Team USA speedskater Jordan Stolz came just short of his third Olympic gold on Thursday, taking silver in the men's 1,500-meter race.
OLIVIA CAVANNA
Staff Reporter
Since I was a kid, my life has been engrossed in the world of musical theatre, specifically the Broadway musical “Wicked.” This show captivated me throughout my entire childhood, one can only imagine my excitement when it was announced that my favorite musical was going to be made into a film.
Directed by Jon M. Chu, the story is being brought to the screen in two parts: the first film, “Wicked,” was released on Nov. 22, 2024, and the second, “Wicked: For Good,” released Nov. 21, 2025.
The films feature a star-studded cast with Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba, Ariana Grande as Glinda, Jeff Goldblum as The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Michelle Yeoh as Madame Morrible and Jonathan Bailey as Fiyero.
The final official trailer of “Wicked: For Good” premiered on Sept. 24, 2025, and it got me thinking about one of the most compelling themes in the “Wicked” universe: the various portrayals of power.
When thinking about “Wicked,” magical power is probably the most obvious form of power one would imagine. Elphaba has many different magical abilities, including spell casting, telekinesis, levitation and the ability to read the Grimmerie when nobody else can. Her magical powers symbolize her uniqueness, but also make her a target of fear and discrimination. Which illustrates how her magical abilities are often misunderstood.
Madame Morrible is another character with magical power, seen in her ability to change and control the weather. Her abilities are crucial in shaping the events of the story and influencing the lives of many characters.
Internal power is one of the strongest and most important themes throughout both films. The power and strength that one has within oneself is the driving force of the entire plot. This is seen within several characters.
Elphaba shows internal power in various ways, but most notably by standing her ground and refusing to stray from her morals. Elphaba refuses to do bad things just because the Wizard wants her to — she refuses to hide who she is because people make fun of her
She holds her sense of self even when she is portrayed as a horrible villain. She knows who she is and what she believes in and does not let anyone or anything change that.
Glinda’s depiction of internal power is through her personal growth and ability to confront uncomfortable truths. In the first film, we see Glinda go from a ditsy, rich, vain woman to an emotionally mature and empathetic individual. These new emotional findings continue as the story plays out. In the second film, we will see Glinda begin to question authority, specifically the Wizard and Madame Morrible, and challenge the things she was taught to believe in.
Fiyero, a prince who attends Shiz University, also experiences a transformation. At first, he is portrayed as a careless, privileged and egotistical outsider. However, as the story unfolds, his power lies in his ability to grow and care for others. He later puts his heart over his duty to protect what matters most to him.
Social power is most visibly represented through Glinda. In the first film, her popularity at school gives her influence over her peers, as they look to her for inspiration, advice and guidance. She can get the whole school on her side to hate Elphaba because of her status.
In the “Wicked: For Good” trailer, Glinda is seen stepping into the spotlight as a public figure. She is branded as “Glinda the Good,” and presented as a symbol of optimism and hope for the people of Oz. Madame Morrible emphasizes this by stating that Glinda is responsible for “lift[ing] everyone’s spirits as only [she] can.”
However, it is important to note that this trailer still depicts Glinda as Elphaba’s friend, which is something that goes against the Oz government’s agenda. One can only wonder if conflict will arise as Glinda has to balance her personal loyalty and public duty.
Political power is one of the most complex depictions of power in “Wicked.” The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is an almighty, untouchable figure throughout the land. However, during the finale of the first film, it is revealed that the Wizard holds no real power himself. He is just a man who hides behind luxury and fame.
The Wizard holds political power through propaganda, manipulation, censorship and scapegoating. He uses his charm and the spectacle that is Oz to distract from the horrors going on behind the scenes of a corrupt government. He also shows just how easily the truth can be twisted and spread with the global hate of Elphaba. Even though she did nothing wrong, he paints her as the enemy because, according to him, “the best way to bring folks together is to give them a real good enemy.”
The false perception of power is extremely important throughout this franchise and goes along with the corruption of the government. Though a lot of this front comes with the Wizard, it is also shown through Glinda.
In the trailer of “Wicked: For Good,” we see that Glinda is given a magical bubble and a wand. However, we know from the first film that Glinda has no magical ability herself. In the bubble, there is a button reading “Tap to Bubble,” which creates the physical bubble around her and the ability to fly around.
This mechanism gives a false narrative to the citizens that she has the power to create the bubble herself. It depicts what life is like behind the scenes in Oz, as the government created a false sense of power through its leaders. Madame Morrible even goes as far as to say that “the wand really sells it,” showing that Glinda is really an imposter and portrayed as something that she is not.
The friendship that Elphaba and Glinda share, while unexpected at the start, is shown as deeply human. It is probably the most magical thing in the world. While their close bond is severely tested, Elphaba and Glinda always remain loyal to one another until the very end.
The friendship, love and admiration that they share for one another know no distance and leave both women changed for good.
For me, “Wicked” has always been more than just a musical. It is a story about being misunderstood and holding onto yourself when the world tells you not to. It has powerful messages about identity, truth and loyalty, and has shaped the way I see the world. The most important form of power lies in how we choose to stand in our own truth.
Devyani Saltzman, described as Barbican’s ‘driving force’, leaves few weeks after arrival of new CEO
Salman Rushdie, John Akomfrah and Pankaj Mishra are among more than 170 cultural figures who have signed an open letter to the Barbican expressing concern over the departure of its arts director, Devyani Saltzman.
Saltzman, who became director of arts and participation at the Barbican in February 2024, is leaving the institution amid a significant leadership change a few weeks after its new CEO joined.
Continue reading...The leader of the Liberal Democrats called for MPs to get a vote when American forces want to use UK bases
Alex Davies-Jones, a justice minister, has said the government wants to pass the legislation implementing the Chagos Islands deal as soon as it can – despite Presidient Trump’s lastest diatribe about it. (See 9.34am.)
Davies-Jones was giving interviews this morning and she told Times Radio:
This deal is essential and crucial for the national security of the United Kingdom and that is the first priority of any government.
We will be bringing the bill back as soon as parliamentary time allows, because this is about national security.
Continue reading... | Hey everyone, I recieved my Antic bike yesterday. After charging it for a few hours with the stock charger, the battery seems to get stuck around 40–43%, and the charger light turns green like it’s finished. I went for a short ride today and tried charging again, but it’s doing the same thing — won’t go past ~40%. Charging indoors on a standard 120V outlet. Has anyone experienced this before or know what might cause it? Any suggestions appreciated. [link] [comments] |
Follow us over on Bluesky | And you can email Daniel
The cross-country bit gets going at 1pm, and I’m looking forward to that. It’s a scientific fact that here’s no kind of race a human can devise that is uncompelling.
In the Nordic, teams of two both have a go at ski jumping, and Germany have just leapt into the lead; they’ll start the cross-country portion with no time penalty, because Austria have just completed this part of things, and only landed far enough for fifth. Norway are second, Japan third and Finland fourth.
Continue reading...The police raided Andrew’s Norfolk home on Thursday
Before the arrest was announced, the prime minister told BBC Breakfast “nobody is above the law” when asked about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
Keir Starmer added:
Anybody who has any information should testify.
So whether it’s Andrew or anybody else, anybody who has got relevant information should come forward to whatever the relevant body is, in this particular case we’re talking about Epstein, but there are plenty of other cases.
Continue reading...A National Science Foundation (NSF) plan to transition the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center to a third-party operator is stirring up controversy in the HPC and scientific communities. While the transition has not yet occurred and the center–which operates the Derecho supercomputer–is still functioning as before, the NSF’s announcement has raised questions about the Trump administration’s scientific priorities.
“The U.S. National Science Foundation has informed the NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) that management and operations of the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center are expected to transition to a third-party operator consistent with the terms of NSF’s cooperative agreement with the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research,” the NSF stated on its website February 12. “NSF is working with all parties to ensure continuity of operations, and additional information will be shared as it becomes available.”
Steve Conway, an analyst with Intersect360 Research, says the hostility toward NCAR by the Trump administration is misdirected.
“The attack on NCAR seems motivated by the administration’s hostility toward the inconvenient truth of climate science, but the attack will also harm NCAR’s continued leadership in weather forecasting methods that over the years have helped save countless American lives and prevent many billions of dollars in property damage,” Conway told HPCwire. “Attacking NCAR’s leadership in weather and climate research threatens America’s economy and national security.”

Derecho (Image courtesy NCAR)
The NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center (NWSC) opened in Cheyenne, Wyoming in 2012 as a partnership between NCAR, the University of Wyoming, and state entities. It has been used by about 1,500 researchers from more than 500 universities around the country.
NWSC is home to Derecho, an HPE Cray cluster that was installed in 2023. The system is composed of 2,400 dual-socket, 64-core AMD “Milan” CPU nodes and 82 GPU nodes, each of which contains a single-socket Milan CPU and four Nvidia A100 GPUs. It uses a 200Gb Slingshot-11 interconnect and is connected to a 60PB Lustre file system. Derecho debuted at 59 on the Top500 list, with 12.4 petaflops on the Linpack benchmark, and is currently number 160.
The announcement regarding the future of NWSC was not unexpected, as the NSF announced in December its “intent to restructure critical weather science infrastructure.” That includes exploring the potential to transfer stewardship of the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center to an “appropriate operator” as well as divesting two NSF aircraft managed and operated by NCAR. The goal of the actions was to “redefine the scope of modeling and forecasting research and operations to concentrate on needs such as seasonal weather prediction, severe storms, and space weather,” the NSF stated.
NCAR Director Everette Joseph addressed the matter in a letter to NCAR staff:

(Hamara/Shutterstock)
“We do not yet know who the new managing entity will be nor do we know the timeline for this transition. I understand that this is difficult news and that it raises many questions, most of which I cannot answer at this point,” Joseph wrote in the letter, according to CNN. “However, we will be working to get more details as soon as possible from NSF, including how this will impact our science and the community we support.”
Russell Vought, the director of the Office of Management and Budget at the White House, announced in a December X post the NSF’s plan to “break up” NCAR, which is based in Boulder, Colorado.
“This facility is one of the largest sources of climate alarmism in the country,” Vought wrote. “A comprehensive review is underway & any vital activities such as weather research will be moved to another entity or location.”
The situation at the NCAR facility in Cheyenne appears to be more stable than it is at the NCAR’s Mesa Laboratory in Boulder, Colorado. The Trump administration has announced its plan to completely close the Mesa Lab.

The plan calls for the NCAR-Wyoming Supercomputing Center to survive, albeit under a new operator. Patrick Collins, the mayor of Cheyenne, told Cowboy State Daily he is looking forward to hearing the plan to continue operating the center.
“The goal for me is to make sure that NCAR in Wyoming survives,” he told Cowboy State Daily. “It’s so important for allowing people to understand what’s happening with the weather, from our military to our communities, studying weather patterns as they change … I’m hopeful that whoever takes over understands the mission.”
U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyoming, told the Wyoming Tribune Eagle that she supports the Trump administration’s decision to shut down the Boulder lab.
“At this time, there has been no announcement regarding the NCAR supercomputing facility in Cheyenne,” Hageman said. “I have long raised concerns about the co-mingling of climate data with extreme ideological-driven agendas, and believe federally funded science should remain focused on objective research and transparency. I will continue to monitor the situation as more information becomes available.”
The post NSF Transition Plan for NCAR-Wyoming Raises Questions in Science Community appeared first on HPCwire.
An avalanche watch was issued by the Sierra Avalanche Center on Sunday, two days before skiers were killed in an avalanche near Lake Tahoe, California.
| Hey all! Started riding a few months ago. This is my GT. I'm a big guy so I've modded it a bit. Thank you all for the mostly informative posts, learned a ton from you all! Only waiting for GTV kit to complete my beast! [link] [comments] |
Girl, 15, and boy, 17, found dead at Little Eden holiday park in suspected carbon monoxide poisoning, police say
Two teenagers have died at a holiday park on the Yorkshire coast in a suspected carbon monoxide poisoning.
A 15-year-old girl and 17-year-old boy were found dead inside a rental property at Little Eden holiday park in Bridlington on Wednesday, police said.
Continue reading...Accenture has reportedly started tracking staff use of its AI tools and will take this into consideration when deciding on top promotions, as the consulting company tries to increase uptake of the technology by its workforce. From a report: The company told senior managers and associate directors that being promoted to leadership roles would require "regular adoption" of artificial intelligence, according to an internal email seen by the Financial Times. The consultancy has also begun collecting data on weekly log-ins to its AI tools by some senior staff members, the FT reports. Accenture has previously said it has trained 550,000 of its 780,000-strong workforce in generative AI, up from only 30 people in 2022, and has announced it is rolling out training to all of its employees as part of its annual $1bn annual spend on learning. Among the tools whose use will reportedly be monitored is Accenture's AI Refinery. The chief executive, Julie Sweet, has previously said this will "create opportunities for companies to reimagine their processes and operations, discover new ways of working, and scale AI solutions across the enterprise to help drive continuous change and create value."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A commission that advises the federal government on architecture and the arts voted to approve President Trump's overhaul of the White House East Wing.
The head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency says Iran's enriched uranium "is still there," as he stresses the urgency of diplomacy to avert a U.S.-Iran war.
A CBS News analysis found 126 cases that were brought by federal prosecutors last year arising out of threats to public officials.
President says US has ‘some work’ to do with Iran as representatives from more than 45 countries attend Trump-run initiative
Donald Trump will start his day in Washington for the Board of Peace meeting at the White House.
He’ll then travel to Rome, Georgia, as part of his tour of the country to tout the administration’s affordability message. He’ll meet with local businesses there, and deliver remarks at 4pm ET.
Continue reading...Scientists envision new research frontiers at the intersection of biology and AI
Feb. 19, 2026 — As computing technologies evolve and advance, so too must the ways we perform scientific research. In a recently released report from the 2025 Workshop on Envisioning Frontiers in AI and Computing for Biological Research, researchers detailed how new technologies such as AI and exascale computing can be used to enhance research in the biological sciences. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) scientists Kirsten Hofmockel and Neeraj Kumar served on the organizing committee for this workshop.

Neeraj Kumar and Kirsten Hofmockel were part of the organizing committee for the 2025 Workshop on Envisioning Frontiers in AI and Computing for Biological Research. Composite image credit: Shannon Colson, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
“One of the big challenges I routinely run into collaborating across domains of science is integrating diverse data across multiple scales to establish genotype to phenotype relationships,” said Hofmockel who leads the Soil Microbiome Science Focus Area project at PNNL. “Individual projects or experiments can widely vary in the amount and diversity of data they produce. Because this data comes in various formats, from images to genetic sequences, it must be integrated in a meaningful way for AI applications.”
The workshop was jointly supported by the Department of Energy’s Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) program and Biological and Environmental Research (BER) program. During the workshop, participants explored how different techniques, such as multiscale modeling and novel algorithms, can be applied to biological research. They also provided their input on specific areas of research that could benefit most from these techniques in the near future. The resulting report identifies four priority research directions: multimodal data assembly, multiscale biosystems simulation, AI-enabled drivers for experimental systems, and novel algorithms for genomics. The report highlights how combining BER’s extensive efforts in biological data collection and analysis with ASCR’s leading computational capabilities, including exascale architectures and high-performance computing platforms, is an important path to progress.
Co-chaired by Daniela Ushizima of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Christopher Henry of Argonne National Laboratory, the workshop featured participants from different career stages across academia, industry, and the national laboratory system. PNNL participants included Arunima Bhattacharjee, Aivett Bilbao, William (Bill) Cannon, and Jason McDermott.
“AI and advanced computing hold immense promise to unlocking breakthroughs in biological research,” said Kumar. “Through close collaboration between computer scientists and domain scientists, we can co-design systems that can enable the next generation of scientific discovery.”
As a chief data scientist in the Advanced Computing, Mathematics, and Data Division and an advisory board member of the Center for AI @PNNL, Kumar leads AI and machine learning programs that advance PNNL’s role in the Department of Energy’s Genesis Mission, the national effort to accelerate scientific discovery through AI-powered platforms. He is driving integration between the Transformational AI Models Consortium and American Science Cloud to build a unified infrastructure for autonomous discovery across biology, chemistry, and critical materials, bridging computational and domain sciences to deliver multidisciplinary impact on a national scale.
Both Kumar and Hofmockel acknowledged the need for innovation in both computing and biological sciences to establish genotype to phenotype relationships and scale-up biological processes.
“We need to innovate algorithms and leverage AI to integrate and interpret diverse biological data,” said Hofmockel. “New collaborations that incorporate biology, advanced computing, and automation are key to advancing the discovery of biological mechanisms and designing new behaviors that support biotechnology and biomanufacturing.”
Source: Sarah Wong, PNNL
The post PNNL: Integrating AI into Biological Research appeared first on HPCwire.
Thinking about buying a 400-ounce gold bar? Here's what to know about the ownership rules for these large bars.
Saudi–UAE tensions: Yemen and regional implications 3 March 2026 — 2:30PM TO 3:45PM Anonymous (not verified) Online
Panellists examine how tensions between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi reflect broader divergences in regional strategy, security priorities, and approaches to influence.
Panellists examine how tensions between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi reflect broader divergences in regional strategy, security priorities, and approaches to influence.
In the final days of 2025, tensions between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), once key partners in the Yemen coalition, became more visible as differences over the conflict’s endgame resurfaced. A central source of friction was their opposing relationships with local actors, particularly the UAE’s support for the Southern Transitional Council (STC), whose push for southern autonomy conflicted with Saudi Arabia’s backing of Yemen’s internationally recognized government and its preference for preserving territorial unity. As Saudi Arabia intensified efforts to stabilize the front lines and advance a political settlement, the UAE’s announcement of a full withdrawal from Yemen brought these underlying disagreements into sharper focus.
Panellists will discuss how the episode underscores not only differing assessments of Yemen’s political future and security architecture but also broader divergences in regional strategy that had been developing between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi in recent years. Speakers will also discuss how the Yemen file became one arena in which evolving economic ambitions, security priorities, and approaches to regional influence have increasingly shaped the relationship between the two Gulf states, with implications likely to extend beyond the conflict itself.
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Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Robert Garcia's previous attempts to extract information about the White House ballroom's finances have so far yielded few answers.
Comments come after Zelenskyy accused Russia of using ‘delay tactics’ to stall peace talks with Ukraine
Meanwhile, Sweden has pledged about €1.2bn in new military support package for Ukraine, responding to president Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s call for urgent help with air defence and ammunition over the weekend.
The EU sees “no tangible signs that Russia is engaging seriously” with the aim of securing peace in Ukraine, its spokesperson said, responding to the latest round of talks in Geneva.
“We see that Russia continues its relentless attacks on Ukraine. This does reflect that Russia is not ready for peace. We still do not see tangible signs that Russia is engaging seriously on peace. …
Even this week, ahead of the peace talks, Ukraine experienced another massive missile and drone strike, according to Ukrainian authorities. …
Continue reading...Italian government urges IPC to reconsider its stance
Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete under flags
Italy, the Winter Olympic hosts, has called for a reversal of the decision to let 10 Russian and Belarusian athletes compete with national flags and anthems at next month’s Paralympic Games.
The foreign minister Antonio Tajani and sports minister Andrea Abodi urged the International Paralympic Committee to reconsider its stance due to Russia’s four-year-old invasion of Ukraine, saying it contradicted the Olympic spirit.
Continue reading...NASA wants to make sure repairs have eliminated the hydrogen leaks detected during an initial fueling test of the Artemis II moon rocket earlier this month.
Up to three times national average of metabolite produced by human use of drug was found in town’s wastewater
Tests on wastewater in an upscale Massachusetts ocean resort town have revealed unexpectedly high levels of cocaine – up to three times the national average.
Officials in the town of Nantucket on the eponymous island off Cape Cod began testing its wastewater last summer “to monitor high-risk substances and opioids in the community”.
Continue reading...Former Prince Andrew's arrest followed the release of a massive trove of Epstein files by the U.S. Justice Department that included a series of potentially incriminating documents related to his activities as trade envoy.
Workplace grievances that once fit in a single email are now ballooning into 30-page documents stuffed with irrelevant historical detail, made-up legal precedents, and citations to laws from the wrong country -- and UK employment lawyers say generative AI is the likely culprit. Anna Bond, legal director at Lewis Silkin, says the complaints she now sees sometimes cite Canadian legislation or fabricated case law. Sinead Casey, employment partner at Linklaters, calls such filings "confidently incompetent" -- superficially persuasive even to lawyers. The flood of bloated claims is compounding pressure on an already stretched tribunal system: Ministry of Justice figures show new employment cases rose 33% in the three months to September, even as concluded cases fell 10% year over year. Investor Marc Andreessen, quipping on X: Overheard in Silicon Valley: "Marginal cost of arguing is going to zero."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The FBI has been in touch with the Mexican government and Mexican law enforcement regarding the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, law enforcement sources told CBS News.
