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Seniors could get a bigger tax deduction this year, but the rules matter. Here's what to know before filing.

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At 17, Cooper Lutkenhaus is the youngest world champion in track and field history – and soon to be 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 that 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.” An hour or so later, I spoke to Trevor Painter and Jenny Meadows, the coaches of Keely Hodgkinson, who were just as effusive. “He’s phenomenal,” Painter said. “You look at things like that and you think: ‘Wow. I’d love to know what he’s done at his age to do that.’”

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Justices weigh constitutionality of bid to end birthright citizenship in landmark case that could affect legal status of hundreds of thousands of US babies

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.

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Mitchell H. Katz, MD, president and CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals, said hospitals could already replace many radiologists with AI for some imaging tasks -- if regulators allowed it. He argued the technology presents an opportunity to simultaneously cut costs and expand access. Radiology Business reports: Katz -- who has led the 11-hospital organization since 2018 -- said he sees great potential for AI to increase access to breast cancer screening. Hospitals could potentially produce "major savings" by letting the technology handle first reads, with radiologists then double-checking any abnormal screenings. Fellow panelist David Lubarsky, MD, MBA, president and CEO of the Westchester Medical Center Health Network, said his system is already seeing great success in deploying such technology. The AI Westchester uses misses very few breast cancers and is "actually better than human beings," he told the audience. "For women who aren't considered high risk, if the test comes back negative, it's wrong only about 3 times out of 10,000," Lubarsky said. Katz asked fellow hospital CEOs if there is any reason why they shouldn't be pushing for changes to New York state regulations, allowing AI to read images "without a radiologist," Crain's reported. In this scenario, rads could then provide second opinions, if AI flags any images as abnormal. Sandra Scott, MD, CEO of the One Brooklyn Health, a small hospital facing tight margins, agreed with this line of thinking, according to Crain's. "I mean, I'm in charge of a safety-net institution. It would be a game-changer," Scott said about AI being used to replace rads.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Brent crude prices have fallen sharply, while the FTSE 100 is up 1.8% and government bonds are rallying

The bond market is also reacting to hopes of peace in the Middle East soon.

Government bonds are rallying, which is pushing down the yield (or interest rate) on UK debt.

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The US president issued an executive order in 2025 that seeks to undo birthright citizenship, overriding the constitution

The longstanding policy that babies born in the US are American citizens is being considered by the US supreme court on Wednesday as Donald Trump seeks to reinstate a key immigration policy of his second administration.

If birthright citizenship is overturned, hundreds of thousands of children born annually would be blocked from US citizenship.

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Policy is still divisive two years in, with SPD hailing it while CDU minister claims it is risk to young people’s health

Germany is divided over how the legalisation of cannabis two years ago is going, with critics and proponents at odds over its impact on consumption, youth welfare and organised crime.

On 1 April 2024 the previous centre-left-led government made Germany the first big EU country to legally allow personal recreational use of cannabis for over-18s.

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President Trump is seeking to end birthright citizenship, after years of criticizing the constitutional right.

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President Trump went to the Supreme Court on Wednesday as the justices took up his executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship, a major test of his immigration agenda.

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Fifty-eight other people found alive during rescue involving inflatable craft in early hours of Wednesday

The bodies of 19 people have been recovered from an inflatable boat south of the island of Lampedusa by the Italian coastguard, a spokesperson told AFP.

Fifty-eight other people, including five children, were found alive during the rescue in the early hours of Wednesday and transported to Lampedusa by the coastguard, according to Roberto D’Arrigo.

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The Supreme Court is hearing arguments over President Trump's bid to end birthright citizenship, a case that tests one of the cornerstones of his immigration agenda.

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Trump claimed Iran’s ‘new president’ requested a ceasefire – but Iran’s president remains Pezeshkian, the same person it was before the war

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”.

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US understood not to be invited directly to talks that will explore ways of reopening critical waterway

The UK will convene 35 countries – excluding the US – to explore ways to reopen the strait of Hormuz, the vital shipping route for oil and gas that has been blocked by Iran.

Keir Starmer, the prime minister, said the next phase of discussions in the joint British and French efforts to secure the waterway would be held on Thursday, with Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, alongside international leaders.

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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.

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This is mostly a sanity check. In the clips you see the heel pad spontaneously engaging and disengaging while I'm not on it.

My board ghosted a few times, ran off on top speed without me on it, so I brought it back to the shop. they "reset the sensors" and that was it.

The annoying part is that they try to move the problem to me and ask me to contact FM directly, but i'm in the Netherlands, this shop is the only seller in the Netherlands, and it's their responsibility to fix this.

Soo.. I'm not crazy right? This is faulty?

https://reddit.com/link/1s9ng0c/video/3cxjzyt3hlsg1/player

https://reddit.com/link/1s9ng0c/video/lad88lv3hlsg1/player

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Take a look at how the four Artemis II astronauts will sleep, exercise and even use the bathroom while on board the Orion spacecraft as they shoot for the moon.

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This live blog is now closed

Meanwhile, the European Union has sought to ramp up pressure on Hungary to drop its veto on the €90bn loan for Ukraine, with the European Commission saying it will push ahead with its preparatory work for the loan to be paid out.

The commission said it would draft a legal text setting out the details of the first payment of €45bn in 2026 and what the funds would be used for, and send it to the European Council to be formally approved by the bloc’s 27 leaders.

We proposed a ceasefire for Easter – in response, we’re getting ‘shaheds.’ We also proposed a ceasefire specifically regarding energy infrastructure – the Russians ignore this and once again attempt to strike our substations and transformers.

Ukraine is working with partners to expand joint capabilities to protect lives, while Russia continues to prolong the war in Europe, and by sharing its intelligence with the Iranian regime it is openly investing in fueling war in the Middle East and the Gulf.

Ukraine proposed a ceasefire for Easter. Russia responded with a swarm of drones targeting civilians.

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Since the Iran war began Feb. 28, the U.S. and Israel have reported killing many Iranian officials, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. After Khamenei’s death, Iranian government officials said his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, took power. 

On multiple occasions, administration officials including the president have declared that Iran has undergone regime change following U.S. military action.

  • President Donald Trump mused in comments on March 24, March 26 and March 27 that regime change had already happened in Iran. 

  • On March 25, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked about Trump’s mention of regime change the previous day. She said, "I mean, has it not?" She later added, "There has been a change in the regime leadership, which is what the president said, so thank you for confirming he was right."

  • Aboard Air Force One on March 29, Trump said, "We've had regime change, if you look already, because the one regime was decimated, destroyed. They're all dead. The next regime is mostly dead. And the third regime, we're dealing with different people than anybody's dealt with before."

  • Two days later, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth echoed the statement in a press conference, saying that "regime change has occurred."

When we asked White House staff why they were using this term, spokesperson Anna Kelly said, "The regime has changed because the former leaders are dead." 

Military and foreign policy experts say this regime change explanation is insufficient to fulfill the term’s traditional meaning. Removing top officials is a necessary step in regime change, but not sufficient, they said

"It's fair to say that there has been a leadership change in the regime, but the regime is still there because the basic structures, like the constitution, are intact," said Mark F. Cancian, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a national security think tank. "Regime change (in Iran) implies that the government is something other than the current theocratic structure."

Boaz Atzili, an American University foreign policy and global security professor, agreed that a regime consists of more than people. 

A regime consists of "ideas and institutions," Atzili said. "The institutions remained intact." 

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the armed forces branch that is widely considered a backbone of the regime’s power, is maintaining and possibly even gaining more control, analysts say. Other Iranian government power centers, such as the Guardian Council and the Council of Experts, are also still in place.

Michael O’Hanlon, the director of research in foreign policy at the Brookings Institution, said he’s not aware of a formal definition of "regime change," but he said that what has occurred in Iran would not meet the "common sense standard of a complete removal of previous leadership and its ideology."

Analysts said there are signs Iran’s new leaders are more extreme than the ones who were killed.

"Judging from their backgrounds, these leaders — some pulled out of retirement — are more hardline, anti-U.S., and anti-Israel than those they replaced," Barbara Slavin, a distinguished fellow at the Stimson Center, a foreign-policy think tank, wrote in a recent analysis.

If regime change was the goal, "it has so far failed miserably," Atzili said.

On CNN March 31, foreign policy analyst Fareed Zakaria said, "The system of government in Iran is fully in place. The people who have replaced the old office holders appear to be more hardline, more militaristic. … So, how you can claim this is a new regime, I don’t understand."

Later in the same show, John Bolton — a pro-interventionist on Iran who served as Trump’s national security adviser during his first term but later broke with him — described the conditions in Iran as "moving in the direction of possible regime change."

At least one Trump administration official — Secretary of State Marco Rubio — has taken a more cautious approach to using the phrase.

On ABC’s "Good Morning America" on March 30, Rubio said that the U.S. is "dealing with a 47-year-old regime that still has a lot of people involved in it who aren’t necessarily big fans of diplomacy or peace."

Our ruling

Trump said that in Iran, "We've had regime change."

The U.S. has killed many top Iranian officials, including its supreme leader. But multiple foreign policy and military experts said regime change is about more than just people; it’s about governing institutions.

Iran’s current government structure appears intact, bolstered by the same ideology and using the same levers of power. 

Because killing top Iranian leaders is a step toward regime change but insufficient to achieve it, we rate the statement Mostly False.

RELATED: Barack Obama says regime change in Iraq took eight years

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You'll want to stick around for the credits to see where the Nintendo cinematic universe might go next.

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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.

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A sucker for a good sunset 🥰
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  • Wilson hasn’t played for US since 2024 due to pregnancy

  • Davidson makes return after ACL injury last year

  • US play Japan on 11, 14 and 17 April

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.

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An international break that many expected to provide clarity has instead provided fresh reasons to doubt the tournament co-hosts

Roberto Martínez has long been easy with a smile. Those moments aren’t in short supply after wins like Tuesday’s, when Portugal comfortably dispatched the United States 2-0 in Atlanta.

That smile was on full display afterward, when he was asked for his thoughts on how the US look ahead of their home World Cup.

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: An unknown technical problem caused a number of robotaxis owned by the Chinese tech giant Baidu to freeze on Tuesday in the middle of traffic, trapping some passengers in the vehicles for more than an hour. In Wuhan, a city in central China where Baidu has deployed hundreds of its Apollo Go self-driving taxis, people on Chinese social media reported witnessing the cars suddenly malfunction and stop operating. Photos and videos shared online show the Baidu cars halted on busy highways, often in the fast lane. [...] Local police in Wuhan issued a statement around midnight in China that said the situation was "likely caused by a system malfunction," but the incident is still under investigation. No one was injured, and all passengers have exited the vehicles, the police added. It's unclear how many of Baidu's robotaxis may have been impacted. [...] There were at least two other collisions on the same day, according to photos and videos posted on Chinese social media. A RedNote user in Wuhan confirmed to WIRED that she drove past a white minivan that had gotten into a rear-end collision with a parked robotaxi. The back of the Baidu car was badly damaged, but the two people standing beside the scene looked unharmed, she says. She added that she estimates she also saw at least a dozen more parked robotaxies.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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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.

A market stall selling alternative lighting in Baghdad

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’s safety net undermined

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. 

Looming electricity shortages

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. 

Political fallout?

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. 

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Follow along live as we gear up for NASA's historic Artemis II mission beginning today.

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Congressional leaders announced that Britain's King Charles III will address a joint meeting of Congress as part of his visit to Washington later this month.

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Joani Reid MP reportedly swapped flirtatious messages with senior officer in charge of nuclear-armed submarine

A Royal Navy captain in charge of one of Britain’s nuclear-armed submarines stepped back from his duties over his relationship with the MP Joani Reid, whose husband faces allegations of spying for China.

The married senior officer was investigated by the navy last year over his contact with Reid after the messages, described as inappropriate, prompted an assessment of a potential blackmail risk, the Financial Times first reported.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 10:38

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.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 10:30

The argument for transitioning to renewables seems stronger than ever – and yet, attacks mount on the carbon price scheme that underpins the EU’s success at cutting pollution

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On the one hand, experts say, Europe is better prepared for this energy crisis than the last. On the other, it is still waging a culture war against the most obvious path out.

Fuel prices have soared to ruinous levels since the Iran war left ships of oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) stranded in the Gulf. The pain is most acute in Asia, but high energy prices are already causing panic in Europe. Shortages could hit the continent this month, oil company Shell warned last week. Donald Trump’s “go get your own oil” comments on Tuesday sent prices to their highest level since the start of the US-Israel attack on Iran. They briefly dipped below $100-a-barrel on Wednesday amid hopes that the war may soon end.

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🤯

😮 Happy April.

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U.S. gasoline prices continue to inch higher after crossing the $4 a gallon threshold on Tuesday for the first time since 2022.

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Apple's MacBook lineup now includes three tiers: Neo, Air and Pro. See our favorites and find the best MacBook for your laptop budget and needs.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 10:10

...plus new movies Thrash, Apex, and Roommates arrive to Netflix this month, too.

2026-04-01 12:04
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Experts say the US believes it is entitled to resources it desires – a perspective president has supported for decades

Donald Trump said this past weekend he wants to “take the oil in Iran” by seizing control of a key export hub, echoing a refrain he has returned to for over a decade.

It’s a sign of his disregard for international law and belief in “fossil-fuel imperialism”, experts say.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 10:00

In her first print interview since release, the Palestinian immigrant says after year in custody, she sees it as her duty to denounce ICE detention in the US

A Palestinian woman who was released last month after spending a year in a Texas immigration detention center told the Guardian in an exclusive interview that she sees “a lot of similarities” between the treatment of people in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody and that of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation.

Leqaa Kordia, who was detained by ICE following her arrest at a protest against Israel’s war in Gaza, says that she will continue to speak up about the rights of Palestinians, but that she now also sees it as her duty to denounce the “human tragedy” of immigration detention in the US.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 10:00

T-Mobile releases a cologne (not really), Timekettle translates British English to American English (no), Yahoo creates a device to stop you doomscrolling (kind of real?) and more.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 09:47

Your home devices and appliances quietly suck energy even when not in active use. I found the worst offender and it totally shocked me.

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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

  • Guang Yang is developing a next-generation sodium-carbon dioxide redox flow battery built from low-cost, earth-abundant materials, with the potential to dramatically reduce system cost while delivering high power for grid-scale storage.
  • Andrew Westover is developing bulk ionic glasses that enable batteries that have twice the energy density of commercial lithium-ion batteries and can charge in 10 minutes.

Nuclear Fission and Fusion

  • Vittorio Badalassi, with Ohio State University, is advancing and validating a revolutionary blanket concept that addresses shortcomings of current fusion blankets, which must breed enough fuel, convert intense neutron energy into heat for electricity generation and shield a fusion reactor’s systems from damaging radiation.
  • Pradeep Ramuhalli, with the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and Purdue University, is advancing AI-driven efforts to enhance the reliability and up-time of particle accelerators for use in nuclear energy waste transmutation to reduce amounts of long-lived isotopes in spent nuclear fuel.

Grid and Materials Supply Chains

  • Rishi Pillai, with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Virginia Tech, the University of Pittsburgh, ATI Materials and GE Vernova, is creating a materials design and discovery framework to enable high-throughput, performance-specific and cost-effective generative materials tailored for flexible fuel power generation technologies.
  • Govindarajan Muralidharan “Murali,” with the universities of North Texas and Pittsburgh, Cleveland-Cliffs, Advanced Optical and Hitachi Energy, is developing a new type of steel that can improve performance of power transformers, reducing energy losses by more than 20 percent over those of existing transformers.
  • Sheng Dai, with Solidion Technology Inc., is refining a more efficient, domestically deployable method for making high-purity graphite, a critical material for energy and national security applications.

Alloys in Extreme Environments

  • Erik Herbert, with the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, the University of Wisconsin and industry partner ATI, is developing next-generation nickel-based alloys for use in advanced liquid fluoride- and chloride-based molten salt reactors.
  • Sebastien Dryepondt is advancing a unique high-temperature facility for developing next-generation superalloys for gas turbine applications in the power generation and aviation industries, working with a team from the universities of California (Santa Barbara), Connecticut, Maryland, and Minnesota; Virginia Tech; and Harvard University.

Partner-Driven Projects

  • Haiying Chen, in a collaboration with Johnson Matthey Inc. and Core Natural Resources, is advancing catalytic oxidation of ventilation air methane from coal mines to improve air quality during mining and improve global competitiveness of the U.S. coal industry.
  • Michael Kirka, in a collaboration with Penn State and DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory, is improving the design and manufacture of ultrahigh-temperature refractory alloys for turbine applications. In a separate collaboration with Texas A&M, Kirka is refining the design space for refractory alloys used in power generation and aerospace to improve their ductility and enhance their suitability for additive manufacturing, particularly of high-performance turbine blades.
  • Femi Omitaomu, in a collaboration with the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is developing a comprehensive and validated logistical decision support system for national intermodal freight transportation, which is especially important for evaluating routing to enhance operational efficiency and ensure energy security.

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.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 09:32

Chatham House's Corporate Reception 2026 21 May 2026 — 18:00 TO 20:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House

Join us for the annual Chatham House Corporate Reception.

Join us for a special evening held to thank our corporate members for their continued support. Network with other members, connect with our research experts and discover ways to engage with our work—all over drinks and canapés.

This special evening is held to thank our 300+ corporate members and supporters for their continued engagement with the Institute, especially over this turbulent period. You will have the opportunity to network with policymakers, business leaders and the diplomatic community, in addition to meeting our experts while enjoying drinks and canapés at Chatham House.  

We would be grateful if you could RSVP to Aisha Abdirahman at aabdirahman@chathamhouse.org by Thursday 23 April 2026, letting us know if you will be able to join us and the name and e-mail address of your guest.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 09:31

Taken in by reports of Liz Truss joining Nasa or the launch of nappy ‘Twosies’? It’s that time of year again

The media ecosystem may have changed since the BBC’s spaghetti harvest report in 1957 or the Guardian’s 1977 travel supplement about the island of San Serriffe, but April fool stories are still with us.

Indeed, if you picked up Wednesday’s edition of the Guardian, you may have been taken in by our report that evidence has been found of coffee being consumed in England a couple of centuries before the first known examples, thanks in part to an expert called Macky Arto.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 09:26

This will be the first time humans have traveled to the moon since the early 1970s.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 09:16

Jurors hear 19-year-old recount FaceTime call after alleged cliffside attack on Oahu during wife’s birthday trip

The son of a Hawaii doctor accused of trying to kill his wife testified on Tuesday that his father told him that his wife had been cheating on him and that he had “tried to kill her”.

Emile Konig, 19, told jurors that he had received two FaceTime calls from his father, Gerhardt Konig, 47, on the morning of 24 March 2025 – the same day prosecutors allege that Gerhardt attempted to murder his wife, Arielle Konig, 37, during a hike on Oahu’s “Pali Puka” trail.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 09:02

PM to focus on European defence and economic partnership for ‘dangerous world’ in pivot away from US

Britain’s long-term national interest requires closer partnership with the EU, Keir Starmer has said, citing war in the Middle East and the increasingly volatile international situation.

The prime minister indicated that the conflict had refocused the government on “ambitious” new ties with Europe, economically and in defence, and said how Britain emerged from the crisis “would define us for a generation”.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 09:00

Experts say brutal March heat has left critical snowpack at record-low levels – and key basins in uncharted territory

Snow surveys taking place across the American west this week are offering a grim prognosis, after a historically warm winter and searing March temperatures left the critical snowpack at record-low levels across the region.

Experts warned that even as the heat begins to subside, the stunning pace of melt-off over the past month has left key basins in uncharted territory for the dry seasons ahead. Though there’s still potential for more snow in the forecast, experts said it will likely be too little too late.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 08:55

Head of committee says it was appropriate for government to seek guidance on way out of £330m deal with US data company

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.

It was also appropriate for the government to seek guidance on activating a break contract in the deal, said Chi Onwurah, a Labour MP who heads the science, innovation and technology select committee.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 08:25

While the event is technically finished we are still finding plenty of deals remaining.

2026-04-01 12:04
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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, an 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, down 2.5% on the day at $101.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 08:17

American Heart Association bucks Trump administration line to suggest prioritizing plant-based protein over meat

The American Heart Association’s new nutrition guidance, released on Tuesday, emphasizes a dietary pattern rich in vegetables, ​fruits and whole grains, prioritizing plant-based protein over meat.

It also suggests limiting the ‌use of sugar, salt and ultra-processed foods and replacing full fat dairy with non-fat and low-fat dairy.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 10:05

Food and Drink Federation almost triples forecast, even allowing for possibility of strait of Hormuz reopening soon

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, 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.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 11:41

Prime minister says UK will host meeting later this week with other nations on the reopening of the strait of Hormuz

Starmer says he understands why people are concerned about the cost of living.

He says he has already set out a five-point plan to deal with the crisis.

Just look at what’s happening today. Today your energy bills will be cut because of the action that we took at the budget. And whatever happens in Iran, that price is now fixed until July.

The most effective way we can support the cost of living in Britain is to push for de-escalation in the Middle East, and a reopening of the strait of Hormuz, which is such a vital route for energy.

To that end, we’re exploring each and every diplomatic avenue that is available to us.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 09:27

President Trump has told Britain's Telegraph newspaper he could try to terminate U.S. membership in NATO. He's railed against NATO allies for refusing to join the Iran war.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 10:39

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.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 11:35

NASA's Artemis II astronauts are set to launch today on a nine-day mission around the moon and back. Follow the countdown and watch it live.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 11:54

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.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 08:01

Neural implants, AI agents, facial devices, robots: Where exactly will Apple be headed in the decades to come? I take some guesses with a futurist friend.

2026-04-01 08:04
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After strangers raised thousands of dollars for a search, the border collie was flown to safety by a pilot who was determined to reunite pet and owner.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 08:00

The Soviet-designed military transport turboprop aircraft crashed into a cliff, sources at the scene told state news agencies.

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2026-04-01 08:00

Proxy servers offer critical benefits in security and competitive intelligence, but they introduce new complications and risks.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 08:00

Malcolm in the Middle: Life's Still Unfair, The Testaments and more titles hit the streamer this month.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 07:38

Group cuts costs as shares plunge while it grapples with impact of Iran war on property market

One of Britain’s biggest housebuilders has said it will stop buying new land and hiring new staff, as it grapples with the impact of the Iran war on the property market.

Berkeley, a London-focused housebuilder, said it would cut costs as it warned that “geopolitical volatility” and “reduced potential” for interest rate cuts could weigh on the business.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 07:21

I got stopped by the police telling me it's the first onewheel they see and took pictures to register it in their system, I need immediate insurance and we won't be able to ride onewheels in 2027 and beyond, any PEV from before 2024 is also not permitted. does anybody know if new boards are going to have a serial number or any sort of certification to make them legal?

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me paró la policía diciéndome que era el primer onewheel que habían visto e hizo fotos para registrarlo en su sistema, que necesito un seguro inmediatamente y que aparte de 2027 no se puede circular con el, cualquier patinete de antes de 2024 también está prohibido circular. ¿alguien sabe si los onewheels nuevos van a tener un número de serie o alguna certificación para hacerlos legales?

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 07:04

Sandhu Ponnachan appears in court on charges of dangerous driving and causing grievous bodily harm

A 36-year-old man has been remanded into custody after appearing in court accused of dangerous driving after seven people were injured when a car hit pedestrians in Derby on Saturday night.

Sandhu Ponnachan, from the Alvaston area of the city, appeared at Southern Derbyshire magistrates court on Wednesday having also been charged with six counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent, one count of attempted grievous bodily harm, and one count of possession of a bladed article.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 07:03

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.

President al-Sharaa at Chatham House. Picture by Carmen Valino

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:

Portrait of President al-Sharaa by Ander McIntyre

Portrait of President al-Sharaa taken at Chatham House by Ander McIntyre 

‘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.’  

Watch the event in full.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 07:00

For 128 years, it’s been clear that if you are born in this country, you are a citizen. The court must not turn back the clock

I am lead counsel in the challenge to Donald Trump’s birthright citizenship executive order. As I and my team help the ACLU legal director, Cecillia Wang, prepare for the supreme court argument in this case on Wednesday, we are poring over legal minutiae and sharpening our arguments. But the larger questions that loom over the whole case are simple: What does it mean to be an American? Will we adhere to the best of American history and protect the values of equal citizenship and opportunity?

In early America, like today, people born on US soil were citizens, even if their parents were immigrants. That’s a principle we inherited from England as part of a body of rules known as the “common law”. In England, that rule was originally about monarchical power; but in our young republic it found new life as a principle of equal citizenship. As waves of immigrants arrived, the birthright rule ensured that the child of Irish or German immigrants would be no less citizens than those who traced their lineage back to the Mayflower.

Cody Wofsy is deputy director of the ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project and lead counsel on the Trump v Barbara legal team

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 07:00

James Broadnax was a teenager when a jury convicted him of capital murder, with his rap lyrics presented as evidence he posed a threat of ‘future dangerousness’

James Broadnax has been locked up in a 6ft-by-10ft cell on death row in Texas for more than 16 years, and in that time he has developed coping mechanisms for passing the long and desolate days.

A favourite technique is to write spoken word poetry at his cell desk. He becomes so engrossed in the creative process that he can lose himself for hours, transfixed in what he calls a “time gap”. In one of his recent poems, featured in a short death row documentary, Solitary Minds, Broadnax, who is 37, describes how he writes:

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 07:00

MIT Technology Review discovered that startup R3 Bio has pitched an ethically and scientifically explosive long-term vision beyond its public work on non-sentient monkey "organ sacks": creating human "brainless clones" or replacement bodies for organs as part of an extreme life-extension agenda. From the report: Imagine it like this: a baby version of yourself with only enough of a brain structure to be alive in case you ever need a new kidney or liver. Or, alternatively, he has speculated, you might one day get your brain placed into a younger clone. That could be a way to gain a second lifespan through a still hypothetical procedure known as a body transplant. The fuller context of R3's proposals, as well as activities of another stealth startup with related goals, have not previously been reported. They've been kept secret by a circle of extreme life-extension proponents who fear that their plans for immortality could be derailed by clickbait headlines and public backlash. And that's because the idea can sound like something straight from a creepy science fiction film. One person who heard R3's clone presentation, and spoke on the condition of anonymity, was left reeling by its implications and shaken by [R3 founder John Schloendorn's] enthusiastic delivery. The briefing, this person said, was like a "close encounter of the third kind" with "Dr. Strangelove." [...] MIT Technology Review found no evidence that R3 has cloned anyone, or even any animal bigger than a rodent. What we did find were documents, additional meeting agendas, and other sources outlining a technical road map for what R3 called "body replacement cloning" in a 2023 letter to supporters. That road map involved improvements to the cloning process and genetic wiring diagrams for how to create animals without complete brains. A main purpose of the fundraising, investors say, was to support efforts to try these techniques in monkeys from a base in the Caribbean. That offered a path to a nearer-term business plan for more ethical medical experiments and toxicology testing -- if the company could develop what it now calls monkey "organ sacks." However, this work would clearly inform any possible human version.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 06:48

Campaigners call verdict on Ben Jamal and Chris Nineham ‘grotesque’ and part of attempt to ‘undermine civil liberties’

Two prominent leaders in the Palestine solidarity movement in Britain have been found guilty of breaching protest conditions, in what campaigners called a “grotesque” and “shocking” decision.

Ben Jamal, 62, the director of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC), and Chris Nineham, 63, vice-chair of the Stop the War Coalition, were accused of failing to comply with conditions imposed on a protest on 18 January 2025. They were subsequently charged with public order offences.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 06:46

The final season of The Boys arrives, along with loads of other new original shows and movies, this April.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 06:30

Some European countries have blocked Israeli and US planes from moving weapons through their airspace. Plus, a rocket heads to the moon for the first time since 1972

Good morning.

Donald Trump has launched a tirade against European countries that refused to join the Israel-US war against Iran, calling out the UK and France, as transatlantic relations continue their downward spiral and the war wreaks havoc on the global economy.

What pushback has there been from Europe? France has blocked Israeli planes from flying weapons through its airspace, while Italy refused last-minute permission for US bombers to land in Sicily. Spain has already denied the US use of its bases and airspace. The UK, however, has allowed the US to use its bases for a war that its government says is illegal.

For the latest updates, follow our live blog.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 06:30

Your iPhone gets new emoji, video podcasts and more.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 06:20

Company chaired by Trump ally Larry Ellison seeks to reassure investors that bet on AI infrastructure will pay off

Oracle is cutting thousands of jobs as the US technology company seeks to reassure investors that its bet on AI infrastructure will pay off.

The $420bn (£315bn) company, which is headquartered in Austin, Texas, started making employees redundant on Tuesday, with thousands of its 162,000-strong workforce expected to leave.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 06:05

Most modern dishwashers have one important part that needs regular cleaning. I asked an expert about how and how often to do it.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 06:01

The distorted face emoji is fun, but the orca is number one in my heart.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 06:00

From an interactive session of Sex With Friends to improvised Robot Karaoke, the Friday Live celebration of play and performance amid the museum’s venerable halls was a reminder of gaming’s cultural clout

In the grand entrance of the Victoria & Albert Museum, beneath a looming dome with ancient statues visible through nearby arches, a programmer/DJ is busy live-coding a glitchy electronic music set. Either side of her, large LED displays show streams of code and strobing pixellated images as the bass pounds. She’s part of a group named London Live Coding, an experimental collective that makes music by writing and manipulating audio programs. It is loud, disorientating and brilliant, and I can’t help wondering what Queen Victoria and her husband would have made of it.

The set is part of the museum’s long-running Friday Late evening series, a collaboration with the London Games Festival. It showcased a range of independent video games and immersive interactive experiences, focusing on the link between play and performance. Visitors were given a map and left to wander the halls, corridors and galleries looking for installations. You could play the Bafta-winning comedy game Thank Goodness You’re Here! on a giant screen beneath a 13th-century spiral staircase. You could wander down the darkened Prince Consort’s gallery and find groups of giggling pals playing the hilarious erotic physics puzzler Sex With Friends, in which ragdoll-like characters have to be guided into (consensual) sexual encounters – much to the amusement of spectators.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 06:00

Five Nights at Freddy's 2, The Real Housewives of Rhode Island and more also arrive on Peacock.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 06:00

We need a 5% wealth tax on America’s 938 billionaires. Over a ten-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 percent 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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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware’s largest hospital system is expanding both in and out of the state. On Monday, the hospital said it would spend $75 million to build a new inpatient rehabilitation facility as part of that expansion. 

ChristianaCare announced Monday it is building a new $75 million inpatient rehabilitation facility for patients in need of physical, speech and occupational therapy near its Newark hospital. 

The announcement comes as part of the hospital’s $865 million investment into health facilities across the state, and more than a month and a half after announcing plans for a new $65 million campus in Georgetown.

ChristianaCare said it would partner with the Pennsylvania-based Onix Group, a commercial real estate company that focuses on hotel and health care developments, on the project. Some of its properties include the Hyatt Place on the Wilmington Riverfront, Dover Town Center on U.S. Route 13, and Cadia Healthcare Silverside near Talleyville. 

The new 92,000‑square‑foot facility would open in summer 2028, offering 73 beds for rehabilitation services and creating 122 new jobs. 

ChristianaCare cited the state’s aging population as part of its reasoning for constructing the facility, as well as relieving pressure on Wilmington Hospital’s emergency department. At Wilmington Hospital, ChristianaCare runs its “Center for Rehabilitation,” where it offers treatment for patients recovering from strokes and other traumatic injuries. 

The hospital said it would transfer the Center for Rehabilitation’s 40 beds to the new Newark center, and the space in Wilmington would be converted to an inpatient step‑down unit to free up space in the emergency room. 

“As one of the highest-quality programs in the region, these services are in high demand,” said Bradley Sandella, clinical leader of ChristianaCare’s medical subspecialties service line, in a statement. “But our ability to grow has been constrained by the space limitations in Wilmington Hospital.”

A year of expansions

In recent months, the hospital has announced expansions both in and out of the state after saying last summer it would spend $865 million on new health facilities in the coming years. 

Last month, the health care giant announced it aims to open a new $65 million campus in Georgetown. Months before that, it said it was building a health center dedicated to treating cancer in Middletown.

ChristianaCare plans to build this $65 million micro hospital campus in Georgetown, but it will be up to regulators as to whether to allow it. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRISTIANACARE

The health care system expects its new Georgetown facility — which would offer emergency beds, behavioral health care, specialty care and primary care — to open by 2028. It is partnering with health care-focused developer Emerus Holdings to build the facility at 20769 DuPont Blvd., just south of the Bridgeville Road intersection. 

After a failed bid to merge with Southern New Jersey’s Virtua Health, the Georgetown plans could indicate that ChristianaCare sees more opportunity in its own backyard, and is willing to disregard the loose geographic monopolies that health care systems have enjoyed in Delaware for decades. 

“This new campus will help close gaps in access by bringing high-quality, equitable and more convenient care directly into the community that needs it most,” ChristianaCare’s CEO Dr. Janice Nevin said in a statement. “Our goal is simple: ensure that every Delawarean can access the care they need, in the right place at the right time.”

ChristianaCare’s new facility would also come as federal funds will soon start to flow into Delaware’s southern counties to support rural health, and the hospital system continues its expansion both in and outside the state.

Like up north with its new rehabilitation center, ChristianaCare framed its decision to expand into Georgetown as part of a commitment to serve Delaware’s aging population.

Its Middletown cancer center, which is slated to open in May 2027, would solidify its foothold in the suburbs south of the C&D Canal. The $92 million health center would bring primary care, behavioral health, pediatrics, neurology and cardiovascular care, among others.

A new ChristianaCare cancer center is coming to Middletown as part of the hospital system’s larger expansion into the suburbs south of the C&D Canal. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRISTIANACARE

Since 2020, ChristianaCare has ventured deeper into the suburban Philadelphia health market, purchasing defunct hospitals and building its own in the surrounding towns. The hospital system announced last year it would partner with the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, better known as CHOP, leaving Delaware’s chief pediatric hospital, Nemours Children’s Health, on the sidelines

However, late last year the hospital and New Jersey-based Virtua Health terminated a letter of intent they signed last summer that had signaled the health systems were considering merging in the coming years.

Combining the current ChristianaCare and Virtua Health footprints would have created a system covering more than 10 contiguous counties in New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania and Maryland, with more than 600 facilities, nearly 30,000 employees and more than 500 residents and fellows.

The deal also would have required numerous regulatory sign-offs in both states, pitting potential hurdles to completing the deal. That included a review by attorneys general in Delaware and New Jersey because both systems are not-for-profits.

In Delaware, the prospect of an out-of-state merger was met with skepticism from Gov. Matt Meyer, who challenged the move when asked about it at a July press conference. 

“I think when any medical practice in Delaware, and especially nonprofit hospitals, get some positive return from serving Delawareans’ health, that money should be reinvested in Delaware, not in another state,” Meyer said.

The post ChristianaCare announces new $75M rehab facility in Newark  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 06:00

An electric transmission tower is seen against a dramatic sky.

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. 

Delaware Public Advocate Jameson Tweedie said there is little that his office could challenge with the results of the energy auction. | PHOTO COURTESY OF DE SENATE DEMOCRATS

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.

What’s behind the rate increases?

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.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:57

We now know all 48 teams that will play in the US, Canada and Mexico later this year – this is how they got there

Nine countries qualified as group winners – Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Ghana, Cape Verde, South Africa, Senegal and Côte d’Ivoire – and the Democratic Republic of Congo gave the continent a 10th representative at the tournament by battling through the playoffs.

Egypt
Mohamed Salah scored twice as Hossam Hassan’s side beat Djibouti 3-0 in Casablanca in October and made up for missing out on Qatar 2022 by reaching the finals with a game in hand. This will be Egypt’s fourth finals, even though they have yet to win a game. Bizarrely, the Pharaohs did qualify for the first World Cup, in 1930, but missed their boat from Marseille to South America after a storm delayed them.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:52

Khalid Ahmed, 24, from Ealing in west London, also charged with one count of possession of prohibited ammunition

A 24-year-old man who was stopped at Dover has been charged with 10 counts of possession of a firearm.

Khalid Ahmed, from Ealing in west London, who is a dual Dutch and Irish national, is to appear at Westminster magistrates court on Wednesday, where he will also face one charge of possession of prohibited ammunition.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:09

If you don't want to pay for a personal trainer or gym membership, the best workout apps are a great alternative you can use anywhere, anytime.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:03

State department says it is working to ensure release of freelancer ‘as soon as possible’ after abduction in Baghdad

An American journalist, Shelly Kittleson, has been kidnapped in Baghdad by a suspected Iranian-backed Iraqi armed group, the US has said, as regional security deteriorates after the US-Israeli attack on Iran.

Kittleson is a longtime freelancer in the region, reporting extensively from Syria, Iraq and Lebanon.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:03

The Climate Briefing: Climate change, energy and geopolitics Audio thilton.drupal

Anna and Bhargabi are joined by three experts to explore the links between climate change, energy and geopolitics.

As the conflict in the Middle East rattles energy markets, this episode explores the connections between climate change, energy, and geopolitics. It addresses questions such as:

- What does the war in Iran reveal about the links between fossil fuels, vulnerability, and power? What lessons can be drawn? 
- What does the energy transition mean for global geopolitics, and how should governments manage the ‘messiness’ of the process? 
- How are the impacts of climate change reshaping our world, and what can be done to navigate the challenges that arise?

To unpack these dynamics, Anna and Bhargabi are joined by Arthur Snell (a former diplomat and author of Elemental: The New Geography of Climate Change and How We Survive It), Michael Bradshaw (Professor of Global Energy at Warwick Business School, Associate Fellow at Chatham House, and author of The Geopolitics of Energy System Transformation: Managing the Messy Mix), and Dr Beatrice Mosello (Senior Research Fellow at Chatham House).

About The Climate Briefing  

The Climate Briefing explores key themes in the UN climate negotiations and international climate politics. The podcast is hosted by Bhargabi Bharadwaj and Anna Aberg from Chatham House and features interviewees from governments, international organizations, academia and civil society organizations from across the world. 
 
You can also listen to The Climate Briefing on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:00

The American star hasn’t scored since 2024 for the US, but he and manager Mauricio Pochettino are taking it in stride

Nobody on the US men’s national team is worried about Christian Pulisic’s severe lack of goalscoring form.

At least, nobody is saying they are.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:00

With the NFL’s Chicago Bears weighing a once-unthinkable move to Indiana, a new federal bill aims to give cities the right to keep their teams

WWE star CM Punk called it “straight greed”. Illinois governor JB Pritzker called it a “slap in the face”. An overwhelming majority of fans say they will hold a grudge.

This cacophony of disgust has been prompted by the real possibility that the Chicago Bears could relocate to Hammond, Indiana. The Bears’ owners bought a site in Arlington Heights, Illinois, for a new stadium, but negotiations over property taxes have stalled construction. Meanwhile, Indiana has thrown its hat into the ring, passing a state bill on 26 February authorizing funding in Hammond. Chicago’s current home, Soldier Field, is a rental, open-air venue with the smallest seating capacity in the NFL. Still, it is not only in Illinois; it is in Chicago proper along Lake Michigan. Arlington Heights, while about 25 miles north of the city, is at least within state lines.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:00

Former Infowars video editor and field producer spoke on his experience working on the show in an NPR interview

A former video editor and field producer for Alex Jones’s Infowars has said his work for the notorious conspiracy theorist was “nonsense” and “lies”, but he kept at it for four years in his 20s because the far-right media company’s founder was a magnetic presence and it earned him good money.

Josh Owens made those revealing remarks in an NPR interview published on Tuesday promoting his new memoir about once having been an employee of Jones and Infowars – a conversation that also detailed the hand he said he had in fabricating a video of an operative of the Islamic State (IS) terror group sneaking into the US from Mexico immediately after a beheading.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:00

The Trump administration official leading an effort to loosen rules on methane pollution was an unnamed author of key industry arguments against those same rules just four years ago when he was an oil and gas lobbyist.

Aaron Szabo, an assistant administrator at the Environmental Protection Agency, is listed in PDF metadata as the author of a January 2022 comment letter objecting to proposed controls on methane emissions in the oil and gas industry. The letter was submitted to the EPA by the American Exploration and Production Council, which represents some of the industry’s largest emitters of the planet-warming gas, including ConocoPhillips, Diversified Energy and Hilcorp. Szabo’s name does not appear in the document itself, but it can be found in information embedded by the software used to create the PDF file.

Szabo was registered as a lobbyist for one of the AXPC’s lesser-known members, Ovintiv, when he drafted the arguments against the restrictions, which were finalized later in the Biden administration. He has also lobbied for other clients in the oil and chemicals sectors. While he did not hide that work during his confirmation last year as head of the EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, he described it in terms that avoided any mention of efforts to influence climate policy: “I learned how regulated entities comply with the federal government’s thousands of regulations and policies. I also saw firsthand that the people working in these companies want to ensure the environment is properly protected.”

In his current role overseeing federal climate rules at the EPA, Szabo has been soliciting input and even specific regulatory language from oil industry groups that stand to gain from watered-down methane rules, according to internal emails, calendar entries and records of closed-door conversations reviewed by ProPublica.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., the ranking Democrat on the Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee, pointed to Szabo’s previous lobbying as evidence that the EPA had effectively been captured by the oil and gas industry. “Now he can do Big Oil’s dirty work from inside the EPA,” Whitehouse told ProPublica in an email.

As part of its plan to “unleash American energy,” the Trump administration has waged an unprecedented campaign against regulations on fossil fuels, the main cause of global warming. One of its biggest moves was to repeal the “endangerment finding” that classified greenhouse gases as pollutants — the basis for the EPA’s authority to limit emissions at all. Rather than throw out the methane rules entirely, however, Szabo’s office is working to revise them, emails and documents show. It has already delayed many of the compliance deadlines until next year.

Methane, the main component of natural gas, is a climate superpollutant, responsible for one-third of the rise in global temperatures since preindustrial times, according to the United Nations Environment Programme. When it escapes into the atmosphere without being burned for energy, it can trap 80 times more heat than carbon dioxide, research shows. The oil and gas business is the largest industrial source of U.S. methane emissions, in part because of leaks from poorly maintained equipment. If it is uneconomical to collect the gas for sale, companies sometimes intentionally release it in a process known as venting.

To cut down on methane discharges, President Joe Biden’s EPA imposed much stricter controls on oil and gas operations, including requiring increased monitoring for leaks and equipment upgrades. According to agency estimates, the new rules would have lowered the industry’s methane emissions by nearly 80%. And, given that the gas breaks down relatively quickly, this would have been one of the fastest ways to reduce global warming.

Industry groups pushed back. In the January 2022 letter that Szabo helped to draft, the AXPC used the word “burdensome” 10 times to describe the new requirements and pushed for more “flexibility” to allow for less expensive leak-detection methods and less frequent monitoring, among other requests.

The group also cast doubt on the rules’ expected climate and health benefits, highlighting what it called “the importance of communicating the significant uncertainties within the estimates.” The AXPC’s chief executive, Anne Bradbury, added in a later statement that the rules risked “undercutting US production in the near and long-term — which will lead to increased energy costs and reduced energy security.”

The AXPC failed to persuade the Biden administration to change its approach. But it renewed its push after President Donald Trump returned to office and ordered federal agencies to “suspend, revise, or rescind” any “undue burden” on domestic energy production.

Szabo, after two years as a fellow at the Trump-aligned America First Policy Institute, joined the administration on Day 1 as an adviser to EPA chief Lee Zeldin. He immediately signaled that he planned to weaken the regulations he had argued against as a lobbyist. His staff met with AXPC representatives as early as Feb. 6, 2025, less than three weeks after Trump’s inauguration, to discuss its petition to “reconsider” the methane rules, according to emails and calendar entries obtained through public records requests and shared with ProPublica by Fieldnotes, a watchdog group that investigates the oil and gas industry. His staff went on to meet with them at least twice more, and Szabo himself was listed as a required attendee for a meeting with Bradbury last July.

The AXPC didn’t respond to emails from ProPublica seeking comment.

According to records of closed-door conversations reviewed by ProPublica, other oil industry representatives have described their meetings with Szabo and his staff as highly favorable to their interests. “Mr. Szabo assured us that the EPA is focused on these [methane] rules and doing everything that can be done to limit the damage they will cause,” the leadership of a major trade group wrote to its members last year in an internal newsletter.

Lee Fuller, of the Independent Petroleum Association of America, also spoke glowingly about his meeting with Szabo’s office on a conference call with industry representatives last year.

“It was one of the more fascinating meetings that we’ve ever had, just because they were suddenly willing to talk to us,” he said. “And they’re also suddenly willing to talk about things that we’ve been trying to get them to do for years, and they’ve never even let it kind of come onto the radar screen.”

The IPAA declined to answer specific questions from ProPublica but linked to a September 2025 letter in which the group publicly asked the EPA for exceptions to the methane rules.

Szabo’s office has even invited oil industry groups to offer specific wording for the revised rules. “We had a call several weeks back re. pneumatics on temporary equipment,” Mike O’Connor of the American Petroleum Institute wrote to an EPA official, referring to devices that are a major source of methane emissions. “EPA had informally requested input on this topic and any suggested reg. text language. We are providing the attached draft document as informal input to EPA’s inquiry.” The draft called for a number of exemptions.

The shift in priorities under Szabo can also be seen in communications from the EPA itself. In a June 2025 email reviewed by ProPublica, an agency official asked O’Connor to meet and discuss alternative leak-detection methods. Echoing the language in the AXPC comment that Szabo helped to draft, the official spoke of “the additional flexibility we would like to pursue.”

“I think their agenda was, from what I could tell, to do what industry wanted,” one former EPA official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe confidential discussions, said of Szabo and other Trump appointees at the agency.

“Since when is it a bad thing for public officials to ask the public what they think?” the EPA said in an emailed statement, referring to Szabo’s interactions with oil industry representatives. Szabo “fulfilled all his ethical obligations to the letter. He met with EPA career ethics staff when he started at EPA to ensure he is aware of and complies with federal ethics requirements.”

Szabo’s affinities are hardly a secret. He is thanked by name in the EPA chapter of Project 2025, the deregulatory blueprint for the second Trump administration. As part of the nomination process for his appointment at the EPA, he also submitted ethics disclosures listing oil, natural gas and chemicals companies he had lobbied for.

Still, at his confirmation hearing on March 5 last year, he repeatedly declined to elaborate on his role in Project 2025, beyond saying he provided “general advice and thoughts” on the Clean Air Act.

The post The Trump EPA Official in Charge of Methane Regulations Helped Write Oil Industry Argument Against Those Rules appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:00

Some of HBO Max's biggest shows are back this month, along with tons of major movie releases.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:00

NASA is poised to launch four astronauts on a historic nine-day trip around the moon and back. Here's everything to know about the Artemis II mission.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 05:00

North Carolina and other states have insurance plans for kids in foster care, but many doctors did not accept patients on the plans, leaving kids' guardians scrambling to find health care providers.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 05:00

People gather to defend trans people rights in New York City on February 3, 2025. Hundreds of people protested in New York February 3 against US President Donald Trump's executive order signed January 28, 2025, to restrict gender transition procedures for people under the age of 19, and reports of a local hospital group cancelling appointments for young people in response. (Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU / AFP) (Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)
A protester demonstrating for trans rights in New York City on Feb. 3, 2025.  Photo: Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images

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.

Speech as Medicine

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.

Other Liberal Justices?

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.

Related

Executive Lawlessness: Leah Litman on the Supreme Court Enabling Presidential Overreach 

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.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 03:31

President Trump indicated the Iran war may wrap up "very soon" and he could abandon efforts to force Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, as the war pushed U.S. gas prices over the $4 mark.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 03:00

A Starlink satellite broke apart in orbit after suffering an unexplained "anomaly," apparently due to an "internal energetic source" rather than a collision. "The incident appears to have created some debris, with fragments likely to fall to Earth over the next few weeks," reports Scientific American. From the report: The satellite lost communication at about 560 kilometers above Earth, Starlink said. While the statement from Starlink, which is a subsidiary of Musk's rocket company SpaceX, merely noted that investigations are ongoing, LeoLabs said its radar observations of the event indicated an "internal energetic source" as the likely cause rather than a collision. The incident underscores the potential hazards of the increasingly large numbers of satellites and other spacecraft in low-Earth orbit -- some 10,000 Starlinks are currently in orbit and counting. Starlink's statement said that "the event poses no new risk" to the International Space Station or to the upcoming launch of NASA's Artemis II mission, targeted for April 1.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-04-01 03:00

Calls for tougher laws as network stretching from Caribbean to Georgia generates riches for offshore tycoons by appearing to prey on the vulnerable

Immaculately groomed and beaming from ear to ear, Andres Markou looks every inch the golden boy of the gambling sector. The youthful boss of MyStake, a fast-growing digital casino, has been pictured shaking hands with the Brazilian football legend Ronaldinho over a lucrative branding partnership.

Elsewhere, he can be seen collecting industry awards, or offering “visionary” insights to interviewers. There is only one hurdle blocking Markou’s ascent to the very top of his trade: he does not exist.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 01:46

In today’s newsletter: As conflict engulfs Iran, shifting ​global alliances and soaring energy prices are reshaping ​the existing power balances​ that could redefine the next stage of international security

Good morning. So far, there is only one clear winner from the war in Iran: Russia. Before the US and Israel attacked Tehran in late February, Moscow was preparing deep budget cuts to education and healthcare funding to pay for its invasion of Ukraine, which has now entered its fifth year.

In just over a month of the fighting in Iran, Vladimir Putin’s Russia has experienced a dramatic reversal in fortunes. The global oil price has shot up from a prewar average of $72 to well over $100 per barrel, providing a financial boost of multi-billions for Moscow that shows little sign of ending.

Middle East | Donald Trump has launched a tirade against European countries that refused to join his war against Iran, calling out the UK and France.

Military | The UK is sending more military support to the Gulf, taking the total deployment to 1,000 troops.

NHS England | Some medicines could run out in weeks or even days, NHS England head warns, after supply line shocks.

UK politics | Nigel Farage to ‘steer well clear’ of UK CPAC event in July being led by the short-lived former prime minister Liz Truss.

UK news | King Charles’s state visit to US to go ahead in late April despite Iran war concerns.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 01:32

Here's where the self-driving company operates and where it's headed soon.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 01:05

South Korea will delay the shutdown of coal-fired plants, while the Philippines also plans to boost the output of its coal-burning plants

Governments across Asia are ramping up their use of coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, as they try to cover huge energy shortfalls triggered by the US-Israel war on Iran.

The move has triggered warnings from climate experts who point to coal’s devastating environmental impact, and say the energy crisis should be a wake up call for governments to invest in renewables, which can offer a more stable supply that is not exposed to price shocks.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 00:12

President Trump is planning to deliver a prime-time address Wednesday night to "provide an important update on Iran," the White House said, as the president faces critical decisions in the monthlong war.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 00:00

Content creators love the built-in camera; sceptics call them ‘pervert glasses’. Do we really need any more hi-tech wearables, even with a voice assistant that sounds like Judi Dench?

Lately, I’ve been hearing Judi Dench’s voice in my head. She tells me tomorrow’s forecast, when to turn right, that there’s been another message in my group chat. Day or night, Dame Judi is eager to assist. When I ask the eight-time Academy Award nominee what I’m looking at, she answers: a residential area, a person in a pub, daffodils. “They are a bright yellow colour and are often associated with spring.”

This isn’t a delusion. This is, apparently, progress. I am test-driving Meta’s smartglasses and Dench voices its integrated AI assistant: “Here to chat, answer questions, create images and provide advice and inspiration,” said “Judi” when I selected her over the actors John Cena and Kristen Bell. “Shall we begin?”

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 00:00

Why the future of science might be Chinese.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 00:00

The Iran war will accelerate the region’s economic transformation.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-04-01 00:00

A war’s unintended consequences—for Iran, the Middle East, and the global order.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Russia is going to further clamp down Virtual Private Networks (VPNs), which are used by millions of Russians to get around internet controls and censorship, Russia's digital minister said. In what has been cast by diplomats as Russia's "great crackdown," the authorities have repeatedly blocked mobile internet and jammed major messenger services while giving sweeping powers to cut off mass communications. "The task is reduce VPN usage," Digital Minister Maksut Shadayev said on state-backed messenger MAX late on Monday, adding that his ministry was trying to impose the limits with minimal impact on users. He said decisions had been taken to restrict access to a number of unidentified foreign platforms without giving details.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 23:23

A rescue mission involving volunteer helicopter crew and public donations ended in joy after Molly was located and brought home

A spot of furry black and white appears among the jagged rocks of New Zealand’s alpine backcountry. It is Molly the border collie, sitting near the foot of a waterfall where she had been separated from her owner one week earlier.

Molly was rescued on Tuesday after an avalanche of donations from the public funded a volunteer team made up of former helicopter pilots and crew to mount a search in the wilderness.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 22:54
Anyone else having clearance issue after VRH install? (Goat Tire)

Installed the Land + Surf VRH and lost my fender but everything I put there rubs on the tire including the original fender delete. Did this happen to anyone else and is there a solution? I even shaved it down with a Sawzall but still rubbing, any advice is appreciated! 🙏

submitted by /u/CalmDirection8
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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 22:10

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for April 1.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 22:10

The AI company blames the leak on human error, but says no customer data was released.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 22:06

“No punishment. No investigation,” the Pentagon chief wrote on social media hours after military officials announced they had grounded the pilots involved.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 22:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for April 1, No. 759.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-03-31 21:59

Critics say ‘election integrity’ plan to compile national voter list is unconstitutional and will be blocked by the courts

Donald Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order seeking to restrict mail-in voting and compile a national voter list in a move that is unprecedented and probably unconstitutional.

The order directs the administration to establish a federal list of confirmed citizens that can legally vote in each state, and orders the postal service to send mail-in ballots only to those on the list. During a press conference at the White House, Trump said the administration would like to require voter ID and proof of citizenship, and repeated falsehoods about mail-in voting.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:56

This live blog is now closed.

Donald Trump confirmed that King Charles and Queen Camilla, will travel to the US for a state visit from 27 to 30 April.

The president said that the trip will include a banquet dinner at the White House on 28 April. “I look forward to spending time with the King, whom I greatly respect. It will be TERRIFIC!,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:43

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for April 1 #1025

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-03-31 21:31

Lewis’s son Avi Lewis was elected leader of progressive New Democratic party a day before his father’s death

Stephen Lewis, the Canadian diplomat, politician and human rights advocate, who spent decades tirelessly working to focus global attention on the HIV/Aids epidemic, has died of cancer.

Lewis, who served as the Canadian ambassador to the United Nations, as well as the head of Ontario’s New Democratic party (NDP), was 88.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:16

Announcement part of controversial shakeup described by critics as administration attack on ‘science and scientists’

The Trump administration will move the US Forest Service headquarters from Washington DC to Salt Lake City and shut down its regional offices, the agriculture department has announced. The announcement sets in motion a controversial reorganization for the country’s second-largest federal land management agency that Trump officials have planned since last year.

The move, which the USDA touted as a “commonsense approach”, recalls the first Trump administration’s chaotic attempt to relocate the Bureau of Land Management from Washington DC to Colorado, first announced in 2019. The agency lost nearly 90% of its Washington-based staff, who declined to move – only for the BLM to return toWashington after Joe Biden took office.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:13

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for April 1, No. 555.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:11

A federal judge directed the Trump administration to restore the legal status of migrants allowed into the U.S. under a now-defunct Biden administration program for asylum-seekers who arrived at the southern border.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:07
  • Christian Pulisic struggles in more attacking role

  • Francisco Trincão opens scoring in first half

  • US play Germany, Senegal before World Cup opener

The US men’s national team met Portugal at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on Tuesday evening having spent the days leading up to the match preaching about intensity. Following a 5-2 drubbing at the hands of Belgium on the weekend, players and coaches alike stressed the importance of showing well against Portugal, sixth in Fifa’s world rankings.

Instead, the US closed this window with another flat performance, undone by a talented Portuguese side that easily unlocked the US in front of a sellout crowd of 72,297. The 2-0 loss was the USMNT’s eighth consecutive defeat at the hands of a European opponent, a stretch that’s seen them outscored 22-6.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:06

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for April 1, No. 1,747.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:00

Trump taunts allies to ‘go get your own oil’ as some nations dig in heels to oppose conflict and global destabilization – key US politics stories from Tuesday 31 March at a glance

Donald Trump launched a fresh tirade Tuesday against European countries that refused to join his war against Iran, calling out the UK and France, as transatlantic relations soured from the spiralling conflict that has wreaked havoc on the global economy.

On his Truth Social website, the US president told governments worried about fuel prices to “go get your own oil” by force from the Gulf, comments that sent oil prices even higher.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 21:00

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 20:23

They may look the same, but when a new one goes missing, you'll notice a difference in how much easier it is to locate.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-03-31 20:14

March 31, 2026 — Bringing researchers to the state of the art is crucial to the use of AI for science research, and this summer, that’s exactly what the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), and collaborating institutions are doing.

Deep Learning for Science School 2025

They’ll host the 2026 Deep Learning for Science (DL4SCI) Summer School, a five-day intensive program assembling researchers and engineers to explore the latest advances in deep learning and AI. Hosted at Berkeley Lab from July 20–24, the 2026 iteration will emphasize foundation models, reasoning, and agentic AI for scientific discovery. The deadline to apply is April 10.

“Since we started this event in 2019, we’ve seen an explosion in the sophistication of deep learning and AI approaches used in science,” said Wahid Bhimji, Division Deputy for AI and Science at NERSC and a co-organizer of the event. “It remains our focus to bring bleeding-edge techniques from practitioners in industry, academia, and labs to the wider fundamental science community.”

Built around in-depth lectures, research talks, and hands-on tutorials teaching emerging approaches to foundation models for science, the program will span the end-to-end lifecycle – data, training at scale, adaptation, and evaluation – along with sessions on reasoning-centric workflows and agentic systems. Students can expect a blend of theory, practical application, and networking opportunities to bolster their understanding and prepare to bring what they’ve learned into their work.

It’s this range of learning experiences that makes DL4SCI a valuable tool for developing an AI-conversant workforce, according to organizers. And because the program is tailored to issues and skills at the forefront of AI as it evolves, each iteration offers unique opportunities.

“DL4SCI is a week packed with insights, hands-on learning, and opportunities to connect with peers and experts, with lectures, talks, and tutorials from experts at the forefront of AI,” said Ben Erichson, a researcher in the Berkeley Lab Scientific Data Division and a co-organizer of the event.

But summer school isn’t just about gaining knowledge; it’s also about people. Summer School will also facilitate networking and collaboration through breakout sessions, group activities, and optional poster sessions. These forums will allow participants to engage directly with instructors and peers, fostering vibrant discussions on how current research trends—particularly in foundation models, reasoning, and agents—can be leveraged in scientific domains. By the end of the program, attendees will be equipped with the tools and expertise necessary to implement, evaluate, and scale modern AI solutions in their research.

“I love meeting participants who are applying AI to so many exciting science problems,” he said. “So I can’t wait for this year’s event!”

About Computing Sciences at Berkeley Lab

High performance computing plays a critical role in scientific discovery. Researchers increasingly rely on advances in computer science, mathematics, computational science, data science, and large-scale computing and networking to increase our understanding of ourselves, our planet, and our universe. Berkeley Lab’s Computing Sciences Area researches, develops, and deploys new foundations, tools, and technologies to meet these needs and to advance research across a broad range of scientific disciplines.


Source: Elizabeth Ball, Berkeley Lab

The post Berkeley Lab: DL4SCI 2026 to Spotlight Discovery Through Agentic AI, Foundation Models appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 20:12

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 20:06

Many countries in Europe have called the conflict illegal, with some blocking Israeli and US planes from moving weapons through their airspace

Donald Trump has launched a tirade against European countries that refused to join his war against Iran, calling out the UK and France, as transatlantic relations soured from the spiralling conflict that has wreaked havoc on the global economy.

On his Truth Social website, the US president told governments worried about fuel prices to “go get your own oil” by force from the Gulf, comments that sent oil prices even higher.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-04-01 11:23

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon shares his thinking on capitalism, AI, prediction markets and more in an interview with "CBS Evening News" anchor Tony Dokoupil.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:53

⚽️ US kick off v Portugal at 7pm ET in Atlanta, Georgia
⚽️ Final friendly before 2026 World Cup roster is named
⚽️ Questions? Thoughts? Email Alexander here
⚽️ Last time out: US 2-5 Belgium | Another lowlands debacle

From Jeff Rueter: It’s tough to resist rampant speculation on the back of this final lineup before Pochettino picks his squad. Morris and Berhalter, former academy teammates in Columbus, will be desperate to show the requisite bite and midfield moderation to make their cases for World Cup inclusion. Clearly there’s some desperation to get Pulisic back among the goals if he’s serving as a nominal line-leader.

US fans ought to hope Alex Freeman puts in a shift that keeps him in the lineup. Whether he’s right-most of three center-backs or a right back (or wing back), he’s been a staple of the team’s best performances in recent windows.

Via Pablo Iglesias Maurer: It’s about an hour before kickoff and Mercedes-Benz Stadium is already filling in quite a bit. One thing was made abundantly clear on the walk over here – this will be a much taller task for the US in terms of the crowd, which is 50/50 rooting interests at best and perhaps even pro-Portugal. Belgian fans were hard to come by on Saturday, when the US got thrashed anyways.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:48

US president reiterates that responsibility for reopening the vital oil and gas hub rests on the countries who rely on it

Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry has said it has intercepted and destroyed ten drones over the past hours, and eight missiles launched towards the Riyadh area and the country’s eastern region.

Early this morning Kuwait said its air defences were responding to hostile missile and drone attacks. Neither Saudi Arabia nor Kuwait said where the drones or missiles came from.

Iran attacked and set ablaze a fully loaded crude oil tanker off Dubai. Local authorities later said response teams contained the incident with no oil leakage and that no injuries had been reported

Donald Trump warned that the US would obliterate Iran’s energy plants and oil wells if it did not open the strait of Hormuz.

The Israeli military said four soldiers had been killed in combat in southern Lebanon, where its forces are clashing with Iran-backed Hezbollah.

Two giant Chinese container ships have sailed through the strait of Hormuz on their second attempt to leave the Gulf after turning back on Friday, ship-tracking data shows. The transit signals a diplomatic breakthrough between Beijing and Tehran as Iran widens its list of approved nations for transiting the vital route, Lloyd’s List reported.

Indonesia’s foreign minister called for an emergency UN security council meeting and a thorough investigation” into a “heinous attack” after three UN peacekeepers from Indonesia were killed in southern Lebanon.

Blasts were heard in Tehran and power cuts hit some areas of the capital, Iranian media reported on Tuesday. Israel earlier carried out missile strikes on what it called military infrastructure in Tehran and infrastructure used by Hezbollah in Beirut.

Japan and Indonesia agreed to step up coordination on energy security, Japanese PM Sanae Takaichi said on Tuesday.

Two Iranian missile launches targeted central Israel, Israeli media reported, with the emergency service saying it had not received reports of any injuries.

Turkey reported a ballistic missile launched from Iran had entered Turkish airspace before being shot down by Nato air and missile defences.

An earlier summary of key developments is here.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 19:45

Tiger Woods announced Tuesday that he's "stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment" after pleading not guilty​ to charges including driving under the influence.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:40

White House officials have been trying to drum up new strategies to prevent a GOP wipeout in the midterm elections.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:38
  • Woods pleads not guilty and demands jury trial

  • Deputies cite signs of impairment in affidavit

  • Hydrocodone pills found in pocket after arrest

Tiger Woods said he will step away from golf to seek treatment and focus on his health after his arrest on suspicion of driving under the influence after a rollover crash near his Florida home.

“I know and understand the seriousness of the situation I find myself in today,” Woods said in a statement posted on X. “I am stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health. This is necessary in order for me to prioritize my well-being and work toward lasting recovery.”

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:37

Kid Rock posted videos of the helicopters hovering by his Nashville home on social media over the weekend. The Army later confirmed the helicopters were on a training mission.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:35

Just hours earlier, an Army spokesperson said the crew had been suspended from flying while the Army conducts a formal investigation into why the Apache helicopters flew near Kid Rock's Nashville house.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:30

Pentagon chief’s remarks come after US army said crews suspended amid investigation into incident in Tennessee

Defense secretary Pete Hegseth said the crews of two US army AH-64 Apache helicopters that hovered next to the singer Kid Rock’s swimming pool while he clapped and saluted on Saturday are no longer suspended.

“No punishment. No investigation,” Hegseth wrote on social media. “Carry on, patriots.”

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:21

President Trump has long wanted to place additional restrictions on mail-in voting, which he has called "mail-in cheating."

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:05

The new artwork supports theories that the game's next hero will be Frankie, a member of Ashe's Deadlock Gang.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:01

Sector cites ‘billions of pounds in additional costs’ from new business rates and increase in minimum wage thresholds

Two-thirds of hospitality businesses are planning to cut jobs as a result of “suffocating” costs imposed by government, as new business rates and higher wage bills come into force.

Many pubs, restaurants and hotel companies will see their costs increase significantly from 1 April after Rachel Reeves’s changes to business rates and an increase in minimum wage thresholds announced at the chancellor’s November budget.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:01

UK researcher uses maths to explain seeming inevitability of phenomenon experienced by many motorists

It is a situation experienced by many motorists: one driver overtakes another only to find the slower car is right behind them when they reach a red light. Now a researcher has used mathematics to reveal why the situation feels inevitable.

Dr Conor Boland from Dublin City University has called his work “The Voorhees law of traffic”.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:00

Policymakers should address financial barriers that hinder young people from starting families, says thinktank

Politicians hoping to persuade young people in the UK to have more children should prioritise tackling housing affordability, according to research by the Resolution Foundation thinktank.

There has been growing concern in recent years about Britain’s declining birthrate, given the long-term fiscal pressures of supporting an ageing population.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:00

The home affairs select committee said Prevent cannot deal with the modern challenges of fighting extremism

The government’s anti-terrorism programme, Prevent, is “outdated and inadequately prepared” to deal with modern challenges such as extremists adhering to no particular ideology, an influential cross-party group of MPs has concluded.

The home affairs select committee has called for a reset to the approach for dealing with fast-evolving online subcultures promoting antisemitism, anti-Muslim hostility, misogyny and violence, as well as an over-representation of neurodiverse people and those with mental health conditions.

A growing prevalence of under-18s being drawn into extremism.

Neurodiverse individuals, particularly those with Autistic Spectrum Disorder, being over-represented among referrals to the programme.

Fluid or hybrid ideological beliefs among those referred and a shift toward nihilistic violence.

Influencers and creative tools such as memes, humour and coded messaging being used to spread extremist content in a way that is accessible and appealing.

Generative AI being used to produce large volumes of tailored content and disinformation.

An increase in hate crimes and incidents in the UK that are linked to anti-blasphemy activism, anti-Israel extremism, anti-Muslim hostility and eco-extremism.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:00

The new rules are the first major change to the country’s laws governing child-rearing in more than a century

Divorced couples in Japan will be able to negotiate joint custody of their children from Wednesday, in the first major change to the country’s laws governing child-rearing in more than a century.

Previously, Japan’s Civil Code required couples to decide which parent would take custody of their children when they divorce.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 19:00

Polestar and Volvo are ending Polestar 3 production in Chengdu, China, and consolidating all output of the electric SUV at Volvo's plant in South Carolina. "The move to consolidate global Polestar 3 production in Charleston help[s] generate efficiencies for both companies, whilst also underscoring our confidence in the plant and the role it plays in our manufacturing footprint," said Hakan Samuelsson, chief executive of Volvo Cars. "The U.S. is a very important market for Volvo Cars, both to support our growth ambitions as well as a strategic production site to meet regional and export demands." Ars Technica reports: Volvo had a challenging 2025, with sales falling by 7 percent. Meanwhile, Polestar, which was spun out from the Swedish OEM's performance arm into a standalone startup in 2017, had a rather good 2025, seeing a 34 percent increase in sales. So increasing the proportion of Polestar 3s to come out of South Carolina seems sensible. And as we learned last September, the midsize electric Volvo EX60 will also go into production at the South Carolina site later this year, and then we'll see a still-unnamed hybrid Volvo in 2030. The two companies also announced today that Volvo agreed to extend part of a shareholder loan it made to Polestar and will convert the rest into Polestar shares. Polestar will still owe Volvo $661 million, due at the end of 2031, and another $274 million will become Polestar stock now, with a further $65 million in the second quarter of the year. Since December, Polestar has also raised $1 billion through three equity financing investments.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:59

Looking for a solution to charge my XRC on trails with no power outlets

Would something like this work? https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0FFZJFBYH/ref=ox_sc_act_image_1?smid=AKSIB48CQUPXZ&psc=1

Also would love to know what other people are using/what's the best solution is

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

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:57

US president demolished East Wing of White House last year to make way for 90,000-sq-ft project

A US judge has halted the construction of Donald Trump’s $400m White House ballroom.

The US president demolished the historic East Wing of the White House last year to make way for the project.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:57

So, I’ve been having some nosedive issues on my Fungineers X7 (Thor 300, only about 35 miles lifetime). It seems to only happen when I don’t have “Disable Moving Faults” on, which led me to think I have a crap foot sensor (Stompies v3… I think). Most of the time, I seem to experience these nosedives when I’m riding a mellow trail. I never go too aggressively, typically staying at 10 mph as this board has me a little spooked. I tend to get a WheelSlip warning around the same time as sensor disengagements, which looks like a chicken-or-egg problem. Today, while riding around to build my confidence on the board a bit more with Disable Moving Faults on, I encountered a “stuck” IMU. I took a screenshot of what it looked like on the AppUI of the VESC Tool. I stopped throughout my ride to check for any weird warnings or errors that might help diagnose these nosedives, and on the last stop, the board wouldn’t reengage. Regardless of how I moved the board around, the orientation on the AppUI page never changed.

I’ve already run through the IMU recalibration in Float Hub, which seems to have helped, but could this issue be behind some of my nosedives? What’s the likelihood of a bad IMU? Anyone else experiencing this with the Thor 300?

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:51

Looks like Google's Fitbit and Pixel smartwatches might be getting a new sibling.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 18:47

Milpitas approves measure to distribute smart doorbells and says residents can upload footage to police database

A Silicon Valley city will offer its residents free wireless doorbells equipped with cameras to help police collect video evidence.

The city council of Milpitas, a suburb north of San Jose, California, recently approved $60,000 to provide these devices on a one-camera-per-household, first-come, first-served basis, as was first reported by Milpitas Beat and confirmed by the Guardian.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:35

President has falsely claimed ‘legendary’ fraud for limiting mail-in ballots and himself voted by mail last week

Donald Trump signed an executive order directing his administration to compile a national voter file and to restrict the use of mail-in ballots, an unprecedented move that is probably unconstitutional.

The executive order directs the Department of Homeland Security to work with the Social Security Administration to compile a list of verified US citizens who can vote in every state. It also directs the United States Postal Service (USPS) to begin rule-making on a process that would require states to notify the agency of voters who intend to receive a mail-in ballot and prohibit them from receiving one unless they are on a USPS-approved list of eligible voters.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:29

Iraq’s interior ministry said it had arrested one suspect, seized a car and was looking for accomplices.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:23

The latest Ray-Ban and Oakley Meta updates introduce hands-free nutrition logging and real-time translation, moving the smart glasses closer to the "continuous assistant" Meta promised.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:22

There's a Spicy Saja McMuffin, Derpy McFlurry, Ramyeon McShaker fries and two new dipping sauces -- one in a bright purple.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:16

Trump administration claims list is part of an EEOC investigation into antisemitic discrimination at university

A federal judge on Tuesday ordered the University of Pennsylvania to hand over records about Jewish employees on campus to a federal agency as part of an investigation into antisemitic discrimination but said it did not have to reveal any employee’s affiliation with a specific group.

US district judge Gerald Pappert said employees can refuse to take part in the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) investigation but the agency “needs the opportunity to talk to them directly to learn if they have evidence of discrimination”.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 18:16

A federal judge has ordered Penn to hand over records about Jewish employees on campus to a federal agency as part of an investigation into antisemitic discrimination.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 18:00

bobthesungeek76036 shares a report from the Register: Oracle laid off thousands of employees on Tuesday as it ramps spending on AI infrastructure projects internally and with major technology partners. The layoffs were carried out via email, according to copies of the message viewed by Business Insider. The email told affected workers they would be terminated immediately and to provide a personal email for follow-up. The cuts echo a TD Cowen forecast earlier this year, when the investment bank questioned how Oracle would finance its expanding AI datacenter buildout and suggested headcount reductions could reach 20,000 to 30,000. It is not clear how many employees were notified on Tuesday, but one screenshot that purports to show the number of internal Slack users showed a drop of 10,000 overnight. [...] Oracle employs about 162,000 people, with 58,000 of those in the US and approximately 104,000 internationally. If the rumored cuts of 30,000 are correct, it would amount to 18 percent of the company's workforce. According to posts from Oracle workers on LinkedIn, the cuts were spread through multiple departments around the country, with employees in Kansas, Tennessee, and Texas taking to social media to say they were among those chopped. "This news didn't seem to affect stock price," adds bobthesungeek76036. "ORCL is up 6% for the day."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:59

The ban applies only to the sale of new routers manufactured outside the US. Americans with existing foreign-made routers can continue to use them.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:57

The JPMorgan Chase CEO said the bank may one day introduce prediction market features, but said "there's a bunch of stuff we won't do" in that space.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:55

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon thinks AI will shorten the work week and lead to medical breakthroughs, while acknowledging the technology's potential impact on the nation's workforce.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 17:55

Company said it achieved valuation of $852bn, mentioning in a blogpost it generates $2bn a month in revenue

OpenAI announced on Tuesday it had closed a fundraising round of $122bn and achieved a valuation of $852bn. The funding cements the ChatGPT maker as one of the most highly valued private companies in the world.

The artificial intelligence firm received multibillion-dollar investments from companies including Amazon, Nvidia and SoftBank, which committed $110bn, according to the Wall Street Journal. OpenAI also allowed a select group of individual investors to contribute about $3bn. The funding round ranks among the highest-ever in Silicon Valley. OpenAI said last month it was expecting to raise $110bn in funding, but upped that figure in its latest announcement.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:47

The Swiss company says its new Workspace, like its Unlimited suite, gives users more control over their privacy and security.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:42

The cute blue-and-white mascot made his debut during the MacBook Neo launch, but he's back in more TikTok videos. Long live "Lil Finder Guy"!

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 17:39

Citing the first amendment, judge says president’s executive order is unlawful and unenforceable

Citing the first amendment, a federal judge on Tuesday agreed to permanently block the Trump administration from implementing a presidential directive to end federal funding for National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), two media entities that the White House has said are counterproductive to American priorities.

The operational impact of US district judge Randolph Moss’s decision was not immediately clear – both because it will probably be appealed and because too much damage to the public-broadcasting system has already been done, both by the president and Congress.

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2026-04-01 12:04
2026-03-31 17:32

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 speaks to Hegseth at a roundtable event at the Tennessee Air National Guard Base on March 23. Official White House photo by Molly Riley.

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.”


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 Trump Links Biden’s Ukraine Aid to Pentagon’s Iran War Funding Request appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:29

Americans have made clear to politicians that rising prices are a major concern. But has milk escaped inflationary pressure? That’s what a New York congressional candidate recently said.

Blake Gendebien is a farmer seeking the Democratic nomination in New York’s 21st Congressional District, which will come open because Republican Rep. Elise Stefanik is retiring. 

In a Jan. 30 X post, Gendebien wrote that milk prices "currently are no higher than they were in 1980’s, even as fuel, feed, and equipment costs keep climbing."

A spokesperson for Gendebien’s office, Georgia Greenleaf, pointed PolitiFact New York to federal price data. We looked at the numbers and found that Gendebien had a point, although the comparison needs some explanation.

The federal government’s Bureau of Labor Statistics has tracked the price of milk since January 1980. Until June 1995, it measured the price per half gallon. Since July 1995, it has measured the price per gallon. To make the data series comparable over the full period, we multiplied the half-gallon prices from January 1980 to June 1995 by two and kept the subsequent data the same, at one gallon. (This isn’t a perfect adjustment, since purchasing larger quantities of an item often leads to a bit of a price break, but it’s a reasonable estimate.)

Next, we divided each month’s per-gallon milk price by the January 1980 price to show how much it had risen from that baseline.

This calculation showed that the price of milk has roughly doubled from $2.03 to $4.03 per gallon since January 1980.

So if you look at the price of milk in isolation, it hasn’t stayed constant since the 1980s. But if you compare the rise in the price of milk to overall consumer price inflation — the most reasonable way of measuring price changes over a 46-year period — milk has risen in price by far less than other items have.

From January 1980 to February 2026, overall consumer prices have more than quadrupled. That’s about twice as fast as milk prices have risen since January 1980.

Alan Bjerga, National Milk Producers Federation executive vice president of communications and industry relations, agreed that today’s prices are "lower in real dollars" — that is, accounting for inflation.

The main reason is greater efficiency at the farm level, experts said. According to the Council on Dairy Cattle Breeding, U.S. dairy cattle produced four times as much milk per cow in 2021 as in 1945, and twice as much as in 1970. This increase stems from improvements in genetic selection and herd management, the council found.

Because the average cow produces much more milk in 2026, Bjerga said, the average farmer has much more milk to sell, and with greater supply comes lower prices.

"It’s fair to say that nominal farm-level milk prices have not increased at the US national rate of inflation," said Alex White, a Virginia Tech agricultural economics and management instructor.

Our ruling

Gendebien said milk prices "currently are no higher than they were in 1980’s."

That’s not the case using nominal dollars — but few products stay the same in price over more than a four-decade span. When comparing prices over a period that long, economists typically factor in overall consumer price inflation.

Using that method, milk has seen price increases far below that of overall consumer prices. Milk prices have roughly doubled since January 1980, compared to a rough quadrupling for consumer prices overall. In that context, it’s reasonable to say that milk prices are no higher than they were in the 1980s.

The statement is accurate but needs additional information, so we rate it Mostly True.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:25

When it comes to the economy, President Donald Trump often celebrates how many people are working.

"More Americans are working today than at any time in the history of our country," Trump said at a Saudi investment conference in Florida on March 27.

Trump has made this case in at least four previous speeches this year

In January, U.S. employment hit an all time high. But raw employment numbers are driven by overall population growth, so any president can claim an all-time high during their tenure.

A more telling statistic about employment trends during Trump’s second term is that the past year-plus has seen the weakest job creation record in 16 years.

Employment, population growth and participation rates

For nearly nine decades, nonfarm employment — the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics’ standard employment measure — has risen steadily. It has dipped during recessions, but within a couple of years, the statistic returns to its previous peak and then exceeds it, until the next recession.

In February, 158.5 million Americans were working, according to the bureau. That was down slightly from the 158.6 million people working in January. The January total is the highest ever. 

To support Trump’s statement, the White House pointed us to a different statistic: the labor force participation rate for prime-age workers, people ages 25 to 54. This metric shows what percentage of a given population is either working or looking for work; using a 25-to-54 age range filters out any skew from the baby boomers who are retiring in large numbers every month.

Like nonfarm employment, the labor force participation rate for prime-age workers isn’t the highest ever, but it’s close. In February, 83.9% of prime-age workers were working or looking for work; the all-time high was 84.6% for a month in 1999.

"With labor force participation for prime-age Americans at a 25-year high, thanks to this administration’s pro-growth agenda, that puts American workers first," White House spokesperson Kush Desai said. "More Americans than ever before are working or coming off the sidelines to look for work."

Because the labor force participation rate counts both workers and people who are looking for work, this isn’t the most direct way of testing Trump’s statement about people with jobs. A more direct way is through a third statistic: the employment-population ratio for prime-age workers. This metric divides the number of workers by that age group’s population.

This statistic is also close to an all-time high. In February, 80.7% of prime-age workers were employed; the all-time record was 81.9% in early 2000. It has largely stalled since early 2023, under both Trump and his predecessor, President Joe Biden.

Bottom line: Three employment metrics show relatively high levels and rates of employment today, but none is currently at a historic record.

Other metrics show weak employment in Trump’s second term

Other federal data undercuts the notion that the U.S. job market is strong. Monthly employment changes during Trump’s second term are more negative than they were during other recent presidencies, including his initial term.

In the fall of 2010, the recovery from the 2007-09 Great Recession began to heat up. And nearly every month for the next 14 years — from October 2010 to December 2024 — jobs increased month over month, not including three months during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. 

This represented most of Barack Obama’s presidency, all of Trump’s first term (minus the three pandemic months), and all of Biden’s.

By contrast, since Trump’s second term began in January 2025, the government has released data for 14 months — and six of them have seen monthly job losses. 

Another way to slice the data is to look at the average job gains for each president. For a fair comparison, we did not calculate periods of recession, when jobs plummet, or immediate recoveries, when jobs spike.

We looked at four periods: Obama’s third and fourth year, Obama’s second term, Trump’s prepandemic period and Biden’s final three years, which were largely after the pandemic. Each period saw an average monthly employment increase of between 176,000 and 236,000.

Trump’s second term is a distinct outlier: The average monthly gain has been less than 11,000.

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of the center-right American Action Forum, said the employment picture is even worse than that, because only one sector — health care — has been keeping the second-term Trump employment figures above water.

"We have a golden age for the home health aide, but most people are working in industries that are shrinking," Holtz-Eakin said. "If you’re thinking about the average worker, it’s not good." 

Our ruling

Trump said, "More Americans are working today than at any time in the history of our country."

The employment peak came in January 2026, though it dropped the following month. However, population growth primarily shapes this metric, so economists do not consider it a meaningful statistic.

Two other statistics — the labor force participation rate and the employment-population ratio — are relatively high, but not at their all-time highs.

A more relevant yardstick shows Trump’s second term underperforming his predecessors Obama, Biden and himself from his first term. After 14 years of almost uninterrupted monthly job gains, almost half of Trump’s months in office have seen job losses. 

The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details or takes things out of context. We rate it Half True.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:25

Here's what to know about the Amazon Live FAST channel on the streaming service.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:19

The exhibit promises an interactive experience with some of Apple's greatest products.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:10

It's not every day you can save over $500 on a portable power station and solar panel combo, but you'll want to act quickly before the sale ends tonight.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:05

If you're on an older AT&T wireless plan, your price is going up in April. But by how much?

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:03

Peacock's got the goods to make your movie night pop.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:01

Class-action suit against FBI and justice department alleges agents were wrongfully terminated for investigating Trump

Three former FBI agents filed a class-action lawsuit against the bureau and justice department on Tuesday, along with the FBI director, Kash Patel, and attorney general, Pam Bondi, claiming they had been wrongfully terminated for working on the criminal cases related to Donald Trump.

The agents – Jamie Garman, Blaire Toleman and Michelle Ball – all worked on a public corruption squad in the FBI’s Washington field office and worked on investigations of Trump. All three were abruptly fired from the FBI last year.

Continue reading...

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 17:00

A top EU official is urging Europeans to work from home, drive less, and cut air travel as the bloc braces for a prolonged energy crisis triggered by the Gulf conflict. The European Commission is also pushing member states to accelerate renewables and other energy-security measures as oil and gas disruptions continue. Politico reports: In a speech with echoes of the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, EU energy chief Dan Jorgensen said Europe was facing a "very serious situation" with no clear end in sight. "Even if ... peace is here tomorrow, still we will not go back to normal in the foreseeable future," he said, following an extraordinary meeting of the EU's 27 energy ministers on Tuesday to discuss the crisis. "The more you can do to save oil, especially diesel, especially jet fuel, the better we are off," Jorgensen said, confirming an earlier report by POLITICO that Brussels wanted Europeans to travel less. He urged member countries to follow the advice of the International Energy Agency, which he said included "work from home where possible, reduce highway speed limits by ten kilometers [an hour], encourage public transport, alternate private car access ... increase car sharing and adopt efficient driving practices." Longer term, he urged EU countries to double down on building more renewables, saying "this must be the time we finally turn the tide and truly become energy independent."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 16:51

The 15-inch M4 MacBook Air has dropped to just $999, but time's ticking to get yours.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 16:48

Nicknamed the "God Squad" by groups who say it can decide a species' fate, the government's Endangered Species Committee exempted oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico from the Endangered Species Act.

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-03-31 16:43

In 2025, NextSilicon authored a winning proposal alongside a consortium of leading research and technology organizations to establish the ODISSEE project (Online Data Intensive Solutions for Science in the Exabytes Era). This European Union-funded initiative focuses on processing and analyzing the massive volumes of data generated by leading research infrastructures, such as high-energy physics at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider beauty (LHCb) and radio astronomy at the SKA Observatory (SKAO). These facilities expect to produce data at the exabyte scale, requiring a new generation of computing technologies that go well beyond traditional architectures.

The scale of the challenge is staggering. CERN’s LHC already generates approximately one petabyte of raw collision data per second during operation, with only a fraction stored for analysis after real-time filtering. Once operational, SKAO will handle two petabytes of raw data each second. Current systems cannot keep pace with these volumes and scaling them further via conventional means imposes significant energy constraints, rendering brute-force approaches impractical.

As a result, traditional computing architectures – like those designed around predictable workloads and static data pipelines – struggle to keep pace with these volumes. ODISSEE aims to address this gap by developing flexible, data-centric computing approaches that can more easily adapt to the irregular burst-driven nature of scientific data.

The author visiting CERN in Switzerland (Image courtesy Ilan Tayari)

Supported by the EU’s Horizon Europe program, ODISSEE unites leading research institutions, universities, and technology companies across Europe to develop next-generation data-intensive computing solutions that are scalable, energy-efficient, and adaptable to various scientific fields. The consortium includes partners across multiple countries, including national research organizations (CERN, SKAO, CNRS, and SURF), leading universities (EPFL, ETH Zurich), and other technology companies (SiPearl, Energy Aware Solutions).

This diversity in partners reflects the project’s core premise: no single institution or vendor can solve the exabyte challenge alone. The project also reflects Europe’s increasing focus on HPC and AI sovereignty, strengthening the continent’s ability to build strategic computing capabilities while remaining an active participant in the global research community.

Exploring Data Challenges Beneath CERN

Recently, I attended the ODISSEE Annual Consortium Meeting at CERN along with my colleague Oded Margalit, NextSilicon’s Head Scientist. Over the three-day event, we met with project partners to review technical progress and strengthen collaboration across the consortium.

ODISSEE has now entered its second of three years. In the first year, the consortium focused heavily on coordination and technical preparation, aligning research goals across scientific domains and establishing the baseline infrastructure needed for integration work ahead. NextSilicon contributed two servers equipped with four Maverick-2 accelerators and collaborated with partners to train researchers on new approaches to the project’s scientific computing challenges. Other partners made similar contributions across software tooling, networking, and workload characterization.

 

The first day emphasized the scientific challenges behind the project, including presentations on dark matter research, radio astronomy, and high-energy physics related to the LHC. We touched on the computational challenges researchers face, from raw processing power to data movement across distributed systems to long-term storage of experimental data for later analysis.

The second day focused on technological solutions, with partners showcasing innovations that ranged from performance programming techniques to power optimization and post-exascale computing initiatives. Discussions centered on how emerging hardware architectures, including dataflow and reconfigurable computing approaches, can better address workloads than traditional CPU/GPU/FPGA architectures. Energy efficiency was a consistent theme, reflecting both the practical constraints of exabyte-scale processing and Europe’s broader commitment to sustainable computing.

The day ended with a visit to CERN’s LHCb experiment, one of four detectors positioned along the 27-kilometer ring. We descended 103 meters underground to see firsthand the physical infrastructure generating data for the project. LHCb specializes in studying the differences between matter and antimatter, producing vast datasets that require new approaches to storage, movement, and computation. For our team, it was a powerful reminder that behind every exabyte of data is a scientific question waiting to be answered.

Looking Ahead: 2026 Priorities

As ODISSEE enters its second year, the consortium is shifting from coordination to implementation. Key priorities include demonstrating initial integration results across the project’s target workloads and expanding hands-on engagement with the consortium’s hardware platforms. In June, the project will host a hackathon focused on integrating fast communication with computation, giving researchers from across the consortium direct experience with the tools and approaches under development. The goal is to move beyond benchmarks and begin showing preliminary results on real scientific workflows from both primary use cases.

The consortium is also exploring how emerging open standards, including the RISC-V processor ecosystem, could help create a more flexible and sovereign European hardware stack. The broader European HPC community views open instruction set architectures as critical to future computing systems, and several ODISSEE partners are contributing work in this area.

The annual meeting also created opportunities beyond the formal agenda. During the week, consortium members met with the CERN openlab team to explore potential collaborations in which ODISSEE-developed technologies could contribute to the lab’s broader research goals. Separately, Oded and I met with leaders of the SETI project, led by Andrew Siemion, to discuss co-sponsoring a Ph.D. project at the University of Bordeaux that investigates the use of advanced computing architectures for SETI and transient-signal detection. These cross-disciplinary connections are exactly the kinds of outcomes a project like ODISSEE is designed to enable.

The author (right) and Oded Margalit, NextSilicon’s Head Scientist (Image courtesy Ilan Tayari)

ODISSEE and European HPC Sovereignty

ODISSEE sits at the intersection of scientific discovery, advanced computing, and Europe’s long-term strategic priorities. As the EU increasingly views HPC as critical digital infrastructure, projects like ODISSEE help ensure that Europe remains at the forefront of exascale scientific research.

This project exemplifies a collaborative model where research institutions and technology companies work together to develop sovereign computing capabilities. Rather than only relying on imported hardware and software, initiatives like ODISSEE are uniquely positioned to establish European expertise in areas such as processor architectures, system software, and application optimization.

The project’s second year will be a critical test of whether emerging architectures can deliver when applied to real scientific workloads with demanding performance and efficiency requirements. As ODISSEE progresses toward its 2027 conclusion, the results will help shape Europe’s roadmap for post-exascale scientific computing and offer practical lessons for the global HPC community navigating similar data-intensive challenges.

About the author: Ilan Tayari is co-founder & VP of Architecture at NextSilicon, a chip startup aiming to address the scientific computing market.

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SiPearl Closes €130M Series A to Advance Sovereign European Supercomputing Processors

NextSilicon Says Maverick-2 Delivers 4x Performance-Per-Watt Vs. Blackwell GPU

 

The post How ODISSEE is Preparing Europe for Exabyte-Scale Scientific Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 16:37

The Army is “committed to enforcing standards and holding personnel accountable,” an official said. The flybys were not authorized.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 16:29

Stocks rally after reports suggest Trump might end the war soon, saying ‘we’re not going to be there for too much longer’

Average US fuel prices have exceeded $4 a gallon for the first time in four years, piling pressure on drivers as Donald Trump’s war on Iran continues to boost oil markets.

The nationwide average climbed to almost $4.02 on Tuesday, according to AAA data, capping an extraordinary rise from $2.98 just a month ago. The fuel price last reached this high in August 2022.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 16:16

Coming soon: Two UFC fights, the Masters golf tournament, a Cheech & Chong documentary and more.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 16:14

Northerners may want to stay up late, with their eyes on the skies.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 16:06

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 19:15

Poll of 10,000 teachers also finds ‘overwhelming’ exam anxiety and rising absenteeism linked to poor mental health

Almost half of primary school teachers are seeing pupils with eating disorders “at least occasionally”, rising to four in five at secondary level, according to a survey by the UK’s largest education union.

The findings emerged in a poll of 10,000 teachers in English state schools about pupils’ mental health, which also revealed “overwhelming” exam anxiety in secondaries and dwindling numbers of counsellors to support students.

Continue reading...

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 18:39

A federal judge has temporarily blocked the Trump administration's construction of a 90,000-square-foot ballroom to replace the White House's East Wing,

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-04-01 10:24

American journalist Shelly Kittleson was kidnapped in Baghdad on Tuesday, according to two sources familiar with the matter as well as an Iraqi official.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 19:39

Shortages of helium, a byproduct of natural gas processing, could create problems for semiconductor and medical equipment manufacturers.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 19:52

Forecasters continue to predict an 80% chance of favorable weather on Wednesday for the launch of four astronauts on a flight to the moon.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 20:33

Italy blocked U.S. use of a base, the latest instance of European nations refusing deeper involvement in the war despite U.S. threats of backing away from NATO.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 16:00

Google is rolling out a feature in the U.S. that lets some users change their Gmail address without creating a new account or losing their data. TechCrunch reports: Users who have access to this feature can go to their Google Account settings, navigate to Personal info > Email > Google Account email option. Tap on the "Change Google Account email" button to start the process of changing your username. Users will be able to change their username only once every 12 months. Plus, they won't be able to delete their new email address for that period of time. The company said users' old emails will be preserved, and the old email address will serve as an alternate address for the account. Users will be able to sign in to Google services using both the old and the new addresses. You can learn more via Google's support page.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 15:59

The newest wave of backlash against AI on social media is directed at Bluesky.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:30

The inspector general for the National Archives concluded human error, not political motivations, was to blame for the release of New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill's military records last year.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:26

Though the US is almost certainly not going to have a draft, media commentary and online anxiety have surfaced

The United States is almost certainly not going to have a military draft to fight Iran. That hasn’t stopped the chatter, and anxiety, across the country.

In recent weeks, Donald Trump has ordered a number of marines and army paratroopers to head to the Middle East, gesturing toward a possible ground war to reopen the strait of Hormuz or secure nuclear weapons material. The provocative military activity has led to speculative conversation about what it would take to invade a country twice the population and three times the territory of Iraq.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:19

The long and winding road may lead to Cupertino. Apple will reportedly celebrate 50 years with a little help from one of the Beatles.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:18

Following major gold price changes in March, investors should consider these questions before starting this April.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:15

Luanne James said as a librarian she had an obligation to protect the public’s right to access information

A Tennessee library director has been fired after she refused to relocate more than 100 LGBTQ+-themed children’s titles to the library system’s adult section.

The Rutherford county library board on Monday voted to fire Luanne James following a heated emergency meeting that involved supporters of hers chanting “We stand with Luanne!” while wearing shirts that read “Protect the freedom to read.”

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:01

Luca Cella Walker asked chatbot for best way for someone to kill themself on railway line before his death

A 16-year-old boy killed himself after asking ChatGPT for the “most successful” way to take your own life, an inquest has been told.

Luca Cella Walker, a private school pupil from Yateley, Hampshire, died on 4 May last year.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:01

U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss blocked the Trump administration from enforcing provisions of his executive order that directed federal agencies to cut off funding to NPR and PBS.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 15:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: A global ban on taxing digital streaming and downloads across national borders expired on Monday, after members of the World Trade Organization concluded an annual meeting without agreeing to extend it. U.S. representatives had pushed to extend the ban, which prevents the more than 160 members of the W.T.O. from issuing duties related to e-commerce. But Brazil and Turkey blocked a motion for a longer extension. U.S. representatives excoriated the outcome as further proof of the organization's irrelevance. The W.T.O. provides a forum for trade negotiations and setting rules for global trade. But U.S. officials have long criticized the group for its failure to police unfair trade practices by countries like China. Over the past year, the Trump administration has further abandoned W.T.O. by issuing its own global framework of tariffs instead. [...] Brazil had pushed for a two-year extension of the moratorium on e-commerce duties, while the United States wanted a permanent one. The countries couldn't come to a compromise, but negotiations are set to continue in Geneva this spring. W.T.O. members also failed to reach an agreement on future reforms for the organization. Bernd Lange, the chair of the international trade committee for the European Parliament, wrote in a post on X that "supporters of the multilateral trading system are waking up with a hangover." "We knew that a breakthrough might not materialize, but that doesn't make it any less painful," he wrote, adding that "without an agreement to extend moratorium on digital tariffs, a period of great uncertainty could soon begin for businesses and consumers." Jonathan McHale, the vice president of digital trade at the Computer & Communications Industry Association, called the outcome "deeply disappointing." He said: "For more than two decades, W.T.O. members have recognized that imposing tariffs on electronic transmissions would be counterproductive, but allowed the issue to become a negotiating football."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 14:57

PARIS, March 31, 2026 — Atos Group, a global leader of AI-powered digital transformation, announced today that it has completed the sale of Bull, its Advanced Computing activities, to the French State for an enterprise value up to €404 million including contingent earn-outs totaling €104 million.

The Group previously announced that it had signed a share purchase agreement on July 31, 2025 following the receipt of a confirmatory offer. The transaction perimeter has been adjusted since signing to exclude zData, a leader in Big Data consulting and solutions. As a result, contingent earn-outs were revised from €110 million to €104 million (and consequently the enterprise value from up to €410 million to up to €404 million).

The Advanced Computing activity comprises the High-Performance Computing (HPC) & Quantum as well as the Business Computing & Artificial Intelligence divisions. It generated revenue of c. €0.7 billion in fiscal year 2025 and was previously part of Eviden, Atos Group’s brand for products and systems.

Following this divestiture, Eviden now encompasses cybersecurity products, mission‑critical systems and Vision AI. Its revenue, pro forma for the disposal of Advanced Computing activities, reached c. €0.3 billion in fiscal year 2025.

This divestiture marks a significant step in the execution of Atos Group’s strategic plan to refocus on its core markets. By streamlining its portfolio, the Group strengthens its focus on cybersecurity, mission-critical systems and digital services – areas where it holds strong, long-term growth potential.

The transaction has been designed to ensure full continuity of service for Bull’s clients and employees. The French State is now the sole shareholder of Bull, underscoring its commitment to preserving and developing sovereign capabilities in supercomputing and AI.

More from HPCwire: What the Return of Bull Means to European HPC

About Atos Group

Atos Group is a global leader in digital transformation with c. 61,000 employees and annual revenue of c. €7.2 billion (pro forma for the disposal of Advanced Computing activities), operating in 61 countries under two brands – Atos for services and Eviden for products and systems. European number one in cybersecurity and cloud, Atos Group is committed to a secure and decarbonized future and provides tailored AI-powered, end-to-end solutions for all industries. Atos Group is the brand under which Atos SE (Societas Europaea) operates. Atos SE listed on Euronext Paris.


Source: Atos Group

The post Atos Completes Sale of Bull Advanced Computing Unit to French State appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 14:56

Theoretical discovery opens the door to building quantum computers with significantly reduced resources

March 31, 2026 — Quantum computers of the future may be closer to reality thanks to new research from Caltech and Oratomic, a Caltech-linked start-up company. Theorists and experimentalists teamed up to develop a new approach for reducing the errors that riddle today’s rudimentary quantum computers. Whereas these machines were previously thought to require millions of qubits to work properly (qubits being the quantum equivalent to 1’s and 0’s in classical computers), the new results indicate that a fully realized quantum computer could be built with as few as 10,000 to 20,000 qubits. The need for fewer qubits means that quantum computers could, in theory, be operational by the end of the decade.

Image credit: Caltech/Robert Hurt (IPAC-SELab)

The team proposes a new quantum error-correction architecture that is significantly more efficient than previous approaches. Quantum error correction is a process by which extra, redundant qubits are introduced to correct errors, or faults, enabling the ultimate goal in the field: fault-tolerant quantum computing.

The results exploit special properties of quantum computing platforms built out of neutral atoms, which serve as the qubits. Alternative platforms in development include superconducting circuits and trapped ions (ions are charged whereas neutral atoms are not). In a neutral atom system, laser beams known as optical tweezers are used to arrange atoms into qubit arrays. Manuel Endres, a professor of physics at Caltech, and his colleagues recently created the largest qubit array ever assembled, containing 6,100 trapped neutral atoms.

“Unlike other quantum computing platforms, neutral atom qubits can be directly connected over large distances,” Endres says. “Optical tweezers can shuttle one atom to the other end of the array and directly entangle it with another atom.”

This dynamic ability to move atoms is key to the researchers’ ultra-efficient error-correction scheme, which they describe in a new report posted online. The study’s co-first authors are Madelyn Cain, lead theoretical scientist at Oratomic, and Qian Xu, the Sherman Fairchild Postdoctoral Fellow at Caltech and now a research scientist at Oratomic. The senior authors are Endres; John Preskill, the Richard P. Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics and the Allen V. C. Davis and Lenabelle Davis Leadership Chair of the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter (IQIM) at Caltech; Hsin-Yuan (Robert) Huang, assistant professor of theoretical physics and a William H. Hurt Scholar at Caltech who is currently on leave while serving as CTO of Oratomic; and Dolev Bluvstein, a visiting associate in physics at Caltech and CEO of Oratomic. Other authors include Oratomic’s Robbie King and Lewis Picard, and Harry Levine of Oratomic and UC Berkeley.

The theoretical results involved innovating new architectures to greatly reduce the overhead of error correction.

“We’ve spent years learning how to leverage this remarkable ability of neutral atom computers to rearrange qubits dynamically,” Cain says. “Our results now make useful quantum computation with neutral atoms appear within reach by reducing qubit counts by up to two orders of magnitude.”

Xu adds, “For decades, qubit count has been viewed as the main obstacle to fault-tolerant quantum computing. I hope our work helps shift that perspective.”

The report stresses that the team’s findings mean that fault-tolerant quantum computers could be on the horizon. Previously, experts in quantum computing thought that such an accurate machine would take another 10 or even 20 years to build.

“I’ve been working on fault-tolerant quantum computing longer than some of my coauthors have been alive,” Preskill says. “Now at last we’re getting close.”

Huang says, “I always considered theoretical research on the usefulness of large-scale quantum algorithms to only be of interest in the distant future. Our new study made me realize they might come true in the next few years.”

Importantly, the accelerated timeline indicates that the security of digital communications—which includes everyday financial transactions and many other forms of private messaging—could be vulnerable to data breaches sooner than expected. Today’s computers protect data using encryption schemes, such as RSA (Rivest-Shamir-Adleman) and ECC (elliptic curve cryptography). In these classical schemes, data are encrypted using hard mathematical problems that are infeasible for current computers to solve.

Quantum computers will have the ability to break both encryption schemes thanks to an algorithm developed by Peter Shor in 1994, now a professor of applied mathematics at MIT. To protect against this scenario, organizations around the world have been migrating to new encryption schemes capable of resisting quantum computer attacks. The authors emphasize that the rapid progress toward practical quantum computing underscores the importance of safe and timely migration to these new cryptographic standards.

Quantum computers are based on the laws of quantum physics—laws that govern the behaviors of subatomic particles such as electrons and photons. In the quantum realm, particles exhibit properties foreign to the classical realm we live in, including superposition, in which a particle exists in two places at once, and entanglement, in which particles remain intimately connected even after being separated by long distances.

Because nature is quantum at its most fundamental level, quantum computers are posited to have the power to unlock scientific mysteries, including quantum gravity and room-temperature superconductivity, as well as other problems in chemistry, medicine, sustainability, machine learning, and more.

The qubits at the hearts of these machines become both superimposed and entangled; however, these quantum states are delicate and prone to collapse. When this happens during a calculation, the information stored by the qubits is damaged, leading to errors. To address this problem, researchers have come up with error-correcting methods, like those used by classical computers, in which redundant qubits are used to check for the presence of errors. But error correction is trickier with quantum computers: Today’s most common protocols often require about 1,000 or so physical qubits to act together as one single “logical” qubit—the qubit carrying out a desired calculation.

A working quantum computer will require at least 1,000 logical qubits in total, but if each logical qubit is made of 1,000 physical qubits, the whole computer would require 1 million qubits. Scaling up a quantum machine to that large of a size would be extremely challenging, so researchers have been working on ways to scale down the number of physical qubits required for each logical qubit.

The new study describes how this can be achieved using neutral-atom arrays. In other error-correction schemes, such as those using so-called surface codes, qubits arranged in two dimensions are limited to connections to their direct neighbors. In neutral atom arrays, the qubits can be connected to many other qubits that are far away, enabling what scientists call high-rate codes. In such protocols, each physical qubit can participate in many logical qubits instead of just one.

The new scheme means that each logical qubit could be encoded with as few as five or so physical qubits, as opposed to the 1,000 needed with other techniques.

“It’s actually very surprising how well this works. It’s what we call ultra-efficient error correction,” Endres says.

While the results are theoretical, neutral atom quantum systems have rapidly advanced experimentally in recent years, with researchers demonstrating early error-corrected operations and arrays exceeding 6,000 atomic qubits. Significant engineering challenges remain to combine these capabilities into scalable systems, but the new research suggests that neutral atom architectures could ultimately run quantum algorithms powerful enough to impact modern encryption. More broadly, as these systems scale to thousands of logical qubits performing millions of operations, they are expected to enable a wide range of applications with major scientific and economic impact.

“Fault-tolerant quantum computing with neutral atoms is a rapidly emerging topic, and it was clear there are many understudied opportunities for finding shortcuts,” Bluvstein says. “We gathered some of the world’s top experts in the topic at Caltech to put all the pieces together. What we came up with—a clear road map to building a quantum computer—came faster than we expected.”

The next steps are to take larger arrays like those of Endres and his group and scale them up to even larger numbers while demonstrating low error rates, a process that will require additional technological advances.

The scientists founded Oratomic, with Bluvstein as CEO, with the goal to build the world’s first utility-scale fault-tolerant quantum computers. Oratomic will work in close collaboration with Caltech’s Advanced Quantum Computing Mission, an on-campus interdisciplinary effort, which will continue to study the fundamental science of quantum information processing. In the longer term, the Caltech team plans to have quantum “supercomputers” on campus for solving scientific problems.

“Now it’s time to build the machines,” Bluvstein says.

The study “Shor’s algorithm is possible with as few as 10,000 reconfigurable atomic qubits” was conducted at Caltech and Oratomic. Research at Caltech was funded by Caltech. Manuel Endres and John Preskill also acknowledge support from the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, a National Science Foundation (NSF) Physics Frontiers Center. Manuel Endres also acknowledges support from the NSF Quantum Leap Challenge Institutes program Challenge Institute for Quantum Computation. Qian Xu also acknowledges funding by the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics at Caltech.

More from HPCwire


Source: Whitney Clavin, Caltech

The post Caltech Team Finds Useful Quantum Computers Could Be Built with as Few as 10,000 Qubits appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 14:55

LUXEMBOURG, March 31, 2026 — Gcore, a global edge AI, cloud, network, and security solutions provider, today announced the launch of GPU Virtual Machines (VMs) on NVIDIA Hopper, delivering flexible, cost-efficient access to AI compute. As AI development becomes more iterative and central to company functioning, organisations increasingly need infrastructure that can scale dynamically. Gcore’s VMs with NVIDIA GPUs make high-performance computing more accessible to a broad range of customers.

This new addition to Gcore’s AI infrastructure and software suite is launching first in Sines-3, Gcore’s sovereign AI region in Portugal, as a response to growing demand for European-based AI infrastructure. GPU VMs provide access to the same NVIDIA Hopper GPUs with high-bandwidth NVIDIA Quantum InfiniBand networking as Gcore Bare Metal GPU Cloud, without requiring a long-term commitment to hardware. This flexible deployment model is ideal for use cases such as early/growth-phase AI startups looking for performant GPUs without the high fixed costs, EU R&D labs needing sovereign infrastructure for burst PoCs and experiments, and research institutions seeking to run short-term, high-intensity fine-tuning runs on a budget.

Cutting Idle Costs Without Complexity

Some AI jobs require the full power and always-on availability of dedicated bare metal clusters. Others need something more agile: compute that can be sized up or down quickly, used for a burst of experimentation, powered down when idle, and spun back up when the next training run begins. Gcore’s new GPU VMs allow companies to match GPU capacity and cost to the stage of their project with precision.

One of the biggest advantages of GPU VMs is how they behave when they’re not in use. When the instance is powered off, GPU billing pauses automatically. Volumes, IPs, and configuration remain intact, but the GPU meter stops running, so companies only pay for storage and IPs while paused.

When ready to start work again, teams can restart the VMs without needing to set up or reconfigure. They can flexibly use a single Hopper GPU, scale to two or four, or jump to an eight-GPU VM when their workload requires it.

Key product capabilities:

  • Reduces operational overhead: Power VMs off when idle and resume instantly, eliminating the need to redesign workflows.
  • Creates flexible, cost-efficient compute: Adjust GPU capacity as workloads scale without committing long-term to a dedicated server.
  • Maintains trusted infrastructure: Benefit from the same AI infrastructure as Gcore Bare Metal GPU instances, including high-bandwidth InfiniBand networking.

Part of a Larger AI Infrastructure Roadmap

Gcore GPU VMs are the latest expansion of Gcore GPU Cloud, which already includes Bare Metal GPUs and Spot Bare Metal GPUs (a cost-saving option where capacity becomes available when there is spare capacity in a region). Customers can combine and switch between these GPU solutions in the Gcore Customer Portal for precision and flexibility over how their GPU compute is paid for and used.

Seva Vayner, Product Director, Cloud Edge & AI at Gcore, said: ”This launch reflects Gcore’s mission to democratize access to AI and connect the world to AI anytime, anywhere. Whether you’re an early/growth-phase AI startup, a SMB looking for performant GPUs without the high fixed costs, an EU R&D lab needing sovereign infrastructure for burst experiments, or a research institution seeking to run short-term, high-intensity fine-tuning on a budget, Gcore GPU VMs deliver the flexibility and cost efficiency you need.”

To deploy a GPU VM workload on Gcore with just 3 clicks, click here. For more information on how to scale AI workloads without compromising on compute price, speak to the Gcore team.

About Gcore

Gcore is a global provider of infrastructure and software solutions for AI, cloud, network, and security, headquartered in Luxembourg. Operating its own sovereign infrastructure across six continents, Gcore delivers reliable, ultra-low latency performance for enterprises and service providers. Its AI-native cloud stack enables organizations to build, train, and scale AI models seamlessly across public, private, and hybrid environments, while integrating AI, compute, networking, and security into a single platform for mission-critical workloads.


Source: Gcore

The post Gcore Launches NVIDIA Hopper GPU Virtual Machines for Flexible AI Compute appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 14:54

AMSTERDAM, March 31, 2026 — Nebius today announced the construction of a new AI factory in the Finnish city of Lappeenranta with capacity of up to 310 MW. The first capacity from the Lappeenranta AI factory is expected to be available to customers in 2027, and it will be one of Europe’s largest dedicated AI factories when fully deployed.

The construction of the Lappeenranta AI factory follows Nebius’s recent expansion of its first Finnish data center in Mäntsälä up to 75 MW, completed earlier this year. The company plans to expand further in Finland in future as it continues its global capacity build-out.

Arkady Volozh, founder and CEO of Nebius, said: “We have been building in Finland for many years and are pleased to be expanding our presence here. Lappeenranta represents a significant addition to our global AI infrastructure build-out, and will make a significant contribution to achieving our capacity goals.”

Nebius is building one of the largest footprints of purpose-built AI compute globally, and is targeting more than 3 GW of contracted power by the end of 2026. As part of this, the company recently secured approval for its first gigawatt-scale AI factory in Independence, Missouri.

In the EMEA region, the company has already secured more than 750 MW of contracted power across its own sites and colocations. In addition to its Finnish locations, Nebius is building an AI factory near Lille, France, that will have capacity of 240 MW when fully deployed.

As global demand for high-performance compute for AI training and inference continues to accelerate, Nebius’s AI factories will serve AI builders with the latest Blackwell and Rubin generations of NVIDIA accelerated compute. The Mäntsälä facility houses Europe’s first operational deployment of the NVIDIA GB300 NVL72 platform, and Nebius intends to offer the NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 platform starting later this year.

The Lappeenranta AI factory is a multi-building campus on a ca. 100-acre industrial site, and will bring substantial economic and employment benefits to the South Karelia region of Finland. The construction phase is expected to create up to 700 skilled construction jobs, mostly sourced in the Lappeenranta area, with around 100 permanent positions once the data center is operational, as well as hundreds of indirect employment opportunities for operations and maintenance.

City of Lappeenranta Mayor Tuomo Sallinen welcomed the announcement: “Lappeenranta offers an increasingly attractive environment for innovation, with our universities playing a key role in developing top talent tailored to the needs of high-tech industries. The new data center will position our city at the forefront of Finland’s AI ecosystem and help meet Europe’s growing demand for artificial intelligence for decades to come. We’re proud that this project is being realized in Lappeenranta and in Finland, built sustainably on clean energy and driven largely by Finnish expertise.”

Nebius is actively exploring partnerships with local academic institutions via Nebius Academy to upskill local residents in AI expertise, develop the talent pipeline, and support long-term innovation and economic development in the region.

Sustainability will be a key design principle for the Lappeenranta AI factory, building on Nebius’s track record Mäntsälä, where its data center design ranks among the most energy-efficient facilities globally. Electricity sourcing will reflect Nebius’s predominantly low-carbon energy mix.

Servers will be cooled using a closed-loop liquid cooling system, eliminating the need for the AI factory to rely on water intake from local supplies and thus keeping water consumption to a minimum. As in Mäntsälä, the cooling system will be designed to integrate a heat recovery system, opening the opportunity for excess server heat to be donated to the local district heating network. In Mäntsälä, this approach avoided approximately 4,000 tonnes of CO₂e emissions associated with heat production in 2025 and reduced heating costs for connected households by around 10%.

About Nebius

Nebius, the AI cloud company, is building the full-stack platform for developers and companies to take charge of their AI future — from data and model training to production deployment. Founded on deep in-house technological expertise and operating at scale with a rapidly expanding global footprint, Nebius serves startups and enterprises building AI products, agents, and services worldwide.


Source: Nebius

The post Nebius to Construct 310 MW AI Factory in Finland appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 14:49

WASHINGTON, March 31, 2026 — Oracle today announced the availability of Oracle AI Data Platform for US federal agencies. Purpose-built to securely connect industry-leading generative AI models with agency data, applications, and workflows, the platform enables civilian and defense agencies to unify critical information so they can move faster, reduce information silos, and make informed, mission-critical decisions at scale.

Credit: Jonathan Weiss/Shutterstock

For US federal government agencies, Oracle AI Data Platform makes data AI-ready and enables the creation and deployment of agentic applications by harnessing the combined capabilities of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), Oracle Autonomous AI Database, and OCI Enterprise AI. This enables developers to rapidly design, build, and deploy enterprise lakehouses, AI agents, and mission-ready applications using a modern, scalable foundation. At the same time, civilian and defense agency users benefit from real-time insights, automated workflows, and secure agentic experiences that streamline decision-making, elevate day-to-day operations, and help teams execute with greater speed, confidence, and mission impact.

“Federal agencies are under increasing pressure to turn data into a secure, decisive mission advantage at speed and scale,” said Kim Lynch, executive vice president, Government, Defense & Intelligence. “By unifying Oracle’s leading cloud infrastructure, AI database, and AI services, Oracle AI Data Platform for Federal Government provides a powerful, cost-effective way to connect data and workflows to generative AI. This helps agencies accelerate innovation, improve mission outcomes, and meet their mandates with greater confidence.”

A Unified Data Foundation for the AI Era

AI Data Platform for Federal Government represents a fundamental shift in how federal agencies can approach data management. By automating data ingestion and enriching data with context, it helps transform raw, fragmented data into reliable, mission-ready intelligence. Built-in generative AI tools make that intelligence immediately usable, enabling agencies to accelerate AI adoption, improve operational efficiencies, and act with greater speed and confidence. The platform is designed to reduce cost per query, improve inference performance, and increase throughput compared with other cloud providers by bringing together:

  • Oracle Autonomous AI Database: Delivers industry-leading price-performance by providing a self-managing, self-securing database engineered for mission-critical workloads. In addition, built-in AI capabilities—including AI Vector Search for semantic analysis across documents, reports, imagery, and intelligence data, and Select AI for natural language querying without SQL expertise—bring intelligence directly to agency data at a fraction of the cost of alternative platforms.
  • Oracle Analytics: Surfaces trends, anomalies, and recommendations directly to federal analysts and decision-makers through a unified analytics platform featuring AI-powered assistants and automated insights. It enables natural language interaction with mission data, automated narrative generation, and proactive intelligence without requiring specialized technical expertise.
  • OCI Enterprise AI: Gives agencies access to leading large language models in a secure, FedRAMP authorized cloud environment. It is designed as a fully managed generative AI service, with sovereign AI options for data hosting and processing.
  • OCI Object Storage: Enables agencies to eliminate silos and analyze data in place without costly migration by providing a scalable, high durability, lakehouse storage foundation for structured and unstructured data in open formats. In addition, real-time streaming and event-driven analytics provide agencies with situational awareness and operational decision support.

The platform supports open ecosystem compatibility with Python, Spark, open-source AI/ML frameworks, and existing agency tools—ensuring agencies can leverage their current investments while adopting next-generation AI capabilities.

Built for Federal Security, Compliance, and Sovereignty Requirements

Oracle AI Data Platform is engineered to address the most stringent security and compliance demands in the federal market. It operates within OCI’s FedRAMP High-authorized Government Cloud with IL4 and IL5 support for sensitive and controlled unclassified information (CUI), backed by always-on encryption, granular access controls, and comprehensive audit logging aligned with NIST and FISMA frameworks.

For agencies requiring the highest levels of data sovereignty, Oracle offers dedicated and isolated cloud regions—including Oracle National Security Regions—for air-gapped environments, as well as Oracle Exadata Cloud@Customer for cloud-managed infrastructure deployed entirely within agency facilities.

For more information about Oracle AI Data Platform for federal agencies, visit https://www.oracle.com/government/federal.

About Oracle

Oracle offers integrated suites of applications plus secure, autonomous infrastructure in the Oracle Cloud. For more information about Oracle (NYSE: ORCL), please visit us at oracle.com.


Source: Oracle

The post Oracle Unveils AI Data Platform for US Federal Government appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:48

Tax debt and tax liens aren't the same and misunderstanding the difference can cost you a lot over time.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:47

Full-time employees cut their 401(k) participation and contribution rates last year amid an affordability crunch, new research shows.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:46

COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 31, 2026 — Vertiv, a global leader in critical digital infrastructure, has announced an investment of ~$50 million to expand its manufacturing presence in Ironton, Ohio, and its headquarters campus in Westerville, Ohio. The projects are expected to create hundreds of new jobs through 2029 and strengthen Vertiv’s ability to support growing customer demand for AI, high-density computing, and other critical digital infrastructure applications.

Vertiv’s Ironton facility will expand manufacturing capacity for advanced liquid cooling and chilled water systems, strengthening supply chains and supporting high-density AI infrastructure and next-generation data centers.

The Ironton expansion, which is expected to be operational in the second quarter of 2027, is planned to increase production capacity for Vertiv liquid cooling and chilled water systems used in advanced thermal management applications. With the expansion, total capacity at the facility is expected to increase by ~45% for these systems, helping Vertiv expand regional production, improve responsiveness to customer demand, and shorten supply chains.

As AI adoption accelerates and compute densities continue to rise, customers are requiring more advanced thermal management solutions to support next-generation GPU clusters, large-scale model training, and other high-performance workloads. Vertiv’s investment is designed to expand the manufacturing, engineering, sales, services, and logistics capabilities needed to help customers deploy and scale this infrastructure more efficiently.

“Ohio operations remain integral to Vertiv’s strategy,” said Giordano (Gio) Albertazzi, CEO of Vertiv. “This investment expands our manufacturing capacity and strengthens the engineering, sales, service, and logistics capabilities that support customers building the next generation of digital infrastructure. It also reflects our confidence in the talent, commitment, and long-standing support we continue to see across Ohio and within the communities where we operate.”

Vertiv has a rich history in Ohio, founded more than 60 years ago as Liebert Corporation, a pioneer in data center precision cooling. Today, Vertiv’s Ohio footprint spans 14 facilities, including manufacturing, research and development, testing labs, service and sales offices, customer experience centers, a training facility, and its global headquarters. By expanding both its manufacturing footprint and headquarters capabilities in the state, Vertiv is further positioning its U.S. operations to serve customers with greater scale, speed, and operational resilience.

Vertiv delivers end-to-end infrastructure, from grid to chip and chip to heat reuse, where power, cooling, IT, and services operate in unison and are built for multiple compute generations ahead. With global reach and a portfolio of innovative industry-leading technologies and services, Vertiv is enabling customers to deploy efficiently and scale seamlessly, helping customers manage the challenges associated with modern digital infrastructure.

About Vertiv

Vertiv (NYSE: VRT) brings together hardware, software, analytics and ongoing services to enable its customers’ vital applications to run continuously, perform optimally and grow with their business needs. Vertiv solves the most important challenges facing today’s data centers, communication networks and commercial and industrial facilities with a portfolio of power, cooling and IT infrastructure solutions and services that extends from the cloud to the edge of the network. Headquartered in Westerville, Ohio, USA, Vertiv does business in more than 130 countries.


Source: Vertiv

The post Vertiv Expands Ohio Manufacturing to Support AI Data Center Cooling Demand appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:45

BOULDER, Colo. and TUSTIN, Calif., March 31, 2026 — Spectra Logic, a global leader in data management and storage solutions, together with Geyser Data, a provider of purpose-built cold data archiving services, today announced a new tape-as-a-service archive deployment in London, marking the first European location available through the Geyser Data portal.

The London deployment expands the companies’ tape-as-a-service model into Europe. It introduces a new regional provider location designed to deliver predictable, long-term archive storage. Customers can select the London archive location through the Geyser Data portal alongside the existing Los Angeles deployment, giving organizations additional geographic choice for storing and retrieving cold data.

As more organizations move cold data to the cloud, many discover that archive storage can incur additional costs for data retrieval, egress, and API activity, making long-term storage difficult to predict. Some organizations choose to deploy and manage on-premises tape libraries for predictable archive economics. Geyser Data offers another option by delivering tape-powered archive infrastructure as a service. The platform provides a cloud-based archive copy with predictable pricing, giving existing tape library customers and new cloud users a way to store and retrieve long-term data without unexpected fees.

Through the tape-as-a-service model, hosting providers can deploy archive infrastructure in their local markets while delivering the service through the Geyser Data platform. Spectra Logic supplies the tape library infrastructure and core archive technologies, while Geyser Data provides the software and cloud platform that enable customers to access archive storage through an Amazon S3-compatible interface.

The approach creates a repeatable framework for expanding archive capacity globally. Local service providers operate the infrastructure, channel partners can deliver archive services to customers in their regions, and end users gain more options for where their data resides while maintaining a consistent archive experience through the Geyser Data portal.

The London deployment is hosted in a Digital Realty facility, providing a carrier-neutral interconnection environment and connectivity options designed to support enterprise archive workflows, hybrid architectures, and large-scale data movement.

“London is an important milestone because it demonstrates that tape-as-a-service can scale into new markets through a growing provider ecosystem,” said Nelson Nahum, CEO of Geyser Data. “Organizations are looking for archive infrastructure that is purpose-built for long-term cold data retention with predictable economics. At the same time, service providers want a practical way to deliver those capabilities locally. Expanding to London gives customers more geographic choice and validates that this model works.”

“As demand for long-term data retention continues to grow, providers are looking for reliable infrastructure that can support archive services in their regions,” said Nathan Thompson, chief executive officer of Spectra Logic. “Our tape library platforms and S3-compatible archive technologies power the underlying infrastructure that makes these deployments possible and give providers a proven foundation for delivering scalable cold data archiving.”

The London deployment represents the latest step in Geyser Data’s global expansion strategy. In addition to its U.S. presence, the company recently announced a partnership in Brazil that is expected to bring another archive deployment online later this year, continuing the expansion of the tape-as-a-service provider ecosystem.

Customers can now archive data in either London or Los Angeles through the Geyser Data portal. A free 30-day trial with limited capacity is available for both locations.

About Spectra Logic

Dedicated solely to data storage innovation for more than 40 years, Spectra Logic helps organizations modernize their IT infrastructures and protect and preserve their data with a broad portfolio of solutions that enable them to manage, migrate, store, and preserve long-term business data, along with features to make them ransomware resilient, whether on-premises, in a single cloud, across multiple clouds, or in all locations at once. To learn more, visit www.spectralogic.com.


Source: Spectra Logic

The post Spectra Logic and Geyser Data Expand Tape-as-a-Service with New London Archive Deployment appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:44

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., March 31, 2026 — Hammerspace today announced support for FIPS 140-3 validated cryptography, enabling the Hammerspace Data Platform to be configured to meet the U.S. government standard for cryptographic security. This milestone positions Hammerspace to support deployments in federal, defense, healthcare, finance and other highly regulated environments. Integration into the Hammerspace Data Platform is planned for an upcoming release by the end of 2026.

“This validation is an important milestone for government and other security-sensitive deployments,” said Molly Presley, SVP of Global Marketing at Hammerspace. “The bigger challenge is maintaining control of distributed data across data centers, clouds and edge environments without sacrificing performance or flexibility. That is where Hammerspace is differentiated. We built our platform to secure, govern and orchestrate data at the data layer itself – providing the foundation organizations need for AI at scale.”

By supporting FIPS 140-3 validated cryptography, Hammerspace meets key requirements for secure data protection in regulated environments and is advancing the integration of these capabilities into the Hammerspace Data Platform.

Security Enforced at the Data Layer for Consistent Control, Compliance and Data Sovereignty

Hammerspace delivers consistent, policy-driven orchestration, governance and protection across distributed environments, providing consistent control in multi-site and hybrid-cloud architectures. With the integration of FIPS 140-3 validated cryptography, the platform is designed to provide:

  • End-to-End Encryption with FIPS-Validated Security: Support for encrypting data in-flight and at-rest using FIPS 140-3 validated cryptographic modules, aligning with federal security requirements.
  • Built-In Data Protection and Ransomware Resilience: Immutable snapshots, clones and WORM capabilities to enable rapid recovery and protect against unauthorized modification or deletion.
  • Consistent Security Enforcement Across a Global Namespace: Centralized policy enforcement across the global namespace, ensuring consistent protection across sites, clouds and storage systems.
  • Unified Access Controls Across Protocols and Environments: Consistent access policies across file and object data, spanning NFS, SMB and S3.
  • Policy-Driven Data Governance Sovereignty and Orchestration: Metadata-driven data placement policies to control where data resides, how it moves and how it is used in real time.

The Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) 140-3 is defined by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and establishes stringent requirements for the design, implementation, and validation of cryptographic modules used to protect sensitive data. Validation requires independent testing by accredited laboratories and is mandatory for systems used by U.S. federal agencies and organizations operating under stringent compliance mandates.

Learn more about Hammerspace solutions for the public sector at https://hammerspace.com/public-sector.

About Hammerspace

Hammerspace is the high-performance data platform built to simplify and optimize AI infrastructure at scale. It makes all your data immediately accessible – anywhere across on-premises and cloud environments – without copying or migrating data into new silos. By integrating with existing storage, networking, and applications, Hammerspace creates a unified, high-speed data backbone for AI, enabling organizations to accelerate every stage of the AI pipeline while eliminating data silos.


Source: Hammerspace

The post Hammerspace Adds FIPS 140-3 Cryptography Support to Data Platform appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:36

Jamie Dimon told "CBS Evening News" anchor Tony Dokoupil that "what's more important for the future of the world is that this war successfully conclude."

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:35

Anybody riding one currently? I was literally checking out with the X7 sport after weeks of going back & forth between the SC or Sport, when it suddenly removed the board from my cart & said it was sold out.

So being my impatient self I saw that as a sign & the Super charged was available so i bit the bullet & purchased it instead. 😅

Says 25 days for shipping but we will see.

Super amped for this absolute beast of a machine.

It's just hard to find a lot of current riders talking about it, there's some stuff out there but not much. Everything I see is nothing but positivity & pure shredding enjoyment.

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

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:29

A new feature allows Google Account users in the US to update their Gmail address.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:17

Tabloid outlet has covered Republicans and Democrats relaxing at places such as Disney World as shutdown drags on

When US federal workers were missing paychecks and the partial government shutdown entered its seventh week, Lindsey Graham, a Republican senator from South Carolina, was doing what any responsible lawmaker would do: riding Space Mountain and carrying a bubble wand at Disney World in Florida.

Naturally, TMZ had photos of the vacationing senator on its homepage a few days later.

Continue reading...

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:14

Case involves a former prosecutor removing nearly all Black jurors in a 2006 capital murder trial, raising legal questions

The US supreme court appeared skeptical on Tuesday of whether jury selection in a trial was conducted appropriately when they heard oral arguments in a death penalty case about racial bias in jury selection stemming from Mississippi.

Doug Evans, a now-retired prosecutor, removed all but one Black person from a jury that convicted Terry Pitchford of capital murder in 2006. The judge, Joseph Loper, allowed the juror strikes, despite objections from the defense counsel, and Mississippi’s supreme court upheld the conviction.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:11

Jim Mackey responds to concerns about cost implications and supply disruption link to war against Iran

The head of the NHS in England has said he is “really worried” about medicine supply issues.

A number of experts have raised concerns about cost implications and supply disruption linked to the war in Iran.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:01

Two-month arrangement aimed at preventing small-boat crossings comes as existing deal expires

The UK will pay France an extra £16.2m to keep police patrolling Channel beaches and prevent a surge in small-boat crossings after negotiators failed to agree a permanent deal before a midnight deadline.

The stopgap arrangement, which will last for two months, comes after French negotiators refused to agree to UK demands for further interventions and patrols to stop asylum seekers from reaching the UK via the Channel.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 14:00

Australia is preparing possible court action against major social media platforms that are failing to enforce the country's social media ban on under-16s. "Three months after the ban came into effect, the eSafety Commissioner said it was probing Meta's Instagram and Facebook, Google's YouTube, Snapchat and TikTok for possible breaches of the law," reports Reuters. From the report: Communications Minister Anika Wells said the government was gathering evidence "so that the eSafety Commissioner can go to the Federal Court and win." "We have spent the summer building that evidence base of all the stories that no doubt you have all heard ... about how kids are getting around that," Wells told reporters in Canberra. The legal threat is a striking change of tone from a government which had hailed tech giants' shows of cooperation when the ban went live in December. Under the Australian law, platforms must show they are taking reasonable steps to keep out underage users or face fines of up to $34 million per breach, something eSafety would need to pursue in a civil court. The regulator previously said it would only take enforcement action in cases of systemic noncompliance. But in its first comprehensive compliance report since the ban took effect, eSafety said measures taken by the platforms were substandard and it would make a decision about next steps by mid-year. "We are now moving âinto an enforcement stance," said commissioner Julie Inman Grant in a statement. The regulator reported major compliance gaps, including platforms prompting children who had previously declared ages under 16 to do fresh age checks, allowing repeated attempts at age-assurance tests until a child got a result over 16 and poor pathways for people to report underage accounts. Some platforms did not use age-inference, which estimates age based on someone's online activity, and some only used age-assurance measures like photo-based checks after a user tried to change their age, rather than at sign-up. That made it "likely many Australian children aged under 16 have been able to create accounts on age-restricted social media platforms by simply declaring they are 16 or older", the regulator said. Nearly one-third of parents reported their under-16 child had at least one social media account after the ban took effect, of which two-thirds said the platform had not asked the child's age, it added.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:58

Allergy season is here, but you don't need to suffer. CNET put 15 of the latest air purifier models through CNET's smoke bomb test to find out which perform the best at particle filtering, noise levels and energy efficiency.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:56

The event sounds similar to an incident that caused SpaceX to lose a satellite in December.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:43
Help my charger wont fit my onewheel

I've bought 3 different chargers for my onewheel plus xr and none of them fit it. It's a smaller plug in. What kind of charger do I need?

submitted by /u/21betitab
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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:28

Police said two people headed the network, including one person considered to be the "narco-architect" and "mastermind of the tunnels."

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:26

Nearly a quarter of voters cite Reform leader’s support for US president as main reason against voting for his party

By day 31 of the war in the Middle East, Nigel Farage had become somewhat less vocal about the closeness of his relationship with Donald Trump.

“Trying to read what’s really in the minds of people in the White House right at the moment is a mug’s game,” said the MP, as he unveiled his party’s latest “pledge” to cut the cost of living on Tuesday.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:24

The German chancellor has drawn condemnation from NGOs and members of his own government

Friedrich Merz has drawn condemnation from NGOs and members of his own government after he called for the vast majority of Syrians living in Germany to “go back to their homeland”.

The German chancellor, who was elected last year after promising a tough line on immigration in a bid to beat the far right, made the remarks during a visit to Berlin on Monday by the interim Syrian president Ahmed al-Sharaa.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:15

Volker Türk says bill, which applies to Palestinians convicted of terror charges but not Jewish extremists, must be repealed

A new Israeli law that would allow the execution of Palestinians convicted on terror charges for deadly attacks, but not Jewish extremists accused of similar crimes, would constitute a war crime if enacted, according to one of the UN’s most senior human rights officials.

Speaking amid mounting international condemnation of the bill, the UN’s high commissioner for human rights, Volker Türk, described the law as “patently inconsistent with Israel’s international law obligations, including in relation to the right to life”. He added that it “raises serious concerns about due process violations, is deeply discriminatory, and must be promptly repealed”.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:05

Milly Alcock's hero says she "has no people" as she and Krypto drift off on a new adventure.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:05

Grady Martin writes: A security researcher has leaked a complete repository of source code for Anthropic's flagship command-line tool. The file listing was exposed via a Node Package Manager (npm) mapping, with every target publicly accessible on a Cloudflare R2 storage bucket. There's been a number of discoveries as people continue to pore over the code. The DEV Community outlines some of the leak's most notable architectural elements and the key technical choices: Architecture Highlights The Tool System (~40 tools): Claude Code uses a plugin-like tool architecture. Each capability (file read, bash execution, web fetch, LSP integration) is a discrete, permission-gated tool. The base tool definition alone is 29,000 lines of TypeScript. The Query Engine (46K lines): This is the brain of the operation. It handles all LLM API calls, streaming, caching, and orchestration. It's by far the largest single module in the codebase. Multi-Agent Orchestration: Claude Code can spawn sub-agents (they call them "swarms") to handle complex, parallelizable tasks. Each agent runs in its own context with specific tool permissions. IDE Bridge System: A bidirectional communication layer connects IDE extensions (VS Code, JetBrains) to the CLI via JWT-authenticated channels. This is how the "Claude in your editor" experience works. Persistent Memory System: A file-based memory directory where Claude stores context about you, your project, and your preferences across sessions. Key Technical Decisions Worth Noting Bun over Node: They chose Bun as the JavaScript runtime, leveraging its dead code elimination for feature flags and its faster startup times. React for CLI: Using Ink (React for terminals) is bold. It means their terminal UI is component-based with state management, just like a web app. Zod v4 for validation: Schema validation is everywhere. Every tool input, every API response, every config file. ~50 slash commands: From /commit to /review-pr to memory management -- there's a command system as rich as any IDE. Lazy-loaded modules: Heavy dependencies like OpenTelemetry and gRPC are lazy-loaded to keep startup fast.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 13:01

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth​ is tentatively expected to testify publicly before the House Armed Services Committee on April 29, according to two sources familiar with the plans.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:42

Long time crunch troubleshooter, first time crunch thread poster.

I have a 5" Superflux HS and was experiencing a strange acceleration crunch/noise around 4k ERPM. Thanks to nexinity on discord, he recommended the following fix which completely remedied the issue.

Motor → FOC → Filters: Increase “Maximum ERPM for phase filters” to 6000-8000 ERPM.

My issue seems completely remedied at 6k, but if I see any further issues I’m going to increase it to 8k (as nex did and has been running for a long time). Apparently there are no adverse affects to doing this, but I will edit or reply to this thread if that changes.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:41

Core focus will be on beauty, personal care and home products after spinning off brands such as Hellmann’s and Pot Noodle

Unilever has agreed to combine its food business with US-based McCormick in a $44.8bn deal that will give the Marmite-to-Hellmann’s mayonnaise owner majority control of a food empire.

The Anglo-Dutch company will control 65% of the new spin-off, which will combine brands such as Knorr and Pot Noodle with McCormick’s condiments and spices including French’s mustard, Old Bay seasoning and Cholula hot sauce.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:27

Marine told investigators he found the round ‘in the field’ about a year ago and kept it, thinking it wasn’t live

A US marine was detained at a California airport after Transportation Security Administration (TSA) personnel found a live 25mm explosive round in his checked baggage, police said.

The round was found during the screening process of checked luggage at the Palm Springs international airport on Monday, the Palm Springs police department said in a news release.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:24

John Healey says extra deployment is defensive response to ‘expanding threat’ from Iran

The UK is sending more military support to the Gulf, taking the total deployment to 1,000 troops, amid more jibes from Donald Trump about Britain’s refusal to get involved in offensive operations against Iran.

Speaking from Qatar where he met UK troops, the defence secretary, John Healey, said the extra deployment was in response to an “expanding threat” from Iran.

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2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 12:22

An incident at the end of the Duke-UConn game reminded Black people of something we already know: we’re treated differently in America

The UConn-Duke game on Sunday night was one for the ages. A last-second game winner from freshman Braylon Mullins took down the top-seeded Blue Devils, who at one point had led by 19 points. It is a moment that will be replayed over and over for years to come.

However, something strange happened after Mullins’s shot. UConn’s head coach Dan Hurley approached referee Roger Ayers and touched foreheads with the official while glaring into his eyes. It wasn’t quite the “head-butt” some called it on social media but it was an eye-catching scene. For his part, Ayers told ESPN the incident was “absolutely nothing” but it wouldn’t have been unusual for Hurley to be given a technical foul, which would have given Duke free throws and a chance to win the game with 0.4 seconds left. Hurley mystifyingly has said he thought Ayers was trying to “chest bump me to celebrate.”

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:18

DNA testing confirmed bones found on Salmon Creek beach belonged to Walter Karl Kinney, a man last seen in 1999

Human remains discovered in the summer of 2022 on a beach in California recently were identified as those of a former banker who disappeared in 1999.

The DNA Doe Project (DDP) on Thursday announced that bones found on Salmon Creek state beach in northern California in June 2022 – by a family searching for seashells – belonged to 59-year-old Walter Karl Kinney, a former banker who lived in nearby Santa Rosa.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:17

Argonne and industry partners advance AI-enabled technologies to strengthen U.S. critical materials supply chains and accelerate domestic production

March 31, 2026 — As the United States expands artificial intelligence (AI), modernizes the electricity grid and grows advanced manufacturing, access to critical materials has become a national priority. Materials such as rare earth elements, lithium, cobalt and graphite are essential to these efforts. Today, many of them are still mined or processed overseas. This leaves U.S. manufacturers exposed to supply disruptions, price swings and geopolitical risk.

Aclara’s Rare Earth Separation Pilot Plant in operation. Image credit: Aclara.

To reduce these risks, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is relying more heavily on public-private partnerships. Through its Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation, DOE is linking federal research capabilities with industry-led deployment to help move new technologies from the laboratory into the marketplace faster.

As part of this approach, DOE’s Argonne National Laboratory is working with companies across the mining, processing, recycling and manufacturing value chain. These collaborations focus on developing technologies that make domestic production more efficient, resilient and economically viable.

Accelerating the Path from Science to Industry

One recent example is a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement between Argonne and Aclara Resources. The project centers on developing an AI-enabled digital twin for heavy rare earth separation. Argonne is applying its strengths in advanced computing, process modeling and AI to support the scale-up of separation technologies for Aclara’s pilot plant, which is being developed in partnership with Virginia Tech.

The goal is to help technologies reach industrial readiness faster. By pairing Argonne’s AI-powered process simulation platform with data from Aclara’s recently inaugurated rare earth pilot plant, the team aims to reduce both time and cost as operations move from pilot scale to commercial facilities. This transition is one of the biggest barriers to building new U.S.-based capacity.

The collaboration supports Aclara’s plan to build a $277 million heavy rare earth separation facility in Louisiana — the first of its kind in the U.S. with a secured ionic clay raw material feed. By the time production begins in 2028, Aclara expects to have more than a year of operational data from its pilot plant, enabling faster ramp-up, improved efficiency and stable long-term operations.

“By combining real-world industry needs with deep expertise in the science of scale-up at national laboratories, we can speed the deployment of advanced technologies that strengthen domestic supply chains,” said Claus Daniel, associate laboratory director for Argonne’s Advanced Energy Technologies directorate. ​“This work reflects Argonne’s role in building regional industrial innovation hubs, such as the Gulf Coast and the Midwest, by aligning research investments and leveraging complementary capabilities to support U.S. competitiveness.”

“This partnership with Argonne is a critical accelerator for Aclara’s strategy to establish a reliable U.S.-based supply chain for heavy rare earths,” said Ramon Barua, CEO of Aclara. ​“By combining our proprietary separation technology and pilot-scale data with Argonne’s world-class capabilities in advanced computing, we are significantly reducing scale-up risk, accelerating industrial deployment and strengthening the foundations of a secure domestic supply of these critical minerals.”

A National Strategy Built on Innovation and Partnerships

Partnerships like this are central to DOE’s broader approach to rebuilding domestic critical materials supply chains. Rather than relying only on traditional mining, DOE is supporting research that improves processing efficiency, unlocks new material sources and enables recycling and reuse at scale.

“We need new ways to source and process the materials that support our energy system,” said Audrey Robertson, Assistant Secretary of Energy who leads the Office of Critical Minerals, Materials, and Manufacturing. ​“That means investing in innovation that reduces risk for industry, shortens the path from the lab to the market, and builds supply chains that are secure, resilient, and based in the U.S.”

These efforts are already delivering results. Argonne and its industry partners are demonstrating pilot-scale processes and AI-enabled optimization tools that can be adopted directly by manufacturers. At full production, Aclara has indicated that its Louisiana facility could supply more than 75% of U.S. demand of dysprosium and terbium, significantly reducing reliance on overseas processing. These rare earth materials are used in high-strength magnets that allow for the efficient operation of electric motors.

By pairing federal research investments with industry execution, DOE and Argonne are helping create a new generation of U.S.-based critical materials supply chains. These supply chains are designed to deploy faster, withstand disruption and support long-term industrial growth. Rebuilding domestic capacity is no longer a distant goal. It is already underway, one partnership at a time.


Source: Argonne National Laboratory

The post Argonne Advances AI-Enabled Rare Earth Separation with Aclara Partnership appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 12:13

For many young people entering the workforce, the stigma of hands-on jobs is fading. There a competitive appeal – and they all require human expertise

Gib and Michelle Mouser are proud of their son’s career – just not in the way they once imagined.

Only 23 years old, Cale Mouser already earns well over six figures, and he’ll end up making substantially more. He is an acknowledged expert in a highly specialized field who spends hours in deep thought solving hard problems. He uses a computer, but he’s not stuck behind it.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 12:13

Publisher alleges AI research company’s chatbot violated its copyright over Coconut the Little Dragon series

Penguin Random House has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging its chatbot ChatGPT violated copyright by mimicking and reproducing the content of a popular series of German children’s books.

The lawsuit, which was filed on Friday with a Munich court against OpenAI’s Ireland-based European subsidiary, states Penguin Random House’s legal team had prompted ChatGPT to write a story in the vein of Penguin author and illustrator Ingo Siegner’s Coconut the Little Dragon series.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:10

Defence minister outlines plans to destroy all homes and villages in area ‘in accordance with the model in Gaza’

Israel says it will occupy swathes of south Lebanon and destroy the homes along the border to prevent the return of about 600,000 residents, prompting concerns of long-term forced displacement.

The defence minister, Israel Katz, said that when fighting with Hezbollah ended, Israel would occupy the area under the Litani River, about 19 miles from the Israel-Lebanon border, as part of its so-called buffer zone inside southern Lebanon.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 13:04

Donald Tusk and Micheál Martin say reported phone call with Moscow on sanctions confirms Hungary ‘doing the bidding for Russia’ within EU

Back to Iran and the perceived lack of support from European Nato allies, US president Donald Trump has now turned to criticising France in his latest outburst on social media.

In a post on Truth Social, he said:

“The Country of France wouldn’t let planes headed to Israel, loaded up with military supplies, fly over French territory. France has been VERY UNHELPFUL with respect to the “Butcher of Iran,” who has been successfully eliminated! The U.S.A. will REMEMBER!!! President DJT”

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-04-01 08:38

The visit "will celebrate the historic connections and the modern bilateral relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States," Buckingham Palace says.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 19:45

Tiger Woods was arrested last week in Florida and charged with driving under the influence after a vehicle crash.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 12:19

The Supreme Court ruled in favor of a Colorado counselor who challenged a law banning conversion therapy for minors, ruling that lower courts failed to apply "sufficiently rigorous First Amendment scrutiny."