First arrest of a senior member of royal family in modern history came on morning of former prince’s 66th birthday
It was shortly after 8am on Thursday when a small fleet of unmarked police cars drew up at Wood Farm on the king’s private Sandringham estate in Norfolk.
Plainclothes officers stepped out into the late winter drizzle and readied themselves for a historic act that the royal family might have been expecting and dreading for weeks. Inside the house, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was perhaps sitting down to a birthday breakfast.
Continue reading...Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, King Charles III's younger brother, has been arrested over suspected misconduct in public office after revelations in the Epstein files.
One of the four men who was initially convicted was sent to death row in the killing of four teenagers in a crime that haunted Austin for decades.
As Trump pressures Iran, he's spoken of an "armada" heading for the Mideast, but there's another massive movement of American fire power in the air.
Several weeks ago, I came back from a ride and plugged the board in to charge. The charger light stayed green, and the board wouldn’t charge at all. The board is still fully functional at 36%, so you can ride it, but obviously it’s going to die soon if we can’t get it to charge.
We tried two different chargers and neither worked. Both showed a green light as if the board were already fully charged.
We contacted Tony and ordered a new BMS, thinking that would solve the issue. After installing the new BMS, nothing changed — same behavior, still won’t charge.
At this point we’re not sure what else to check. Could this be a charge port issue, wiring problem, battery pack issue, or something else entirely?
Any help or ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Gold prices have been soaring, but before you invest, it helps to know some specific reporting rules.
Where to spot Venus, Jupiter, Saturn, Mercury, Uranus and Neptune in the night sky all at the same time.
From TikTok deepfakes to smears put out by the White House, fake videos modeled on Black archetypes are running rampant - putting Black users at risk
Late last year, as a US government shutdown cut off the Snap benefits that low-income families rely on for groceries, videos on social media cast the fallout in frantic scenes. “Imma keep it real with you,” a Black woman said in a viral TikTok post, “I get over $2,500 a month in stamps. I sell ’em, $2,000 worth, for about $1,200-$1,500 cash.” Another Black woman ranted about taxpayers’ responsibility to her seven children with seven men, and yet another melted down after her food stamps were rejected at a corn-dog counter.
Visible watermarks stamped some videos as AI-generated – apparently, too faintly for the racist commentators and hustlers more than happy to believe the frenzy was real. “You got people treating it like a side hustle, selling the stamps, abusing the system,” the conservative commentator Amir Odom whinged. Fox News reported on the Snap deepfakes as if they were authentic, before issuing a correction. Newsmax anchor Rob Schmitt claimed people were using Snap “to get their nails done, to get their weaves and hair”. (Lost in the outrage was a basic fact: white Americans make up 37% of Snap’s 42 million beneficiaries.)
Continue reading...PALO ALTO, Calif., Feb. 19, 2026 — D-Wave Quantum Inc. today joined the Southeastern Quantum Collaborative (SQC), alongside The University of Alabama in Huntsville, Davidson Technologies, IBM, Alabama A&M University, and the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
The SQC will bring together academia, industry and government to accelerate the advancement and application of quantum information science and technology across the Southeast. In addition, it aims to develop the quantum-ready workforce needed to commercialize the technology. Given Davidson hosts a D-Wave Advantage2 system at its headquarters in Huntsville, Alabama, D-Wave is well positioned to support the SQC’s quantum workforce development efforts.
“Alabama has long been a leader in the development and use of advanced technologies, and D-Wave is excited to join the Southeastern Quantum Collaborative as an inaugural member to support the next wave of innovation coming from the region — quantum computing,” said Jack Sears, vice president of government business solutions at D-Wave. “Establishing a globally competitive, quantum-ready workforce across the Southeast — capable of operationalizing annealing and gate-model systems for mission-critical decision-making, large-scale operational efficiency, and the protection of national interests — will be decisive in accelerating adoption throughout the region’s public and private sectors. By investing in quantum talent and infrastructure, the Southeast can position itself as a national leader in quantum innovation, advanced manufacturing, energy, logistics, and defense.”
“The SQC aims to leverage the region’s unique concentration of cleared defense infrastructure, advanced missile defense expertise, and strong base of prime contractors to accelerate the transition of quantum information science and technology into field-ready capabilities for the warfighter,” said Dr. Rainer Steinwandt, dean of the College of Science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. “The Collaborative’s goal is to transform the Southeastern United States into a global quantum computing leader. Having quantum leaders like D-Wave as inaugural members is critical to developing the next generation of talent.”
“Our work developing quantum-powered applications on D-Wave’s Advantage2 annealing system has demonstrated the real-world power of this technology to enhance mission planning, optimize complex operations, and strengthen national security,” said James Lackey, senior vice president, software solutions division at Davidson. “By joining the SQC, D-Wave reinforces a high-impact collaboration among industry and academia that will accelerate quantum workforce development and rapidly translate advanced quantum capabilities into operational advantage for the warfighter.” Through expert talks, roundtables and networking, the SQC will provide an opportunity for collaboration across the quantum ecosystem to connect government, tech companies and academia.
More from HPCwire
About D-Wave Quantum Inc.
D-Wave is a leader in the development and delivery of quantum computing systems, software, and services. It is the world’s first commercial supplier of quantum computers, and the first and only to offer dual-platform quantum computing products and services, spanning both annealing and gate-model quantum computing technologies. D-Wave’s mission is to help customers realize the value of quantum today through enterprise-grade systems available on-premises and via its Leap quantum cloud service, which offers 99.9% availability and uptime. More than 100 organizations across commercial, government and research sectors trust D-Wave to address complex computational challenges using quantum computing. Learn more about realizing the value of quantum computing today and how D-Wave is shaping the quantum-driven industrial and societal advancements of tomorrow: www.dwavequantum.com.
Source: D-Wave
The post D-Wave Joins Southeastern Quantum Collaborative appeared first on HPCwire.
The U.S. Treasury Department on Thursday sanctioned Kovay Gardens, accusing the Mexican resort of operating under the direction of the Cartel de Jalisco Nueva Generación, or CJNG.
Phison CEO Pua Khein-Seng, whose company is one of the leading makers of controller chips for SSDs and other flash memory devices, admitted in a televised interview that the ongoing global RAM shortage could force companies to cut back their product lines in the second half of 2026 -- and that some may not survive at all if they cannot secure enough memory. The interview, conducted in Chinese by Ningguan Chen of Taiwanese broadcaster Next TV, drew an important distinction: it was the interviewer who raised the possibility of shutdowns and product discontinuations, and Khein-Seng largely agreed rather than volunteering the prediction himself. The shortage stems from AI data centers consuming the vast majority of the world's memory supply, a buildout that has sent RAM prices up by three to six times over the past several months. Only three companies control 93% of the global DRAM market, and all three have chosen to prioritize profits over rapid capacity expansion. Even Nvidia may skip shipping a gaming GPU for the first time in 30 years, and Apple could struggle to secure enough chips. Khein-Seng also expects consumers will increasingly repair broken products rather than replace them.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
NEW DELHI, Feb. 19, 2026 — Amazon Web Services India Private Limited (AWS India) has announced that it will work with Yotta Data Services to deploy AWS Outposts for the National Informatics Centre’s (NIC) Meghraj 2.0 initiative. This initiative enables government departments to leverage AWS services and generative AI capabilities for data residency and security requirements.
AWS Outposts allows customers with sensitive workloads that are restricted to NIC data centers to leverage AWS’s advanced cloud capabilities including the AWS Nitro System’s advanced security capabilities and AWS managed services such as Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS), Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS), and Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3).
This hybrid architecture enables government departments to run sensitive workloads within NIC data centers while accessing the full capabilities of AWS services. With AWS Outposts, applications running in NIC data centers can leverage the AWS Region in India, during peak demand for citizen-facing services. During peak demand periods, applications can expand to the AWS Region in India for use cases like data ingestion, with data synchronizing back to NIC data centers within hours, enabling elastic scaling beyond on-premises capacity constraints. Using AWS Outposts, NIC can enforce security guardrails via AWS Control Tower, to create a security baseline initialized for every new workload eliminating risk of human errors with manual configurations and preventing security drift.
“This synergy with Yotta represents AWS’s commitment to supporting the Government of India’s digital transformation vision,” said Sandeep Dutta, President, AWS India and South Asia. “By deploying AWS Outposts for NIC Meghraj 2.0, we’re enabling government departments to leverage the full power of our cloud services and generative AI capabilities while meeting the requirements for sensitive workloads.”
“This collaboration with AWS strengthens Yotta’s mission to power India’s sovereign and secure digital infrastructure for government”, said Sunil Gupta, Co-founder, Managing Director & CEO, Yotta Data Services. He further added, “By enabling AWS Outposts within NIC’s Meghraj 2.0 framework, we are combining Yotta’s enterprise-grade data center and sovereign cloud capabilities with AWS’s advanced cloud and AI services to deliver a robust hybrid architecture tailored for India’s public sector. Government departments can now scale citizen services seamlessly, leverage generative AI, and innovate faster while ensuring data residency and security within India’s trusted infrastructure ecosystem.”
More from HPCwire: Yotta Plans $2B NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra Supercluster Deployment in India
About Amazon Web Services (AWS) India Services Private Limited
AWS India Private Limited (AWS India) undertakes the resale and marketing of AWS Cloud services in India.
About Amazon Web Services
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is guided by customer obsession, pace of innovation, commitment to operational excellence, and long-term thinking. By democratizing technology for nearly two decades and making cloud computing and generative AI accessible to organizations of every size and industry, AWS has built one of the fastest-growing enterprise technology businesses in history. Millions of customers trust AWS to accelerate innovation, transform their businesses, and shape the future. Learn more at aws.amazon.com.
About Yotta Data Services
Yotta is a new-age Digital Transformation enabler that derives its value from end-to-end competencies in Hyperscale Data Center and Cloud Infrastructure, Managed IT, Global Connectivity, Holistic Cybersecurity, Application Modernization and a gamut of cutting-edge solutions for every enterprise need.
Source: Yotta Data Services
The post AWS and Yotta to Deploy Hybrid Cloud Infrastructure for National Informatics Centre’s Meghraj 2.0 appeared first on HPCwire.
Resettlement organizations said the updated guidance represents a dramatic shift in how refugees are treated after being legally permitted to enter the United States.
Feb. 19, 2026 — A Florida State University researcher has been awarded an international fellowship to develop new materials that contain quantum bits with eventual applications ranging from health care to cybersecurity.

Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry Michael Shatruk. Credit: Amy Walden/FSU College of Arts and Sciences.
Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry Michael Shatruk has earned a 2025 Novo Nordisk Fellowship. Through 752,000 Danish kroner in funding, or about $117,000, the fellowship will allow Shatruk to study quantum molecule-based materials using advanced equipment housed at the Technical University of Denmark in Copenhagen through early May.
“Quantum technologies are poised to revolutionize many areas, including computing, drug development and medical sensing,” Shatruk said. “This fellowship will allow me to carry out research on quantum materials with extensive use of electron-diffraction crystallography, a rare and cutting-edge method for determining the crystal structures of sub-micron particles, which are less than one-thousandth of a millimeter in size.”
Based in Denmark, Novo Nordisk is a global pharmaceutical company specializing in medical treatments for serious chronic diseases. As the producer of half of the world’s insulin, Novo Nordisk is a global leader in diabetes care and notable for developing insulin pens as well as GLP-1 weight loss medications such as Ozempic and Wegovy. Novo Nordisk is also Denmark’s largest private sponsor of fundamental research and supports a wide array of work across scientific disciplines, including Shatruk’s discovery of new quantum materials.
“Dr. Shatruk’s research is highly innovative and rich with transformative insights and effective realizations,” said Wei Yang, chair of the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. “In the past decade, scholar development has been a major departmental focus, and Dr. Shatruk’s fellowship, which centers on improving quantum science and technology, is a testimony to FSU’s synergistic efforts.”
“While in Denmark, I plan to work on the systems that create two-dimensional arrays of qubits, which are the building blocks of chips used in quantum devices,” Shatruk said. “The focus of my project is to study molecular spin qubits placed in the nodes of metal-organic frameworks, or MOFs, to increase computing stability and power. The discovery of MOFs was recognized with the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, so it is fun to work in this field immediately after it received such great recognition.”
MOFs are crystalline structures that are built from metallic ions connected by organic molecules to form a porous material that is readily customizable for specific tasks, including the slow, controlled release of drugs in the body. By integrating MOFs in quantum chips, Shatruk aims to target stability issues in current quantum technology. Most MOFs are smaller than one micron, while a single strand of human hair is about 70 microns in diameter. “Large” MOF crystals are still under one millimeter in size.
“Unfortunately, it is difficult to grow large MOF crystals, so many of them cannot be studied using traditional single-crystal X-ray crystallography methods,” Shatruk said. “The electron-diffraction crystallography machinery in Denmark will help determine the atomic structures of MOFs, even if large crystals cannot be grown, because it enables crystal structure determination on sub-micron particles.”
In 2023, Shatruk became the founding director of the FSU Initiative in Quantum Science and Engineering. With an initial investment of more than $20 million from FSU over three years, the initiative aims to accelerate the discovery of novel quantum phenomena that can impact the design of quantum-related systems.
Visit the FSU Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry website to learn more about Shatruk’s work and research. Visit quantum.fsu.edu to learn more about the FSU Initiative in Quantum Science.
More from HPCwire: Florida Quantum Launches to Organize and Accelerate State’s Quantum Economy
Source: Kendall Cooper, FSU
The post FSU Researcher Wins Novo Nordisk Fellowship to Develop Qubit-Based Materials appeared first on HPCwire.
Speaking before she was sentenced with husband Craig, Lindsay Foreman tells of being on emotional rollercoaster
A woman sentenced to 10 years in jail by an Iranian court said she had undergone an “endurance test for the mind” as she pleaded her innocence on charges of espionage.
Lindsay Foreman said she only wanted justice and fairness under the Iranian constitution, in an interview given to the BBC from inside Evin prison in Tehran just before she was sentenced with her husband, Craig.
Continue reading...Thomas P gives evidence on first day of trial in case that could shape standards for mountain sports
An Austrian mountaineer has said he is “endlessly sorry” his girlfriend froze to death on a joint climb to the country’s highest peak, but denied criminal wrongdoing as his trial began in Innsbruck.
The 37-year-old defendant, identified only as Thomas P, gave evidence on the first day of the high-profile proceedings over the tragedy on Großglockner, in a case that could shape international standards for liability in mountain sports.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: Amazon has officially dethroned Walmart as the biggest global company by revenue, a milestone attesting to the massive scale the e-commerce and cloud-computing giant has achieved since its humble beginnings in 1994 as an online bookseller in Jeff Bezos' Seattle-area garage. Walmart, which had been the largest company by revenue for more than a decade, on Thursday reported sales of $713.2 billion for the 12 months ending Jan. 31. Amazon, which operates on a fiscal year ending in December, earlier this month reported 2025 sales of $717 billion. Bezos carefully studied Walmart founder Sam Walton, embracing many of his business strategies while building his company. Over the past decade, Amazon's revenue has increased at almost 10 times the pace of Walmart's, fueled by a shift in consumer spending from stores to websites and its rapidly growing cloud-computing business, Amazon Web Services.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The Kitchen and Bath Industry Show showcases breakthrough technology in the home industry. CNET's David Watsky is there in person to see it all.
Nick Thomas-Symonds says move could also create unnecessary UK-EU trade barriers and increase costs
A British minister has warned that the EU’s “Made in Europe” industrial strategy could hit supply chains, increase costs and create unnecessary trade barriers between the UK and some members of the bloc.
Nick Thomas-Symonds, the UK minister for EU relations, made the comments as the EU is preparing to publish legislation that would require European-made products to be prioritised in public procurement and consumer schemes.
Continue reading...A new DHS memo details plan to allow federal immigration officers to detain legal refugees in the US indefinitely
The Trump administration is moving to arrest thousands of people already legally admitted to the US as refugees and detain them indefinitely for aggressive “re-screening”, a report published Thursday said.
Under the new policy, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), said that federal immigration officers can and should arrest anyone who has not yet obtained the right to permanent residence, a so-called green card, and subject them to interviews to assess their refugee claims while they are in custody, as first reported by the Washington Post.
Continue reading...MIGDAL HAEMEK, Israel, and TORONTO, Feb. 19, 2026 — Tower Semiconductor and Xanadu today announced an expansion of their collaboration in developing advanced silicon photonics for fault tolerant quantum computers based on Tower’s high-volume silicon photonics platform. These developments build on prior collaborative technical achievements, including a series of successful joint tapeouts to test and refine Xanadu’s designs on Tower Semiconductor process flows.
Xanadu and Tower have co-engineered a unique production flow for Xanadu’s custom material stack, delivering a manufacturing-aligned, architecture-compatible platform for next-generation photonic quantum hardware. This custom stack is designed to sustain both scalability and performance as systems grow in complexity, meeting the requirements of large-scale quantum information processing.
“Our work with Tower has been instrumental in moving our hardware from concept to prototype to demonstrator systems within a scalable manufacturing environment,” said Christian Weedbrook, Founder and CEO of Xanadu. “By combining our architectural breakthroughs, fabrication process engineering and design innovations with Tower’s world-class technology and manufacturing expertise, we are building the foundation for a truly useful quantum computer.”
“Xanadu is advancing one of the most scalable quantum architectures in the industry, and we’re pleased to deepen our collaboration to support manufacturable scale,” said Dr. Ed Preisler, Vice President and General Manager of RF Business Unit, Tower Semiconductor. “This reinforces the broad applicability of our platform across multiple advanced domains including quantum computing, data centers, telecom and automotive applications.
Current developments focus on optimizing the performance of critical components using standard product flows for ultra-low loss silicon nitride (SiN) and integrated photodiodes. These projects allow Xanadu to validate its cutting-edge photonic circuit designs on an established high-volume manufacturing platform. In addition, as the quantum computing industry advances toward commercial scale systems, this collaboration is set to meet the manufacturability requirements of large-scale photonic quantum computing.
For additional information about Tower Semiconductor’s SiPho technology platform, visit here. For more information about Xanadu, please visit xanadu.ai.
About Tower Semiconductor
Tower Semiconductor Ltd. (NASDAQ/TASE: TSEM), the leading foundry of high-value analog semiconductor solutions, provides technology, development, and process platforms for its customers in growing markets such as consumer, industrial, automotive, mobile, infrastructure, medical and aerospace and defense. Tower Semiconductor focuses on creating a positive and sustainable impact on the world through long-term partnerships and its advanced and innovative analog technology offering, comprised of a broad range of customizable process platforms such as SiPho, SiGe, BiCMOS, mixed-signal/CMOS, RF CMOS, CMOS image sensor, non-imaging sensors, displays, integrated power management (BCD and 700V), and MEMS. Tower Semiconductor also provides world-class design enablement for a quick and accurate design cycle as well as process transfer services including development, transfer, and optimization, to IDMs and fabless companies. To provide multi-fab sourcing and extended capacity for its customers, Tower Semiconductor currently owns one operating facility in Israel (200mm), two in the U.S. (200mm), and two in Japan (200mm and 300mm) which it owns through its 51% holdings in TPSCo and shares a 300mm facility in Agrate, Italy with STMicroelectronics.
About Xanadu
Xanadu is a Canadian quantum computing company with the mission to build quantum computers that are useful and available to people everywhere. Founded in 2016, Xanadu has become one of the world’s leading quantum hardware and software companies. The company also leads the development of PennyLane, an open-source software library for quantum computing and application development.
Source: Tower Semiconductor
The post Xanadu Expands Silicon Photonics Collaboration with Tower Semiconductor for Fault Tolerant Quantum Hardware appeared first on HPCwire.
Israeli prison service and IDF reject allegations after research by Committee to Protect Journalists
Almost 60 Palestinian journalists detained in Israeli prisons since the 7 October 2023 Hamas attack have been beaten, starved and subjected to sexual violence, including rape, a report alleges.
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reviewed dozens of testimonies, photographs and medical records documenting what it describes as serious abuses by Israeli soldiers and prison guards against Palestinian reporters. The report draws on in-depth interviews from 59 Palestinian journalists. Of those interviewed, 58 reported being subjected to what they described as torture while in Israeli custody.
Continue reading...José María Balcázar, who argued for marriage at 14 and above, replaces José Jerí who was voted out after a scandal
Peru’s congress has elected José María Balcázar, an octogenarian leftist lawmaker who has defended child marriage, as the country’s interim president ahead of general elections in April.
Balcázar is Peru’s ninth president since 2016. The surprise election, in which Balcázar beat the favourite, María del Carmen Alva, a conservative, came after lawmakers voted to remove José Jerí as president on Tuesday after just four months in office, due to a scandal over secretive meetings with Chinese businessmen.
Continue reading...A Coast Guard crew recovered over two dozen bales of cocaine from waters off Puerto Rico.
Trump wants US energy dominance. Global markets may not agree Expert comment LToremark
At first glance, the Trump administration’s energy dominance policy appears to have been a success. But shifting energy market dynamics has proven difficult.
Ever since US President Trump declared a national energy emergency on his first day in office last year, energy has been a major focus of his administration. He aims to achieve ’dominance’ by growing the fossil fuel, nuclear and critical minerals sectors to fill domestic markets and lead global ones. Renewables are pushed aside by revoking regulations, subsidies and even approved projects.
What is clear is that US oil and gas production are surging – oil to record levels, and liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports growing more than 20 per cent.
Longer term, Trump wants similar growth in coal and nuclear power. After coal’s precipitous decline in recent years, his administration has thus far managed to keep five US coal-fired power plants open by removing pollution regulations, offering investment assistance, and even ordering the Pentagon to purchase coal-generated electricity. On nuclear, Trump has set a goal of quadrupling US atomic power generation by 2050 and has moved aggressively to ease permitting at home and build new commercial nuclear partnerships abroad, including with the UK.
But the Trump administration’s energy dominance goals go beyond making the United States a hydrocarbon hyperpower. As Secretary of State Marco Rubio spelled out at the Munich Security Conference, the administration sees the global shift to renewables as a source of leverage against Washington – and US allies must follow it in changing course.
One of the brains behind energy dominance, Diana Furchtgott-Roth, argues that America’s growth under a pro-energy regime will force other countries to reconsider their own policies or face economic decline.
US allies like the EU, Japan and South Korea have responded by pledging to purchase and/or invest in US energy production. Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, led OPEC countries in increasing oil production in 2025, helping put global production at an all-time high. Washington now has direct or indirect influence over oil output from Canada through to Guyana and Venezuela – approximately 20 per cent of global oil production. Enough, analysts argue, to limit price spikes and give the Trump administration freedom of action in global politics.
Indeed, energy dominance has both domestic and foreign policy goals. At home, it aims to enrich US producers and lower prices for consumers – two sometimes contradictory goals. Abroad, it again aims to empower US energy companies, particularly those who are major players in the development of Middle Eastern LNG. Washington also hopes that a stable and diverse oil supply helps prevent Iran, Russia or other actors from using energy prices to put pressure on Washington, for example in response to further attacks on Tehran.
But energy dominance also has an ideological side. The aim is to defeat what Rubio has called the ‘climate cult’ and with it both Beijing’s dominance of green energy technology and cooperative global efforts at energy transition.
At first glance, Trump’s energy dominance appears to be a success so far. But three key points indicate that all is perhaps not what it seems. First, global demand is driving increased production of all types of energy – including green energy. Second, long-time horizons for energy generation mean today’s headline new plants were planned five to ten years ago. Today’s policies will also need that kind of staying power. Third, from Trump’s energy dominance to Europe’s quest for energy security to global efforts at energy transition, there are many attempts to put politics over energy markets. But markets continue to reassert themselves.
Climbing energy use, demand for air conditioning in emerging economies, and AI and data centres in OECD countries saw production and use of every kind of energy increase last year, from oil and gas to green and nuclear. Even as coal use remained stable globally and rebounded in the US, renewables generated more power globally than coal for the first time, and new capacity in solar and wind was enough to account for all of global energy demand growth.
Domestically, the Trump administration’s efforts to shift marketplace dynamics had mixed results. Shale oil producers did not see prices high enough to spur growth, while renewable energy continued to outperform administration rhetoric. Although US investment in renewables declined from 2024 highs, overall renewables made up a large majority of new power generation capacity in 2025. Investment in renewables also outpaced investment in fossil fuel production, and solar energy now competes favourably on price alone. This suggests that market fundamentals will continue to drive a US energy transition, albeit at a slower pace.
Internationally, the geopolitical ramifications of the US move to oust Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and supervise the country’s oil production are dramatic. Washington is already using Venezuela to cut off oil supplies to Cuba and pressure India to stop buying discounted Russian oil. Coupled with new moves or even military action against Iran, in principle this increases pressure on Moscow but also Beijing, a key beneficiary of cheap Russian and Iranian oil. The intended beneficiaries are US producers in the Western Hemisphere, US companies globally, as well as Gulf OPEC producers who are key partners of Trump.
In the Middle East, Trump – and many US leaders before him – has been frustrated by the ability of OPEC members to threaten price increases and destabilize the US economy. Increased domestic and hemispheric oil production has been viewed as a way to gain freedom of action in the Middle East. By that metric, the Trump administration’s ability to carry out multiple military operations in the region – and threaten more – without debilitating oil price spikes is a sign of success. However, US companies’ increasing involvement in Middle Eastern oil and gas production mean that US interests will continue to be heavily engaged in the region for decades to come – the exact opposite geopolitical outcome of what Americans thought domestic energy growth would achieve.
Separate gear and engine problems with some Nissan Rogue compact SUVs can cause them to lose power, safety regulators warn.
We can honor my mentor and the late civil rights icon by becoming the America we’ve never yet been
Before 5am on Tuesday, Jesse Jackson Jr called to tell me his father and my friend, the Rev Jesse Louis Jackson, had died at 84 years old. I shared a prayer with the family and listened to Jesse Jr talk about how he had heard his father breathe his last breath in the middle of the night. When he called his mother to the room, he told me, she reached toward his father and said: “A mighty lion has fallen.”
In Africa’s savannas, the lion is respected because he has a power that all the other animals recognize, even if they do not understand it. The responses to Jackson’s death have proven him to be a lion in this sense – remembered with respect by people from every walk of life, even those who did not understand him. Though Donald Trump has built a political career by opposing almost every policy Jackson worked for in public life, he recalled Jackson as a “force of nature”. Trump recognized his power, even if he didn’t understand it. Anyone who wants to help reconstruct the America that Jackson worked for should take time to understand the source of this mighty lion’s strength.
Continue reading...Intelligence findings read to parliament say ‘rogue’ agencies and individuals recruiting Kenyan nationals to frontline
More than 1,000 Kenyans have been lured to fight for Russia in its war with Ukraine, according to an intelligence report to the Kenyan parliament that highlights the scale of a Russian operation taking African men to the frontline.
The majority leader of Kenya’s national assembly, Kimani Ichung’wah, said “rogue recruitment agencies and individuals in Kenya” were continuing to send Kenyan nationals to fight in the conflict, as he read MPs the summary of an investigation by Kenya’s National Intelligence Service.
Continue reading...Eight skiers were found dead, six were rescued and one is still missing after avalanche in Sierra Nevada mountains
The many weeks of a worrying snow drought in the western US is driven by the climate crisis and helped set the stage for the deadly avalanche this week in the Sierra Nevada mountains of northern California, according to experts.
Perilous avalanches are not uncommon in the region, according to the National Avalanche Center, which maintains a map of locations where avalanche danger is highest, and the risk is now particularly high in the Lake Tahoe area.
Continue reading...Paolo Petrecca, director of Rai Sport, prompted widespread criticism and protests from journalists at network
The head of the sports division of the Italian public broadcaster Rai has resigned after his gaffe-strewn commentary of the Winter Olympics opening ceremony provoked protests among its journalists.
Paolo Petrecca, appointed director of Rai Sport last year, handed in his notice on Thursday after a board meeting, a source within Rai confirmed.
Continue reading...These exercises will help keep heart disease away and get you stronger.
I’ve looked all over and can’t find a single option in stock that doesn’t originate from FM… I’d even take just a sensor…
The worst part is these smug fucks think they’re actually winning by spending all this money to send lawyers after regular people just trying to provide a small service to their community, all the while oblivious to everything they’re missing out on
The family of Virginia Giuffre, who accused former Prince Andrew of assaulting her when she was a teenager, thanked police on Thursday after he was arrested.
| Used GT with 500 miles. Put about 20 on it myself last 2 weeks. Charged day 1 and still have about 81% battery! Cleaned ALL the dirty in all the places. I badgered it, added Loboy soft footpads and the Variable Rail Height kit and dropped ‘er down to at XR height. The VRH has 1 or 2 (can’t remember) settings ABOVE stock for trails, then 5 below stock for street riding. Gonna add some slime to the tire shortly. Got a fender from TFL that should give capri fenders when lowered and then add the top when raised back to stock. Next up: add new rail guards and some color to the fenders. Have some nubby grip tape with a cool design that I’ll install on the old footpads once i figure things out ! Shout-out to Good Day Grip…. Can’t wait to get ‘em! It’s threatening to rain, so took it out on a quick 10 min ride. WAY easier to turn, more stable, and went faster than i intended. So already, way more control of the board. Now… just missed an eBay 6” hub for GT with tire only 200 mi for $250. Dangit. Soft Loboys already have a nice padded feel. Looking forward to seeing if i still prefer them or concave once i upgrade the grip on the concave. [link] [comments] |
Tehran may claim it will not negotiate under duress, but that is precisely what it is being required to do
Although much attention will be given to the inaugural meeting of the Board of Peace in Washington, it is the “arsenal of war” that Donald Trump has assembled in the Middle East, and what it implies for the stately pace of Washington’s negotiations with Iran, that deserves more.
The well-connected Axios reporter Barak Ravid is hated in Iran – one news site on Thursday described him as a one-man psychological war operation against Tehran. But he is widely read, as was his report that the US viewed the talks in Geneva on Tuesday as a “nothing burger”, and that a full-scale attack on Iran was far closer than most Americans realised. The story led to a spike in oil prices and front-page pieces in US newspapers saying Trump’s military preparations would be complete by the weekend.
Continue reading...US military base on Diego Garcia: What is its strategic importance? Explainer jon.wallace
President Trump’s comments regarding the island’s potential use in a strike on Iran show its continued importance in projecting US power in the Indian Ocean region – even in a rapidly changing strategic environment.
President Donald Trump’s critique of the UK’s 2025 agreement to transfer sovereignty of the Chagos Archipelago to Mauritius triggered a wave of media attention in January 2026. In February, the president appeared to walk back his criticism of the deal, which would see the UK obtain a 99-year lease on Diego Garcia – the largest Chagos island and the site of a major UK/US military base.
But President Trump criticized the deal again on 18 February, linking Diego Garcia to the US military buildup for a possible strike on Iran:
‘Should Iran decide not to make a Deal,’ he said, ‘it may be necessary for the United States to use Diego Garcia… in order to eradicate a potential attack by a highly unstable and dangerous Regime.’
The headlines the president generates tend to centre on the wisdom and fairness of the UK’s deal with Mauritius. But this misses another important part of the story: the entire concept of a military base on Diego Garcia was conceived and initiated by the US, not the UK, to assert American control in the Indian Ocean.
The disputed presence of the military base is therefore a story about American power and strategy as much as the legacy of the British Empire. The president’s comments show the island’s continuing importance to longstanding American policy in the region. So do reports that Diego Garcia may have been used to mount an operation to seize a sanctioned oil tanker.
Following the end of World War II, as decolonization progressed and more countries became independent, US naval planners worried that US access to overseas bases was diminishing relative to its Cold War opponents: China and the Soviet Union.
One leading planner was concerned that in the event of hostilities in the Indian Ocean region ‘access via Suez and undisputed access via Singapore or through the Indies may be denied’, arguing that the US Navy therefore needed a base in the Indian Ocean.
Diego Garcia was a strong candidate: it had military advantages (an airfield and anchorage potential), political advantages (a small population, and administrative status under the UK) and a useful location, in the middle of the Indian Ocean. It is about 3000 kilometres from both the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait at the mouth of the Red Sea and the Malacca Strait near the South China Sea. This would allow the US military to project power across the ocean, deter adversaries and reassure allies.
The UK had already built a small base in Deigo Garcia during World War II, and British troops remained there until the end of the war.
In 1961, the US proposed that the UK government detach the Chagos Archipelago from colonial Mauritius to create a new territory that would ensure basing rights for future US and UK military use. Over the following years, the UK and US governments entered secret negotiations over the detachment of the Chagos Archipelago from colonial Mauritius.
In the final agreement, the US government agreed to make payments to the British of up to $14 million, or half the cost of creating the ‘British Indian Ocean Territory’.
Since then, the military base in Diego Garcia has served as an anchor for American operations. The island hosts an extensive airfield with runways long enough to accommodate large military aircraft like B-52 bombers, KC-135 tankers, reconnaissance aircraft and transport planes. It also has major fuel storage facilities, radar installations, and control towers that can support regional military operations.
Diego Garcia also hosts a deep-water port that can dock, resupply, and provide maintenance to large naval vessels including aircraft carriers, destroyers, and submarines. There are multiple piers and docks equipped with modern systems to support rapid response operations.
Diego Garcia was a critical, high-volume launchpad for US air operations in the 1991 Gulf War and 2003 Iraq War.
And in the early 2000’s the base provided support for US airstrikes in Afghanistan, targeting Taliban and al-Qaeda forces. Questions have also been raised about the possible role of Diego Garcia as a CIA ‘black site’ during the ‘War on Terror.’ In 2024 and 2025, the US used the base to launch operations against the Houthis in Yemen.
The US is not the only military that operates in the Indian Ocean. France and India are the two leading naval powers of the Indian Ocean region.
India has its own military presence and relationship with Mauritius and is currently constructing a major air base and naval jetty on the island of Agaléga about 1767 kilometres away from Diego Garcia. This base is planned to include a long runway, deep-water jetty, and radar and communications infrastructure capable of supporting Indian maritime patrol aircraft including US-made Boeing P-8 surveillance planes.
Mauritius officially frames the infrastructure as mutually beneficial coastguard support, but the base significantly bolsters India’s ability to project power and conduct long-range surveillance in the western Indian Ocean. More broadly, India also supports Mauritius with coastal surveillance radar stations, training, defence equipment, and maritime security cooperation.
France also has a neighbouring military presence in the Indian Ocean within its own island territories like La Réunion and Mayotte. About 7,000 French military personnel operate under the Forces Armées de la Zone Sud de l’Océan Indien, conducting surveillance, counter-piracy, disaster response, and deterrence missions. French submarines also patrol the region as part of Paris’s continuous at-sea nuclear posture. These positions together give France significant control over the southern part of the Indian Ocean.
Notably, France also faces a number of sovereignty disputes in the Indian Ocean. In both Réunion and Mayotte there have been various independence movements overtime. Repeated referendums in Mayotte have demonstrated a desire amongst islanders to remain a part of – and deepen integration – with France. However, Comoros still maintains its historic claims to Mayotte.
Today, many Comorians consider the ‘return’ of Mayotte a national cause – not unlike Mauritius’ claims to the Chagos Archipelago, although the Chagos Archipelago is much farther away from Mauritius than Mayotte is from Comoros. Both the African Union and United Nations recognize Mayotte as part of Comoros. The Comoros–France sovereignty dispute over Mayotte is thus a continuing challenge in the region.
France and Mauritius are also in an ongoing territorial dispute over Tromelin island. In 2010, both countries signed an agreement to promote environmental protection there but have not resolved the sovereignty issue.
In recent years China has also developed a significant Indian Ocean presence. The expansion of Chinese commercial, military, and dual-use shipping in the Indian Ocean has led to growing security concerns amongst the major navies of the Indian Ocean, including the US, France, India, and Australia.
That concern fuelled much of the criticism in the UK about the sovereignty agreement – with opponents arguing the 2025 deal could allow China to expand its influence in Mauritius and the region.
Policymakers in Washington and London continue to press the counter-China narrative about the Chagos Archipelago – arguing that the deal leaves nothing to prevent China building a base on the Chagos Islands. But this argument overlooks the complexity of the Indian Ocean region. Mauritius and India’s important strategic relationship would likely blunt any Chinese efforts to develop a strategic or dual-use presence in Mauritius.
Besides, China has focused its partnerships and port developments elsewhere in the region, from Gwardar Port in Pakistan to the Kyaukphyu Port in Myanmar and beyond. Rather than competing directly for a presence in Mauritius, China has successfully distributed its maritime interests amongst countries where the US and UK have less leverage.
Furthermore, Beijing does not have a clear Indian Ocean strategy. Instead, it has benefitted from the narrative that Western countries like the UK (and by extension the US) have violated international law in the Chagos Islands and continue to face an active sovereignty issue in the Indo-Pacific. That serves as a useful counterweight to China’s own sovereignty disputes in the South China Sea.
Diego Garcia’s importance is likely to increase as the US seeks a secure fallback position amid shifting alliances and regional rivalries.
Even in the context of the so-called ‘Donroe Doctrine’, in which the Trump administration has sought to reorient US defence strategy towards the Western Hemisphere, the island does not represent overreach. Instead, Diego Garcia functions as a support node that underwrites US hemispheric control.
The nature of maritime warfare is also evolving. This will have implications for the future of Diego Garcia. For example, drones like autonomous undersea vehicles (UAVs) or ‘supercarrier’ ships that can operate unmanned aerial systems (UAS) are being added to the US arsenal. From Diego Garcia, these capabilities would extend the US’s ability to project power and threaten use of force across the Indian Ocean region.
Liberal MP claims the Reserve Bank has been soft on inflation. Labor says questioning the RBA’s dual mandate amounts to a ‘plan for higher unemployment’
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There was good news on Thursday.
Another solid month of jobs growth left the unemployment rate steady at 4.1% in January.
Continue reading...RFK Jr ally Jay Bhattacharya was named acting director of the CDC and will be fourth leader in a year to head agency
Jay Bhattacharya, the director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), was named the acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Wednesday, making him the fourth leader in a year at the embattled agency in an unprecedented move that further consolidates power among a small group of men at the helm of US health agencies.
He’s been an ineffectual health leader whose attention will be further fractured, and as a close ally to Robert F Kennedy Jr, secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services and a longtime vaccine critic. Bhattacharya may sign off on further changes to the vaccine schedule, observers said.
Continue reading...India's digital payment platforms process trillions of dollars a year through UPI, the government-built real-time payments rail that handles more than 90% of all payment transactions in the country, but one of their largest net revenue line items is not a payment product at all: it's a cheap plastic speaker that sits on a shopkeeper's counter and reads out incoming payments aloud. The roughly 23 million soundboxes deployed across India earn about $220 million a year in rental fees, more than every explicitly UPI-linked revenue line in the ecosystem combined, according to estimates from Bernstein. Each device costs $7-12 to manufacture and earns its platform $7-10 a year in rent. A story adds: PhonePe processes about 48% of all UPI transactions in India. Its net payment processing revenue in H1 FY26 was about $83 million. Its device revenue was about $34 million. Running nearly half of India's real-time payment infrastructure earns PhonePe only 2.4 times what it makes from renting speakers to shopkeepers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Getting another board for my spouse as a first time rider. Looking more at ease of use, “steady” or locked in feel and comparing these rails more than the individual products. No need for high speed a torque. Just gonna cruise around for leisure and stuff.
How does each rail feel? You can even give feedback from straight rails to recurve.
Thanks!
Feral chickens, hens and roosters have been nuisances in Hawaii for years, but ways to deal with them, including proposals to let people kill them, are proving controversial.
Racism allegations in Portugal overshadowed another fine result in the Arctic and the holders being pushed by their Ligue 1 rivals
Nothing should divert attention away from what happened after Vinícius Júnior’s goal for Real Madrid in their 1-0 victory at Benfica on Tuesday. It would be frivolous to do so. The Brazilian scored one of the finest goals of a career marked by spectacular strikes, but this week’s Champions League action will be remembered for the regrettable flashpoint that followed.
Continue reading...King Charles III said in a statement that “the law must take its course,” promising the royal family’s full support and cooperation.
The Celerity high-speed oven is an industry first. Its "golden heater" technology can cook a chicken three times faster than a normal oven.
Under pressure from the Trump administration, over a dozen schools signed agreements to end links with organizations that “restrict participation based on race.”
At $2,900, Samsung's latest foldable is a true phone-tablet hybrid and a multitasker's dream. But more isn't always better.
If you don't want to pay a $45 fee at the airport, you'll need to get a Real ID before flying.
New technology has workers spooked, but experts say it’s creating an opening for a resurgence in worker power
In 2026, it’s a scary time to work for a living.
Gone are the days of quiet quitting, the Great Resignation, and the highly visible union-organizing battles that began the decade and signaled that perhaps worker power was on the rise again in the US. Instead, much of that momentum is being crowded out of our minds by anxieties: a worsening affordability crisis, geopolitical instability, and the specter of artificial intelligence looming over the workplace.
Continue reading...The homeland security department is reportedly seeking information on critical social media accounts. Look no further
The New York Times reports that the Department of Homeland Security has sent Google, Meta (owner of Facebook and Instagram) and other media corporations subpoenas for the names on accounts that criticize ICE enforcement. The department wants to identify Americans who oppose what it’s doing.
I’ll save them time.
Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is a professor of public policy emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a Guardian US columnist and his newsletter is at robertreich.substack.com. His new book, Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America, is out now
Continue reading...Cesar Vasquez, who has supported families of undocumented immigrants since age 14, has become a community lifeline – and a known ICE target
While most 18-year-olds worry about college papers and spring break plans, Cesar Vasquez drives through coastal California farm towns scanning for unmarked SUVs before dawn. He flips down his driver’s seat visor to look at a taped list of license plates he has already identified as Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) vehicles, and jots down a few new ones he suspects could be. His phone buzzes constantly – tips from neighbors, text chains from volunteers alerting to ICE activity – all in an attempt to keep his community safe from being swept up in federal agents’ widening dragnet.