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 19:41

President Trump told CBS News that he is not ready "quite yet" to abandon efforts to force Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz amid the Iran war, despite a Truth Social post suggesting allies need to do it themselves.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 12:00

Euro-Office is a new open-source project supported by several European companies that aims to offer a "truly open, transparent and sovereign solution for collaborate document editing," using OnlyOffice as a starting point. The project is positioned around European digital independence and familiar Office-style editing, though it has already drawn pushback from OnlyOffice over alleged licensing violations. "The company behind OnlyOffice is also based in Russia, and Russia is still heavily sanctioned by most European nations due to the country's ongoing invasion of Ukraine," adds How-To Geek. From the report: Euro-Office is a new open-source project supported by Nextcloud, EuroStack, Wiki, Proton, Soverin, Abilian, and other companies based in Europe. The goal is to build an online office suite that can open and edit standard Microsoft Office documents (DOCX, PPTX, XLSX) and the OpenDocument format (ODS, ODT, ODP) used by LibreOffice and OpenOffice. The current design is remarkably close to Microsoft Office and its tabbed toolbars, so there shouldn't be much of a learning curve for anyone used to Word, Excel, or PowerPoint. Importantly, Euro-Office is only the document editing component. It's designed to be added to cloud storage services, online wikis, project management tools, and other software. For example, you could have some Word documents in your Nextcloud file storage, and clicking them in a browser could open the Euro-Office editor. That way, Nextcloud (or Proton, or anyone else) doesn't have to build its own document editor from scratch. Euro-Office is based on OnlyOffice, which is open-source under the AGPL license. The project explained that "Contributing is impossible or greatly discouraged" with OnlyOffice's developers, with outside code changes rarely accepted, so a hard fork was required. The company behind OnlyOffice is also based in Russia, and Russia is still heavily sanctioned by most European nations due to the country's ongoing invasion of Ukraine. The project's home page explains, "A lot of users and customers require software that is not potentially influenced or controlled by the Russian government." As for why OnlyOffice was chosen over LibreOffice, the project simply said: "We believe open source is about collaboration, and we look for opportunities to integrate and collaborate with the LibreOffice community and companies like Collabora." UPDATE: Slashdot reader Elektroschock shares a statement from OnlyOffice CEO Lev Bannov, expressing his concerns about the Euro-Office inclusion of its software with trademarks removed: "We liked the AGPL v3 license because its 7th clause allows us to ensure that our code retains its original attributes, so that users are able to clearly identify the developers and the brand behind the program..." Bannov continued: "The core issue here isn't just about what the AGPL license states, but about the additional provisions we, as the authors, have included. This is a critical distinction, even if some may argue otherwise. We firmly assert that the Euro-Office project is currently infringing on our copyright in a deliberate and unacceptable manner." "As the creators of ONLYOFFICE, we want to make our position unequivocally clear: we do not grant anyone the right to remove our branding or alter our open-source code without proper attribution. This principle is non-negotiable and will never change. We demand that the Euro-Office project either restore our branding and attributions or roll back all forks of our project, refraining from using our code without proper acknowledgment of ONLYOFFICE."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:00

The first full moon in spring isn't actually pink, but it determines the date of Easter each year.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 12:00

We're celebrating Apple's 50th anniversary by reminiscing on the tech titan's biggest moments.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 11:58

Meta claims social media addiction isn’t real. Juries disagree

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, US tech editor for the Guardian. I’m hoping futilely for warm spring weather in New York City, but while it’s still cold, I’m sitting inside and reading The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains by Nicholas Carr. Published in 2010 and a finalist for the Pulitzer prize, the book is a fascinating record of our anxieties about technology at a time when the iPhone was just three years old and Facebook was just six. Google Chrome had debuted two years prior, and I think I was using Mozilla Firefox as my main browser. Stay tuned for a fuller analysis once I finish, but my early impression is that Carr’s observations have stood the test of time.

This week in tech, we’re discussing one major topic: two landmark cases against Meta and YouTube over social media addiction. Whether social media is clinically addictive or not, the liability for it has been determined.

‘Accountability has arrived’: dual US court losses show shifting tide against Meta and co

The Guardian view on social media in the dock: tech bros move fast – society is trying to catch up

How Meta’s victim-blaming failed to sway jurors in landmark social media addiction trial | Technology

I was paid to write fake Google reviews – then my ‘bosses’ tried to scam me

Keep under-fives’ screen time to no more than an hour a day, UK advice says

Wikipedia bans AI-generated content in its online encyclopedia

Federal judge sides with Anthropic in first round of standoff with Pentagon

Bernie Sanders and AOC introduce bill to pause building of new datacenters

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:57

Anyone know of any repair shops/people who can change a tire on my Pint X in Orlando, Kissimmee or even Tampa area? I’m willing to drive a bit if I have to. Just can’t seem to find anything at all. Thank you!

submitted by /u/jc041692
[link] [comments]

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:54

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 11:52

SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 31, 2026 — NVIDIA and Marvell Technology, Inc. today announced a strategic partnership to connect Marvell to the NVIDIA AI factory and AI-RAN ecosystem through NVIDIA NVLink Fusion, offering customers building on NVIDIA architectures greater choice and flexibility in developing next-generation infrastructure. The companies will also collaborate on silicon photonics technology.

Credit: Shutterstock

In addition, NVIDIA has invested $2 billion in Marvell.

The partnership builds on NVIDIA NVLink Fusion, a rack-scale platform that enables customers to develop semi-custom AI infrastructure using the NVIDIA NVLink ecosystem. Marvell will provide custom XPUs and NVLink Fusion-compatible scale-up networking, while NVIDIA will provide the supporting technologies, including Vera CPU, ConnectX NICs, Bluefield DPUs, NVLink interconnect and Spectrum-X switches, and the rack-scale AI compute.

For customers developing custom XPUs, NVLink Fusion enables a heterogeneous AI infrastructure fully compatible with NVIDIA systems, allowing seamless integration with NVIDIA GPU, LPU, networking and storage platforms while leveraging NVIDIA’s rich technology stack global supply chain ecosystem.

The companies will also partner to transform the world’s telecommunication network into AI infrastructure with NVIDIA Aerial AI-RAN for 5G/6G, and advance world-class networking for AI, including advanced optical interconnect solutions and silicon photonics technology.

“The inference inflection has arrived. Token generation demand is surging, and the world is racing to build AI factories,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. “Together with Marvell, we are enabling customers to leverage NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure ecosystem and scale to build specialized AI compute.”

“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.”

About Marvell

To deliver the data infrastructure technology that connects the world, we’re building solutions on the most powerful foundation: our partnerships with our customers. Trusted by the world’s leading technology companies for over 30 years, we move, store, process and secure the world’s data with semiconductor solutions designed for our customers’ current needs and future ambitions. Through a process of deep collaboration and transparency, we’re ultimately changing the way tomorrow’s enterprise, cloud and carrier architectures transform—for the better.

About NVIDIA

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


Source: NVIDIA

The post NVIDIA AI Ecosystem Expands as Marvell Joins Forces Through NVLink Fusion appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 11:47

Can the Poles pull off their first win in Sweden after almost a century?

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 11:46

The Azzurri head to Zenica looking to claim their spot in this summer's tournament.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:44

So I bought two from a family friend for 400 apiece for me and my girlfriend a ride. They came with everything including all the extra parts. handle, wheel cover, two fast chargers, couple other things. They only had about 30 miles a piece on them basically brand new.

Although nice to have them, my girlfriend doesn’t really like riding that much. It’s nice to have it for when she does, but I’m wondering what I could get for both of these and if it’s worth trading them in or selling them for something better. One has about 180 miles and the other one has about 100 now. It would be great to have if I needed something in a city, but I don’t live in a city and I don’t use it to get to work. Is it possible to find someone who wants to trade for something better that needs 2 pints? is the value still worth 400 apiece? I feel like the value is going down a ton since last year because they’re selling them for like 700 bucks on their website now

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:39

Video posted on social media depicts a rendering of the proposed 50-storey gargantuan structure decked in gold

In a city of respected art deco buildings, ridicule is being heaped on the latest structure proposed for Miami’s skyline: the Donald J Trump presidential library, unveiled in ambitious plans posted to social media on Monday night.

A 1 minute 40 second video tour of the proposed gargantuan structure revealed it will be decked, almost inevitably, in Trump’s trademark gold, including a giant statue of him, and will feature Air Force One, the $400m Boeing “flying palace” gifted to him by Qatar, in its cavernous lobby.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:38

Falling behind on debt in retirement can trigger a chain of consequences, but you have more options than you think.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:35

Maybe I missed the memo? There was chatter around a year ago including preorders - but now nada. Nothing on the website either.

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2026-03-31 12:04
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Brandon Sklenar and Amanda Seyfried also star in the film, which is coming to the Starz app.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 11:30

Foreign ministers Ishaq Dar and Wang Yi met in Beijing as Pakistan pushes for peacemaker role

Pakistan and China have released a joint five-part proposal for peace in the Middle East, after Pakistan’s foreign minister flew to Beijing on Tuesday to seek Chinese support for the country’s faltering efforts to negotiate an end to end the war.

The one-day meeting between Ishaq Dar and his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, came as Pakistan continues to push for the role of peacemaker between the United States and Iran, even as the war shows little sign of relenting.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:27

The king will address Congress during the visit, which will commemorate the 250th anniversary of American independence

Q: What do you make of the suggestion that Donald Trump could end the Iran war without securing the strait of Hormuz? Or do you think he should finish the job?

Farage replies:

I don’t think we should take literally anything right now that Donald Trump says … And then the last thing he’s going to do, or the last thing his colleagues in the White House are going to do, is to give the Iranians any idea of what their true intentions are.

Was it to remove nuclear capability? Was it aimed at regime change? I don’t think any of us quite know the absolute truth about that.

The problem is any third party inquiry is a waste of space unless you can subpoena police officers, social services, civil servants who were all part of turning the collective blind eye. And I think everything this government has done on this issue is an attempt to literally kick the can down the road, to not fully open this up.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 11:26

Critics say exemption for fossil fuels exploits White House’s ‘self-made gas crisis’, and could doom the rare Rice’s whale

A US government panel on Tuesday exempted oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico from the Endangered Species Act (ESA), a move which critics say could doom a rare whale species and harm other marine life.

The Endangered Species Committee – which had not convened in more than three decades – voted to approve the request for the ESA exemption at the request of the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:23

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine held a news conference at the Pentagon as gas prices in the U.S. continued to climb amid the ongoing war with Iran.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:15

Brendan Carr, commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Grapevine, Texas, US, on Friday, March 27, 2026. The Conservative Political Action Conference launched in 1974 brings together conservative organizations, elected leaders, and activists. Photographer: Shelby Tauber/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Grapevine, Texas, US, March 27, 2026.  Photo: Shelby Tauber / Bloomberg via Getty Images

When Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr talks about broadcast licensees serving the “public interest,” he loves to emphasizelocalism.” 

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.

Related

The Latest FCC Censorship Push No One Is Talking About Targets Incarcerated People

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. 

  • When Trump complained that news outlets were running “fake news” about Iranian missile strikes, Carr warned that broadcasters running “hoaxes and news distortions” would lose their licenses if they didn’t correct course.
  • After MSNBC declined to carry a White House briefing on the deportation of Kilmar Ábrego Garcia, Carr accused Comcast of ignoring “obvious facts of public interest” and warned “news distortion doesn’t cut it.” MSNBC (now MSNOW) is not a local outlet — it’s a cable station that the FCC doesn’t even regulate. 
  • Carr investigated KCBS, a San Francisco radio station, leading to rampant self-censorship in fear of retaliation. That might sound local, but the story that drew his ire was about a federal immigration enforcement operation. He didn’t care if the locals in the Bay Area wanted to know what immigration officers were up to — only that his boss does not want them to know. 
  • Carr investigated CBS over the same interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris that Trump sued over, despite experts’ virtually unanimous agreement that the claims were frivolous. Then he helped Trump shake down Paramount for the aforementioned palm-grease by waiting until two days after Trump’s settlement check arrived to approve CBS parent Paramount’s merger with David Ellison’s Skydance. He touted that merger as proof of Trump “winning” his war on the media at CPAC. 
  • When Trump sued the BBC over a documentary about January 6, Carr wrote to the heads of PBS and NPR demanding transcripts and video of any American broadcast of the program, claiming the British broadcast about events in Washington, D.C., contained “news distortion.”
  • After late night host Jimmy Kimmel commented on the assassination of Charlie Kirk, Carr warned that if ABC and Disney did not “take action” against Kimmel, the FCC would act. “We can do this the easy way or the hard way,” he said, drawing comparisons to mafia movies.

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 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.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:11
  • Fifa president made comments at Iran-Costa Rica game

  • Infantino says Iran will play games in the US as scheduled

  • Iran scheduled to open World Cup in LA on 15 June

The Fifa president, Gianni Infantino, told AFP on Tuesday that Iran “will be at the World Cup” and will play their group matches in the United States as scheduled, despite the Middle East war.

“Iran will be at the World Cup,” Infantino said at half-time of Iran’s friendly against Costa Rica in Turkey. “That’s why we’re here. We’re delighted because they’re a very, very strong team, I’m very happy.”

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:01

A Las Vegas performer has sued Taylor Swift over the title of her hit album "The Life of a Showgirl," alleging it violates the performer's trademark.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:00

Merlin could disappear in worst-case scenario, with British isles facing ecological ‘point of no return’

The merlin, Britain’s smallest bird of prey, is one of more than 200 species that will become extinct in the UK if action is not taken to curb emissions and unsustainable land use, a study has claimed.

According to the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH), there is a 20-year window in which decisions on climate and land use will determine the fate of dozens of Britain’s native species.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: The Trump administration on Monday issued a long-awaited proposed rule to open up retirement plans to alternative assets, paving the way for private equity and cryptocurrencies to be added to 401(k) accounts. The measure, announced by the U.S. Department of Labor, is intended to ease longstanding barriers to incorporating these less liquid and less transparent assets into American retirement plans. It follows an executive order from President Donald Trump last summer and could clear the way for alternative asset management firms to tap a large new source of capital. Industry groups have argued private market investments can enhance long-term returns and diversification for retirement savers, while skeptics warn higher fees, complexity and limited liquidity could limit those gains and pose risks for retail investors. Some private market funds that are already available to wealthier individual investors have shown signs of strain in recent months. Private credit funds known as business development companies have seen a wave of withdrawals. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the proposed rule was "an initial step" and aimed to be "mindful of the importance of protecting retirement assets." The guidance lays out how plan trustees, who have a legal fiduciary duty to act in the best interest of members, can incorporate these assets. They would have to "objectively, thoroughly, and analytically consider, and make determinations on factors including performance, fees, liquidity, valuation, performance benchmarks, and complexity," the DOL said. Trustees who abide by them will be granted safe harbor that protects them from lawsuits, it added. The Supreme Court agreed earlier this year to hear one such case filed in 2019 by a former Intel employee claiming trustees made "imprudent" decisions by investing in hedge funds and private equity funds.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:58

Robert Morris, who started Gateway church, pleaded guilty in October to sexually abusing girl in the 1980s

The founder and former pastor of one of the US’s largest megachurches has been released from an Oklahoma jail six months after pleading guilty to sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl in the 1980s.

Robert Morris, 64, who started Texas’s Gateway church and also once served as a White House spiritual adviser during Donald Trump’s first presidency, pleaded guilty in early October in Osage county district court on five counts of lewd or indecent acts with a child.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:57

Family pushing for greater controls after inquest finds Oliver Robinson’s prescription was ‘obstacle’ to proper care

Oliver Robinson felt he had exhausted conventional therapies when he left the Priory, a private mental health facility where he was treated for depression and addiction between 2019 and 2022. Initially he found relief from a new kind of prescription elsewhere. But by the time he took his own life in November 2023, aged 34, his family believe his medicine was making him worse.

In January, an inquest concluded that Robinson’s prescription for medicinal cannabis had “probably contributed to his death”. Catherine McKenna, the coroner for Manchester North, also ruled that his continued use of the prescription, first issued to him in May 2022 by Curaleaf Clinic, a private cannabis provider, “acted as an obstacle” to him receiving appropriate psychiatric and addiction care. His family understand this to be the first ruling of its kind.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:56

Dozens of other vessels leave area after drone strike causes fire onboard tanker owned by Kuwait’s state oil company

When Iran attacked a fully loaded crude oil tanker anchored at Dubai port on Monday night, damaging the vessel’s hull, hundreds of seafarers stranded on tankers anchored nearby were close enough to watch as the vessel burned.

Thousands more were able to listen to radio messages sent from the tanker to port authorities, as the latest strike on a merchant vessel during the US-Israel war on Iran reignited fears for the civilian maritime workers trapped in a war zone.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 10:50

As calls for restrictions on under-16s’ online activities gather pace, some are urging curbs on online gaming. The idea is a mess from top to bottom

Last week, Meta and YouTube were found liable for creating intentionally addictive products that affected the wellbeing of young social media users. The ruling has supercharged an already growing movement from governments and regulators to restrict or ban social media use for under-16s, as has been done in Australia, to protect children from potential harm.

But there is another way that about 85% of kids and teens congregate online – and that is through video games. It has been suggested that curbs on online gaming should be considered alongside social media restrictions in future legislation. There is some precedent: in 2021, China restricted young people’s online gaming time to one hour a day on weekends and holidays. But I have a lot of questions about how such curbs would work, and whether they should be attempted.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:45

The three former agents were seasoned investigators who primarily handled public corruption investigations and were assigned to special counsel Jack Smith's team.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:39

Heathrow wanted changes to fund upgrade, but airlines warned cost increases would be passed on to passengers

The UK aviation regulator has partly rejected plans by Heathrow to significantly raise its landing fees to fund a multibillion-pound upgrade, arguing the airport can still invest without steep rises to ticket prices.

The Civil Aviation Authority said the average charge for each passenger should rise from £28.40 to £28.80 between 2027 and 2031.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:38

Home to one of the world’s largest deposits of freshwater, the Great Lakes region will soon host next-generation generators – just as prices are being hiked across the US

Submersible hydroelectric technology deployed across the Great Lakes could become a key cog in clean energy efforts, supporters say, amid surging electricity demand and costs.

Home to one of the largest deposits of freshwater on the planet, the Great Lakes region has on its shores some of the largest cities in North America in Chicago, Toronto, Montreal and Detroit, where electricity demand is growing. While none of the five Great Lakes have significant tides or currents to fuel hydropower, several of the waterways that link the lakes do.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:33

If you have $7,500 saved, a CD account may be worth considering. Here's how much interest it can earn right now.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 10:33

It's next to impossible to attend high school or college without a laptop. Here are my favorite laptops that I've tested and reviewed for student budgets.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:28

Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco says his election fraud probe of the Proposition 50 Special Election last fall has come to a halt due to "politically motivated lawsuits and court filings."

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:27

Single biggest donation to a UK university in modern times will establish a new school of government bearing his name

The British billionaire hedge fund manager Chris Rokos has donated a record £190m to the University of Cambridge to establish a new school of government, which will bear his name.

It is believed to be the single biggest donation to any UK university in modern times and is intended to support Cambridge to become a leading training ground for future world leaders.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:25

Excited after that "You're welcome" scene at the end of the season premiere? Let's keep it going.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:25

This is what Apple, cybersecurity professionals and CNET's iOS experts recommend you do to keep your data safe.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:02

Ukraine says Russian spy satellite had photographed base before strike, as Moscow accused of helping Tehran

The destruction of a US E-3 Sentry airborne warning and control system (AWACS) aircraft in an Iranian strike on a Saudi Arabian airbase has raised questions over how a critical surveillance asset was left unprotected, and how Iran was able to launch a direct strike on the plane.

The plane was one of 16 operational E-3s, which first went into production in the 1960s and carry sophisticated monitoring equipment that allow them to warn of airborne threats such as missiles, as well as surveil and monitor their assigned battle space including communications, troop and equipment movements and air defence sites.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 10:01

It's never been more important to make the most of your money when buying a phone. These tips will help you shop better.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 09:59

ZURICH, March 31, 2026 — IBM and ETH Zurich announced today a 10-year collaboration to advance the next generation of algorithms at the intersection of AI and quantum computing. This initiative represents the latest milestone in the long-standing collaboration between the two institutions, further strengthening a scientific exchange that has helped create the future of information technology.

Credit: Shutterstock

Algorithms are the hidden architecture of modern technology. They power scientific discovery, economic growth, and technological progress, from classical computing to today’s AI revolution. With quantum computing bringing increasing value to science and industry, entirely new algorithmic foundations — as well as new ways of understanding and representing data — are required. Over the next decade, IBM and ETH Zurich aim to create new classes of algorithms capable of bridging classical computing, machine learning, and quantum systems to address some of the today’s critical challenges in business.

IBM will also support the creation of professorship positions and research projects at ETH Zurich, with the goal of advancing the algorithmic expertise of the next generation workforce. The education and research efforts will focus on new algorithmic paradigms for AI and quantum systems, including hybrid approaches that combine classical, AI-driven, and quantum computation to address challenges in four key areas: optimization and combinatorial problems; differential equations and dynamical systems; linear algebra and Hamiltonian simulations; and complex system modeling. These mathematical foundations are particularly important at the intersection of AI and quantum computing, where new algorithmic approaches could soon help unlock practical value from today’s quantum hardware and redefine how complex problems in science, industry, and society are solved.

Alessandro Curioni, IBM Fellow, VP Algorithms and Applications, IBM Research said: “Algorithms have always been the true drivers of computing revolutions and are at the core of our history at IBM Research. I strongly believe that the future of computing will be written not only in hardware or software, but in the algorithms that connect the two. As AI and quantum computing converge, we are witnessing the dawn of a new algorithmic era — and shaping this future requires both industry and academic scientific depth. IBM and ETH Zurich have a long and distinguished history of working together at the frontiers of science and technology. With this agreement, we are committing to inventing the algorithmic foundations of the future.”

Prof. Dr. Joël Mesot, President of ETH Zurich, said: “ETH Zurich and IBM share a longstanding commitment to excellence in research, and our focus in developing pioneering technologies is anchored in long-term societal benefits. The partnership with IBM reflects our ambition to co-create groundbreaking technology and to empower the next generation of AI and quantum computing experts.”

IBM has helped define every major era of computing, from foundational algorithmic breakthroughs — including the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) — to pioneering artificial intelligence — with systems like Deep Blue and Watson. Showcasing decades of leadership in algorithm design and implementation, IBM continues to push the boundaries of what computation can achieve.

ETH Zurich stands among the world’s leading scientific institutions, with a legacy that includes 22 Nobel laureates and some of the most influential minds in mathematics, physics, and computer science — from Albert Einstein to Eduard Stiefel. ETH was the birthplace of numerous ideas that form the mathematical and algorithmic backbone of modern science, and ETH-created programming languages, numerical methods, and theoretical frameworks are still in use to this day.

About IBM

IBM is a leading global hybrid cloud and AI, and business services provider, helping 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 business services deliver open and flexible options to our clients. All of this is backed by IBM’s legendary commitment to trust, transparency, responsibility, inclusivity and service. For more information, visit https://research.ibm.com.


Source: IBM

The post IBM and ETH Zurich Target New Algorithmic Foundations for AI and Quantum Computing appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:53

Families fear undocumented relatives could be turned away or detained at recruit celebrations in South Carolina

Federal immigration agents will be stationed at Marine Corps graduation events this week, the service has announced, raising fears that undocumented relatives celebrating their loved ones’ achievements will be seized and deported.

The service is presenting the unusual move as a security enhancement for family events over the next few days at the Parris Island Marine Corps recruiting depot in South Carolina.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:45

No other injuries were reported after the attack at a small Bulverde campus, where classes were cancelled

A 15-year-old student shot a teacher at a Texas high school and then fatally shot himself on Monday, according to authorities, who were still investigating what led to the early morning attack.

No other injuries were reported at Hill Country college preparatory high school in Bulverde, a small but growing city near San Antonio.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 09:40

SAN MATEO, Calif., March 31, 2026 — QuSecure, Inc., a market leader in post-quantum cybersecurity and cryptographic agility, today announced it is collaborating with the National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) in the Migration to Post-Quantum Cryptography Project Consortium to bring awareness to the issues involved in migrating to post-quantum algorithms and to develop practices to ease migration from current public-key algorithms to replacement algorithms.

Quantum computers capable of breaking public key cryptography threaten current information systems. NIST’s post-quantum cryptography program developed standardized quantum-resistant algorithms to protect digital information. Organizations must identify where vulnerable public key algorithms exist across hardware, software, and services and prioritize migration to NIST post-quantum cryptographic algorithms to protect data and processes from future threats.

“Public-key cryptography is widely used to protect today’s digital information,” said William Newhouse, Security Engineer, NIST National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence. “With the advent of quantum computing, and its potential to compromise many of the current cryptographic algorithms, it is critical that organizations begin to plan for many of the technological and operational challenges that a migration to post-quantum cryptography will present. This project aims to help organizations in that effort.”

As a contributing member of the consortium, QuSecure will collaborate with Automated Cryptography Discovery and Inventory and post-quantum cryptography vendors to understand tool performance across enterprise environments and use cases. QuSecure will test solutions in NCCoE lab environments with enterprise PQC tools to identify capability gaps and strengthen post-quantum cryptography migration strategies. The company will share technical expertise and deployment barriers to improve interoperability, implementation performance, and coordination with standards bodies and industry sectors.

“This collaboration with the NCCoE brings industry leaders together to tackle one of today’s most pressing cybersecurity challenges – the transition to post-quantum cryptography,” said Garfield Jones, QuSecure SVP, Research & Technology Strategy. “By working across government, industry, and academia, we can help organizations identify quantum-vulnerable systems, manage risk, and prepare for a secure, quantum-resilient future.”

The initial scope of this project will engage the industry to demonstrate the use of automated discovery tools to identify instances of quantum-vulnerable public key algorithms that are widely deployed, and to manage associated risks. Other goals include development and improvement of migration strategy, interoperability and performance of implementations, and outreach to standard developing organizations and industry sectors.

As part of NIST, the NCCoE is a collaborative hub where industry organizations, government agencies, and academic institutions work together to address businesses’ most pressing cybersecurity issues. This public-private partnership enables collaboration in the creation of practical cybersecurity solutions for specific industries, as well as for broad, cross-sector technology challenges. The NCCoE was established in 2012 by NIST in partnership with the State of Maryland and Montgomery County, Maryland. Information is available at https://www.nccoe.nist.gov.

About QuSecure

QuSecure is the pioneer of orchestrated crypto-agility and the creator of QuProtect R3, the first end-to-end crypto-agility and cryptographic command platform. QuSecure enables organizations to identify high-value assets, modernize cryptography without operational disruption, and achieve continuous compliance—all while preparing for the quantum threat.


Source: QuSecure

The post QuSecure and NIST’s NCCoE Partner to Address Post-Quantum Algorithm Migration appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:17

Defence ministry says US failed to request authorisation in time for parliament to give approval as required by international treaty

Italy has denied the use of an airbase in Sicily to US military planes carrying weapons for the war in Iran after the US did not follow the required authorisation procedure.

A source at the Italian defence ministry confirmed a report in Corriere della Sera that “some US bombers” had been due to land at Sigonella – one of seven US navy bases in Italy – before heading to the Middle East, but that use of the base had been denied because the US sought authorisation to land only while the aircraft were already en route to Sicily.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:17

US-Israel war on Iran: What next for Lebanon? 14 April 2026 — 13:00 TO 14:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Online

Experts examine the conflict’s trajectory, its impact on Lebanon’s people and the future of Hezbollah’s role in the Lebanese state.

Experts examine the conflict’s trajectory, its impact on Lebanon’s people, and the future of Hezbollah’s role in the Lebanese state.

Amid the ongoing US-Israel war on Iran, the conflict in Lebanon is intensifying. On 2 March, Hezbollah launched rockets and drones into Israel in response to strikes on Iran. Since then, Israeli military attacks have killed more than 1,000 people, injured around 2,500, and displaced nearly one-fifth of Lebanon’s population.

The conflict is unlikely to subside soon. On 24 March, Israel’s defense minister announced plans for a military occupation of a large area of southern Lebanon. The Lebanese government would have limited options for responding. Meanwhile, it continues to struggle with whether and how to confront Hezbollah without inflaming internal tensions.

In this webinar, experts will examine the conflict’s trajectory, implications of a potential Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon, and the future of Hezbollah’s role in the Lebanese state. Panelists will also discuss how this latest round of conflict has impacted Lebanon’s people and what is needed to support recovery.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:10

SAN DIEGO, March 31, 2026 — Monarch Quantum, a developer of integrated photonics hardware for quantum technologies, today announced a $55 million oversubscribed growth round, led by Serendipity Capital, a leading deep tech investor, with participation from 55 North, the world’s largest dedicated pure play quantum fund, and Global Innovation Labs. Founded in 2025, Monarch entered 2026 with more than $60 million in customer contracts from leading quantum companies including Quantinuum, Infleqtion, and NASA, bringing total capital and customer contracts to more than $115 million within six months of founding.

Monarch Quantum Founding Team

The funding will accelerate production of Monarch’s Quantum Light Engines, photonic control systems for quantum computing, sensing, and networking, while supporting scale-up, supply chain expansion, and global partnerships to meet growing demand for next-generation quantum hardware.

Founded in 2025 by photonics industry veteran Dr. Timothy Day, Monarch entered 2026 with more than $60 million in customer contracts from leading quantum companies. Importantly, this investment will enable Monarch to expand support for leading organizations at the forefront of quantum technology including Quantinuum, Infleqtion, and NASA, as they advance their next-generation quantum roadmaps. This also supports positioning the company as a critical hardware infrastructure supplier to the emerging quantum ecosystem.

“Quantum technologies are reaching a point where infrastructure matters as much as the qubits themselves,” said Dr. Timothy Day, Chairman and CEO of Monarch Quantum. “Our Quantum Light Engines replace complex laboratory photonics systems with manufacturable hardware, enabling our customers to scale quantum platforms faster and more reliably.”

Rob Jesudason, CEO and Founder of Serendipity Capital said, “Integrated photonics – and Monarch’s Quantum Light Engines in particular – are a critical enabler for the deployment of quantum technologies. Monarch Quantum is uniquely positioned to become the global leader and enable quantum computing companies to deliver their roadmaps. Tim and his team have a proven track record in photonic integration, and we are delighted to partner with them to achieve the next stage of their growth.”

The Infrastructure Gap in Quantum Technology

Quantum technologies are set to transform industries from healthcare to national security, with governments accelerating investment through initiatives like the U.S. National Quantum Initiative. Yet today’s systems still rely on complex, lab-scale setups that are difficult to scale—creating a key bottleneck.

As public and private investment grows, scalable photonics infrastructure is becoming essential to move from research to commercial deployment. Monarch’s Quantum Light Engines provide this critical layer, enabling precise photonic control across quantum computing, sensing, and networking.

Monarch’s Quantum Light Engines serve as a hardware infrastructure layer for quantum technologies, providing the precise photonic control systems required across multiple quantum computing modalities while also supporting emerging quantum sensing and networking architectures.

Building the Photonics Infrastructure Layer for Quantum Systems

Monarch Quantum is led by a team with a successful history of turning advanced photonics research into commercial technology platforms. Dr. Day and the founding team bring decades of experience scaling complex laser systems through a disciplined systems engineering approach. The team previously built and commercialized Daylight Solutions, a leader in quantum cascade laser technology whose systems are deployed in low-SWaP infrared countermeasure platforms for lightweight rotary and fixed-wing aircraft, bioprocessing and semiconductor inspection. The company was acquired by aerospace and defense contractor Leonardo DRS in 2017.

At Monarch Quantum, the team is applying that same commercialization expertise to integrated photonics, enabling quantum hardware developers to move from laboratory-scale experiments to scalable, manufacturable systems.

World-Class Investors in Monarch Quantum

The Monarch Quantum growth capital round brings together a world-class syndicate of institutional investors with deep experience across the full quantum technology stack, photonics infrastructure, and supply chain supporting the quantum ecosystem.

Serendipity Capital invests in companies that enhance and secure the critical technologies and infrastructure of tomorrow. Their permanent capital structure allows them to invest for the long term. Through the expertise within their ecosystem, they facilitate access to strategic partners, provide the capital and offer hands-on practical support to enable their leading portfolio companies to realize their potential.

Kai Hudek, General Partner at 55 North, said, “Quantum technologies will only achieve real impact if they can be engineered and manufactured at scale. We see Monarch’s technology as critical infrastructure for the ecosystem, enabling quantum platforms to move from bespoke laboratory setups to reliable, manufacturable systems. The company combines deep photonics expertise, strong systems engineering, and high-quality manufacturing validated by real commercial demand. We’re excited to partner with Tim and the Monarch team in this next phase of growth and help build the photonics backbone for quantum systems worldwide.”

“Monarch Quantum represents exactly the kind of breakthrough technology we aim to support,” said David Park, General Partner of Global Innovation Labs. “At Global Innovation Labs, our mission is to translate deep scientific innovation into globally impactful companies. Monarch brings together exceptional scientific depth, visionary leadership, and strong market timing. Integrated photonics is emerging as a critical enabling layer for quantum computing, advanced sensing, telecommunications, and next generation AI infrastructure. As demand for photonic technologies accelerates across these sectors, Monarch’s platform has the potential to unlock new performance frontiers. We believe the company has both the technology and the team to become a global leader in this space.”

More from HPCwire: Monarch Quantum Launches to Deliver Scalable Systems to Quantum Ecosystem

About Monarch Quantum, Inc.

Monarch Quantum is a U.S.-based quantum photonics company building integrated photonics systems — Quantum Light Engines — for quantum computing, sensing, and communications. Monarch Quantum combines best-in-class photonics components with systems engineering and advanced packaging to enable scalable, deployable quantum hardware. The company serves quantum OEMs, national laboratories, defense integrators, and advanced research institutions worldwide.


Source: Monarch Quantum

The post Monarch Quantum Raises $55M as Demand Grows for Photonic Quantum Hardware appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:08

Anyone have some old ones laying around? I just vesced my board and would love to get some of the rails next. Thanks!

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:02

BOSTON and PARIS, March 31, 2026 — Alice & Bob, a leader in fault-tolerant quantum computing, has been awarded $3.9 million from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) Quantum Computing for Computational Chemistry (QC 3) program to develop fault-tolerant quantum algorithms aimed at discovering rare-earth-free permanent magnets – a critical component in electric motors and turbines.

To meet their goal, Alice & Bob will strive to achieve a 10,000-fold speed-up in computing time compared to state-of-the-art classical simulations, enabling realistic material calculations within approximately one day. They will show this speed-up experimentally on Alice & Bob’s fault-tolerant quantum computers, and theoretically with resource estimates.

“Designing high-performance magnets without rare earth elements is one of the hardest problems in material science, as these materials are extremely difficult to simulate with classical computers. A hybrid approach – where classical methods compute environmental parameters and quantum computers simulate highly correlated electronic systems more accurately – could significantly accelerate the discovery of new magnetic materials.” said Juliette Peyronnet, U.S General Manager at Alice & Bob

Alice & Bob will lead the three-year project in collaboration with Los Alamos National Laboratory, GE Vernova’s Advanced Research accelerator, and Professor Emanuel Gull (a visiting Professor at Warsaw University and a Professor at University of Michigan), leading a group that will create classical algorithms that will work in conjunction with Alice & Bob’s quantum algorithms. Los Alamos will develop tensor network tools to optimize quantum circuits, and GE Vernova’s Advanced Research accelerator will perform a technoeconomic analysis of material discovery opportunities enabled by the hybrid algorithm.

“Finding ways to prepare high quality states via tensor network optimization is a critical tool that will help develop fault-tolerant quantum algorithms applied to challenges like rare-earth-free minerals permanent magnets,” said Marco Cerezo, Los Alamos scientist and Laboratory lead on the project. “This team effort converges expertise to leverage quantum computing for an important, practical outcome.”

“Our team is excited to collaborate with this outstanding technical team and ARPA-E to evaluate how quantum computing could drive forward industrial materials design and discovery,” said Jonathan Owens, Senior Scientist – Computational Materials Physics at GE Vernova’s Advanced Research Center in Niskayuna, NY, U.S.A.

High-performance magnets underpin many technologies central to the global energy transition. Today’s dominant magnet, neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB), was discovered in the 1980s and relies on rare-earth elements and related processes whose supply chains are geographically concentrated and politically constrained.

Finding alternatives has proven difficult. The magnetic behavior of candidate materials emerges from complex quantum interactions between electrons, making accurate simulation extremely challenging for classical computers. Quantum computers, which directly model quantum systems, could allow researchers to simulate these materials far more efficiently.

If successful, the approach could accelerate the development of cheaper, more sustainable magnets for future energy and industrial technologies. The algorithm developed could also be easily adapted to solve other challenging problems in chemistry and materials science.

About Alice & Bob

Alice & Bob  is a quantum computing company based in Paris and Boston whose goal is to create the first universal, fault-tolerant quantum computer. Founded in 2020, Alice & Bob has raised €130 million in funding and employs more than 200 people.   Advised by Nobel Prize winning researchers, Alice & Bob specializes in cat qubits, a technology developed by the company’s founders. Demonstrating the power of its cat architecture, Alice & Bob recently showed that it could reduce the hardware requirements for building a useful large-scale quantum computer up to 200 times compared with competing approaches.


Source: Alice & Bob

The post Alice & Bob Secures $3.9M ARPA-E Award to Apply Quantum Computing to Magnet Design appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:01

At first glance, the AirPods Max 2 don't seem like much of an upgrade from their predecessor. But after I went hands-on with them, I grew more impressed with the changes, though I still have a few gripes.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:01

The globally available feature is finally rolling out in the US, but you'll need to buy extra hardware to use it.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 09:01

Brittlestars, sea anemones and a catshark among new-to-science species collected during expedition off the Queensland coast

Marine scientists have discovered more than 110 new fish and invertebrate species in the Coral Sea – a figure they believe could exceed 200 as more are identified.

The species were found in waters between 200 metres and 3km deep in the Coral Sea marine park, Australia’s largest marine protected area, which spans nearly 1m sq km to the east of the Great Barrier Reef.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:00

As the US midterms approach, Americans must take action to shield democracy from Donald Trump’s assault

Donald Trump is going all out to pressure the Senate to pass the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, which he insists on calling the Save America Act. On 8 March, he posted on Truth Social: “It supersedes everything else. MUST GO TO THE FRONT OF THE LINE. I, as President, will not sign other Bills until this is passed … MUST SHOW VOTER I.D. & PROOF OF CITIZENSHIP: NO MAIL-IN BALLOTS EXCEPT FOR MILITARY - ILLNESS, DISABILITY, TRAVEL … ”

The New York Times reports that the president “has called the measure his ‘No. 1 priority,’ saying it would ‘guarantee the midterms’ for his party.” He has even asked Senate Republicans to use their majority to end the filibuster and pass the bill.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 09:00

Sling and YouTube TV help you cut the cord, but what do they offer?

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 09:00

As living costs rise, the state where Gates and Bezos made billions is targeting top earners – could other states follow?

Noel Frame knows exactly how difficult it is to raise taxes on the ultra-wealthy, because she has been trying to do just that – first as an activist, then as a state legislator – for the past 15 years. And until recently almost all of her efforts ended in failure.

She lives in Washington, a solid blue state that should, in theory, be hospitable to the idea of more progressive taxation and has plenty of multimillionaires to target, since it is the home of Microsoft, Amazon and an array of other tech-driven corporations. While the wealth of these tech giants has grown exponentially in recent decades, the state – which levies no income taxes – has struggled to bring in enough revenue to pay for basic services like public schooling and long-term healthcare.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 08:51

STAMFORD, Conn., March 31, 2026 — Gartner, Inc., a business and technology insights company, predicts that by 2028, the growing importance of explainable AI (XAI) will drive large language model (LLM) observability investments to 50% of GenAI deployments, up from 15% today.

Gartner defines XAI as a set of capabilities that describes a model, highlights its strengths and weaknesses, predicts its likely behavior and identifies any potential biases. It can clarify a model’s functioning to a specific audience to enable accuracy, fairness, accountability, stability and transparency in algorithmic decision making.

LLM observability solutions monitor, analyze and provide actionable insights into the behavior and performance of LLMs. They go beyond standard IT measurements, such as response times to look at specific LLM metrics such as hallucinations, bias and token utilization. These tools are used by teams that develop and operationalize AI systems, and increasingly by IT operations and SREs responsible for the performance and resilience of these systems in production.

“As enterprises scale GenAI, the trust requirement grows faster than the technology itself,” said Pankaj Prasad, Sr Principal Analyst at Gartner. “XAI provides visibility into why a model responded a certain way, while LLM observability validates how that response was generated and whether it can be relied on.

“Without robust XAI and observability foundations, GenAI initiatives will be restricted to low risk, internal, or noncritical tasks where output verification is easily managed or inconsequential, severely limiting the potential return on investment.”

Growing Need for XAI and LLM Observability as Mandatory Trust Mechanisms

Gartner forecasts the global GenAI models market will exceed $25 billion in 2026 and reach $75 billion by 2029, driven by rapid adoption across industries. As usage increases, so does the need for mechanisms that verify AI-generated content and protect against hallucinations, factual inaccuracies and biased reasoning.

“Traditional observability is focused on speed and cost, but the priority is now moving toward deeper quality measures such as factual accuracy, logical correctness and sycophancy. This shift requires new governance-focused metrics and evaluation methods, such as human-in-the-loop validation of the generated content’s narrative and citation accuracy,” said Prasad.

“Explainability turns a GenAI output into a defensible, auditable insight. LLM observability ensures the model behaves as expected over time. Without both, GenAI cannot mature beyond controlled lab environments.”

To improve the reliability, transparency and business value of GenAI use cases, organizations should prioritize the following steps:

  • XAI Tracing for High Impact Use Cases: Mandate verifiable XAI tracing for all high impact GenAI use cases to document the model’s reasoning steps and the source data behind each output.
  • Multidimensional LLM Observability: Prioritize observability platforms that monitor latency, drift, token usage and cost, error rates, and output‑quality metrics to ensure reliable GenAI performance.
  • Continuous LLM Evaluation in CI/CD Pipelines: Integrate LLM evaluation metrics, including factual‑accuracy benchmarks and safety checks, into continuous integration (CI)/continuous delivery (CD) pipelines for continuous validation before deployment.
  • Stakeholder Education on Explainability Requirements: Educate legal, compliance, and other key stakeholders on explainability requirements to ensure alignment on risk, governance expectations, and implementation challenges.

Gartner clients can read more in Predicts: AI will unlock Observability at Scale.

About Gartner

Gartner (NYSE: IT) delivers actionable, objective business and technology insights that drive smarter decisions and stronger performance on an organization’s mission-critical priorities. To learn more, visit gartner.com.


Source: Gartner

The post Gartner Forecasts Rising Explainable AI Demand to Boost LLM Observability Adoption in GenAI appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 08:46

CHICAGO, March 31, 2026 — memQ, an industry leader in quantum networking solutions for distributed quantum computing, announced today the closing of its $10 million Series A round of financing. The round was co-led by Quantonation and Ocean Azul Partners, with syndicate participation from both existing and new investors.

Quantum computing is the next major shift in computing, forecasted to become a $100 billion market by 2035 according to McKinsey & Company; in that the quantum communications subsector alone is projected to reach up to $15 billion. Key workloads include quantum secure networking, distributed quantum computing, blind quantum computing, and quantum sensing. Each of these are expected to require the ability to network quantum-capable systems across a range of distances, and potentially across varied quantum computer architectures and qubit modalities.

“Quantonation was the industry’s first venture fund dedicated to quantum technologies and deep physics, recognizing the potential for quantum systems to transform our use of information,” stated Christophe Jurczak, founding partner at Quantonation.“We see in memQ the potential to unlock and accelerate the power of quantum across our entire portfolio, as well as the industry at large – and to be a clear industry leader in that process.”

The memQ xQNA portfolio provides the core components needed to network quantum systems together for modular growth, unlimited scale, and real-world use cases such as scale-out configurations, cooperative processing, and blind cloud quantum computing – all using dense and efficient chip-scale technology. The company’s quantum network interface controllers (QNICs) allow various types of quantum computers to join a network without collapsing the quantum state; the quantum memory modules (QMMs) provide stable quantum memories for centralized entanglement operations; the quantum control system (QCS) orchestrates qubit and entanglement operations across a distributed network with atomic precision; and the distributed quantum compiler (xDQC) distributes workloads across the network based upon optimum resource allocation for maximum performance.

“memQ’s breakthrough technology addresses a key issue facing today’s quantum computers: the inability to work together over classical networks; this blocks them from leveraging the type of modular scale-out configurations that are key to today’s HPC and supercomputer systems,” stated Charles Foley, Chairman and CEO of memQ. “Our end-to-end architecture provides qubit-agnostic connectivity and control of connected quantum systems over standard optical telecom links, using chip-scale solutions that are efficient, powerful, and straightforward to integrate.”

“Photonic integrated control circuits are a key enabler of the utility-scale, networked quantum systems we’re building at Atom Computing. memQ is making meaningful progress on technologies that could be central to scaling quantum computers, and we look forward to collaborating with their team to accelerate that vision,” said Dr. Ben Bloom, CEO and Founder, Atom Computing.

Industry analyst firm Global Quantum Intelligence (GQI) was among the first of the market research firms to analyze memQ’s technology, which was included in an industry diligence report published in December 2024. “At GQI, we monitor the evolution and development of the quantum industry as a whole – from science, to technology, to products, and eventually to business models. memQ’s approach to developing an extensible quantum network architecture based upon commercial fab processes and platforms is a leading approach to delivering quantum networking at scale,” reported Andre Konig, CEO of Global Quantum Intelligence. “Capabilities such as this will be prerequisite to quantum computing attaining its full promise.”

More from HPCwire

About memQ

Founded in 2021 as a technology spin-out from the University of Chicago, memQ is dedicated to enabling the scalable implementation of quantum computing through standards-based connectivity across optical connections between quantum computers anywhere. The company’s portfolio provides secure connectivity and control across local, campus, metro, and wide-area quantum compute resources with high-fidelity and low-loss, regardless of qubit structures employed. More information is available at www.memq.tech.


Source: memQ

The post memQ Announces Series A Funding to Drive Extensible Quantum Networking appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 08:33

Spin-off launched with 10 nations, as original event remains mired in protests and boycotts over Israel’s involvement

Eurovision is seeking to expand into the Asian market by hosting a version of its song contest in Bangkok this year, just as the original annual event is being buffeted by discord and boycotts on the eve of its 70th anniversary edition.

The grand final of the inaugural Eurovision song contest Asia will take place in Thailand’s capital on Saturday 14 November, the Switzerland-based organisation announced on Tuesday. Broadcasters from 10 countries have confirmed their participation.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 08:16

There's no shortage of prestige shows on Apple TV this month.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 08:11

A new documentary charts the tragic events that led to the former NBA star overdosing in a Nevada brothel – and what came next

There’s a version of the Lamar Odom story that ends in a Nevada brothel. It’s not hard to imagine the grand finale – the TMZ bulletin relating his fatal drug overdose, followed by emotional tributes to what was lost: a radical basketball prodigy of the New York tradition, a two-time NBA champion with the Kobe Bryant Lakers, a glittering career that spanned coasts and eras before caving under the weight of addiction. A cautionary tale of incandescent fame, with Odom’s celebrity wife Khloé Kardashian cast as a man-eater to eclipse her more notorious older sister, would have been the epilogue cemented in a thousand think pieces.

But by living to tell the tale, Odom has instead become the latest fallen star to prove a core truism of Western mythmaking: heroes who don’t die young are doomed to live long enough to become the villain in their own tale.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 08:07

Why are UK energy costs so high? And how to bring them down. Independent Thinking Podcast Audio sfarrell.drupa…

As the Iran war pushes energy costs to the front of everyone’s mind, Bronwen Maddox and Sir Dieter Helm discuss what the UK government should do.

An earlier than usual episode of the Independent Thinking podcast, ahead of the Easter break.

In a one-on-one conversation, Chatham House Director Bronwen Maddox discusses energy with Sir Dieter Helm, Professor of Economic Policy at the University of Oxford, who has been advising governments and writing on energy, water and the environment for decades.

They examine how energy policies of different governments over decades led to the UK’s energy costs being so high. And what the government should do if it wants to guarantee security of supply – and to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Are those concerned about climate change right to push for net zero? Are current policies driving industry from the UK? Should there be more nuclear power stations, or more drilling in the North Sea?

About Independent Thinking 

Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.

More ways to listen: Apple podcasts and Spotify. 

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 09:13

Lawyers for the man charged with killing Charlie Kirk are citing a federal agency's report in questioning the link between a bullet from his autopsy and a rifle found near the scene.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 19:39

The average price of gas across the U.S. last reached $4 after Russia's invasion of Ukraine​ sent crude oil prices surging.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 13:48

Opposition lawmakers, rights advocates and some foreign governments condemned the law as discriminatory. Israelis in the territory are tried in different courts.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 08:01

I see it’s the cheapest one on the website but also says it supports up to 250lbs. I’m 175, would it work?

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 08:01

The Cupertino colossus has created some of the most iconic products over the last 50 years. Here are ones that stand out.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 08:00

In 2003, the US claimed its Iraq incursion would be brief. Now there’s competition for the title of worst-planned war in American history

The US-Israel war on Iran is a colossal blunder of world historical proportions. As clear an act of aggression as one can imagine, the war is blatantly illegal, continuing the death blow to international law and norms that began (most recently) with Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza.

The war has also been launched with magnificently poor planning, as the United States seems shocked by and unprepared for how Iran uses every means at its disposal to restrict shipping in the strait of Hormuz. And with the massive disruption to the international supply of energy and certain necessary commodities, the global economy is teetering on collapse, with the United States and Israel mortgaging the futures of many poorer nations around the world – especially in Asia and Africa – for their own imperial adventurism.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:54

Telegram is increasingly blocked and mobile internet users face blackouts in effort likened to Iranian shutdowns

Russia is in the midst of a vast, slow-moving effort to splinter its internet from the rest of the world, say activists and experts, with steep consequences for millions of people who are gradually being cut off.

Unlike Iran’s internet shutdowns earlier this year, Russia’s shutdown is a piecemeal and opaque effort. It is defined by escalating mobile internet blackouts across cities and provinces, growing restrictions on certain kinds of traffic, and new blocks on Telegram, a messaging app essential to communication and daily life for most Russians.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 07:50

The US vice-president still dreams of succeeding Trump in 2028. No wonder he’s desperate to distance himself from the price rises caused by the war with Iran

Bombing little kids in the Middle East? Whatever. Immigration agents killing US civilians in the street and terrorising local communities? Meh. The Epstein files still not being released in full? Annoying, but there’s probably an explanation. Gas prices blowing past $4 a gallon (80p a litre) because of the war on Iran? An outrage!

There are a lot of things that Maga can forgive the dear leader for, but high fuel prices? In a country addicted to cheap energy, that’s a red line. A month into the reckless and unconscionable war on Iran, Donald Trump’s popularity is sinking. According to a national poll by the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the president’s approval rating has fallen to 33%, the lowest during his second term. His base is still behind him, but if gas prices keep rising, along with the cost of everything else, even it could turn.

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

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:45

New York-based Gao Zhen was detained in 2024 during a family visit to China and then tried for ‘defaming national heroes’

The Chinese dissident artist Gao Zhen, known for making satirical sculptures of China’s former leader Mao Zedong, has been tried over accusations of “defaming national heroes and martyrs”, his wife and a rights group have said.

Gao, 69, who was detained in 2024 during a visit to China from the US, faces a maximum three-year prison sentence, his wife, Zhao Yaliang, and Shane Yi, a researcher at the Chinese human rights defenders group, said.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:15

The bank plans to lend $80 billion to small businesses over the next 10 years as part of what it's calling the "American Dream Initiative."

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:11

Every onewheel chair video I see involves wild bodyweight movement which IMHO defeats the purpose. Disclaimer: I'm an armchair engineer without a Onewheel.

Would a chair mounted in a 2-axis slider right under the seat and controlled with linkages to a joystick or each sliding armrest be a better solution? Armrests as joysticks?

Would the sliders need to be at the level of the footpads?

What about a rotationally-constrained ball pivot mounted atop the fender with linkages controlling A-axis and B-axis tilt?

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:06
  • Champions UConn face South Carolina on Friday

  • Bruins will take on Longhorns in other semi-final

The women’s Final Four is on repeat. No 1 seeds UConn, UCLA, Texas and South Carolina are in the Final Four for the second straight season, just the second time the same teams have reached the sport’s final weekend in consecutive years.

Only the matchups and location will be different this time. Reigning national champion UConn will face South Carolina on Friday in Phoenix after playing UCLA last season. The Bruins will take on the Longhorns.

“I don’t think people understand how hard it is to do it,” Texas coach Vic Schaefer said. “I think it bodes well for all of us, but there’s four or five more teams right there nipping at your heels.”

Just not this season – or last. The only other time the same four teams reached consecutive Final Fours was when UConn, Tennessee, Stanford and Georgia did so from 1995-96.

Everyone will be trying to stop the Huskies in this one. UConn have been the standard in women’s college basketball under coach Geno Auriemma. The Huskies have won 12 national championships, played in 25 Final Fours – a record 14 straight from 2008-22 – and have won 1,288 games in 41 seasons under Auriemma.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:00

A wartime leader’s words are critically important. But Trump, contradicting himself and denying reality, is no Churchill

During a White House ceremony on 9 April 1963, then president John F Kennedy bestowed honorary citizenship on former prime minister Winston Churchill, remembering how effectively Churchill inspired millions with his words during the second world war. As Kennedy put it, Churchill “mobilized the English language and sent it into battle”.

The same cannot be said of Kennedy’s successor Donald Trump. Their names may be awkwardly conjoined atop the shuttered Kennedy Center, but the comparison ends there. Kennedy, like Churchill, spoke effectively, with great attention to the facts, particularly during the Cuban missile crisis, when the world’s leaders hung on every phrase and participle spoken by the leader of the free world.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:00

There are plenty to choose from regardless of your teeth needs. These toothpastes will keep them white.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:00

You can equip your rental with personalized security options. My picks can fit nearly anywhere -- no screws required.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 07:00

Researchers at the University of Waterloo say a new "quadratic quantum gravity" framework could explain the universe's rapid early expansion without adding extra ingredients to Einstein's theory by hand. The idea is especially notable because it makes testable predictions, including a minimum level of primordial gravitational waves that future experiments may be able to detect. "Even though this model deals with incredibly high energies, it leads to clear predictions that today's experiments can actually look for," said Dr. Niayesh Afshordi, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Waterloo and Perimeter Institute (PI). "That direct link between quantum gravity and real data is rare and exciting." Phys.org reports: The research team found that the Big Bang's rapid early expansion can emerge naturally from this simple, consistent theory of quantum gravity, without adding any extra ingredients. This early burst of expansion, often called inflation, is a central idea in modern cosmology because it explains why the universe looks the way it does today. Their model also predicts a minimum amount of primordial gravitational waves, which are tiny ripples in spacetime geometry created in the first moments after the Big Bang. These signals may be detectable in upcoming experiments, offering a rare chance to test ideas about the universe's quantum origins. [...] The team plans to refine their predictions for upcoming experiments to explore how their framework connects to particle physics and other puzzles about the early universe. Their long-term goal is to strengthen the bridge between quantum gravity and observational cosmology. The research has been published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 06:55

After three months of testing, I found the best countertop and cordless water flossers for battery life, cleaning braces, travel and more.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:50

You can download and 3D print the little spaceman from Project Hail Mary, and it's inspiring, like the movie itself.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:47

Ex-Radio 2 presenter reportedly investigated over claims relating to teenager but case closed due to lack of evidence

Scott Mills was questioned over allegations of serious sexual offences against a boy under 16 in 2018 but the case was later closed due to lack of evidence, it has emerged after he was sacked with immediate effect.

Mills, who hosted Britain’s most popular radio breakfast show on BBC Radio 2, was taken off the air last week, and on Monday the BBC announced his contract had been terminated.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:47

test conference 30 April 2026 — 08:00 TO 09:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online test conference

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:46

Authorities said the smuggler turned to forest paths and camels to avoid road checkpoints.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:44

A soldier who made “inappropriate remarks” has been dismissed from service, the IDF said. Reservists from the ultra-Orthodox Netzah Yehuda unit held the journalists for two hours.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:26

Homes evacuated in Lurgan as police carry out controlled explosion on device, which man was forced to carry in ‘terrifying ordeal’

Gunmen hijacked a car, placed a device inside and forced the occupant to drive the vehicle to a police station in Northern Ireland on Monday, prompting a security alert and the evacuation of about 100 homes.

Some streets in Lurgan, County Armagh, remained shut on Tuesday morning as police investigated the scene.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:20

The attack came hours after Trump threatened to ‘obliterate’ Iran’s energy plants and oil wells unless it opened the strait of Hormuz. Plus, Israel to give death penalty to Palestinians convicted of lethal attacks

Good morning.

Iran attacked and set alight a fully loaded crude oil tanker anchored at Dubai port, causing damage to the vessel’s hull, in the latest strike on merchant vessels in the Gulf and the strait of Hormuz. The fire was extinguished within hours and no injuries were reported.

What has Trump said about the war’s end? He has continued to give mixed messages, threatening to destroy Iran’s energy facilities unless it agrees to peace terms – while simultaneously claiming diplomatic progress in ending the war the US started together with Israel. Iran has accused the US of using diplomacy as a smokescreen to prepare for more attacks.

Which countries are most vulnerable to economic shocks? The Philippines, which imports almost all of its crude oil from the Middle East, is particularly exposed to surging prices, which have triggered protests and widespread anger.

Why now? The government of Iran, which the US has attacked, is a prolific and sophisticated disinformation actor, while Russian and Chinese influence operations continue to target US allies globally.

How would the embassies do it? They have been told to use local influencers, academics and community leaders abroad to make US-funded narratives feel more organic.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:16

New AT&T customers can pay one price for a home and wireless bundle.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:11

Exclusive: Reform UK will be ‘steering well clear’ of CPAC event in July, says a source, as will senior Tories

Nigel Farage will snub a major conference of US conservatives that is being brought to the UK by Liz Truss.

The short-lived former prime minister, who was accused of crashing the economy, was chosen by the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) to lead a version of the event in the UK in July.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:02

What I’m Discussing Today:

  • Kareem’s Daily Quote: When the tale gets loud but the facts stay put

  • The Story Didn’t Start Where the Headlines Say It Did: Houthis and the Iran war

  • Video Break: C’mon…we gotta do it one more time…March Madness!

  • A Man Steals a Lectern and Still Runs for Office: The joke that went too far

  • Selective History Makes Bad Law: Reconstruction wasn’t optional

  • What I’m Watching: Send Help

  • Jukebox Playlist: Nice work if you can get it

Kareem’s Daily Quote

“Facts are stubborn things.” — By John Adams. Or Tobias Smollett. Or Alain-René Lesage (who wrote a book that Smollett translated).

Credit: Getty Images

It was a line that John Adams dropped during a courtroom argument that still hits harder than most modern political speeches. “Facts are stubborn things” was such a good line that it traveled at least a century, from novelist Alain-René Lesage who put it in one of his writings in the 1600s, to our future U.S. president in that courthouse in 1770.

Adams was defending British soldiers involved in the Boston Massacre, of all things. The British weren’t terribly popular, as you might guess, and Adams was emphasizing that facts and evidence can’t be altered by personal wishes or emotions as he highlighted the importance of truth in legal proceedings. Facts don’t bend just because they make us uncomfortable. They don’t soften because someone yells louder. They just sit there, unmoved and unmoving, waiting for the rest of us to catch up.

And honestly, that’s the part we seem to struggle with the most.

We live in a moment where the tall tale often outruns the truth by several miles. Someone posts a clip, a headline, a half‑sentence ripped of context, and suddenly it becomes “the thing.” By the time the actual facts show up, the misinformation has already unpacked its suitcase, made itself at home, and whispered that other famous phrase of conquest, “Hold my beer.”

You see it in politics, in courtrooms, in the way people talk about history…like it’s a buffet warming under hot lights, growing less appetizing by the second, while we pick the parts we like and leave the rest behind. You see it in the way some folks treat the Constitution like a choose‑your‑own‑adventure book. You see it in the way a man can break into the Capitol and make off with the Speaker’s lectern, and still convince people he’s a serious candidate for public office.

Fabrication is always easier than truth. It’s cleaner. It’s flattering to the bearer.

The facts…not so much. Facts are inconvenient. They complicate the narrative. They remind us that actions have consequences, that history has context, that rights weren’t handed down by magic but fought for by real people with real stakes. Facts don’t care if they ruin your argument or even your day, and they especially don’t care if they make your favorite politician, artist, philosopher or scientist look bad.

Which is exactly why fact matter.

The moment we start ignoring facts, everything else starts to wobble. Institutions wobble. Trust, democracy, they all wobble. You can’t build anything sturdy on top of a story you made up because it felt good. But that’s exactly what people in power are doing. War is bad until it isn’t. Redistricting is wrong until it helps our team. Autopens are evil until they’re useful, just like mail-in ballots. So-and-so is admirable, respected, maybe even a hero, until some inconvenient truth emerges.

Thankfully, facts don’t need us to like them. They don’t need our permission. They just need us to stop pretending they’re negotiable.

So when someone tells me a comforting story that asks me to ignore the messy parts, the historical record, the humanitarian numbers, that’s my cue to slow down. To ask questions. To look for pieces that were conveniently trimmed away.

Because facts are stubborn things. And the people who fear them the most usually have the most to hide.

Kareem Takes on the News is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:00

As Cesar Chavez Day becomes Farmworkers Day, we must remember that the hero is the movement

The way we commemorate history is often – too often – by celebrating an individual with a statue, a place name, a holiday. While some have been torn down – statues of Gen Robert E Lee have given way in some parts of the US to statues of Harriet Tubman – Republicans are trying to reverse the shift in statuary. To that end, the Trump administration recently plunked down a Columbus statue on the White House grounds, a replica of one thrown into the harbor in Baltimore in 2020 as the Black Lives Matter protests addressed racism and colonialism.

Still, maybe the age of individual heroes is fading. This year, Jon Wiener, a retired history professor and current Nation magazine editor, nominated Minneapolis for the Nobel peace prize for its residents’ valor and solidarity in opposing ICE and defending their neighbors. The magazine’s editors wrote: “Through countless acts of courage and solidarity, the people of Minneapolis have challenged the culture of fear, hate, and brutality that has gripped the United States and too many other countries. Their nonviolent resistance has captured the imagination of the nation and the world.” The Nobel is a longshot, but the Twin Cities – both Minneapolis and St Paul – got the John F Kennedy Profile in Courage award “for risking their lives to protect their neighbors and immigrant community members ... with extraordinary courage and resolve”.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 06:00

The Supreme Court will consider the legality of President Trump's executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship.

2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Only a handful of inpatient psychiatric facilities operate in Delaware, many of which are privately owned. Oversight for these facilities often falls to state and federal regulators, leaving patients and their families who are harmed by treatment with few options for accountability. 

Tia Wright found her 22-year-old son, Darrian, in the emergency room on an early Saturday morning last year. Hours before he arrived at Christiana Hospital, he received a powerful sedative cocktail inside one of Delaware’s psychiatric facilities.

Darrian, who has an intellectual disability that limits his cognitive function, voluntarily admitted himself to the Rockford Center in Newark after telling his mother he wanted to die.

He woke up in the emergency room less than 48 hours later.

At the time of his admission to Rockford, Darrian weighed less than 115 pounds. And during his short stay, Darrian received multiple medications on top of a shot of Benadryl, Ativan, and Zyprexa, a potent combination meant to subdue patients during outbursts, his medical records show.

An independent psychiatrist who reviewed a redacted copy of Darrian’s medical records said he received a large amount of sedating medications when accounting for his body weight. The psychiatrist also said he would not have given such a powerful combination considering Darrian’s weight and the medications already in his system.

An independent psychiatrist who reviewed a redacted copy of Darrian Jones’ medical records said he received a large amount of sedating medications when accounting for his body weight. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Once Darrian left the emergency room, his mother said he had side effects from the medications for weeks. Wright’s story mirrors that of another mother who claims Rockford overmedicated her then-8-year-old daughter, leading to hallucinations that told her to harm herself and others.

The accounts also come after state regulators documented the psychiatric hospital’s repeated violation of patient safety rules in 2022 and 2024. Rockford had regularly given children medications without their, or their parents’, consent, according to inspectors’ reports.

Additionally, two former employees who spoke with Spotlight Delaware said they believe de-escalation processes were not utilized enough in the facility.

The claims reveal a pattern of questionable, if not impermissible, druggings of vulnerable patients. And after turning to Rockford as one of the only care options of its kind in Delaware, patients and their families say they were left searching for recourse against a facility that did more to harm than help.

Recourse that they say has often proven hard to find. 

Rockford CEO Bill Mason said in an email that his hospital cannot discuss patient care due to privacy laws, but that it prides itself on transparency and is committed to “high-quality, compassionate care.”

In another email, Mason “categorically” denied the hospital uses sedation as a first line of defense against patients.

Darrian returned to Rockford months later, after Wright said he wandered from home and was taken to a hospital, which later transported him to the facility. This second experience was not notable, she said. 

Wright said she believes the facility was more careful with Darrian during his second stay, which lasted three days, because of her persistent calling during his first experience.

Still, Wright said she now places a note in Darrian’s bag advising anyone who may find him wandering in the future to not take him to Rockford.

Today, Wright said her son is more stable following a change in his medications. She has enrolled him in online school, and he does art classes. But she says he is stable because of her efforts, not because of outside help. 

“It’s all me,” Wright said. “It’s not nothing that anybody else is doing.”

Threats of sedation

Early in the afternoon on March 21, 2025, Darrian received that subduing drug cocktail less than 24 hours after being voluntarily committed at Rockford. 

Hours later, he arrived in the emergency room for “medication side effect,” according to medical records reviewed by Spotlight Delaware.

He reportedly received those medications following a spat of “aggression,” something his mother said she had never experienced. Instead, she said that if her son does have outbursts, it is because he is in pain.

“So you gave him all that medicine for what?” Wright said. “Because he was asking you questions? He was getting on your nerves?”

Yann Poncin, a psychiatrist who works with children at Yale Medicine, said combining medications can compound their effects.

Darrian had already received two doses of hydroxyzine, an anxiety medication, as well as a dose of Haldol, a powerful anti-psychotic, earlier in the day. He may not have been overly sedated at that point, but whatever drugs were still in his system, combined with the shot, may have over-sedated him, Poncin said. 

“It’s a really large amount, and maybe risky in the context of the other things that he takes,” Poncin said. “And the way we know it was risky is because you saw the outcome.”

Darrian’s experience follows claims made by two other former Rockford patients who told Spotlight Delaware they experienced or witnessed staff threaten patients with sedation, when they otherwise would not have needed it. 

Once Darrian left the emergency room, his mother said he had side effects from the medications for weeks. Wright’s story mirrors that of another mother who claims Rockford overmedicated her then-8-year-old daughter, leading to hallucinations that told her to harm herself and others. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JULIA MEROLA

Jessicalyn Van Lenten, from Bear, spent seven days in the facility in December 2025. 

She said she saw staff instigating patients and questioned whether they are advised to practice other non-medication interventions first.

“They have no capacity to deal with people with mental health issues,” Van Lenten said. 

During her stay, she said a staff member threatened her with sedation after she began raising concerns about her medication and other issues on her unit, like not being able to see the time.

‘It was easier to medicate’

Kate Lott, who worked in Rockford between 2024 and 2025, called her time in the facility “traumatizing.” She said she has worked in the behavioral health field for 26 years. 

She said de-escalation was not promoted enough when dealing with patient outbursts, and the “first instinct” of support staff was to ask nurses to get sedation. 

“It was easier to medicate than it was to de-escalate,” Lott said. 

Demarco Delion said he worked at Rockford from 2022 to 2025 as a behavioral interventionist and trained new staff on de-escalation practices. But during his time in the facility, Delion said he was only called in to address outbursts after sedation had already been ordered.

He claimed he saw sedation used by staff in anger, rather than in attempts to help a patient.

“I witnessed a lot of it,” Delion said. “… Up to the point where it brought tears to my eyes.”

Mason, Rockford’s CEO, vehemently denied claims that his hospital relied on sedation as an initial de-escalation method. 

“Rockford follows all appropriate de-escalation techniques with sedation only used pursuant to a physician’s order and when all other efforts have been exhausted,” he said in an email. 

In reviewing a sample of five patients’ records, state regulators found that in all of them the psychiatric hospital gave the children psychotropic medications without their consent, or that of their parent’s. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE GRAPHIC BY ELSA KEGELMAN

In September 2024, Delaware regulators with the state’s health department found something alarming during an unannounced inspection at Rockford.

In reviewing a sample of five patients’ records, they found that in all of them the psychiatric hospital gave the children psychotropic medications without their consent, or that of their parent’s, in violation of both state and federal regulations. 

Asked about the state report, Mason called it an opportunity for “continuous improvement.” He said the hospital has put processes in place to address its protocols. He did not elaborate on what, specifically, those processes entail.

According to a correction plan submitted to the state in late 2024, Rockford said it would revise policies to require physicians to obtain and document consent for medications. It also would audit its own compliance for at least six months afterward.

Such internal audits had not substantially changed the outcomes at Rockford previously though. 

In 2022, Delaware inspectors found the hospital violated the same consent regulations. The facility avoided meaningful consequences beyond submitting correction plans to the state by saying it would retrain its nurses.

Regulators also said in a prior report from October 2023 that facility employees did not document any kind of aggressive behavior for a patient but still administered sedation. The report said an employee told inspectors there was no evidence in the patient’s chart showing sedation was necessary.

Lott, who also served as the director of Kirkwood Recovery Center in Wilmington from 2017 to 2022, said she was told by regulators at that time that it was their job to keep centers open when they were found to be noncompliant.

“They needed us to be open, to care for all these people – the homeless, the drug addicts, the mentally ill,” Lott said. “They needed us.”

In a statement from the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services, which regulates hospitals, a spokesperson said the department cannot comment on specific allegations or personnel matters. He noted that all licensed facilities in the state are required to meet state and federal requirements regarding patient care. 

“When deficiencies are identified, the Department takes appropriate enforcement action, which may include corrective action plans, sanctions, fines, or other remedies as warranted,” the spokesperson said. 

Parents decry communication blackout

Soon after her daughter’s stay at the Rockford Center last summer, Julia Bailey started to lock her cabinets, stow away her knives, and use surveillance cameras in her home in an effort to keep her children safe.

Not from any outside intruder, but from the voices and scary figures that told her then-8-year-old daughter to harm herself and others. Voices her daughter began hearing and seeing shortly after her time at Rockford.

The New Jersey mother told Spotlight Delaware her daughter, Oaklynn, never experienced hallucinations prior to her stay at the psychiatric facility. 

“She never saw anything, or even spoke about seeing things, before she went to Rockford,” Bailey said. 

Both parents, Wright and Bailey, told Spotlight Delaware that getting in touch with the facility and their children was nearly impossible. 

When Bailey brought her daughter to Rockford in July 2025 for what would become an 11-day stay, she went days at a time without hearing from the hospital, she said.

On the day after Oaklynn’s admission, Bailey tried to speak to her daughter three times, but she said hospital staff hung up on her each time.

A week into Oaklynn’s stay and overwhelmed with frustration over the lack of communication, she attempted to call the hospital 45 times. The staff declined each of those calls, she said.

“My kid is in your care, she’s 8, she’s a baby, and I have no information as to what’s going on,” Bailey said.

Mason, Rockford’s CEO, said families can reach a nursing supervisor at the facility “24 hours a day, 7 days a week.”

Although her son is doing better, Wright says Darrian’s experience has left him unrecognizable to some family members. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY ETHAN GRANDIN

Wright, however, said her experience was not any better. 

“You damn near gotta say you’re gonna burn the place down for somebody to call you back,” Wright said.

Hours after leaving her son, Wright said she received calls from Darrian saying he wanted to leave the facility.

She did not receive another update on her son, other than being told he was asleep, until Darrian’s father called Wright and told her their son had been admitted to the emergency department at Christiana Hospital.

Few avenues of recourse

Regulators have previously told Spotlight Delaware that closing facilities is often a last resort, and they give hospitals every chance to fix issues found by inspectors. In Delaware, where  inpatient mental health providers are limited, a closure would hamstring an already stressed treatment system.

Typically, when hospitals are found in noncompliance, up to the point it poses “a serious threat to the health and safety of a patient,” state law says regulators can fine a hospital $10,000. 

When the state decides to fine a hospital, it often amounts to nothing more than a slap on the wrist for institutions that often have multi-billion-dollar owners, like Rockford and nearby MeadowWood Behavioral Health Hospital.