This is what organizing looks like for this son of undocumented immigrants. In his home town of Santa Maria, a small farming town on California’s central coast where over 80% of farm workers are undocumented, Vasquez has become both a crucial community lifeline and a known target of federal immigration enforcement.
Continue reading...
JENI NANCE
Co-Managing Mosaic Editor
You can tell a lot about a person based on the kind of music they listen to, which is why I try to expand my musical intake as much as I can. I have different playlists for different moods, which I’ve carefully crafted and take pride in. Despite venturing to different musical realms, I find myself gravitating back to the same sound and artists.
My Spotify Wrapped this year is definitely an interesting one. First, I didn’t listen to as much music as I usually do. In the past I typically listened to upwards of 50,000 minutes on Spotify. This year I fell short, only listening to 30,941 minutes, which is the lowest it’s been in years.
On a more surprising note, I listened to 225 genres. I didn’t even know there were that many to begin with.
To make it even more interesting, my top five were soft pop, classic rock, power pop, Latin and country. My top five genres being so vastly different from each other threw me for a loop.
I’m not sure if I should be embarrassed by my top song, but I’m definitely not surprised. It tickles my brain and I swear I had it on a loop for the longest time. It’s also one of the more obscure songs on my list at 131 listens — “Down Under” by Men At Work. Needless to say, the Robert Irwin underwear ad got to me, seeing as it had me playing the unofficial Australian anthem for months.
Coming in second place is “Hard Times” by Paramore, which I listened to 130 times. I also played this song on an endless loop. It just scratched an itch and listening to it gave me an instant boost of serotonin.
At number three is “DtMF” by Bad Bunny — no shame, this one is a banger. Numbers four and five are “no tears left to cry” and “we can’t be friends” by Ariana Grande — yes, someone did break my heart.
My top album is my pride and joy, “BITE ME,” by the queen herself, Reneé Rapp. She and Billie Eilish have been my favorite artists for years now and “BITE ME,” has been on repeat since it was released. It single-handedly kept me from going crazy while I was in the hospital with a broken ankle.
My number two album was also a release from this year, “DeBí TiRAR MáS FOToS” by Bad Bunny. This was one of the best albums released this year and has been on a regular rotation.
My family is Colombian and listening to this album makes me feel like I’m back at my childhood home, flooded with the smell of fresh empanadas and standing on my grandmother’s toes as we dance to Reggaton music.
Number three, no surprise, is “HIT ME HARD AND SOFT” by Billie Eilish. This is another one of my favorite albums and I consider it one of the best albums of all time — one that makes me feel like I’m seeing through a window into Eilish’s life, while also relating to mine in almost every way. She was snubbed at last year’s Grammys and I will die on that hill.
“American Heartbreak” by Zach Bryan was my number four, which is kind of odd compared to the other albums in my top five. Not mad at it, just unexpected. I didn’t think I listened to it that much.
My number five was “Man’s Best Friend” by Sabrina Carpenter. The album as a whole, I truly didn’t like. I only regularly listened to four or five songs, but I guess I listen to them on the album track when I do pull them up.
My number one artist was Reneé Rapp — wow, shocker. It’s not like I listened to her at least once a day for a year. My number two was Billie Eilish, again, no surprise there. I’m pretty sure the song that would save me from Vecna would be “CHIHIRO” (if you know, you know — if you don’t, I’m not sorry).
Coming in at number three is Bad Bunny. I think what surprised me the most was how much his music impacts me. I’d never listened to him before “DeBí TiRAR MáS FOTos” and I wasn’t expecting him to hit as hard as he does. Now I’m determined to see him during this tour, despite there not being any stops in the United States.
Number four is Ariana Grande, which also doesn’t really surprise me. I tend to gravitate towards music that transcends the bounds of my consciousness. Her music makes me feel like I’m on an intergalactic trip and it’s an otherworldly experience. Something about her vocals and melodies is hypnotic and mildly addicting.
Number five is Paramore. I’m not really sure what to say about this one. I’ve listened to Paramore regularly since I was a kid and they have a sound that just doesn’t die. I have them on a lot of my playlists because their music is pretty versatile and can fit various moods or occasions.
Overall, a very interesting Spotify Wrapped if I do say so myself. I love the variety and how much I’ve branched out this year — from Latin to country. If you want to feel girlhood on a different level, travel between galaxies or just total “feel good” vibes, grab your headphones and listen to some of my favorites from this year.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Financial Post: In 2024, the Ethiopian government banned the import of fossil fuel-powered vehicles and slashed tariffs on their electric equivalents. It was a policy driven less by the country's climate ambitions and more by fiscal pressures. For years, subsidizing gasoline for consumers has been a major drag on Ethiopia's budget, costing the state billions of dollars over the past decade. The country defaulted on its sovereign bonds in 2023 after rising interest rates drove up the costs of servicing its debts, and it received a $3.4 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund the following year. In the two years since the ban on internal combustion engine vehicles, EV adoption has grown from less than 1% to nearly 6% of all of the vehicles on the road in the country -- according to the government's own figures -- some way above the global average of 4%. "The Ethiopia story is fascinating," said Colin McKerracher, head of clean transport at BloombergNEF. "What you're seeing in places that don't make a lot of vehicles of any type, they're saying: 'Well, look, if I'm going to import the cars anyway, then I'd rather import less oil. We may as well import the one that cleans up local air quality and is cheaper to buy.'" For decades, Ethiopia's high import tariffs on vehicles put new car ownership out of the reach of most of the country's population. Per capita gross domestic product is only about $1,000, and even by the standards of low-income countries, it has among the lowest car ownership rates. At 13 vehicles per 1,000 people, it's a fraction of the African average of 73. With few cars manufactured in the country, the vast majority are imported, and most are bought used. The government's import policy has upended the market. In parallel, tariffs for EVs were dropped to 15% for completed cars, 5% for parts and semi-assembled vehicles, and zero for "fully knocked down" -- vehicles shipped in parts and assembled locally. That has made new EVs cost-competitive with old gasoline cars.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bruce Meyer promoted to interim executive director
New labor deal negotiations with owners looming
Bruce Meyer was promoted to interim executive director of the baseball players’ association on Wednesday, a day after Tony Clark’s forced resignation. It was a move for continuity ahead of the likely start in April of what figures to be contentious collective bargaining with team owners.
Clark is a former All-Star first baseman who had headed the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) since 2013. He resigned on Tuesday, just months ahead of the expected start of bargaining for a new labor contract. The current deal expires on 1 December.
Continue reading...The Starforge Explorer III Pro is a big, exceptional machine that delivers stellar performance and value.
Two law professors outline strategies for equality’s survival in a Trumpian post-DEI era in new book How Equality Wins
The Trump administration’s “war on woke” seems to have claimed its biggest victim in DEI. Not so long ago, diversity, equity and inclusion was the favorite term of Fortune 500 CEOs and the political elite. More recently, it has been blamed for everything from the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore and the deadly Los Angeles wildfires to the crash between a regional jet and a helicopter in Washington DC.
“DEI means people DIE,” Elon Musk wrote last year.
Continue reading...As Trump slashes science funding, young researchers flee abroad. Without solid innovation, the US could cease to have the largest biomedical ecosystem in the world
In April 2025, less than three months after Donald Trump returned to the White House, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) put out its latest public health alert on so-called “superbugs”, strains of bacteria resistant to antibiotics.
These drug-resistant germs, the CDC warned, are responsible for more than 3m infections in the US each year, claiming the lives of up to 48,000 Americans.
Continue reading...Whatever type of sci-fi you're looking for, Prime Video has it.
While the court denied prosecutors’ request for the death penalty, the life sentence imposed on Yoon Suk Yeol is a pivotal moment for South Korea’s democracy.
Police assessing if Mountbatten-Windsor shared sensitive information with Jeffrey Epstein. Plus: how plastic production has doubled
Good morning.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Prince Andrew, has been arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.
What other information has the force shared? Thames Valley police previously said they were reviewing allegations that a woman was trafficked to the UK by Epstein to have a sexual encounter with Andrew.
This is a developing story: follow the latest updates.
What is the ISF? According to the UN, which authorized the creation of a temporary force, the ISF will be tasked with securing Gaza’s border and maintaining peace within the area. It’s also supposed to protect civilians, and train and support “vetted Palestinian police forces”.
What about in case of renewed war? It’s unclear what the ISF’s rules of engagement would be if there was combat, renewed bombing by Israel, or Hamas attacks.
What other news is there from Gaza? A Lancet study has found that the death toll in the first 16 months of the war in Gaza was far higher than reported.
Continue reading...MLS stakeholders want to turn the interest in this summer’s North American World Cup into ‘rocket fuel’ for the league. Are those realistic expectations?
In 1988, a full eight years before Major League Soccer debuted, it got its first “World Cup bump”.
Fifa had just awarded the 1994 World Cup to the United States, but there was a stipulation. The US could host the tournament, but only if there was a competitive club league in place by the time it rolled around, something that hadn’t been true since the North American Soccer League collapsed in 1985. Tournament organisers missed that 1994 deadline, but two years later, MLS became a reality. Thirty years on, it is still here.
Continue reading...The US president’s relentless self-aggrandizement spree continues amid hypocrisy and shifting explanations
As a real estate developer, Donald Trump built his empire on ostentatious displays of wealth, substantial tax breaks – and lots of free publicity. As president, he has deployed the power of the state to expand his personal brand, adding his name to the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, the US Institute of Peace, a class of new navy warships, and even investment accounts for millions of children.
Trump is now eyeing yet more grandiose targets in his self-aggrandizement spree. He wants Congress to rename New York’s Penn Station and Washington Dulles international airport in his honor. But there’s a catch: Trump reportedly told Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, that he would unfreeze billions of dollars in federal funding for a major infrastructure project in the north-east – if Schumer supported renaming the two sites.
Mohamad Bazzi is director of the Center for Near Eastern Studies, and a journalism professor, at New York University
Continue reading...For a month, Michael Rectenwald had been trying to get Nick Fuentes to notice him. Rectenwald had a new political action committee devoted to anti-Zionism, and he hoped the far-right influencer would promote it to his legions of perpetually online, often antisemitic fans. But Rectenwald, a former New York University professor and one-time presidential hopeful, had struggled to stand out to the ascendant Fuentes, who has come to symbolize the formerly fringe extremes of the online right. So in October, Rectenwald posted something sure to catch Fuentes’s eye: “Nick has sold out to the cabal.”
It worked. “Fuck you,” Fuentes wrote back.
This was Rectenwald’s shot. He apologized, calling Fuentes “a brilliant guy.” He reposted an uncannily gorgeous, computer-generated woman in a cross necklace and blazer encouraging the two men to “drop the beef.” She sat in front of an American flag and six light-up letters spelling “AZAPAC,” the acronym for Rectenwald’s new group. If Fuentes would just endorse it, Rectenwald promised, he’d “take it all back.”
Rectenwald launched the Anti-Zionist America Political Action Committee in August, vowing to fight to end U.S. financial and military aid to Israel and root out pro-Israel influence in Congress. AZAPAC aims to raise money to unseat pro-Israel legislators in the coming midterm elections, targeting some of the main recipients of cash from influential groups like the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and Democratic Majority for Israel.
It’s a goal that might sound appealing for the electoral left, whose members have long struggled to make meaningful progress on Palestinian rights in Washington, D.C., largely because of the strong grip the pro-Israel lobby holds on U.S. politicians. And as Israel’s genocide in Gaza stretches into a third year, AZAPAC’s policy goals may tap into a political energy currently unaddressed by either major party: growing anti-Israel sentiment on the right.
Though the Republican party loudly backs Israel and its war effort, far-right online spaces are growing increasingly critical of Israel. While accusations of antisemitism from the pro-Israel mainstream often dog Israel’s critics on the left, they appear as little cause for concern to far-right figures and their followers. As the nonpartisan AZAPAC works to sway the 2026 midterms, Rectenwald’s group will test whether candidates across the political spectrum will be similarly pressed on the distinction between anti-Zionism and antisemitism.
The AZAPAC founder has attempted to connect with openly antisemitic figures like Fuentes, a Holocaust denier who famously praised Hitler. Rectenwald is a regular on The Stew Peters Show, which streams on the Peter Thiel and JD Vance-funded YouTube alternative Rumble, where the host has used slurs to describe Jewish and Black people — to no objection from Rectenwald. He’s courted support from popular manosphere influencer Dan Bilzerian, an antisemitic conspiracy theorist who has falsely claimed Jewish people are behind DEI policies, transgender identity, and “open borders.” AZAPAC is helping fund at least one candidate who is a Hitler apologist and another who has participated in white nationalist demonstrations.
In a conversation with The Intercept, Rectenwald made clear he’s aware such affiliations could be detrimental to his cause. He said he is no longer seeking the support of Fuentes, though he remains interested in his fan base — they’re “more sincere than him on some things” — and that he was unaware of “the depth of” Bilzerian’s antisemitic views, which are well–documented online.
Asked about Peters’s language, Rectenwald told The Intercept he would no longer appear on his show, then reversed and said he didn’t want to “throw him under the bus.” Peters, Rectenwald added, has “helped us quite a bit.”
Affiliating with such figures perpetuates harmful and often violent rhetoric toward Jewish people, antisemitism and hate speech experts told The Intercept, and in the most extreme cases, conspiracy theories can motivate violence, as occurred when a white nationalist shooter massacred worshippers at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue in 2018.
These antisemitic allyships also risk undermining legitimate criticism of the state of Israel — a heightened liability at a time when the federal government and its pro-Israel allies have launched largely spurious claims of antisemitism against advocates on the left who support Palestine and oppose Israel’s genocide.
“If we give any quarter to antisemitism anywhere near our movements, we are opening ourselves up to the charges from Israel’s defenders,” said Ben Lorber, an author and researcher of antisemitism and white Christian nationalism. “It stands to really harm the movement.”
“If we give any quarter to antisemitism anywhere near our movements, we are opening ourselves up to the charges from Israel’s defenders.”
Rectenwald appears to understand what he’s risking. After The Intercept reached out to AZAPAC-endorsed candidates for this story, two rejected the group’s backing and were scrubbed from the site, and a third threatened to do the same. Rectenwald accused The Intercept of trying to sink his PAC.
Rectenwald himself has used language commonly associated with antisemitic conspiracy theories of global Jewish control, and he argues that other Israel critics embrace similar language. Online, he regularly refers to “the Jewish mafia” and “Jewish elites,” and last April, he self-published a novel called “The Cabal Question.” He originally wanted to call it “The Jewish Question,” as he said on a podcast, but Amazon barred him from using the title.
“We don’t use the same language and talk about the same things with the same terms,” Rectenwald told The Intercept, referring to Peters. And yet, he said, “I do believe he’s doing pretty good work in terms of exposing the Zionist network and what it’s up to.” He said a significant portion of AZAPAC’s early donations arrived after his appearances on Peters’s show, which also runs commercials for the group.
Rectenwald self-published a novel called “The Cabal Question.” He originally wanted to call it “The Jewish Question,” but Amazon barred him from using the title.
During a September episode while introducing Rectenwald, Peters referred to Jewish people using a common antisemitic slur. A month earlier, he used an anti-Black slur to describe Department of Justice attorney Leo Terrell in another episode with Rectenwald. In that episode, Peters said the U.S. is “occupied” by “anti-white, anti-Christian, anti-American Jews who are not just working on behalf of Israel, but on behalf of a more broad, satanic, Talmudic agenda that’s taken shape over thousands of years.”
Rectenwald promised Peters in his August appearance that AZAPAC does not have “infiltrators,” “dual allegiances,” or “sneaky Jews coming in and running the show.” He closed out the episode by offering Peters an invite — which he told The Intercept has since been rescinded — to be a member of AZAPAC’s board.
An AZAPAC ad launched in November and produced by the far-right company Dissident Media shows Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu shaking hands, Palestinian children killed by Israel, re-enactments of the American Revolution — and the red, clawed hands of a puppet master manipulating strings overlaying a mashup of the American and Israeli flags.
Rectenwald told The Intercept that he was not aware “puppet master” was a well-known antisemitic trope and that the strings represented the pro-Israeli donor class’s influence on the Trump administration. Plus, the trailer was a success: Donations poured in as it drew attention online, Rectenwald said.
AZAPAC had raised $111,556 by the end of December, according to recent FEC filings.
Of AZAPAC’s 10 publicly endorsed candidates, six are running as Republicans with three Democrats and a Libertarian on its slate. The group is more focused on Republicans, Rectenwald said, because he aims to put a dent in the GOP’s pro-Israel base. AZAPAC is backing Aaron Baker, for example, an America First conservative who is running to unseat Rep. Randy Fine, R-Fla., a vocal supporter of Israel and Netanyahu.
At least one AZAPAC candidate drew national headlines five years ago. Tyler Dykes, a Republican candidate running for Rep. Nancy Mace’s congressional seat in South Carolina, was famously accused of performing a Nazi salute, which he denies, while storming the Capitol on January 6, 2021, and later pleaded guilty to assaulting, resisting, or impeding federal officers with a stolen riot shield. (Trump pardoned Dykes on his first day in office.) Dykes also received a felony conviction for his participation in the 2017 white supremacist Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where organizers protested the removal of a monument to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and yelled, “Jews will not replace us.”
Reached by The Intercept, Dykes said in an emailed statement he denounces “violence and extremism in all its forms.” He added that “Robert E. Lee was a hero, and deserves to be honored as such.”
Rectenwald told The Intercept that AZAPAC’s board had vetted Dykes and other candidates. He said he was willing to tolerate certain disagreements with the candidates and their views. The endorsements, Rectenwald said, are “a pragmatism of sorts.”
“We don’t agree with all of these candidates,” Rectenwald said. “We’re trying to put together a coalition of sometimes very unlikely bedfellows, if you will.”
AZAPAC’s endorsement process is primarily based on a 19-part questionnaire, which Rectenwald shared with The Intercept. It asks things like whether a candidate would pledge not to receive campaign donations from prominent pro-Israel groups or “any other foreign lobby/PAC”; what they think of laws restricting the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement or imposing the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism; and whether they would vote to end military aid to Israel.
“We’re trying to put together a coalition of sometimes very unlikely bedfellows, if you will.”
The group’s contradictions are perhaps best captured by two brief recent endorsements: two former American soldiers, Anthony Aguilar and Greg Stoker, running for Congress as progressive Green Party candidates. As a contractor working with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, Aguilar, who is running in North Carolina, became a whistleblower alleging that GHF employees were firing into crowds of starving civilians at aid sites. Stoker, running in Texas, took part in last year’s Global Sumud Flotilla, a humanitarian mission meant to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza.
Their AZAPAC endorsements were short-lived.
After receiving questions from The Intercept about Rectenwald’s language and AZAPAC’s associations with far-right figures, both Aguilar and Stoker rejected the group’s backing. Mentions of them had been erased from AZAPAC’s online presence by Tuesday.
In explaining his withdrawal, Aguilar’s campaign acknowledged that anti-genocide and anti-Zionist activists “are falsely accused on antisemitism on a regular basis” to discredit their work. “For that reason, we want to avoid being associated with any group whose statements or actions raise credible concerns of actual antisemitism,” Aguilar’s campaign manager said in a statement.
Stoker told The Intercept that “I have always used my platform to fight against racial superiority,” adding that AZAPAC’s narrow focus on “old conspiracy theories” and eradicating the pro-Zionist lobby “is not going to fix any of the larger systemic issues facing working class Americans.”
Christine Reyna, a professor at De Paul University who studies the psychology of extremism, questioned why AZAPAC would endorse candidates like Dykes and Casey Putsch, a racecar driver and AZAPAC-backed Republican candidate for Ohio governor. In August, Putsch posted a video asking Grok to list “all the good things Adolf Hitler did or was responsible for creating in his life” and railed against the Jewish right-wing commentator Ben Shapiro, whom he called “an annoying little rodent.” While there’s a growing number of other candidates who oppose sending military aid to Israel or have sworn off AIPAC donations, backing candidates like Putsch and Dykes could serve as a dog whistle, Reyna said, to some of the most extreme corners of the far right.
“When you package these really frightening and terrible and dangerous ideologies and you hide them behind this front-facing organization that gives them legitimacy,” Reyna said, “That can be extremely dangerous.”
Aligning with such America First nationalists, who tend to ignore the issue of America’s own ambitions of control and profit, can harm other communities, antisemitism researcher Lorber warned, because of their anti-Blackness, xenophobia, or anti-LGBTQ views. In the case of Israel, these far-right alliances can also injure the movement for Palestinian liberation, he said.
“If we get distracted chasing fantasies of Jewish cabals, it harms our analysis, it makes our work less informed and less effective,” Lorber said, “and it also divides our movements.”
“There is a big umbrella for a movement against unconditional support for Israel. But neo-Nazis and far-right antisemites will never be welcome in that.”