Families and patients left in the aftermath of questionable treatment cannot always afford to sue a hospital, let alone withstand the years of litigation that comes with it. Such medical malpractice suits are also difficult to prove and, ultimately, to win, when a death or significant injury has not occurred.

So families often find themselves in the dark, clamoring for any kind of recourse. 

Mason said the facility has a compliance hotline and that all claims are investigated. Additionally, he said families concerned about their children can reach out to the hospital, or speak to a patient advocate.

And late last year, the state fined Rockford $10,000 after it found unlocked doors between an adolescent and adult unit, posing a potential safety risk. But for a hospital owned by a company worth nearly $12 billion, the fine amounts to little. 

Although her son is doing better, Wright says Darrian’s experience has left him unrecognizable to some family members. 

Wright said she was unsure if Darrian would ever return to normal following his stay. But eventually, his side effects subsided. Still, she said her son is “different” since his time at Rockford.

“It’s like he went in for one thing,” she said, “and came out with 10 other things wrong.”

The post Families, ex-staff allege improper sedation at Rockford psych hospital appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 05:52

Louis Mosley says government should resist calls to trigger break clause in £330m deal with US analytics company

Palantir’s UK boss has urged the government not to give in to “ideologically motivated campaigners” as government ministers explore a way out of a £330m NHS contract with the tech company.

Ministers have sought advice on triggering a break clause in Palantir’s deal to deliver the Federated Data Platform (FDP), amid questions over the company’s presence in the public sector.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 05:09

Africa Aware: Can minerals buy peace in the DRC? Audio LToremark

Christian-Géraud Neema and Joshua Walker discuss how the short and long-term implications of the DRC’s pivot to the US are affecting its strategic autonomy, mining sovereignty, and what it means for President Tshisekedi’s political options.

As a key mediator in the ongoing conflict in the eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the United States has brokered peace agreements backed by security guarantees and by the investment potential of the country’s vast mineral wealth. 

However, critics warn this ‘minerals for peace’ approach risks overlooking unresolved issues – from the protection of minority rights to the limited role of the African Union, and fragile state-society relations in the DRC. 

In this episode, Christian-Géraud Neema and Joshua Walker join the Africa Programme’s Romane Dideberg and Lisa Musumba to discuss how the short and long-term implications of the DRC’s pivot to the US are affecting its strategic autonomy, mining sovereignty, and what it means for President Tshisekedi’s political options. 

About Africa Aware 

Africa Aware is a podcast from the Chatham House Africa Programme bringing together leading international experts to provide in-depth analysis and sharp insights on the political, economic and social issues shaping African countries, their international relations and the continent as a whole.

You can also listen to Africa Aware on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

 

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 05:00

‘Bear slayer’ Honey injured during confrontation to protect family and animals from ursine home invader

A half-blind, 12-year-old New Mexico dog is being called “bear slayer” after she fended off an ursine intruder at her family’s home, protecting dozens of chickens and other animals but only narrowly surviving the violent encounter.

As told by her caretakers, the story of Honey demonstrates the extreme loyalty of dogs to their owners.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 05:00

In the first days after Pam Bondi was appointed attorney general last year, the Department of Justice began shutting down pending criminal cases at a record pace.

The cases included an investigation into a Virginia nursing home with a recent record of patient abuse; probes of fraud involving several New Jersey labor unions, including one opened after a top official of a national union was accused of embezzlement; and an investigation into a cryptocurrency company suspected of cheating investors.

In total, the DOJ quietly closed more than 23,000 criminal cases in the first six months of President Donald Trump’s administration, abandoning hundreds of investigations into terrorism, white-collar crime, drugs and other offenses as it shifted resources to pursue immigration cases, according to an analysis by ProPublica.

The bulk of these cases, which were closed without prosecution and known as declinations, had been referred to the DOJ by law enforcement agencies under prior administrations that believed a federal crime may have been committed. The DOJ routinely declines to prosecute cases for any number of reasons, including insufficient evidence or because a case is not a priority for enforcement.

But the number of declinations under Bondi marks a striking departure not only from the Biden administration but also the first Trump term, according to the ProPublica analysis, which examined two decades of DOJ data, including the first six months of Trump’s second term. ProPublica determined the increase is not the result of inheriting a larger caseload or more referrals from law enforcement.

In February 2025 alone, which included the first weeks of Bondi’s tenure, nearly 11,000 cases were declined, the most in a month since at least 2004. The previous high was just over 6,500 cases in September 2019, during Trump’s first administration.

Some of the cases shut down were the result of yearslong investigations by federal agencies such as the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration. For complex cases, the DOJ can take years before deciding whether to bring charges.

The shift comes as the DOJ has undergone an extraordinary overhaul under the Trump administration, with entire units shuttered, directives to abandon pursuit of certain crimes and thousands of lawyers quitting or, in some cases, being forced out of the agency.

In doing so, the DOJ is retreating from its mission to impartially uphold the rule of law, keep the country safe and protect civil rights, according to interviews with a dozen prosecutors and an open letter from nearly 300 DOJ employees who have left the department under Trump. The Trump DOJ, the employees wrote, is “taking a sledgehammer” to long-standing work to “protect communities and the rule of law.”

The change in priorities was outlined in a series of memos sent to attorneys early last year. Trump’s DOJ has said it is “turning a new page on white-collar and corporate enforcement” and emphasizing the pursuit of drug cartels, illegal immigrants and institutions that promote “divisive DEI policies.” Trump, in an address last March at the department, said the changes were necessary after a “surrender to violent criminals” during the past administration and would result in a restoration of “fair, equal and impartial justice under the constitutional rule of law.”

The department prosecuted 32,000 new immigration cases in the first six months of the administration, which was nearly triple the number under the Biden administration and a 15% increase from the first Trump term. It has pursued fewer prosecutions of nearly every other type of crime — from drug offenses to corruption — than new administrations in their first six months dating back to 2009.

The DOJ has also closed hundreds of cases involving alleged crimes that the administration has publicly emphasized as enforcement priorities. Even as the Trump administration unleashed Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency operatives to root out waste, fraud and abuse in the federal government, the DOJ declined over 900 cases of federal program or procurement fraud. About three times as many cases of major fraud against the U.S. were declined under Trump compared with the average of similar time periods under prior administrations. And while the Trump administration has promised to “make America safe again,” its DOJ has declined more than 1,000 terrorism cases, also more than prior administrations.

Federal prosecutor Joseph Gerbasi had spent years in the department’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section helping build cases against major suppliers of fentanyl ingredients in India and China. After Bondi came in, he was left bewildered when his team was ordered to abandon its work.

“All of the building blocks of what would become successful prosecutions were pulled out,” said Gerbasi, who retired as the section’s acting deputy chief for policy in March 2025 after 28 years with the department.

The move had an “overwhelming deflating effect on morale,” he said.

After Trump’s Inauguration, the Department of Justice Turned Down a Record Number of Cases

The first quarter of 2025, and especially February of that year, saw the department declining to prosecute cases against thousands of defendants outside of its regular six-month review process.

A chart showing the number of criminal cases declined by the Department of Justice from 2004 through July 2025, by month. There is a spike of nearly 11,000 declined cases in February 2025, much higher than the other months. The second-highest count of around 6,500 declined cases is in September 2019, during Trump’s first term.
Source: DOJ data provided by TRAC Ken Morales/ProPublica

Barbara McQuade, who worked as a federal prosecutor in Michigan for two decades until 2017 during Republican and Democratic administrations, said it was not unusual for new administrations to come to office with a few “pet priorities” — such as a focus on violent crime or drug trafficking. But she said those changes usually involved modest adjustments in policy and that most of the decisions on what crimes to focus on were typically made at the local level by the district U.S. attorney in coordination with the FBI or other agencies.

“We would revise those about every five years, not having anything to do with any administration, just because it made sense,” she said.

A DOJ spokesperson, in an emailed response to questions about the spike in declinations, said that in “an effort to clean, remediate, and validate data in U.S. Attorneys’ case management system,” the department reviewed all pending criminal matters opened prior to the 2023 fiscal year, which included updating the status of closed cases. “This Department of Justice remains committed to investigating and prosecuting all types of crime to keep the American people safe, and the number of declinations is a direct result of our efforts to run the agency in a more efficient manner.”

The agency did not respond to questions about the types of cases declined.

The spike of declined cases began in February 2025 when the department ordered prosecutors to review every open case launched prior to October 2022 and determine whether to close it. Such a review would typically take months, according to one attorney tasked with reviewing cases. A memo, which was described to ProPublica reporters, ordered the review to be completed within 10 days.

Former DOJ prosecutors told ProPublica that they typically reviewed caseloads every six months with supervisors and that closing out languishing cases wouldn’t ordinarily be cause for concern. They said the February directive, however, was unusual. None could recall a similar order.

The directive came as higher-ups in the department had begun making frequent demands for data about specific types of cases and charging decisions, such as the outcome of fentanyl cases, according to former prosecutor Michael Gordon. Gordon, who helped prosecute Jan. 6 cases before moving to white-collar crime prosecutions, said the “fire drills” from officials in Washington became so regular that he grew used to the forlorn look on his supervisor’s face when he showed up at Gordon’s door, apologetically delivering yet another frantic request.

“It was either ‘give us stats we can use to make ourselves look good’ or ‘give us the stats to show how bad things are in this area,’” Gordon said. “It was never productive fact-finding.”

Though Gordon didn’t see the memo, he remembered getting the request to review all cases that had been open for more than two years and report back on their status, entering into a master spreadsheet basic information about any that he wanted to keep pursuing.

“The office was pushing us to close everything by a certain date so that when they had to report up to D.C. they had a low number of open cases,” he said. “You really had to go to bat to keep open a case that was more than two years old.”

Gordon said he was fired by the DOJ last June. He has filed a lawsuit alleging his termination was politically motivated. The department did not respond to questions about Gordon’s comments or his lawsuit. The government filed a motion to dismiss the case late last year, arguing that the federal court did not have jurisdiction over the matter. The court has not yet ruled on that motion, and the case is still pending.

Investigations into individuals or corporations declined for prosecution are generally not reported to courts and usually only disclosed in summary form by the DOJ in annual reports. To conduct its analysis, ProPublica obtained declination data from the DOJ and the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a center that obtains data through Freedom of Information Act requests.

The DOJ Declined a Slew of Cases Shortly After Pam Bondi Was Confirmed as Attorney General

Nearly 11,000 criminal cases were declined during her first month in office.

A chart showing daily counts of declined criminal cases, from Jan. 1, 2025, through the middle of March. In January, daily counts don’t rise much above 150. After Bondi was confirmed as attorney general on Feb. 4, declined cases start to climb and several days are above 1,000. Counts start to fall again until toward the end of February, with nearly 11,000 total in February alone. March looks more like the counts in January, though several days are above 200.
Source: DOJ data provided by TRAC Ken Morales/ProPublica

Here are some of the areas most impacted by the spike in declinations.

Drugs

As president, Trump has spoken frequently about the “scourge” of drugs coming into the country. At the same time, the Justice Department has declined to prosecute nearly 5,000 cases of federal drug law violations, including trafficking and money laundering. The number of declinations were 45% higher than the average of the prior three new administrations.

Gerbasi, the counternarcotics prosecutor, declined to comment on specific cases that might have been declined in his office. But, he said, once Bondi was appointed, the priority in the office became building cases against Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan group that the Trump administration has labeled a foreign terrorist organization.

“Tren de Aragua was not anywhere close to the scale or impact of the cartels we were focused on,” Gerbasi said. “But we were told to generate those cases.”

He said his office had to scramble to fly people to investigate local gangs in small towns that were reportedly affiliated with Tren de Aragua. “They never would have merited a full-scale federal investigation,” he said.

“It told me that decisions were going to be based on political appearances and not based on the merits of where investigative resources should be placed.”

The DOJ declined to comment on Gerbasi’s remarks.

Trump’s DOJ Has Rejected Far More Cases Than Previous Administrations Across a Wide Range of Categories

Many of the dropped cases were in programs the DOJ has claimed were priorities.

A table showing criminal declinations in the first six months of Trump’s second term in comparison to the average declinations over a similar time frame of the prior three administrations. Cases are categorized by type, such drugs, white-collar crime and corruption. The largest change is with labor cases, where Trump’s DOJ has declined 129% more cases (64 vs. 28). In national security, Trump’s DOJ has declined 93% more cases (1,391 vs. 720), and in organized crime, 86% more cases (182 vs. 98). Trump’s DOJ is higher in all categories except for immigration, where Trump has declined 22% less (674 vs. 864).
Source: TRAC, DOJ
Note: “Other” primarily includes government regulatory offenses and theft. Comparison to average of past administrations only includes the first six months after a presidential administration change: Obama (2009), Trump (2017) and Biden (2021)
Ken Morales/ProPublica

National Security

Under Bondi, the DOJ declined more than 1,300 cases involving terrorism and national security, nearly twice what was typical at the start of the most recent new administrations. While domestic terrorism was the hardest-hit program, just over 300 cases involving charges of providing material support to foreign terrorist organizations were also dropped.

The DOJ program handling matters relating to national internal security — which considers cases of alleged spy activity and the security of classified information — saw over 200 declinations, which is four times as many as typical in the first six months of a new administration. Some of the cases related to serving as an unregistered foreign agent, a charge Bondi ordered prosecutors to stop pursuing unless they involved “conduct similar to more traditional espionage by foreign government actors.”

Jimmy Gurulé, a former federal prosecutor and George W. Bush appointee to the U.S. Treasury Department who investigated the financing of terrorism, said the decline in terrorism cases was troubling.

“The Trump DOJ has been used as a political weapon,” he said. “It’s a question of prioritizing resources. Are they going to be used for national security threats or to prosecute his political enemies and critics?” The DOJ did not respond to a request for comment on Gurulé’s remarks.

Labor

The DOJ shut down over 60 union corruption and labor racketeering cases, 2.5 times the number in Trump’s first term. Nearly half of the cases turned down for those offenses were out of the New Jersey U.S. attorney’s office, which in the past has aggressively pursued alleged union corruption. All were noted as declined for insufficient evidence.

Most of those cases had been opened by Grady O’Malley, an assistant U.S. attorney who oversaw several prosecutions of union corruption while working in the New Jersey office over four decades. He retired in 2023 and was disturbed to learn from former colleagues that the office was shutting down the open union probes.

A Trump supporter, O’Malley said that while he doesn’t blame the president, he worries the decision to drop so many cases could embolden unions that he and his colleagues spent years working to hold accountable. “No one is assigned to do labor union cases, and the unions have every reason to believe no one is looking.”

The New Jersey U.S. attorney’s office said it had no comment on the declination of labor cases.

White-Collar Crime

The Trump administration has pledged to root out “rampant” fraud in federal benefit programs like food stamps and welfare. The controversial surging of federal agents to Minnesota in January began as a stated crackdown on noncitizens allegedly ripping off nutrition and child care programs.

The DOJ, however, shut down more than 900 cases of federal program or procurement fraud in the first six months of the administration, including one targeting a mortgage lender accused by several state regulators of defrauding the Federal Housing Administration. The case was dropped due to “prioritization of federal resources and interests.” The U.S. attorney’s office for the Northern District of Alabama, which declined the case, did not reply to a request for comment. The number of fraud cases closed was about double that in the same time period of the Biden and first Trump administrations.

The agency also closed over 100 health care fraud cases as a result of “prioritization of resources and interests” even though the Trump administration has said it is making this area of enforcement a priority.

Among other cases the DOJ determined weren’t a priority: the probe into the Virginia nursing home accused of abuse, as well as investigations in Tennessee into fraud at a national hospital chain and one of the largest Medicaid managed care companies.

The Western District of Virginia U.S. attorney’s office, through a spokesperson, declined to comment on the nursing home case. A spokesperson for the U.S. attorney in the Middle District of Tennessee said the office does not comment on investigations that do not result in public charges.

The DOJ’s Antitrust Division, which focuses on preventing big businesses from creating harmful monopolies, also declined an unusually high number of cases in Trump’s second term. More than 40 cases were dropped within the first six months of Bondi’s tenure. That’s more than double the number declined in the same time period by the prior three new administrations.

Despite the declinations, the department said it charged slightly more people with fraud in 2025 compared with the final year of the Biden administration, and those cases alleged larger financial losses.

Promises Kept

The DOJ under Bondi has also rapidly pursued many of the priorities laid out in Trump’s early executive orders and her own “first day” directives to staff.

Trump in February 2025 issued an executive order pausing new investigations under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which prohibits citizens and companies from bribing foreign entities to advance their business interests. The order asked the attorney general to review and “take appropriate action” on any existing probes to “preserve Presidential foreign policy prerogatives.”

In the first six months, Bondi’s DOJ shut down 25 such cases, which is more than the combined number dropped by the prior three new administrations over the same time period. One of the cases declined for prosecution involved a major car manufacturer, which had reported possible anti-bribery violations to federal investigators involving a foreign subsidiary. The DOJ declined the case for prosecution last June, citing the “prioritization of federal resources and interests.”

On her first day, Bondi ordered a review of criminal prosecutions under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances, or FACE Act, which prohibits people from illegally blocking access to abortion clinics and places of worship. The department dropped as many cases under the act in its first six months as the past three new administrations combined, over the same time frame. Bondi’s order focused on “non-violent protest activity,” although at least one of the closed cases was being investigated as a violent crime. The DOJ has since charged protesters against Immigration and Customs Enforcement and journalists in Minneapolis under the FACE Act. The defendants in the case have pleaded not guilty.

The agency closed three times the number of cases alleging environmental crimes as the Biden administration did and one-and-a-half times as many as compared with Trump’s first term. The declinations came as the DOJ reassigned and cut prosecutors working on environmental cases. One-fifth of all of the dropped environmental protection cases were shut down for “prioritization of federal resources and interests.”

The post Trump’s Justice Department Dropped 23,000 Criminal Investigations in Shift to Immigration appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 05:00

Maria de Jesus Estrada Juarez is among a growing group of immigrants targeted for removal after arriving as children and gaining protections in the Obama era.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 05:00

The report found advanced degrees in social work and psychology may have a zero to negative return, while medicine, law and pharmacy degrees show the highest return.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 05:00

The lawsuit signals a historic shift for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, whose chair issued an appeal asking White men to report discrimination.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-31 05:00

US Interior Secretary Doug Burgum speaks alongside Venezuela's interim president, Delcy Rodriguez, after their meeting at the Miraflores Presidential Palace in Caracas on March 4, 2026. US Interior Secretary Doug Burgum on March 4, 2026,  became the latest senior Trump administration official to visit Venezuela, as Washington pushes to ramp up oil and mineral production in the country. (Photo by Federico PARRA / AFP via Getty Images)
U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum speaks alongside Venezuela's interim president, Delcy Rodríguez, after their meeting at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas on March 4, 2026. Photo: Federico Parra / AFP via Getty Images

“What we did in Venezuela, I think, is the perfect, the perfect scenario,” U.S. President Donald Trump told the New York Times in a March 1 interview about his plans for war on Iran. Things have not gone as Trump hoped, to put it mildly. Trump’s search for the Iranian Delcy Rodríguez — a regime insider willing to comply with U.S. demands, as Rodríguez has since she ascended from Venezuela’s vice president to acting president following the January 3 U.S. attack on Venezuela and kidnapping of its president, Nicolás Maduro — hit a snag when the U.S. and Israel killed most of the would-be successors to Ayatollah Khamenei in the opening days of the war. During a March 3 meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Trump told reporters, “Most of the people we had in mind are dead.” (Trump omitted the crucial fact that the U.S. is to blame.)

As the war passes the four-week mark, it is abundantly clear Iran will not be the next Venezuela. Operation Absolute Resolve, the code name for the U.S. attack on Venezuela, was a spectacular success in tactical terms. The U.S. achieved its military aim of removing Maduro in just a few hours and suffered zero U.S. service member fatalities and only a handful of injuries, although the operation cost the lives of around 70 Venezuelans and 32 Cuban security forces. While this toll should not be minimized, it pales in comparison to the U.S.–Israeli war on Iran, which as of mid-March has led to at least 3,000 deaths in Iran, Lebanon, and beyond. In contrast to Trump’s “brilliant operation” in Caracas, the war on Iran has exploded. Well over a dozen countries are now involved, and the war threatens to bring the global economy to a halt due to the ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a pivotal passage for oil, liquid natural gas, fertilizer, and other crucial commodities.

As the world’s eyes remain fixed on Iran, it is important to ask: What has the Venezuela model actually achieved in Venezuela? The short answer is a new form of colonialism in which Venezuela has lost its national sovereignty. Trump’s pledge to “run” Venezuela, made in the hours after the January 3 attack, has not come to pass. The attack instead led to regime change without a change of regime, in which the U.S. removed Maduro but left his regime almost entirely intact. Trump has boasted of this fact, telling the New York Times, “Everybody’s kept their job except two people,” i.e., Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, both of whom have spent the past three months awaiting trial in a Brooklyn jail. The officials who now run Venezuela come directly from Maduro’s administration: Rodríguez; her brother Jorge, who heads the National Assembly; and the minister of interior, Diosdado Cabello. In a possible sign of future changes to come, Rodríguez on March 18 replaced Venezuela’s longstanding minister of defense, Vladimir Padrino López, all but surely in coordination with the U.S.

Related

The U.S. Desperately Wants Back in the Business of Empire With Venezuela

The flip side of this overall continuity is the Trump administration’s stunning and continuing sidelining of far-right opposition leader María Corina Machado, who won the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize and infamously gifted it to Trump in an unsuccessful attempt to curry his favor. Trump has supported Rodríguez because she offers that which he most wants: stability. A handover to Machado threatened to plunge Venezuela into chaos and civil war. Strictly speaking, this is not because Machado “lacks the respect within” Venezuela, as Trump claimed during his January 3 press conference. Polls indicate Machado remains the most popular politician within Venezuela. The problem, for Trump, is Machado’s longstanding opposition to any form of “collaboration” with the Maduro administration and Chavismo (the political movement associated with the late Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez) more broadly. This radical stance makes Machado a major threat to Venezuela’s military and state apparatus. Machado may be reevaluating her hardline position as she plans to return to Venezuela. In a March 12 press conference, Machado spoke of a “grand national agreement,” presumably a power-sharing accord, a possibility she had long rejected. Trump, for his part, has reportedly told Machado, who fled the country in 2025, not to return to Venezuela. This is purportedly out of concern for her safety but is more likely due to Trump’s (not unreasonable) fear that Machado’s presence in Venezuela would undermine the continuity Trump has sought to preserve.

For now, Venezuela remains in the hands of former Maduro officials, who have presided over a transformation of Venezuela’s domestic and foreign policy that is both stunning and limited. The details of this transformation, and the way it is happening, lay bare Venezuela’s profound lack of national sovereignty. While Trump is not “running” Venezuela in an operational sense, the U.S. is now effectively dictating the country’s policy. This is evident in many ways, starting with the fact that the Rodríguez administration must submit a monthly budget to the U.S., which has the discretion to approve or reject Venezuela’s requests. The Trump administration has also seized at least 80 million barrels of Venezuelan oil and controls the sale of this oil, with the proceeds held not in Caracas but in a U.S. Treasury account (prior to that, they were held in a U.S.-controlled account in Qatar). American Democratic Party leaders have repeatedly questioned this arrangement, which is not only blatantly colonial and opaque but also creates the clear potential for corruption and malfeasance.

A worker is seen on the Roibeira, sailing under the Portuguese flag, as it is loaded by International Frontier Forwarders, Inc. with equipment for the oil and gas industry bound for Venezuela at the Port of Houston, Texas on February 25, 2026. Workers in hard hats teem aboard a cargo ship at the Port of Houston, the latest US ship headed to Venezuela after President Donald Trump lifted restrictions to boost oil production in the crisis-hit country. US sanctions have crippled Venezuela for years, but Trump's administration has been working with interim president Delcy Rodriguez after toppling autocratic leader Nicolas Maduro. Washington has used a carrot-and-stick approach with Rodriguez, praising her for welcoming US oil companies but at the same time threatening her with violence if she does not cooperate. (Photo by RONALDO SCHEMIDT / AFP via Getty Images)
The Roibeira, sailing under the Portuguese flag, is loaded with equipment for the oil and gas industry bound for Venezuela at the Port of Houston, Texas, on Feb. 25, 2026. Photo by Ronaldo Schemidt / AFP via Getty Images

Under direct pressure from the Trump administration, Venezuela’s National Assembly has implemented sweeping oil and mining reforms. In late January, the National Assembly passed a major reform of Venezuela’s hydrocarbons law regulating oil production. The reform institutes three fundamental changes: First, it dramatically lowers the taxes and royalties foreign oil companies pay to the Venezuelan state. Under the 2006 hydrocarbons law, the Venezuelan state took up to 65 percent of oil proceeds. The reform permits this to be reduced to 25 percent, lowers income taxes to 15 percent (from 30 percent), and caps royalties at 30 percent, with the executive given discretion to lower it even further. Second, the reform allows foreign oil companies to operate independently, instead of the previous mandate that foreign companies operate through joint projects with Venezuela’s national oil company, PDVSA. Third, the reform allows arbitration over disputes to occur in foreign courts, eliminating the earlier requirement that disputes be resolved within Venezuela. These changes give foreign oil companies dramatically greater material benefits and control over the country’s oil.

Foreign oil companies are already taking advantage. Shell and Chevron are reportedly close to signing major new deals for production in Venezuela. Chevron is the only U.S. oil major that remained in Venezuela throughout the Hugo Chávez and Maduro years, with Shell (like Exxon and others) having left the country in the wake of the 2006–2007 nationalization process under Chávez. Despite these deals, it will take significant time and resources — upward of $100 billion and a decade of work, according to experts — for Venezuela’s oil industry to approach its previous levels of production. These latest deals come in the wake of the second recent visit by a Trump Cabinet member to Venezuela. Energy Secretary Chris Wright toured Venezuela in mid-February, and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum traveled there in early March, when he gushed about Washington’s desire to access Venezuela’s mineral resources. CIA Director John Ratcliffe and U.S. Southern Command General Francis Donovan have also recently traveled to Venezuela. During Burgum’s visit, Rodríguez promised to work at “Trump speed” to ramp up the U.S.’s access to Venezuela’s mineral resources. Rodríguez has been as good as her word, with the National Assembly swiftly moving to approve a new mining law that, like the hydrocarbons reform, will roll back decades-old nationalist legislation.

Related

It’s a War With Iran, Not an “Intervention”

The U.S. has also pushed Venezuela to sever its relations with its rivals China, Russia, Iran, and Cuba. A statement from Venezuela’s foreign ministry late last month about the U.S.–Israeli war on Iran shows the profound changes underway. The statement (which was later taken down) condemned Iran but failed to condemn or even name the U.S. or Israel. This is a major shift from the Chávez and Maduro years, when Venezuela stood with Iran and regularly condemned the U.S. and Israel. The change in Venezuela’s foreign policy is most clear on Cuba, which for more than a decade relied heavily on highly subsidized Venezuelan oil. After Maduro’s capture, Venezuela ceased all oil shipments to Cuba, directly contributing to the profound energy crisis it is now facing, marked by regular nationwide blackouts. The Trump administration has done everything it can to deepen this crisis by applying heavy pressure on Mexico and other countries to stop providing oil to Cuba. Trump’s open goal is regime change.

While Venezuela’s economic and foreign policy has shifted quickly and decisively, political change since Maduro’s capture has been much more slow going. There is still no timetable for elections, and the Trump administration is not pushing for a democratic transition any time soon. According to a New York Times report, Rubio and Rodríguez have discussed the possibility of holding elections in late 2027, and Rubio has made clear that there must be a new democratically elected government in Venezuela before Trump leaves office in 2029. Rodríguez has taken a few steps toward political liberalization. She has pledged to close the notorious El Helicoide prison, and on February 19 the National Assembly passed an amnesty law, which has been greeted as a positive development but criticized for limiting the time period and offenses covered by the law. According to a March 17 report by the Venezuelan human rights organization Foro Penal, as of February 24 the government had released over 400 political prisoners.

“People don’t care about the idea of sovereignty or nationhood when they’re dying of hunger.”

A key question is: How do ordinary Venezuelans feel about the changes happening in their country? One answer comes from the first in-person poll conducted in Venezuela following Maduro’s removal, with 1,000 respondents interviewed between January 24 and 30. The poll indicates Venezuelans largely support the January 3 operation and feel cautiously optimistic about the future but deeply unsatisfied with their economic situation and wary of the Rodríguez administration. Fifty-five percent of respondents approve of Maduro’s removal and 77 percent view him unfavorably. Rodríguez fares a tad better, with 73 percent viewing her unfavorably, while 37 percent approve and 41 percent disapprove of her performance as acting president. 

This suggests many Venezuelans are in a wait-and-see holding pattern with Rodríguez. Tellingly, 62 percent of respondents list cost of living as their priority versus just 7 percent prioritizing democracy. The poll also indicates Venezuelans are evenly split in their views of the U.S. government and Trump, with roughly half supportive and half opposed. Of the respondents, 72 percent reported they feel Venezuela is moving in a positive direction and 83 percent feel optimistic about the future.

Related

Pentagon Reveals Attacks in Latin America Are Just the Beginning

These findings are in line with recent public comments by Venezuelan scholars and journalists. In a February 3 online Atlantic Council forum, Guillermo Aveledo, a political science professor at Universidad Metropolitana in Caracas, said most Venezuelans were feeling cautiously optimistic but continue to fear government repression. Aveledo also spoke of how citizens and the government will be testing the waters in the coming weeks and months to see what is acceptable in terms of public speech and protest.

During a March 11 interview I conducted with him, Andrés Antillano, a member of the anti-imperialist leftist organization Corriente Comunes and professor at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, expressed a similar but more critical view. Antillano said, “I believe Trump is more popular in Venezuela than in the United States,” and added, “there’s a consensus that what happened [on January 3] is for the better of the country.” He noted, “Government actors are happy because they’ve preserved their power. The right is happy because Trump, their great hero, is ruling. And the people are happy because of their expectation … that their life conditions are going to improve.” Antillano feels this is mistaken: “Not only have we not seen an improvement but in material terms, in economic terms, the situation has gotten worse and worse.” 

Antillano views Venezuelans’ continuing immiseration — due to years of government mismanagement and punishing U.S. sanctions (which Trump eased on March 18, in a major policy shift allowing U.S. oil companies to deal directly with PDVSA, Venezuela’s state-owned oil company) — as the reason for their acquiescence to Venezuela’s subordination to the U.S.

“People don’t care about the idea of sovereignty or nationhood when they’re dying of hunger,” he said.

Antillano remains deeply pessimistic about Venezuela’s future. “We are in a subordinate, colonial relationship. We’re a protectorate,” he said. He also said: “[Machado] wants to return to the country to defend the idea of the political transition. Thus, we could see the great irony of María Corina becoming the anti-imperialist figure and the Bolivarian government, with its anti-imperialist origins, becoming the great defender of Trump. It’s crazy, very strange. Everything that’s happening is very sad.”

He continued: “As a friend told me, Venezuela has gone from being a laboratory for emancipatory practices to being a laboratory for the new colonialism.”

But Antillano doesn’t believe all is lost, and said he believes “an important cycle of protest is coming.” He said Corriente Comunes “is actively driving the processes of struggle as the illusion of improvement — stemming from the colonial relationship with the United States — gradually fades away.” Antillano said that Corriente Comunes had recently “held a workers’ gathering, and we believe a very significant mobilization is about to take place in all the country’s major cities, a mobilization for wages, wage increases, and labor rights, which will be the largest in many years.”

The mobilization occurred March 12, the day after we spoke, and videos show it was large and contentious. Protesters broke through a line of police blocking the National Assembly and forced legislators to listen to their salary and pension demands. While Trump and Rodríguez are seeking economic liberalization without democratization, Venezuela’s workers and leftist activists have other ideas. Venezuelans will seek to write their own story, despite being mired in conditions not of their own making. Time will tell what vision of the country will prevail, and for the foreseeable future, all actors in Venezuela will have to reckon with the imperial behemoth to the north.

The post Trump Wanted to Replicate His Venezuela “Success” in Iran. What Has It Even Looked Like? appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 04:00
  • Ibrahim Hassan claimed league is ‘out of the spotlight’

  • MLS commissioner says Hassan ‘should watch Messi’

In an interview with the Guardian, MLS commissioner Don Garber suggested that the Egyptian soccer executive who urged Mohamed Salah to avoid the league should watch Lionel Messi starring for Inter Miami.

Garber’s comments come after Egypt’s national team director, Ibrahim Hassan, said Salah should stay in Europe when he leaves Liverpool as MLS is “too far out of the spotlight”. Hassan later added that if Salah “does not receive offers from Europe, then a move to the Saudi league would be a good option.”

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 03:00

While Jannik Sinner’s duopoly with Carlos Alcaraz looks unbreakable, Aryna Sabalenka is dominating despite a more competitive women’s top 10

“No, I think it’s all an individual sport,” Jannik Sinner says, chuckling quietly, as he reflects on another triumphant fortnight at the Miami Open after his efficient win over Jiri Lehecka. Sinner had been asked whether he was aware that his win meant the maintenance of one of the defining records of this new era of men’s tennis: since the Madrid Open in April 2024, every tournament with Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz present has been won by either player. The duopoly continues.

Unsurprisingly, Sinner was far more focused on what the victory meant to him. By following his Indian Wells triumph with a title in Miami, he secured one of the greatest achievements of his career in the Sunshine Double. He has now won three consecutive Masters 1000 titles and 34 consecutive sets at this level. This was an immense feat, further underlining his enduring dominance over all challengers aside from his great rival, Carlos Alcaraz.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 03:00

Researchers found that common nitrile and latex lab gloves can shed stearate particles that closely resemble microplastics, potentially "increasing the risk of false positives when studying microplastic pollution," reports ScienceDaily. "We may be overestimating microplastics, but there should be none," said Anne McNeil, senior author of the study and U-M professor of chemistry, macromolecular science and engineering. "There's still a lot out there, and that's the problem." From the report: Researchers found that these gloves can unintentionally transfer particles onto lab tools used to analyze air, water, and other environmental samples. The contamination comes from stearates, which are not plastics but can closely resemble them during testing. Because of this, scientists may be detecting particles that are not true microplastics. To reduce this issue, U-M researchers Madeline Clough and Anne McNeil recommend using cleanroom gloves, which release far fewer particles. Stearates are salt-based, soap-like substances added to disposable gloves to help them separate easily from molds during manufacturing. However, their chemical similarity to certain plastics makes them difficult to distinguish in lab analyses, increasing the risk of false positives when studying microplastic pollution. "For microplastics researchers who have these impacted datasets, there's still hope to recover them and find a true quantity of microplastics," said researcher and recent doctoral graduate Madeline Clough. "This field is very challenging to work in because there's plastic everywhere," McNeil said. "But that's why we need chemists and people who understand chemical structure to be working in this field." The findings have been published in the journal Analytical Methods.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-31 03:00

The poster child of the AI boom, valued at $850bn, needs to show strategic discipline after ‘casting its net too wide’

If OpenAI is going to float this year, it has to get serious about its business model. The wow factor around the US company – the poster child of an AI industry boom that has stoked fears of a stock market bubble – has been long established, but when will the profits come? The party can’t go on for ever.

The developer of ChatGPT is one of the biggest startups in the world and is now valued at $850bn (£645bn). Meanwhile, it is reportedly spending $600bn on infrastructure (the amount it invests in datacentres and chips to power its AI models) by 2030. At least this is a reduction on an initial estimate of $1.4tn.

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2026-04-01 08:04
2026-03-31 02:30

From Italy to France, Germany to Hungary, far-right governments and politicians are targeting media with the same playbook

Barely six months after Giorgia Meloni’s government was sworn in, the chief executive of Italy’s public broadcaster Rai resigned. Carlo Fuortes cited “a political conflict” as the reason for his departure in May 2023, a year before the end of his term.

The top posts quickly went to nominees with ties to Meloni’s Brothers of Italy, a party with neofascist roots. Rai’s CEO is now Giampaolo Rossi, a former Rai board member who has in the past voiced support for Vladimir Putin, Viktor Orbán and Donald Trump.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 02:14
I found the best pair of handlebars for Jackrabbit XG on Facebook Marketplace. Jackrabbit XG Handlebar Upgrade
Bargain price S&M bars to replace my previous upgraded FMF bars

The Best Handlebars for a Jackrabbit XG – A $15 Upgrade That Changed Everything

Almost as soon as I first took delivery of my Jackrabbit XG, I changed out the stock Jackrabbit handlebars with a pair of secondhand FMF bars sourced from Facebook marketplace, see this in my Jackrabbit XG Mods post. In practice, they turned out to be a compromise. The bars had been trimmed a bit too narrow, so the handlebar grips, brake lever, and throttle were all fighting for space. The throttle often snagged, so I had to trim down the handlebar grips in order to have enough space for the grips, brake leaver and throttle

Scrolling through Facebook Marketplace one evening, I spotted a pair of S&M 9.5‑inch rise bars listed for $15. The seller’s photos showed full‑width steel handlebars that looked roomy enough to solve my clearance problem. After a quick drive, I had the bars in my possession, ready to install.

Products Used in This Project

Jackrabbit Handlebar XG Handlebar Change – VIDEO

Removal was painless: I loosened the clamp bolts, slipped off the grips, and pulled the FM F bars out. The new S&M bars are bolted in place.   Then I reinstalled the grips, brake, lever, and throttle. There is now plenty of room. And, no more issues with the throttle operation.

A short test ride confirmed the upgrade’s impact. The 9.5‑inch rise lifts my hands into a more relaxed position, while the added width eliminates the cramped feel of the FMF setup. Throttle response is smooth, and the brakes feel more ergonomic.

The Best Jackrabbit XG Handlebars are ✅ 

Swapping handlebars might sound like a minor tweak, but on a nimble bike like the Jackrabbit XG it transforms the entire riding experience. If you’re stuck with a narrow, cut‑down bar or the stock bars, keep an eye on local listings—sometimes the perfect upgrade is just a few clicks away.

Share Your Thoughts 

Have you changed the handlebars on your Jackrabbit e-bike? Have some knowledge to share? Drop a comment on my socials. FB IG YT

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The post The Best Handlebars for a Jackrabbit XG appeared first on The Sideways Movement.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 02:00

Snappy performance, high-quality screen, best-in-class keyboard and trackpad show cheaper can still be great

Apple’s brand new entry-level laptop is powered by the chip from an iPhone and offers more than just the essential MacBook experience for a great price, putting the PC industry on notice.

The MacBook Neo is the first of its kind from Apple. A 13in laptop that runs on an A18 Pro chip and brings the starting price for a brand new MacBook down to £599 (€699/$599/A$899) – £500 or the equivalent less than the MacBook Air.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-31 01:02

ChristianaCare is planning to build a new 73-bed inpatient rehabilitation hospital near Newark, officials announced Monday.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 00:57

If you or someone you know suffers from frequent motion sickness, Samsung's free sound therapy app is worth a try.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 00:54

Practice of using apartments to store relatives’ ashes has risen as rapid urbanisation and ageing population increases competition for cemetery plots

China is introducing a law to stop people storing the ashes of their dead relatives in empty high-rise flats rather than paying steep costs for increasingly scarce cemetery plots.

China’s new funeral management legislation will prohibit the use of “residential housing specifically for the purpose of storing cremated remains” and the burial of corpses or construction of tombs in “areas other than public cemeteries”.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 00:44

A U.S. Marine was detained at the Palm Springs International Airport on Monday after he allegedly tried to bring a live explosive round through airport screening, according to Riverside County officials.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 00:00

In Hungary, the Iran war is exposing tensions. On April 12, voters may decide that Orban’s geopolitical contortions are a liability

On 3 March, Viktor Orbán held a phone conversation with Vladimir Putin. According to official Hungarian reporting, the discussion focused on “energy issues” and other routine matters. What followed was anything but routine. Within days, the Hungarian foreign minister, Péter Szijjártó, had flown to Moscow, and returned with two freed prisoners of war, dual citizens of Ukraine and Hungary.

Hungary is not part of the military conflict in Ukraine, but the message was unmistakable. With his PoW diplomacy, Putin was not only signalling goodwill towards Hungary, he was effectively endorsing Orbán’s re-election on 12 April.

Péter Krekó is a political scientist, behavioural scientist, and director of the independent thinktank the Political Capital Institute in Budapest

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 00:00

The end of the dream of economic integration.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 00:00

Baghdad slides into a conflict it long wanted to escape.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-31 00:00

Who will determine the fate of the Islamic Republic?

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 23:56

This blog is closed – our live coverage continues on a new blog here

Donald Trump is weighing a military operation to extract nearly 1,000 pounds (454kg) of uranium from Iran, the Wall Street Journal is reporting, citing unnamed US officials.

The mission would likely put American forces inside the country for days or longer, the report says.

But the president remains generally open to the idea, according to the officials, because it could help accomplish his central goal of preventing Iran from ever making a nuclear weapon.

The combined effect of both waterways being shut to commercial traffic from countries that neither the Iranians nor Houthis favour would be devastating.

Napoleon Bonaparte’s remark that “the policy of a state lies in its geography” has never seemed more apt.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 23:30

An anonymous reader quotes a report from New Scientist: Andrea Marinoni at the University of Cambridge, UK, and his colleagues saw that the amount of energy needed to run a data centre had been steadily increasing of late and was likely to "explode" in the coming years, so wanted to quantify the impact. The researchers took satellite measurements of land surface temperatures over the past 20 years and cross-referenced them against the geographical coordinates of more than 8400 AI data centers. Recognizing that surface temperature could be affected by other factors, the researchers chose to focus their investigation on data centers located away from densely populated areas. They discovered that land surface temperatures increased by an average of 2C (3.6F) in the months after an AI data center started operations. In the most extreme cases, the increase in temperature was 9.1C (16.4F). The effect wasn't limited to the immediate surroundings of the data centers: the team found increased temperatures up to 10 kilometers away. Seven kilometers away, there was only a 30 percent reduction in the intensity. "The results we had were quite surprising," says Marinoni. "This could become a huge problem." Using population data, the researchers estimate that more than 340 million people live within 10 kilometers of data centers, so live in a place that is warmer than it would be if the data centre hadn't been built there. Marinoni says that areas including the Bajio region in Mexico and the Aragon province in Spain saw a 2C (3.6F) temperature increase in the 20 years between 2004 and 2024 that couldn't otherwise be explained. University of Bristol researcher Chris Preist said the findings may be more complicated than they look. "It would be worth doing follow-up research to understand to what extent it's the heat generated from computation versus the heat generated from the building itself," he says. For example, the building being heated by sunlight may be part of the effect. The findings of the study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, can be found on arXiv.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 22:22

California's governor says the order aims to prevent the misuse of AI technology.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 22:12

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 31.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 22:07

Chad Bianco, the Riverside county sheriff also running for governor, had seized 650,000 ballots

Chad Bianco, the Riverside county sheriff, has halted a contentious investigation into a alleged voter fraud that has drawn opposition from the state’s attorney general.

The move marks a major reversal for Bianco, a prominent Donald Trump supporter who is one of the top two Republican candidates running for the governorship of California.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 22:06

This live blog is now closed.

The average price for a gallon of gasoline in the US is about to hit $4, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA).

This is up 33% from a month ago, when the average price was $2.98 per gallon. It is the highest national average since 2022, following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 21:59

The Super Bowl will return to Las Vegas in 2029 for the second time after NFL owners voted Monday to award the nation's gambling and entertainment capital the big game.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 21:49

I bought a used XR+ with only 6 miles on it. it says it’s fully changed and the board lights up when plugged in but wont power on if unplugged. The previous owner left it uncharged for a year. I disassembled it and it’s reading 63volts from the battery connects. Everything is pointing to a bad battery but the fact it says it’s fully charge and still putting off full volts is causing me pause before I drop $350 on an EBay replacement battery.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 21:32

President says he is open to scaling back strikes on oil and wider energy industry if Moscow reciprocates. What we know on day 1,496

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 21:26

If approved, move is latest in series of buildings, warships, institutions, programs and currency named after president

He has buildings, institutions, government programs, warships, currency, and now Donald Trump is getting an airport that bears his name even as he looks forward to a towering Trump presidential library in Miami.

Ron DeSantis, Florida’s governor, signed a bill on Monday saying the Palm Beach international airport was being renamed to the President Donald J Trump international airport.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 21:13

JD Vance headlined a closed-door gathering for the spring summit of the Rockbridge Network, a secretive donor group that Vance co-founded in 2019 during his stint as a private investor.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 21:00

Cable signed by secretary of state Marco Rubio endorses Musk’s platform by name and suggests staff work with Pentagon psychological operations unit – key US politics stories from Monday 30 March at a glance

The United States has directed every American embassy and consulate across the world to launch coordinated campaigns against foreign propaganda and endorses Elon Musk’s Twitter/X as an “innovative” tool to help do it.

The cable, signed by the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, on Monday and obtained by the Guardian, also suggests embassies and consulates work alongside the US military’s psychological operations unit to address the problem of rampant disinformation. It lays out a sweeping set of instructions for how embassy staff should push back against what it describes as coordinated foreign efforts to undermine American interests abroad.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 20:56

Clowns in Bolivia are upset by mandate that stops schools hosting events from which they earn a living

Dozens of clowns have marched through the streets of Bolivia’s capital to protest against a government decree that limits extracurricular activities in schools, threatening their livelihoods.

Wearing full face paint and their signature red noses, the clowns gathered on Monday in front of the ministry of education in La Paz to oppose a decree published in February. The new mandate says schools must comply with 200 days of lessons each year – in effect banning them from hosting the special events where the entertainers are frequently employed.

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2026-03-31 08:04
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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 20:40

Exclusive: Environmental impact assessments are ‘incomplete’, say leaders, and private beach club could harm fragile ecosystems

Indigenous community leaders in Vanuatu have raised concerns over plans by the cruise operator Royal Caribbean to build a private beach club on the island of Lelepa, arguing environmental impact assessments by the company are “incomplete” and “misleading”.

The community leaders outlined the issues in a letter sent to Royal Caribbean on 26 February, which has been seen by the Guardian. The leaders also said the development could harm fragile ecosystems and a nearby Unesco world heritage site.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 20:11

I have a XRC (shout out to the community for convincing me to upgrade) and I went out for a short ride on concrete today. At one point, I decided to stop to change my music. I hopped off the board, it tipped on its side, I changed my music, then righted the board and hopped back on. Only, when I leveled it out, I felt the motor engage, followed by immediate haptic buzz into a nosedive. The wheel did not really turn during this, almost like it was stuck, but directly afterward, it ghost rode in reverse a bit once I was off of it.

I engaged it with my hands, and noticed that the wheel didn't seem to want to move forward while on the ground. It would move fine if I was holding it up. I then turned off the board, turned it back on, and it started acting normally.

I rode it home a little more slowly to be safe, but it seemed totally normal during the short trip home.

I've only ever experienced that type of nosedive once while trying to go uphill on some pretty unforgiving vegetation. But this time, it was a flat sidewalk.

Should I be concerned?

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 20:10

The feature, introduced in beta in December, is expanding to iOS and to more countries.

2026-03-31 08:04
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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-31 05:00

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 31, No. 1,746.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-31 05:01

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 31, No. 1,024.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-31 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 31, No. 758.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 20:59

Countdown clocks began ticking Monday, setting the stage for launch of the Artemis II moon mission early Wednesday evening.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 20:49

President Trump's family business filed a trademark application for the name in February in response to the Florida bill.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 22:32

Iran contradicted Trump’s claims that direct talks with more a moderate regime in Tehran were making “great progress.”

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 20:00

Trusted Apple leaker Mark Gurman predicts the upcoming iPhone design will eclipse the iPhone 4, 6 and X.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-30 19:59

Gavin Newsom signs order to prioritize public safety and rights as president seeks to prevent ‘cumbersome’ rules

California will impose new standards on artificial intelligence companies seeking to do business with the state, defying Donald Trump’s demands to keep the controversial industry as deregulated as possible.

The state’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, signed an executive order on Monday that gives California four months to develop AI policies that prioritize public safety.

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:58
Onewheel Pint X Surestance footpad malfunction

I finally fixed my battery pinching issue with my Pint X, and upon putting it back together, an error stating “I need my personal space” is repeatedly being shown. I disconnected the front pad and it doesn’t show the error, so I’ve narrowed it down to the sensor. How can I fix this? Do I need to take off “the 4th layer”?

submitted by /u/LegitimateMorning931
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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:50

U.S. stocks swung on Monday as oil prices kept climbing because of uncertainty about when the war with Iran could end.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:47

Kid Rock shared videos to social media that show two Army helicopters outside of his Tennessee home. An Army official confirmed to CBS News that it was a training flight.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:45

TSA staffing shortages remain far more severe than the national average, although wait times seemed to be stabilizing Monday.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:40

Prosecutors investigate whether Farah Louis and Debbie Louis accepted bribes to help migrant shelter provider

Federal prosecutors are investigating whether a New York City councilmember and her sister, an aide to governor Kathy Hochul, accepted bribes or kickbacks in connection with the appropriation of city funds to a migrant shelter provider, according to a copy of a search warrant obtained by the Associated Press.

The warrant, signed on 19 March, seeks evidence of possible criminal violations involving councilmember Farah Louis, a Brooklyn Democrat, and Debbie Louis, who serves as Hochul’s assistant secretary of New York City intergovernmental affairs.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-30 19:38

Police have arrested a Newark man accused of robbing or scamming several people who arranged to sell him items through an online marketplace.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:31

Pixel fans hoping for a dramatic redesign might need to wait at least another year.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:24

JetBlue is hiking bag check fees as airlines face higher jet fuel costs related to the Iran war, making flying more expensive.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:21

New features behind a paywall include spotlighting one story per week, previewing stories without showing up as a viewer and extending your stories for 24 hours.

2026-03-30 20:04
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2026-03-30 19:15

Congressman Joaquin Castro calls for release of boy, Kaleth, and mother from much-criticized detention Dilley facility

A two-year-old detained in a family detention center in Dilley, Texas, is sick and not getting adequate help, said Joaquin Castro, a Democratic congressman from San Antonio. The boy, Kaleth, has a fever and is not eating the food served at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center, which Castro said detainees have complained of having mold and worms.

“When his mother asked for help, the staff said it was all ‘mental’,” Castro wrote in a post on X. “A vulnerable child at the Dilley trailer prison was suffering and ICE denied their reality and their needs. It’s shameful and must stop.”

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 19:00

Microsoft is reportedly shifting Windows 11 app development back toward fully native apps. Rudy Huyn, a Partner Architect at Microsoft working on the Store and File Explorer, said in a post on X that he is building a new team to work on Windows apps. "You don't need prior experience with the platform.. what matters most is strong product thinking and a deep focus on the customer," he wrote. "If you've built great apps on any platform and care about crafting meaningful user experiences, I'd love to hear from you." Huyn later said in a reply on X that the new Windows 11 apps will be "100% native." TechSpot reports: The description stands out at a time when many of Microsoft's built-in tools, including Clipchamp and Copilot, rely on web technologies and Progressive Web App architectures. The company's commitment to native performance suggests that some long-standing frustrations around responsiveness, memory use, and interface consistency could finally be addressed. For Windows developers, Huyn's comments hint at a change in direction. Microsoft's recent development priorities have leaned heavily on web-based approaches, with Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) replacing or supplementing many native programs. [...] Exactly which applications will be rebuilt, or how strictly "100% native" will be enforced, remains unclear. Some current Microsoft apps classified as native still depend on WebView for specific features. But the renewed emphasis already has developers paying attention.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 18:59

Electric cars from 16 automakers in the US will be able to plan long routes with AI-powered charging suggestions.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 18:31

hey all, I am looking to buy a VESC on a budget. I have selected the U-Box 100A-100V Lite. I was wondering if anybody has any opinions on it. For context, I am a bigger rider and mostly do trails, very rarely peaking at 16 mph. I have heard some mixed opinions on it and was wondering if there's a better controller for the same price? Thank you.

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 18:31

What is Alex's endgame?

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 18:24

Security staff at the Adelanto detention center found Ramos unconscious and unresponsive in his bunk

A Mexican immigrant has died at a detention center outside Los Angeles, marking at least the 14th death in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody since the year began.

Security staff at the Adelanto detention center found José Guadalupe Ramos unconscious and unresponsive in his bunk on 25 March, according to an ICE press release. Staff attempted to carry out life-saving procedures, including CPR, then called emergency services, who took Ramos to Victory Valley Global medical center in nearby Victorville. He was pronounced dead there at 9.29pm.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-30 18:24

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.

Skyrocketing Arrests

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.

After Renee Good Killing

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.

Related

The Woman Alex Pretti Was Killed Trying to Defend Is an EMT. Federal Agents Stopped Her From Giving First Aid.

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.

Few Somalis Arrested

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.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 18:16

Ayman Ghazali, naturalized US citizen from Lebanon, often consumed content linked to Lebanese group online

The assailant who attacked a synagogue in Michigan earlier this month was inspired by Hezbollah, the FBI said on Monday.

Jennifer Runyan, head of the FBI’s Detroit field office, announced during a press conference that Ayman Ghazali, 41, had frequently consumed Hezbollah-related content online before the attack. In a video recorded before he drove his truck into Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township – a north-western suburb of Detroit – on 12 March, Ghazali said he wanted to “kill as many of them as I possibly can”.

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 18:06

Rather than purchasing new footpads from FM for $150, I would love to just replace the sensor. I've seen videos of people doing it, but cannot seem to find one for sale. Am I missing something? Thanks!

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 18:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Last year, just before the Fourth of July holiday, the US Space Force officially took ownership of a new operating system for the GPS navigation network, raising hopes that one of the military's most troubled space programs might finally bear fruit. The GPS Next-Generation Operational Control System, or OCX, is designed for command and control of the military's constellation of more than 30 GPS satellites. It consists of software to handle new signals and jam-resistant capabilities of the latest generation of GPS satellites, GPS III, which started launching in 2018. The ground segment also includes two master control stations and upgrades to ground monitoring stations around the world, among other hardware elements. RTX Corporation, formerly known as Raytheon, won a Pentagon contract in 2010 to develop and deliver the control system. The program was supposed to be complete in 2016 at a cost of $3.7 billion. Today, the official cost for the ground system for the GPS III satellites stands at $7.6 billion. RTX is developing an OCX augmentation projected to cost more than $400 million to support a new series of GPS IIIF satellites set to begin launching next year, bringing the total effort to $8 billion. Although RTX delivered OCX to the Space Force last July, the ground segment remains nonoperational. Nine months later, the Pentagon may soon call it quits on the program. Thomas Ainsworth, assistant secretary of the Air Force for space acquisition and integration, told Congress last week that OCX is still struggling. The GAO found the OCX program was undermined by "poor acquisition decisions and a slow recognition of development problems." By 2016, it had blown past cost and schedule targets badly enough to trigger a Pentagon review for possible cancellation. Officials also pointed to cybersecurity software issues, a "persistently high software development defect rate," the government's lack of software expertise, and Raytheon's "poor systems engineering" practices. Even after the military restructured the program, it kept running into delays and overruns, with Ainsworth telling lawmakers, "It's a very stressing program" and adding, "We are still considering how to ensure we move forward."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:55

Saturday’s protests drew millions of people across the US and around the world. The Guardian spoke with some of them to see why they were there and what’s next

Saturday saw the greatest number of protests in US history, when more than 8 million people at 3,300 No Kings events took to the streets to oppose the policies of Donald Trump.

In the past few months, the Trump administration has sent more than 3,000 federal immigration agents into Minnesota’s Twin Cities, causing fear and havoc that was only furthered when agents killed two residents. Trump has also launched strikes on Venezuela and waged a war in Iran that has so far cost the US about $30bn to $40bn. That is on top of the US continuing to fund Israel’s war in Gaza; the ongoing immigration raids in other US cities, towns and rural regions; and the threats to trans rights, voting rights and more.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-30 17:52

Cable signed by Marco Rubio and seen by Guardian suggests staff work with Pentagon psychological operations unit

The United States has directed every American embassy and consulate across the world to launch coordinated campaigns against foreign propaganda and endorses Elon Musk’s X as an “innovative” tool to help do it.

The cable, signed by the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, on Monday and obtained by the Guardian, also suggests embassies and consulates work alongside the US military’s psychological operations unit to address the problem of rampant disinformation. It lays out a sweeping set of instructions for how embassy staff should push back against what it describes as coordinated foreign efforts to undermine American interests abroad.

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:50

A video of what looks like an abrupt exchange between an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent and an airplane passenger has stirred social media outrage. But it isn’t footage of an actual law enforcement encounter.  

The video shows a man at an airplane cabin wearing a bulletproof vest and a badge with his face covered. The man asks a woman at the front of the plane for someone named "Juan Garcia." He then walks down the aisle to confront a bearded man.

"We would like to verify that you’re a citizen of this country, look dude, you’re wearing a Mexico shirt," the masked man says before escorting the bearded man and a woman seated next to him off of the plane. People on the plane jeer at the exchange and film the encounter with their phones.

"ICE thug kidnaps US citizen on a plane for being Latino," the video’s caption reads in a March 26 Facebook post.

Other X, TikTok and YouTube users also shared the video with similar captions. 

The video may seek to replicate the tensions of real encounters recorded between ICE agents and U.S. citizens in cities across the U.S., but in this case it’s staged.

President Donald Trump sent ICE agents to help Transportation Security Administration workers with security lines across U.S. airports because of the partial government shutdown, but this footage isn’t a result of Trump’s order. 

The video has a TikTok watermark with the username, @tonyandangel. The account posted footage of the supposed arrest on March 25, with the caption, "ICE agent removes US citizen from airplane. CRAZY!" The video is currently unavailable in the account.  

The account has posted multiple skits and prank videos, including other videos in the same airplane set. We also noticed that some of the people in the purported ICE agent video were featured in other skits

The blue chairs and carpet with the white airplane cabin matches the image of the airplane set offered to social media creators by Network Media, a company that provides creative coaching, and filming infrastructure for content creators, according to its website.

PolitiFact reached out to the video creator for comment, but didn’t receive an immediate response.

This video of a man being removed from an airplane by an ICE agent is a skit, we rate this claim False.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:50

The app is a nightmare of a historically dangerous cyberattack waiting to happen.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:47

Posted photographs show Patel smoking cigars, riding in antique cars and holding a large bottle of rum.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:37

Justice department claims state is violating Title IX – the federal law that prohibits sex-based discrimination

The US Department of Justice sued Minnesota’s education department and the state’s school athletics body on Monday for allowing transgender athletes to compete in girls’ sports.

In a lawsuit, the justice department claims that by making female student athletes compete against transgender girls, as well as share locker rooms and bathrooms with them, Minnesota is violating Title IX – the federal law that prohibits sex-based discrimination for any programs that receive federal funding.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 17:31

Front-load washing machines are more expensive to buy but cost less to operate. I crunched the numbers over time to see which is the better buy in 2026.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:26

City regulator reduces number of loan agreements in line for compensation from 14m to 12m

Victims of the car finance scandal will be in line for payouts worth £830 on average, as the City regulator tightened the rules of its compensation scheme to cover fewer contracts.

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) released the final details of its planned redress programme, saying it had narrowed the number of loan agreements eligible for payouts from 14m to 12.1m contracts.

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:20

Four masked men are believed to have forced their way through an entry gate, grabbed the paintings and escaped by climbing a fence, Italy’s Carabinieri said.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:14

Why do so many people keep falling for the same trick over and over again?

With an over $400 billion gap between the money invested in AI data centers and the actual revenue these products generate, Silicon Valley slowly returned to the tested and trusted playbook: advertising.

Now, ads are starting to appear in pull requests generated by Copilot. According to Melbourne-based software developer Zach Manson, a team member used the AI to fix a simple typo in a pull request. Copilot did the job, but it also took the liberty of editing the PR’s description to include this message: “⚡ Quickly spin up Copilot coding agent tasks from anywhere on your macOS or Windows machine with Raycast.”

↫ David Uzondu at Neowin

It turns out that Microsoft has added ads to over 1.5 million Copilot pull requests on GitHub, and they’re even appearing on GitLab, one of the GitHub alternatives. The reasoning is clear, too, of course: “AI” companies and investors have poured ungodly amounts of money in “AI” that is impossible to recover, even with paying customers. As such, the logical next step is ads, and many “AI” companies are already starting to add advertising to their pachinko machines. It was only a matter of time before Copilot would start inserting ads into the pull requests it ejaculates over all kinds of projects.

This isn’t the first time a once-free service turns on its users, but it’s definitely one of the quickest turnarounds I’ve ever seen. Usually it takes much longer before companies reach the stage of putting ads in their products to plug any financial bleeding, but with the amount of money poured into this useless black hole, it really shouldn’t be surprising we’re already there. I’m sure Copilot’s competitors, like Claude, will soon follow suit.

They’re enshittifying Git, and developers are just letting it happen. No wonder worker exploitation is so rampant in Silicon Valley.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-30 17:11

Republican Sen. Mike Lee said that he believes there are “at least tens of thousands, probably hundreds of thousands” of noncitizens illegally registered to vote in the U.S., adding that a federal tool used in nearly two dozen states would help identify the number. But the tool has wrongly flagged many as being noncitizens, and there’s no evidence of widespread noncitizen voting. 

The data-matching program employed in those states over the last year identified about 10,000 potential noncitizens on voter registration lists, out of about 49 million voter registrations checked, according to reporting by the New York Times citing federal officials. But upon further investigation, county officials found U.S. citizens were among those identified.

In addition, election officials determined some noncitizens were inadvertently added by county officials to voter lists, and still others were noncitizens who mistakenly checked a box for voter registration even after acknowledging on the same forms that they were noncitizens.

Experts and state audits refute the idea of widespread noncitizen voting.

The SAVE America Act championed by Lee — and touted by President Donald Trump as necessary to stop illegal voting by noncitizens — would require all states to submit their voter registration lists to the Department of Homeland Security to be run through this tool, called the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements, or SAVE, program. The bill passed the House and is being debated in the Senate. Lee made his comments about noncitizens being registered to vote in a March 22 interview on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures.”

Jasleen Singh, a senior counsel and manager in the Brennan Center for Justice’s democracy program, said that Lee’s speculation about the number of noncitizens on voter registration lists amounts to “another outlandish claim without evidence.” The reality, Singh said, is that “noncitizen voting is vanishingly rare.”

The SAVE program, Singh said, “is one of many tools that election officials have in their toolbox to use. It comes with a myriad of data flaws, and any results that come directly from a search to the SAVE program need to be viewed with that lens and with a good degree of skepticism.”

Acting upon an executive order from Trump in March 2025, DHS overhauled the SAVE program last spring to include Social Security data. Trump also waived fees to states to access the database, allowing bulk searches.

“What we do know is that in states that have started reviewing the voter registration files in order to weed out those [ineligible people] who might have registered, perhaps inadvertently … already there have been thousands of voter registration files identified in just the handful of states doing their own reviews,” Lee told the Hill on March 20.

We reached out to Lee’s office but did not get a response.

Many states — predominantly ones run by Democrats — have refused to share their voting lists with the SAVE program. U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi has sued 29 states and the District of Columbia for failing to provide the federal government with their lists.

But nearly two dozen states have utilized the SAVE program. Lee is correct that “thousands” of people have been flagged as potentially being noncitizens. As we said, of the 49.5 million voter registrations checked, DHS referred about 10,000 cases to investigators, according to a Jan. 14 New York Times report that attributed the figures to a spokesman for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. (There were 174 million people registered to vote in the U.S. for the 2024 election, according to the U.S. Census. In other words, less than a third of all names on state voter registration lists nationwide have been run through the SAVE program.)

But the Times reported that local election officials began to discover that some of the names flagged by the SAVE program turned out to be citizens. That appeared to be particularly true for recently naturalized citizens. Tens of thousands of people are naturalized as citizens every month, according to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services data.

A stack of voter registration forms in the Loving County offices in Mentone, Texas, on Aug. 19, 2025. Photo by Elizabeth Conley/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images.

A joint investigation by ProPublica and the Texas Tribune found that in addition to many citizens being wrongly flagged as noncitizens, several election officials “came across instances in which voters marked on registration forms that they weren’t citizens, but were registered by election office staffers in error. Clerks also said voters have told them they’d misunderstood questions about eligibility when getting drivers’ licenses.”

Ongoing research by the Center for Election Innovation & Research “continues to find that sweeping allegations about noncitizen registrations or voting appear to arise from misunderstandings, mischaracterizations, or outright fabrications about complex voter data. In every examined case, when claims about large numbers of noncitizens on voting rolls are subject to scrutiny and properly investigated, the number of alleged instances falls drastically.”

Even in the states that have used the federal SAVE program, “Claims of large numbers of possible noncitizens on voter records are revised significantly downward after proper investigation and scrutiny. Most often, investigations into large claims reveal that at least some early flags were based on outdated, incomplete, or improperly matched data that incorrectly labeled eligible citizens as possible noncitizens,” CEIR reported in February. Those smaller, revised numbers “generally receive far less public attention.”

Lee’s Home State of Utah

Interestingly, the SAVE America Act faces significant opposition from the top Republican election official in Lee’s home state of Utah, which last year initiated a citizenship review of all registered voters in the state. Ultimately, officials announced in January that they were only able to confirm the state voter rolls included one noncitizen, and that person did not vote.

State officials first compared voter records against driver’s license data, which records citizenship status. The conclusion: 99.9% of the state’s 2 million voters were citizens. But that left the status of 71,314 people unclear, so officials checked those against the SAVE database, which narrowed the potential number of noncitizens to 8,836. Staff in the state elections office then reviewed the remaining voters’ information. That narrowed the list to 486 they could not immediately verify were citizens. Officials sent letters to everyone in that group and got back 52 responses, including many from older voters who registered before the state required a driver’s license or Social Security number.

“The bottom line is, there is not a widespread problem,” Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson, a Republican, said at the time. “You hear people say hundreds or thousands — it’s just not.”

Henderson, who oversees elections in the state, wrote in a January press release that through Utah’s citizenship review, “We also learned that the federal government does not keep accurate databases.”

The SAVE program, she said, “is notoriously inaccurate and frequently flags individuals who are, in fact, citizens.”

Henderson and others have also raised concerns about the SAVE America Act requiring states to use the DHS database immediately, in the midst of a midterm election year.

“If we want a federal law mandating voter ID or DPOC [documentary proof of citizenship], and it’s really not about disenfranchising a bunch of voters, then states and voters need an onramp with time to prepare — get the documents, obtain the right ID, set up the system,” Henderson wrote in a social media post on March 17. “That’s not what’s happening with the SAVE America Act. This bill would be effective immediately in the middle of an election year.”

SAVE Flaws Found in Other States

Similar stories have played out in other states that used the SAVE program.

One of the first states to implement the SAVE program was Texas, and on Oct. 22, Texas’ secretary of state, Jane Nelson, announced that it had completed a full comparison of the state’s voter registration list against citizenship data in the SAVE database. Calling it a “game changer,” Nelson said the SAVE program identified 2,724 potential noncitizens on the state’s voter registration rolls — or less than 0.02% of more than 18 million voters.

Nelson said the list of those potential noncitizens was sent to Texas counties to conduct investigations, with the understanding that those deemed to be noncitizens would be purged from voter registration lists and those who were found to have voted illegally would be referred to the Texas attorney general for prosecution.

“Everyone’s right to vote is sacred and must be protected. We encourage counties to conduct rigorous investigations to determine if any voter is ineligible — just as they do with any other data set we provide,” Nelson said.

But that’s where things began to fall apart.

As a joint investigation by ProPublica and the Texas Tribune documented, lacking clear guidance, some counties investigated; others didn’t. Some sent letters to people on the list and purged those who failed to respond; others didn’t purge any names.

Some counties compared the names on their list to databases kept by the Department of Public Safety, which requires proof of citizenship if residents register to vote when obtaining a driver’s license. Those checks found many of those on the list identified as potentially noncitizens were citizens.

In Potter County, for example, three of nine voters on the list had proof of citizenship on file, the ProPublica/Texas Tribune investigation found. In Travis County, it was 11 of the 97 voters flagged by the SAVE program. Overall, the counties that checked the SAVE-generated list against DPS records found “more than 5% of the voters SAVE identified as noncitizens proved to be citizens,” the investigation concluded.

“It has proven to be inaccurate,” Travis County’s voter registrar, Celia Israel, told the publications. “Why would I rely on it?”

While the SAVE program accurately identified many on the voter registration rolls who were ineligible to vote, “Several [counties] came across instances in which voters marked on registration forms that they weren’t citizens, but were registered by election office staffers in error. Clerks also said voters have told them they’d misunderstood questions about eligibility when getting drivers’ licenses,” the ProPublica/Texas Tribune report said.

In Louisiana, the SAVE program identified 403 potential noncitizens registered to vote, out of 2.96 million registered voters. That’s about 0.014%. Of those potential noncitizens, 83 cast at least one vote going back to the 1980s (though it was not clear how many of those were later verified to be noncitizens). In 2024, 2,006,975 people voted in the presidential election in Louisiana. Even if all 83 of them voted that year, that would translate to about 0.004% of all votes cast in the state.

“I want to be clear: noncitizens illegally registering or voting is not a systemic problem in Louisiana,” Louisiana Secretary of State Nancy Landry said when the preliminary results were revealed last September.

Missouri also employed the SAVE program and generated lists of potential noncitizens, which it then circulated to local officials.

On Dec. 3, more than 70 county election clerks from both parties wrote a letter to the state’s speaker of the House warning, “These lists are deeply flawed: they are outdated, inaccurate, and include individuals we know to be U.S. citizens—our neighbors, colleagues, and even voters we have personally registered at naturalization ceremonies.”

It’s not clear how many noncitizens flagged by the SAVE database actually voted. But there have been relatively few arrests nationwide for illegal voting by noncitizens.

That makes sense, Singh told us, considering the stiff consequences for convictions for voting illegally as a noncitizen. Current federal law requires those registering to vote to attest that they are citizens under penalty of perjury. Noncitizens convicted of voting in federal elections face fines, jail time and deportation.

“Someone who is in this country, who may not have documents, or who has a legal presence and is not a citizen yet, whatever it is, they’re not going to risk their ability to be in this country to cast a ballot, because they will be subject to deportation,” Singh said. “And it’s just not a risk that folks are, if we think about it logically and reasonably, that folks are going to be willing to take.”

According to the conservative Heritage Foundation’s election fraud database, just under 100 noncitizens have been convicted of illegally voting or registering to vote since 1982.

There may be so few prosecutions, Singh said, because by and large, when noncitizens are on registration rolls “it’s likely a mistake or because of an error by the person registering, or maybe the DMV … whatever it is, it’s a mistake rather than an actual intentional act.”

“The evidence is that the number of noncitizens illegally voting in federal elections is extremely low, not high enough to have changed the party outcome of any federal election in recent years,” Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute, told us last April. “Audits and investigations in states like Ohio, Nevada, and North Carolina have found the numbers to be tiny in relation to votes cast. … The consistent experience has been that very few persons in this category mistakenly or deliberately vote.”


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 Flaws in Government Tool to ID Noncitizen Voters appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:02

By reimplementing these features using capabilities, we made the kernel simpler by moving complex scheme and namespace management out of it which improved security and stability by reducing the attack surface and possible bugs. At the same time, we gained a means to support more sandboxing features using the CWD file descriptor. This project leads the way for future sandboxing support in Redox OS. As the OS continues to move toward capability-based security, it will be able to provide more modern security features.

↫ Ibuki Omatsu

Redox seems to be making the right decisions at, crucially, the right time.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 17:00

Samsung is reportedly planning to roll out AirDrop-style file sharing for older Galaxy phones via a Quick Share update. Early reports suggest the feature is appearing on devices from the Galaxy S22 through the S25, though it is not actually working yet. Android Central reports: As spotted by Reddit users (via Tarun Vats on X), a Quick Share app update is rolling out via the Galaxy Store on older Samsung devices that appears to add support for AirDrop file sharing with Apple devices. Users report seeing the same new "Share with Apple devices" section we first saw on Galaxy S26 devices in the Settings app after updating Quick Share. The update is reportedly showing up on Galaxy models ranging from the Galaxy S22 to last year's Galaxy S25 series. The catch, however, is that the feature doesn't seem to be working yet. It's appearing on devices running One UI 8 as well as the One UI 8.5 beta, but enabling the toggle doesn't activate the functionality for now. Users say that turning on the feature doesn't make their device visible to Apple devices, and no Apple devices show up in Quick Share either. It's possible Samsung or Google still needs to enable it server-side, but it does confirm that broader rollout to older Galaxy devices is coming. The feature could arrive fully with the One UI 8.5 update.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:56

A landline could be your lifeline during a major mobile outage.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-30 16:55

March 30, 2026 — To lead in space, America must lead in silicon. With NASA recently announcing a shift from short-duration missions to sustained lunar presence and deep-space exploration, autonomous, high-performance computing is no longer optional – it’s mission-critical. AMD is helping power that transformation, delivering the compute that enables the next era of exploration.