Palestinian-American advocate and analyst Tariq Kenney-Shawa, whose family is from Gaza, is acutely aware of the ways pro-Israel institutions have attacked anti-Zionist work for being antisemitic. He said those bad-faith attacks were why he was concerned about AZAPAC’s affiliations with the far right, which has long rooted its criticism of Israel in “actually racist and antisemitic” beliefs.
“There is a big umbrella for a movement against unconditional support for Israel,” Kenney-Shawa said. “But neo Nazis and far-right antisemites will never be welcome in that.”
The day after federal immigration agents shot and killed Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, Putsch, who did not respond to outreach from The Intercept, doubled down on his support for ICE’s mass deportation campaign. On social media, Putsch, who is Christian, often attacks his opponent Vivek Ramaswamy’s Hindu faith and Indian ancestry. On his campaign site, his platform includes anti-immigrant calls to “accelerate deportations” and limit the number of H-1B visas offered to immigrant workers.
His platform makes no mention of Israel or foreign policy.
“Maybe one time I failed to say Zionist,” Rectenwald told The Intercept, acknowledging that on occasion, he has used the words “Jew” or “Jewish” instead. A search of his X account turned up at least 43 references to the “Jewish mafia,” and he’s repeatedly invoked the “Jewish elite” on his Substack. He claimed to have borrowed the latter term from Norm Finkelstein, a pro-Palestinian author and activist who, unlike Rectenwald, is Jewish himself.
“It’s not just an ‘israeli lobby.’ LOL. It’s a Talmudic Jewish mafia that runs the U.S. and the world,” Rectenwald wrote in one post in March. The same day, he claimed that “the Jewish mafia did 9/11.”
“Maybe one time I failed to say Zionist.”
When The Intercept asked about Rectenwald’s use of the term “Zionist Occupation Government,” which has a history of popularity among white supremacists, he brought up AZAPAC-backed candidates like Bernard Taylor, a firefighter and Democrat hoping to unseat Florida Republican Rep. Brian Mast, a former IDF volunteer. Rectenwald cited Taylor, who is Black, as proof that “we are not like bigots,” adding that AZAPAC planned to endorse other people of color.
Taylor, who accepted an endorsement from AZAPAC in December, said he also was not aware of Rectenwald’s rhetoric until approached by The Intercept for this story.
“I’m not gonna sit here and say it’s not concerning to me,” Taylor told The Intercept in a phone call, referring to Rectenwald’s language. In an emailed statement, he said his campaign rejects antisemitism, racism, and white supremacy, but would keep the AZAPAC endorsement based on policy. Taylor said that if he feels AZAPAC is “crossing the line” into overt antisemitism, he will reject its endorsement and refund donations from the group.
“If I made, you know, some slips here and there, it isn’t intentional — I’m not trying to dog whistle to anybody,” Rectenwald said. “I’m just trying to be precise, and sometimes, you know, precision is difficult.”
In “The Cabal Question,” Rectenwald’s self-published novel, a former professor finds his worldview transformed when a friend “thrusts him into the JQ,” or Jewish question, as the book’s Amazon summary puts it, working with “a steadfast ex-occultist turned Christian nationalist to trace the strands of the cabal’s reach.” The story mirrors his own evolution of getting “J-pilled,” or “Jew-pilled,” Rectenwald has said, though he insists the novel is not about promoting antisemitism but rather “a Christian redemption story.”
Rectenwald once identified as a leftist. He taught liberal studies as a Marxist at New York University — until a fallout that began in 2016, when it was revealed that he was behind the since-deleted Twitter account @AntiPCNYUProf with the screen name “Deplorable NYU Professor.” Rectenwald used the account to act “in the guise of an alt-righter,” as a way to argue against politically correct use of pronouns, trigger warnings, and safe spaces.
He took a paid leave from NYU and claimed he was a victim of liberal censorship in a splashy op-ed and a sit-down on Fox & Friends. When he came back, Rectenwald invited far-right activist Milo Yiannopoulos to speak to his class and later sued NYU for defamation. Court records indicate the case was dropped with prejudice, and Rectenwald said he settled out of court for a cash payment in exchange for his departure from the school in 2019.
NYU did not respond to The Intercept’s request for comment.
The experience prompted Rectenwald to denounce the left and his several decades of Marxist scholarship, and in 2024, he launched a failed bid for president as a Libertarian, representing the conservative Mises Caucus.
It’s unclear when his fixation on Israel and antisemitic conspiracy theories took hold. But on the right-wing podcast The Backlash in May, Rectenwald used the protagonist of “The Cabal Question” to describe how his views developed.
In the book, Rectenwald said, the main character flees persecution and surveillance from the government controlled by “the Jewish mafia.” The character ends up finding refuge with “radical right wingers,” who help him escape the country. The more closely he affiliates with the right-wing network, however, the more he risks damaging his own reputation.
“Art imitates life, right?” said the host. Rectenwald agreed.
The post A New PAC Wants to Counter Israel’s Influence. It Also Welcomes Hitler Apologists. appeared first on The Intercept.
hey guys I am considering getting a onewheel but I don't live in the us or any country close to. im looking for a reseller or a way to not import for a large amount of money lol. seen one shop I germany called warehouse-one.de but idk if that's my only choice im just looking for something close to Denmark could be anywhere in scandinavian. also would like to know if you can change the max speed to set it down because of ev laws
If you’re dealing with hair loss, these vitamins can help you on your way to a fuller head of hair.
Officers devise unusual plan to arrest man suspected of stealing about $64,000 worth of Buddhist artefacts
Thai police donned a lion costume during this week’s lunar new year festivities to arrest a man accused of stealing about $64,000 worth of Buddhist artefacts.
Dressed as a red-and-yellow lion, officers made the arrest on Wednesday evening after responding to a report this month of a home burglary in the suburbs of Bangkok.
Continue reading...Nintendo Switch 2; Nintendo
This ruthlessly competitive game will have everyone from your granny to semi-pros trying to set fire to their opponent’s side of the court with powered-up ‘fever rackets’
Tennis has been a regular hobby of Mario’s for the past 30 years, beginning with the headache-inducing Mario’s Tennis on the Virtual Boy and most recently resurfacing as the surprisingly complex Mario Tennis Aces on the Switch. Now he’s back in his whites (and reds) with a charming new take on the sport that dials back the difficulty level and adds lots of fun modes and features, aiming to appease complete newcomers and Djokovic-esque veterans.
At first, the range of options is almost bewildering. You can opt to play in one-off matches with up to three other players or NPCs, or enter a more structured tournament of singles or doubles play. Then there’s the extremely fun Mix It Up, which offers a range of fun tennis derivatives. These include Forest Court where piranha plants appear and gobble any balls that get close, and Pinball where bumpers and barriers pop up as you play. Trial Towers, meanwhile, presents a tower of increasingly tough tennis challenges which all have to be completed to open the next two buildings; fail more than three times and you’re sent back to the beginning – yes, it’s Mario Tennis: The Roguelike.
Continue reading...Exclusive: approximately 350-acre compound planned as base for multinational force, according to records reviewed by the Guardian
The Trump administration is planning to build a 5,000-person military base in Gaza, sprawling more than 350 acres, according to Board of Peace contracting records reviewed by the Guardian.
The site is envisioned as a military operating base for a future International Stabilization Force (ISF), planned as a multinational military force composed of pledged troops. The ISF is part of the newly created Board of Peace which is meant to govern Gaza. The Board of Peace is chaired by Donald Trump and led in part by his son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Continue reading...The built-in basket keeps socks from disappearing and protects your favorite sweaters from the harsh realities of regular washing.
Critics have questioned why the federal government should underwrite coverage costs for people with ACA health plans — but almost all health insurance in the U.S. comes with some federal help.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Although Delaware’s school districts already have policies on cellphone use in the classroom, a bill that would require districts and charters to establish policies restricting cellphone use is awaiting Gov. Matt Meyer’s signature. Some school districts have looked to update their existing policies ahead of the bill’s implementation.
The Christina School District is requiring students at five of its schools to stow away their phones in locked pouches – a move that highlights the costly but escalating prohibitions on the use of cellphones in classrooms across the state.
The new policy is a six-month pilot program that replaces a looser cellphone ban in classrooms. It also comes in response to the introduction of Senate Bill 106, which state lawmakers passed last month and currently awaits the governor’s signature.
In recent year, schools across the country have been banning phones in various ways, in response to their disruptive apps and their distracting ringtones. A survey conducted in 2024 by Pew Research found that 72% of U.S. high school teachers said cellphone distraction is a major problem within their classrooms.
Christina Director of Student Services and Whole Child Support Gina Moody said the district may eventually update its existing cellphone policy for all of its schools with stricter policies. Whether they adopt lockable pouches districtwide will depend on the cost and success of the pilot program.
At least five other Delaware school districts have policies that direct at least some of their schools to require students to place phones in such locked pouches.
“We’re going through some recreating and updating based off of Senate Bill 106, but also because we just feel it’s good to have,” Moody said.

SB 106 would require that every school district and charter school in the state set a policy limiting phone usage during instructional time. It also requires that schools set consequences for students violating the cellphone policy, and that those include exceptions for emergencies.
The bill, sponsored by State Sen. Eric Buckson (R-Dover) and Rep. Kim Williams (D-Stanton), passed both the House and the Senate last month.
A spokeswoman for Gov. Matt Meyer confirmed he plans on signing the legislation “later in March.”
All 19 of Delaware’s school districts already limit cellphone use in class, but the policies vary widely.
Some, such as the Sussex Vocational Technical School District, require students to place their phones in a “designated area like a caddy box upon entering class.”
Others, like the Seaford School District, which updated its existing phone policy last month, have different requirements for differing grade levels.
Seaford’s elementary students must have their devices powered off and kept out of sight all day. In middle school, students are able to use their phones in the morning, before the school day begins, and in the afternoon after it ends.
Seaford’s policy for high schoolers simply says phones cannot disrupt student learning, and “any approved program at the high school which expands the use of technology for educational purposes will be monitored and revised as needed.”
Buckson told Spotlight Delaware last spring that he had learned about other districts’ phone policies while drafting the bill, and said they “gave credibility” to his desire not to rewrite regulations for districts that already have effective rules.
He said his bill was drafted to give guidance, but not impose specific rules.
“Maybe the pouches are something [districts are] already doing. Maybe it’s something that’s cost-prohibitive at this time, or it’s just something they don’t need to do because they’ve got other measures,” Buckson said at the time.
Although Delaware’s schools already had policies in place prior to Buckson’s bill, the legislation has inspired some districts to update those rules.
Moody said the goal for the Christina School District is to have a “more universal process,” throughout its schools for cellphone policies.
Currently for schools that aren’t part of its new pilot program, the district prohibits phone use during instructional time but does not completely ban phones in schools, according to a report from the Newark Post last fall.
But Moody said educators have approached that rule in various ways from class to class.
“You may go in some classrooms, and there are no cellphones out, and some classrooms may have them in a [cellphone pouch],” she said.

In January, the Christina School District implemented their new pilot program in Gauger-Cobbs Middle School, Kirk Middle School, Shue-Medill Middle School, the Bayard School’s middle school students, and Newark High School.
Students in those schools now start their day by turning their phones off and placing them in a pouch, which will remain with them throughout the school day.
After the last bell rings, the pouches can be unlocked at “designated locations” within the school, according to the Christina School District’s website.
Moody said that at the moment, it is unclear if the district would continue with the phone pouches after the pilot program ends this school year. The district must first analyze the results from the five schools and determine whether it is financially sustainable to bring pouches to every school.
“If all things in place point to ‘Yes, we can do this to sustain it,’ then that would be the recommendation,” Moody said.
The post Schools consider new phone bans as bill aims to set statewide guidelines appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware’s beaches are a key part of the tourism industry, which has become a larger part of the state’s economy in recent years. The delays in their replenishment could threaten the buildings and roads on the coast and make the beaches smaller.
Two of Delaware’s popular beaches could shrink this year after federal funding cuts delayed plans to replenish them.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers typically works with the state to fund projects that replace eroded sand on Delaware beaches, which restores dunes and protects the coastline from storm damage.
But recent federal budget cuts have delayed nearly $20 million worth of replenishment projects at Dewey Beach and Rehoboth Beach . The federal share for the work is more than $15 million, according to a spokesman for Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control.
Those projects were scheduled to begin last fall, but now will not start until at least 2027, DNREC Secretary Gregory Patterson said.
Delaware’s beaches need regular replenishment because the force of ocean waves continuously washes away sand. Now, with the current delays, the risk of coastal flooding could be heightened.
Those beaches also are the center of Delaware’s tourism industry.
“We need beach nourishment for the economy, not only of the coastal towns but of the entire state,” Dewey Beach Town Manager Bill Zolper said.
Asked how concerned he is about the delays, Patterson said he holds a “seven out of 10 level of concern,” because the beaches protect critical infrastructure, such as Route 1.

In August 2024, beach erosion contributed to the flooding that prompted the Delaware Department of Transportation to shut down part of Route 1 near the Indian River Inlet.
Patterson said he is working with Delaware’s congressional delegation to secure funding for the projects in next year’s budget.
He said he may try to schedule all beach replenishment projects in Delaware at the same time to save money. A large part of the cost is simply getting the equipment to the project site, he said.
Now is not the only time Delawareans have experienced delays in federal funding for coastal protection.
In October, Gov. Matt Meyer wrote an open letter to President Donald Trump asking for emergency coastal restoration funds following nor’easters that “severely damaged Delaware’s shoreline.”
“More delays will only increase risks to life and property and drive-up long-term disaster recovery costs,” he said.

Asked on Tuesday at a press conference about the letter, Meyer said he is “having constructive conversations” with the federal government. A spokesperson from Meyer’s administration later said she could not provide more specific information.
Zolper, Dewey Beach’s town manager, said his town also nearly lost federal funding for another flood prevention project last year.
Before leaving office, former President Joe Biden confirmed a $1 million grant for the town to build a pump station to get floodwater back into Rehoboth Bay. But the Trump administration later put the grant “on hold,” Zolper said.
Last month, U.S. Sen. Chris Coons (D-Delaware) was able to secure the grant again, allowing the project to move forward. The pump station is expected to be completed in the summer of 2028.
As for the oceanside of the town, Zolper said the dunes that protect it from flooding are in good condition now. But further delays to the beach replenishment project could degrade those dunes.
“There will be more of a chance of homes being destroyed,” he said.
The post Delaware beach replenishment projects delayed by federal funding cuts appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
A new partnership between two of Delaware’s largest health care systems and a Philadelphia medical school aims to expand rural access to health care by placing more medical students in Kent and Sussex county hospitals. The announcement comes shortly after Gov. Matt Meyer began looking for formal partners to help launch Delaware’s first ever medical school.
As Delaware begins work on launching its first medical school, two of its largest health care systems are collaborating on a new program to bring a handful of medical students from Philadelphia to Kent and Sussex counties.
ChristianaCare, Bayhealth and the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM) announced a new partnership Wednesday that will bring five new third-year medical school students to train in southern Delaware beginning this summer.
Called the Delaware Clinical Community Campus, the new partnership is meant to “expand undergraduate medical education and attract more physicians to practice in central and southern Delaware,” according to ChristianaCare’s announcement of the new venture.
ChristianaCare has long partnered with PCOM, bringing medical students to its hospitals in northern Delaware for clinical training. This new initiative is a buildout of that program, bringing in Bayhealth as a new host hospital at which medical students will train.
In the ChristianaCare statement, Bayhealth Chief Medical Officer Dr. Gary Siegelman said bringing medical students to southern Delaware to train could “encourage them to establish their practices right here in Delaware.”
“This directly addresses our workforce needs in underserved areas and enhances access to high-quality care for the patients we serve every day,” he said.
According to the statement, students will complete their core clinical rotations at Bayhealth and ChristianaCare facilities in Kent and Sussex counties, as the program is geared toward expanding rural health care access. The students’ training will include stints in various specialties, including primary care, OB-GYN and psychiatry.
But there will also be “additional opportunities” at ChristianaCare’s New Castle County facilities.
A spokesperson for ChristianaCare did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Spotlight Delaware on Wednesday afternoon about these northern Delaware opportunities.
The rural partnership will eventually be open to all PCOM students, but this year’s first class of five students will all be Delaware residents who take part in the Delaware Institute of Medical Education and Research (DIMER) program.
DIMER is a partnership between Delaware health care systems and Philadelphia-area medical schools that secures admission opportunities for Delawareans at PCOM and the Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University. Bayhealth and ChristianaCare then serve as facilities where medical students complete clinical training.
The new partnership comes on the heels of Gov. Matt Meyer’s announcement late last year that he would use a swath of federal grant money to build Delaware’s first-ever medical school.
The state formally began the process of seeking partners to help start up and operate the new school earlier this month.
It remains unclear if any of the parties involved in the Delaware Clinical Community Campus – ChristianaCare, Bayhealth and PCOM – will vie for the opportunity to take part in jumpstarting the First State’s first medical school.
The post New collaboration to bring Philly med students to Kent, Sussex counties appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: Tech companies are conflating traditional artificial intelligence with generative AI when claiming the energy-hungry technology could help avert climate breakdown, according to a report. Most claims that AI can help avert climate breakdown refer to machine learning and not the energy-hungry chatbots and image generation tools driving the sector's explosive growth of gas-guzzling datacenters, the analysis of 154 statements found. The research, commissioned by nonprofits including Beyond Fossil Fuels and Climate Action Against Disinformation, did not find a single example where popular tools such as Google's Gemini or Microsoft's Copilot were leading to a "material, verifiable, and substantial" reduction in planet-heating emissions. Ketan Joshi, an energy analyst and author of the report, said the industry's tactics were "diversionary" and relied on tried and tested methods that amount to "greenwashing." He likened it to fossil fuel companies advertising their modest investments in solar panels and overstating the potential of carbon capture. "These technologies only avoid a minuscule fraction of emissions relative to the massive emissions of their core business," said Joshi. "Big tech took that approach and upgraded and expanded it." [...] Joshi said the discourse around AI's climate benefits needed to be "brought back to reality." "The false coupling of a big problem and a small solution serves as a distraction from the very preventable harms being done through unrestricted datacenter expansion," he said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Deal agreed to acquire British secondhand fashion resale app from Etsy as eBay attempts to fend off Amazon
The online retailer eBay has agreed to buy the British secondhand fashion resale app Depop from Etsy for about $1.2bn (£890m) in cash, as eBay targets younger fashion-loving consumers.
The deal comes at a time when secondhand marketplaces continue to soar in popularity, especially among gen Z shoppers – born between 1997 and 2012 – amid a squeeze on household incomes and concerns about sustainability in fashion.
Continue reading...Ex-leader sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labour over failed martial law declaration in 2024
A South Korean court has sentenced the former president Yoon Suk Yeol to life imprisonment with labour over his failed martial law declaration in December 2024, finding him guilty of leading an insurrection and making him the first elected head of state in the country’s democratic era to receive the maximum custodial sentence.
The Seoul central district court found that Yoon’s declaration of martial law on 3 December 2024 constituted insurrection, carried out with the intent to disrupt the constitutional order.
Continue reading...French president rejects US criticism as António Guterres and Narendra Modi warn on child safety and AI monopolies
Emmanuel Macron has hit back at US criticism of Europe’s efforts to regulate AI, vowing to protect children from “digital abuse” during France’s presidency of the G7.
Speaking at the AI Impact summit in Delhi, the French president called for tougher safeguards after global outrage over Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot being used to generate tens of thousands of sexualised images of children, and amid mounting concern about the concentration of AI power in a handful of companies.
Continue reading...According to Lara Trump, Donald Trump has prepared but not yet delivered a speech about extraterrestrial life, though the White House says such a speech would be "news to me." White House Spokesperson Karoline Leavitt continued: "I'll have to check in with our speech writing team. Uh, and that would be of great interest to me personally, and I'm sure all of you in this room and apparently former President Obama, too." The Hill reports: Lara Trump, speaking on the Pod Force One podcast, said the president has played coy when she and her husband Eric have asked about the existence of UFO's and aliens. "We've kind of asked my father-in-law about this... we all want to know about the UFOs... and he played a little coy with us," Lara Trump said. "I've heard kind of around, I think my father-in-law has actually said it, that there is some speech that he has, that I guess at the right time, I don't know when the right time is, he's going to break out and talk about and it has to do with maybe some sort of extraterrestrial life." Obama has clarified in recent days that he has seen no evidence that aliens are real, after comments he made on a podcast with Brian Tyler Cohen seeming to confirm his knowledge of extraterrestrial life went viral. "They're real but I haven't seen them," Obama said on the podcast. "And they're not being kept in... what is it? Area 51. There's no underground facility unless there's this enormous conspiracy and they hid it from the president of the United States." Later, in a post on Instagram, Obama clarified that he was trying to answer in the light-hearted spirit of a speed round of questions and that, "Statistically, the universe is so vast that the odds are good there's life out there." "But the distances between solar systems are so great that the chances we've been visited by aliens is low, and I saw no evidence during my presidency that extraterrestrials have made contact with us. Really!"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In a fiery speech in Los Angeles, the Vermont senator criticizes ‘grotesque’ levels of economic inequality
Billionaires are “treading on very, very thin ice,” Bernie Sanders warned on Wednesday during a fiery speech in Los Angeles, imploring California voters to fight “grotesque” levels of economic inequality by approving a proposed tax on the state’s richest residents.
The Vermont senator railed against the “greed”, “arrogance” and “moral turpitude” of the nation’s “ruling class”, calling it “fairly disgusting” that some ultra-wealthy tech leaders have fled California – or are threatening to do so, if the proposed wealth tax becomes law.
Continue reading...Television outranks laptops, tablets and smartphones across all age groups, according to audience review
The television has replaced laptops, tablets and smartphones as the most common device for UK viewers to watch YouTube at home, according to data confirming the platform’s place as a living room mainstay.
More than half of all YouTube viewing through a domestic wifi connection is now done through the traditional TV, making it the top-ranking YouTube device across all age groups.
Continue reading...New Ark United Church of Christ is evaluating proposals from potential partners that would help the congregation redevelop its Main Street property into an affordable housing complex.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 19.
Comment some songs that’s are chill and would go good ride along the streets near the beach. I plan on riding my one wheel at Ocean Beach in San Diego this weekend and the first song on the playlist is….:
70s 80s by Nightmares On Wax
| Im a bit delayed in posting this, but I had a pretty big day recently - in the morning my old trusty XR finally crossed 10k miles, and in the afternoon this beauty showed up. Not a bad day. [link] [comments] |
| I’m wondering what kind of board this is and what charger it uses. I found it a while back and haven’t been able to figure out what it is. [link] [comments] |
Programme that funds groups building tech to evade oppressive government controls under serious threat
For nearly two decades, the US quietly funded a global effort to keep the internet from splintering into fiefdoms run by authoritarian governments. Now that money is seriously threatened and a large part of it is already gone, putting into jeopardy internet freedoms around the world.
Managed by the US state department and the US Agency for Global Media, the programme – broadly called Internet Freedom – funds small groups all over the world, from Iran to China to the Philippines, who built grassroots technologies to evade internet controls imposed by governments. It has dispensed well over $500m (£370m) in the past decade, according to an analysis by the Guardian, including $94m in 2024.
Continue reading...People like me were targets of the Islamophobia that gripped the west after the US-led ‘war on terror’. Now I fear a chilling sequel is on the way
Twenty-five years ago, George W Bush persuaded European leaders to back his “war on terror”. That disastrous project cost millions of lives and caused mass displacement of people from across the Middle East. It normalised racism and hatred for Muslims, refugees and racialised minorities in the US and Europe. I fear Marco Rubio’s speech at the Munich Security Conference, with its calls to defend white, western, Christian civilisation against supposedly contaminating racialised migrants – and the standing ovation he received from European elites – may mark a chilling sequel.
Rubio’s language of a shared and superior American and European civilisation differs from that of his bosses, Donald Trump and JD Vance. His tone is more emollient but his outreach is conspiratorial. Rubio talks of migration and identity and civilisational anxiety, rather than terrorism and hard security threats as Bush once did. In his Munich speech, Rubio flattered Europeans about the continent’s colonial past. He denied preaching a message of xenophobia or hate, and instead framed his call to defend national borders as entirely respectable, dutiful and a “fundamental act of sovereignty”.
Shada Islam is a Brussels-based commentator on EU affairs. She runs New Horizons Project, a strategy, analysis and advisory company
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.
Continue reading...Why Beijing holds the power in the century ahead.
Just curious if anyone actually uses it and thoughts on it. Also any things you wish it did?
Newark Liberty International Airport reopened Wednesday evening after an aircraft emergency caused a ground stop.
Despite Trump’s opposition to annexation, Israel has moved to expand control over the West Bank — to the condemnation of Britain and others at a U.N. Security Council meeting.
Abandoned beaches, public health warning signs and seagulls eating human waste are now features of the popular coastline in New Zealand
A tide of anger is rising in New Zealand’s capital, Wellington, as the city’s toilets continue to flush directly into the ocean more than two weeks after the catastrophic collapse of its wastewater treatment plant.
Millions of litres of raw and partially screened sewage have been pouring into pristine reefs and a marine reserve along the south coast daily since 4 February, prompting a national inquiry, as the authorities struggle to get the decimated plant operational.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: The first shot has been fired in the legal war over the Environmental Protection Agency's rollback of its "endangerment finding," which had been the foundation for federal climate regulations. Environmental and health groups filed a lawsuit on Wednesday morning in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, arguing that the E.P.A.'s move to eliminate limits on greenhouse gases from vehicles, and potentially other sources, was illegal. The suit was triggered by last week's decision by the E.P.A. to kill one of its key scientific conclusions, the endangerment finding, which says that greenhouse gases harm public health. The finding had formed the basis for climate regulations in the United States. The lawsuit claims that the agency is rehashing arguments that the Supreme Court already considered, and rejected, in a landmark 2007 case, Massachusetts v. E.P.A. The issue is likely to end up back before the Supreme Court, which is now far more conservative. In the 2007 case, the justices ruled that the E.P.A. was required to issue a scientific determination as to whether greenhouse gases were a threat to public health under the 1970 Clean Air Act and to regulate them if they were. As a result, two years later, in 2009, the E.P.A. issued the endangerment finding, allowing the government to limit greenhouse gas emissions, which cause climate change. "With this action, E.P.A. flips its mission on its head," said Hana Vizcarra, a senior lawyer at the nonprofit Earthjustice, which is representing six groups in the lawsuit. "It abandons its core mandate to protect human health and the environment to boost polluting industries and attempts to rewrite the law in order to do so." [...] Also on Wednesday, two other nonprofit law firms filed their own lawsuit against the E.P.A. over the endangerment finding, on behalf of 18 youth plaintiffs. That suit, by Our Children's Trust and Public Justice, argues that the E.P.A.'s move was unconstitutional. Separate legal challenges to E.P.A. rules are generally consolidated into one case at the D.C. Circuit Court, which is where disputes involving the Clean Air Act are required to be heard. But the sheer number of groups involved could make the legal battle lengthy and complicated to manage. A three-judge panel at the Circuit Court is expected to pore over several rounds of legal briefs before oral arguments begin. Those may not take place until next year.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
CHARLOTTE MCQUILLAN
Staff Reporter
President Donald Trump exemplifies a new form of politics that has been on the rise: ragebaiting. The sheer outrageousness of his social media posts is hard to combat because the truth is, he is getting what he wants — our attention.
The tameness of old politics has undergone drastic changes over the years. Real influence now rests not on policy debates but on creating the perfect sound bite — one crafted to spark outrage, dominate the news cycle and make that person’s name impossible to ignore.
For the past nine years, Trump’s strategy has been capturing soundbites to control public attention, whether through bold statements, bent facts or reframed narratives. More often than not, this takes the form of Trump “bullying” someone for contesting his actions or words.
In their study about long-term language trends in political leaders and institutions, authors Kayla N. Jordan, Joanna Sterling, James W. Pennebaker and Rylan L. Boyd say that Trump “is lower in analytic thinking and higher in confidence than almost any previous American president.”
This study was published in 2019, during Trump’s first term in office. It examines the language used by Trump during his presidential debates and speeches.
The research explains that while his linguistic patterns seem to make him an outlier among previous presidents, there has been a general decline in analytical thinking and a rise in confidence, reflecting longer-standing political trends. These are possible implications of modern politics changing due to the media’s rising role.
In this new era, is there political legitimacy in “ragebaiting” Trump in return?
Many politicians and political commentators have moved towards this idea. Two prominent voices engaging in this behavior are Governor Gavin Newsom from California and Jack Schlossberg, a New York congressional candidate and the grandson of the 35th President of the United States, John F. Kennedy. Both are associated with the political left.
Newsom and his political staffers have become President Trump’s personal problem. They have tweeted in President Trump’s distinct style and created artificial intelligence (AI) videos to make fun of him, especially in reference to the Epstein files. This has placed a target on Newsom, sparking a political battle between him and the Trump administration.
Currently, the two are in a legal battle over Trump’s decision to send the National Guard to various cities in California.
Schlossberg has long leveraged this style of political communication. He creates videos online using Make America Great Again (MAGA) outrage tactics to the Democratic Party’s benefit with the intention of sparking controversy.
Schlossberg has gone after many political figures, including Trump, Vice President JD Vance, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene and his own cousin, Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“I’ve watched the other side people say that, like, ‘You’re saying crazy stuff. People aren’t gonna take you seriously. You’re — Why would you air out your stuff in broad daylight?’” Schlossberg said in an interview with People Magazine. “I’m like, ‘Are you not looking at what’s going on on the other side?’ Like, apparently nobody cares. And that’s kind of the point that I’m trying to make.”
Schlossberg is taking the outrage and throwing it right back. The goal is to engage people on both sides and start conversations, and he is getting people to talk.
With the rise of short-form media, politics has shifted from valuing expertise to caring about who has the most polarizing or ridiculous content. Trump thrives in this political climate because he is a professional at being the loudest in the room, which is why other politicians have sought to fight fire with fire.
In this new age of politics, it is beginning to feel like a reality television show rather than America’s democratic system. With a heavily vocal presidential administration, it is essential to speak louder to be heard.
Charlotte McQuillan is a staff reporter at The Review. Her opinions are her own and do not represent the majority opinion of The Review staff. She may be reached at @cmcquil@udel.edu.
Lunar new year has ushered in a rare zodiac symbol with a reputation for energy and independence
As the lunar new year begins, the focus has turned to the Chinese zodiac and the arrival of the year of the fire horse – a rare pairing in the 60-year lunar cycle.
Drawing on Chinese metaphysics, the fire horse blends the horse’s reputation for energy and independence with the intensity of the fire element, giving it a distinct place in the zodiac tradition.
Continue reading...Feb. 18, 2026 — AWS has announced Amazon EC2 Hpc8a instances, the next generation of high performance computing optimized instance, powered by 5th Gen AMD EPYC processors (formerly code named Turin). With a maximum frequency of 4.5GHz, Hpc8a instances deliver up to 40% higher performance and up to 25% better price performance compared to Hpc7a instances, helping customers accelerate compute-intensive workloads while optimizing costs.
Built on the latest sixth-generation AWS Nitro Cards, Hpc8a instances are designed for compute-intensive, latency-sensitive HPC workloads. They are ideal for tightly coupled applications such as computational fluid dynamics (CFD), weather forecasting, explicit finite element analysis (FEA), and multiphysics simulations that require fast inter-node communication and consistent high performance.
Hpc8a instances feature 192 cores, 768 GiB memory and 300 Gbps of Elastic Fabric Adapter (EFA) network bandwidth, enabling fast, low-latency cluster scaling for large-scale HPC workloads. Compared to Hpc7a instances, Hpc8a instances also provide up to 42% higher memory bandwidth, further improving performance for memory-intensive simulations and scientific computing workloads.
Hpc8a instances are available today in US East (Ohio) and Europe (Stockholm). Customers can purchase Hpc8a instances via Savings Plans or On-Demand instances. To get started, sign in to the AWS Management Console. For more information visit the Amazon EC2 Hpc8a instance page or AWS news blog.
Source: AWS
The post AWS Announces New High Performance Computing Amazon EC2 Hpc8a Instances appeared first on HPCwire.
Uber plans to invest $100 million in EV charging infrastructure to support current and future robotaxi fleets in cities like Los Angeles, the Bay Area, and Dallas, "eventually partner[ing] with multiple robotaxi companies on actual robotaxi deployment -- WeRide, Waabi, Lucid, Nuro, May Mobility, Momenta, and Waymo of course," reports CleanTechnica. From the report: "Cities can only unlock the full promise of autonomy and electrification if the right charging infrastructure is built for scale. That infrastructure needs to work for today's drivers and the fleets of the future," said Uber's global head of mobility, Pradeep Parameswaran. In addition to building some infrastructure itself, the company is making "utilization guarantee agreements" with EVgo for various major US cities as well as Electra, Hubber, and Ionity in Europe. On Uber's latest shareholder call, CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said that the company would make "targeted growth-oriented investments aligned with the 6 strategic areas of focus." That includes self-driving vehicles/robotaxis. "With the benefit of learning from multiple AV deployments around the world, we're more convinced than ever that AVs will unlock a multitrillion-dollar opportunity for Uber. AVs amplify the fundamental strengths of our platform, global scale, deep demand density, sophisticated marketplace technology, and decades of on-the-ground experience matching riders, drivers, and vehicles, all in real time," Khosrowshahi added.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
So vi only has one level of undo, which is simply no longer fit for the times we live in now, and also wholly unnecessary given even the least powerful devices that might need to run vi probably have more than enough resources to give at least a few more levels of undo. What I didn’t know, however, is that vi’s limited undo behaviour is actually part of POSIX, and for full compliance, you’re going to need it. As Chris Siebenmann notes, vim and its derivatives ignore this POSIX requirement and implement multiple levels of undo in the obviously correct way.
What about nvi, the default on the BSD variants? I didn’t know this, but it has a convoluted workaround to both maintain POSIX compatibility and offer multiple levels of undo, and it’s definitely something.
Nvi has opted to remain POSIX compliant and operate in the traditional vi way, while still supporting multi-level undo. To get multi-level undo in nvi, you extend the first ‘u’ with ‘.’ commands, so ‘u..’ undoes the most recent three changes. The ‘u’ command can be extended with ‘.’ in either of its modes (undo’ing or redo’ing), so ‘u..u..’ is a no-op. The ‘.’ operation doesn’t appear to take a count in nvi, so there is no way to do multiple undos (or redos) in one action; you have to step through them by hand. I’m not sure how nvi reacts if you want do things like move your cursor position during an undo or redo sequence (my limited testing suggests that it can perturb the sequence, so that ‘.’ now doesn’t continue undoing or redoing the way vim will continue if you use ‘u’ or Ctrl-r again).
↫ Chris Siebenmann
Siebenmann lists a few other implementations and how they work with undo, and it’s interesting to see how all of them try to solve the problem in slightly different ways.
Actor allegedly also made remarks to man who dresses in drag, and was seen dancing on Bourbon Street after arrest
The actor Shia LaBeouf allegedly aimed homophobic slurs at two men – one who identifies as queer and the other who dresses in drag – as the Transformers star was arrested for purportedly battering them at a bar early on Tuesday morning in New Orleans, the victims said.
Jeffrey Damnit – who was born with the last name Klein and was listed as one of the victims by New Orleans police – said in an interview on Wednesday that he was wearing mascara, eye shadow and lipstick when LaBeouf tried to beat him up “while screaming, ‘You’re a fucking faggot’”. He also shared a cellphone video showing LaBeouf in the back of a vehicle being examined by first responders, glancing over at Damnit and saying: “Faggot.”
Continue reading...Lawsuit is first by Equal Employment Opportunity Commission over workplace DEI in Trump’s second term
A US civil rights agency has sued a bottler and distributor of Coca-Cola products it accuses of sex discrimination over an employee networking event that excluded men, its first lawsuit over workplace diversity programs since Donald Trump took office. The lawsuit, filed Tuesday by the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, says Coca-Cola Beverages Northeast violated federal law when it hosted the event for about 250 female employees at a casino in Connecticut in September 2024.
The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It is owned by Kirin Holdings, a Japanese company. Coca-Cola is not a defendant in the case.
Continue reading...Google's Pixel 10a is essentially a flatter version of last year's Pixel 9a, keeping the same Tensor G4 chip, camera hardware, RAM, storage, and $500 price while dropping features like Pixelsnap Qi2 charging and advanced Gemini AI capabilities found in higher-end models. Gizmodo reports: We use words like "candy bar" or "slab" to describe our full-screen smartphones, but Google has designed what is likely the slabbiest phone of the modern era. During an hour-long hands-on with Google's all-new Google Pixel 10a, I slid the phone across a desk and felt oddly satisfied that it could glide as neatly as a figure skater without any hint of a camera bump hindering its path. It's the first thing I need to bring up regarding the Pixel 10a, because there's no other discernible difference between this phone and the previous-gen Pixel 9a. And that seems to be the point. The Pixel 10a starts at $500, exactly how much the Pixel 9a cost at launch. In a Q&A with journalists, Google told Gizmodo that the company wanted to offer the same price point as before. That apparently required Google to stick with the same Tensor G4 chip as last year. You still have the same storage options of 128GB or 256GB and the minimum of 8GB of RAM. Think of the Pixel 10a as a Pixel 9a with a reduced camera bump. If you're one of the heretics who uses a phone without a case, that fact alone may be enough to pay attention. Otherwise, you'll be scrounging to find any real difference between the Pixel 10a and one of last year's best mid-range phones.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
An avalanche near California's Lake Tahoe has become the fourth deadliest in U.S. history. Here's what we know about the six deadliest slides.
Hidden in the latest developer guide for iOS 26.4 is support for "voice-based conversational apps" in CarPlay.
The Meta CEO defended his company's efforts to keep kids under 13 off of Instagram, but noted that there are "people who lie" about their ages.
Trump has not yet made a final decision about whether to strike Iran, sources told CBS News.
More than 5,000 employees have resigned, retired or been fired from the Justice Department in the first year of Mr. Trump's second administration.
‘Iran would be very wise to make a deal,’ says Karoline Leavitt on possibility of US strikes against Iran; CBS News reports strikes could begin as soon as Saturday
On a recent morning Eric Taylor, city manager for a small Georgia town of about 5,000 residents called Social Circle, was contacted by a staffer from Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
“They asked me to turn on the water,” he said of a 1m sq ft warehouse nearby that the federal government recently purchased for $128m, with plans to use it for locking up as many as 10,000 detainees as part of the Trump administration’s mass deportation plan.
Continue reading...Avalanches have caused deaths in Lake Tahoe area in six of past 10 years but latest slide is fourth deadliest in US history
The avalanche that killed at least eight skiers in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains occurred in the Castle Peak area, near Lake Tahoe – an area where deadly avalanches are not uncommon.
The Sierra Avalanche Center, which provides forecasts for the region, has observed at least 50 avalanches in the area near Lake Tahoe since September 2025. And according to the National Avalanche Center, which maintains a map of locations where avalanche danger is highest, risk is currently particularly high in the Lake Tahoe area.
Continue reading...After crew on flight 543 reported smoke in the cockpit, passengers and crew exited Airbus A320 via slides
Traffic was temporarily disrupted at Newark Liberty international airport in New Jersey on Wednesday after a Florida-bound JetBlue flight suffered an engine failure on takeoff and returned to the airport, officials said.
Crew on flight 543 reported smoke in the cockpit, and after an emergency landing, passengers and crew exited the Airbus A320 on a taxiway via slides, the Federal Aviation Administration said. No injuries were reported.
Continue reading...Attorney General Pam Bondi ordered the Justice Department to prioritize animal welfare enforcement, in a move she said will entail stepping up prosecutions and even doling out grants to animal welfare groups.
Authorities haven't named a suspect or person of interest in Nancy Guthrie's disappearance as the search continued for a third week.
Police arrest four after incident in the Briar Hill area that left a man in his 20s dead
A man is dead and a teenage boy is in a critical condition in hospital after they were stabbed at a Northampton skate park.
Northamptonshire police launched a murder investigation after emergency services were called to the park in Ringway in the Briar Hill area on Wednesday following reports that two people had been stabbed “during an altercation”.
Continue reading...California wine giant Gallo is set to close one of its Bay Area production facilities, laying off nearly 100 workers there and at four other wineries and tasting rooms in Napa and Sonoma counties.
Coalition of refugee support groups says board’s ‘traumatic’ and ‘flawed’ processes are putting children at risk
A coalition of refugee support groups has called for a Home Office organisation to be axed, claiming it is putting hundreds of children at risk.