AMD Versal adaptive SoC. Credit: AMD.

As missions like Artemis II and NISAR increase in scale and complexity, high-performance computing and AI inference are becoming foundational. With over two decades of flight-proven space heritage, from the Mars rover to Earth observation satellites, AMD technologies are helping turn vast streams of complex data into actionable intelligence at the edge.

AMD’s comprehensive portfolio of CPUs, GPUs, FPGAs and adaptive SoCs enable mission partners to deploy the right compute for every environment. The result is lower latency, greater resilience, and the ability to build intelligent, autonomous space systems that can operate reliability in the harshest conditions.

Proven Resilience for the New Space Era

From lunar exploration to the surface of Mars and into the outer solar system, AMD’s space-grade FPGAs and adaptive SoCs have supported some of the most demanding space missions, where onboard processing must operate reliably in extreme conditions with limited communication to Earth. These deployments highlight the importance of resilient, low-power compute platforms capable of autonomous operations.

Across the broader ecosystem, AMD delivers the flexibility and reliability required for long-duration space programs.

Blue Origin, a leader in space technology, recently shared that it’s using AMD Versal AI Edge Gen 2 adaptive SoCs in its development flight computers that are currently flying in the vehicle testbed that will eventually power the Mark 2 lander that will land astronauts on the moon as early as 2028.

And NEC recently announced it is building Japan’s first optical communication satellite constellation with AMD tech. The company will demonstrate high-speed network routing in space using AMD Versal adaptive SoCs to provide high-performance signal processing of data transmissions within the constellation and to help improve connectivity on Earth.

Computing at the Lunar Edge

As NASA shifts toward sustained lunar operations, the distance to Earth creates a critical latency and bandwidth gap. Radiation tolerant, space-grade AMD Versal adaptive SoCs close this gap by integrating programmable logic, AI engines and Arm cores to enable on-board high-performance processing in orbit and directly on the lunar surface.

By moving compute closer to the data source, spacecraft and surface systems can analyze sensor data in real time with reduced latency and dependence on limited bandwidth. This capability is critical for lunar surface operations, where systems must operate with increasing autonomy and resilience.

Reconfigurable Systems for Evolving Missions

NASA’s focus on flexible, iterative mission architectures aligns closely with the strengths of AMD FPGA-based adaptive computing. By enabling on-orbit reconfiguration, operators can address operational challenges in real-time. These include:

  • Updating algorithms after launch.
  • Deploying new AI models as mission needs evolve.
  • Optimizing performance throughout the mission life cycle.

This adaptability ensures NASA’s most ambitious investments deliver high-performance long after they have left the launch pad.

Accelerating AI-Driven Insights for Data-Intensive Missions

The NISAR mission, a collaboration between NASA and ISRO (India Space Research Organization), highlights the critical need for on-board, AI-driven intelligence. Generating massive volumes of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data, NISAR requires sophisticated on-orbit processing to bypass the constraints of Earth-bound transmission.

AMD adaptive SoCs solve this by enabling on-board processing tasks, such as data-filtering, compression and range-Doppler processing directly on the spacecraft. By ensuring only the most valuable insights are transmitted to Earth, this approach improves mission efficiency while enabling faster insights for climate monitoring, disaster response and environmental analysis.

Reliable, High-Performance Computing for the Harshest Environment

NASA’s ambitious vision for future missions requires hardware that can meet stringent reliability and safety requirements.

Capping a journey of nearly seven months, the NASA Mars rover Perseverance landed on the surface of Mars with several instruments enabled by AMD FPGAs, from navigation to collection and examination of soil and rock samples. AMD’s FPGAs also played a key role in the spacecraft involved in the NASA OSIRIS REx mission, marking the first U.S. mission to collect samples from an asteroid.

Designed and qualified to operate in extreme environments, AMD’s space-grade adaptive SoCs provide:

  • Radiation tolerance validated through proton, heavy ion and gamma testing.
  • Support for fault-tolerant system design techniques.
  • Compliance with standards including MIL-PRF-38535.
  • Long-term life cycle support aligned with multi-decade missions.

These capabilities ensure consistent performance across the full duration of complex exploration programs.

Advancing the Next Era of American Space Leadership

NASA’s initiatives represent a defining moment for ensuring American space leadership. By combining proven expertise in high-performance and adaptive computing, AMD enables the intelligent, flexible and radiation-tolerant systems required to meet these ambitions.

From lunar landers to deep-space missions, AMD technologies are the backbone for these extreme environments. By delivering real-time processing, AI-driven insights and mission adaptability, AMD ensures NASA and AMD’s commercial partners can navigate the complexities of deep-space exploration.

As the pace of innovation accelerates, the comprehensive AMD compute portfolio remains central to driving discovery, strengthening partnerships, enabling exploration and advancing the next era of American leadership in space.


Source: AMD

The post AMD Outlines Role in Enabling Edge AI and HPC for Space Exploration appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:54

Florida police arrested golf icon Tiger Woods on March 27 for charges including driving under the influence. This is the fourth time Woods has been involved in an automobile incident.

He was released later that night

Social media users claimed President Donald Trump publicly asked Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to pardon Woods. On multiple social media platforms, people circulated an image of a supposed March 27 Truth Social post from Trump, which read: 

"I’ve just been told that Tiger Woods, who is a Great Golfer and even Greater American, was involved in a minor fender bender today, and as a result of a misunderstanding, was charged with a dreaded DUI. This happening as he attempts to return to professional golf. Everyone deserves a second chance, which Tiger never got, if we're being honest. That is why I am calling on Gov. Ron DeSantis to IMMEDIATELY AND COMPLETELY PARDON Tiger so he can focus on The Masters and help to Make Golf Great Again!"

We found no evidence that Trump made this post. On March 27, Trump made multiple Truth Social posts, but not on 6:21 p.m. as the supposed screenshot showed. There are no news reports or cached copies that prove the post was real.

We’ve seen only one version of the image; the posts used one image with the same number of reposts and likes. If the post did get 565 reposts and more than 1,400 likes, there would likely be other versions or reports about the post.

On the same day of Woods’ arrest, Trump spoke to reporters in Miami and commented on it, but he did not mention a pardon. 

"I feel so badly. He’s, he’s got some difficulty. There was an accident and that’s all I know. Very close friend of mine, he’s an amazing person, amazing man. But, some difficulty," he said.

Trump awarded Woods the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2019, and Woods has visited The White House on other occasions.

Trump didn’t urge DeSantis on Truth Social to pardon Woods. We rate this claim False.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:46

Nearly 6,000 people forced to flee, human rights group says, as it criticises ‘abandonment’ from authorities

At least 70 people have been killed and 30 injured during an attack in Haiti’s breadbasket Artibonite region, significantly more than official estimates, a human rights group has said.

Police initially reported 16 dead and 10 injured, while a preliminary report from civil protection authorities suggested 17 had died and 19 were wounded.

Continue reading...

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-30 16:40

March 30, 2026 — Google Quantum AI is identifying a select cohort of research partners to drive high-impact projects on Google’s state-of-the-art Willow quantum processor.

Google’s Willow quantum chip

Selected applicants to the Willow Early Access Program gain exclusive access to this hardware—which is not yet available to the public—to push the boundaries of science and realize their proposal on quantum hardware. To help Google evaluate the scientific merit and feasibility of your project, please follow the submission instructions and eligibility requirements outlined below.

  • Submission Deadline: May 15, 2026
  • Selection Notification Deadline: July 1, 2026

Instructions

  • Propose an experiment to run on Google’s Willow quantum processor. The proposal should be specifically designed for a Willow processor. It should detail the circuits you propose to run and the observables that might go into the figures of a paper. Numerical simulations, where possible, can help make your case, but you should challenge yourself to go beyond what can be simulated easily.
  • There must be a member of your research group (e.g., a PhD student or post-doc) who would be dedicated to running this experiment.
  • Proposals should follow the guidelines here.
  • Upload your proposal to Google’s intake form. For your submission to be complete, all fields in this form must be answered. This form also asks certain questions that will enable Google to verify the eligibility of your employer and/or academic institution.
  • Do not include personally identifying information (e.g., name, email address, etc.) or attach the bios of any other member of your research team in your research proposal at this time.

Selection Criteria

  • Feasibility: Would the proposal yield high-quality results on current Willow devices given the device specifications detailed here. Proposals must demonstrate a clear, actionable path to execution and consider realistic sources of noise.
  • Impact: What are the implications of a successful run? Could this lead to a high-impact scientific result or demonstrate a novel breakthrough technique?

Follow this page to stay updated on the Willow Access Program. Details and program updates will be posted as they become available.

More from HPCwire


Source: Google Quantum AI

The post Google Quantum AI Opens Willow Early Access Program for Research Proposals appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:38

The new Infinite AI Wine Refrigerator is only available in South Korea for now, priced at $4,300.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:37
420

Checked my screen at the right time

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

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:37

Iranian Red Crescent emergency workers use a bulldozer to clear rubble from a residential building that was hit in an earlier U.S.-Israeli strike in Tehran, Iran, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)
Iranian Red Crescent emergency workers use an excavator to clear rubble from a residential building that was hit in an earlier U.S.–Israeli strike in Tehran, Iran, on March 23, 2026. Photo: Vahid Salemi/AP

Over the weekend, the U.S. and Israel bombarded two universities in Iran, the Isfahan University of Technology and the Iran University of Science and Technology in Tehran.

These are not, of course, the first attacks on civilian infrastructure in President Donald Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s illegal war on Iran; hospitals, desalination facilities, power plants, and an elementary school have all been hit.

Iranian students and educators received no warning.

The U.S. and Israel claimed that the attacks on the universities were justified, because they said the schools were connected to Iran’s weapons programs.

In response, Iranian authorities said on Sunday that American university facilities in the region would be considered legitimate targets, should the U.S. not condemn the strikes on Iranian educational institutions.

In a statement, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned “all employees, professors and students of American universities in the region to stay at least a kilometer away.”

Iranian students and educators received no such warning. Iran’s university campuses have been closed since the U.S.–Israeli war began last month; the weekend strikes nonetheless severely damaged buildings and reportedly wounded at least four staff members.

Cynical Justification

Leaving aside the fact that nothing in Trump’s war of choice against Iran is justified, the U.S. and Israel’s purported grounds for targeting Iranian universities are hollow and cynical. It is true that both universities had ties to military research. Would American and Israeli leaders consider their own equivalent institutions fair game? Of course not.

By stated U.S. and Israeli rationale, however, were Iran able to launch airstrikes on American soil, direct ties to the U.S. and Israeli military-industrial complex would make valid targets of at least the University of California, Berkeley; the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and Johns Hopkins University, among dozens of other schools.

Numerous Israeli universities, including Technion and Tel Aviv University, have research institutes dedicated to military technologies. And the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has a military base on campus for training intelligence soldiers.

Asymmetric warfare offers powerful aggressors the privilege of hypocrisy. It has long been pointed out that Israel’s justifications for mass slaughtering civilians — that Hamas uses civilian infrastructure — would in turn justify strikes on civilian areas in Israel. The Israeli government, after all, has facilities and even military installations within and near major cities and towns, not to mention the integration of the military into vast swaths of civilian Israeli life.

This is true almost everywhere that commercial and military technologies become intractably integrated, but that integration is especially robust in Israel.

The idea that any site related to military research is a justified target could be used to attack any technological hub.

Indeed, in this grim conjuncture, the idea that any site related to military research and development is a justified target could be used to attack any industrial, educational, and technological hub — which is precisely what the U.S. and Israel are doing in Iran. The U.S. and Israel’s own justifications for the Iranian university strikes de facto legitimize strikes against an MIT or a Technion, but American and Israeli leadership know that Iran and its allies don’t have the firepower to flatten whole campuses.

This is not to say that Iran will not retaliate and attempt to extract a cost from its enemies; this has been the pattern since the U.S. and Israel launched their illegal offensive in late February.

Universities including New York University, Texas A&M, Carnegie Mellon, Northwestern, and others have lucrative campuses in the Persian Gulf monarchies, primarily in Abu Dhabi and Qatar. These schools have all already moved to online instruction and most international students and faculty have left countries facing retaliatory Iranian strikes.

Related

“Liberate Their Bodies From Their Souls”: The Lies That Sell the Iran War

These international campuses are not known for housing advanced research labs connected to military and surveillance research, but, as the student-led Gaza solidarity movement made clear, U.S. academia at large is deeply invested in multinational arms manufacturers and U.S. and Israeli military industries. Dozens of American institutions of higher education are deeply involved in the government-funded weapons research that helps make the U.S. military the most potentially destructive force in the world.

“Systematic” Targeting

Let’s not pretend, however, that the ongoing war on Iran follows any sort of valid justificatory reasoning.

According to Helyeh Doutaghi, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Tehran who spoke to Al-Jazeera, the university bombings reflect a “consistent and clear pattern, and that is the systemic de-industrialization and underdevelopment” of Iran’s capabilities.

“The targeting is very systematic,” she said, “and very designed to make Iran incapable of defending its sovereignty by relying on its iedingeounous development and indigenous industries.”

Strikes against civilian infrastructure follow the same genocidal logic that saw every university in Gaza razed to rubble within 100 days of October 7, 2023. In a video shared by members of the Israeli military on social media in 2024, a soldier walked through the rubble of Al-Azhar University.

“To those who say, ‘There is no education in Gaza,’” he says, “we bombed them all. Too bad, you’ll not be engineers anymore.”

The point, that is, is the devastation of a place and a people, foreclosing their capacity to rebuild.

The post What Would We All Say If Iran Razed MIT Because of Military-Related Research? appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:35

Of course, it was only a matter of time before the time-honoured tradition of the demoscene also got infected by “AI”.

For me personally, generative AI ruins much of the fun. I still enjoy creating pixel art and making little animations and demos. My own creative process remains satisfying as an isolated activity. Alas, obvious AI generated imagery – as well as middle-aged men plagiarizing other, sometimes much younger, hobbyist artists – makes me feel disappointed and empty. It’s not as much about effort as it is about the loss of style and personality; soul, if you will. The result is defacement, to echo T. S. Eliot, rather than inspired improvement. Even in more elaborate AI-based works, it’s hard to tell where the prompt ends and the pixelling begins.

↫ Carl Svensson

A wonderful explanation of the rather unique views on originality, stealing, plagiarism, and related topics within the demoscene, which certainly diverge from many other places.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-30 16:15

When Marc Garner joined Schneider Electric’s data center business seven years ago, getting an order for a few megawatts was significant. “We were celebrating two to five megawatt deals at the time,” said Garner, who is Schneider’s Global President of Cloud & Service Providers. “And now we’re talking gigawatts. It’s a fascinating development.”

Clearly, the AI boom has been good to companies like Schneider, the 190-year-old energy solutions giant based in France. Revenues from its cloud and data center business currently makes up about a quarter of Schneider’s revenues, which last year was €38.15 billion (about $44 billion at current exchange rates). However, if Schneider CEO Olivier Blum’s prediction that computers will drive a 60% increase in electricity consumption over the next 15 years is accurate, that percentage will increase considerably.

“It’s phenomenal at the moment. I can’t put a number to it, but the increase we see in demand is significant,” Garner told HPCwire at the recent GTC 2026 conference. “I’m seven years in this industry now, and I’ve never seen the market quite like this. It’s very dynamic.”

ProEnergy’s PE6000 gas turbine engine, which is based on the GE Aerospace CF6-80C2 turbofan engine, can generate 48 megawatts of power. (Image courtesy ProEnergy)

The AI boom is leading companies to completely rethink how they build, power, and cool data centers. With nearly two centuries of experience building industrial electrical systems, Schneider is well positioned to help with several transitions that are occurring simultaneously.

Choosing where to build a data center is one of the first considerations. Rural areas of the United States tend to have more surplus power in the grid, which is one reason why there is currently 6.5 gigawatts of data center currently under construction in Texas, according to IR Pros, a provider of liquid cooling solutions for data centers.

In other areas of the country where the availability of electricity is an issue, bring your own power (BYOP) is the name of the game. Microsoft wants to restart the Unit 1 nuclear reactor at Three Mile Island in Middletown, Pennsylvania to power a data center. Other data center operators are looking to convert large turbofan engines that power commercial jets to get the power they need, as IEEE Spectrum recently reported.

Another big transition is the switch to liquid cooling, which is already well underway. Liquid cooling has been used in HPC sites for years, thanks to the intense compute density in supercomputers due to the use of GPUs and other AI accelerators. But now liquid cooling is going mainstream as dozens of gigawatt-scale AI factories are under construction around the world.

NVL72 has a TDP of up to 132 kW

This transition motivated Schneiders’ $850-million acquisition of a controlling stake in Motivair, a leader in liquid cooling for HPC systems, back in December 2024.

Typical computer racks have between two and five kilowatts of power per rack, with some high-density racks perhaps using 10 to 30 kW. But thanks to AI, it’s not uncommon to see racks drawing 100 kW of power. Nvidia’s NVL72, for instance, has a thermal design power (TDP) of 120 kW to 132kW. Future Nvidia systems will sport up to 400 kW, and there is even talk of having a single rack consume one megawatt of energy, which is enough energy to power up to 1,000 homes. Liquid cooling is necessary to deal with all the heat generated by all that electricity.

“When I first started in the data center industry, someone told me that a data center is a great big hairdryer,” Garner said. “You put power in, and hot air comes out. And it’s a really good analogy of what happens there. What we see though now is, because of the density of compute that’s happening within the rack, we need to extract that heat in a very different way. And that’s where the requirement for liquid cooling. That’s why Schneider bought Motivair a couple of years ago.”

The extreme compute density is leading to another big change in how HPC systems are powered: the adoption of 800 Volt DC electricity.

All computers run on DC power, but power from the grid is AC. Each computer or device typically does the conversion from AC power by itself, through the external power supply box.

Nvidia envisions moving large chunks of the data center to 800V DC power, which would eliminate the need to transform power for each device. Feeding GPUs directly with 800V DC would provide advantages in terms of wiring, as higher voltage circuits can use thinner copper wires. Each time you convert between AC and DC also leads to some power losses, which would be eliminated.

We’re not there yet with 800V DC. Nvidia intends to start the conversion with the current Vera Rubin systems, and move to fully native 800V DC with the Feynman generation that follows it. But Nvidia’s partners like Schneider and Vertiv are preparing themselves for the 800V DC future.

Switch is partnering with Schneider to incorporate its data center modeling software into Nvidia Omniverse (Image courtesy Switch)

“A lot of the work that we do is to make sure that we are two generations ahead,” says Anand Sanghi, president of the Americas at Vertiv, which provides power and cooling solutions to some of the largest data centers in the world. “We’re working with the chipsets that are going to be out in two years, because it takes time for people to design and deploy a data center.”

There are all sorts of variations on how 800V DC will be deployed, Sanghi said.

“Some people will say, I will continue to have AC coming into a certain level and then I can do sidecar and then conversion,” he told HPCwire at GTC2026. “Some people are saying, as soon as it comes in from the substation, I will convert it into DC, and have DC the whole way. So there are multiple architectures. Ideally, you’d want to do that conversion once, and then hold it DC for the rest of the way.”

There’s one more big change that will give data center architects more flexibility in how they construct data centers: the advent of solid-state transformers.

Traditional transformer technology has changed much since Michael Faraday developed his “induction ring” back in 1831. He found that by wrapping copper wiring around an iron core, he could change the voltage of electricity. But much more sophisticated solid-state transformers developed from silicon chemistry are starting to proliferate. They’re still more expensive than iron-core transformers, but solid-state transformers have several advantages, including the capability to handle multiple energy conversions, as well as two-way energy flows, which is important for backups.

Schneider’s reference design for AI data centers features two modes for token generation: MaxQ and MaxP (Image courtesy Schneider Electric)

Data center operators are counting on solid-state transformers to handle a variety of tasks, replacing multiple traditional transformers (which can typically only do one thing) and even uninterruptible power systems (UPS) with a single box, thereby simplifying the electrical designs of data centers and freeing up more space for GPUs and networking gear. This possibility has led to solid-state vendors like DG Matrix, Heron Power, and Amperesand raising hundreds of millions of dollars this year.

Having so many moving parts can be overwhelming. This is one reason why Nvidia is encouraging its partner to adopt digital twin technology within the Omniverse DSX Blueprint, to assist with data center design.

“The key piece here is the system-level thinking,” Vertiv’s Sanghi said. “You can do all that modeling, ensure that your architecture is at a system level to deploy the entire AI factory, and you’re able to do it at speed and scale everywhere in the world.”

Schneider, which is also working with Nvidia’s digital twin technology, rolled out its new AI reference design for Vera Rubin NVL72 racks. The reference design supports the Nvidia’s latest requirements, including increasing the per-rack power rating to 480V AC, cold water (45°C) liquid cooling, and support for maximal token generation, MaxP and MaxQ.

“You could buy a chiller from one company, a CDU [coolant distribution unit] from another, and many companies do,” Schneider’s Garner said. “But the integration of that system and the automation of it end-to-end, the system of systems and how it works, becomes really, really important from an efficiency [point of view].

“Almost all the conversations that happen around this industry at the moment [revolve around] the speed and scale. How do we deliver the infrastructure faster,” Garner continued. “The scale of what we’re delivering is at a rate that we’ve never seen before.”

The post Big Changes In Store for Data Center Power and Cooling, Thanks to AI Boom appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:08
  • Coach says no contact with Tottenham or Real Madrid

  • Pochettino committed to US for 2026 World Cup

Mauricio Pochettino once again distanced himself from links to a return to Tottenham Hotspur on Monday, while expressing his confidence that his former club will avoid relegation despite a challenging season.

Pochettino, who led Spurs to some of their greatest successes in the modern era during a tenure from 2014-2019, has often been linked with a return to the club. However, his position as head coach of the US men’s national team has prevented him from taking over this season as Tottenham have floundered. Pochettino will not be available for his next job until after this summer’s World Cup, as his US Soccer contract expires in August.

Continue reading...

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 19:02

California governor contender not accused of wrongdoing in decade-old inquiry into suspected Chinese agent

The Trump administration has reportedly been pushing to release records from an FBI investigation related to Eric Swalwell and alleged links to a Chinese agent as the Democratic congressman makes gains in the California governor’s race.

The Washington Post reported on Saturday, citing “three people familiar with the effort”, that the FBI director, Kash Patel, is pushing to release the files, even though there is no public evidence of wrongdoing on Swalwell’s part. The records stem from a decade-old investigation into a suspected spy who had developed relationships with US politicians and assisted Swalwell with fundraising.

Continue reading...

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 19:44

The shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security is set to stretch on after House Republicans rejected a Senate-passed solution to the standoff late last week.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 17:53

Federal officials on Monday for the first time labeled the March 12 attack​ at Michigan's Temple Israel as an act of terrorism inspired by Hezbollah, an Iran-backed militant group.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-31 02:39

Energy markets remain volatile as President Trump threatens Iran with an invasion to seize its oil while also suggesting a deal could soon end the war.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 16:37

In a rare about-face, the move by Israeli police to block Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa from the holiest site in Christianity was reversed after criticism.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 16:01

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle No. 554 for Tuesday, March 31.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 16:00

A study from the New York Fed found that delinquency rates increased faster in states where online sports betting is legal.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 16:00

OkCupid and parent company Match Group settled an FTC case dating back to 2014 over allegations that the dating app shared users' photos and other personal data with a third party without proper disclosure or opt-out rights. Engadget reports: According to the FTC, OkCupid's privacy policy at the time noted that the company wouldn't share a user's personal information with others, except for some cases including "service providers, business partners, other entities within its family of businesses." However, the lawsuit accused OkCupid of sharing three million photos of its users to Clarifai, which the FTC claims is a "unrelated third party" that didn't fall under the allowed entities. On top of that, the lawsuit alleged that OkCupid didn't inform its users of this data sharing, nor give them a chance to opt out. Moving forward, the settlement would "permanently prohibit" Match Group, which owns OkCupid, and Humor Rainbow, which operates OkCupid, from misrepresenting what kind of personal information it collects, the purpose for collecting the data and any consumer choices to prevent data collection. Even after the 2014 incident, OkCupid was found with security flaws that could've exposed user account info but, which were quickly patched in 2020.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 15:55
3rd day of floating

So this was my third day of riding a onewheel and my first day off road. I managed to finish the battery of my X10 LR after 7 hours and had to take a taxi home lol.

I’m loving this thing! Today was one of the best days of my life! :)

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 15:52

REDMOND, Wash., March 30, 2026 — Starcloud today announced it has raised a $170 million Series A, at a $1.1 billion valuation. Achieving unicorn status just 17 months after its Y Combinator demo day, Starcloud is now the fastest unicorn in Y Combinator history. The round is also more than double the size of the next largest YC Series A, and brings the company’s total capital raised to $200 million.

As artificial intelligence drives unprecedented demand for computing power, terrestrial infrastructure is struggling to keep pace. Permitting and building new data centers and energy projects on Earth can take up to five years. Starcloud is bypassing these terrestrial constraints by building data centers in low Earth orbit where they have access to virtually unlimited, low-cost solar energy.

“The AI revolution is colliding with the physical limits of our terrestrial energy grid,” said Philip Johnston, Co-Founder and CEO of Starcloud. “We are quickly running out of places to build new energy projects for data centers on Earth. By moving AI compute to space, we unlock access to unlimited solar power and completely remove the energy bottleneck. This funding allows us to rapidly scale our orbital infrastructure and meet the massive commercial demand for sustainable AI compute.”

Starcloud has demonstrated a pace of execution previously unseen in the aerospace or tech industries. With just $3 million in pre-seed funding, the company designed, built, and launched its first satellite, Starcloud-1, in a record 21 months. Launched in November 2025, the mission achieved several historic industry firsts:

  • First NVIDIA H100 in orbit: Successfully deployed the most powerful GPU in space, delivering a 100x increase in AI compute.
  • First orbital AI training: Successfully trained an AI model in space.
  • First orbital inference on Gemini: Successfully ran a version of Gemini in orbit.
  • First orbital fine-tuning: Demonstrated high-powered inference and model fine-tuning in space.

As part of the financing, Benchmark General Partner and six-time Midas lister, Chetan Puttagunta, will join the board of Starcloud.

“We believe that we are in the early innings of a decades-long buildout of AI infrastructure,” said Puttagunta. “Starcloud is pioneering a solution to the challenges of scaling AI infrastructure on Earth with orbital data centers. Their extraordinary engineering team has achieved significant technical breakthroughs in power and cooling, as well as innovative advancements in manufacturing processes. Most notably, the great team at Starcloud has reached these milestones while remaining exceptionally capital efficient. We believe their technical rigor and remarkable ambitions will enable them to achieve extraordinary scale.”

The new capital will accelerate the design and build of the company’s next-generation Starcloud-3 satellites, the establishment of a dedicated manufacturing facility, critical headcount expansion, and the procurement of future launch contracts.

Later this year, the company will launch Starcloud-2. This satellite will feature the largest commercial deployable radiator ever sent to space and generate 100x the power generation of Starcloud-1. Starcloud-2 will be the company’s first satellite to run commercial edge and cloud workloads for customers, including early customer Crusoe, alongside partnerships with AWS, Google Cloud, and NVIDIA.

The round was split into two tranches, with an initial round led by Benchmark with participation from EQT, and an extension round co-led by both investors. EQT is the world’s second-largest private equity fund, with over $100bn in assets under management, and the owner of more than 70 data centers. Benchmark is the world’s most successful long-running venture capital fund by returns.

The heavily oversubscribed round also saw participation from major global funds and strategic partners, including the world’s largest infrastructure fund, Macquarie Capital ($500bn AUM), NFX, Nebular, Y Combinator, Adjacent, 776 Ventures, Fuse Ventures, Manhattan West, and Monolith Power Systems. Prominent angel investors joining the round include Gen. Stephen Wilson, former Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg, and former Starbucks CEO and Goldman Sachs board member Kevin Johnson.

About Starcloud

Starcloud is building data centers in space to solve the AI energy bottleneck. Starcloud launched its first satellite, Starcloud-1, in November 2025. It featured the first NVIDIA H100 on board, which is approximately 100x more powerful GPU compute than has been on orbit before and was the first to train an AI model in space. Founded in 2024, Starcloud is headquartered at 2517 152nd Ave NE, Redmond, WA 98052.


Source: Starcloud

The post Starcloud Raises $170M Series A at $1.1B Valuation Led by Benchmark and EQT Ventures appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 15:47

March 30, 2026 — Poland’s NASK (Naukowa i Akademicka Sieć Komputerowa (Research and Academic Computer Network)) has launched a new AI computing cluster. The PLN 30 million (~US$8.01 million) project will allow NASK to conduct research, create proprietary tools, and develop technologies that address the specific needs of Poland and its citizens.

Credit: NASK

Chatbots, image generators, and automated data analysis—these are the things most often associated with artificial intelligence today. Behind each of these solutions, however, lies something the user typically doesn’t see: computing infrastructure. It’s no wonder, then, that Poland’s NASK is investing in it, as it’s this infrastructure that determines whether modern and secure AI systems can be developed.

Expanding AI computing resources today has far more than just technical significance. NASK has launched a new AI computing cluster. This isn’t just an investment in hardware. It’s an investment in the ability to conduct research, create proprietary tools, and develop technologies that address the specific needs of the state and its citizens.

“Training models, analyzing massive data sets, and testing new solutions all require appropriate technical resources. We are investing not only in AI Factories in Poznań and Kraków, but also increasing computing power within the ministry. The NASK AI Laboratory is an investment in implementing artificial intelligence in government, as well as combining research with innovation. We are developing the Polish AI ecosystem,” said Deputy Minister of Digital Affairs Dariusz Standerski.

The investment was financed by Poland’s Ministry of Digital Affairs.

More Than Servers

The new AI cluster launched at NASK is a liquid-cooled infrastructure equipped with 96 NVIDIA B200 cards, over 50 TB of RAM and over 1 PB of All-Flash NVME based on weka.io technology.

As NASK Director Radosław Nielek joked, “In gaming terms, this cluster would allow us to talk about Cyberpunk not at 60 or 120, but at 18,000 frames per second.”

However, in this case, the numbers themselves aren’t the most important thing. Their significance only becomes apparent when one considers the scale of computations required by today’s development of artificial intelligence. Model training, analysis of massive data sets, testing new solutions, and the parallel work of multiple teams—all of this requires a resource base that can’t be replaced by knowledge or ideas alone. Computing power has become one of the prerequisites for true agency: it determines whether one can work faster, more ambitiously, and more independently.

It’s not just about modern infrastructure. It’s about providing the conditions for conducting more complex research and development work, without constantly relying on external resources. The cluster architecture itself also plays a significant role.

More Space for Research, Testing and Development

Most importantly, however, is the practical possibilities the cluster opens up. It’s not just a single project, nor a single direction, but a whole group of tasks that require significant computing power, very fast data access, and the ability to repeatedly test different variants. This includes developing content analysis tools, working on biometrics, investigating anomalies and threats in network traffic, testing model security, and building solutions that must operate on massive volumes of data while maintaining high precision.

Therefore, the new cluster at NASK should be viewed not as a symbol of technological ambitions, but as a concrete work tool. One that provides more space for research, more opportunities to test and compare different approaches, and ultimately, a greater chance of creating solutions.

This tool allows researchers to do more at once, shortens the path from idea to result, and gives teams greater freedom where previously the pace of research was primarily determined by hardware.

A New Stage

The new AI cluster at NASK is not just an infrastructure expansion project, which can be summarized in a table of parameters. Its launch marks a significant increase in NASK’s capabilities – in terms of work pace, research scale, and the courage to undertake new projects. The institute’s teams are now equipped with a tool that allows them to do more, faster, and undertake more ambitious tasks.

“There are investments that are doubly satisfying: firstly because of their impressive scale, and secondly because you can quickly see how much good they can do. This cluster is one of them,” said NASK Director Radosław Nielek.


Source: NASK [Translated from Polish]

The post Poland’s NASK Unveils AI Compute Cluster to Support Government and Research Workloads appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 15:45
Help Me Jeff

My front footpad looks stupid. I had to retire my homemade kush wide front sensor footpad because it wouldn’t activate or would get stuck on (I think the membrane sensors don’t like concave surfaces). I just want a sweet XR TFL sensor front footpad.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 15:29

Knesset approves measure that has been criticised by European countries and rights groups

Israel’s parliament has passed a law imposing the death penalty on Palestinians convicted of fatal attacks, a measure sharply criticised as discriminatory by European countries and rights groups.

The legislation makes the death penalty the default punishment for Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank found guilty of intentionally carrying out deadly attacks deemed acts of terrorism by a military court.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 15:28

Travelers have faced hours-long security lines and missed flights as a partial government shutdown has continued for weeks.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 15:01

Tim Sweeney, chief of firm that created Fortnite, received backlash after worker’s wife revealed loss of life insurance

The chief of the company that created Fortnite, a popular online game, has issued an apology following backlash after recent mass layoffs cost an employee with terminal brain cancer his job – and his life insurance.

On Sunday, Tim Sweeney, the Epic Games chief executive, apologized after Jenni Griffin, the wife of Mike Prinke, a laid-off employee, revealed on social media that the loss of her husband’s job also meant he was losing his life insurance.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 15:01

In a Monday speech, Powell also touched on the impact of the Iran war, saying that longer-term inflation expectations remain in check.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 15:00

fjo3 shares a report from France 24: Too many lines of code to analyze, armies of AI assistants to wrangle, and lengthy prompts to draft are among the laments by hard-core AI adopters. Consultants at Boston Consulting Group (BCG) have dubbed the phenomenon "AI brain fry," a state of mental exhaustion stemming "from the excessive use or supervision of artificial intelligence tools, pushed beyond our cognitive limits." The rise of AI agents that tend to computer tasks on demand has put users in the position of managing smart, fast digital workers rather than having to grind through jobs themselves. "It's a brand-new kind of cognitive load," said Ben Wigler, co-founder of the start-up LoveMind AI. "You have to really babysit these models." [...] "There is a unique kind of reward hacking that can go on when you have productivity at the scale that encourages even later hours," Wigler said. [Adam Mackintosh, a programmer for a Canadian company] recalled spending 15 consecutive hours fine-tuning around 25,000 lines of code in an application. "At the end, I felt like I couldn't code anymore," he recalled. "I could tell my dopamine was shot because I was irritable and didn't want to answer basic questions about my day." BCG recommends in a recently published study that company leaders establish clear limits regarding employee use and supervision of AI. However, "That self-care piece is not really an America workplace value," Wigler said. "So, I am very skeptical as to whether or not its going to be healthy or even high quality in the long term." Notably, the report says everyone interviewed for the article "expressed overall positive views of AI despite the downsides." In fact, a recent BCG study actually found a decline in burnout rates when AI took over repetitive work tasks.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 14:52

The New York Times says the Defense Department flouted a court order blocking it from enforcing a policy limiting press access to the Pentagon.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 14:39

MILTON, Ontario, March 30, 2026 — Schneider Electric, a global energy technology leader, today unveiled new research highlighting a powerful combination of pressures pushing autonomous operations to the top of the agenda for the energy and chemicals sector across Canada and North America.

The study of 400 senior energy and chemicals executives across 12 countries shows a sharp rise in urgency around autonomy. A third of executives (31.5%) say advancing autonomy is a ‘critical’ priority in the next five years, rising to 44% over a ten-year horizon. Fewer than 5% globally view it as a low priority.

Leaders cite strong commercial pressures. They warn that delaying adoption risks higher operating costs (59%), worsening talent shortages (52%), and declining competitiveness (48%). Yet adoption is not without obstacles. Key barriers include high upfront costs (34%), legacy systems (30%), organizational resistance (27%), cybersecurity concerns (26%), and regulatory uncertainty (25%).

Schneider Electric’s Global Autonomous Maturity Report shows the sector at a critical point of transformation as electrification, automation, and digitalization converge. Surging AI demand, driven predominantly by hyperscale cloud and data center growth in North America, is placing unprecedented pressure on energy systems. Electricity demand is projected to nearly double to 1,000 TWh by 2030, intensifying the need for flexible, efficient, and resilient operations.

Within this emerging AI energy nexus, 49% of executives identify AI as the single biggest enabler of autonomous acceleration, followed by cybersecurity advancements, cloud and edge computing, digital twins, advanced process control, and open, software defined automation.

“Across Canada and North America, organizations are already operating at a high level of autonomy, with clear plans to accelerate over the next decade,” said Emily Heitman, President of Schneider Electric Canada. “As AI reshapes both energy demand and industrial performance, autonomous operations are becoming essential to maintaining reliability, safety, and competitiveness. This shift is not about replacing people, it’s about empowering skilled teams to focus on higher value work and operate complex systems more safely and efficiently.”

The momentum is clear, but progress is uneven, with the data highlighting regional differences in readiness levels. While Asia currently leads in autonomous operations maturity, North America is set for the fastest acceleration in adoption over the next five years. This growth is being driven by the region’s scale in energy production and consumption, combined with rapid expansion of data center infrastructure and increasing expectations around performance and resilience.

“Autonomous operations are redefining how energy and chemicals companies manage their facilities end to end,” said Heitman. “By combining automation, power management, and digital intelligence, Canadian operators can gain real time visibility and deploy AI enabled systems that predict, adapt, and self optimize, helping them meet rising energy demand while strengthening safety, reliability, and sustainability.”

Recent deployments illustrate this shift. At Shell’s Scotford Refinery in Canada, Schneider Electric is helping modernize operations through open, software defined automation, supporting more flexible and autonomous operations. At European Energy’s Kassø Power to X facility, the world’s first commercially viable e methanol plant, Schneider Electric technologies are enabling AI supported, self optimizing clean fuel operations with resilient remote monitoring.

The research was commissioned in partnership with Censuswide and Development Economics, supported by insights from Independent Energy Market Analyst, Gaurav Sharma. It captures insights from 400 senior energy executives across 12 countries in four key regions, including North America, Europe, Asia, and the GCC, supported by desk research and conversations with industry stakeholders and commentators across the global energy and chemicals sector.

About Schneider Electric

Schneider Electric is a global energy technology leader, driving efficiency and sustainability by electrifying, automating, and digitalizing industries, businesses, and homes. Its technologies enable buildings, data centers, factories, infrastructure, and grids to operate as open, interconnected ecosystems, enhancing performance, resilience, and sustainability. The portfolio includes intelligent devices, software-defined architectures, AI-powered systems, digital services, and expert advisory. With 160,000 employees and one million partners in over 100 countries, Schneider Electric is consistently ranked among the world’s most sustainable companies.


Source: Schneider Electric

The post Schneider Electric Study Highlights AI-Driven Push Toward Autonomy in Energy Sector appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 14:36

Negotiations deadlocked as No 10 wants more action on beach patrols but France has concerns over safety

The UK’s agreement with France to pay for beach patrols is on the verge of collapse amid wrangling over the number of small boat interceptions and the safety of asylum seekers in French waters.

Negotiations over plans to revamp the three-year, £480m deal remain deadlocked, despite the involvement of ministers including Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary. The deal expires at midnight on Tuesday.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 14:33

Oil prices on course for record monthly rise amid risk of further escalation and mixed messaging from US

Donald Trump has threatened to “obliterate” Iran’s power stations and fresh water plants if Tehran does not agree to peace terms “shortly”, even as he claimed diplomatic progress in ending the war that was instigated by the US and Israel.

Tehran has remained defiant during the month-long conflict, describing US peace proposals as “excessive, unrealistic and irrational” and firing waves of missiles at Israel.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 14:32

March 30, 2026 — Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have developed a new way to package photonic integrated circuits — tiny chips that convey information using light instead of electricity — so they can survive and operate in extreme environments, from scorchingly hot industrial settings to ultracold vacuum chambers and the depths of outer space.

Credit: Shutterstock

“Our study marks a major step toward bringing the speed and efficiency of photonics into environments where conventional semiconductor chips powered by electric current and photonics chips packaged using traditional methods have not been able to operate,” said NIST physicist Nikolai Klimov, who led the project.

The results were just published in Photonics Research.

In the world of chip manufacturing, “packaging” refers to the protective housing and connection system that surrounds a chip and links it to the outside world, including optical fibers, electrical contacts and other components. Good packaging allows the chips to be used in compact, reliable devices without damage or misalignment.

Photonic integrated chips have a particular advantage because they transmit data at high speeds while consuming far less power than conventional chips — but only if the packaging can keep delicate optical connections perfectly aligned.

Photonic integrated chips already play a central role in telecommunications, medical diagnostics and advanced sensing. But their use in demanding environments has remained limited. Traditional packaging fails to maintain reliable connections between photonic chips and optical fibers in extreme conditions — such as intense radiation, ultrahigh vacuum, blistering heat or frigid temperatures.

Many quantum technologies, including several leading quantum computing platforms, require either ultrahigh vacuum environments, temperatures just a few degrees above absolute zero, or both. Space missions, nuclear reactor cores and particle accelerators expose instruments to intense radiation. Industrial and energy applications demand sensors that can withstand heat, pressure and corrosive environments.

To make it possible for photonic integrated chips to work in these extreme environments, the researchers overcame a surprisingly stubborn challenge: reliably attaching an optical fiber to a photonic chip. Today’s standard adhesives — organic polymer glues — tend to crack, outgas or degrade when exposed to extreme cold, intense radiation, vacuum or heat. Once that bond fails, the chip can no longer function.

To solve this problem, NIST scientists adapted a technique originally used by NASA to assemble large, ultrastable optical systems for both space-based and ground-based astronomical systems. The method, called hydroxide catalysis bonding (HCB), creates an inorganic, glasslike chemical bond between the optical fiber and the photonic chip. Instead of relying on glue, the process uses a tiny amount of sodium hydroxide solution to fuse the surfaces at the molecular level, forming a rigid, stable connection.

The NIST team demonstrated for the first time that the HCB technique can achieve the precise optical fiber alignment and efficient light coupling that photonic circuits require, while still forming a robust package able to withstand harsh environments. To test that resilience, the researchers exposed the packaged photonic chip to a series of extreme conditions. Even after the team chilled the assembly to cryogenic temperatures, plunged the material through rapid swings in temperature, bombarded it with intense ionizing radiation, and placed it under high vacuum, the HCB-bonded fiber connection remained intact. This allowed the team to verify that the chip itself continued to function normally.

Although high-temperature testing could not be performed directly on the packaged photonic chip due to limitations of the commercial optical fibers available, additional studies performed by the team showed that HCB-based photonic packaging remains mechanically stable at temperatures far higher than what conventional adhesives can withstand. Together, these results point to a packaging method with exceptional resilience across a remarkably wide environmental range.

“This approach creates a bond that is as resilient as the optical fiber itself,” said Klimov. “It allows photonic integrated circuits to go places they simply couldn’t go before.”

Although the current bonding process requires several days to complete, the researchers emphasize that this is an engineering issue rather than a fundamental barrier. With focused development, engineers could dramatically shorten the time, making the technique suitable for large-scale manufacturing.


Source: NIST

The post NIST Researchers Develop Photonic Chip Packaging for Extreme Environments appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 14:11

PARIS, March 30, 2026 — Palantir Technologies Inc. today announced the renewal and expansion of its long‑standing partnership with Stellantis. The new five‑year agreement continues a collaboration that began in 2016, supporting Stellantis in the ongoing industrialization and secure use of data and artificial intelligence across the company.

Under the renewed partnership, Stellantis will broaden its use of Palantir Foundry and begin deploying the Palantir Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP) in select business functions and regions. Foundry provides a unified environment for managing and operationalizing data, while AIP offers tools to integrate AI capabilities into existing workflows in a controlled and governed manner. The combined use of these platforms supports Stellantis teams in consolidating previously fragmented datasets, improving transparency, and enabling faster decision‑making within complex industrial operations.

The integration of AIP builds on Stellantis’ established data ontology in Foundry, helping connect generative AI capabilities to the company’s internal data, business rules, and decision‑making processes. This approach strengthens governance, enhances traceability, and supports the controlled scaling of strategic use cases across the organization. It also contributes to Stellantis’ Data4All ambition by increasing the ability of teams to safely access and explore data.

François Bohuon, General Manager of Palantir France and EMEA Executive, and Grégoire Omont, Europe Operations Lead, stated: “We are proud to deepen our partnership with Stellantis and to support them as they define what the AI-powered industrial enterprise of tomorrow looks like. By combining Foundry and AIP, we are helping Stellantis embed secure, governed AI at the heart of its operations — turning data into a decisive advantage across every function and geography. ”

About Palantir

Foundational software of tomorrow. Delivered today. Additional information is available at https://www.palantir.com.


Source: Palantir

The post Palantir Extends Its Partnership with Stellantis for an Additional 5 Years appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 14:01

Without diplomacy or restraint, the economic shock will deepen and US soldiers may become embroiled in a quagmire

The fifth week of Donald Trump’s illegal war on Iran has confirmed the absence of any overarching strategy. The US continues to hit Iranian targets while building up forces in the region. Iran continues to launch missile and drone attacks on Israel and neighbouring Gulf states. Tehran’s proxies in the region have entered the fray. Its closure of the strait of Hormuz has seen oil prices shoot up and had knock-on effects already visible across fuel, fertiliser and supply chains. No amount of contradictory social media posts from Mr Trump can negate the shortages felt across the world, from Asian factories to European diesel markets. The pain is likely to get worse. There is no sign of imminent US victory or Iranian collapse.

This instead looks like a war of attrition. Each side can point to successes and their opponents can highlight failures. That is what sustains the conflict. The stakes extend far beyond the battlefield. The war is embedding itself in the global economy, shaping what is produced, moved and ultimately affordable. Even European ministers now admit they are losing sleep over what comes next – not just the war but its economic consequences.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 14:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak: In an effort to gather material for its LLM training, Meta used BitTorrent to download pirated books from Anna's Archive and other shadow libraries. According to several authors, Meta facilitated the infringement of others by "seeding" these torrents. This week, the court granted the authors permission to add these claims to their complaint, despite openly scolding their counsel for "lame excuses" and "Meta bashing." [...] The judge acknowledged that the contributory infringement claim could and should have been added back in November 2024, when the authors amended their complaint to include the distribution claim. After all, both claims arise from the same factual allegations about Meta's torrenting activity. "The lawyers for the named plaintiffs have no excuse for neglecting to add a contributory infringement claim based on these allegations back in November 2024," Judge Chhabria wrote. The lawyers of the book authors claimed that the delay was the result of newly produced evidence that had "crystallized" their understanding of Meta's uploading activity. However, that did not impress the judge. He called it a "lame excuse" and "a bunch of doubletalk," noting that if the missing discovery truly prevented the contributory claim from being added in November 2024, the same logic would have prevented the distribution claim from being added at that time as well. "Rather than blaming Meta for producing discovery late, the plaintiffs' lawyers should have been candid with the Court, explaining that they missed an issue in a case of first impression..," the order reads. Judge Chhabria went further, noting that the authors' law firm, Boies Schiller, showed "an ongoing pattern" of distracting from its own mistakes by attacking Meta. He pointed specifically to the dispute over when Meta disclosed its fair use defense to the distribution claim, which we covered here recently, characterizing it as a false distraction. "The lawyers for the plaintiffs seem so intent on bashing Meta that they are unable to exercise proper judgment about how to represent the interests of their clients and the proposed class members," the order reads. Despite the criticism, Chhabria granted the motion. [...] For now, the case moves forward with a fourth amended complaint, three new loan-out companies added as named plaintiffs, and a growing list of BitTorrent-related claims for Judge Chhabria to resolve.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:58

Missing a tax deadline triggers immediate IRS penalties — but how bad it gets depends entirely on what you do next.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:45

Leader understood to have spoken to 10 trade unions after party claimed working class voters are turning to them

Zack Polanski has kicked off a charm offensive designed to convince trade unions to stop funding Labour and throw their weight behind the Green party, as he delivered the first in a series of speeches to union conferences.

The Green leader has had “good conversations” with 10 trade unions, including some affiliated to Labour, according to party sources, and is due to address the University and College Union and the Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union, not affiliated with Labour, in the coming months.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:44

A $3,000 CD account can be worth exploring for many savers now. Here's how much interest it'll earn at today's rates.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:40

Designing scalable, portable quantum hardware is an important step toward practical quantum computing and sending optical clocks to space

March 30, 2026 — Scientists in the Riccio College of Engineering at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the University of California Santa Barbara have demonstrated key laser and ion trap components necessary to help drastically shrink the size of quantum computers, an achievement aligned with the shrinking of integrated microprocessors in the 1970s, 80s and 90s that allowed computers to move from room-sized behemoths to today’s ultrathin smartphones.

Robert Niffenegger (left) and Chris Caron work on the the UMass+ room temperature ion trap system. Photo credit: Derrick Zellmann.

The current state-of-the-art technology for quantum computing is too large and complex to scale and too sensitive and bulky to be portable. The largest and most sensitive components of these quantum systems are the optics, which include multiple lasers and vibration-isolated, temperature-controlled vacuum chambers that contain ultrastable optical cavities. These cavities stabilize the lasers to extremely high precision in order to control trapped ions for quantum computing and optical clocks.

In a new paper, the researchers demonstrate key stabilized laser pieces necessary for an integrated quantum computing system-on-a-chip with the potential to shrink portions of quantum computing hardware from the size of a room to the chip-scale the size of a deck of cards. This is a critical first step towards the scalability of quantum computing and an opportunity to make optical clocks (which are based on the same trapped-ion technology) portable.

“If you want scalability or portability with quantum technology, you need the laser systems to all be on chip too,” said Robert Niffenegger, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering. “We could have millions of qubits on one chip in a way that is not possible if you needed rooms full of lasers and optics. If you’re serious about getting to that scale, you have to look at how traditional computers have scaled through integration. That’s the vision we’re following.”

In quantum computers, these trapped ion systems serve as “qubits,” which perform the analogous function to traditional computing bits of storing and processing data, but do so based on the rules of quantum physics, not binary 0’s and 1s. Optical clocks keep time by counting oscillations of visible light and verifying that frequency with the atomic transitions of trapped ions, resulting in unprecedented precision for applications such as mapping Earth’s gravitational field to centimeter-level accuracy and enhancing deep space navigation and GPS systems.

Working with collaborators at the University of California Santa Barbara led by Professor Daniel Blumenthal, the team demonstrated, for the first time, that these large precision lasers can be replaced with small photonic chips. They show that this new photonic technology can be used to control trapped ions to perform qubit and clock operations.

They tested how their design performs key quantum operations, including preparing a qubit’s quantum state. Their results show the system already achieves the high-fidelity qubit state preparation and measurement required for quantum computing, while further improvements will enable applications in quantum sensing. Their full findings are published in Nature Communications.

“We haven’t matched state-of-the-art clock performance yet, but we really went pretty far in the very first go and have made even more progress since,” Niffenegger added.

Long-term, he says this design is a critical first step for creating functional large-scale quantum computers capable of solving problems too complex for today’s supercomputers, such as deciphering the encryption that secures much of the world’s sensitive data. Many experts estimate that such applications could require millions of qubits.

“To build something truly useful, something beyond what a traditional supercomputer can do, you’re going to need an integrated quantum system on a chip,” Niffenegger said. “You can’t have football fields full of lasers and optics. It’s just not going to work. Integration is the only viable path.”

In the near term, Niffenegger sees this new technology as an opportunity to push forward the portability of optical clocks. By shrinking the laser and cavity onto photonic chips, optical clocks could become far more compact and robust, enabling them to go to places they’ve never gone before, like outer space.

“This is really the only way to get a precision optical clock into space,” Niffenegger said. “It could allow new tests of fundamental physics.”

For instance, he imagines testing the fundamental constants of nature by having an optical clock do an elliptical orbit around the sun to see if there is any variation at different distances. “Right now, because our system is smaller and more robust to vibrations, it would already be the best optical clock that you could put it in space,” he adds.

A major technical challenge was maintaining laser stability without the bulky isolation systems used in conventional optical cavities. “We don’t have that luxury when we’re using this chip,” said Niffenegger. “And that’s by design. If we were going to say this is a portable, integrated solution, it has to be rugged. It’s still temperature-controlled, but it’s not in a vacuum.” Instead, they developed a method to actively compensate for drift by intertwining calibrations with experiments.

“It did feel like wrangling a bull,” he added. “The clock is just running away, and you’re trying to catch it with a very, very precise atomic clock, and then to not only catch it, but keep it locked as it’s moving away.”

The next goal is full integration, combining the ion trap chip, the laser chip, the optical cavity chip, and other photonics onto a single chip. “Now that we’ve shown precision quantum operations are possible with integrated photonics,” Niffenegger said,” the next step is bringing everything together into one unified quantum system-on-a-chip.”

This work was funded by a CAREER Award to Niffenegger from the U.S. National Science Foundation.


Source: UMass Amherst

The post UMass Amherst Research Demonstrates New Tech for Shrinking Quantum Computers appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:39

Ex-TV host pledged to centre party around equity, with higher wealth taxes, green energy and tuition-free education

Canada’s embattled New Democratic party (NDP) has elected the former broadcaster and self-proclaimed socialist Avi Lewis as its new leader, as it looks to rebuild following a devastating federal election last year that saw it lose official party status.

A record number of members voted in the three-day NDP leadership convention, giving Lewis a first-ballot win that underscored widespread support. Lewis pledged to convert the “tremendous momentum” of the convention into an “NDP comeback”.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:36

The massive seizure of cocaine marked the latest instance of the illicit drug being found hidden in a shipment of the fruit.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:35

Dern will play Miami Herald reporter Julie K Brown in first scripted take on the Epstein story, based on Brown’s book

Laura Dern is taking on the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, in a new limited series executive produced by Adam McKay based on journalist Julie K Brown’s work busting open the story.

Dern will play Brown, the Miami Herald investigative reporter on the late, disgraced financier’s tail when no one else was, for the first scripted take on the Epstein case. The screenplay will be based on Brown’s 2021 book Perversion of Injustice: The Jeffrey Epstein Story. Sharon Hoffman, a writer on the 2020 limited series Mrs America, will write the project and serve as co-showrunner with Eileen Myers (The Night Agent, Masters of Sex). McKay, the writer-director of Don’t Look Up and executive producer on the HBO juggernaut Succession, among other credits, will serve as executive producer alongside Dern and Brown.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:32

WASHINGTON, March 30, 2026 — The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Technology Commercialization (OTC) has partnered with Connected DMV, host of Quantum World Congress, on a new quantum algorithm competition as part of the 2026 Global Industry Challenge, an effort to accelerate innovation in critical technology areas.

The competition invites innovators to explore how emerging quantum and hybrid computing approaches could help address complex power grid planning challenges.

“Quantum computing has the potential to fundamentally improve how we plan, operate, and ensure the reliability of the nation’s power system, but practical applications will require significant investment,” said Anthony Pugliese, Chief Commercialization Officer and Director of the DOE Office of Technology Commercialization. “Grid operators are facing increasingly complex, high-stakes decisions—from resource adequacy and interconnection to transmission expansion. By advancing quantum and hybrid algorithms through this challenge, DOE is helping support real-world grid planning —while supporting the Genesis Mission to advance next-generation computing.”

“The Global Industry Challenge exists to move quantum computing from theory into practice,” said George Thomas, President & CEO of Connected DMV. “Energy infrastructure is one of the most complex environments in the world, and it represents a powerful proving ground for emerging computational approaches.”

As electricity demand grows and the U.S. power system integrates large loads such as data centers, planners must evaluate increasingly complex infrastructure decisions, including where to deploy energy storage systems and microgrids.

“With electricity demand accelerating due to AI infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, and new large-scale industrial loads, grid planning is becoming dramatically more complex —requiring new computational approaches,” said Rima Kasia Oueid, Senior Commercialization Executive at DOE’s Office of Technology Commercialization. “This challenge pushes the frontier by asking whether quantum and hybrid algorithms can help planners evaluate thousands of infrastructure decisions faster and more effectively, unlocking new strategies for resilience, economic efficiency, and energy security to support the next generation of American energy infrastructure.”

Through this collaboration, DOE will contribute technical expertise and evaluation support from across the Department’s National Laboratories. DOE experts will review submitted algorithms and assess their potential for practical energy applications.

The challenge invites startups, technology companies, researchers, students, and independent developers seeking to demonstrate how quantum approaches could enhance grid planning capabilities.

For more information about the challenge, visit: https://www.pqic.org/challenge.


Source: U.S. Dept. of Enegery

The post DOE Partners on Quantum Algorithm Competition to Strengthen Grid Resilience appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 13:32

Washington-based fund says rising energy and food costs will hit economies worldwide and could leave lasting scars

The International Monetary Fund has warned that “all roads lead to higher prices and slower growth worldwide” should the conflict in the Middle East continue to throttle the amount of oil, gas and fertiliser making its way out of the Gulf.

In a stark message that countries on all continents will be affected, the Washington-based organisation said a rise in energy and food costs would harm economic growth this year and could leave lasting scars on the global economy.

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2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-30 13:30

President Donald Trump talks endlessly of “peace.” He ran for office promising to keep the United States out of conflicts, claims to be a “peacemaker,” has campaigned for a Nobel Peace Prize, and founded a so-called Board of Peace. “Under Trump we will have no more wars,” he said on the campaign trail in 2024. Yet Trump has immersed the U.S. in constant conflict, outpacing even other presidential warmongers like Richard Nixon, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama.

The White House and Pentagon won’t tell the American people where the U.S. is at war, and Trump has never gone to Congress for war authorization. But an analysis by The Intercept reveals that Trump has embroiled the U.S. in more than 20 military interventions, armed conflicts, and wars during his five-plus years in the White House. Due to a lack of government transparency, obscure security cooperation, and carveouts baked into the U.S. Code — like the 127e authority enacted in the wake of the September 11 attacks, and the covert action statute that enables the CIA to conduct secret wars — the actual number could be markedly higher.

During his two terms in office, Trump has overseen armed interventions and military operations — including drone strikes, ground raids, proxy wars, 127e programs, and full-scale conflicts — in Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Cameroon, EcuadorEgypt, IranIraqKenya, Lebanon, Libya, Mali, Niger, NigeriaNorth Korea, Pakistan, the Philippines, SomaliaSyriaTunisia, VenezuelaYemen, and an unspecified country in the Indo-Pacific region, as well as attacks on civilians in boats in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean. More than 6,500 U.S. Special Operations forces’ “operators and enablers” are currently deployed in more than 80 countries around the world. And during its second term, the Trump administration has also bullied Panama and threatened Canada, ColombiaCuba, Greenland (perhaps also Iceland), and Mexico.

Under the U.S. Constitution, it’s Congress that has the authority to declare war, not the president, pointed out Katherine Yon Ebright, counsel in the Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program.

“Congress has not authorized conflicts in this wide array of contexts, and indeed many lawmakers — to say nothing of members of the public — would be surprised to learn that hostilities have taken place in many of these countries,” Ebright said. “Congressional authorization isn’t just a box-checking exercise: It’s a means of ensuring that the solemn decision to go to war is made democratically and accountably, with a clear purpose and goal that the American people can support.”

Related

Pentagon Reveals Attacks in Latin America Are Just the Beginning

Despite the fact that the U.S. has not declared war since 1941, its military has fought near-constant wars from Korea to Vietnam from the 1950s through the 1970s to Afghanistan and Iraq in the 21st century, as the executive branch has come to dominate the government and Congress has abdicated its constitutional duty to declare war.

For years, the Pentagon has even attempted to define war out of existence, claiming that it does not treat 127e and similar authorities as authorizations for the use of military force. In practice, however, Special Operations forces have used these authorities to create and control proxy forces and sometimes engage in combat alongside them. Recent presidents have also consistently claimed broad rights to act in self-defense, not only of U.S. forces but also for partner forces.

“Many lawmakers — to say nothing of members of the public — would be surprised that hostilities have taken place in many of these countries.”

The Trump administration has even claimed the full-scale conflict in Iran is something other than what it is. Earlier this month, Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Elbridge Colby refused to call it a war. “I think we’re in a military action at this point,” he told lawmakers.

Trump routinely refers to the conflict with Iran as a war, but he has also cast it as an “excursion.” Trump has also erroneously claimed that if he doesn’t call the conflict with Iran a “war,” it circumvents Congress’s constitutional authority.

“We have a thing called a war, or as they would rather say, a military operation. It’s for legal reasons,” he said on Friday. “I don’t need any approvals. As a war you’re supposed to get approval from Congress. Something like that.”

EArlier This month, Special Operations Command chief Adm. Frank M. Bradley told the House Armed Services Committee’s Subcommittee on Intelligence and Special Operations that secret-war capabilities were key for the United States.

“This environment places a premium on forces capable of operating persistently inside contested spaces, below the threshold of armed conflict,” he said. “Small footprints are necessary to enable denial strategies, strengthen allied resilience, and contribute to deterrence without triggering escalation, and to counter illicit and malign activity without large-scale military presence.”

Related

Pentagon Official on Venezuela War: “Following the Old, Failed Scripts”

Bradley claimed America’s enemies “blur the lines between competition and conflict,” but this is precisely what America has done for decades, including numerous secret wars during both Trump terms. The United States has waged unconstitutional and clandestine conflicts through a variety of mechanisms. The covert action statute, for example, provides the authority for secret, unattributed, and primarily CIA-led operations that can involve the use of force. It has been used during the forever wars, including under Trump, to conduct drone strikes outside areas of active hostilities. It was apparently employed in the first U.S. strike on Venezuela in late 2025 — a prelude to a war, days later, that led to the kidnapping of that country’s president, Nicolás Maduro, by U.S. Special Operations forces.

The 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force, which was enacted in the wake of the 9/11 attacks and has been stretched by successive administrations to cover a broad assortment of terrorist groups — most of which did not exist on September 11 — has been used to justify counterterrorism operations, including ground combat, airstrikes, and support of partner militaries, in at least 22 countries, according to a 2021 report by Brown University’s Costs of War Project.

Under Trump, even this signature post-9/11 workaround for war has been eschewed for something more clandestine. Top Pentagon leadership wanted to keep so-called “advise, assist and accompany” or “AAA” missions — which can be indistinguishable from combat — under wraps during Trump’s first term. This led then-Defense Secretary James Mattis to order U.S. operations in Africa to be kept “off the front page,” a former senior U.S. official told the International Crisis Group.

But the bid to keep Trump’s other African wars secret imploded during a May 2017 AAA mission when Navy SEAL Kyle Milliken was killed and two other Americans were wounded in a raid on an al-Shabab camp in Somalia. The Pentagon initially claimed that Somali forces were out ahead of Milliken — U.S. troops are supposed to remain at the last position of cover and concealment where they remain out of sight and protected — but that fiction fell apart, and the truth emerged that he was, in fact, alongside them.

This was followed by an October 2017 debacle in Tongo Tongo, Niger, where ISIS fighters ambushed American troops, killing four U.S. soldiers and wounding two others. The U.S. initially claimed troops were providing “advice and assistance” to local counterparts. In truth, until bad weather prevented it, the ambushed team was slated to support another group of American and Nigerien commandos attempting to kill or capture an ISIS leader as part of Obsidian Nomad II, another 127e program.

Under 127e, U.S. commandoes — including Army Green Berets, Navy SEALs, and Marine Raiders — arm, train, and provide intelligence to foreign forces. Unlike traditional foreign assistance programs, which are primarily intended to build local capacity, 127e partners are then dispatched on U.S.-directed missions, targeting U.S. enemies to achieve U.S. aims.

During Trump’s first term, U.S. Special Operations forces conducted at least 23 separate 127e programs across the world. Previous reporting by The Intercept has documented many 127e efforts in Africa and the Middle East, including a partnership with a notoriously abusive unit of the Cameroonian military, also during Trump’s first term, that continued long after its members were connected to mass atrocities. In addition to Cameroon, Niger, and Somalia, the U.S. has conducted 127e programs in Afghanistan, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Mali, Syria, Tunisia, Yemen, and an undisclosed country in the Indo-Pacific region.

“During the global war on terror, the Department of Defense built out its capacity, and secured legal authorities, to operate ‘by, with, and through’ foreign militaries and paramilitaries,” Ebright said, noting that these authorities had been designed for countering al-Qaeda but had led to led to combat against groups that had not been debated and approved by Congress. “These smaller-scale, unauthorized hostilities through or alongside foreign partners may seem quaint compared to the Iran War and other recent public and persistent hostilities, but for years they deepened the perception that the president may use force whenever and wherever he pleases, even without specific congressional authorization.”

For almost one year, the White House has failed to respond to repeated requests from The Intercept for information about past and current 127e programs.

“While Trump claims to be the president of peace, he is actually the conflict-in-chief, waging many pointless and deadly wars, ensuring generational animosity towards a rogue U.S.,” said Sarah Harrison, an associate general counsel at the Pentagon’s Office of General Counsel, International Affairs during Trump’s first term. “His actions are not just unconstitutional and in violation of international law, they make Americans less safe and their wallets less full.”

During his second term, Trump has made overt war across the African continent, conducting airstrikes from Nigeria to Somalia. In the Middle East, Trump has left a trail of civilians dead, from a migrant detention facility in Yemen to an elementary school in Iran.

Related

Trump’s War on Iran Could Cost Trillions

America’s punishing war on Iran has ground on for over a month without a clear definition of victory, a plan for the aftermath, or coherent strategy behind bellicose rhetoric and shifting claims, most recently that the U.S. is fighting a regime change war and will possibly seize Iran’s oil.

“We’ve had regime change if you look already because the one regime was decimated, destroyed, they’re all dead,” Trump said on Sunday, referring to top ranking officials killed in the war including the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. “The next regime is mostly dead.”

“We’ve had regime change if you look already because the one regime was decimated, destroyed, they’re all dead.”

Additional U.S. forces are now being sped to the Middle East to augment more than 40,000 troops already stationed in the region. This included dozens of fighter jets, bombers, and other aircraft, as well as two carrier strike groups. (The USS Gerald R. Ford had to since abandon the fight and travel to port, following a fire on the ship.)

More than 2,000 additional Marines arrived in the region over the weekend, and 2,000 more are on their way by ship. A similar number of paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division are expected to arrive soon. The influx of troops comes as Trump has threatened to seize Iran’s oilfields.

“To be honest with you, my favorite thing is to take the oil in Iran but some stupid people back in the U.S. say: ‘why are you doing that?’ But they’re stupid people,” he told the Financial Times on Sunday. In a Monday Truth Social post, Trump threatened to commit war crimes by “blowing up and completely obliterating all of [Iran’s] Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells and Kharg Island (and possibly all desalinization plants!)”

Related

The Regime Survives, Trump Has to Deal, and Iranians Are the Biggest Losers

The Pentagon has already requested $200 billion in supplemental funds to pay for the Iran war, and the ultimate cost is expected to run into the trillions of dollars.

The U.S. is also ramping up conflicts in the Western hemisphere. Since attacking Venezuela and abducting its president in January, the U.S. has reportedly undertaken a regime-change operation in Cuba, attempting to push out President Miguel Díaz-Canel. Trump has also repeatedly spoken of “taking” Cuba. He has also threatened to annex Greenland (and possibly Iceland), turn Canada into a U.S. state, and carry out military strikes in Mexico.

The chief of U.S. Special Operations Command recently referenced the “perceived increase of U.S. support to counter-cartel operations in Mexico” and said his elite troops “remain postured to provide… support to Mexican military and security forces to dismantle narco-terrorist organizations.”  The U.S. claims to be currently at war with at least 24 cartels and criminal gangs it will not name.

Under Operation Southern Spear, the U.S. has conducted an illegal campaign of strikes on boats in the Caribbean Sea and Eastern Pacific Ocean, destroying 49 vessels and killing more than 160 civilians. The latest strike, on March 25 in the Caribbean, killed four people.

“Trump wants to call DoD’s summary executions on the high seas a war because he thinks that will allow him to kill civilians. And he wants to call the war in Iran a military operation so he doesn’t have to go to Congress for approval,” explained Harrison, who also previously served in the White House Office of Legislative Affairs. “It doesn’t matter what imaginary legal constructs Trump comes up with, it won’t protect him or his officials from accountability for these undeniably illegal uses of force.”

The boat strikes recently moved to land as so-called “bilateral kinetic actions against cartel targets along the Colombia-Ecuador border” on unnamed “designated terrorist organizations.” “The joint effort, named ‘Operation Total Extermination,’ is the start of a military offensive by Ecuador against transnational criminal organizations with the support of the U.S.,” Joseph Humire, the acting assistant secretary of war for homeland defense and Americas security affairs, announced earlier this month. That U.S.–Ecuadorian campaign has already strayed into Colombia after a farm was bombed or hit by “ricochet effect” on March 3, leaving an unexploded 500-pound bomb lying in Colombia’s border region.

“It doesn’t matter what imaginary legal constructs Trump comes up with, it won’t protect him or his officials from accountability.”

Harrison drew attention to the human costs of the raft of conflicts being waged by the Trump administration, remarking on “all the people who are needlessly dying because of one man’s ego and how it makes the U.S. much less safe.”

Successive White Houses and the Pentagon have also kept secret the full list of groups with which the U.S. is in conflict. In 2015, The Intercept asked the Pentagon for “a complete and exhaustive list of the groups and individuals, including affiliates and/or associated forces, against which the U.S. military is authorized to take direct action” — a Pentagon euphemism for attacks. Eleven years later, we’re still waiting for an answer. Asked more recently for a simple count — just the number — of wars, conflicts, interventions, and kinetic operations, the Office of the Secretary of Defense offered no answers. “Your queries have been received and sent to the appropriate department,” a spokesperson told The Intercept weeks ago before ghosting this reporter.

“The proliferation of unauthorized, presidentially initiated conflicts raises profound challenges for our rule of law, democracy, and accountability around matters of war and peace,” said Ebright. “This is true, too, of secret wars that government officials may refer to as ‘light-footprint warfare’ or ‘low-intensity conflict,’ not the least because we’ve repeatedly seen intermittent strikes or raids give way to protracted military engagements and larger-scale operations.”

Bradley — perhaps best known for ordering the double-tap strike that killed two shipwrecked men last fall — recently offered a murky catalogue of “state adversaries, terrorists, and transnational criminal networks” aligned against the United States, including China, Russia, “Iran, its proxy forces, and terrorist organizations,” and other unnamed “state adversaries”; transnational criminal organizations that “continue to attempt to exploit the southern approaches to the United States”; ISIS and Al Qaeda affiliates; as well as “terrorists” and “extremist groups” in Africa. The State Department currently counts 94 foreign terrorist organizations around the world, including 13 that were designated back in 1997. Thirty-seven groups, about 40 percent of the list, were added under Trump — 27 during his second term. The most recent addition, the Sudanese Muslim Brotherhood, was designated earlier this month. The administration also maintains a secret list of domestic terrorist organizations which it will not disclose.

For weeks, The Intercept has asked if the White House even knows how many wars, conflicts, kinetic operations, and military interventions the U.S. is currently involved in. We have never received a response.

The post Trump’s Secret Wars on the World Keep Expanding appeared first on The Intercept.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:27

Resumption of diplomatic operations come three months after former president Maduro was abducted

The US government is resuming operations at its embassy in Venezuela, the state department announced on Monday, nearly three months since former president Nicolás Maduro was abducted from the country and locked up in the US.

The resumption of US diplomatic operations in Venezuela marks a significant step in the US-Venezuela relationship, as the Trump administration begins to work closely with the government of Delcy Rodríguez, the acting president who replaced Maduro after his forcible ousting by US troops. Rodríguez was Maduro’s vice-president.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:17
Ethan Grandin

ETHAN GRANDIN
Editor-in-Chief

More than a thousand people took to the streets of downtown Newark on Saturday afternoon, joining a third nationwide “No Kings” protest against the Trump administration.

Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW
Ethan Grandin/THE REVIEW

Photo Gallery: “No Kings” protest in downtown Newark was first posted on March 30, 2026 at 12:17 pm.
©2022 "The Review". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at eic@udreview.com

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 13:16

Scheme for accusers of store’s former owner Mohamed Al Fayed to close before end of retailer’s internal investigation

Harrods has been accused of being “neither fair nor just” over its decision to close a compensation scheme for survivors of alleged sexual abuse by the luxury department store’s former owner Mohamed Al Fayed.

Kingsley Hayes, partner at KP Law, which is representing nearly 280 survivors, questioned why the scheme was being closed on Tuesday 31 March, before Harrods had completed an internal investigation into what happened and who knew about it.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:15

Judge seems skeptical of Pentagon’s restrictive protocol but did not rule on forcing compliance with an earlier order

Federal judge Paul Friedman seemed skeptical of the new press policy implemented by the Pentagon last week, calling aspects of it “weird” and Kafkaesque.

Friedman struck down key aspects of the previously implemented Pentagon media policy on 20 March, but at the latest hearing on Monday stopped short of ruling on a motion filed by the New York Times to force compliance of his decision.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:11

Radio 2 breakfast show presenter departs over claims said to relate to a ‘historic relationship’ in latest crisis for BBC

The BBC has been plunged into a new crisis after sacking the Radio 2 presenter Scott Mills over allegations about his personal conduct.

Mills, who hosted Britain’s most popular radio breakfast show, was blindsided by the decision to take him off the air last Tuesday. The corporation has opted to terminate his contact after claims made against him.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 13:10

The Green party leader said Ofsted is a ‘failed institution’ and that teaching should move ‘toward a genuinely collaborative model’

Starmer complained about other parties whipping up division, and he specifically criticised Nick Timothy, the shadow justice secretary, for “complaining about Muslims praying in public”.

Labour, by contrast, values bringing people together, he said.

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2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 13:00

Microsoft Copilot is reportedly injecting promotional "tips" into GitHub pull requests, with Neowin claiming more than 1.5 million PRs have been affected by messages advertising integrations like Raycast, Slack, Teams, and various IDEs. From the report: According to Melbourne-based software developer Zach Manson, a team member used the AI to fix a simple typo in a pull request. Copilot did the job, but it also took the liberty of editing the PR's description to include this message: "Quickly spin up Copilot coding agent tasks from anywhere on your macOS or Windows machine with Raycast." A quick search of that phrase on GitHub shows that the same promotional text appears in over 11,000 pull requests across thousands of repositories. Even merge requests on GitLab aren't safe from the injection. So what's happening? Well, Raycast has a Copilot extension that can do things like create pull requests from a natural language command. The ad directly names Raycast, so you might think that Raycast is injecting the promo into the PRs to market its own app. But it is more likely that Microsoft is the one doing the injecting. If you look at the raw markdown of the affected pull requests, there is a hidden HTML comment, "START COPILOT CODING AGENT TIPS" placed right just before the ad tip. This suggests Microsoft is using the comment to insert a "tip" that points back to its own developer ecosystem or partner integrations. UPDATE: Following backlash from developers, Microsoft has removed Copilot's ability to insert "tips" into pull requests. Tim Rogers, principal product manager for Copilot at GitHub, said the move was intended "to help developers learn new ways to use the agent in their workflow." "On reflection," Rogers said he has since realized that letting Copilot make changes to PRs written by a human without their knowledge "was the wrong judgement call."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:58

Welsh affairs committee says Bridgend jail is ‘not the right place’ to add inmates after deaths, violence and staff shortages

Plans to expand one of the most troubled prisons in England and Wales should be paused until serious failures surrounding staff and inmate safety are addressed, MPs have said.

Seventeen men died at HMP Parc in Bridgend in 2024 – the highest number recorded at any prison in England and Wales that year – amid drug use, self-harm, violence and understaffing issues. Another three men died there in the first nine months of 2025.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:53

Excited after that "You're welcome" scene at the end of the season premiere? Let's keep it going.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:48

Presidential decisions can mean life or death for millions around the world, that’s why constitutional safeguards exist. But do they work in practice?

Donald Trump’s cognitive skills are amazing. So amazing! So great! So much better than any other dumb presidential contender you could mention, at least according to Trump himself, who bragged once again last week of how he had repeatedly aced what he calls “a very hard test for a lot of people”. (It’s thought he means a screening tool for mild cognitive impairment in elderly people.)

Sure, the 79-year-old leader of the free world recently interrupted a cabinet meeting in the middle of a war to ramble on at length about a conversation he supposedly had with the head of the Sharpie pen company over supplying bespoke presidential felt-tips, of which the firm said it could find no record. And made a baffling joke about Pearl Harbor during a press conference in front of an alarmed-looking Japanese prime minister. And called the strait of Hormuz the “strait of Trump”, before adding that that was absolutely deliberate because “there are no accidents with me”. But anyway, to be clear, his mental state is great. The greatest!

Gaby Hinsliff 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.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:40
BMS help on One Wheel Pint X

🙏Help pls, I tested the battery and got 43V directly from the battery. Then when I try testing the battery from the other end of the one wheel I get 0 volts. There was a little corrosion on the BMS that I cleaned off and On the bottom side of the BMS there were 2 little holes that looked darker then the rest (Image 2). Could that be my issue? I’m not sure where to go from here… I thought I was dealing with a dead battery but it’s something else. Please help🙏could also be the BMS wires because of the design flaw but they look to all still be intact or in usable condition(last pic)

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:38

Reports, based on X post from unofficial account, follow JD Vance’s accusations and threats of finding ‘legal remedies’

Several news outlets have falsely reported that Somaliland’s government called for the extradition of Ilhan Omar, basing their stories on a post from an X account that does not represent the state despite its claims to the contrary.

Fox News, the New York Post, Sinclair Broadcast Group’s the National News Desk and the Independent ran stories on the US representative. The reports centred on a post by @RepOfSomaliland in reaction to claims by JD Vance that Omar had committed immigration fraud, which echoed prior allegations against the Somali-born Minnesota Democrat that she has vehemently denied.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:23

COLUMBUS, Ohio, March 30, 2026 — The Global Open OnDemand (GOOD) Conference returned for its second year, March 9–12, 2026, welcoming 88 attendees from nine countries to Salt Lake City, Utah. The event brought together developers, system administrators, researchers, and institutional leaders committed to making high performance computing (HPC) easier to use.

Attendees at GOOD26 represent a wide range of disciplines and institutions from around the world. Credit: Lexi Biasi.

Hosted by The University of Utah, the conference featured technical talks, collaborative discussions, and hands-on sessions focused on expanding the capabilities and adoption of Open OnDemand across research computing environments.

Attendees represented organizations across academia, entrepreneurial ventures, government agencies, industry, and nonprofit institutions, with participants traveling from Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Italy, Japan, Spain, Sweden, and the United States. Nearly half of this year’s participants attended the inaugural GOOD Conference in 2025, reflecting continued strong engagement throughout the global community.

“The GOOD Conference continues to demonstrate the dedication and range of the Open OnDemand community,” said Alan Chalker, Open OnDemand project lead and director of strategic programs at the Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC). “Bringing together contributors and users from around the world allows us to exchange ideas, collaborate on new features, and explore how Open OnDemand can continue expanding access to advanced computing resources.”

Developed by OSC and funded through multiple National Science Foundation grants, Open OnDemand is an open-source web portal that simplifies access to advanced computing resources through a browser-based interface. The platform is deployed at more than 2,100 organizations worldwide and enables researchers, educators, and students to run complex computational workflows without specialized local software or command-line expertise.

Julie Ma, co-principal investigator of the Open OnDemand project and program director at the Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center (MGHPCC), said the conference reflects the collaborative spirit that drives the platform’s continued development.

“The GOOD Conference brings together users and contributors from around the world to share ideas, learn from one another, and help shape the future of Open OnDemand,” Ma said. “That sense of community is what continues to move the project forward.”

Credit: Lexi Biasi

Open OnDemand’s development model is driven by its global community, with contributors playing an active role in shaping the platform’s evolution. At GOOD26, the project introduced the Appverse—a community-driven catalog of application configurations featuring more than 75 apps across dozens of software packages contributed by institutions worldwide—alongside a Contributor Wall that recognized contributions across GitHub, Discourse, application development, and community committees.

These efforts are supported through the Open OnDemand Community Hub, which has grown to more than 100 members since its inception at GOOD25 and includes multiple affinity groups that foster collaboration and shared development. The community has generated new contributors to core repositories and increased participation on Discourse, which has helped expand the global impact of the Open OnDemand ecosystem.

Throughout the multi-day GOOD26 event, attendees explored how Open OnDemand supports research and education across disciplines including chemistry, climatology, education, energy, finance, information technology, manufacturing, medicine, and the social sciences.

The conference began with a Contributor Jam, where participants worked directly with Open OnDemand developers to learn more about the platform and contribute code, documentation, and ideas to the project. The main conference program featured technical presentations, community discussions, and Birds-of-a-Feather sessions highlighting practical implementations, emerging technologies, and community-led innovation.

The conference also introduced the inaugural GOOD Example Award, recognizing community members who have made exceptional contributions to the Open OnDemand ecosystem. This year’s recipients were:

  • Sean Anderson, Wake Forest University
  • Brandon Biggs, Idaho National Laboratory
  • Robin Karlsson, CSC – IT Center for Science

Each recipient was honored with a signature red jacket recognizing their leadership and impact within the Open OnDemand community.

To highlight the personal impact of the platform, attendees were invited to share their experiences using Open OnDemand by completing prompts such as “I love Open OnDemand because…” and “My Open OnDemand story started when….” Participants described how the platform supports their research, teaching, and system administration work, with many noting how it simplifies access to HPC for faculty and students while making it easier for system administrators to support a wide range of users across their campuses.

The 2026 GOOD Conference was made possible through the support of conference partners and sponsors.

The University of Utah served as the conference host. Additional sponsors included Cendio ThinLinc (Platinum); HPC SYSTEMS Inc., Cambridge Computer, Do IT Now, and MathWorks (Gold); and Globus.org and SGX3 (Silver).

NumFOCUS, a nonprofit organization that promotes open practices in research, data, and scientific computing, organized the conference in collaboration with the Open OnDemand project team. Many of the presentations were recorded and are now available to view online. A full list of the presentations, tutorials, panel discussions, and their abstracts may be viewed on the GOOD Conference website.

Members of the Open OnDemand community can get involved year-round by contributing code or documentation, attending virtual webinars and developer office hours, engaging on Discourse, and following along on LinkedIn.

Organizations interested in Open OnDemand can participate in the Open OnDemand Support Program, which provides support, resources, and guidance to users while also helping sustain the project and contribute to its future direction.

About OSC

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


Source: Lexi Biasi, OSC

The post Open OnDemand GOOD26 Draws Global Community to Advance HPC Access appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:16

Assistants and bots are lying, cheating and scheming more than ever.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:15

Critics say films lauding country’s attitude to women and green credentials could damage corporation’s reputation

The BBC has been accused of making “glossy propaganda films” for Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund and taking money from a “repressive regime”.

BBC Storyworks, the corporation’s commercial arm, has entered into a partnership with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF). The broadcaster has made a series of films and written articles lauding the country’s supposedly progressive attitude to women and eco-friendly credentials. These are hosted on a mini-site that carried BBC branding.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:12

Collien Fernandes accuses ex-husband Christian Ulmen of sharing sexually explicit deepfake images of her online

A high-profile German TV star’s allegations that her ex-husband spread AI-generated pornographic images of her have triggered a national debate and put pressure on the government to tighten laws around digital violence against women.

In an interview with the news magazine Der Spiegel last week, Collien Fernandes accused her former husband Christian Ulmen, a prominent TV presenter and producer, of impersonating her online for years and sharing sexually explicit deepfake images.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:08
FlightFins & Good Day Grip Collaboration

Been chomping at the bit to finally share this one 🤘

Like many of you, we’re super-fans of FlightFins and so feel honored to announce our first official collaboration with them! Now offering GDG X FlightFins Nub-Mapped Onewheel™ Grip that combines their iconic FF Falcon with our approach to TPU grip. Now available on gooddaygrip.com & flightfins.com.

FlightFins is always pushing what’s possible for after market parts and we aim to continue that innovation with our nub mapping for effortless activation and durability. A HUGE shoutout to Orie for making this such a fun and easy collaboration.

Check it out - We’d love to hear what you think 👀

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 12:07

Air Canada will seek a new CEO with "the ability to communicate in French" after Rousseau's English-only condolence message about the deadly New York crash.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 12:06

Michael Rousseau faced mockery for speaking English and not French while addressing fatal LaGuardia airport crash

The head of Canada’s largest airline is stepping down after his video tribute to pilots killed in a fatal collision became a public relations nightmare for Air Canada, prompting a wave of mockery and indignation at him from both the public and politicians for not speaking French.

Air Canada’s CEO, Michael Rousseau, will retire by the end of the third quarter of 2026, the company said on Monday. He will continue to lead the company and serve on the board of directors until that time, the carrier said.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 19:27

From headphones to Lego sets to cookware, our shopping experts are bringing the can't-miss bargains straight to you.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 19:43

The forces give Trump military options in Iran, including operations that could target opening the Strait of Hormuz, take oil from Kharg Island or seize Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium, sources said.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 12:00

According to a recent report, nearly one in four species catalogued by the CMS are threatened with extinction on a worldwide scale.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 12:00

For the "foreseeable future," Sony says it has stopped accepting new orders for most of its CFexpress and SD memory card lines due to the an ongoing memory supply shortage. "Due to the global shortage of semiconductors (memory) and other factors, it is anticipated that supply will not be able to meet demand for CFexpress memory cards and SD memory cards for the foreseeable future," the company said in a notice. "Therefore, we have decided to temporarily suspend the acceptance of orders from our authorized dealers and from customers at the Sony Store from March 27, 2026 onwards. PetaPixel reports: The suspension includes all of Sony's memory card lines, including CFexpress Type A, CFexpress Type B, and SD cards. The 240GB, 480GB, 960GB, and 1920GB capacity Type A cards have been suspended, as have the 480GB and 240GB Type B cards. The full gamut of Sony's high-end SD cards has also been suspended, including the 256GB, 128GB, and 64GB TOUGH-branded cards and the lower-end 512GB, 256GB, 128GB, and 256GB plainly-branded Sony cards, which cap out at V60 speeds. Even Sony's lower-end, V30 128GB and 64GB SD cards have been suspended, showcasing that the SSD shortage affects all types of solid state, not just the high-end ones. It appears that only the 960GB CFexpress Type B card and the lowest-end SF-UZ series SD cards remain in production. However, those UHS-I SD cards are discontinued in the United States outside of a scant few retailers and resellers. "We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may cause our customers," Sony concludes.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 11:42

Tori Mattingly told TMZ Dayton Webber would ‘lash out’ at her during four-year relationship that ended in 2025

A woman who claims she was romantically involved with a quadruple-amputee cornhole champion and the man he is accused of shooting dead in a murder case grabbing national attention has spoken of dating both of them – and said the accused killer had “a dark side”.

Tori Mattingly told TMZ in an interview published over the weekend that Dayton Webber would “lash out” at her during their four-year relationship. That relationship ended in February 2025 before she dated Bradrick Wells, the alleged victim of a deadly shooting in Webber’s car in suburban Washington DC on 22 March.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 11:40

Was wondering if a One wheel, let's say the Fungineers X7 sport, could be used to run around town and keep up with the rest of the family riding Ebikes and Escooters? Like up and down side walks, hilly streets and what about off road bike trails? How much sand can 0How long of a learning curve is there before you could hop on and cruise a few miles down the street? Basically wondering if I'm also going to need to have a more robust PEV to keep up with the Fam on eScoots and eBikes or if a onewheel can be my one and done PEV? What is a normal cruising speed on anX7 sport, I question both my and a Oneweels abilities to be able to keep up with the Fam.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 11:34
  • Football federation president on the run with wife and son

  • Conviction in absentia of wide-ranging corruption charges

Authorities in Congo-Brazzaville have applied to Interpol for an international arrest warrant against Jean-Guy Blaise Mayolas, the president of the country’s football federation, Fecofoot, after he was convicted of embezzling $1.1m in Fifa funds.

Mayolas is on the run with his wife and son after they were all sentenced to life imprisonment this month for embezzling funds provided by world football’s governing body as part of its Covid-19 relief plan in February 2021. As the Guardian revealed last year, that included almost $500,000 earmarked for the Congo women’s team.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 11:24

Interest earnings on a money market account of this size can be significant. Here's what savers need to know now.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 11:18

Filing for bankruptcy on disability? Here's what could change for your credit card debt during the process.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 11:05

New Mexico governor calls order ‘not serious’ as south-eastern counties note divisions with Democratic Santa Fe

The speaker of Texas’s house of representatives says he is entertaining the idea of expanding the state by annexing some New Mexico counties.

Dustin Burrows, who has been the chamber’s speaker since 2025, ordered a state legislative committee on 26 March to look into the legal and economic options to add “one or more contiguous counties” of New Mexico to the state of Texas.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 11:00

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the BBC: Sweeping job cuts at Big Tech companies have become an annual tradition. How executives explain those decisions, however, has changed. Out are buzzwords like efficiency, over-hiring, and too many management layers. Today, all explanations stem from artificial intelligence (AI). In recent weeks, giants including Google, Amazon, Meta, as well as smaller firms such as Pinterest and Atlassian, have all announced or warned of plans to shrink their workforce, pointing to developments in AI that they say are allowing their firms to do more with fewer people. [...] But explaining cuts by pointing to advances in AI sounds better than citing cost pressures or a desire to please shareholders, says tech investor Terrence Rohan, who has had a seat on many company boards. "Pointing to AI makes a better blog post," Rohan says. "Or it at least doesn't make you seem as much the bad guy who just wants to cut people for cost-effectiveness." That does not mean there is no substance behind the words, Rohan added. Some of the companies he's backing are using code that is 25% to 75% AI-generated. That is a sign of the real threat that AI tools for writing code represent to jobs such as software developer, computer engineer and programmer, posts once considered a near-guarantee of highly paid, stable careers. "Some of it is that the narrative is changing, some of it is that we really are starting to see step changes in productivity," Anne Hoecker, a partner at Bain who leads the consultancy's technology practice, says of the recent job cuts. "Leaders more recently are seeing these tools are good enough that you really can do the same amount of work with fundamentally less people." There is another way that AI is driving job cuts -- and it has nothing to do with the technical abilities of coding tools and chatbots. Amazon, Meta, Google and Microsoft are collectively planning to pour $650 billion into AI in the coming year. As executives hunt for ways to try to ease investor shock at those costs, many are landing on payroll, typically tech firms' single biggest expense. [...] Although the expense of, for example, 30,000 corporate Amazon employees is dwarfed by that company's AI spending plans, firms of this size will now take any opportunity to cut costs, Rohan says. "They're playing a game of inches," Rohan says of cuts at Big Tech firms. "If you can even slightly tune the machine, that is helpful." Hoecker says cutting jobs also signals to stock market investors worried about the "real and huge" cost of AI development that executives are not blithely writing blank cheques. "It shows some discipline," says Hoecker. "Maybe laying off people isn't going to make much of a dent in that bill, but by creating a little bit of cashflow, it helps."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 11:00

The expansion of this summer’s 48-team tournament mean Tuesday’s games will be the best we see until the round of 16

There is always a slightly odd rhythm to the World Cup. The final round of qualifying games is almost invariably more exciting than the early games at the tournament itself, and now with 32 teams making it through the group stage and into the knockout rounds, that is likely to be even more true for the 2026 edition. Those final qualifiers in November were thrilling and meaningful – Troy Parrott’s hat-trick! Scotland scoring two absurdly good goals in the same game! DR Congo beating Nigeria on penalties as bottles rained down from the stands! Honduras failing to score against Costa Rica! – and Tuesday will be too as 12 teams battle for the six remaining slots.

But for those not involved in World Cup playoffs, there is an unsatisfying phoniness to the friendlies they must play instead, with experimental line-ups and weary players going through glorified training exercises. While it’s never good to be letting in five goals, neither the USA nor Ghana should be too concerned about the defeats to Belgium or Austria.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 10:58

Down by 19 at one point during the game, Hurley said his team "leaned on our resiliency and fortitude" to make a major comeback against Duke in the Elite Eight.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 10:31

Lucas Gorelick, an EMT and college student, said he wanted to make a difference in the life of another first responder when he looked into organ donation.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 10:13

US president says he has ‘no problem’ with countries sending oil to Cuba, in potential lifeline to island nation

Donald Trump appears to have relaxed his blockade on fuel-starved Cuba after a Russian tanker reached the Caribbean island carrying 100,000 tonnes of crude.

Russia’s transport ministry said the Anatoly Kolodkin tanker arrived at the port of Matanzas on Cuba’s northern coast on Monday to deliver the crisis-hit country’s first such cargo in more than three months.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 10:11

Brent crude on track for record monthly increase; aluminium prices hit four-year highs after Iranian attacks on Middle East smelters

Aluminium prices have surged to four-year highs after Iranian airstrikes on two major Middle East producers over the weekend raised fears of a supply shock.

Benchmark aluminium on the London Metal Exchange rose nearly 5% to $3,453 a tonne, and touched $3,492 earlier today. This compares with an all-time high of $4,073.50 a tonne in March 2022, after the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, a top producer of the metal.

Iran’s strikes on Middle Eastern aluminium plants are threatening to send a fragile market into crisis, raising the prospect of record prices.

The conflict’s impact is being amplified because constraints on production elsewhere have eroded global inventories, leaving the market with little buffer against shocks.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 10:10

The Department of Homeland Security said TSA agents should begin receiving pay as early as Monday, March 30.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 10:06

Investors nervous over escalation of Middle East conflict as US president says he wants to ‘take the oil in Iran’

The price of oil hit nearly $117 (£89) a barrel on Monday as Donald Trump threatened to “blow up” and “completely obliterate” Iranian electricity plants, oilwells and its export hub Kharg Island if it did not agree to a deal.

Brent crude rose after the US president wrote on his social media platform Truth Social that if a deal was not agreed and the strait of Hormuz was not reopened, the US would take further action.

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Survey also found 65% of gen Z think ‘things are better if men do paid work and women do care work’

Younger fathers are more likely to cling to outdated ideas that frame men as the money earners and women as caregivers, new research has found.

The Australian State of the World’s Fathers report is based on a global survey of 8,000 parents, with 533 from Australia.

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2026-03-30 20:04
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Jack Karlson’s rallying cry of ‘democracy manifest’ added to national collection of sound recordings that hold historical, cultural and aesthetic significance

Thirty-five years ago, when Jack Karlson was hauled into a police car outside a Chinese restaurant in Queensland, he couldn’t have known his bombastic speech would be watched by millions around the world, become a meme and, now, be preserved in Australia’s National Film and Sound Archive.

Karlson’s declaration – “Gentlemen, this is democracy manifest! … What is the charge? Eating a meal? A succulent Chinese meal?” – is one of nine pieces of audio that have been added to the NFSA’s Sounds of Australia collection this year, along with a pedestrian crossing signal and Missy Higgins’ 2004 hit Scar.

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College basketball has transformed almost beyond recognition over the last decade. But Sunday’s game provided welcome nostalgia

UConn’s shock win over No 1 seed Duke on Sunday night to advance to the Final Four connected two disparate eras of college basketball. Not only did the game produce one of the greatest endings in NCAA Tournament history, it was also a reminder of college basketball’s enduring appeal despite the huge changes that have transformed the sport over the past decade.

Freshman Braylon Mullins’s three-point heave from well beyond the arc – after he had moments earlier stolen the ball from Duke guard Cayden Boozer – sealed the 73-72 victory. It was a shot that will forever torment Duke fans: the Blue Devils had led by 19 points in the first-half, and No 1 seeds had been 134-0 when leading by 15 or more points in NCAA Tournament history. That mark now stands at 134-1.

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2026-03-30 16:04
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Burglary arrest was James Farthing’s latest run-in with the law after winning the Powerball jackpot last year

A man who recently won a $167m Powerball lottery jackpot stands accused of stealing the relatively paltry sum of $12,000 after breaking into a house in his home state of Kentucky on Saturday, according to authorities who arrested him.

James Farthing’s arrest on Saturday on counts of burglary and illicit marijuana possession reportedly was at least his third since winning Kentucky’s most lucrative lottery prize ever.

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2026-03-30 16:04
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Vice-president promises ‘to get to the bottom of’ reports of US government files about unidentified flying objects

JD Vance, the vice-president of the United States, said this weekend that he considers aliens to be “demons”.

With the war in Iran continuing, petrol and grocery prices soaring, and chaos continuing at US airports as a partial government shutdown endures, Vance appeared on the conservative Benny Show podcast, released on Saturday, to promise that he would spend time looking into what he called his “obsession” with UFOs and extraterrestrial visitors.

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2026-04-01 08:04
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NASA's Artemis II astronauts — three space station veterans and a Canadian rookie — stand out even in an astronaut corps full of super achievers.

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ESPOO, Finland,  March 30, 2026 — IQM Finland Oy (IQM Quantum Computers, IQM), a global leader in full-stack superconducting quantum computers (IQM), today announced it has secured a €50 million financing package from funds and accounts managed by BlackRock. This facility will support acceleration of IQM’s technology roadmap, fuel R&D, support entry into additional markets, and advance IQM’s leadership in quantum computing.

IQM Radiance quantum computer is located in IQM’s showroom in Espoo, Finland.

The facility was secured prior to IQM’s recent announcement of plans to become the first publicly listed European quantum computing company through a merger with Real Asset Acquisition Corp (RAAQ). The facility lowers IQM’s overall cost of capital and improves the flexibility and diversity of its capital base.

“The financing package comes at a pivotal time for IQM, as we build momentum for our next phase of growth,” said Jan Goetz, CEO and Co-founder of IQM. “This financing further strengthens our capital structure, increasing the resources available to enable us to execute on our technology vision and expand into new markets.”

He added: “We build open and transparent quantum systems that institutions can operate directly, enabling hands-on use, long-term capability building, and full control over their quantum infrastructure. By making quantum computing accessible in this way, we are enabling ecosystems to grow, benefitting researchers, industries, and partners.”

With growing global demand for its on-premises quantum systems, IQM is well positioned to support enterprise quantum and quantum-AI adoption through a multifaceted strategy that includes hardware innovation, cloud accessibility, industry partnerships, and ecosystem development on the path toward fault-tolerant quantum computing.

More from HPCwire: IQM Announces Business Combination to Take Quantum Computing Company Public

About IQM Quantum Computers

IQM Quantum Computers is a global leader in superconducting quantum computers, delivering full-stack quantum systems and cloud platform access to research institutions, universities, high-performance computing centers, and national laboratories worldwide. IQM’s on-premises deployment model gives customers direct ownership and control of their quantum infrastructure. Founded in 2018, headquartered in Finland, it has over 350 employees. IQM operates across Europe, Asia, and North America and has announced its plans to become the first publicly listed European quantum company on a major U.S. stock exchange and considering dual listing on Helsinki Stock Exchange.


Source: IQM

The post IQM Secures €50M Financing to Accelerate Global Growth appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 09:03

Cargo of tofu was spilled in highway accident near town of Jerome and left to ripen and rot in the open for weeks

A staggering 40,000lbs of extra-firm tofu was spilled in an accident near a small town in Missouri and left in the open for weeks, creating a smell that local officials called “unforgettable”.

The cleanup – dubbed the “Great Battle of the Jerome Tofu Monster” – began near the town of Jerome, in south-western Missouri, on 1 March, when a tractor-trailer vehicle with a cargo of tofu crashed off a local highway and plunged into a ravine.

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2026-03-30 12:04
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Full send POV from Let It Ride 5 race (semi-final winning line)

POV from my semi-final race run at Let It Ride 5 out in Boulder City.

This ended up being a winning run—fast, sketchy in spots, and zero room for mistakes. The track was loose and you really had to commit to your line.

Would you send the features or play it safe?

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HAMMOND, Ind. and HOBOKEN, N.J., March 30, 2026 — Quantum Corridor, the first inter-state quantum-safe commercial communications network in North America, and Quantum Computing Inc., an innovative, quantum optics and integrated photonics technology company, today announced the placement of a QCi Dirac-3 quantum optimization machine on the network.

The partnership will allow enhanced customer access for institutions and commercial customers with secure, on-demand access to Dirac-3 over Quantum Corridor’s network. This comes on the heels of Quantum Corridor’s recent breakthrough with Toshiba, implementing Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) over Quantum Corridor’s commercial fiber infrastructure, which provides 10G commercial connection to the QCi machine secured with Toshiba QKD.

Deployed at the Digital Crossroad Data Center in Hammond, Ind., the machine placement marks the first data center installation of a Dirac-3 machine and the first installation of its kind in a commercial data center environment. The Dirac-3 enables a novel revenue approach for QCi and Quantum Corridor alike, allowing clients to access Dirac-3 via Quantum Corridor’s existing subscription and service framework.

“We are proud to partner with Quantum Corridor to deliver the first data center installation of our Dirac-3 computer, designed to solve complex optimization problems,” said Dr. Yuping Huang, CEO of QCi. “This collaboration enhances secure and scalable access to our quantum computing capabilities and marks a significant step forward in QCi’s commercial deployment strategy. By embedding our technology into a highly secure, quantum-compatible network in the Chicago and Northwest Indiana region, we are expanding practical access to quantum infrastructure for both academic and enterprise users. It reflects our commitment to making high-performance quantum solutions available where they’re needed most in real-world IT ecosystems.”

The Dirac-3 delivers computational capabilities that can be used in a wide range of applications, enabling organizations to detect fraud across millions of transactions, optimize complex multi-asset portfolios, plan mission critical operations and manage UAS risk at scale. By solving problems that are extremely complex for classical systems, Dirac-3 empowers faster, data-driven decisions and drives innovation in both commercial and scientific industries.

The partnership expands market reach and improves access to QCi’s quantum hardware for the Chicago Quantum Exchange member institutions and a broader range of enterprises in the Midwest, including future expansion to universities and government partners in Indiana.

“Our purpose-built network is designed to grow to serve as a foundation for quantum internet, and we are delighted to have the QCi machine on our network,” said Dr. Mit Jha, CEO of Quantum Corridor. “This is an important step towards offering our customers unique access to computing solutions in the quantum era. Our quantum safe network that connects research institutions and industries that are expected to benefit significantly from quantum solutions will now have the ability to solve some of the previously intractable optimization problems.”

Quantum Corridor’s quantum-enabled commercial fiber infrastructure spans from Chicago’s ORD 10 Data Center (350 Cermak) to the Digital Crossroad Data Center. Its live high-capacity optical network will link quantum research facilities, hyperscalers and industry leaders across key verticals with a capacity of 40 terabits per second (Tbps)—the equivalent of 1,500 hours of high-quality video per second—at a round-trip latency of 0.274 milliseconds—500 times faster than the blink of an eye and nearly 12 times faster than the average network.

About Quantum Computing Inc.

Quantum Computing Inc. (Nasdaq: QUBT) is an innovative, quantum optics and integrated photonics technology company that provides accessible and affordable quantum machines and foundry services for the production of photonic chips based on thin-film lithium niobate (TFLN). QCi’s products are designed to operate at room temperature and low power at an affordable cost. The Company’s portfolio of core technologies and products offer unique capabilities in the areas of high-performance computing, artificial intelligence, and cybersecurity, as well as remote sensing applications.

Through its acquisitions of Luminar Semiconductor, Inc. and NuCrypt, LLC, QCi accelerated its technology roadmap while expanding technical depth, manufacturing capabilities, and its product portfolio to photonics and optics components, subsystems, and systems.

More from HPCwire: Quantum Corridor, Toshiba Demonstrate 1st Cross-State Quantum Key Distribution Over Live Commercial Metro Fiber Network

About Quantum Corridor Inc.

Quantum Corridor Inc. was formed by Chicago-area technology innovators to drive tech infrastructure to Indiana and create an information-sharing platform for institutions such as Chicago Quantum Exchange, defense contractors, research hubs and universities. It is a member of the Bloch Tech Hub, a coalition of industry, academic, government and nonprofit stakeholders led by Chicago Quantum Exchange, one of 31 U.S. Regional and Innovation Technology Hubs federally designated for quantum technologies. Quantum Corridor Inc. was named a Chicago Quantum Exchange member in 2024. Upon its completion, the Quantum Corridor network will be the nation’s largest quantum computing superhighway. Visit www.quantumcorridor.com for more information.


S0urce: QCi

The post QCi Quantum Optimization Machine Placed on Quantum Corridor Network appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 12:04
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CNET has tested hundreds of cordless vacuum models over the years, evaluating their cleaning ability on different surfaces as well as other features and overall performance.

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CNET experts lab-tested more than 50 cordless vacuums to find the best for each flooring type across all budgets.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 08:59

A human bone discovered on a California beach in 2022 has been traced back to a former banker who vanished from that area more than two decades ago.

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  • Group says US is facing a ‘human rights emergency’

  • ICE director said agency will play ‘key part’ at tournament

Amnesty International has warned that the World Cup, spread across three North American countries, risks becoming a “stage for repression”. The human rights organisation published a report on Monday – “Humanity Must Win” – calling on Fifa and the host countries, the US, Canada and Mexico, to take urgent action to protect fans, players and other communities.

Fifa has promised a tournament where everyone “feels safe, included and free to exercise their rights”. But Amnesty said that pledge sat in “stark contrast” to conditions in all three host nations, especially the US, which hosts three-quarters of the 104 matches.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 08:57

My Pint has been good to me, but I mostly use it to get around my property rather than for long rides. I’d like something better off-road, currently I ride my long paved driveway, which is why I was looking at the GT S-Series XL because of the bigger tire and overall size. One of my biggest concerns is hill climbing. I have a hill on my property that my Pint really struggles to get up, and I often have to ride it sideways or just carry the board. Since I usually start at the top of the hill, I also love a feature to stop before 100%.

I’ve also been looking at the new Funwheel X7 as another option, but I don’t really know how different it is in real-world use.

A big part of how I use my board is utility. I use it to move things around my property, take the trash down the driveway, and just get from place to place. It works really well for that. I skateboarded for years, so balance is not really an issue for me. But I likely could use a big boost in power.

I’m tall and around 230 lbs, so in hindsight I was probably a bit crazy for riding my Pint as long as I did.

Cost is not really the issue, but I also do not think I need huge range. Lighter weight would definitely be a plus.

Given all that, what board should I be leaning toward?

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 08:49

Apple Distribution International, based in Ireland, made payments worth £635,000 to a Russian streaming service

The UK government has fined a subsidiary of Apple £390,000 for breaching sanctions against Moscow over payments it made to a Russian streaming platform.

Apple Distribution International (ADI), based in the Republic of Ireland, instructed an unnamed UK-based bank to make two payments to a company owned by a sanctioned Russian entity.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 08:34

The Supreme Court will hear arguments Wednesday over the legality of President Trump's executive order that seeks to end birthright citizenship.

2026-03-30 16:04
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Spain’s defence minister confirms move and describes US-Israel war on Iran as ‘profoundly illegal and unjust’

Spain has ramped up its opposition to the US-Israel war on Iran by closing its airspace to US aircraft involved in attacks, underlining its position as Europe’s leading critic of the conflict.

The move, first reported by El País newspaper and confirmed by the defence minister on Monday, comes after Madrid said the US could not use jointly operated military bases in the country for operations related to the war.

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2026-03-30 08:04
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The countdown to launch of the Artemis II crew's flight around the moon begins Monday at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

2026-03-30 08:04
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The unprecedented move amounted to an indefinite suspension of all asylum requests filed outside of immigration court, regardless of the applicant's nationality.

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The administration had threatened to punish countries that attempted to break the blockade, which was aimed at weakening the communist government.

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We tested popular LED face masks to find the best red light therapy mask based on FDA clearance, light wavelengths, power and comfort.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 08:00

It's not an April Fool's Joke. Apple's celebrating half a century this week.

2026-03-30 12:04
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The Artisan Plus takes the fan-favorite mixer up a notch.

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Cape Canaveral and Titusville, long ghost towns after 1969 moon landing, have witnessed space industry ‘renaissance’

Almost six decades have passed since the space coast of Florida experienced an atmosphere quite like this. On its beaches and in cities, there is an air of anticipation, excitement and anxiety to match the final days of Nasa’s storied Apollo moon program.

At 6.24pm ET on Wednesday at Cape Canaveral, subject to adverse weather and last-minute technical hitches, four Artemis II astronauts – three Americans and one Canadian – will become the first humans to blast off on a journey to the moon since 1972.

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2026-03-30 16:04
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To see this war as archaic, the last squawk of the Middle East hawks, is at once maddening and hopeful

From the moment the United States and Israel attacked Iran, the news seemed incongruous with the year 2026. A war to kill the Ayatollah and overthrow the government – this was the fantasy of neoconservatives after September 11, before today’s college students were born. Hadn’t every president since, Donald Trump most boisterously of all, repudiated regime-change wars in the Middle East?

When he announced the strikes in an overnight video, decked out in a USA ball cap, Trump evoked an even more distant era. The president barely bothered to claim that Tehran posed some kind of imminent threat. Instead, he recited the litany of misdeeds perpetrated by the Islamic Republic since it took power in 1979.

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2026-03-30 16:04
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  • 41-year-old seals first PGA Tour win since 2019 US Open

  • Brain lesion derailed American’s career

Gary Woodland won the Houston Open on Sunday, a moment that seemed improbable 30 months ago when he had brain surgery, and even two weeks ago when he opened up about his struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Woodland looked close to his best at Memorial Park, coasting home to a trophy that felt as important as his US Open title at Pebble Beach in 2019.

He closed with a three-under 67 to win by five shots over Nicolai Hojgaard. The gallery chanted Woodland’s name before falling silent so he could roll in the winning putt.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 07:47

Tehran says it will confront any land attack, as Trump says regime’s export hub on Kharg Island could be taken ‘very easily’. Plus, how Americans can rebuild its once robust peace movement

Good morning.

Iran has warned the US that it is prepared to confront any ground assault, accusing Washington of secretly planning a land attack while publicly seeking talks, as the war that has killed thousands of people and caused the biggest ever disruption to global energy supplies entered its second month.

What has Donald Trump said? In an interview published last night, the US president did little to assuage those concerns, telling the Financial Times that his “preference would be to take the oil” in Iran, and saying of Iran’s crucial export hub on Kharg Island: “We could take it very easily.”

This is a developing story. Follow the liveblog here.

Why is this important to Cuba? The thousands of barrels of crude would provide significant relief to Cuba, which, according to the president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, has not received any oil imports for three months, leading to strict rationing of gasoline and exacerbating an energy crisis that has resulted in multiple power outages across the country.

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2026-03-30 08:04
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Thieves made off with three paintings by Renoir, Cézanne and Matisse worth millions from an Italian museum in under three minutes, reports say.

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What exactly is an AI claw, and why is everyone from solo hackers to Silicon Valley giants obsessed with raising lobsters? We deep dive into the world of claw AI agents.

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Their goal is to use biometric data and blockchain to build age-verification measures directly into disposable vape cartridges. Wired reports on a partnership between vape/cartridge manufacturer Ispire Technology and regulatory consulting company Chemular (which specializes in the nicotine market) — which they've named "Ike Tech": [Using blockchain-based security, the e-cig cartridge] would use a camera to scan some form of ID and then also take a video of the user's face. Once it verifies your identity and determines you're old enough to vape, it translates that information into anonymized tokens. That info goes to an identity service like ID.me or Clear. If approved, it bounces back to the app, which then uses a Bluetooth signal to give the vape the OK to turn on. "Everything is tokenized," [says Ispire CEO Michael Wang]. "As a result of this process, we don't communicate consumer personal private information." He says the process takes about a minute and a half... After that onetime check, the Bluetooth connection on the phone will recognize when the vape cartridge is nearby and keep it unlocked. Move the vape too far away from the phone, and it shuts off again. Based on testing, the companies behind Ike Tech claim this process has a 100 percent success rate in age verification, more or less calling the tech infallible. "The FDA told us it's the holy grail technology they were looking for," Wang says. "That's word-for-word what they said when we met with them...." Wang says the goal is to implement additional features in the verification process, like geo-fencing, which would force the vape to shut off while near a school or on an airplane. In the future, the plan is to license this biometric verification tech to other e-cig companies. The tech may also grow to include fingerprint readers and expand to other product categories; Wang suggests guns, which have a long history of age-verification features not quite working.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 20:04
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The Iran war risks triggering a new wave of nuclear proliferation Expert comment thilton.drupal

States may be tempted to pursue their own nuclear weapons as they seek deterrence against attacks amid uncertainty over US guarantees.

North Korean missiles seen on television

The US-Israeli war with Iran is taking place as the global non-proliferation regime is already under significant strain. 

New START, the last bilateral nuclear arms control treaty between the US and Russia, expired in February with nothing to replace it. China is currently expanding and modernizing its nuclear arsenal. France has announced an expansion of its nuclear programme and closer cooperation with European partners. 

Public opinion in several non-nuclear states such as Turkey, Poland and South Korea seems to be shifting towards support for developing domestic nuclear capabilities, as the lessons of the Cold War and the devastating consequences of nuclear weapons fade from living memory. 

This comes amid rising doubts over Washington’s ability to uphold its extended deterrence and security commitments to allies. In particular, the US’s reported redeployment of part of its THAAD missile defence systems from South Korea to the Middle East may be cause for concern among US allies in East Asia.

The strains on the non-proliferation regime predate the Iran war and the reported THAAD redeployment. But they risk fracturing the regime at precisely the moment when the international community can least afford it.

A dangerous lesson

There is a danger that many states watching these developments will absorb a straightforward message: nuclear weapons deter attack in a way that conventional capabilities cannot. 

This belief was already gaining ground after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which some have interpreted as confirmation that Kyiv relinquishing its Soviet-era arsenal left it exposed. While establishing an independent Ukrainian nuclear deterrent would have faced profound practical obstacles, including questions of operability and command and control, it seems unlikely that Russia would have launched a full-scale invasion if Ukraine had nuclear weapons. 

Likewise, Iraq and Libya, which abandoned their weapons programmes, were also targeted with military action. In contrast, North Korea, which has developed nuclear weapons, has so far avoided military action against it. 

The US and Israel have justified their strikes on Iran in part as aimed at preventing Tehran from developing a nuclear weapon in future. However, observers may take the lesson that Iran would not have been attacked if it had a nuclear deterrent already.

Besides, Iran was also attacked during two active rounds of negotiations – in June 2025, and again in late February 2026. For states weighing whether to engage diplomatically with Washington, that precedent is significant. Dialogue did not protect Iran. 

Proliferation in the Middle East

Since the war, prominent voices within the Iranian regime are now arguing that Tehran should quit the NPT and develop the bomb, according to Reuters. 

Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is reported to be more hardline than his father and predecessor, who issued a fatwa against nuclear weapons and reportedly pushed back against senior Iranian military leaders who argued for the bomb. 

If Iran were to develop a nuclear weapons programme, the consequences for regional proliferation could be severe. 

Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has repeatedly stated his opposition to nuclear weapons but has previously warned, including in a 2023 interview, that the kingdom would seek to acquire a nuclear weapon if Iran does. This could in turn prompt even wider proliferation in an already volatile region.

East Asia

In East Asia, the picture is similarly concerning. In Japan and South Korea, serious debates about domestic nuclear acquisition have been building for several years. These are driven by China’s sustained nuclear buildup, North Korea’s expanding arsenal and concerns about the reliability of US security guarantees.

The US stationing THAAD missile defence systems in South Korea in 2017 was a visible symbol of its commitment to the region. It reinforced Washington’s commitment to extended deterrence – to defend its allies if they are attacked, including potentially by using its nuclear weapons. 

Washington remains committed to defending South Korea under their 1953 Mutual Defense Treaty and retains a strong military presence in East Asia. 

But the reported THAAD redeployment signals that Washington may be prioritizing Middle Eastern engagements over its Indo-Pacific commitments.  This exposes the limits of US capacity across multiple fronts simultaneously, and risks leaving Washington’s partners exposed to opportunistic attacks while the US is distracted elsewhere. 

The Iran war has also sparked questions over the US’s ability to defend its allies. While US defences have shot down many Iranian missiles, Washington has been unable to fully shield its partners in the Middle East from Iran’s retaliatory strikes.

In this context, non-nuclear US partners may seek to develop their own domestic nuclear deterrence capabilities.

Restating the case against proliferation 

None of this makes proliferation inevitable, or strategically rational. The potential costs of pursuing a nuclear weapon remain severe: comprehensive sanctions, exclusion from international financial systems and the collapse of security and trade relationships that took decades to build.

Extended deterrence, when credible, continues to offer a more reliable guarantee than an emerging and vulnerable domestic programme. The path to nuclear deterrence is neither quick nor cost-free – in the interim, a state acquiring a weapon is more likely to attract pre-emptive action than to deter it. 

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 07:29

Exclusive: UK owner’s version of Old Man with a Gold Chain reunited in Chicago with undisputed work by Dutch master

A portrait in a UK collection that has long been dismissed as a workshop copy of an almost identical painting by Rembrandt was in fact also painted by the 17th-century Dutch master, according to a leading scholar.

Each of the paintings, titled Old Man with a Gold Chain and dated to the early 1630s, is a near-lifesize depiction of an older man wearing a gold chain and a plumed hat.

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2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-30 07:28

Why Should Delaware Care? 
The homeless shelter at the People’s Church of Dover has drawn criticism from city leaders and residents in recent weeks for bringing issues to its surrounding neighborhood. The city’s latest move to require the shelter to apply for zoning approval could shut down one of the few homelessness resources in Kent County.

A month after Dover City Council voted to deny grant funding for the homeless shelter at the People’s Church of Dover, the city has issued a letter threatening to shut down part of the shelter’s operations. 

City Solicitor Dan Griffith sent a letter on March 23 to the church’s lead pastor, Derrick Hodge, saying that operating an overnight shelter is not permitted under the church’s current residential zoning designation. 

As a result, Griffith wrote, the church must submit an application to the city’s Planning Commission requesting it be allowed to continue functioning as an overnight shelter.

Griffith’s letter comes amid an outcry from nearby residents, who say the church’s shelter has brought drug use, prostitution and blight to their neighborhood.

But Hodge rejects these claims. He said he fears the letter could be the city’s first step toward shutting down the shelter’s overnight operations, as he doubts the Planning Commission would vote to approve the church’s request. 

The city’s attempt to enforce its zoning laws and respond to resident concerns could ultimately eliminate one of the few homeless service providers in central Delaware — long considered scarce in homelessness and drug detox resources.

Located on South Bradford Street, roughly a quarter-mile from Dover City Hall, the People’s Church shelter serves daily meals year round and operates as a Code Purple overnight shelter for men in the winter months. 

Teresa Campbell Harris, director of the “People’s Community Center” organization — the shelter arm of the People’s Church of Dover — told Spotlight Delaware the shelter has served nearly 500 people since last October. The $47,000 grant request that city leaders denied earlier this month would have allowed the shelter, in collaboration with the Department of Labor, to provide workforce development programs. 

But residents of Bradford Street say those same people who the shelter has served are trespassing on their properties, openly using drugs and making their neighborhood less safe. 

Complaints rise over past year

According to emails obtained by Spotlight Delaware, the city of Dover received more than 15 complaint letters between December 2025 and February 2026 along with one threat of a lawsuit over the shelter’s improper zoning from the company Tidemark Construction, which has an office down the street from the church. 

One lifelong Bradford Street resident, Andrew Freud, said he and his neighbors have been watching the shelter increase its offered services since the COVID pandemic, expanding from just a Code Purple overnight winter shelter to also include an afterschool children’s program and more meal offerings. 

As these services have grown, he said, the number of people loitering around the church has also increased. 

Freud added that residents have tried to respectfully describe their concerns to shelter leadership, but have continuously been ignored. This left them with no choice but to turn to the city with complaints, he said.

“We were trying to get the church to step up and advocate for some of our concerns and respond to those,” he said. “They haven’t done that.” 

Hodge said the church shares many of the same concerns as residents about drug use and other issues on Bradford Street. He does not, however, appreciate neighbors blaming the problems on the shelter. 

“They’ve targeted us as a convenient way to say, ‘This is all the fault of the People’s Church because they feed people,’” Hodge said. 

Freud said he and his neighbors were taken aback when they learned the shelter was seeking roughly $50,000 in city funding to expand its services. They felt compelled to stop the services from growing even more, he said. 

Many of the complaint letters sent to the city shared similar sentiments. Residents said they understood the value of the shelter’s services, but they could not endure more blight in their neighborhood. 

“We have watched as our beloved neighborhood has turned from a safe, clean and vibrant neighborhood to an open-air drug market, safe haven for human trafficking and prostitution,” one resident, whose name was redacted, wrote to the city on Feb. 4.

Dover city council members have been fairly unanimous in their push to pare back services offered to the homeless at the People’s Church of Dover. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY MAGGIE REYNOLDS

City leaders offer few solutions 

Discussions about the People’s Church come directly after city council members spent nearly five months debating a proposal to ban panhandling in Delaware’s capital city. The proposal itself was billed as an ordinance to improve pedestrian safety, but debates surrounding the idea largely focused on poverty and homelessness.

Opponents of the panhandling ban called on city leaders to propose solutions to the homelessness crisis in the city instead of “criminalizing poverty.” 

Since the start of that panhandling debate, which began in October 2025, city council members have not introduced any ordinances aimed at providing more resources to combat homelessness and drug use. 

Dover City Council President Fred Neil declined to discuss the People’s Church with Spotlight Delaware by phone.

In an emailed statement, however, Neil wrote the city does not have the authority to spend money on “health care, education, or social services.” 

“This is not a Dover city problem,” Neil said. “This is a Delaware problem.”

While city council will not have a direct say in the fate of the People’s Church shelter — the final decision on its application to continue overnight operations rests with the city’s Planning Commission — eight members of the nine-member council have expressed concern about the shelter.

“City council, in my view, does not shut down any place,” Councilman Roy Sudler told Spotlight Delaware. “They shut themselves down by not being in compliance.” 

The ninth council member, Gerald Rocha, has recused himself from votes on the shelter because he serves on the organization’s board. 

The People’s Church in Dover fills with dozens of men when temperatures drop below 20 degrees. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY OLIVIA MARBLE

The shelter’s plan

The People’s Church has a 14-day grace period in which it can continue operating the overnight shelter before it must obtain the conditional use approval to stay open, Neil said. 

Because of the two-week buffer, Hodge, the church’s pastor, said it will continue providing overnight beds until the winter shelter season officially ends on Tuesday, March 31.

The hurdle, he said, will be receiving approval for next winter’s season.

The People’s Church will continue providing daily meals throughout the year, but it only offers overnight shelter for men between Dec. 1 to March 31. 

As things currently stand, Hodge said the church’s application to maintain overnight operations would “surely be denied.”

He is hopeful, however, the church can convince city leaders to change their minds about the application by showing “an outpouring of public support” for the shelter.

Nearly 20 people spoke at the most recent city council meeting on March 23, including volunteers at the shelter and individuals who use the shelter’s services, in favor of the People’s Church during a public comment period that lasted an hour and 20 minutes. 

Hodge added that courts have “consistently upheld” a religious group’s right to engage in ministry — which he said includes providing community services. That right, he said, supersedes a city’s authority over zoning. He is confident that legal action would end with a victory for the church.

“There is no legal justification to shut us down,” Hodge said.

After making it through the end of the Code Purple winter season, Hodge said he plans to submit a zoning application this summer to allow the church to continue its overnight shelter operations. It remains unclear if the city will approve that application.


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 shelter’s future in question as city challenges zoning appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

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Desmond Freeman fled into dense bushland in August last year after shooting and killing two police officers who came to search his rural home.

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Moving out of the country in a couple of months and one wheel is a no go in Japan so what should I expect to get for one good shape with I think around 1100mi, oem maghandle, charger cap , rail guards hell original box and everything it contained.

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If there is any consistency to Trump’s policy, it is a series of frantic attempts to justify his original blunder and extricate himself from its dire consequences

Donald Trump has lost his Iran war. He is the Iranian hostage. Unlike the US embassy personnel captured as hostages for 444 days, Trump threw himself into Iranian hands. Less than a month into his “short-term excursion”, his stated objectives have been scattered to the winds. There is no regime change, no uprising and no access to oil wealth along the Venezuelan model. The decapitation gambit – assassinating Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and senior Iranian leadership – has failed to destroy the regime. Despite the massacre, it is Trump who stands exposed to slings and arrows for the rashest military adventure since Custer at the Little Bighorn.

Iran maintains a chokehold on the strait of Hormuz and, through its narrowest passage of 21 miles, on the global economy. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development forecasts a spike of inflation to 4.2% in the US, a 40% increase since Trump returned to office. The stock market has dived into correction territory. Iran has also demonstrated its capacity to wreak existential destruction on the Gulf states whose rulers’ delusion of their invulnerability and US protection has been shattered. “I’m the opposite of desperate,” Trump declared on 26 March. “I don’t care.”

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President is convening so-called ‘God squad’ to override provisions of Endangered Species Act for ‘national security’

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If successful, the administration may kill off dozens of protected species – from Rice’s whales and whooping cranes to sea turtles.

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A train derailment involving over 40 railcars in Roseau County, Minnesota, on Saturday morning has prompted evacuations, according to the sheriff's office.

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Fighter jets were scrambled over Palm Beach after a civilian plane breached restricted airspace near President Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort, officials said.

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When asked if a New York Times report that the tanker would be allowed to reach Cuba was true, Mr. Trump said: "If a country wants to send some oil into Cuba right now, I have no problem whether it's Russia or not."

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The actor and comedian, posting on X, said that ‘unlike in today’s universities’ the military would teach young people ‘how truly great their country is’

The actor and comedian Rob Schneider has urged the US to “restore the military draft for our nation’s young people” amid the ongoing war with Iran.

Posting on X, Schneider, 62, who has not served in the military, wrote:

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Sending snapshots of your pet is one thing. Sending a custom emoji is another.

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Slumped on the pavement, she wasn’t breathing – and I wouldn’t have realised if I’d been listening to music as usual. Time to stop blotting out the world …

For years I walked the streets of London wearing noise-cancelling headphones, absorbed in playlists, politics podcasts or long voice notes from friends, and a million miles away from wherever I was. One damp January evening last year, I was walking home from my parents’ house, headphones dead in my bag, when I noticed a small figure slumped on the pavement with her eyes closed. I might not have noticed her had I been in my own world, fixated on what was playing in my ears.

I asked for her name. “Can you hear me?” I tried several times, my voice tightening. She didn’t respond, and worse, she didn’t seem to be breathing. My mind raced back to the one first aid class I took in school, but drawing a blank and worried that I might get it wrong, I dialled 999 and frantically tried to figure out if I could feel her pulse.

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Scott "Custa" Kennedy used his experience as a former Overwatch League pro to design one of the game's most popular heroes in Reign of Talon season 1.

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Tim Carlin, deputy editor for southern Delaware, is the guest for this episode of “Beyond the Headlines.” While Tim’s work for Spotlight normally has him roaming Legislative Hall in Dover, he joins the podcast to discuss the time he spent on the Leipsic River and the Delaware Bay reporting for his article In Leipsic, watermen have toiled for generations to dredge the deep.

Tim shares how he developed his sources among the community of watermen, what his experience was like on Leonard “Limbo” Voss’ boat, and why Spotlight readers can expect to see more stories of “joy, wonder and discovery.”

The podcast was hosted by Director of Community Engagement David Stradley.

This transcript has been edited for length and clarity.

This article marked a different kind of article for you. Readers have mainly seen your reporting on government leaders in Dover. How did reporting on commercial fishermen who called the Leipsic River home get on your radar? 

Yeah, a bit of a departure for me, for sure. This story was actually put on my radar by our Editor-in-Chief, Jake Owens. I believe it was something that he had been meaning, or hoping, to get to as part of the “Our Delaware” series that Spotlight puts out.

There is a specific restaurant in Leipsic called Sambo’s Tavern, and that is a very famous crab and seafood restaurant that’s only open from April through October every year. And his idea was originally to focus on the history of this restaurant. 

But expanded from there into a story about this really small town that not a lot of people know about, that has a very deep and rich history for crabbing, oystering and just for watermen in general. 

I’m glad you mentioned the “Our Delaware” series, because this article actually marks a transition from that series to a more informal approach to telling community stories.

If listeners don’t know, from late 2024 through 2025, the “Our Delaware” series explored the history of communities and the institutions that serve them around the state. People may remember articles featuring places like Kingswood Community Center, the Islamic Society of Delaware, La Esperanza, CAMP Rehoboth, the Seaside Jewish Community, and many more. 

This year for these kinds of feature stories, our reporters are shifting their approach from having this specific focus on community institutions. From your perspective as editor, can you tell us about this shift and the strategy behind it? 

So this year we’re going to be taking a bit of a broader approach to these feature stories about communities across Delaware. Internally we’re calling them our “joy, wonder, and discovery” stories. The idea behind that is to give us the ability to paint a more full, vibrant picture of Delaware. 

I think using the Leipsic story is a great example. It is not something that would really fit particularly into an “Our Delaware” story. It is not pegged on an institution specifically. It is more of an idea, it is an industry, it is the culture of a town. And I think that some of those stories really can tell you some of the best stories.

Feature stories are about these more abstract ideas, and finding ways to pull them into a piece of journalism – I think that is the idea behind “joy, wonder, discovery.” 

This article is kind of the first foray into that “joy, wonder and discovery” theme. I know it worked for me. You write in your article about people who probably have driven past Leipsic all their life and didn’t know it was there. I’m definitely one of those people. In fact, I had that exact experience.

Several months ago I was driving downstate for Spotlight. and I had to get off Route One around Dover because of an accident. I ended up driving through Leipsic and I was like, “I’ve lived here 20 plus years. I have never been on this road. I’ve never driven through this community.” 

I was just really struck both by that fact and by just how beautiful and interesting Leipsic seemed to be. I wanted to know more. Who lives here? What do they do? Your reporting did just that, that discovery side of it.

What was your goal in writing this article? 

Journalism, at its core, is storytelling. It is a way of sharing new information about the world around you.

We live in very precarious and polarized times. I think any opportunity to learn about new communities, new people, or maybe shed some preconceived notions about certain types of people – I relish those opportunities. 

Leipsic is a very small town. It is a very blue collar, working class, rural area.There are a lot of preconceived notions that come to mind when you hear some of those buzzwords. I hope that we were able to deconstruct some of that with this story and really get to the meat – the crab meat, if you will – of what it’s like to live in this town and to be part of this generations-long industry in Delaware.

I love talking about this kind of article on “Beyond the Headlines” because there is so much that goes on behind the scenes in an article like this. Can you walk us through your reporting process on this article?

So we might be here for a while. 

That’s okay. That’s the fun of it.

Reporting this story for me really started at the end of September and the beginning of October. I had gotten this really cool idea – but it was kind of a nugget of an idea – from Jake. 

I had only been in Delaware since July of last year. I certainly didn’t have any connection to the town of Leipsic. I didn’t know anything about crabbing. The best way to find sources sometimes is to put boots on the ground. And so that is exactly what I did. 

There is one main road that runs through the town. This is the same road that runs along the Leipsic River and is where the dock on the river is. It is where the boatyard is and it is where Sambo’s Tavern, this very famous crab restaurant, is. And so that was my first stop. 

I rolled into town on a sunny afternoon in early October, and I just walked along this very small dock along the Leispic River and hoped to find people on boats. And that is where I bumped into Limbo – Leonard “Limbo” Voss – one of the main sources in my story

He and his crew of fellow watermen were unloading their boat. They seemed very busy. They seemed very tired. I knew that was not the time to give him a full elevator pitch and try to talk to him. 

So I slipped him my business card. I gave him the short version of what I wanted, and I went along my way. He gave me his phone number. I was very thankful for that. From there, we talked back and forth and eventually set up an interview in person. 

Through Limbo, I was connected to Craig Pugh. I spent about four or five hours in early December with Craig. He very kindly told me, “Come up to Leipsic, and I’ll show you around.” 

And so I got in his pickup truck in early December, and he showed me around all the hotspots.  He graciously let me inside his home, and he was showing me these beautiful artifacts about the town, and he was just telling me his story, but also the story of his relatives and this industry that he loves so much that he has spent 50 years in. He is 63 and has been doing it since he was about 10. 

And while I was talking to Craig, I also had been talking to Limbo about trying to get on his boat. And so finally, also in early December, a few days after I was in Leipsic with Craig, it lined up perfectly, and I was able to go out on Limbo’s boat.

Each one of those elements of the reporting process sounds fascinating. We could talk a lot more about each one of those. But let’s get on the boat, and specifically I want to talk about you on the boat.

In the article, you don’t put the focus on you. You, focus it on the fishermen and on the UD students on the boat. But what was Tim Carlin’s experience like?

Tim Carlin was holding on for dear life on this boat. 

So we had to go out super early. They go out before the sun rises to get out on the water when it is calm – in between high and low tides.

I live in Lewes. Leipsic is up near Dover. So I had to get up at around 4 a.m. to leave my house by 5 a.m. to get to Leipsic by 5:45 a.m. to be out on the water just after 6 a.m. 

And this is December, so the sun is not anywhere near coming up. 

It is cold. I have on three pairs of pants, three shirts, a windbreaker, a pair of rubber boots that I borrowed from our other Deputy Editor, Karl, who used to be a commercial fisherman in his own past life – which, in retrospect, maybe he should have reported this story. 

We also had a freelance photographer, Ethan Grandin, who was our summer intern last summer, who is just an amazing photographer. Limbo was kind enough to let us both on the boat.

It was almost like an out-of-body experience. I’m half awake, it is freezing. It was almost formulaic for the fishermen, this is a regular day for them. But I’m trying to take in everything. I’m writing notes on my phone. I’m trying to remember what things look like, what they sound like, what they smell like.

Limbo’s brother, Bird, was a chain smoker. We are in the cabin of the boat, and the window is cracked, obviously, but he is just chain smoking his cigarettes at 6:30 in the morning, and I’m like, “God, I want to ask you to bum a cigarette right now.”

So the experience for me was just trying to hold on for dear life, but also take in as much as I could. When we got out to the Delaware Bay, it was very rough. The boat was really rocking from side to side. So I’m just in there trying to hold on to whatever handles I can find inside this small cabin of the boat to stay upright.

I stayed in the cabin. I took one or two steps out to really peek my head out. I wanted to smell the salty air and feel the breeze. It was a beautiful experience, and I wanted to take that in, but I also was keenly aware of the fact that I did not want to fly overboard and be the guy that fell into the bay and had to be picked up.

So you’re inside and kind of costume playing in Karl Baker’s boots. What’s Ethan doing, and how is he dressed? 

Ethan is from Long Island, and he has experience on oyster boats. So he came ready to go. He had a full set of bibs on. Bibs are – rubber overalls are the best way I can describe them. And so Ethan, obviously, had his own pair of bibs because he’s forever prepared.

So he’s fully ready to go. All the watermen are ready to go. Ethan is out on the back deck of this boat as it is just back and forth, side to side, camera in hand, wrapped in plastic to make sure his camera doesn’t get ruined, just making the most beautiful photos.

He seemed very comfortable out on the back of that boat.

And he seemed to zoom in, for lack of a better word, on one of the other boatmen, Zach.

Zach is Limbo’s son. He is featured in a lot of the photos. He’s wearing bright, neon yellow, construction worker color. 

Zach was a character. He was very quiet. He didn’t talk a lot, but once he got out on the back of the boat when we made it out to the bay, and we actually started the process of dredging up some of the oysters, he had this really bright smile on his face and just seemed so at ease.

He is standing up on this platform on the back of the boat. There’s no railing around him. He has got the dredge to hold on to, really, and that is it. We were really rocking back and forth, but he seemed like he was just standing up as sturdy as can be on this platform overlooking the bay. And just happy as a clam. 

I felt like I was watching someone in their element, if that makes sense. I’m glad that translated to the photos. I remember that experience – seeing it. And so I’m glad that readers got to see it as well. 

Writing about an oystering expedition is obviously a lot different than writing about legislation. I’d love to ask you to read a short portion of the article and then I’d love to talk a little bit about what your kind of craft process is with that.

Tim talked about the rocky waves. I want to ask him to read the portion of the article where he goes into those waves. Well not go into those waves, but… 

Yeah, try not to go into those waves. [Tim reads the following selection.]

After making it out of the river, Limbo drove down the coast and picked up a group of post-graduate students studying at the University of Delaware’s College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment in Lewes. While Limbo and his crew hoped to catch some oysters, the students would collect data on the ones not yet ready for harvest.

Out on the bay, the water was rough. Rougher than Limbo had expected. 

Waves rocked his 20-foot-long boat to one side and then back again. Water crashed into the cabin’s windshield. 

Gone was the man who casually steered through the Leipsic River’s winding waters earlier that morning, charismatically holding court from his captain’s chair and telling stories of gambling woes and wins, boat mechanics, climate change and evolution.

Now, Limbo was focused. His eyes shifted between the wide open bay in front of him and the boat’s back deck, where the crew had assembled in anticipation of the real work beginning.

He decided to abandon harvesting for the day. No need to stay out in that mess longer than necessary, he said.

But he wanted the students to check on the oysters’ growth — to collect the data they needed. So he dropped the dredge — a large, chainlink, basket-like structure with metal teeth on one end — into the murky water.

Thank you so much for reading that. It’s great to hear that. 

I tried to put on my audio book voice. 

No, it’s great to hear that in your voice. And you know, you talk about how much you love the pictures of this story, but hearing you read that, I almost wish there was an audio component of the story to hear those waves.

So purely from a craft perspective, what writing muscles are you using when composing a passage like that? 

It’s a good question, and it is one that I don’t know if I have a great answer to. 

A really great professor and mentor of mine – his name is Jim Tobin, I’ll give him a shout out – he had a real penchant for narrative nonfiction writing. This very evocative, visual type of storytelling. I just drank that up in college. I just think that it is so beautiful, and I think that when it’s done well, it can really place you into a story, like you can feel like you’re there. 

For me, I think my process when I’m trying to evoke some of those senses when I’m writing, I do a lot of talking to myself. I probably look at the crazy person when I’m out at a cafe.

It starts as an idea in your head. It is like a blurry picture that you can’t really see is the best way I can describe it. So for me, the process is like I have this idea that feels very far away and very out of touch, and I’m trying my best to bring it into focus.

And a lot of the ways that I do that are by speaking different versions of the paragraph that I’m writing out loud. I think that writing is melodic, especially when you’re doing this kind of narrative writing. So I like to mix in short, choppy, punchy sentences with long, compound, flowing sentences.

You can kind of hear it in that paragraph about Limbo and the way that his demeanor changed. I think those two paragraphs are a good example. 

“Out on the bay, the water was rough.”

It’s technically a compound sentence, right? There’s a comma in there, but it is these short, choppy – boom, boom, boom. And then you really drive the knife in and you say:

“Rougher than Limbo had expected.” 

So you’re telling the story, like, “Oh, this isn’t just bad. This is worse than what the expert thought it was going to be.” 

You’re gearing the reader up to say, “We’re in trouble here.” And then you hit them more with, like sensory overload:

“Waves rocked his 20-foot-long-boat to one side and then back again. Water crashed into the cabin’s windshield.”

That’s another one of those short, punchy sentences.

And then after that, you go into the really long, almost run-on sentence territory. But here it is intentional, and it works, and you say:

“Gone was the man who had casually steered through the river’s winding waters, charismatically holding court…” 

Because that is also a way to pull in chunks from your reporting that maybe wouldn’t have fit in otherwise. We were out on the river for about an hour just to get out to the bay, and he’s shooting the shit, telling jokes, you know, this funny guy. 

That is such rich storytelling that doesn’t fit into the broader narrative. So you’re able to fit some of that into the context of: things were great, and now things are a little bit more precarious.

I want to return to this theme of “joy, wonder, and discovery” that this article represents. 

There is a saying that news has a bias towards bad news. Our Editor-in-Chief Jake Owens says reporters don’t write about the hundreds of planes that land safely on the runway, they write about the one that crashes. That is also borne out by the fact that people tend to read those articles more than they read the good news articles – even though people who call themselves “news avoiders” say they don’t read news because of the constant drumbeat of bad news

So, I wonder, can you make the argument – what’s the value for Spotlight Delaware writing articles in this vein of “joy, wonder and discovery?” 

I think the argument for “joy, wonder and discovery” is that we’re not avoiding those bad news stories. It can be a “yes, and,” not an “either/or.” 

I would also say that “joy, wonder, and discovery” does not by any stretch mean fluffy, soft, non-reported gobbledygook. This story took me months to report. To build the sources, and to build the trust, and to spend the hours in Leipsic, out on the Delaware Bay, to learn a very cursory understanding of crabbing and oystering and how those fields work. 

There is a reason for these types of stories because we live in a world that is so segmented. We talk a lot about young kids, and the loneliness epidemic, or algorithms that feed you the same thing and send you down rabbit holes and don’t pull you out of them. To me, “joy, wonder, and discovery” is a way to pull yourself out of those closed loop systems and to understand a little bit more about the world around you. 

I think it is more important now than ever to make a meaningful effort to engage with ideas and with people and with schools of thought that fall outside of what you consider to be your own. 

We should all want to learn more about one another, and I think, ideally, it can bring us closer together, and, at the very least, help us understand one another better. And I hope that “joy, wonder, and discovery” stories will do exactly that.

Besides this article on the Leipsic watermen, can you give listeners any examples of the kinds of articles that Spotlight readers might expect as reporters pursue “joy, wonder, and discovery?” Looking backwards, or imagining forwards?

Looking backwards, also very recently, José Ignacio, our diverse communities reporter, covered these really cool underground – well not underground anymore because he has covered them and CBS Philadelphia has covered them as well – but these NPR Tiny Desk-style concerts for Mexican musicians at this Mexican grocery store in New Castle County.

Just this unknown world that is out there. Like, yeah, let me go get my groceries and hear an up and coming artist perform some of their latest songs. 

I also think about Julia, our education reporter, covering a teacher trying to incorporate positive affirmations into her classroom and into her teaching style. Those stories that have this value that, like I said, will help you understand the world around you that is maybe right underneath your nose that you don’t know about. 

Looking ahead for “joy and discovery,” I don’t know what’s out there. The beauty is that we will have the joy and the wonder of discovering them.

I can also see a world where “joy, wonder and discovery” stories are actually approaching the same things that we already write about, just in a new way.

I’m thinking of your coverage of Legislative Hall. At the Legislative Summit when you were interviewing the legislative leadership panel, Minority Whip Jeff Spiegelman shared that Speaker of the House Melissa Minor-Brown every week does a bipartisan leadership meeting together. 

That was a little discovery moment for me. So I could see an article like that. We’re going to take you behind the scenes of Legislative Hall and let you discover something you didn’t know about how these legislators are working together.

Exactly. I think that it is not a departure or a shift away from the news. It is just looking at it through a different lens and allowing ourselves the flexibility and giving ourselves the green light to explore things in a new way. Whether that is Legislative Hall, whether it is energy policy. 

There’s joy, wonder and discovery in every story that we write. It is just trying to be more intentional about finding some of those things to highlight in fun ways.

Let’s close by coming back to our watermen. I have a couple of fun questions here, and then a final reflective question for you. 

In the article you shared that the Leipsic watermen think that Delaware Bay crabs are far better than Chesapeake Bay Blue crabs. Did they give specific reasons? 

They did. I think part of it is, you know, you got to take up for the home team. You can’t be a Delaware Bay waterman and say that the Chesapeake Bay crabs are better. 

They did say that Delaware Bay crabs tend to live longer than some of their compatriots coming from other places. 

They also gave me the inside scoop that a lot of times – let me not say a lot of times – sometimes when you are eating a Chesapeake Bay crab from somewhere in Maryland, it may not really be from the Chesapeake Bay. They may be importing them from places like Louisiana because the number of crabs in the Chesapeake has dwindled a bit.

So they specifically told me that Delaware Bay crabs last far longer than their Louisiana-based brethren. Can I say for certain? No, but I trust Craig and Limbo to tell me about good crabs. So I’m going to go with their word on it. 

Connecting your main beat to this article: what qualities do watermen and legislators have in common? 

That’s a good question. They both can tell a very good story, I’ll say.

No, that sounds like a jab. I don’t mean it that way.

Both camps are very charismatic, I think, in a genuine way. I got to see that the watermen that I talked to had such a deep affinity and love and fight for their industry and for their community. And I’ve seen lawmakers do the same thing.

Standing up and fighting for what you believe in definitely connects watermen and lawmakers. 

So we’ll close on this: Is there a detail from your reporting or a person from your reporting that’s really staying with you, even to this day?

Yeah, I think Craig stays with me a lot. I spent a lot of time with him, four or five hours, like almost a whole day. Longer than I thought he was going to give me, time-wise.

There was so much that didn’t make it into the story. But there were just so many small details of the way that he would talk about the river. Or the way he would talk about his life on the water, and just look out and maybe pause and take a deep breath or a sigh. 

He was a very stoic man, so it is not like I could tell if he was going to get emotional on me, but I feel like it was the closest I was going to see to a display of emotion.

He has done a lot of advocacy work for watermen. And he talked about fighting for his community as part of that work and bringing watermen together to really advocate against some regulations on the industry that they felt were unfair in the past. You could just feel and hear the pride in his voice.

I only briefly mentioned this young waterman who he is helping to mentor, but I saw them interact with one another for a bit while we were together, and you could just tell that it is a very tight-knit community up in Leipsic, and that they really care about one another. 

You know, that has really stuck with me. That experience back in December. 

Thank you for taking us with you and the watermen out on the Leipsic River. 

Of course. Anytime. Let me know if there are any other bodies of water you need me to go hop into for Spotlight Delaware. I’m happy to do it.

The post ‘Beyond the Headlines’ podcast: On the waves with Leipsic watermen appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care?
Government works best when its citizens are knowledgeable and engaged. Delaware’s government has scores of commissions, working groups, agencies and legislative committees. All must hold meetings that are open to the public. Below we highlight a few of those meetings that are happening this week.

Below are some of the most important or interesting public meetings happening around the state this week.

  • Wilmington City Council to vote on corner store, political party change bans
  • Sussex Planning and Zoning Commission to consider affordable housing changes
  • Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board to outline reporting requirements 
  • Delaware Interagency Collaborative to End Homelessness talks progress updates

Wilmington leaders to vote on corner store, political party change bans

Wilmington City Council is set to vote Thursday night on a temporary ban on new corner stores. The council will also vote on a proposal that could limit some at-large councilmembers’ ability to change their political party affiliation while in office.

The corner store proposal, introduced by Councilwoman Shané Darby last fall, would temporarily ban the opening of new convenience stores and liquor stores in the city until an assessment can be done to determine their health and safety impacts on surrounding communities.  

The proposal follows years of concerns expressed by community members who say too many corner stores sell unhealthy foods, attract crime, or don’t listen to community input.

But a spokesperson for Wilmington Mayor John Carney’s office expressed early concerns that an assessment on corner stores’ impact may not be feasible.

“A project of that scope would need a dedicated budget line item to support external consulting, and we don’t know what a contract of that nature would cost,” the spokesperson, Caroline Klinger, said in an emailed statement to Spotlight Delaware.

The resolution on political party changes, introduced by Councilman Alexander Hackett, was sparked by Councilman James Spadola’s surprise decision to switch his political party affiliation from Republican to Democrat last fall.

That move raised questions about fair representation on the 13-member city council, which is now entirely Democrat-run.

In response to those questions, Hackett’s resolution asks Delaware’s legislature to change the city’s charter to prohibit a future at-large council member who represents a minority political party from changing their party during their term. If they do, they would be required to forfeit their seat.

Currently, Wilmington’s city charter prohibits the majority party from nominating more than three candidates for the four at-large council seats, essentially guaranteeing that at least one member is from a minority political party. The charter does not explicitly say that council members cannot change their party while in office.

📍 Wilmington City Council is scheduled to meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday inside Council Chambers at the Louis L. Redding City/County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.

Sussex officials to consider affordable housing changes

The Sussex County Planning and Zoning Commission is set to consider a proposal Wednesday afternoon that would allow new housing developments within the county’s affordable housing program to charge higher rents

The Sussex County Rental Program (SCRP), which encourages developers to include affordable housing units in their projects through density bonuses and a quicker review process, has largely been unsuccessful.

To qualify for the SCRP, 25% of a development’s housing units currently must have a maximum rent of $765 for a one-bedroom, $915 for a two-bedroom and $1,060 for a three-bedroom.

The planning commission is set to consider a proposal that would increase those maximum rents to $1,220 for a one-bedroom, $1,465 for a two-bedroom and $1,695 for a three-bedroom. 

The proposal also would decrease the number of housing units inside an SCRP development that would need to abide by these rent caps from 25% down to 15%.

If approved by the planning commission, the proposal would still need to be approved by the Sussex County Council before going into effect. 

📍 The Sussex County Planning and Zoning Commission is scheduled to meet at 3 p.m. Wednesday inside Council Chambers at the Sussex County Administrative Office Building, located at 2 The Circle in Georgetown. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.

Hospital review board outlines reporting requirements 

The Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board is set to meet on Tuesday afternoon to discuss its draft reporting requirements for Delaware’s health care systems.

The review board will gather feedback from hospital financial leaders on the feasibility of the state’s health care systems providing the data that board members will present in their draft requirements. 

According to the state law that enables the cost review board, hospitals will be required to share budget information and labor costs. Tuesday’s meeting could give the public insight into the specific information the board hopes to glean from the state’s health care systems.

Tuesday’s meeting also follows a legal settlement reached earlier this year between ChristianaCare, the state’s largest hospital, and state officials that — among other changes — removed the review board’s ability to modify or veto the budgets of hospitals it deemed to be too profligate.

Now, if a hospital’s spending exceeds the state’s projected benchmark, the cost review board would now require it to send in a compliance plan outlining how it intends to bring it down.

📍 The Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board is scheduled to meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday inside the Delaware Health and Social Services Chapel at the Herman M. Holloway Sr. Campus, located at 1901 N Dupont Hwy in New Castle. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.

Delaware officials talk homelessness initiatives

The Delaware Interagency Collaborative to End Homelessness will meet virtually on Wednesday afternoon to review its work to date and outline next steps. 

The collaborative was established by Gov. Matt Meyer in hopes of curbing homelessness in the First State. The goal of the collaborative is to cut homelessness in half and end youth homelessness in Delaware within the next five years.

📍 The Delaware Interagency Collaborative to End Homelessness is scheduled to meet virtually at 1 p.m. Wednesday. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.

Brianna Hill, Olivia Marble and Nick Stonesifer contributed to this report.

The post Get Involved: Corner store bans, affordable housing changes, more appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 06:00

A New York congressional primary is exposing the gap between Democrats who want to fight Trump and Democrats who want to fight for something

The Democratic party seems more united than it has been in years, thanks to one man: Donald Trump. Opposition to his presidency has papered over what would otherwise be serious disagreements about economic policy, civil liberties, foreign affairs and the role of corporate money in politics.

As long as Democrats can point to Trump as the common enemy, their coalition holds, and the ideological conflicts that once defined the party during the 2016 primary or the battles over the Gaza genocide during the Joe Biden years now feel like a thing of the past. But those divisions haven’t disappeared – and in New York’s 10th congressional district, they’re beginning to surface again.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 06:00

Review of Kai Schwemmer’s broadcasts undermines claim ‘process of growth’ had led him to abandon bigoted views

Kai Schwemmer, the newly appointed College Republicans of America political director, has made racist, antisemitic, homophobic and sexist statements while espousing extremist rightwing views on abortion, a Guardian review of livestream recordings can reveal.

Schwemmer said he would accept a world in which slavery was legal if abortion was criminalised, describes himself as “very much an anti-universal suffrage guy” and accepts a supporter’s description of him as “our Mormon Nick Fuentes” – referring to the white nationalist influencer whose platform he streamed on for years.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 06:00

An offshore windmill is seen at a wind farm in Blyth, United Kingdom.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Skyrocketing electricity prices have sparked calls from across the mid-Atlantic for the construction of new power plants. But a proposed offshore wind farm near the Maryland, Delaware state line has drawn stiff opposition from shoreline businesses and residents. The subsequent debate has led to two years of political tensions between state officials in Dover and Annapolis and residents living near the two states’ beach communities.  

The Baltimore company behind plans to build a wind farm off the Ocean City, Md., coastline scored a victory last week when a Delaware judge upheld a law stripping Sussex County of its ability to deny a permit for the renewable energy project.

While the ruling represents a step forward for U.S. Wind, the future of the company’s ambitious yet controversial project is far from clear. 

The company still faces a bevy of other challenges to its proposed 114-turbine offshore wind farm — including an ongoing federal lawsuit brought by Ocean City, and administrative challenges to permits granted by Delaware environmental regulators. 

The project’s federal incentives could also be in peril following the passage of President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act last year. The new law threatens to cut the lucrative credits for previously approved alternative energy projects, if their on-site construction does not begin by this July. 

Despite the potential challenges, Delaware’s governor and attorney general each cheered Wednesday’s ruling.

In a press release on Friday, each official stated that the lawsuit challenging the Delaware law that sought to clear the path for the wind project’s land-based substation was the result of politics getting in the way of energy policy.

Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings joins Attorney General Josh Shapiro to announce a settlement of over $20 million with former top home mortgage lender, Trident Mortgage Company, to resolve allegations of “redlining” in the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington region. The deal requires Trident to provide individual subsidies of up to $10,000 in support of new mortgages for owner-occupied homes in majority-minority neighborhoods to qualified applicants.
Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings celebrated the ruling that denied Sussex County’s ability to scuttle an offshore wind project. | PHOTO COURTESY OF CFPB

The “ruling makes clear that Delaware’s energy future is a statewide issue that should be decided by the whole State — not one municipality,” Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings said in the statement.

The substation, planned for a property next to the Indian River Power Plant in Dagsboro, would link electricity generated offshore to the regional electric grid.

US Wind has said the wind farm has the potential to generate as much as 1,800 megawatts of electricity, or enough to power about 600,000 homes.

Sussex County and the Town of Fenwick Island brought the lawsuit in Delaware’s Court of Chancery last year. 

Their attorney Jane Brady told Spotlight Delaware on Friday that she will hold discussions with county officials to determine whether their side will appeal the ruling to the Delaware Supreme Court. 

A spokesman for Sussex County said officials are “still reviewing the decision and will withhold comment at this time.” CoastTV reported that Fenwick Island Mayor Natalie Magdeburger, a longtime opponent of offshore wind, said she hopes “Sussex County will continue to pursue it.”

For its part, U.S. Wind also indicated that political differences were at the root of the legal dispute over the state’s substation law.

In an emailed statement, company spokeswoman Nancy Sopko said the court’s decision “reinforces the validity of state law that prioritizes homegrown energy development over politics.” 

‘Foundational’ to the energy future?

The Delaware law challenged in the lawsuit was also at the center of a partisan political battle last year – one that nearly derailed the passage of the state’s capital budget. 

During the final days of Delaware’s 2025 legislative session, Democrats proposed Senate Bill 159 in an effort to override Sussex County’s previous denial of a land-use permit that would allow U.S. Wind to build its substation near Dagsboro. 

In response, Senate Republicans decried the bill as legislative overreach, and argued that any dispute over the permit should be decided in the courts. Despite the pleas, Democrats moved forward with the bill, as the GOP did not have enough votes to defeat it directly. Instead, they used their sole piece of leverage and blocked the state’s bond bill — which requires a supermajority vote to pass.  

The move sent Democrats and Republicans into negotiations that lasted late into the night during the legislative session’s final hours.

At the time, State Sen. Stephanie Hansen (D-Middletown) called the U.S. Wind project “foundational” for Delaware’s energy future. 

But Senate Minority Whip Brian Pettyjohn (R-Georgetown) argued that Democrats sought to erode counties’ rights of  “local control” – a theme that also emerged in separate legislative debates at the time over marijuana regulations.

Ultimately, the two sides agreed on an amended bill, which promptly passed the Senate and the House of Representatives. Both chambers also later passed Delaware’s billion-dollar bond bill, with each celebrating the passage with applause.   

Later in the year, Brady filed the challenge to Senate Bill 159 on behalf of Sussex County and Fenwick Island.

The post Delaware court ruling marks a victory for Maryland offshore wind project  appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 05:51

Woman assaulted after man was given key card to her room criticises CEO Jo Boydell over cancelled meeting

A woman who was sexually assaulted by a man who was handed a key card to her room at a Travelodge has said she was shocked to learn the hotel chain’s boss cancelled a meeting with a group of MPs seeking to discuss concerns about the case.

More than 20 MPs had demanded the meeting this month to discuss the matter – including details of the chain’s security processes and procedures that led to it offering the victim an “insulting” £30 refund after the incident.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 05:34

US firm Eli Lilly, which is also pushing for end to rebate scheme, optimistic about talks with ministers

The US pharmaceutical group behind the Mounjaro weight-loss drug has said it will unpause its UK investments if ministers agree to regularly increase NHS drug prices and end a rebate scheme.

Patrik Jonsson, the president of Eli Lilly’s international business, said the company was in talks with UK ministers and that he was optimistic about reaching an agreement this summer for Britain to pay more for its medicines.

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2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-30 05:32

US ground troops have arrived in Middle East but military options to open strait risk strong retaliation from Iran

The arrival of US ground invasion forces in the Middle East over the weekend provides Donald Trump with the muscle for a perilous attempt to forcibly open the strait of Hormuz, Iran’s biggest pressure point in the war.

Iran’s chokehold on the strait, through which a fifth of the world’s oil trade normally passes, gives Tehran leverage that Trump understands, sending oil prices rocketing to more than $100 a barrel. The US president has said he is prepared to give diplomacy a chance, though bombing of Iran continues. But he also said on Sunday that he wanted to “take the oil in Iran”.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 05:31

Abnormally strong jet stream triggers deluge in Middle East, while north Africa braces for 60-80mph gusts

An unusual weather pattern unleashed severe thunderstorms across parts of the Middle East last week, battering countries including the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia. The Arabian peninsula – typically dominated by arid desert climates – received up to 150mm of rain in just a few days.

The deluge was caused by an abnormally strong jet stream, which helped a deep area of low pressure to develop north of Saudi Arabia. This, in turn, drew moist tropical air from the Indian Ocean and triggered intense storms.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-30 05:01

The division of responsibility has left Israel to hunt and kill Iranian leaders ruthlessly, using an intelligence apparatus built up to assassinate with lethal proficiency.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 05:00

After setting the women’s around-the-world record two years ago, the Alaskan is aiming for a new mark with her next 18,000 mile journey

On 11 September 2024, Lael Wilcox returned to Chicago after 108 days in the saddle, smashing the women’s around-the-world cycling record by more than two weeks. The extraordinary feat had taken her 18,000 miles over remote mountains and across 22 countries. But it left Wilcox with a lingering question: could she break Mark Beaumont’s outright record of 78 days and 14 hours?

Shaving 30 days off her time would require a major pivot in philosophy from adventure riding to pure racing, with an emphasis on efficiency, aerodynamics, and rigorous planning. Motivated to prove that women can compete with men in ultra-cycling, Wilcox will start her second attempt on 7 June in Chicago.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 05:00

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act will add red tape and restrictions for those seeking Medicaid and SNAP benefits. And the costs to update computer systems that determine eligibility for those programs will be steep.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-30 05:00

Doris Coulson remained spirited even as her illness progressed — watching cooking shows on TV, working crossword puzzles and wheeling herself down the hallways of her nursing home to show off her granddaughter when she came to visit.

Coulson had been admitted to Hillview Post Acute and Rehabilitation Center in Little Rock, Arkansas, in January 2016, after Parkinson’s disease left her at risk of choking when she swallowed. That April, the facility’s operations were taken over by Skyline Healthcare, a New Jersey-based company that was buying up nursing homes across the country.

Medical records for the retired cardiac nurse, then 71, were marked “NPO” — nothing by mouth.

Then that September, a nursing assistant found Coulson unresponsive and hanging off the side of her bed, her skin ashy and her breathing shallow. She was taken to a hospital in a coma and died several days later. The chief cause of death was aspiration pneumonia, according to her death certificate.

“The doctors said they found scrambled eggs in her lungs,” said her daughter Melissa Coulson.

Coulson’s death and the circumstances surrounding it led her family to file a lawsuit against Skyline and its owner, the New Jersey businessman Joseph Schwartz, alleging that cost-cutting at Hillview left Coulson without the care she needed. It was one of several lawsuits tied to patient outcomes as Schwartz’s empire expanded and then unraveled, with much of the chain collapsing by 2018.

Schwartz didn’t contest the case, and a judge in 2020 awarded nearly $19 million in damages. Coulson’s family has never been able to collect. Schwartz had by that time relinquished all of his property in Arkansas, so there was nothing left in the state for the family’s lawyer to try to seize, nor was there enough information about assets he may hold in other states.

Coulson’s civil action was one of several efforts to hold Schwartz accountable for what happened at his nursing homes. In perhaps the most sweeping move, federal prosecutors in New Jersey charged Schwartz with orchestrating a $39 million payroll tax scheme connected to his nursing home empire.

He pleaded guilty last April to failure to pay the IRS taxes withheld from employees and failing to file a financial report for his employees’ benefit plan. A federal judge sentenced him to three years in prison.

But Schwartz served just three months. In November, President Donald Trump granted him a full pardon, negating his criminal conviction — part of a series of clemency decisions in the president’s second term that have benefited well-connected defendants, including political allies with access to the White House and individuals like Schwartz who had spent heavily on lobbyists.

Often overshadowed in the attention around Trump’s decisions is the emotional and financial devastation left behind. Few clemency decisions illustrate that more clearly than the case of Schwartz, who paid himself millions of dollars from his nursing homes while diverting tens of millions owed to taxpayers and employees, and who has failed to satisfy at least three multimillion-dollar judgments awarded to grieving families.

In the Coulson case, Schwartz later claimed he never received key filings and had mistaken the complaint for the same lawsuit first filed in 2017, which he believed his insurer had already handled before it was withdrawn and refiled. And he argued the company that took over Hillside and canceled insurance coverage — not him — was the proper defendant. He also said he was representing himself, in poor health and isolating because of COVID-19 risks. A judge denied his request to put the case on hold.

Kevin Marino, a lawyer representing Schwartz and Skyline, said he and Schwartz had no comment. He did not respond to a follow-up email containing a detailed list of questions.

Trump has granted clemency to several figures in major health care fraud cases. In 2020, he commuted the 20-year federal prison sentence of Philip Esformes, a Florida nursing home magnate convicted in a scheme that prosecutors said involved about $1.3 billion in fraudulent Medicare and Medicaid claims. The White House cited allegations of prosecutorial misconduct, echoing claims from Esformes’ defense that prosecutors improperly invaded attorney-client privilege by reviewing documents seized in an FBI raid. Although appeals courts did not overturn the conviction based on this argument, Esformes had support from two former U.S. attorneys general.

That same year, Trump commuted the sentence of Judith Negron, convicted in a $200 million Medicare fraud case. Trump’s clemency grant said the “ends of justice” did not require her to serve another two decades in prison.

Lawyers for Esformes and Negron did not respond to requests for comment.

Trump has also nominated nursing home owner Benjamin Landa as ambassador to Hungary. The nomination has remained in place even as a facility Landa co-owns faces a federal audit alleging there were more than $31 million in Medicare overpayments. Landa is suing the administration to block repayment. An attorney for Landa did not respond to a request for comment but has previously denied wrongdoing by his client, saying in a statement the issues identified in the audit occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic when nursing homes were in the midst of a crisis and that the company was committed to patient care.

Schwartz’s case was highlighted by the far-right activist and Trump ally Laura Loomer, who had previously worked on other issues alongside the lobbyists Schwartz hired to press his case in Washington. Loomer published a series of posts on X that falsely claimed that Schwartz was not responsible for the tax violations, that he had been unfairly blamed for the collapse of his nursing home chain and that he had paid back “every dime.”

She also accused the judge in the case of antisemitism against Schwartz, who is Jewish, though she offered no evidence. She also said Schwartz was in “extremely poor health” and that prison would be a “death sentence,” though the judge found no evidence that Schwartz was unfit for prison.

Versions of Loomer’s narrative surfaced in the White House’s explanation for the pardon. A White House official said in response to questions from ProPublica that Schwartz “relied on a third-party entity” to manage tax filings, that he paid restitution, that no funds were used for personal enrichment, that the sentence was exceptionally harmful to a 65-year-old man in deteriorating health and that it was “an example of over prosecution.”

But those claims are contradicted by the court record and Schwartz’s own guilty plea, in which he acknowledged responsibility for the unpaid payroll taxes. While he repaid $5 million, that covered only a fraction of what he owed. Federal prosecutors said that under Schwartz’s plea agreement, the IRS could have pursued the remaining balance — an effort that now appears far less likely following the pardon. And his three-year sentence fell in the middle of the range recommended under federal sentencing guidelines.

Asked about those statements and how they square with the court record, the White House did not respond.

Schwartz’s faith also became part of the Trump administration’s public celebration of the decision. Alice Marie Johnson, who has advised the White House on clemency, wrote online that the pardon meant Schwartz could now join his family for Shabbat, and weeks later, he attended the White House Hanukkah party.

Schwartz paid more than $1 million to lobbyists to press the White House, the Justice Department and Congress on his behalf — including on his efforts to secure a pardon — according to lobbying disclosure forms. The White House has insisted that paid lobbyists have no influence on pardons.

Loomer said she was not paid for her advocacy. She said she heard about Schwartz’s case in a group chat with members of an orthodox Jewish outreach movement, who asked her to look into it. She also pointed to her influence within the Trump administration, citing several instances in which she publicly urged specific actions that the president ultimately took. She said Schwartz approached her at the Hanukkah party to thank her.

Melissa Coulson said Trump’s pardon of Schwartz reinforced her belief that justice is not applied equally.

“Apparently he’s got money somewhere,” Coulson said.

Her lawyer hopes to find it.

A woman with long black hair, wearing a red long-sleeve shirt and blue jeans, seated on a rock wall against a red, wooden structure.
Melissa Coulson and her family filed a wrongful death case against Skyline Healthcare and Joseph Schwartz over the death of her mother, Doris Coulson, who died at Hillview Post Acute and Rehabilitation Center in Little Rock, Arkansas. Houston Cofield for ProPublica

From the outside, Schwartz’s operation doesn’t look like a corporate empire. The headquarters of Skyline’s fast-growing nursing home network was a second-floor office above a pizza parlor in Wood-Ridge, New Jersey.

Schwartz entered the nursing home business in the late 2000s and formed Skyline to acquire and operate skilled nursing facilities, initially in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. He sold a Florida-based insurance business in 2015 for $22 million, allowing him to rapidly expand Skyline. By 2017, Skyline and the related companies Schwartz controlled cared for approximately 15,000 residents in roughly 100 facilities in 11 states.

In a 2017 deposition in a wrongful death suit in Philadelphia, Schwartz defended the care at his facilities as “superb” while distancing himself from day-to-day operations by saying he relied on facility-level administrators and nursing directors. The suit was settled without Schwartz admitting wrongdoing.

In the deposition, Schwartz minimized reports of staffing shortages and unpaid bills as simple business “disagreements.” Asked about the facility’s one-star federal staffing ratings from 2010 to 2014 — the lowest possible score under the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Five-Star system — Schwartz said he recalled having “a good star rating” and that his nursing homes had tried their hardest to provide as much staffing as possible, insisting that they were “very, very, very, very, very compliant” and that residents were “happy and satisfied.”

The collapse was swift. Skyline facilities failed to make payments for food and medical supplies, and cut hours for nursing home staff. At the same time, Schwartz began to siphon money from multiple sources — overbilling Medicaid and withholding millions of dollars in payroll taxes from workers’ paychecks but never sending the money to the IRS, he admitted later. What’s more, Schwartz paid himself $5 million as what one federal prosecutor described as a “ghost employee” at some of his facilities.

As conditions in the homes deteriorated, health officials in at least six states from Nebraska to Massachusetts seized or transferred control of his facilities or relocated residents. In South Dakota, a vice president who oversaw 18 Schwartz-owned nursing homes began sending increasingly desperate emails to state health officials, according to court records.

Debbie Menzenberg wrote in the emails that Schwartz’s son Louis, an executive officer for Skyline, had called her to say the state “has to do something — there is no money — he told me to discharge residents???”

Then Menzenberg’s emails to the state became more urgent:

“I need water paid at Bella Vista and Prairie Hills today or it will be SHUT OFF — Skyline is SILENT!!!”

“Disconnect notice came today for Pierre May 8 electric.”

“I NEED HELP!!!!!”

“CEO’s are aware of stuff going on!!!”

Neither Menzenberg nor Louis Schwartz could be reached for comment.

A court document showing emails from a person named Menzenberg, with the highlighted portion stating “I NEED HELP!!!!!” “CEO’s are aware of stuff going on!!!”
Debbie Menzenberg, a vice president who oversaw 18 Schwartz-owned nursing homes in South Dakota, sent desperate emails to state health officials seeking help as Skyline collapsed. Obtained and highlighted by ProPublica

A group of employees at Skyline nursing homes across the country later filed a lawsuit alleging that Skyline withheld more than $2 million in health insurance premiums from more than 1,000 workers’ paychecks but failed to provide coverage. That left some of his employees with denied health insurance claims and mounting medical bills.

Schwartz has not defended himself against the claim, and a lawyer for the employees has asked a judge to award a $2.4 million default judgment. The case remains pending in federal court in New Jersey.

One of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, an activities director at a nursing home in Arkansas, said that she was left with more than $50,000 in medical bills after surgery on her back and neck. She said she couldn’t pay the bills and that the debt ultimately wrecked her credit.

“They withheld over $1,000 from my paycheck for insurance premiums and did nothing with them except abscond with them,” said the employee, Margaret Gates.

Under Schwartz’s ownership, residents suffered — and some died.

In a lawsuit against Schwartz, Zelma Grissom’s family said the conditions at Hillview, the same facility where Doris Coulson was living, left residents without even basic care. The mother of six had entered the facility after brain surgery left her unable to move on her own and dependent on staff to turn her in bed.

Grissom’s son, LeVester Ivy, said Hillview appeared chronically short-staffed. One day, Ivy said, a wound-care nurse called the family into his mother’s room and showed them a severe pressure sore that had developed after Grissom hadn’t been turned regularly. Surgeons had to cut away infected tissue, leaving a large open wound. After that, he said, her health spiraled.

“She started getting infection after infection,” Ivy recalled.

During one late-night ambulance transfer, he said, an emergency medical worker quietly told him how his mother had arrived. “She pulled me to the side and told me how dirty and nasty, how wet she was,” Ivy said.

The family’s lawyers said she died of sepsis from the bedsores that Hillview caregivers allowed to become infected.

A judge in February 2023 ordered Schwartz to pay Grissom’s family $15.7 million after neither Schwartz nor any representative challenged the family’s wrongful death claim. Schwartz later tried to overturn the ruling, claiming poor health, lack of notice and that he was merely an investor with no role in operations, but a judge rejected the effort.

Ivy said the family sued Schwartz because “we wanted nobody else to go through the things we had to go through.” Schwartz has not paid the judgment, and the family’s lawyer said in an interview that he does not have enough information about Schwartz’s assets to try to recover the money.


The suffering described in cases like Coulson’s and Grissom’s was not part of the tax case against Schwartz that landed him in prison. But it loomed over the proceedings when he appeared for sentencing in federal court in Newark, New Jersey, last April. Schwartz had pleaded guilty to withholding $39 million in payroll taxes from his employees and failing to send the money to the IRS.

The investigation never determined where the money went. Prosecutors said they were not able to establish that Schwartz had used the money on a lavish lifestyle. But they said they never completed a forensic accounting of his finances, which moved money through more than 200 bank accounts. They said they believed Schwartz still controlled more than $50 million in assets.

An elderly woman in a wheelchair, wearing a long-sleeve pink shirt and green socks, holds a small brown dog in her lap. Two large drinking cups with lids and straws sit on the table in front of her.
Doris Coulson in an October 2014 photo with her Chihuahua, Paddy Cake. Coulon’s family filed a wrongful death suit against Skyline and Schwartz and a judge in 2020 awarded them nearly $19 million in damages. Courtesy of Melissa Coulson

His attorneys argued that his actions were not an attempt at personal enrichment but the result of a businessman who expanded too quickly, fell behind on bills and then made a series of financial decisions — some of them admittedly criminal. But, they argued, he was simply trying to save his company.

Schwartz apologized for his conduct and told U.S. District Judge Susan D. Wigenton that he “always tried to live the right way” and set a good example. But he acknowledged that he’d failed to do so in this instance.

Wigenton said she could not understand why prosecutors had agreed to a sentence of just a year and a day. Even years into the investigation, she noted, it remained unclear where much of the money had gone. And because so many of the letters submitted on Schwartz’s behalf described him as a brilliant businessman, Wigenton said the “number of layers and businesses and LLCs that were created” made it hard to see him as someone who had been fooled or confused.

“Not a single asset is in your name,” she said. “Not one.”

Wigenton said the case was not merely an abstract tax case, citing the collapse of Skyline’s nursing homes and the harm to patients. She said there was a need for deterrence in sentencing.

The judge sentenced Schwartz to three years in prison and ordered him to pay restitution of $5 million — the amount he had paid himself as a ghost employee — which he did. The remaining taxes were not part of the criminal sentence because prosecutors said they were used to fund his collapsing business rather than for personal enrichment. They said the IRS could try to recover the rest through a civil case.

Trump’s pardon wiped away Schwartz’s federal prison sentence — and likely any IRS effort to claw back the rest of the stolen taxes. But it did not affect a separate Arkansas state conviction for Medicaid fraud and tax evasion, in which Schwartz admitted submitting false and misleading information that inflated the Medicaid rates paid to his facilities in the state.

A judge in Little Rock had sentenced Schwartz to one year in state prison, ordered to run at the same time as his federal term. Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin, who had announced Schwartz’s conviction as a signature achievement, made clear after Trump’s pardon that the state prosecution stood on its own.

Schwartz, Griffin said at the time, owed the state of Arkansas nine months in prison and $1.8 million in restitution. A spokesman for Griffin said last week that, after making some payments — on schedule — Schwartz owed the state about $1.2 million, which must be fully repaid by April 2027.

One of the lobbyists whom Schwartz hired, Joshua Nass, worked to try to reduce Schwartz’s sentence in Arkansas. Nass declined to comment. He was later charged with attempting to extort $500,000 from a client and his son. Although the victims are not identified in the case, the circumstances match those of Schwartz.

Nass was released from federal custody after posting a $5 million bond. He has not yet responded to the charge. Prosecutors said in a court filing they were negotiating with Nass for a plea deal that could resolve the case without a trial.

Schwartz reported to an Arkansas prison on Dec. 29, creating an opportunity for the lawyers representing families who had won judgments against him. At the height of Skyline’s expansion, the company controlled nearly 1 in 10 nursing home beds in the state. But by the time families won their cases, Schwartz had relinquished or sold his Arkansas facilities, leaving no clear assets for lawyers to pursue.

Because Schwartz was in state custody again, lawyers could serve him with court papers and ask a judge to compel him to answer questions under oath about his finances — requiring him to disclose bank accounts, companies and other assets and to turn over financial records. Those proceedings are often the first step in tracing money and identifying property that might be used to satisfy a judgment. From there, attorneys could ask courts in other states to recognize and enforce the Arkansas judgments so they could pursue assets located elsewhere.

John Landis, an attorney for Reddick Law, which represents the Coulson and Grissom families, said he and another attorney representing yet another client with a judgment against Schwartz, contacted the state prison system to set up depositions of Schwartz. But the window proved too brief. The Arkansas parole board released Schwartz after just three weeks.

Before they could ask a single question, the chance to follow the money was gone.

The post A Nursing Home Owner Got a Trump Pardon. The Families of His Patients Got Nothing. appeared first on ProPublica.

2026-03-31 12:04
2026-03-30 05:00

When Ubokobong Amanam lost his fingers in an accident he teamed up with his brother John, a special effects artist, to design a prosthetic that suited him – now they run a thriving business

On a humid morning in Uyo, Nigeria, Ubokobong Amanam shows off the lifelike prosthetic where his fingers once were. The skin bears tiny wrinkles, and the nails are naturally shaped. Seven years ago, he was badly injured in a firework accident. Doctors could save him, but not his fingers.

The prosthetics available at the time were clumsy, poorly fitted and designed for bodies nothing like his.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 04:36

Twenty-two defendants, including intelligence agents and police, accused of committing crimes on behalf of Freemason mafia

Twenty-two people are to stand trial in France from Monday on charges of murder and other serious crimes centred on a masonic lodge accused of running hit squads.

Seven defendants – including former intelligence agents, soldiers and businessmen – face possible life sentences. Prosecutors allege the group carried out murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault and criminal conspiracy on behalf of a mafia network inside the Athanor lodge in the Paris suburb of Puteaux.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 04:12

It's unclear if the talks would be direct or indirect, and Washington and Tehran aren't commenting. This, as Iran warns the U.S. not to start ground operations.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 04:00

Drivers planning nearly 21m leisure journeys from Thursday to Monday despite soaring fuel prices, say experts

The four-day bank holiday weekend is expected to be the busiest Easter on the roads in four years, despite a surge in fuel prices caused by the conflict in the Middle East.

Drivers are planning nearly 21m leisure journeys between Thursday and Easter Monday, according to a study by the RAC and the traffic analytics specialists Inrix.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 04:00

New agreement delayed amid home secretary Shabana Mahmood’s demands for more interceptions of dinghies

A renewed deal between the UK and France to stop small boat Channel crossings has not yet been signed, with a day to go before the current one expires, raising questions about whether people smugglers will be able to act unimpeded from later this week.

Rishi Sunak and Emmanuel Macron announced the previous £468m deal on 10 March 2023, weeks before it came into force. The UK pays two-thirds of the cost of policing France’s northern border and the current agreement expires on Tuesday. Discussions on it began last July at the 37th UK-France summit and British officials travelled to Paris last week for another round of talks.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 03:34

Apple's 50th anniversary is this week — and Fast Company's Harry McCracken just published an 11,000-word oral history with some fun stories from Apple's earliest days and the long and winding road to its very first home computers: Steve Wozniak, cofounder, Apple: I told my dad when I was in high school, "I'm going to own a computer someday." My dad said, "It costs as much as a house." And I sat there at the table — I remember right where we were sitting — and I said, "I'll live in an apartment." I was going to have a computer if it was ever possible. I didn't need a house. Woz even remembers trying to build a home computer early on with a teenaged Steve Jobs and Bill Fernandez from rejected parts procured from local electronics companies. Woz designed it — "not from anybody else's design or from a manual. And Fernandez was one of those kids that could use a soldering iron." Bill Fernandez: The computer was very basic. It was working, and we were starting to talk about how we could hook a teletype up to it. Mrs. Wozniak called a reporter from the San Jose Mercury, and he came over with a photographer. We set up the computer on the floor of Steve Wozniak's bedroom. Well, the core integrated circuit that ran the power supply that I built was an old reject part. We turned on the computer, and the power supply smoked and burnt out the circuitry. So we didn't get our photos in the paper with an article about the boy geniuses. But within a few years Jobs and Wozniak both wound up with jobs at local tech companies. Atari cofounder Nolan Bushnell remembers that Steve Jobs "wasn't a good engineer, but he was a great technician. He was pristine in his ability to solder, which was actually important in those days." Meanwhile Allen Baum had shared Wozniak's high school interest in computers, and later got Woz a job working at Hewlett-Packard — where employees were allowed to use stockroom parts for private projects. ("When he needed some parts, even if we didn't have them, I could order them.") Baum helped with the Apple I and II, and joined Apple a decade later. Wozniak remembers being inspired to build that first Apple I by the local Homebrew Computing Club, people "talking about great things that would happen to society, that we would be able to communicate like we never did [before] and educate in new ways. And being a geek would be important and have value." And once he'd built his first computer, "I wanted these people to help create the revolution. And so I passed out my designs with no copyright notices — public domain, open source, everything. A couple of other people in the club did build it." But Woz and Jobs had even tried pitching the computer as a Hewlett-Packard product, Woz remembers: Steve Wozniak: I showed them what it would cost and how it would work and what it could do with my little demos. They had all the engineering people and the marketing people, and they turned me down. That was the first of five turndowns from Hewlett-Packard. Steve Jobs and I had to go into business on our own. In the end, Randy Wigginton, Apple employee No. 6 remembers witnessing Jobs, Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne the signing of Apple's founding contract, "which is pretty funny, because I was 15 at the time." And it was Allen Baum's father who gave Wozniak and Jobs the bridge loan to buy the parts they'd need for their first 500 computers. After all the memories, the article concludes that "Trying to connect every dot between Apple, the tiny, dirt-poor 1970s startup, and Apple, the $3.7 trillion 21st-century global colossus, is impossible." But this much is clear: The company has always been at its best when its original quirky humanity and willingness to be an outlier shine through. Mark Johnson, Apple employee No. 13: I was in Cupertino just yesterday. It's totally different. They own Cupertino now. Jonathan Rotenberg, who cofounded the Boston Computer Society in 1977 at age 13: People want to hate Apple, because it is big and powerful. But Apple has an underlying moral purpose that is immensely deep and expansive... Mike Markkula, the early retiree from Intel whose guidance and money turned the garage startup into a company: The culture mattered. People were there for the right reasons — to build something transformative — not just to make money. That alignment produced extraordinary results... Steve Wozniak: Everything you do in life should have some element of joy in it. Even your work should have an element of joy... When you're about to die, you have certain memories. And for me, it's not going to be Apple going public or Apple being huge and all that. It's really going to be stories from the period when humble people spotted something that was interesting and followed it I'll be thinking of that when I die, along with a lot of pranks I played. The important things.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 01:49

Four masked men entered Magnani Rocca Foundation villa, near Parma in northern Italy, and made off with artworks

Thieves stole paintings by Renoir, Cézanne and Matisse from a museum in Italy a week ago, police have said.

Four masked men entered the villa of the Magnani Rocca Foundation, near Parma in northern Italy, and made off with the artworks on the night of 22 March, a police spokesperson said, confirming a report on the Rai television network.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 01:49

Hi guys,I have a onewheel pint original, that is quarted and rewheeled, but the battery needs to be changed (I posted a couple months ago about this here). Given this I am out of a ride until I figure out the best course of action and I am debating between a battery change + bigger battery box and bumpers (~$650) or using that money towards a bigger upgrade.

I have been riding since 2021 (with battery change around 2023). Ive also added an enduro tire. I did not rewheel to change the top speed since I am not confident the board can handle it. I have been wanting to go faster and farther however. I tend to commute a little over 5 miles to my school (and another 5 back), 2-3 times a week in most weather. I also added a flared back footpad for comfort. I am very comfortable and confident on this ride, so much so that it often feels too slow.

Couple options:

(1) I am stuck on whether to change the battery to a pint x battery equivalent from battery brokers, and get pint x bumpers to fit (and rewheel again), or (2) to just buy a new pint x and transfer my tire and flared footpad over. The latter would let me go a bit faster.

(3) I am also tempted to use this opportunity to go for a bigger upgrade since it's been 5 years of riding. I have been looking at the GT/GTS but they are pricey. It also seems that on this sub, people are not too happy about them and there seems to be much enthusiasm over the Funwheel X7 (sport and LR), which I have just found out about and am considering (4). It looks very cool ! And a better price than GTS. But I am wondering how much I will need to modify/change out of the box? I have not done any vesc stuff; at most I have done the aforementioned changes (rewheel, battery change, tire change, footpad change). So I am willing and able to learn some things, but I am also not an engineer/cs person and feel a little intimidated by vesc upgrades.

I am curious what you guys think is a better route here! At the moment x7 Sport is available, while the LR is sold out. Hoping to have my ride worked out within the next month or so.

Money is sort of a factor in that I am willing to spend more for something that will last long term and will improve my commute and capabilities, but I'd like the best bang for my buck since I am on a student budget. It's my main mode of transportation so I am willing to budget for it.

Some relevant info is that I am F, 5'6'', 140lb but i'm strong (I lift heavy regularly).

Thanks in advance for your perspective!

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 01:01

Exclusive: Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Italy and Slovakia actively pursue regressive policies, watchdog finds

‘Assault on justice’: how far-right attacks are threatening rule of law in Europe

Governments in five EU member states are “consistently and intentionally” eroding the rule of law, Europe’s leading civil liberties group has warned, while democratic standards are deteriorating in six more, including historically strong democracies.

Drawing on evidence from more than 40 NGOs in 22 countries, the Civil Liberties Union for Europe (Liberties) described the governments of Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Italy and Slovakia as “dismantlers” that were actively weakening the rule of law.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 00:00

A huge rise in internet users under the age of 30 has fuelled an increase in online violence against women and girls with devastating real-life effects, activists say

Activists and lawyers in Africa are calling for urgent action to protect women, girls and boys as digital violence surges across the continent.

A massive rise in internet users, coupled with huge numbers of people aged under 30, has fuelled an increase in gendered online violence across the continent, according to experts, by giving perpetrators new tools to control and silence women and girls, and influence boys.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 00:00

The president may not be benefiting directly from betting markets, but he has encouraged a culture that treats politics like a casino floor

Odd things are happening in the markets. Last Monday, 15 minutes before Donald Trump posted an announcement that “productive talks” with Iran had taken place, oil traders placed half a billion dollars’ worth of bets on the future price of oil. Trump’s statement triggered a drop in crude oil prices, and it seems as if some people knew that the announcement was coming, and so a profitable wager was made. Do not be envious; some people are just born lucky.

We do not know if the transactions were made with prior knowledge of political developments, but it’s a hell of a coincidence. It all appears “abnormal for sure”, an oil analyst told the BBC.

Nesrine Malik is a Guardian columnist

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 00:00

Beijing fears American volatility more than American power.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 00:00

Why America needs the European Union.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-30 00:00

Authorize limited airstrikes but rule out ground forces.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 23:34

The Wall Street Journal reports that Rivian "just won a yearslong battle with car dealers in Washington state that threatens the model of how cars are sold." After fighting to sell its vehicles directly to buyers, Rivian threatened to take its case to voters with a ballot measure to permit direct sales. The dealers blinked. The state's dealer lobby not only dropped its opposition to a sales loophole for Rivian and rival EV-maker Lucid, but also encouraged lawmakers to approve one. The measure became law this month... New auto entrants like Rivian, and Tesla before it, have spent years contending with long-established U.S. state laws that require new cars to be sold through independent franchised dealers. The auto startups — typically makers of EVs — argue that they can offer a better experience by selling directly to consumers, much as Apple sells iPhones through its own stores and online. Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe has said the company is committed to direct-only sales because it's more profitable and gives the company control over how its vehicles are sold, marketed and maintained. The Washington compromise riled traditional automakers, including General Motors, Ford and Toyota, which lobbied against it, arguing it unfairly advantages startups. A trade group representing the automakers called it discriminatory and argued the exception could one day open the door to Chinese EV makers... German automaker Volkswagen is currently facing several lawsuits from dealers over its plan to sell new Scout vehicles directly to consumers. Dealers say independent franchises are vital to the car-buying process, creating competition between dealerships that keeps prices affordable for consumers, while providing valuable services such as repairs, warranty work and financing... Yet for Washington's dealers, the prospect of putting franchise laws up for a popular vote laid bare a tough reality: given the choice, many car buyers want the freedom to avoid dealerships. Rivian's polling, which the company shared with lawmakers, showed nearly 70% of respondents favored allowing direct sales when asked whether they would support manufacturers selling cars directly to consumers... The fight comes at a critical time for Rivian, which is launching a new, more affordable SUV in a bid to make consistent profits amid a downturn in U.S. EV sales... Rivian is able to directly sell cars in roughly half of U.S. states, but a number of them limit how many locations the company can operate. They can't disclose the price, though. For that, customers must go online. The article notes that "Following the win, Rivian executives are eyeing other states that, like Washington, ban direct sales but also allow ballot initiatives: Arkansas, Ohio, Oklahoma, Montana, Nebraska and South Dakota..." It adds that lawmakers (from both parties) in the state of Washington had said "they have long felt pulled between giving consumers more car-buying freedom and protecting dealers, essentially small-business owners who are vital to local economies — and politically powerful." But an executive at the Washington State Auto Dealers Association said dealers supported this new law partly because it protects them by barring future automakers from selling directly in the state, and by requiring Rivian and Lucid to adhere to the same regulations that govern how dealers operate.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 23:04

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 30.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 22:59

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for March 30 No. 553.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 22:36

This live blog has now closed. Our coverage of the US-Israel war on Iran and the wider crisis in the Middle East continues here

Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, has condemned Israel’s killing of three journalists in Lebanon on Saturday.

On his Telegram, Araghchi said the killings amounted to “targeted assassination” and “flagrant violation of international law”. He said they were a way of silencing “the voices of those who tell the truth”.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 22:00

Reporter Aisha Down explores the UK’s ‘phantom investments’ in AI, and the risk the government has taken in betting so heavily on the technology if it all goes bust

For years now, the UK has bet big on AI. As Keir Starmer put it last year, he wanted to ‘unleash AI’ to boost growth across the country.

Yet what has become of the billions promised in AI investment? Reporter Aisha Down charts the murky world of building projects behind schedule, vague spending commitments, and even vast sums being thrown at chips at risk of being out of date.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 21:58

After being down by as many as 19 on Sunday, Braylon Mullins retrieved a loose ball near midcourt in the waning seconds against Duke and hit a three-pointer from 35 feet away to take the lead.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 21:49

Tehran says it will confront any land attack, as Trump says regime’s export hub on Kharg island could be taken ‘very easily’

Iran has warned the US that it is prepared to confront any ground assault, accusing Washington of secretly planning a land attack while publicly seeking talks, as the war that has killed thousands of people and caused the biggest ever disruption to global energy supplies entered its second month.

In a message published to mark 30 days since the start of the war, the Iranian parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said: “The enemy signals negotiation in public, while in secret it plots a ground attack.”

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 21:37

Yes, this week YouTube and Meta were found negligent in a landmark case about social media addiction. But "it's still far from certain what this defeat will change," argues The Verge's senior tech and policy editor, "and what the collateral damage could be." If these decisions survive appeal — which isn't certain — the direct outcome would be multimillion-dollar penalties. Depending on the outcome of several more "bellwether" cases in Los Angeles, a much larger group settlement could be reached down the road... For many activists, the overall goal is to make clear that lawsuits will keep piling up if companies don't change their business practices... The best-case outcome of all this has been laid out by people like Julie Angwin, who wrote in The New York Times that companies should be pushed to change "toxic" features like infinite scrolling, beauty filters that encourage body dysmorphia, and algorithms that prioritize "shocking and crude" content. The worst-case scenario falls along the lines of a piece from Mike Masnick at Techdirt, who argued the rulings spell disaster for smaller social networks that could be sued for letting users post and see First Amendment-protected speech under a vague standard of harm. He noted that the New Mexico case hinged partly on arguing that Meta had harmed kids by providing end-to-end encryption in private messaging, creating an incentive to discontinue a feature that protects users' privacy — and indeed, Meta discontinued end-to-end encryption on Instagram earlier this month. Blake Reid, a professor at Colorado Law, is more circumspect. "It's hard right now to forecast what's going to happen," Reid told The Verge in an interview. On Bluesky, he noted that companies will likely look for "cold, calculated" ways to avoid legal liability with the minimum possible disruption, not fundamentally rethink their business models. "There are obviously harms here and it's pretty important that the tort system clocked those harms" in the recent cases, he told The Verge. "It's just that what comes in the wake of them is less clear to me". The article also includes this prediction from legal blogger/Section 230 export Eric Goldman. "There will be even stronger pushes to restrict or ban children from social media." Goldman argues "This hurts many subpopulations of minors, ranging from LGBTQ teens who will be isolated from communities that can help them navigate their identities to minors on the autism spectrum who can express themselves better online than they can in face-to-face conversations."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 21:20
Skill level query - replacing bearings

I've got a new set of bearings in my shopping cart w/TFL. I just watched a youtube on the replacement process and it's giving me pause. Am I gonna ruin my ride? I've found tire and grip tape replacement pretty easy. I'm decently mechanically inclined and can follow instructions well. Is a bearing replacement risky?

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 20:49

Younger conservatives say they are disappointed by Donald Trump’s decision to launch war against Iran. Key US politics stories from 29 March

A generational divide over the Iran war has emerged between older attendees and their political heirs at this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Texas, as the group’s leaders pleaded for unity ahead of a challenging midterm election year for Republicans.

Younger conservatives spoke of disappointment and even “betrayal” over Donald Trump’s launch of strikes against Iran, saying that the president’s actions run counter to his many pledges to oppose foreign entanglements.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 20:31
  • World No 2 seals Miami Open final 6-4, 6-4

  • Sinner becomes eighth man to complete feat

Jiri Lehecka entered his first Masters 1000 final at the Miami Open in the best serving form of his life. He had won every service game in the tournament, a feat previously achieved by eight men at this level. The ease with which he brushed aside all nine break points against him reflected his confidence.

It took two return games for Jannik Sinner to drag the Czech back down to earth. Ten minutes in, Sinner had already broken Lehecka’s unbreakable serve. As has usually been the case over the past few years, Sinner burst into the lead and refused to let it go.

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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-30 05:00

Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for March 30 #1023

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-30 05:01

Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for March 30, No. 1,745.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-30 05:01

Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for March 30, No. 757.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 20:55

"As long as the Americans seek Iran's surrender, our response is clear: Far be it from us to accept humiliation," Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, Iran's parliament speaker, said Sunday.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 20:00

The factories, which buy cheap crude and turn it into fuel, are struggling as higher oil prices threaten their razor-sharp margins

The towns that are the bulwark of China’s energy security can, at a moment of global crisis, appear deceptively quiet. Trucks carrying oil trundle along wide-open highways that have little traffic, while a few boarded-up shops in crumbling low-rise buildings hint at a long-forgotten local buzz.

A ramshackle noodle shop serving hand-pulled ribbons of dough was empty at lunchtime, save for a few construction workers and a teacher watching videos on Douyin, the social media platform, with his meal.

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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:46

"It's time to charge for access," argues a new opinion piece at The Register. Begging billion-dollar companies to fund open source projects just isn't enough, writes long-time tech reporter Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols: Screw fair. Screw asking for dimes. You can't live off one-off charity donations... Depending on what people put in a tip jar is no way to fund anything of value... [A]ccording to a 2024 Tidelift maintainer report, 60 percent of open source maintainers are unpaid, and 60 percent have quit or considered quitting, largely due to burnout and lack of compensation. Oh, and of those getting paid, only 26 percent earn more than $1,000 a year for their work. They'd be better paid asking "Would you like fries with that?" at your local McDonald's... Some organizations do support maintainers, for example, there's HeroDevs and its $20 million Open Source Sustainability Fund. Its mission is to pay maintainers of critical, often end-of-life open source components so they can keep shipping patches without burning out. Sentry's Open Source Pledge/Fund has given hundreds of thousands of dollars per year directly to maintainers of the packages Sentry depends on. Sentry is one of the few vendors that systematically maps its dependency tree and then actually cuts checks to the people maintaining that stack, as opposed to just talking about "giving back." Sentry is on to something. We have the Linux Foundation to manage commercial open source projects, the Apache Foundation to oversee its various open source programs, the Open Source Initiative (OSI) to coordinate open source licenses, and many more for various specific projects. It's time we had an organization with the mission of ensuring that the top programmers and maintainers of valuable open source projects get a cut of the tech billionaire pie. We must realign how businesses work with open source so that payment is no longer an optional charitable gift but a cost of doing business. To do that, we need an organization to create a viable, supportable path from big business to individual programmer. It's time for someone to step up and make this happen. Businesses, open source software, and maintainers will all be better off for it. One possible future... Bruce Perens wrote the original Open Source definition in 1997, and now proposes a not-for-profit corporation developing "the Post Open Collection" of software, distributing its licensing fees to developers while providing services like user support, documentation, hardware-based authentication for developers, and even help with government compliance and lobbying.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:45

I have been experiencing this issue for the past couple weeks. My pint is fully charged, have tried taking it for a ride through trials and it keeps shutting off while im riding. No firmware update or anything. Can someone help before I throw this thing in the lake.

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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

The architect of Ukraine's drone program Oleksandr Kamyshin told Holly Williams drone swarm technology that uses AI would provide a major advantage in the war with Russia, and there is an arms race for the technology. "Both countries are close. None got there yet," he told 60 Minutes.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

One day before the 2025 mid-air collision over Washington, D.C. that killed 67 people, two separate passenger jets had to take sudden action to avoid colliding with Army helicopters.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford provided the following statements for 60 Minutes' report Sunday, "Inside the Tower."

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

A former Reagan airport air traffic controller is speaking out about years of ignored warnings preceding the 2025 deadly midair collision that killed 67 people, saying "it worked until it didn't."

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

Drones, unmanned and remotely-controlled, have transformed the Ukrainian battlefield in the war with Russia. As warfare and technology evolves, the U.S. military is learning lessons from Ukraine.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

Son Doong, the world's largest cave passage — big enough to fit a skyscraper — is deep inside a Vietnamese jungle. Exploring the dark caverns, home to beautiful rock formations and a river, takes days.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

Vietnam's Son Doong, the world's largest cave passage, started its life millions of years ago as a crack the width of a piece of hair. Today, adventurers marvel at the surreal caverns in its depths.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

When American Airlines Flight 5342 crashed into the Potomac River in January 2025, it killed seven friends who had been on a hunting trip. Now, their widows are learning how to navigate grief together.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:33

This week's 60 Minutes takes viewers deep into the largest known cave passage in the world. The journey was one of the most physically demanding and visually stunning assignments of Scott Pelley's long career.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 19:33

Iran is launching deadly drone strikes on U.S. forces and allies in the Middle East. The same weapons have been used for years in Ukraine, where drones have transformed warfare.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:19
Built some backyard features today

Had some scrap wood from a home renovation so a Sunday well spent! The kickers ramp is probably too big for now haha it’s 16” tall at the peak but the skinny is super fun!

submitted by /u/earnestgibbons
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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:08

Levi Vargas, 30, was competing in Baker to Vegas race through Mojave desert as US south-west faces extreme heat

Los Angeles county sheriff’s deputy Levi Vargas died on Saturday after a medical emergency while participating in an annual relay race through the Mojave desert. He was 30 years old.

Vargas had been competing at the Baker to Vegas Challenge Cup relay race, which follows a 120-mile (193km) course from Baker, California, to Las Vegas, Nevada, through the Mojave desert. Several law enforcement agencies send 20-runner teams annually to compete in the race.

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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 19:07

Hey y'all, it's been a while since I've posted here but I'm coming back in a time of need. I just went through the installation process for the OWIE chip upgrade on my 4212/4155 XR. Everything went along smoothly, and eventually I got the board closed back up. The problem is that the board simply doesn't want to move at all, no matter how I press the footpad.

I'm not getting any error codes on the power LED, the board shows up fine in the official app, and I can see that board locking is disabled in the Owie status page, along with having all of the cell voltages and other information displayed as normal.

Has anyone else run into something like this before? Any direction at all would be appreciated.

submitted by /u/GoldenAppleGuy
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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 19:01
  • Braylon Mullin’s last-gasp heave seals shock win

  • Michigan face Arizona for place in national final

Braylon Mullins sank a desperation three-pointer with 0.4 seconds left to give UConn an astonishing 73-72 victory over top-seeded Duke on Sunday, earning the Huskies a spot in the Final Four after they rallied from a 15-point first-half deficit.

The Blue Devils led by three with 10 seconds left before UConn’s Silas Demary Jr made one of two free throws to cut the margin to two. With Duke playing keep-away to prevent the Huskies from fouling, Cayden Boozer’s pass near midcourt was deflected, and after UConn came up with the ball, Mullins made a shot from well behind the three-point line.

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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 18:47
  • Sarah Strong stars as Huskies go for 13th national title

  • UCLA book Final Four place after rallying past Duke

All-America forward Sarah Strong scored 21 points, Blanca Quiñonez added 20 and defending national champion UConn beat Notre Dame 70-52 on Sunday, sending coach Geno Auriemma and the Huskies to their 25th Final Four.

The Huskies (38-0), who have won 54 games in a row, clinched the first spot for the Final Four in Phoenix. They will be going for their 13th national championship.

Continue reading...

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 18:25
GT-S for sale

I have a GT-S for sale. Am I able to post the details here in this sub?

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

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 18:19
Where does this go??

we are vescing XR classic and don't know where this black wire is supposed to go!! We are assuming it is for the power?!? Can someone help?!

submitted by /u/Extension-Quail6504
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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 18:19

Project Hail Mary has now grossed $300.8 million globally after earning another $54.1 million this weekend from 86 markets, reports Variety, noting that after just nine days it's now Amazon MGM's highest-grossing film ever. And last weekend it had the best opening for a "non-franchise" movie in three years, adds the Associated Press — the best since 2023's Oppenheimer: Project Hail Mary, which cost nearly $200 million to produce... is on an enviable trajectory. Its second weekend hold was even better than that of Oppenheimer, which collected $46.7 million in its follow-up frame. But the movie is based on a book by The Martian author Andy Weir, described by one news outlet as "a former software engineer and self-proclaimed 'lifelong space nerd'... known for his realistic and clear-eyed approach to scientifically technical stories." Project Hail Mary has plenty of real science in it, whether it be space mathematics, physics, or astrobiology... The film's namesake project is even comprised of the space programs of other nations, such as Roscosmos from Russia, the Chinese space program, and the European Space Agency... The story relies on work NASA has done regarding exoplanets, or planets outside our solar system... [This includes a nearby star named Tau Ceti approximately 12 light years from Earth which is orbited by four planets — two once thought to be in "the habitable zone" where liquid water can exist.] Tau Ceti has long been the setting used by sci-fi authors and storytellers. Isaac Asimov used it for his Robot series. Arthur C. Clarke's "Rama" spacecraft came across a mysterious tetrahedron in the Tau Ceti system. Authors Ursula K. Le Guin and Kim Stanley Robinson also set stories in Tau Ceti, and it also serves as the extrasolar setting of the 1968 Jane Fonda film Barbarella. Most recently, the Bungie video game Marathon is set in the far-off system, serving as part of the background story for the extraction shooter, about a large-scale plan to colonize the Tau Ceti system. The movie also mentions 40 Eridani A, according to the article, a real star about 16 light-years away that was said to be orbited by the fictional planet Vulcan, home to Star Trek's Mr. Spock. It's also mentioned in Frank Herbert's Dune as the star system of the planets Ix and Richese ("noted for their machine culture and miniaturisation," according to the Stellar Australis site's "Project Dune" page). And in a video on IMAX's YouTube channel, the film's directors explain how for a crucial scene they used non-visible-light photography, which is also an important part of modern astronomy. "Even the credits incorporate real astrophotography into the final moments," the article points out, using the work of award-winning Australian astrophotographer Rod Prazeres. "The only difference between his work of capturing space data in images and what ended up on the big screen was that he gave them 'starless versions' of his photographs to make it easier to place credit text over them." Prazeres wrote on his web site that he was touched the producers "wanted the real thing... In a world where CGI and AI are everywhere, it meant a lot..."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 18:11

The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem said it was "the first time in centuries" that heads of the church were unable to celebrate Palm Sunday Mass at the sacred site.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 17:30

PM will also cite Iran war as reason to stick with Labour, as party adopts new slogan: ‘Pride in Britain’

Keir Starmer will say that a vote for Reform UK will put at risk progress Labour is making on the cost of living, arguing that Britain’s values are being tested in a volatile world.

Launching the party’s local elections campaign with a new slogan: “Pride in Britain”, Starmer will urge voters to stay the course with Labour. A dire set of results are predicted for the party in Wales, Scotland and English councils, especially in the north-east of England and London.

Continue reading...

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 17:15

"Scientists have created a microscopic QR code so tiny it can only be seen with an electron microscope," reports Science Daily. It's "smaller than most bacteria and now officially a world record." "But this isn't just about size; it's about durability. By engraving data into ultra-stable ceramic materials, the team has opened the door to storing information that could last for centuries or even millennia without needing power or maintenance." Scientists at TU Wien, working with data storage company Cerabyte, produced a QR code measuring just 1.98 square micrometers... officially confirmed and recorded in the Guinness Book of Records... Each pixel measures just 49 nanometers, which is about ten times smaller than the wavelength of visible light. As a result, the pattern is completely invisible under normal conditions and cannot be resolved using visible light. However, when viewed with an electron microscope, the QR code can be clearly and reliably read. The storage capacity is also impressive. More than 2 terabytes of data could fit within the area of a single A4 sheet of paper using this approach... This work points toward a more sustainable future for data storage, where information can be preserved securely for the long term with minimal energy use. "We live in the information age, yet we store our knowledge in media that are astonishingly short-lived," says Alexander Kirnbaue (from the thin film materials science division at Vienna's Tu Wein research university). "With ceramic storage media, we are pursuing a similar approach to that of ancient cultures, whose inscriptions we can still read today..." "We now aim to use other materials, increase writing speeds, and develop scalable manufacturing processes so that ceramic data storage can be used not only in laboratories but also in industrial applications."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 17:07

Marsupial escaped from enclosure at Wisconsin’s Sunshine Farm on Wednesday after he was spooked by stray dogs

How does a kangaroo escape a petting zoo?

It’s not the opening line to a dad joke. If you’re Chesney the kangaroo, you scale an 8ft (2.5-meter) fence and go on the lam for three days, giving your keeper sleepless nights and sending residents of a small Wisconsin town on a search that would end happily on Saturday.

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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 16:32

Model posted pictures of herself naked and ‘in her full power’ to celebrate Mother’s Day, before Meta took them down for breaching nudity guidelines

The model Erin O’Connor has spoken out about the need for social media platforms to apply “clearer, more context-sensitive guidelines” after Instagram repeatedly removed two nude photographs she had posted on Mother’s Day, celebrating her heavily pregnant body.

The photos – which were removed, reinstated and then removed again by the platform were taken in 2014 when O’Connor, who is 48, was eight and half months’ pregnant with her son Albert.

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2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 16:07

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 16:01

Luke Grimes leads the Yellowstone sequel.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 15:57
New Pint X Battery low voltage

I originally thought the battery might be bad because I stupidly read it as 35.3V, not mV. I was able to tap my multimeter inline while charging & read 53.5V which is good. Yes, my wire/connector setup was a little scetchy😬👇🏼

submitted by /u/MayTheFloatBeWithYou
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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 15:50
why sidewalk why?

ok guysh im back once again with a tale of woe.

i wish i had shoulder pads and will be going to the goodwill after i post and im recharged.

put in work this morning on the pint no probs, coasted round and round in circles handing out stickers and picking up litter, thats kinda what i do with my spare time

decided to go check out the skate park and took the path. the path with the sign is perfect its the sidewal that got me

i was going 9mph when i didnt pay attention for a half second and was sent due to a 45 degree laid piece of raised sidewalk directly into the wall shoulder first.

im still standing just not as handsomely as the wall as it didnt budge and im still seeing stars a bit

i had to pick myself up and float home which i did after making the skate park

i lost count of my motorcycles and had 4 real harleys

they never hurt me yet i quit riding them

this thing hurts me and i beg for more

i am already a crazy person but still...

saw some cool scoots zipping around the skate park too

shiny side up guysh !

namaste !!

the sign picture was taken after the smash by about an hour or more im fine really

sore, i will admit i am a bit sore in places that were not but thats ok i live to fight/float another day !

submitted by /u/Handsomescout
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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 15:48

Utility-scale solar construction... by robots! It's "one of the largest real-world demonstrations," notes Electrek, with 100 MW of capacity installed by the "Maximo" robots from AES, one of the world's top power companies. Maximo uses AI "to automate the heavy lifting of solar panels and accelerate solar installation," according to their web page, which shows a video of Maximo at work installing a vast field of solar panels in Kern County, California. With assistance from Nvidia, the Maximo team could "develop, test and refine robotic capabilities through physics-based simulation and AI driven modeling before deploying updates in the field," reports Electrek, and they're aiming for a full GW of solar generating capacity: After completing the first half of the Bellefield complex last summer, Maximo engineers went into a higher gear, with the latest version 3.0 robots consistently surpassing an installation rate of one module per minute, with construction crews installing as many as 24 solar panel modules per hour, per person. If that sounds fast, that's because it is. At full tilt, the latest Maximo robot-equipped crews have nearly doubled the output of traditional installation methods at similar solar locations throughout Southern California. "Reaching 100 MW is an important milestone for Maximo and for the role robotics can play in solar construction," explains Chris Shelton, president of Maximo. "It demonstrates that field robotics can move beyond experimentation and deliver consistent results at utility scale. As solar deployment continues to accelerate globally, technologies that improve installation speed, quality and reliability will become increasingly important...." Like just about every other business that demands a high degree of physical labor, the construction industry is facing huge labor shortages, making machines like Maximo that provide real efficiency gains welcome additions to the job site. "The combination of AI, vision, robotics and simulation driven engineering reduced development and validation timelines," the Maximo team said in a statement, "and increased confidence in field performance as the robotic fleet scaled."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-29 20:04
2026-03-29 15:39

If the now six-week partial shutdown continues after the weekend, it will become the longest of any shutdown

The shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the fourth-largest agency in the US government, became the longest partial shutdown in US history on Sunday.

If the now six-week partial shutdown continues after the weekend, it will also become the longest of any shutdown, surpassing the impasse late last year that dragged on for 43 days.

Continue reading...

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 15:37

Democratic Rep. Jim Himes accused President Trump of lying about U.S. negotiations with Iran on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan."

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 15:33

Jerome Adams, who served as surgeon general in President Trump's first term, said that "similar to cigarettes," the government needs to point out that social media platforms "are incredibly addictive."

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 15:32

Senator’s comments come amid growing divisions within the party, which he says has ‘too small of a coalition’

Cory Booker, the Democratic senator from New Jersey, renewed his calls for new leadership of the Democratic party, saying the party has “failed this moment”.

“As a whole, our party has failed this moment,” Booker said on Sunday. “I’ve called for a generational renewal, because this left-right divide is killing our country and our adversaries know it.” He also said that “purity tests” within the party have led to more division in the US.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 15:10

Congress has yet to approve funding for the Department of Homeland Security, which has been shut down for over 40 days.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 14:59

So I know about the Friday night ride thing and went down there once. Idk not a single person said a word to me I rolled up and was like hey what's going on and was looked at like I was an alien 👽 and met with silence so I left I guess my question is this just a bunch of people who already know eachother or whatever. I have my group of friends but not any that are willing to and may not be in the position to buy a wheel so I just ride by myself all the time. Anyway I'm sure there's a bunch of chill people in the community o yeah that same day I did meet a pretty chill guy thanks btw sorry I forgot your name, waiting to ride on his uni in a random spot he knew about but my batt was dead by then.

submitted by /u/J_dizz420
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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 14:45

Health secretary still confident of success but critics say scrapping of NHS England has been ‘a total car crash’

In the Great Hall at the University of East London last Wednesday, the perennially upbeat Wes Streeting was exuding even greater positivity than usual. After years of neglect under the Conservatives, he said, the NHS was starting to revive thanks to Labour’s medicine.

In a bravura performance in front of an audience of health service bosses, policy experts and student nurses in their blue and green uniforms, Streeting reeled off a long list of improvements in his 20-month tenure as health secretary.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 14:34

"What happens when you can describe the social experience you want and have it built for you...?" asks Bluesky? "We've just started experimenting, but we're sharing it now because we want you to build alongside us." Called "Attie" — because it's built with Bluesky's decentralized publishing framework, AT Protocol (which is open source) — the new assistant turns natural language prompts into social feeds, without users having to know how to code. (It's part of Bluesky's mission to "develop and drive large-scale adoption of technologies for open and decentralized public conversation.") Engadget reports: On the Attie website, examples include prompts like, "Show me electronic music and experimental sound from people in my network" or "Builders working on agent infrastructure and open protocol design." "It feels more like having a conversation than configuring software," [writes Bluesky's former CEO/current chief innovation officer, Jay Graber, in a blog post]. "You describe the sort of posts you want to see, and the coding agent builds the feed you described." Graber added that Attie is a separate app from Bluesky and users don't have to use the new AI assistant if they don't want to. However, since Attie and Bluesky were built on the same framework, it could mean there will be some cross-app implementation between the two or any other app built on the AT Protocol. "Attie is open for beta signups today, and we'll be sharing what we learn along the way," Graber writes in the blog post. "To learn more about Attie, visit: Attie.AI. Come help us find out what this can be." The blog post warns that "Right now, AI is undermining human agency at the same time it's enhancing it," since "The proliferation of low-quality AI-generated content is making public social networks noisier and less trustworthy..." And in a world where "signal is getting harder to find... The major platforms aren't trying to fix this problem." They're using AI to increase the time users spend on-platform, to harvest training data, and to shape what users see and believe through systems they can't inspect and didn't choose. We think AI should serve people, not platforms... An open protocol puts this power directly in users' hands. You can use it to build your own feeds, create software that works the way you want it to, and find signal in the noise. We built the AT Protocol so anyone could build any app they imagine on top of it, but until recently "anyone" really meant "anyone who can code." Agentic coding tools change that. For the first time, an open protocol can be genuinely open to everyone... The Atmosphere [Bluesky's interoperable ecosystem] is an open data layer with a clearly defined schema for applications, which makes it uniquely well-suited for coding agents to build on... Bluesky will continue to evolve as a social app millions of people rely on. Attie will be where we experiment with agentic social. AI is an accelerant on whatever it's applied to. I want it to accelerate decentralizing social and putting power back in users' hands. But I don't think the most interesting things built on AT Protocol will come from us. They're going to come from everyone who picks up these tools and starts building.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 14:27

Fresh attacks on Red Sea shipping would be devastating – but the Iranian proxy has reasons to be cautious

The true significance of the long-awaited entry of Yemen’s Houthis into the Iran war depends on whether the Tehran-backed proxy group is intending to send a few missiles and drones from a distance towards Israel or will instead capitalise on its proximity to the narrow Bab al-Mandab strait to effectively close off the Red Sea to shipping, just as Iran has in effect shut the strait of Hormuz.

The combined effect of both waterways being shut to commercial traffic from countries that neither the Iranians nor Houthis favour would be devastating. Napoleon Bonaparte’s remark that “the policy of a state lies in its geography” has never seemed more apt.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 14:15

On this "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" broadcast, Border Czar Tom Homan and former U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams join Margaret Brennan.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 14:02

Officers fired pepper balls and teargas into group of about 150 on Saturday night, arresting those who did not disperse

Police arrested dozens of protesters and shot teargas into a crowd on Saturday night at a No Kings protest in Los Angeles.

The conflict is the latest of many that have taken place outside the Metropolitan detention center, which has become a focal point of protests since the Trump administration launched an immigration offense on Los Angeles last year.

Continue reading...

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 13:57

The following is the transcript of the interview with Rep. Jim Himes, Democrat of Connecticut, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 29, 2026.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 13:57

The following is the transcript of the interview with Jerome Adams, surgeon general in the first Trump administration, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 29, 2026.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 13:57

The following is the transcript of the interview with Iran policy analyst Karim Sadjadpour and former CENTCOM commander and CBS News contributor and retired Gen. Frank McKenzie that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 29, 2026.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 13:45

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul addresses President Trump's decision to launch strikes against Iran, the new Department of Homeland Security secretary and the 2028 election.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 13:35
Pintv drop in kit footpad connector backwards?

I'm trying to install the footpad and motor connector into the box and the keyway for the footpad connector is opposite the opening in the box. Does that mean the connector was placed backwards at the factory? I'm assuming I'll need to desolder and reverse?

submitted by /u/Glittering_Potato397
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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 13:22

When The Verge saw a model unit of the T1, the specs and pricing didn't match up with what's still being advertised on the Trump Mobile website.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 13:18

Millions of people marched on Saturday against Trump and his administration. While the single-day protest has ended, there are other ways, used in other movements throughout history, to keep the momentum going

More than 8 million people showed up across 3,300 No Kings protests on Saturday, calling for an end to the war in Iran, immigration agents in their communities and what they see as Trump’s creeping authoritarianism. Organizers say it’s the greatest number of protests in a single day in US history.

But movement scholars say social change doesn’t begin and end with one protest. It takes activism at the local and national level, and in a variety of forms, to bring about change.

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2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 13:00

Conflict shows signs of entering new, more dangerous phase as additional 3,500 US troops arrive in the Middle East

US lawmakers responded to reports that the Pentagon is preparing for weeks of ground operations in Iran, as thousands of US troops assemble in the Middle East and the conflict showed signs of entering a new, more dangerous phase.