The Refugee and Migrant Children’s Consortium, which consists of more than 100 organisations including the Refugee Council, Barnardo’s and the NSPCC, has published a report analysing the performance of the Home Office’s national age assessment board (NAAB), which was set up in March 2023 to determine the ages of young asylum seekers newly arrived in the UK, often on small boats.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: Meta is preparing to spend $65 million this year to boost state politicians who are friendly to the artificial intelligence industry, beginning this week in Texas and Illinois, according to company representatives. The sum is the biggest election investment by Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp. The company was previously cautious about campaign engagements, making small donations out of a corporate political action committee and contributing to presidential inaugurations. It also let executives like Sheryl Sandberg, who was chief operating officer, support candidates in their personal capacities. Now Meta is betting bigger on politics, driven by concerns over the regulatory threat to the artificial intelligence industry as it aims to beat back legislation in states that it fears could inhibit A.I. development, company representatives said. To do that, Meta is quietly starting two new super PACs, according to federal filings surfaced by The New York Times. One group, Forge the Future Project, is backing Republicans. Another, Making Our Tomorrow, is backing Democrats. The new PACs join two others already started by Meta, one of which is focused on California while the other is an umbrella organization that finances the company's spending in other states. In total, the four super PACs have an initial budget of $65 million, according to federal and state filings. Meta's spending is set to start this week in Illinois and Texas, where the company generally favors backing Democratic and Republican incumbents or engaging in open races rather than deposing existing officials, company representatives said in interviews. [...] Last year, Meta's public policy vice president, Brian Rice, said the company would start spending in politics because of "inconsistent regulations that threaten homegrown innovation and investments in A.I." The company started its first two super PACs, American Technology Excellence Project and Mobilizing Economic Transformation Across California. Meta put $45 million into American Technology Excellence Project in September. That money is expected, in turn, to flow to Forge the Future Project, Making Our Tomorrow and potentially to other entities. [...] In California, which has some of the country's most onerous campaign-finance disclosures, Meta in August put $20 million into Mobilizing Economic Transformation Across California, which shortens to META California. State laws require the sponsoring company to be disclosed in the name of the entity. In December, Meta put $5 million into another California committee called California Leads, which is focused on promoting moderate business policy and not A.I., according to state records.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
NYU Langone’s decision comes amid Trump administration threats to cut funding to providers who treat trans youth
NYU Langone Health, one of New York City’s major hospital networks, announced this week that it will shut down its gender‑affirming care program for minors, as the Trump administration escalates threats to strip federal funding from providers that treat trans youth.
In a statement to the Guardian, spokesperson Steve Ritea said that “given the recent departure of our medical director, coupled with the current regulatory environment, we made the difficult decision to discontinue our Transgender Youth Health Program.” He added that the hospital’s pediatric mental health services will continue.
Continue reading...A new report points to a 2026 release for a Meta fitness watch. But the real reasons for its arriving have to do with glasses, too.
Lancet Global Health research suggests more than 75,000 killed in period, 25,000 more than announced at the time
More than 75,000 people were killed in the first 16 months of the two-year war in Gaza, at least 25,000 more than the death toll announced by local authorities at the time, according to a study published on Wednesday in the Lancet Global Health medical journal.
The research also found that reporting by the Gaza health ministry about the proportion of women, children and elderly people among those killed was accurate.
Continue reading...Mark Zuckerberg is testifying in a landmark Los Angeles trial examining whether Meta and other social media firms can be held liable for designing platforms that allegedly addict and harm children. NBC News reports: It's the first of a consolidated group of cases -- from more than 1,600 plaintiffs, including over 350 families and over 250 school districts -- scheduled to be argued before a jury in Los Angeles County Superior Court. Plaintiffs accuse the owners of Instagram, YouTube, TikTok and Snap of knowingly designing addictive products harmful to young users' mental health. Historically, social media platforms have been largely shielded by Section 230, a provision added to the Communications Act of 1934, that says internet companies are not liable for content users post. TikTok and Snap reached settlements with the first plaintiff, a 20-year-old woman identified in court as K.G.M., ahead of the trial. The companies remain defendants in a series of similar lawsuits expected to go to trial this year. [...] Matt Bergman, founding attorney of Social Media Victims Law Center -- which is representing about 750 plaintiffs in the California proceeding and about 500 in the federal proceeding -- called Wednesday's testimony "more than a legal milestone -- it is a moment that families across this country have been waiting for." "For the first time, a Meta CEO will have to sit before a jury, under oath, and explain why the company released a product its own safety teams warned were addictive and harmful to children," Bergman said in a statement Tuesday, adding that the moment "carries profound weight" for parents "who have spent years fighting to be heard." "They deserve the truth about what company executives knew," he said. "And they deserve accountability from the people who chose growth and engagement over the safety of their children."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I have a pint x. I’m like 225 miles in or so new rider. So I’m getting the hang of it. I push it hard and I’m like 225 so when I go up an incline it gives me crazy power surges.
Anyway
I was pushing the board hard. I felt no pushback (maybe I was standing on it). Anyway the nose dipped at max speed. I landed on my left elbow then at some point I felt my head hit the pavement. Like hard. So hard there was a girl with both hands over her mouth. At this point I’m like “I taste blood in my ears.” but I stand up. Tell him the board wasn’t suppose to do that. Then staggered to my board and dipped.
Woman says she was pregnant during alleged assaults
Lawsuit seeks monetary damages of more than $1m
Rice was suspended to start 2025 for role in car crash
A former girlfriend of Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice filed a civil lawsuit this week in Texas alleging he assaulted her during a span from December 2023 to July 2025.
Dacoda Jones, with whom Rice has two children, said she was pregnant during many of the alleged assaults. She filed the suit on Monday in Dallas County, Texas, and is seeking damages of more than $1m, according to attorney Ron Estefan.
Continue reading...The USA and Canada both won in overtime to reach the men’s ice hockey last four, while Mikaela Shiffrin dominated the slalom
Women’s aerials: the qualifying rounds of accelerating down a ramp and flying through the air. Hanna Huskova, gold medallist in 2018, does a triple somersault, or the “the kiss arse blaster” in the commentator’s words, but it is only enough to leave her seventh.
Women’s curling: Back to the brushes, where Rebecca Morrison posts the final stone of the sixth end into perfect position, Team GB take two and go into a 4-3 lead against the USA with four ends left.
Continue reading...I got to test out Dyson's new PencilWash, which resembles the brand's slim PencilVac but with mopping capabilities.
The ride-hailing company expects to put more robotaxis in more cities this year.
Americans rely on Quinn Hughes’s OT winner
Mitch Marner seals Canada’s 4-3 overtime win
Canadians lose star Sidney Crosby to injury
With NHL players returning to the Winter Olympics for the first time since 2014, these Games were expected to be a relative stroll for Canada and USA. However, both star-packed teams struggled in Wednesday’s men’s ice hockey quarter-finals.
Quinn Hughes scored in overtime to put the US past Sweden 2-1 after giving up the tying goal to Mika Zibanejad with 91 seconds left in the third period. Dylan Larkin deflected Jack Hughes’ shot in for the only US goal in regulation.
Continue reading...The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention hasn't had a Senate confirmed director since last summer, and that official was in the job for less than a month.
Google is bringing its Lyria 3 AI music model into the Gemini app, allowing users to generate 30-second songs from text, images, or video prompts directly within the chatbot. The Verge reports: Lyria 3's text-to-music capabilities allow Gemini app users to make songs by describing specific genres, moods, or memories, such as asking for an "Afrobeat track for my mother about the great times we had growing up." The music generator can make instrumental audio and songs with lyrics composed automatically based on user prompts. Users can also upload photographs and video references, which Gemini then uses to generate a track with lyrics that fit the vibe. "The goal of these tracks isn't to create a musical masterpiece, but rather to give you a fun, unique way to express yourself," Google said in its announcement blog. Gemini will add custom cover art generated by Nano Banana to songs created on the app, which aims to make them easier to share and download. Google is also bringing Lyria 3 to YouTube's Dream Track tool, which allows creators to make custom AI soundtracks for Shorts. Dream Track and Lyria were initially demonstrated with the ability to mimic the style and voice of famous performers. Google says it's been "very mindful" of copyright in the development of Lyria 3 and that the tool "is designed for original expression, not for mimicking existing artists." When prompted for a specific artist, Gemini will make a track that "shares a similar style or mood" and uses filters to check outputs against existing content.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
PM says measure, also applied to deepfake nudes, is needed owing to a ‘national emergency’ of online misogyny
Deepfake nudes and “revenge porn” must be removed from the internet within 48 hours or technology firms risk being blocked in the UK, Keir Starmer has said, calling it a “national emergency” that the government must confront.
Companies could be fined millions or even blocked altogether if they allow the images to spread or be reposted after victims give notice.
Continue reading...Proposal to replant inside a different type of protected woodland would not replicate diversity of cleared sites used by threatened cockatoo species, conservationists say
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Property developers in Perth plan to bulldoze an endangered banksia ecosystem used by threatened black cockatoo species, and conservationists have warned the damage cannot be mitigated by proposed offsets.
The developers want to replant the banksia ecosystem within a different type of protected woodland – a proposal that a leading botanist said was doomed to fail.
Continue reading...This feature aims to improve the reading experience for Audible subscribers.
F9 is an L4-inspired microkernel designed for ARM Cortex-M, targeting real-time embedded systems with hard determinism requirements. It implements the fundamental microkernel principles—address spaces, threads, and IPC, while adding advanced features from industrial RTOSes.
↫ F9 kernel GitHub page
For once, not written in Rust, and comes with both an L4-style native API and a userspace POSIX API, and there’s a ton of documentation to get you started.
Feb. 18, 2026 — A multi-institution research collaboration has been scaling linear optimization problems to run on supercomputers. Through recent advancements, the collaboration calculated over 11,000 scenarios for the German energy system at unprecedented detail and accuracy, providing deeper insights for policy makers and other stakeholders.

Until recently, energy optimization researchers had not ported many of their workflows to supercomputers. Access to JUWELS at JSC helped the team scale its application to new heights. Image credit: JSC.
Global conflicts, climate change, and other sources of volatility in energy markets make it hard for decision makers to plan for a secure, sustainable power supply for the future. Mathematicians and energy researchers work with civic leaders to develop energy scenario analyses that provide a range of possibilities for future energy demands and potential challenges for meeting them. However, until recently, researchers could only efficiently create energy scenario analyses with a small number of scenarios that relied heavily on certain assumptions and did not strongly consider the influence of uncertainty on these systems.
Over the last several years, as part of the UNSEEN project, researchers have used the JURECA-DC and JUWELS Cluster supercomputers at the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) to take energy scenario analysis to new heights. In its recent paper in Nature Communications, the team presented a modeling workflow that included more than 11,000 scenarios for Germany’s power system with a wide range of inputs. Taken together, these analyses deepen future prediction power related to energy costs, security of energy supply, and sustainability. Researchers from the German Aerospace Agency (DLR), JSC, the Zuse Institute Berlin (ZIB), TU Berlin, and GAMS Software GmbH all contributed to the work.
“HPC is not an established approach for our research domain,” said Dr. Karl-Kiên Cao, postdoctoral researcher at DLR and scientific coordinator on the project. “At the same time, researchers doing energy scenario analysis are increasingly confronting impractical computing time using laptops or smaller shared clusters. For us, developing our application to scale on HPC was a logical next step, and required us to develop appropriate software solvers to do this work efficiently.”
Multidisciplinary Collaboration Promotes Better Energy System Analysis
In 2015, JSC joined a multi-institution project focused on using Germany’s computing power to better support energy systems modeling. The project, BEAM-ME, was led by DLR and included computational experts from two Gauss Centre for Supercomputing centers—JSC and the High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart. The project’s success led to the follow-up project, UNSEEN, which started four years later.
While researchers in BEAM-ME were primarily focused on improving algorithmic efficiency and codes for energy optimization problems, the work in UNSEEN has been focused on taking those improvements and running improved energy system analyses while looking for opportunities to further optimize computational workflows.
To create the most realistic energy system analysis possible, researchers must pull together a wide variety of open-source data: existing power plants’ production capacities, hour-by-hour energy demand patterns in Germany, current and projected future power production from renewable energy sources, and climate change models, while also making projections for how population shifts, changes to how energy is produced and priced, and myriad other uncertainties will influence future power generation. “The largest original datasets included in this kind of modeling—historical meteorological data—are typically heavily simplified, but according to our findings, this data has a large impact on the design of future energy systems, so we needed to develop a better understanding of what is an acceptable degree of simplification for these analyses,” Cao said.
The DLR researchers worked closely with JSC’s Thomas Breuer to improve their computational workflows. Ultimately, the team wanted to focus not only on adding more realism to simplifications in its models, but also improve how uncertainties are weighted. “To support the team, we first had to understand how the code and processes worked in their existing environment so that we could transfer them to an HPC environment in the best way possible, including the many interactions of individual components of the workflow,” Breuer said.
Breuer helped the team establish its workflow using JSC’s JUBE workflow management tool and colleagues from ZIB, TU Berlin and GAMS worked with the team to adapt the PIPS-IPM++ solver for energy system modeling, which it intends to further optimize for more efficient analyses. In its recent calculations that were published in the Nature Communications paper, the team found that four of the energy system scenarios for Germany were nearly optimal for several of the team’s seven indicators connected to affordability, supply-security, and sustainability goals.
Powering Up for Future Optimization Research, More Informed Predictions
With these encouraging results in hand, the team is looking to further optimize its workflow so it can run these analyses more quickly. The researchers also want to continue improving how to include more accurate assumptions and how to better account for various types of uncertainty in its models. In addition to making their solver more user-friendly for energy system modelers, the team is currently preparing benchmarking experiments to compare how their workflow would run on shared memory systems, distributed memory systems, and GPU-based solutions.
For Cao, the emphasis moving forward is two-pronged—running large-scale, computationally intensive models that can further improve models that other researchers can use on less powerful computers and presenting research findings to decision makers in an actionable manner. “Our domain is not used to evaluating large ensemble studies like these,” Cao said. “Therefore, it is a challenge to extract core findings from these huge datasets and present them in ways that will help decision makers in guiding future energy policy decisions.” However, now that the team has the ability to develop HPC-based analyses, it is now focused on creating new opportunities for collaboration across disciplines and turning complex modeling results into practical insights for relevant authorities.
Related Publication: Frey, U. et al (2025). “The Benefits of Exploring a Large Scenario Space for Future Energy Systems,” Nature Communications. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-67593-9
Funding for JUWELS was provided by the Ministry of Culture and Research of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia and the German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space through the Gauss Centre for Supercomputing (GCS).
Source: Eric Gedenk, GCS
The post UNSEEN Project Uses HPC to Transform Energy System Modeling appeared first on HPCwire.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: For a while now, Mac owners have been able to use tools like CrossOver and Game Porting Toolkit to get many Windows games running on their operating system of choice. Now, GameSir plans to add its own potential solution to the mix, announcing that a version of its existing Windows emulation tool for Android will be coming to macOS. Hong Kong-based GameSir has primarily made a name for itself as a manufacturer of gaming peripherals -- the company's social media profile includes a self-description as "the Anti-Stick Drift Experts." Early last year, though, GameSir rolled out the Android GameHub app, which includes a GameFusion emulator that the company claims "provides complete support for Windows games to run on Android through high-precision compatibility design." In practice, GameHub and GameFusion for Android haven't quite lived up to that promise. Testers on Reddit and sites like EmuReady report hit-or-miss compatibility for popular Steam titles on various Android-based handhelds. At least one Reddit user suggests that "any Unity, Godot, or Game Maker game tends to just work" through the app, while another reports "terrible compatibility" across a wide range of games. With Sunday's announcement, GameSir promises a similar opportunity to "unlock your entire Steam library" and "run Win games/Steam natively" on Mac will be "coming soon." GameSir is also promising "proprietary AI frame interpolation" for the Mac, following the recent rollout of a "native rendering mode" that improved frame rates on the Android version. There are some "reasons to worry" though, based on the company's uneven track record. The Android version faced controversy for including invasive tracking components, which were later removed after criticism. There were also questions about the use of open-source code, as GameSir acknowledged referencing and using UI components from Winlator, even while maintaining that its core compatibility layer was developed in-house.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
It’s been well over a year since Microsoft unveiled it was working on bringing MIDI 2.0 to Windows, and now it’s actually here available for everyone.
We’ve been working on MIDI over the past several years, completely rewriting decades of MIDI 1.0 code on Windows to both support MIDI 2.0 and make MIDI 1.0 amazing. This new combined stack is called “Windows MIDI Services.”
The Windows MIDI Services core components are built into Windows 11, rolling out through a phased enablement process now to in-support retail releases of Windows 11. This includes all the infrastructure needed to bring more features to existing MIDI 1.0 apps, and also support apps using MIDI 2.0 through our new Windows MIDI Services App SDK.
↫ Pete Brown and Gary Daniels at the Windows Blogs
This is the kind of work users of an operating system want to see. Improvements and new features like these actually have a meaningful, positive impact for people using MIDI, and will genuinely give them them benefits they otherwise wouldn’t get. I won’t pretend to know much about the detailed features and improvements listed in Microsoft’s blog post, but I’m sure the musicians in the audience will be quite pleased.
Whomever at Microsoft was responsible for pushing this through, managing this team, and of course the team members themselves should probably be overseeing more than just this. Less “AI” bullshit, more of this.
Almost 70% of companies, including BYD and Toyota, beat their initial target for the average emissions efficiency of the new cars they sold
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Major auto brands including Mazda, Nissan and Subaru face the possibility of millions of dollars in penalties after failing to meet climate targets for new vehicles in Australia.
The first six months of data since the Albanese government introduced a new vehicle efficiency standard shows 40 companies – 68% of the total – beat their initial target for the average emissions efficiency of the new cars they sold.
Continue reading...TP-Link is facing legal action from the state of Texas for allegedly misleading consumers with "Made in Vietnam" claims despite China-dominated manufacturing and supply chains, and for marketing its devices as secure despite reported firmware vulnerabilities exploited by Chinese state-sponsored actors. The Register: The Lone Star State's Attorney General, Ken Paxton, is filing the lawsuit against California-based TP-Link Systems Inc., which was originally founded in China, accusing it of deceptively marketing its networking devices and alleging that its security practices and China-based affiliations allowed Chinese state-sponsored actors to access devices in the homes of American consumers. It is understood that this is just the first of several lawsuits that the Office of the Attorney General intends to file this week against "China-aligned companies," as part of a coordinated effort to hold China accountable under Texas law. The lawsuit claims that TP-Link is the dominant player in the US networking and smart home market, controlling 65 percent of the American market for network devices. It also alleges that TP-Link represents to American consumers that the devices it markets and sells within the US are manufactured in Vietnam, and that consistent with this, the devices it sells in the American market carry a "Made in Vietnam" sticker.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Feb. 18, 2026 — A team of researchers from the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) and the State University of Campinas (Unicamp) in Brazil used a series of supercomputer simulations to reduce the uncertainty of obtaining information from quantum dots, showing that a system with as many as 30 electrons can be workable. The work also sheds light on several phenomena important to condensed matter and materials science research.
One of the biggest questions in advanced computing today is when will there be a true quantum computer — that is, a computer that calculates using the complex, shades-of-gray rules of quantum mechanics rather than the simple “on/off” switch of conventional computers. What will it be able to do that traditional electronic computers can’t? One roadblock to getting that quantum computer, though, is making it big enough to tackle real problems. A modern computer chip can store hundreds of billions or even trillions of one/zero “bits” of information. Today’s quantum computers, on the other hand, are based on only dozens of qubits. Experts estimate that it’ll take about a million qubits to power a true quantum computer. Which is a tall order today.
The problem lies in the nature of qubits. In a traditional computer, you can store a 1 or a 0 in bits using transistors and electrical currents that are highly controllable. Qubits offer untold promise partly because they can process information via superposition and entanglement: They can be in any state between 1 and 0, offering resources and a complexity of stored information that are not available to a traditional computer. But because qubits are based on single or small numbers of particles, they obey the weird rules of quantum mechanics. Quantum particles interact with each other and their environment in ways that make both storing the information stably and reading it accurately very complicated.
Of course, qubits have to be made of something, and that’s another place where things get tricky. In order to have a true qubit, capable of storing the somewhere-between-one-and-zero information needed for a quantum computer, you need a physical device that is small enough to display quantum behavior. Too large, and it starts to behave by the classical rules that govern conventional computers.
Quantum dots are one approach to building qubits. A quantum dot consists of a small number of electrons trapped in a tiny space. Because of those small dimensions, they are tiny enough to display quantum behavior. As an added benefit, quantum dots can be created on semiconductor chips, as in traditional computers. That makes them relatively easy to manufacture, integrate into computing systems, and potentially scale up to usable sizes.
Scientists had discovered that they could begin to estimate the wave function of particles trapped in a quantum dot — read its somewhere-between-zero-and-one state — using a Monte Carlo method. Like a gambler playing roulette many times in a row, Monte Carlo simulations sample the state of a system repeatedly. The average answer you get tells you the likely state. The variation between the different simulations tell you how certain you can be in that answer.
Quantum behavior is about how small systems get blurry at the smallest sizes and energies. Because of that, one might expect a qubit’s quantum behavior to be at its purest, and the answer to the calculation most accurate, when it’s at as low an energy state as possible. Scientists call that low-energy state the ground state. But here the Monte Carlo method often hits a roadblock. Because it depends on guessing the overall structure of the wave function at the outset, it suffers from the assumptions the humans make about the system. This affects the certainty of the answer.
PSC’s Deputy Scientific Director Bruno Abreu, with colleagues at Unicamp, wondered whether an AI approach could improve on the Monte Carlo approach to quantum dots.
The scientists used a type of AI called a neural network coupled to a Monte Carlo series of simulations. The AI learned as it made guesses, without human input. Because of that, it wasn’t beholden to any assumptions by the researchers. It could possibly break through the limitations of previous Monte Carlo methods.