Officials told the Washington Post that a ground operation in Iran could be limited to raids by special operations forces and infantry troops, but it was unclear whether Donald Trump would approve any of the Pentagon’s plans.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:56

Exclusive: Health secretary’s pledges in doubt as analysis shows health service will not deliver key improvements

The NHS is set to miss key targets to shorten waiting times for help at A&E, cancer care and planned hospital treatment, leaving millions of patients facing persistently long delays.

The health service in England will not deliver a series of milestone improvements in its performance that ministers demanded it achieve by the time the fiscal year ends on Tuesday, a Guardian analysis of the NHS’s most recent data has found.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:45

The following is the transcript of the interview with Tom Homan, Trump administration border czar, that aired on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" on March 29, 2026.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:34

In many rural areas, America's online shoppers can wait half a week or more for deliveries. But Amazon started a $4 billion "rural delivery push" last year, reports Bloomberg, and has now cut delivery times to under 24 hours for 1 in 5 rural and small-town households, with 48-hour delivery to 62% of rural households. The payoff could be huge. Rural shoppers in the US collectively spend $1 trillion a year on clothing, electronics, household goods and other items, representing about 20% of retail purchases excluding cars and gasoline, according to Morgan Stanley. Amazon aims to recondition those shoppers to expect quick delivery, which would play to its strengths and make the company top-of-mind for online purchases... "Rural America is often overlooked," said Sky Canaves, an analyst at EMarketer Inc. who tracks online sales. "This is the opportunity Amazon is trying to seize because e-commerce growth is getting harder to come by...." Amazon's rural push will require a lot more rural business owners willing to make deliveries... Today, Amazon delivers more parcels overall than UPS and FedEx, which are both shedding workers and shrinking their delivery networks, including in rural areas. By picking up the slack, Amazon is expected to become the largest parcel carrier in the US — surpassing the postal service — in 2028, according to the shipping software company Pitney Bowes. Amazon currently delivers two of three orders itself. For rural shoppers, the most visible change will be fewer brown UPS trucks, fewer packages delivered by mail carriers and more small business owners pulling up in their minivans. Amazon's relationship with America's postal service "has become rocky following a dispute over contract terms," notes the Wall Street Journal. But they also share an interesting calculation by Marc Wulfraat, president of MWPVL International, a supply-chain consultancy monitoring the e-commerce company's logistics network. . At Amazon's current pace of constructing 40 to 50 new delivery hubs each year, he estimates Amazon will be able to ship packages to every single U.S. ZIP Code within four years.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:30

The United States’ collapse in a 5-2 loss to Belgium made clear that the gap between the sides in 2014 has yet to narrow

Mauricio Pochettino was literally unmoved.

To his left and right, his assistants pumped their fists, clapped their hands, rose to celebrate. Not Pochettino. After Weston McKennie put the US ahead with an end run around the Belgian defense that freed him up at the far post to tap the ball past Senne Lammens in the 39th minute, Pochettino just sat there, stoically, hunched forward in his seat, two fingers to his mouth.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:30

Looking to avoid an endless scroll? Check out these essential Hulu movie picks for a guaranteed good night in.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:27

Weak and sick mammal has become stuck in shallow bays and experts say prognosis ‘doesn’t look good’

The fate of a humpback whale stuck in shallow bays off Germany’s Baltic coast hangs in the balance after it became stranded for a third time.

The roughly 10-metre-long (33ft) mammal appeared weakened and sick on Sunday and was struggling to find a route back to the Atlantic when it ran into fresh difficulty.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:25

The US health secretary says he is a big fan of peptides. Many are promising drugs, but the only way to know their utility is proper clinical trials

Robert F Kennedy Jr, the US health secretary, is a chaotic person, but his Make America Healthy Again (Maha) agenda tends to follow a predictable logic. Large-scale, mandatory public health interventions – such as childhood vaccine requirements – are generally treated with suspicion and undermined. Personal choice – to drink unpasteurised milk, for example – is to be unleashed, and unburdened by regulation. In theory, Maha promises freedom and autonomy; in practice it tends to replace the precautionary principle with exhortations for individuals to “do your own research”, and sidelines scientific expertise in favour of “wellness” hucksters and profiteers.

This is particularly obvious in Mr Kennedy’s recent claims that he will open up the sale of “about 14” injectable peptide drugs to the public. Peptides are molecules often used by our bodies for sending signals – so there are many kinds of peptides, and the safety and efficacy of each is a separate question. The widely used “weight-loss jab” drugs are peptides but so are the toxic compounds in snake venom that dissolve living cells. Mr Kennedy is likely to be referring to a subset of 17 peptides restricted by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2023 due to “potential significant safety risks”. None have been proved to be safe or effective for human use, so there is no clear argument for reversing the decision.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 12:00

A few minutes with your Vizio TV's settings can make it look even better.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 11:35

Police say seven people sustained ‘serious but not life-threatening injuries’ and they are ‘keeping an open mind about motives’

A man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after a car struck several pedestrians on one of Derby’s busiest streets.

Derbyshire police said seven people were injured, sustaining “a range of serious but not life-threatening injuries”, in the incident in Friar Gate at about 9.30pm on Saturday. The force said that “contrary to online speculation” there were no deaths.

It said detectives were working alongside officers from counter-terrorism policing but were not yet designating the incident as a terror attack and were “keeping an open mind about the potential motives”.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-29 10:01

Russia’s hybrid war in the Western Balkans in 2026 reflects a mature strategy. Rather than seeking escalation, Moscow seeks position. It is a case study in a long‑term, managed, condition. And, for Moscow, a favourable one. Western Easter is approaching, which in Sweden serves as a reliable signal that spring has finally arrived. At long last. Spring, in turn, marks the moment to sitta på husknuten — an informal Swedish expression referring to sitting by the sun‑facing side of the house and absorbing the first sustained warmth of the season. Having just returned from Serbia, this ritual shall be accompanied by plum brandy. The

The post Stably Unstable: The Architecture of Russia’s Hybrid War in the Western Balkans (2026) appeared first on Lima Charlie World.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-29 10:00

Other commenters helped me diagnose the problem. When I couldn’t afford the solution, someone I knew only by his handle offered to pay

As a pensioner, money is always tight, so I was distraught when the secondhand car I’d recently bought began overheating. I took it to three or four different mechanics, none of whom were able to diagnose the problem.

Desperate, I searched online for solutions. On car forums, several commenters suggested tackling the potential problems that would be cheapest to fix, in a process of elimination. Having replaced the thermostat, radiator coolant, engine oil and filter, and transmission fluid, the principal suspect was down to the radiator. So I contacted my carmaker, who quoted me $1,200 for a replacement – way more than I could afford, as I only had $500 left in the bank. I was hit with the sinking feeling that I had just blown my life savings on a lemon.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-29 09:17

U.S. strikes on Iranian infrastructure are unlikely to achieve compliance goals. The more probable response is indirect escalation through asymmetric means, calibrated to impose cost without inviting immediate, decisive retaliation. This is a working hypothesis informed by conversations with clients over the past two weeks. It does not rely on privileged insight, but on a reading of incentives and emerging patterns. The analysis is my own. The current dynamic is anchored in a very explicit escalation signal. Donald J. Trump has issued a 48-hour ultimatum demanding that Iran fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz “without threat”, warning that failure to

The post Working Hypothesis: Europe Seeks Relative Advantage from US Overextension appeared first on Lima Charlie World.

2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-29 09:00

I rejected the church as a teen. But I’ve lately felt called to look for God – and my understanding has changed

Two months into the pandemic, I began a practice I called “When I look for God”. With so much changing so quickly, I was looking to find space during each day when I could ground myself amid the uncertainty. The previous five years had opened up a spiritual yearning spurred by a life-shifting moment while surfing when God became profoundly known to me. These encounters of grace began to happen with some frequency. I was both compelled and confused by this new awakening.

God has always been elusive to me. I grew up Catholic, attended church on Sundays, went to catechism. I was baptized as an infant, received my first communion at seven, and was confirmed at 11. None of this brought me any closer to God.

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2026-03-30 16:04
2026-03-29 08:57

Donald Trump and his administration’s haphazard approach to alliance discipline, strategic continuity, and the maintenance of American primacy supplied the final lesson: Europe can no longer rely on the American security order. Sweden, and Europe more broadly, may yet create something beautiful out of the Ukrainian war: a client state worth keeping, and a cornerstone in a new era of European-controlled spheres of influence. Serious powers do not expend resources for isolated effects. A weapons transfer should not merely strengthen a client state in the field. It should bind that client state to Europe through spare-parts dependency, training pipelines, software control, doctrinal

The post Mission Profile: Soft Power as the New Dominion appeared first on Lima Charlie World.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 08:00

Commentary: Apple's $599 iPhone 17E has a lot of value, but you might be better off with an older iPhone at a similar price.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-29 07:20

Brent crude jumps 51% since start of March and gold suffers fifth-largest monthly fall in 50 years

The Brent crude oil price is on track for its biggest monthly gain on record in March after the Iran war caused mayhem in the markets.

Brent crude, the international benchmark, has climbed by 51% since the start of March, LSEG data shows, beating the previous monthly record of 46% in September 1990 after Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, leading to the first Gulf war.

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2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-29 07:04

Bell Labs "created many of the foundational innovations of the modern age," writes Jon Gertner, author of The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation — from transistors and telecommunications satellites to Unix and the C programming language. But what was the secret to its success? he asks in a new article for the Wall Street Journal. Start with its lucky arrival in a "problem-rich" environment, suggests Arno Penzias, winner of one of Bell Labs' 11 Nobel Prizes: It was Bell Labs' responsibility, in other words, to create technologies for designing, expanding and improving an unruly communications network of cables and microwave links and glass fibers. The Labs also had to figure out ways to create underwater conduits, as well as switching centers that could manage the growing number of customers and escalating amounts of data.... Money mattered, too. Being connected to AT&T, the largest company in the world, was an advantage. The Labs' budget was enormous, and accounting conventions allowed its parent company to make huge and continuing investments in R & D. The generous funding, moreover, allowed scientists and engineers to buy and build expensive equipment — for instance, anechoic chambers to create the world's quietest rooms... The most fortunate part of Bell Labs' situation, however, was that in being attached to a monopoly it could partake in long-term thinking... Without competition nipping at its heels, Bell Labs engineers had the luxury of working out difficult ideas over decades. The first conceptualization of a cellular phone network, for instance, came out of the Labs in the late 1940s; it wasn't until the late 1970s that technicians began testing one in Chicago to gauge its potential. The challenge of deploying these technologies was immense. (The regulatory hurdles were formidable, too....) The article also credits the visionary management of Mervin Kelly — who fortunately also "had access to funding in a decade when most executives and universities didn't" to hire the brightest people. (By the early 1980s Bell Labs employed about 25,000 researchers, technicians and support staff, with an annual budget of $2 billion — roughly $7 billion in today's dollars.) "The Labs' involvement in World War II suggested to Kelly that an exciting postwar era of electronics was approaching, but that the technical problems would be so complex that they required a mix of expertise — not just physicists, but material scientists, chemists, electrical engineers, circuitry experts and the like." At Bell Labs, Kelly would sometimes handpick teams and create such a mix, as was the case for the transistor invention in the late 1940s. He came to see innovation arising not from like-minded or similarly trained people conversing with each other, but from a friction of ideas and approaches. It meant hiring researchers who had different personalities and favored a range of experimental angles. It also meant personally designing a campus in Murray Hill where departments were spread apart, so that scientists and engineers would be forced to walk, mingle and engage in serendipitous conversations and debate ideas. Meanwhile, under Kelly, the Labs focused on hiring people who were deeply curious, not just smart. Kelly saw it as his professional duty to do far more than what was expected, with his laboratory and vast resources, to create new technologies... The breakup of AT&T's monopoly, which led to a steady shrinking of Bell Labs' staff, budget and remit, shows us that no matter how forward looking your employees and managers may be, they will not necessarily see the future coming. It likewise suggests that technological progress is too unpredictable for one organization, no matter how powerful or smart, to control. Famously, Bell Labs managers didn't see value in the Arpanet, which eventually led to today's internet. And yet, for at least five decades, Bell Labs created a blueprint for the global development of communications and electronics. In understanding why it did so, I tend to think its ultimate secret may be hiding in plain sight. The secret has to do with Bell Labs' structure — not only being connected to a fabulously profitable monopoly, but being connected to a company that could move theoretical and applied research into a huge manufacturing division that made telecom equipment (at Western Electric) and ultimately into a dynamic operating system (the AT&T network)... Scientists and engineers at the Labs understood their ideas would be implemented, if they passed muster, into the huge system its parent company was running. Bell Labs racked up about 30,000 patents, according to the article, and celebrated its 100th anniversary last April. It is now part of Finland-based Nokia.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-29 06:00

Aggressive strategy and loss in the trial highlight a problem for tech firms: a widespread distrust of social media companies

When Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, sought to defend itself in the landmark social media addiction lawsuit alleging its products caused personal injury to a young user, it went on the offensive. The mental health problems that the 20-year-old known as KGM suffered since she was a child were not the result of exposure to harm on Instagram, Meta’s lawyers and public relations team argued, but instead linked to her mother’s parenting and her offline social problems.

In a bench memo filed before the trial began, lawyers for Meta quoted excerpts from KGM’s teenage text messages, personal writings and social media posts complaining about her mother. They combed through therapy notes and called on doctors to testify to examples of personal conflict. Throughout the proceedings, Meta’s communications team sent reporters repeated updates from the trial and quotes from testimony that highlighted her familial issues. Far from causing harm, they alleged that Instagram offered a helpful respite from the real world.

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2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-28 20:10

Holding protest signs and chanting pro-democracy slogans, a crowd gathered on the University of Delaware Green on Saturday afternoon for the third iteration of the nationwide “No Kings” protest against the Trump administration.

2026-03-29 16:04
2026-03-28 13:50

A global team of Air Force rescuers is on standby, ready to come to the aid of the Artemis II crew after their space launch.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-28 12:03

Mother Nature didn't make it easy, but in the end, kids left Newark's annual Easter egg hunt happy – many taking home prizes donated by local businesses.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-27 19:25

March 27, 2026 — Microsoft has announced the official opening of its new Danish datacenter region, Denmark East, with campuses in Høje Taastrup, Køge, and Roskilde on Zealand. The datacenter region will provide Danish Microsoft customers with local, secure state of the art cloud infrastructure designed with sustainability as a key focus.

Microsoft Datacenter, Denmark East Region

Mette Kaagaard, General Manager, Microsoft Denmark & Iceland, said: “With the opening of Denmark East, we are strengthening Denmark’s digital resilience with a secure-by-default foundation that gives customers greater control, low latency, and local data residency. It marks an important step in our long-term commitment to Denmark, enabling stronger sovereignty controls and new opportunities for innovation across the public and private sectors — built in close collaboration with Danish partners and guided by values such as transparency, accountability, and sustainability.”

According to IDC, the Microsoft Cloud is expected to generate substantial economic growth while advancing the digital green transition in the coming years, in Denmark. Over the next four years, Microsoft and, its partners are projected to spend approximately $4.5 billion in Denmark on local services and products, strengthening regional business communities.

For every $1 of Microsoft cloud revenue, more than $6 are generated in the wider partner ecosystem, and this is expected to grow to nearly $8, by 2029. The impact extends well beyond Microsoft itself – most of the economic value is created in Danish companies serving other Danish organizations. When Danish organizations adopt cloud services, they rely on local IT consultancies, software developers, cybersecurity firms, and system integrators.

With the opening of the Denmark East region, Danish organizations across sectors – from healthcare and finance to manufacturing, energy, and the public sector – will benefit from:

  • Local data residency enabling customers to store and process data in Denmark under full European legal protection, including strict GDPR compliant safeguards, ensuring sensitive workloads remain inside the EU.
  • Enhanced digital resilience with multiple independent datacenter zones within the region
  • Access to advanced cloud and AI services, including Microsoft Azure and Microsoft 365.

For Nykredit, the opening of Microsoft’s new datacenter region in Denmark strengthens the foundation for secure, compliant, and customer-centric digital services.

Ulrik Have, CIO Technology, Nykredit, said: “For Nykredit, data security, regulatory compliance, and customer trust are fundamental. Microsoft’s new datacenter region in Denmark enables us to keep data local, reduce complexity, and lower latency through close proximity to our on‑premises services—while maintaining the flexibility to deliver new digital solutions for our customers.”

Local Support to Local Investments

The establishment of the new datacenter region has been met with strong support from municipal and regional leaders and decision makers across Zealand. The three host municipalities Høje Taastrup, Køge, and Roskilde – have strategically prepared for years to attract advanced digital infrastructure and technology-driven investments that support both local growth and national digital ambitions.

Microsoft collaborates with local communities in Køge, Taastrup and Roskilde and 13 local partners, including Disability House on inclusion, Vild med Vilje on biodiversity and Boligselskabet Sjælland on neighborhood engagement, to strengthen digital skills, sustainability and local needs while supporting long‑term growth and a strong local economy.

Next to one of Microsoft’s state‑of‑the‑art Danish datacenters in Høje‑Taastrup, a new 40,000 m² public park—the Office Park—has been created in partnership with the municipality, showing how digital infrastructure can coexist with green, community‑friendly spaces.

Ken Kristensen, Mayor of Køge Municipality, said: “The opening of the new datacenter highlights that Køge is an attractive location for large, future-proof projects. We have strong infrastructure, attractive business areas, and a strategic location that makes it possible to develop new solutions and create value locally. This is exciting for Køge and for the entire surrounding region, and we welcome Microsoft. At the same time, we are pleased that, over time, Microsoft’s new datacenter will contribute surplus heat to the local district heating network.”

Tomas Breddam, Mayor of Roskilde Municipality, said: “A datacenter from a global company like Microsoft creates opportunities that go far beyond the building itself. Through collaboration on digital innovation, sustainable solutions and smarter public services, Microsoft’s presence can help bring new technology, knowledge and partnerships into our municipality – and in that way create concrete value for both citizens and local businesses over time.”

Kurt Scheelsbeck, Acting Mayor of Høje Taastrup Municipality, said: “In Høje-Taastrup Municipality, we are pleased with the collaboration with Microsoft and proud to host one of the datacenters in the new Danish datacenter region. With construction now completed, we are already seeing positive effects – for local jobs, skills development and our young people. The new park, which creates a green and safe transition between the datacenter and nearby residential areas, is a strong example of how development can go hand in hand with nature and quality of life. At the same time, the collaboration on local projects through ChangeX strengthens our schools, associations and communities. We look forward to building on the partnership in the years ahead.”

Supporting the Green Digital Transition

In 2020, Microsoft announced a commitment to become carbon negative by 2030 — accelerating work across the company to advance the partnerships and technologies needed to advance sustainability for businesses, customers and the world. A key milestone on this journey was the aim to match 100% of the company’s annual global electricity consumption with renewable energy by 2025. The goal has officially been met and this progress helps drive investment into the power systems where Microsoft operate, expand clean energy supply and advance broader energy innovation.

IDC finds that over the next four years, shifting from on-premises infrastructure to cloud services can reduce CO₂ emissions by nearly 88,000 metric tons, equivalent to the emissions of roughly 22,700 Danish homes over the same period.

In Denmark, Microsoft has entered into long-term power purchase agreements that together provide for a total capacity of 130 MW of renewable energy per year. One example is the Svinningegården Solar Park project in Holbæk Municipality, which has a capacity of 27 MW.

In Denmark East, Microsoft uses renewable fuel such as HVO (Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil) for backup power generation where available. HVO is a renewable diesel made from waste and residual raw materials, and it can significantly reduce lifecycle greenhouse-gas emissions compared to conventional fossil diesel. Using HVO supports Microsoft’s broader commitment to lower-carbon operations while maintaining the same reliability and safety standards required for critical infrastructure.

The Danish datacenters have been purposefully designed with zero water use for cooling, for LEED Gold certification and to ultimately operate at a power usage effectiveness (PUE) of 1.16. Furthermore, Microsoft’s datacenter site in Høje-Taastrup will be the company’s first operational at-scale waste heat recovery in Denmark. The Danish datacenters are engineered to recover surplus heat for local district heating systems in Høje-Taastrup with the ability to warm around 6,000 local homes, with future expansion planned in Køge.

Built-in Digital Sovereignty to Innovate with Confidence

Microsoft investments in cloud and AI infrastructure go beyond bringing capacity online in a region. They are a core part of Microsoft’s long-standing commitment to advancing trust, resilience, and transparency, with digital sovereignty fundamental to that commitment and particularly top of mind for customers and partners in Denmark.

Customers in Denmark are covered by the EU Data Boundary, which ensures that customer data for Microsoft cloud services is stored and processed within the EU, providing clarity, predictability, and confidence in how data is handled. This is reinforced by Microsoft’s European Digital Commitments, which go further than regulatory compliance to deliver meaningful assurance through legally backed commitments, local governance, and operational transparency.

Together, these commitments reflect Microsoft’s belief that digital sovereignty is not a one-size-fits-all requirement, but a continuum of needs. Through the Microsoft Sovereign Cloud, customers in Denmark can choose the level of control, isolation, and operational autonomy that best fits their workloads whether running highly regulated applications, supporting critical national infrastructure, or innovating with AI in the cloud. This flexible approach enables customers to maintain control over their data, without sacrificing the scale, security, or innovation of the Microsoft cloud.


Source: Morten Skøtt, Microsoft

The post Microsoft Announces Opening of New Datacenter Region in Denmark appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-27 15:25

The event brought vendors of emerging computing hardware together with researchers in the HPC community, highlighting opportunities and challenges in a diversifying technology landscape.

March 27, 2026 — In the foreseeable future, traditional technologies for high-performance computing (HPC) based on CPU and GPU processors could reach their limits in terms of performance, economic viability, and environmental sustainability. This has launched the hardware community on a search for alternative paradigms and architectures that could open the door to improvements in speed and energy efficiency. Quantum computing and neuromorphic computing are among the best known approaches, although numerous other avenues are also being explored, including concepts that build on and extend traditional technologies found in x86, GPU-accelerated, and ARM-based architectures.

Credit: HLRS

In parallel, progress is being made on software development for new computing frameworks. These include programming models and libraries that would make it easier to use established codes with new hardware, and to implement heterogeneous workflows across multiple hardware types. Many anticipate that the development of hybrid approaches holds more potential for advancing HPC capabilities than expecting a single hardware type to replace all others, meaning that one goal for future HPC systems would be to integrate different hardware types and programming methods seamlessly. In this way, various elements within complex algorithms could then be distributed to specialized processors that run them most efficiently.

On March 16-17, 2026, the High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS) hosted its first Future Computing Workshop, an event designed to promote discussion, networking, and collaboration surrounding new computing paradigms. Hardware vendors, researchers, and computing facility operators offered in-depth looks at emerging technologies and methods, including the potential advantages they offer and the challenges they face in practice. By including perspectives from the academic research community, the event also enabled hardware vendors to gain insights into user requirements they will need to consider to ensure that their products are widely adopted.

Dr. Johannes Gebert organized the event, and leads HLRS’s Future Computing Group. Launched in 2025, the Future Computing Group is developing partnerships with companies to test emerging computing technologies and to evaluate their relevance for HLRS’s high-performance computing user community. The Future Computing Workshop was held to complement these efforts and promote the exchange of ideas across the community. “Computer scientists, domain-specific researchers, computing centers, and hardware vendors deal with widely different challenges and incentives,” he explained. “We established the workshop as a platform for people to understand one another, accelerating the deployment of high-end computing paradigms.”

The Importance of Dialogue Among Stakeholders

The first day of the Future Computing Workshop focused on presentations by hardware vendors and technology developers, including NextSilicon, SpiNNcloud, AMD, Fraunhofer ITWM, OpenChip, Cerebras, Q.ANT, SiPearl, IQM, and Lightsolver. The presentations offered overviews of their technologies and case studies illustrating their capabilities. On the second day, researchers and representatives of academic HPC centers described progress in developing programming models, libraries, and performance tools for emerging hardware technologies. Academic participants included representatives of KAUST, TU Munich, the German Climate Research Center, the German Aerospace Center, EPCC, the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, Jülich Supercomputing Centre, and Sandia Labs, as well as HLRS.

In addition to spotlighting innovations in hardware, the Future Computing Workshop illuminated challenges facing the HPC community resulting from a diversifying technology landscape. Existing research codes have often taken years to develop, and cannot easily be ported to new computing hardware, if at all. Because of the length of procurement cycles, HPC centers must also be able to plan for the future, requiring a clear understanding of what the user community will need in 5-7 years. As technologies evolve, it will be important that new hardware is well suited to the scientific problems that need to be solved, that the answers it delivers are reliable, and that it is easily programmable. Moreover, regardless of how fast new processing technologies become, the trend toward ever larger simulations and data-driven methods means that improving memory bandwidth capabilities will be at least as important. Otherwise, the ability to move and manage the resulting data efficiently could remain a major rate-limiting step.

These kinds of observations suggest that while new computing architectures hold great potential, they will be most successful if developed in partnership with potential users. The Future Computing Workshop aims to support this essential dialogue among stakeholders in order to facilitate the success of next-generation technologies.

Future Computing Workshop Will Become Annual Event

More than 65 participants attended the two-day Future Computing Workshop, contributing to many lively discussions. Considering the very positive response from across the hardware and research communities, HLRS intends to make the meeting an annual event. Details for the 2027 workshop will be posted as soon as they become available.

More from HPCwire: HLRS Future Computing Group Will Evaluate New Tech for HPC


Source: Christopher Williams, HLRS

The post HLRS Future Computing Group Holds 1st Annual Workshop appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-27 15:22

BRUSSELS, March 27, 2026 — Yesterday, SEMI Europe participated in the European Commission’s Implementation Dialogue on the Chips Act, chaired by Henna Virkkunen, Executive Vice-President of the European Commission for Tech Sovereignty, Security and Democracy. As a key association representing the global electronics manufacturing and design supply chain in the region, SEMI Europe commends the European Commission for coordinating the Chips Act 2.0 Report, in consultation with leading semiconductor companies, to help define the future direction of Europe’s semiconductor policy and investment framework.

In this context, the Implementation Dialogue provided a valuable platform to assess progress under the European Chips Act and to gather concrete recommendations for its upcoming revision, commonly referred to as “Chips Act 2.0.” SEMI Europe strongly supports this consultative approach, which helps ensure that policy objectives are achieved while minimizing administrative and compliance burden for industry.

“SEMI Europe applauds the European Commission for fostering an open and constructive dialogue with industry at a critical moment for Europe’s semiconductor ecosystem,” said Laith Altimime, President of SEMI Europe. “This is a defining moment. With focused execution and unified commitment across institutions and industry, Europe can secure its position as a global leader in semiconductor innovation and manufacturing for decades to come.”

During the dialogue, SEMI Europe highlighted its significant contribution to the policy discussion through its SEMI Europe Chips Act Report published last year, which outlined 30 recommendations aimed at strengthening Europe’s semiconductor ecosystem across the entire supply chain. These included regulatory simplification, accelerated permitting processes, targeted investment support, and measures to strengthen the resilience of the semiconductor supply chain.

SEMI, with its global footprint of over 3,000 members worldwide from across the entire semiconductor value chain, will remain a trusted partner to facilitate global collaboration and support the success of the European Chips Act and its potential “2.0.”

SEMI Europe Advocacy

Discover how SEMI Europe Advocacy & Public Policy supports the microelectronics industry across sustainability, trade, talent, and R&D—or become involved by contacting sorlando@semi.org.

About SEMI

SEMI is the global industry association connecting over 3,000 member companies and 1.5 million professionals worldwide across the semiconductor and electronics design and manufacturing supply chain. We accelerate member collaboration on solutions to top industry challenges through Advocacy, Workforce Development, Sustainability, Supply Chain Management, and other programs. Our SEMICON expositions and events, technology communities, standards, and market intelligence help advance our members’ business growth and innovations in design, devices, equipment, materials, services, and software, enabling smarter, faster, more secure electronics.


Source: SEMI

The post SEMI Europe Applauds European Commission’s Implementation Dialogue on Chips Act 2.0 appeared first on HPCwire.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-27 13:27

Ahmed al‑Sharaa, President of Syria, on Syria’s future 31 March 2026 — 18:00 TO 19:00 BST Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online

The president will outline a vision for Syria amid regional turmoil.

The President will outline a vision for Syria amid regional turmoil.
Ahmed al‑Sharaa, president of Syria

All in person places are fully booked and only online attendance is now available.

In his first public event in the United Kingdom, President Ahmed al-Sharaa visits Chatham House to discuss his vision for Syria at a moment of significant regional upheaval.

Since taking office after the fall of the Assad regime in late 2024, his government has faced the immense task of rebuilding a country devastated by more than a decade of civil war.

Alongside domestic reconstruction, the administration has pursued a new diplomatic course seeking to re-engage with the international community while navigating an increasingly volatile geopolitical landscape.

In this conversation moderated by Chatham House Director Bronwen Maddox, President al-Sharaa is expected to discuss the status of Syria’s transition, his hopes for his country’s political and economic future, his government’s stance on the current Middle East conflict, and how the Syrian leadership plans to build a more stable, inclusive and accountable state.

The event will be on the record and livestreamed, with questions from the moderator and audience.

A core part of Chatham House’s mission is to bring together diverse perspectives to advance debate and to resolve global challenges, as set out in our mission and values. This event is on the record and available to the public to watch.
 

2026-04-01 12:04
2026-03-27 12:34

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

From L-R: Simon Fraser, Alsanosi, Alaa, Kahlid and Bronwen Maddox at the Chatham House Prize 2025 event

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.’  

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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.

2026-03-30 12:04
2026-03-27 06:49

Syria’s successful foreign policy masks a deeper risk Expert comment jon.wallace

2025’s National Dialogue failed, its outcomes unpublished. But without a new effort to resolve internal conflicts, the country will remain vulnerable to external intervention.

Delegates at the National Dialogue Conference in Damascus, Syria in February 2025

Syria’s transitional authorities have achieved notable foreign policy gains. President Ahmed al-Sharaa’s government has restored diplomatic ties, eased sanctions and insulated the country from the military spillover of the ongoing war in Iran.

Yet recent events expose the limits of this outward-facing stabilization strategy. On 19 March, Israeli forces carried out an airstrike on government forces in Sweida, following clashes between government forces and Druze factions demonstrating how Syria’s unresolved internal conflicts can still draw in external actors.

Rather than addressing the root causes of the Sweida conflict through a domestic process, the authorities have sought to resolve them through deals brokered with other countries.

At its most effective, this approach can contain escalation. But it leaves the underlying tensions intact. Without a credible national process to address internal divisions, Syria’s transition will remain fragile, and vulnerable to repeated external intervention.

From battleground to buffer

Syria now stands out in the Middle East for an unexpected reason. While neighbouring countries are increasingly entangled in the fallout from the war on Iran, Syria has, for now, avoided direct involvement remaining largely insulated from its effects.

This shift is striking given Syria’s recent history. For over a decade, the country served as the central arena where regional and international rivalries played out. Today, by contrast, it has repositioned itself as a neutral actor.

This outcome is the result of the al-Sharaa government’s highly effective foreign policy. Since the fall of the Assad regime in December 2024, the transitional authorities have recalibrated Syria’s external relations by restoring diplomatic ties, engaging regional actors and limiting the presence of foreign-aligned armed networks. Such measures have reduced the risk of Syria being drawn back into wider conflict dynamics.

President al-Sharaa made this clear in his address following Eid prayers on 20 March, arguing that Syria’s changing position reflects a more effective management of regional and international relations. In this sense, foreign policy has become a central pillar of efforts to stabilize the country – helping to shield Syria from external shocks at a moment of heightened regional volatility.

Containment without resolution

But recent developments in Sweida highlight the limitations of that strategy. 
Violence escalated in July 2024, when Damascus deployed forces to the province. The government presented the move as an effort to restore order after clashes between Druze and Bedouin groups. 

Locally, however, the intervention was widely seen as an attempt to impose central authority following months of stalled negotiations over governance and security arrangements. Subsequent confrontations – and reported abuses – deepened mistrust between local actors and the authorities.

Rather than addressing the drivers of the conflict through inclusive local dialogue, the authorities have sought to contain it, through external, elite-level agreements. Damascus agreed to a roadmap with Jordan and the United States to address the issue in September 2025, while parallel efforts to limit Israeli intervention intensified. 

The approach failed to resolve the crisis. Implementation of the JordanUS roadmap stalled, rejected by de facto local authorities who had been excluded from its negotiation. The result has been a pattern of recurring tensions and periodic violence – conditions that continue to invite external intervention and complicate Syria’s negotiations with Israel.

The Israeli airstrikes of 19 March followed alleged clashes between Syrian government forces and a Druze armed group. Israel framed its attack as an effort to protect the Druze community, though Damascus condemned what it called ‘interference in internal affairs with the aim of undermining security and stability’.

While its motives remain contested, what is clear is Israel’s willingness to intervene whenever Syria’s local conflicts intersect with its strategic priorities. As such, no amount of diplomatic balancing on Syria’s part can fully shield it, if domestic conflicts remain unresolved.

Dialogue deferred

Crucially, the issues at the heart of the Sweida conflict are not local anomalies. Questions of governance, security, representation, power-sharing and the identity of the state are national in scope. Addressing them through closed-door bargaining – whether with domestic elites or external actors – risks producing outcomes that lack legitimacy and durability.

The most immediate step is also the simplest. The outcomes of the previous dialogue should be published. 

This is where Syria’s stalled national dialogue becomes central. Launched in February 2025, the process was intended to provide a platform for addressing precisely these questions. Instead, it was rushed, narrowly structured and insufficiently consultative.

More than a year later, its outcomes remain largely unpublished. Beyond general statements, Syrians still lack a clear account of what was discussed, what priorities emerged, or what conclusions were reached. 

The result is not just a missed opportunity, but a widening gap between the transitional authorities and society.

A path to consensus

Without an inclusive national framework, Syria’s political actors will continue to approach negotiations as a zero-sum game – where compromise is seen as loss rather than a route to shared stability. Reversing this dynamic requires widening participation beyond political elites to include civil society, displaced communities, refugees and the diaspora.

Even if an earlier opportunity to launch a credible national dialogue was missed, it is not too late to try again. A renewed process could offer a peaceful pathway to address the core questions shaping the emerging state. If conducted transparently and inclusively, it could help build national consensus and prevent negotiating parties with narrow agendas from claiming to speak for their constituencies.

Substance will be critical. Any renewed dialogue must confront the issues that continue to drive conflict – governance, power-sharing, participation, justice, economic reform and the role of security institutions. These are not technical matters; they lie at the heart of Syria’s future political order.

Process will matter just as much. Consultation must be tied to outcomes, with clear mechanisms to translate any agreements into policy. Transparency is essential – without clear understanding of how decisions were reached, trust cannot be rebuilt.

The most immediate step is also the simplest. The outcomes of the previous dialogue should be published. Doing so would signal intent, restore credibility and lay the groundwork for a more meaningful and inclusive process.  

The real test

Syria’s foreign policy success has been significant, but it cannot, on its own, secure stability. A transition built primarily on external positioning rather than internal cohesion will remain inherently fragile. Lasting stability depends on the state’s ability to resolve domestic disputes, build a shared national vision and establish a political order that commands legitimacy across the country’s diverse society.

2026-03-30 08:04
2026-03-27 06:00

Why Should Delaware Care? 
Miriam Liliana Molina Mendez now owns the café inside the Delaware Art Museum where she has worked for 10 years. She’s working to make her coffee shop, and the museum, more accessible for the Latino and immigrant communities. 

Miriam Liliana Molina Mendez found herself speaking Spanish. 

The “Hola, buenos dias,” directed toward a stocky man in his mid-60s with a thick black mustache, escaped her mouth before she realized it wasn’t her usual, “Good morning, how can I help you?” 

The man stood inside Molina Mendez’s coffee shop, Kaffeina Café, which occupies a corner of Wilmington’s Delaware Art Museum — facing the sculpture garden — on a recent March morning.

She quickly began apologizing for the slip-up.  

Molina Mendez had welcomed a customer into her coffee shop in Spanish. She had never done that before. 

But without skipping a beat, the man brightly responded, “Buenos dias,” and rattled off his coffee order in Spanish.

“I love it when people come and speak Spanish with me,” Molina Mendez said in her native tongue. 

Molina Mendez has worked at the museum’s café for about a decade. The mother of four began there in 2016 as a chef, holding down two to three jobs just to make ends meet. 

She weathered the COVID pandemic and multiple café owners. When the opportunity came to take over the business, Molina Mendez was scared. Maybe it was not the right time. Maybe she did not have enough money, or maybe her English was not the best, she thought. 

Despite her fears, she bought the shop in 2024. Now, Kaffeina is all hers. 

Molina Mendez overhauled the café’s fare to focus on fresh ingredients and innovative dishes with dashes of her home country, Mexico, sprinkled throughout. She hopes the change differentiates Kaffeina from most other museum cafeterias that offer the same basic fare.

Molina Mendez wants to welcome more customers from Latino and immigrant communities into her establishment. Many Spanish-speaking Latinos and immigrants are often afraid of trying new places because they are worried they won’t be understood — just as Molina Mendez felt when she first came to Delaware. 

There are so few places where Latina mothers can gossip for the whole day, or where people can swing by to pick up their breakfast on the way to work, she said. 

Kaffeina, she hopes, can be that place. 

“It is a reflection of our community growing,” said Iz Balleto, a longtime customer of the café and cultural program manager at the Delaware Art Museum. 

“After all,” Balleto added, “the American dream is real for those who understand what perseverance is about.”

‘And, here I am’

Molina Mendez first became a mother when she was 17 years old. Two years later, at her mother’s urging, she fled a domestic violence situation and came to Delaware from her home in Mexico City. 

She started cleaning hotel rooms off U.S. Route 13 for $6.50 an hour — she still remembers the exact rate. Relatives told her only to go from her house to work, and back again, advising her not to go out. 

From the hotel, Molina Mendez began working at a nearby Johnson & Johnson factory and worked multiple jobs from then on, ranging from McDonald’s and Arby’s, to the University of Delaware cafeteria and as a chef at the Newark Country Club. 

In 2016, she began working as a chef at the museum café in the mornings. The coffee shop then closed after the onset of the pandemic, but Molina Mendez returned once it reopened under new ownership. 

She helped change the menu, suggesting more diverse offerings and fresh food like tamales, ramen and empanadas. Then, she took over when the previous owner retired.  

Molina Mendez was “very scared” to take on the café from the previous owner. What would happen if it failed? What would happen if it succeeded? 

She spoke with her family as she mulled the decision. They reassured her that she should buy the shop — it would be doing work she was already familiar with. 

“And here I am,” Molina Mendez said.

Seeing Molina Mendez evolve into Kaffeina’s owner after working at the shop for so long was “amazing,” said Balleto, who has known the chef since she started in 2016. 

Molina Mendez comes to work every day with a smile on her face and is always willing to try new things, said Heather Morrissey, director of operations at the Delaware Art Museum. 

Miriam Molina Mendez overhauled Kaffeina café’s menu suggesting more diverse offerings and fresh food like tamales, ramen and empanadas. | SPOTLIGHT DELAWARE PHOTO BY JOSE IGNACIO CASTANEDA PEREZ

She started implementing different initiatives at the café, such as an after-hours Valentine’s Day dinner and a monthly tea party on the last Wednesday of every month — complete with porcelain teacups and delicate finger sandwiches. 

Customers also do not need to pay the museum’s entrance fee to enjoy the café. Kaffeina has a separate entrance near the sculpture garden and is open from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. 

“I want everyone to know that they’re welcome,” Molina Mendez said.

Molina Mendez hopes her café becomes a generational heirloom, passed down to her children and grandchildren. She hopes to eventually open a separate breakfast locale, too. 

But for now, she wants to make her place a mainstay for Wilmington’s Latino community. 

As Molina Mendez finished speaking in her coffee shop on that recent March morning, a man with a white goatee and a baseball cap walked up to the counter. He retrieved his takeout order, sitting in a brown paper bag, and headed toward the exit. 

Upon hearing Molina Mendez chat in Spanish as he headed out the door, the man turned around with a gleeful smile.

“Esta bonito hablar el espanol, verdad?” he said.

“It’s nice to speak Spanish, right?”

The post From employee to owner: How an immigrant-owned café is attracting more Latinos appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-27 01:00

A new community group is looking to make an impact on the community, and do so in an efficient manner.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-27 00:15

Customers of Sapporo Soul Sushi & Ramen soon will be able to enjoy sake, Japanese beer and other alcoholic beverages with their meals.

2026-03-31 08:04
2026-03-26 12:03

Spectator, beneficiary, player: Russia’s strategy in the Iran war, from oil to drones Expert comment jon.wallace

Carefully calibrated involvement in the Middle East amplifies Moscow’s leverage from Havana to the frontlines in Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin looking through binoculars at strategic military drills

‘Speed is necessary, and haste is harmful,’ said Russian Marshal Prince Alexander Suvorov in The Science of Victory (1765). That captures a tension that has remained embedded in Russian strategic culture: how to combine long-term endurance with timely opportunism. 

Russia is often portrayed as a ponderous bear. But in practice, it frequently resembles a more calculating predator patient, adaptive, and inclined to strike when the cost-benefit ratio turns decisively in its favour. 

Those instincts are clearly visible in Moscow’s conduct since the outbreak of the Iran war. Rather than committing decisively or remaining aloof, Russia has calibrated its engagement to extract advantage while limiting its exposure mindful of the risks of pushing Washington too far.

Honouring the partnership with Tehran, but avoiding entrapment

Nowhere has this calibrated approach been clearer in recent years than in Russia’s relationship with the Mullahs. Moscow has provided sustained diplomatic backing, expanded military-technical cooperation, and deepened economic coordination between their two heavily sanctioned systems. A strategic partnership, alongside collaboration in nuclear energy and defence-industrial sectors, reflect a convergence of interests shaped by opposition to Western pressure. 

Yet this support has been deliberately bounded with no mutual-defence commitment. That has allowed Russia to avoid direct military involvement in Iran’s confrontation with Israel and the United States (US)

This is not hesitation but design. Tehran is valuable to Moscow as a partner that complicates Western strategy and reinforces a sanctions-resistant axis. But Russia is not willing to incur open-ended risk on Iran’s behalf. 

President Vladmir Putin’s objective is to remain close enough to shape outcomes in the war, but distant enough to preserve freedom of action. 

As strikes between Israel and Iran intensified, Moscow issued public condemnations and stepped-up diplomatic engagement with Tehran. And some discreet forms of support, including intelligence exchanges, have likely taken place. But no additional Russian forces were deployed, no air defences activated on Iran’s behalf, and no direct attempt made to challenge Israeli or US operations.

Meanwhile, Russia maintained deconfliction channels with Israel and a limited posture in Syria, insulating its assets from the conflict. The result is visible alignment without operational exposure enough to retain influence in Tehran, but not enough to become a belligerent.

A Financial Times report of 25 March suggests Moscow may be providing drones to Iran. If true, this would represent a shift in Russian calculations perhaps based on Iran’s continued resistance to US pressure and raise the level of strategic risk Moscow is willing to take in the conflict. But this support would be hard to prove: some Russian drones are copies of Iranian models. And it would fall far short of the kind of military backing the US has provided to Ukraine.  

Cuba: asymmetric signalling at low cost

A similar logic underpins Russia’s posture in the Western Hemisphere, particularly towards Cuba. 

As President Donald Trump has ratcheted up pressure on Cuba this year, Russia has despatched oil shipments as ‘humanitarian aid’ and provided political backing to the regime.  

The objective is not to confront the US everywhere, but to demonstrate that (Russia) cannot be excluded anywhere.

But such steps can be achieved at relatively low cost. Unlike Soviet commitments, current Russian support to Cuba is limited, reversible, and primarily symbolic. Recent Russian oil deliveries are modest and intermittent in nature. 

Russian actions do not really alter the regional balance of power. But they introduce friction into the US strategic environment and serve as a reminder: that geopolitical competition can never be geographically contained, and that Moscow retains options beyond its immediate theatre.

Moscow’s message to Washington 

From a US perspective, Russia’s behaviour over the past weeks appears opportunistic, if not deliberately provocative. Moscow has combined diplomatic backing for Tehran with continued oil flows to Cuba, while simultaneously benefiting from tighter global energy markets. 

This undermines the premise that Russia can be effectively isolated. And it reinforces Moscow’s claim to relevance across multiple theatres.

Perhaps more importantly, this posture exploits a moment of US overstretch. Washington continues to bear some share of the political, military, and financial burden of sustaining Ukraine’s war effort, albeit significantly smaller since the return of Donald Trump. Simultaneously it is responding to escalation in the Middle East and maintaining commitments in the Indo-Pacific. 

Russia’s approach has been to act selectively within each theatre without triggering direct confrontation. The objective is not to confront the US everywhere, but to demonstrate that it cannot be excluded anywhere. The effect is cumulative: each calibrated action reinforces a broader narrative of Russian resilience and indispensability, to which Moscow knows Trump cannot stay insensitive.

Tactical gains 

The last three weeks of conflict in the Middle East have undeniably strengthened Moscow’s hand, albeit unevenly. Disruption in the Gulf has tightened global energy markets, increasing demand for Russian crude among those buyers willing to operate within or around sanctions constraints. 

At various points, the now traditional discount on Russian oil has narrowed, and in some cases disappeared. This has translated into higher export revenues for Moscow and a short-term improvement in Russia’s fiscal position.

However, these gains should not be overstated: economic fundamentals remain constrained by structural factors. Russia is still dogged by limited access to technology, labour shortages, and ongoing fiscal pressures linked to the war in Ukraine. 

Growth has slowed, and the government continues to reduce non-priority expenditure. Planned cuts to civilian and administrative spending will likely go ahead, to preserve fiscal space for defence and strategic sectors. 

The Middle East crisis has therefore provided a tactical windfall rather than a strategic transformation. It has enhanced Russia’s room for manoeuvre but not resolved its underlying vulnerabilities.

Moscow’s end game: converting leverage into political outcome in Ukraine

These dynamics ultimately converge on the war in Ukraine. Under Donald Trump, US policy has shown a greater emphasis on transactional outcomes and visible leverage. 

In this context, Russia’s ability to demonstrate resilience under sanctions, maintain influence in energy markets, and project strategic reach strengthens its relative standing.

Recent US decisions to ease certain restrictions on Russian energy flows are primarily aimed at stabilizing global markets amid disruption caused by the war. They are not intended as support for President Putin. Nonetheless, by being forced to alleviate pressure on Russia’s most critical revenue stream, Moscow’s economic resilience is reinforced to Washington.

Ukraine, by contrast, risks being framed less as a US strategic partner than as a protracted liability that is resistant to rapid resolution. The longer external crises sustain elevated energy prices and divert political attention, the more credible Moscow’s argument becomes that it is the more durable and consequential actor.

The implication is not necessarily a reversal of US commitments, but a shift in emphasis. If Washington moves from seeking to weaken Russia to managing it, the balance of pressure may increasingly fall on Kyiv to accept compromise. In this sense, Russia’s gains in the Middle East are not peripheral to the Ukraine war; they feed directly into the diplomatic and strategic situation.

Moscow’s best currency: global instability

Russia’s approach to the Middle East war is best understood as selective engagement structured across three layers: spectator, beneficiary, and player. 

By avoiding full entanglement and intervening only where the returns justify the risks, Moscow has positioned itself to extract maximum advantage without assuming proportional costs.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-26 08:23

The Iran war highlights the creeping use of AI in warfare Expert comment thilton.drupal

The war in Iran has added to concerns about the risks of using AI to select targets during armed conflict.

A satellite image of the Shajarah Tayyebeh school building

The US-Israeli war with Iran has amplified long-standing concerns over the adoption of AI-supported targeting in warfare. 

These concerns came to the fore in the aftermath of the 28 February strike on Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab, southern Iran, which Iran says killed at least 168 people, most of whom were schoolchildren. 

The Trump administration initially blamed Iran for the strike, though it did not provide any evidence. The US says it is now investigating the bombing. The Washington Post has reported that the school was on a US target list. 

US Senate Democrats have written to Secretary of War Pete Hegseth seeking information about the attack, including clarification on any use of AI in target selection. So far there has been no confirmation of whether or not AI was used in planning or executing the strike on the school. 

Admiral Brad Cooper, the US commander leading the war in Iran, has confirmed the use of ‘a variety of advanced AI tools’ to sift through large amounts of data in the conflict, without naming any tools in particular. He said these tools allowed leaders to make ‘smarter decisions faster than the enemy can react’ and sped up processes from taking hours or days to seconds. Admiral Cooper also stated that: ‘Humans will always make final decisions on what to shoot and what not to shoot, and when to shoot.’

Iran is not the first war to incorporate AI systems, but it signals AI-supported targeting is becoming the norm in warfare. While militaries may embrace the potential for increased efficiency, significant risks remain.  

Increasing military adoption

AI allows for rapid processing and analysis of information from a variety of different sources and customizable data access. Its adoption across the military domain has the potential to increase situational awareness, facilitate real-time information sharing and enable more informed decision-making in military operations. 

A 2024 US Department of War release outlined how the AI-enabled Maven Smart System helps frontline soldiers identify and strike military targets, and assists chain-of-command approval for strikes. NATO also acquired a version of Maven Smart System from Palantir in 2025. The US military is now reportedly using its own version of Maven to help provide targeting information for its military operations in Iran. But it is unclear exactly how and to what extent Maven and other AI tools are being used in Iran. 

In the war in Ukraine, both sides are using AI for data processing and target selection. Ukraine’s deputy defence minister said last year that AI analyses more than 50,000 video streams from the front line each month, which helps to ‘quickly process this massive data, identify targets, and put them on a map.’ 

The New York Times has reported that Israel used AI as part of its process of identifying potential targets for air strikes targeting Hamas in Gaza. The IDF has said that ‘information systems are merely tools for analysts in the target identification process.’

Additional uses for AI technology across the military domain include the training of military personnel through virtual simulations, the automated scheduling of logistical supplies or the identification of equipment maintenance needs via image-recognition systems. These are just some of the potential uses.

Risks

Many countries will want to invest in tools that give them an advantage over adversaries, in line with the search for asymmetry, which has been a constant throughout the history of warfare. But the use of AI in complex high-stake environments such as armed conflict also comes with serious risks.  

Part of the concern relates to the development of AI technology itself and how it could impact on the system’s performance. For example, an AI model could be trained with faulty data, or with material that is different to what it encounters when deployed in the real world. This could lead it to generate inaccurate information or malfunction when used outside of the training environment. 

AI large language models work by predicting a sequence of words, based on statistical probability – they will likely get it right most of the time, but they won’t get it right all of the time. 

In practical terms, this means basing decisions on AI-generated information contains an element of risk and inaccuracy. 

AI-supported targeting decisions are a high-risk case in point. If AI tools are being employed extensively to generate targets with minimal human oversight, it’s not difficult to imagine how errors could occur.

One core issue highlighted by the use of AI in war is that there is a difference between what AI-enabled systems can do and the procedures or rules about how humans use those systems.

What could be done better?

The Iran war suggests that AI tools are set to be increasingly used in armed conflict. While the laws of war apply to all conflicts, there is a growing debate about whether AI is introducing a new dimension that requires additional rules. For example, concerns have been raised over how AI reduces the space for human judgement required for international humanitarian law determinations.

A binding international framework is unlikely in the short-term. Nevertheless, it is in militaries’ own interest to develop rules for using AI. This would help them mitigate against the risk of over-relying on AI-supported targeting, which could reduce errors that lead to the wrong targets being hit and cause civilian deaths. 

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-26 01:00

City council on Monday agreed to rezone a property on South Chapel Street, clearing a path for a developer to build what could be one of the tallest student housing complexes in Newark.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-26 00:45

Thousands of brightly colored plastic eggs — many containing prizes — will be up for grabs Saturday as the Newark Parks and Recreation Department hosts its annual Easter egg hunt.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-26 00:39

Newark Councilman Jason Lawhorn said farewell Monday, his last city council meeting before retiring after eight years representing District 5.

2026-03-31 16:04
2026-03-26 00:00

A man suffered a seizure while working atop scaffolding at a Newark-area church Wednesday, necessitating a rescue by specially trained first responders.

2026-03-30 20:04
2026-03-24 18:02

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has said the SAVE America Act “could disenfranchise over 20 million American citizens,” while Republicans dispute that the voter registration and ID bill would block any legitimate voters. Election experts say the bill, which isn’t expected to pass, would make it difficult for some unknown number of voters to register and cast a vote.

At times, Schumer has used more definitive language about the bill’s impact, saying that “more than 20 million legitimate people … will not be able to vote under this law” or that it “would disenfranchise tens of millions of people.”

Schumer speaks during a rally against the SAVE America Act outside the U.S. Capitol on March 18. Photo by Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images.

Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute’s Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies, told us the legislation wouldn’t meet the dictionary definition of “disenfranchise,” which is to “deprive a person of the right to vote.” But it would, as described by Democratic Sen. Patty Murray, “‘make it harder and more expensive for [many people] to [register and] vote,'” Olson said in an email. “That extra hassle and expense would mean that some citizens eligible to register and vote will in practice not complete the needed process even though the bill does not take away their legal right to register or to vote.

“How many eligible people will fail to complete the process? Any estimate is guesswork at this stage in part because it depends on factors that the bill itself leaves unspecified,” he said.

Schumer’s 20 million figure comes from an estimate of the number of voting age Americans who don’t have easy access to citizenship documents that the bill would require to register to vote. According to a 2023 survey by New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice and other groups, more than 9% of Americans of voting age, or 21.3 million people, wouldn’t be able to “quickly find” documents such as a passport, birth certificate or naturalization papers if they “had to show it tomorrow.” More than 3.8 million of those people don’t have those documents, the survey found.

That doesn’t mean that at least some of those Americans couldn’t obtain or find proof of citizenship in order to register to vote under the legislation. But some could find the process too onerous to complete, experts say. Under the bill, citizenship documents also would need to be presented in person to an election official if registering to vote for the first time or reregistering after moving, changing one’s name or making other changes to voter registration.

Eliza Sweren-Becker, deputy director of the voting rights and elections program at the Brennan Center for Justice, told us that “it’s definitely safe to say that millions of Americans would be blocked from voting” by the bill’s registration requirements, among other provisions. She noted that tens of millions of Americans register or update their registrations in the two years before elections. More than 103 million did so in the two years before the 2024 election, according to survey reports by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission.

“As many as 21 million could be stopped from voting” under the SAVE America Act, she said, because they lack ready access to a passport, birth certificate or naturalization document required under the bill for voter registration.

Schumer has repeatedly used the 20 million estimate, adding that these voters could be purged from the voter rolls and not know about it until they showed up to vote, at times linking this to a requirement under the bill for states to use a Department of Homeland Security database to remove noncitizens. “Our objection is it’s a voter suppression bill. Twenty million, maybe more people, when they show up to vote … will be told, you’re off the rolls. That’s the problem with the bill,” Schumer said in a March 17 press conference.

On the Senate floor the same day, the Democratic leader said, “It could purge millions of American citizens from the voter rolls through a screening algorithm designed by Elon Musk’s DOGE squad. It could disenfranchise over 20 million American citizens.”

The DHS database is known to have wrongly flagged as noncitizens some Americans who are, in fact, citizens. But the extent of those flaws is unclear — as is how voters might be notified and purged from voter rolls under the legislation.

Republican Sen. John Cornyn objected to Schumer’s remarks. On the Senate floor on March 19, Cornyn said that Schumer’s “general argument that American citizens would be denied the opportunity to vote is patently false. Thirty-eight states, including states like Georgia and Rhode Island, currently represented by Democrats, require voter ID. Are those states suppressing the vote? Is the minority leader suggesting that 38 out of our 50 states are actively engaged in voter suppression? Well, that is preposterous on its face.”

“So the idea that the SAVE America Act will disenfranchise legitimate voters is a bald-faced—well, let me try to be generous. It is not true, and he knows it,” Cornyn said, adding that Schumer was telling “people who may not be informed about the details of this that we are trying to take away their right to vote.”

Cornyn is nearly correct on the number: 36 states have some form of voter ID laws. But the requirements in the bill before the Senate are “stricter” than most of those state laws, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

We’ll explain what the bill would require for registering and casting votes, and how this could affect voters. (For more, see our article “Q&A on the SAVE America Act.”)

The SAVE America Act passed the House in February, and the Senate began debate on the bill on March 17. Similar legislation in recent years has failed to pass the Senate. A proposed Senate amendment would impose more restrictions on voting by mail, eliminating universal mail-in voting and only allowing mail ballots in certain cases, such as illness or disability, travel, or military service. Here, we describe the bill as it passed the House.

Registering to Vote

Republicans say the bill is needed to prevent noncitizens from voting in federal elections, though election experts say, and state audits have shown, this is rare.

Current federal law requires those registering to vote to attest that they are citizens under penalty of perjury. The SAVE America Act would require documentary proof, presented in person to election officials, for those registering or reregistering to vote.

This would happen “any time you conduct what we call a registration transaction, which usually comes from a life event, a move or a change of name,” David Becker, founder and executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research, which works with election officials throughout the country, said in a March 18 media briefing.

For most people, this would likely mean showing a U.S. passport or a certified birth certificate along with a driver’s license or government-issued photo ID. As we’ve explained, the bill stipulates elements the birth certificate must have, such as a government seal.

Some voters could prove citizenship with other documents. A REAL ID driver’s license doesn’t typically show citizenship, but five states issue REAL IDs that do. Also acceptable under the bill: a military ID and service record that says the person was born in the U.S., or a government-issued photo ID that shows a U.S. birthplace. Those with government-issued photo IDs that don’t indicate citizenship would also need either the certified birth certificate or a hospital birth record, adoption decree, a consular birth report, a naturalization certificate, or an American Indian card with the classification “KIC,” which designates U.S. citizenship for Mexican-born members of the Kickapoo tribes of Texas and Oklahoma. 

As we said, surveys show millions of Americans could have trouble producing the proper citizenship documents. In addition to the 2023 survey Schumer has cited, the Bipartisan Policy Center, in analyzing the 2024 Survey on the Performance of American Elections, found that 12% of registered voters, the equivalent of 28.4 million citizens of voting age, lacked either a valid passport or a birth certificate they could easily find along with a valid government-issued photo ID.

For those who do have the proper documents, the requirement to show them “in person” could dissuade others from registering to vote. The bill says that people registering by mail won’t be registered unless they present “documentary proof of United States citizenship in person to the office of the appropriate election official.”

Sweren-Becker said that this in-person requirement would be “especially hard” for “working parents, people with disabilities, elderly voters, voters who live in rural areas.”

The bill calls for states to make unspecified “reasonable accommodations” for people with disabilities.

Republican Sen. Mike Lee said on the Senate floor on March 19 that claims about the legislation disenfranchising voters were wrong. “Ideally” Americans have the proper documents, he said, but “even if you do not have a single shred of documentation as to your citizenship — you can’t find it, it burned down, whatever it is — all you have to do is swear an affidavit.”

“The state is in a very good position to track down the details of the affidavit and easily confirm or refute what the person says,” Lee said.

The bill does provide a process for those who don’t have the required documents. It says: “Subject to any relevant guidance adopted by the Election Assistance Commission, each State shall establish a process under which an applicant who cannot provide documentary proof of United States citizenship … may, if the applicant signs an attestation under penalty of perjury that the applicant is a citizen of the United States and eligible to vote in elections for Federal office, submit such other evidence to the appropriate State or local official demonstrating that the applicant is a citizen of the United States and such official shall make a determination as to whether the applicant has sufficiently established United States citizenship for purposes of registering to vote in elections for Federal office in the State.”

The election official making that determination also would need to sign an affidavit “swearing or affirming the applicant sufficiently established United States citizenship for purposes of registering to vote.”

There’s a similar process for people whose names differ from their documents, such as married women who changed their names. They can provide “additional documentation” on the name discrepancy or sign an affidavit.

Olson said there’s uncertainty about these alternative methods of citizenship verification. Will they “be relatively easy and generous, accepting common sorts of documents and an uncomplicated sworn statement that most eligible persons will feel comfortable signing?” he asked.

States’ procedures will be governed by guidance from the Election Assistance Commission, the bill says, an independent agency that has two commissioners appointed by Trump and two appointed by former President Barack Obama.

“In short, we aren’t going to find out what the bill does on many key questions until after we pass it into law and the EAC begins issuing guidance,” Olson said. “One of the reasons I am critical of the bill is that I don’t believe we should be asked to take it on faith that the EAC will issue practical guidance in good faith. If the EAC is going to issue guidance that causes an uproar because it sets requirements many legitimate voters cannot meet, we should know that now, not later.”

Sweren-Becker said that the affidavit method “is only available if a state or local election official deems that the registered has sufficiently established U.S. citizenship … so it leaves an enormous amount of discretion in local and state election officials’ hands.” The bill also would impose criminal penalties and civil liability on election officials who register someone “who fails to present documentary proof of United States citizenship,” the legislation says. “So in practice,” she said, election officials “will face a lot of pressure to construe it [the affidavit method] very, very, very narrowly out of rightful concern about their own liability,” Sweren-Becker said.

Becker, in the March 18 briefing, said the legislation “would incredibly negatively impact voters across the political spectrum. … I don’t think there’s anyone who can say definitively, if this were to pass, which party would be hurt more by it,” he said. “I think it’s highly likely that Republicans would likely be more hurt” than Democratic voters, “because a lot of the voters who have difficulty digging up their documentary proof of citizenship are Republicans.”

Casting a Vote

In pushing back on Schumer’s comments about disenfranchisement, Cornyn spoke about the bill’s photo ID requirements for casting a vote. “Thirty-eight states, including states like Georgia and Rhode Island, currently represented by Democrats, require voter ID,” he said.

As we said, 36 states do have some form of voter ID laws, but the SAVE America Act is “stricter” than most of them, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

The Republican bill would require “a valid physical photo identification” in order to cast a ballot in person. Those voting by mail would need to submit a copy of a photo ID, or the last four numbers of their Social Security number and an affidavit saying that they couldn’t obtain a copy of their ID.

A valid photo ID under the bill includes: a state-issued driver’s license or ID card issued by the motor vehicle agency that includes a photo and expiration date, a U.S. passport, a military ID, or a photo ID issued by a tribal government that includes an expiration date. There are exceptions for overseas uniformed services members and those who have the right to vote absentee via the Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and Handicapped Act.

The NCSL said most states’ laws are less strict. “Currently, each state determines the types of ID acceptable to vote, and that often includes student IDs, hunting and fishing licenses or other state-specific identification cards,” it said in a post on its website updated in March.

Thirteen states also accept non-photo identification, such as a bank statement. NCSL classified 10 of the voter ID states as having “strict photo ID” laws.

Georgia is one of them, but it still accepts a broader range of documents than the SAVE America Act would. Georgia accepts a student ID from a public college in the state, an expired state driver’s license, an employee photo ID from a government entity, or a free voter ID card issued by the state, among other documents, the Georgia Secretary of State’s office explains. To get an absentee ballot, a voter submits the number on a driver’s license or state-issued ID card, or a photo or copy of another listed ID, or a document that shows a name and address, such as a utility bill, bank statement or paycheck.

NCSL puts Rhode Island in its “non-strict photo ID” category, along with 13 other states. Rhode Island also issues free voter ID cards and accepts “ID issued by a U.S. educational institution,” the state Board of Elections says. No ID is required to cast a ballot by mail.

When we asked Cornyn’s office about his comments, a spokesperson pointed to some of his other remarks, including a March 19 post on X, which said: “These tactics are nothing more than fearmongering by Dems who are objecting to this because they want to make it easier for people to cheat. In a country with citizens bright enough to put a man on the moon and to build the strongest, most powerful military & the greatest economy the world has ever known, Americans are smart enough and capable enough to be able to locate their driver’s license when they cast a ballot and to establish their citizenship in order to qualify to vote. Any suggestion to the contrary is ridiculous.”

Purging Voter Rolls

Schumer also objected to the bill’s provision requiring states to submit their voter rolls to DHS’ Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements program and remove noncitizens from their rolls. The legislation “could purge millions of American citizens from the voter rolls,” Schumer said in the March 17 press conference. He later added: “Our objection is it’s a voter suppression bill. Twenty million, maybe more people, when they show up to vote … will be told, you’re off the rolls.”

On the Senate floor that same day, he repeated the idea that people could be removed from voter rolls and not know about it until they try to cast a vote. “The way this works, you don’t have to be notified if you’re kicked off the rolls. You show up on Election Day and they say, ‘We’re sorry Mr. Smith, Ms. Jones, you’re not on the rolls anymore.’ And then they make it impossible to re-register. Certainly, on that day you lose your right to vote,” the senator said.

In March 15 remarks, he said the bill’s requirements for states to use the DHS system “will purge tens of millions of people from the voter rolls. Once purged, you don’t even know it.”

There are a couple of provisions regarding purging voters. The first requires states to use the DHS system “for the purposes of identifying individuals who are not citizens of the United States and taking the necessary steps to remove such individuals who are not citizens from the official list, after notice is given to such individuals and such individuals are given the opportunity to provide documentary proof of United States citizenship.” As we’ve explained, the DHS system has been shown to have flaws and has wrongly identified people as being noncitizens.

When we asked Schumer’s office about the language in the bill, a spokesperson said the bill included “a requirement that they [voters] be told they have been flagged,” but no requirements about what form the notice would take or the “length of time” people would be given to respond. And there’s “no language in the bill about notice to the voter that they have been purged,” the spokesperson said.

The bill doesn’t provide more details on how states should give “notice” and an opportunity to dispute incorrect information before removing people from the rolls; nor does it say people should be notified again before being purged.

There’s another provision in the bill that says states could remove someone “at any time.” It says: “A State shall remove an individual who is not a citizen of the United States from the official list of eligible voters for elections for Federal office held in the State at any time upon receipt of documentation or verified information that a registrant is not a United States citizen.” That provision doesn’t say anything about a notice given before removing someone.

Election experts told us there’s ambiguity in the bill regarding these provisions. We reached out to the offices of Sen. Lee and Rep. Chip Roy, the authors of the legislation, about this issue, but we haven’t yet received a response.

“[I]t’s not obvious that all of the ways people will be removed from the rolls will be subject by the SAVE Act to notice and an opportunity to respond,” Justin Levitt, a professor of constitutional law at Loyola Marymount University’s law school, told us in an email. “I’d think there are constitutional protections that would kick in, but they’re not explicit in the statute, and that’d take someone litigating.” Levitt, who briefly was a White House senior policy adviser on voting rights during the Biden administration, said the bill “seems to contemplate at least some people being kicked off the rolls without being told,” though this could be a mistake in the drafting of the bill.

“As for how many, it’s a question I can’t answer,” he said, explaining that it depends on the accuracy of the SAVE database and how the process of comparing voter rolls works.

Olson told us that the provision on using the DHS SAVE system “appears to establish protections (notification and a chance to contest removal by supplying documents)” for voters flagged for removal under that system. But “some other persons removed from the voter rolls may not have rights to notification and challenge unless their states have separately legislated to provide such rights,” he said, pointing to the provision on states removing noncitizens “at any time.”

“So far as I can tell, this means that anyone, including the federal government or some private person or group, can send ‘documentation or verified information’ to a state that a certain person, or a list of persons, on its voter rolls are not U.S. citizens. The state then ‘shall’ remove them,” Olson said. “So long as this is not being done by the method carved out for the SAVE database and its intersection with state voter rolls in federal possession, I don’t see where the bill provides any assurance of notification.”

Sweren-Becker had the same reading of the bill. “Absolutely, I think that the second provision … indicates that people could be removed, but on the basis that something has flagged them as a noncitizen, without notice to the voter or an opportunity to provide evidence of their citizenship,” she told us. “And it is also important to note that it is very unclear what ‘documentation or verified information’ means” and from what sources. “I think there’s a risk that election officials may receive, essentially, purge lists generated by activist groups who are not doing careful list matching.”

As for how many legitimate voters could be removed from voter rolls through this process, “I don’t know how to hazard a guess there,” Sweren-Becker said, noting that “shoddy” purge lists by activist groups have listed thousands of people.

Schumer, however, has gone as far as saying that, under the bill, 20 million could be wrongly purged without knowing they were removed from the voter rolls. But that figure comes from the estimate of those lacking easy access to a passport, birth certificate or naturalization papers. It’s not an estimate of voters who could be purged without their knowledge.


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The post Competing Claims on SAVE America Act Disenfranchising Voters appeared first on FactCheck.org.

2026-03-31 20:04
2026-03-24 13:11

US pressure on Zambia shows that Western aid has become nakedly transactional Expert comment LToremark

The US insisting on preferential access to minerals as part of health deal – and Zambia pushing back – highlights how aid is changing.

Abandoned USAID road signage in Uganda.

Western aid for health and development is undergoing two major changes. First, it is shrinking drastically. G7 countries are reducing aid by 28 per cent in 2026 compared to 2024, the biggest drop in aid since the G7 was formed in 1975. In percentage terms, the UK has slashed its aid more than any G7 country – even the US. Although US aid cuts have drawn the most media attention, US Congress has stepped in to reduce some of the proposed cuts. Second, aid is becoming more explicitly conditional on national interests, such as supporting economic growth, tackling immigration or reducing the influence of geopolitical rivals like China

The most blatant deal-making has come from the US. A current and striking example is Zambia, where the US is reportedly considering withdrawing funding for life-saving malaria, tuberculosis and HIV programmes, from as early as May 2026, to pressure the Zambian government to sign the Zambia–US Health Deal. 

Zambia has pushed back on the deal over concerns about US health funding being tied to preferential access to its mineral resources, mining sector and pathogen data. The proposed deal makes it clear that the US will use foreign aid to incentivize other nations to support US interests and will punish those that do not comply. But this shift to overtly transactional aid predates the policies of the second Trump administration. For example, in 2023, Italy’s Mattei Plan explicitly tied engagement with African countries to migration management, energy security and strategic influence. 

Why has aid from Western countries become so transactional, and what does this mean for health in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs)? In short, the previous framing of aid as an altruistic or charitable endeavour – which was never the full picture – has become unpopular in both donor and recipient countries. 

In LMICs, there has been a growing realization of – and frustration with – aid’s links to implicit political and economic agendas of donor countries, often undermining recipient countries’ abilities to set their own health priorities.

At the same time, many Western countries that were previously major aid donors have experienced widening inequalities. These inequalities have fuelled a wave of right-wing populism – amplified by social and traditional media – that prioritizes problems at home over sending money to other countries, and presents this as a zero-sum trade-off. As illustrated by UK polls showing that public support for overseas development assistance is ’genuine but conditional’, spending on global health and development by Western countries is now politically viable primarily when it is conditional on serving national interests.   

The immediate impacts on recipient countries facing the biggest cuts will be huge, with estimates of excess deaths from severe funding cuts as high as 23 million by 2030. Other consequences of aid cuts are expected to include staggering reductions in access to modern family planning methods, disruptions to school feeding programmes, and a surge in vaccine-preventable diseases. 

In the long term, however, making national interests more explicit introduces a level of transparency that was often absent in the past. This allows for more honest negotiations between donors and recipient countries, and explicit alignment of mutual goals. We can already see that aid-recipient countries are in a better position to assess the full terms of engagement and reject deals that do not align with their interests. Like Zambia, Zimbabwe halted negotiations with the US because the health funding deal asked Zimbabwe to provide biological samples and access to information on new or emerging pathogens for up to 25 years without assurance of access to life-saving innovations.

A further long-term benefit for countries that walk away from one-sided aid deals and rely on more domestic financing for health is increased accountability and responsiveness of health programmes to their populations. 

Looking ahead, how should stakeholders adapt to the new transactional model of aid?

NGOs, activists and policy advocates making the case for foreign aid should reframe how they present its purpose. Rather than relying primarily on altruistic arguments – which are proving less politically persuasive in an era of fiscal constraint and more inward-looking populations – they could emphasize how interconnected health is globally and challenge the notion that diverting health funding towards defence makes Western countries safer. Although highlighting national interest to justify foreign aid may feel uncomfortable or even distasteful to those who have championed aid as a moral imperative, it more accurately reflects how aid has always functioned. Global health scholar Hani Kim has argued that investments in global health have always had explicit and implicit purposes – with the implicit being to maintain existing power structures. 

For countries that continue to rely on foreign aid for health programmes, it is critical to introduce stronger safeguards in their agreements with donors, particularly in relation to withdrawal conditions. They should take advantage of the transactional nature of discussions to embed longer timeframes for ending financial support and impact mitigation strategies to protect essential health programmes during transitions.

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