Using the Delta supercomputer at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, the team trained their neural network in what amounted to a series of guesses. The steps decreased the energy, at first by a lot but then leveling out. When further steps didn’t improve the wave function, the sims had their final answer.
“Because I know the position and the velocity of a classical particle … I can predict where the particle is going to be at any time in the future, or in the past,” said Abreu. “In quantum physics, the way you predict what’s going to happen, it’s by knowing the wave function … I can’t predict exactly where the particle is going to be, but I can predict what’s the probability that it will be there [and what] the wave function is going to be like in a certain time in the future. So that’s why the wave function is so important. It’s the key. It brings all the information of the system.”
Over hundreds of thousands of such optimization steps, the simulations got the energy level lower than had been possible with the state-of-the-art non-AI Monte Carlo methods, indicating a better representation of the system’s wave function. The team reported their findings in the journal Physical Review B in October 2025.
These results pave the way to a better understanding and more precise description of usable quantum dots, which can become platforms for building qubits at scale. But they’re also applicable in a number of other fields where quantum behavior is important. These include understanding quantum behaviors of nuclear matter, ultracold gases, and condensed matter systems involved in discovering new useful materials. In the future, the team plans to study how their neural network Monte Carlo method can be scaled up to control larger numbers of particles, as well as to refine the method’s ability to predict quantum behavior. This includes potential quantum circuits running on quantum computers as part of the neural network.
Source: Ken Chiacchia, PSC
The post PSC: Sims Exploit AI to Advance Toward Workable Quantum Computer appeared first on HPCwire.
The greatest American skier of all time won her first Olympic medal in 2014. The 12 years in between have been marked by brutal ups and downs
A lot can happen in 12 years. If you’re Mikaela Shiffrin, as a teenager you can become the youngest ever person to win the Olympic slalom, stack a couple more medals at the next Olympics, become the most successful World Cup skier of all time with a record 108 victories, go 10 more Olympic races in a row over three Winter Games without reaching the podium, overcome the two biggest crashes of your career and subsequent battles with self-doubt and post-traumatic stress disorder and eroding trust in your own skiing, and then bring it all back home with a second Olympic slalom gold.
You can also lose your dad.
Continue reading...Brad Reese claims Hershey is cutting costs by relying on cheaper ingredients, risking the Reese's brand.
Eight backcountry skiers have been found dead and one remains missing after an avalanche near Lake Tahoe in California, officials said.
The Trump administration filed an appeal after a judge ordered slavery exhibits that were removed from the President's House Site to be returned.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 19, No. 718.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 19, No. 1,706.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 19 #984.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 19, No. 514.
One skier still missing and six others rescued after group engulfed in Sierra Nevada mountains during severe storm
Eight skiers who went missing after an avalanche swept the Castle Peak area of the Sierra Nevada mountains in California have been confirmed dead, authorities said during a Wednesday press conference.
One skier is still unaccounted for, while six others, who had been stranded, have since been rescued.
Continue reading...Sign-ups to Student Group Claim in England and Wales escalate amid reports of £21m payout by University College London
Tens of thousands more students who were at university during the pandemic have joined a group claim for compensation, amid reports of a £21m payout by one of the UK’s leading institutions.
Lawyers acting for student claimants said a further 30,000 from different universities had signed up to the Student Group Claim this week, taking the total to almost 200,000.
Continue reading...US president had recently said the plan was the best deal Starmer could make
Donald Trump has urged Keir Starmer not to hand the Chagos Islands over to Mauritius, warning he was “making a big mistake”.
Under the deal agreed last year, Britain would cede control over the British Indian Ocean Territory but lease the largest island, Diego Garcia, for 99 years to continue operating a joint US-UK military base there.
Continue reading...A study of more than 12,000 European firms found that AI adoption causally increases labour productivity by 4% on average across the EU, and that it does so without reducing employment in the short run. Researchers from the Bank for International Settlements and the European Investment Bank used an instrumental variable strategy that matched EU firms to comparable US firms by sector, size, investment intensity and other characteristics, then used the AI adoption rates of those US counterparts as a proxy for exogenous AI exposure among European firms. The productivity gains, however, skewed heavily toward medium and large companies. Among large firms, 45% had deployed AI, compared to just 24% of small firms. The study also found that complementary investments mattered enormously: an extra percentage point of spending on workforce training amplified AI's productivity effect by 5.9%, and an extra point on software and data infrastructure added 2.4%.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Star figure skater Ilia Malinin stressed he was focused on moving forward and continuing to push the boundaries of the sport.
The best VPNs for Google Chrome enhance privacy so you can browse the web, stream videos and download files away from prying eyes.
Wexner, who has denied misconduct related to Epstein, is one of several subpoenaed by House oversight panel
The former boss of the Victoria’s Secret lingerie brand, Les Wexner, said he has “done nothing wrong” and has “nothing to hide”, as he testifies on Wednesday before a congressional committee in relation to his past ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
Wexner is one of several Epstein associates subpoenaed to testify before the House oversight committee in their continued investigation of the late financier’s crimes.
Continue reading...Unite Here, the US’s largest hospitality workers’ union, says ICE crackdown is harming tourism and costing jobs
Donald Trump’s immigration policies are having a chilling effect on the hospitality industry, where nearly a third of workers are immigrants, according to the largest hospitality union in the US.
The number of employed hospitality workers dropped by 98,000 from December 2024 to December 2025, according to a report from Unite Here, which represents 300,000 workers across the hospitality, food and tourism industries in the US and Canada.
Continue reading...Pritzker’s move reflects increasing public pushback against resource-hungry facilities used to power the AI boom
The Illinois governor JB Pritzker proposed a two-year break from offering tax incentives for datacenters, a reflection of increasing public pushback against the massive, resource-hungry facilities used to power the modern AI boom.
Pritzker made the proposal, which will need the backing of state lawmakers, during his annual state of the state address, which covers Illinois budget and policy plans. The plan was first reported by NBC News.
Continue reading...Here are the latest updates and news about the impressive home tech on display at the show from newcomers and major industry players alike.
The avalanche was reported near Castle Peak in Nevada County, north of Boreal Mountain Ski Resort.
Struggling to pay your tax bill? The IRS has programs that may help, but you'll need to prove that you qualify.
Supreme court rules children in England who suffer serious injuries at birth can claim for future lost earnings
The NHS will have to spend more money settling lawsuits involving negligence during childbirth after a supreme court ruling that lawyers said puts right a “historic injustice”.
The court ruled on Wednesday that children in England who suffer catastrophic injuries while they are being born can claim damages for future earnings they would otherwise have had.
Continue reading...White House advisor Kevin Hassett slammed the New York Fed report, which found that Americans, not foreign exporters, bear most tariff costs.
State regulators walk back suspension threat and say Tesla has stopped misleading drivers about the safety of its cars
Tesla will avoid a 30-day suspension of its dealer and manufacturer licenses in California, its biggest market, after the US electric vehicle maker stopped using the term “autopilot” in the marketing of its vehicles in the state.
Tesla now uses the term “supervised” in references to its full self-driving technology and has stopped using “autopilot” entirely in its marketing in the state.
Continue reading...Cleveland.com, the digital arm of Ohio's Plain Dealer newspaper, has removed writing from the workloads of certain reporters and handed that job to what editor Chris Quinn calls an "AI rewrite specialist" who turns reporter-gathered material into article drafts. The reporters on these beats -- covering Lorain, Lake, Geauga, and most recently Medina County -- are assigned entirely to reporting, spending their time on in-person interviews and meeting sources for coffee. Editors review the AI-produced drafts and reporters get the final say before publication. Quinn says the arrangement has effectively freed up an extra workday per week for each reporter. The newsroom adopted this model last year to expand local coverage into counties it could no longer staff with full teams, and Quinn described the setup in a February 14 letter after a college journalism student withdrew from a reporting role over the newsroom's use of AI. Quinn blamed journalism schools for the student's reaction, saying professors have repeatedly told students that AI is bad.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
New rider just wondering what’s the community’s thoughts.
President Donald Trump will gather officials from dozens of countries in Washington to hear a status report on his peace plan for Gaza, though serious stumbling blocks remain.
Regina Santos-Aviles told a colleague in a text message months before her death that she had an affair with Gonzales.
Heard about the XRV Upgrade and it's like telling someone who was perfectly happy when he got his OneWheel that there is actually a slightly greener hill just around the corner
Is the XRV kit really the mind blowing change it's claiming? My main pain on my XR+ is the feeling as though it won't let me go as fast as I'd like with the pushback and haptic, and what feels like "clipping" when trying to go faster uphill. A good portion of my return home trip is uphill so would feel great to not have to be acutely aware of haptic feedback or clipping.
I'm traveling roughly 15-20km per day and love every second, but I think we all chase that 1% better...
Worst case, help me sell to my wife why I need it
When Benjamin Franklin set out on what he called his “bold and arduous project” of moral perfection, he did not imagine he would arrive at the summit of virtue. He knew better. The point was not arrival but effort. “Though I fell far short of perfection,” he wrote late in life, he became “a better and a happier man” for having tried.
That insight captures a central conviction shared across the founding generation: virtue is a lifelong journey, not a mere destination. And happiness, rightly understood, is not a mood to capture, but a character to cultivate.
Happiness as Self-Government
For the Founders, happiness was inseparable from disciplined self-government.
Franklin operationalized this in his famous list of virtues: temperance, silence, order, resolution, frugality, industry, sincerity, justice, moderation, tranquility, and humility. He built a chart, examined himself nightly. Franklin began each week by focusing on a single virtue, starting with temperance because he believed it produced the clarity necessary for governing the rest.
Thomas Jefferson echoed this same framework. Drawing from Cicero’s reflections on the tranquil soul, he praised a life governed by restraint and consistency rather than ambition or fear. For Jefferson, liberty was not license. It was the power to pause, deliberate, and choose long-term good over short-term impulse.
John Adams made humility his lifelong project. In his diaries, Adams recorded his battle with vanity and resolved that no one is fit for high office who leaves a single passion unsubdued. George Washington practiced resolution by cooling the first heat of emotion and acting only after reflection. James Madison and Alexander Hamilton translated this philosophy into constitutional design, crafting institutions that would check public passion and allow reason to prevail.
To these Founders, the personal and the political were never separate spheres. A constitutional democracy has always required citizens who could do internally what the Constitution required externally: let reason, not rage, rule.
The Daily Struggle for Character
Key figures throughout American history understood life as a daily struggle for self-improvement and emotional discipline.
Franklin’s method was practical. “If Passion drives, let Reason hold the reins,” he advised. Imperfectly practiced, these habits nonetheless formed the architecture of his happiness.
John Quincy Adams kept a diary for 70 years as a second conscience, recording his failures, restraining temper, and renewing resolutions. For him, self-rule preceded public rule. You cannot sway a nation if you cannot govern yourself.
Phillis Wheatley drew on the same classical tradition to ground her poetry in virtue. Writing in the shadow of slavery, she asserted the universal capacity for moral excellence and exposed the gap between America’s professed principles and its practices.
Abraham Lincoln, shaped by early reading and lifelong self-education, warned against the “mobocratic spirit” and called for “cold, calculating, unimpassioned reason” to preserve liberty. Passion may ignite change, he suggested, but only disciplined judgment sustains a constitutional democracy.
Frederick Douglass called education and disciplined labor the path to self-making. Character, he insisted, is built by regular and thoughtful exercise of one’s faculties.
The lesson is constant across generations. Virtue is not an inheritance nor a heroic display; it is the steady discipline of daily practice.
Being Good and Being a Citizen
Being a good person and being a good citizen are inseparable.
George Mason insisted that liberty can be preserved only through justice, moderation, temperance, frugality, and virtue. The stability of free government depended on habits formed long before a ballot was cast.
Madison warned that passion can “wrest the scepter from reason” in popular assemblies. Constitutional checks were essential, but they could not succeed unless citizens themselves practiced self-restraint and civic virtue.
Jefferson believed that a free people can govern themselves only if individuals first master their own passions. Liberty without self-discipline gives way to faction and instability. The pursuit of happiness is thus public work: cultivating the character required to sustain freedom.
A Call to Pursue Happiness Together
In an age that often confuses happiness with impulse and success with speed, the Founders and other key figures offer a different path. Happiness means disciplined self-government. It means aligning reason and passion. It means learning, reflecting, correcting, and beginning again.
Temperance, humility, industry, moderation, and sincerity are not relics of the 18th century. They are practices for every generation seeking to strengthen constitutional democracy. The pursuit of happiness is not solitary or self-indulgent. It is the steady work of forming character so that we can contribute to the common good and sustain the freedoms we inherit.
Franklin did not achieve moral perfection. Neither did Jefferson, Adams, nor Washington. That is precisely the point. The work continues, calling each generation and each individual to take it up anew.
If you are ready to engage in that work, we invite you to continue the journey through the National Constitution Center and Arizona State University’s new free online course for adult learners, What the Founders Meant by Happiness: A Journey Through Virtue and Character. Building on NCC CEO Emeritus Jeffrey Rosen’s 2024 book, The Pursuit of Happiness: How Classical Writers on Virtue Inspired the Lives of the Founders and Defined America, this course brings the Founders’ moral world to life through engaging video lectures with Jeff, close study of primary sources, and interactive materials.
At the heart of the course, and at the heart of the American experiment, is a simple but demanding truth: self-government begins with government of the self.
Julie Silverbrook is vice president of civic education at the National Constitution Center.
Here's a quick ski mountaineering (aka skimo) primer and the full schedule of the skimo events at the 2026 Winter Games.
Meta chief says it has improved identifying underage users but adds ‘I always wish we could have gotten there sooner’
The Meta CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, testified at a landmark trial of social media companies on Wednesday. Plaintiffs’ lawyers grilled Zuckerberg about internal complaints that not enough was being done to verify whether children under 13 were using the platform.
Zuckerberg claimed Meta had improved in identifying underage users but also said: “I always wish that we could have gotten there sooner.”
Continue reading...Carr says the Federal Communications Commission has also opened an enforcement action into ABC’s the View
The chair of the US’s top media regulator claimed on Wednesday that journalists had been tricked into covering claims by the late-night host Stephen Colbert that he had been blocked by his network from interviewing a Texas Senate candidate.
Brendan Carr, the avowedly pro-Trump chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), made his comments after Colbert accused the Trump administration and CBS of censorship.
Continue reading...Money clears path for work on Gateway project increasing number of tunnels linking New York City and New Jersey
The Trump administration transferred the balance of federal funds it owed to the Gateway rail tunnel initiative on Wednesday, along with additional money beyond the original amount, clearing the path for work on the project to restart as early as next week.
Once finished, the project will increase the number of rail tunnels linking New York City and New Jersey, as well as repair a century-old tunnel that was heavily damaged by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, which is used by more than 200,000 travelers and 425 trains daily.
Continue reading...From clues on the event invite to rumors swirling online, we have an idea of what Apple might have in store for us on March 4.
Andrew Yang, the former presidential candidate and longtime Universal Basic Income advocate, published a blog post this week warning that AI is about to displace millions of white-collar workers in the U.S. over the next 12 to 18 months, a wave he has taken to calling "the Fuckening." Yang cited a conversation with the CEO of a publicly traded tech company who said the firm is cutting 15% of its workforce now and plans another 20% cut in two years, followed by yet another 20% two years after that. The U.S. currently has about 70 million white-collar workers, and Yang expects that number to fall by 20 to 50% over the next several years. Underemployment among recent college graduates has already hit 52%, and only 30% of graduating seniors have landed a job in their field. Yang's proposed remedy remains the same one he ran on in 2020: Universal Basic Income.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
At HPCwire we outlined the key data challenges that will define the Genesis Mission. There is a growing acknowledgment that scientific AI often breaks down at the data layer. Fragmented datasets and uneven metadata introduce friction that no model alone can overcome. Federated access rules and mismatched computing environments add to the challenge.
While the Genesis Mission does not reduce scientific discovery to a data problem alone, it does highlight that data execution is no longer a background concern. It is quickly emerging as an important consideration in how AI-driven science can realistically progress at national scale.
Last week, the DOE announced 26 science and technology challenges that it described as being “of national importance” to advance the Genesis Mission and accelerate innovation and discovery through artificial intelligence.
There are various sectors that are part of this announcement, including Nuclear systems, grid modernization, materials science, advanced manufacturing, and national security. However, the key takeaway is that the DOE is increasingly viewing AI not just as a research accelerator, but as a means to reorganize how scientific work is structured and executed across the national laboratory system. The emphasis is on building a coordinated system that covers a wide range of industries – an early foundation of a national scientific operating framework.
“These challenges represent a bold step toward a future where science moves at the speed of imagination because of AI. It’s a game-changer for science, energy, and national security,” said DOE Under Secretary for Science and Genesis Mission Lead Dr. Darío Gil. “By uniting the U.S. Government’s unparalleled data resources and DOE’s experimental facilities with cutting-edge AI, we can unlock discoveries that will power the economy, secure our energy future, and keep America at the forefront of global innovation.”
AI is often positioned as a support layer for science to help researchers analyze data faster or run simulations more efficiently.. However, with these 26 challenges, it provides more structure. It positions AI as the connective tissue that links experimentation, compute, and decision making. The DOE is clearly thinking beyond individual models or isolated breakthroughs. It wants a systems level integration at scale.
The challenges announced are not limited to one domain. They represent a cross section of the scientific and industrial stack that powers modern innovation. Several of the challenges focus on reducing the time required to move from theory to validation.
For example, in nuclear systems, AI is being pushed to play a bigger role in reactor design, licensing workflows, and operational modeling. Historically, the nuclear space has been bogged down by long timelines and complex regulatory requirements.
AI can speed up the process through advanced simulations and optimization. It can also improve operation with digital twins and predictive monitoring. The licensing workflows can be more efficient with automated analysis of complex regulatory documents and engineering data. With AI, there is a lot of potential for reducing timeline bottlenecks across various sectors.

Darío Gil, Under Secretary for Science at U.S. Department of Energy
What makes this interesting is that the focus is quietly shifting from single breakthroughs to workflow speed. Scientific progress has always been constrained by how long it takes to test ideas. And that is where simulation comes in. However, manual work is needed. Someone has to run the experiment, analyze the outcome, and decide what comes next. That cycle is slow almost by design. The new challenges suggest the DOE wants AI sitting inside that loop and cutting the dead time between steps.
Many of the challenges are related to materials science and advanced manufacturing. Instead of treating modeling and experimentation as separate stages handled by different groups, the approach now feels more continuous. AI models narrow down possibilities earlier. This should potentially reduce the number (and expenses) of running tests. Less trial and error. More guided exploration.
There is also a quiet push toward experiments that adapt in real time. Not referring to fully autonomous labs here (at least not yet). But instead the environments where AI helps decide what to test next based on live results. That is a big departure from how large scale science has traditionally worked. Experiments were planned, executed, then analyzed afterward. Here the feedback loop tightens. It helps decisions happen faster.
The inclusion of microelectronics and national security in the same set of challenges stands out. Both rely on some heavy compute, hard to manage datasets, and infrastructure that has to coordinate across systems that were never built to work together cleanly. That overlap seems to be the whole point of the initiative.
The DOE is not treating these as separate worlds anymore. It feels more like a bet that shared AI infrastructure matters more than keeping domains isolated just because that is how they have always operated.
That, more than anything, may be the signal hidden inside the announcement. The goal is to build a system where discovery itself moves differently. Faster iteration and shorter gaps between idea and validation. This leads to less fragmentation between disciplines that used to operate independently.
“These 26 challenges are a direct call to action to America’s researchers and innovators to join the Genesis Mission and deliver science and technology breakthroughs that will benefit the American people,” said Assistant to the President and Director of The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Michael Kratsios. “We look forward to expanding the list of challenges across Federal agencies to bring even greater impact to the Mission.”
The 26 challenges will help identify technical problems for different stakeholders in the Genesis Mission. It will also outline how the DOE wants discovery itself to operate, with AI embedded across data and decision making. With AI being more than just an analytical tool, we’ll have to be careful about hallucination and bad data that feeds in the AI systems. The opportunity is significant, but so is the risk. The difference now is that the key challenges have been clearly laid out, giving researchers and industry a clearer starting point for what comes next.
The post Inside the DOE’s 26 AI Challenges for Genesis Mission appeared first on HPCwire.
Will Forster MP says ‘lack of planning and haphazard communication’ on new border rules has caused chaos
A “grace period” should be introduced for British dual nationals living, working or holidaying abroad who face being blocked from returning to the UK if they do not have an up-to-date British passport, the Liberal Democrats have said.
Entry requirements change on 25 February as part of a wider initiative to streamline immigration which requires British dual nationals to present either a valid UK passport or a “certificate of entitlement” on their foreign passport to the airline, ferry or train operator.
Continue reading...Dozens of world leaders head to Washington for what White House says will largely be a fundraiser on Thursday
Dozens of world leaders and national delegations will meet in Washington DC on Thursday for the inaugural meeting of Donald Trump’s Board of Peace, as major European allies declined to join the group and criticised the organisation’s murky funding and political mandate.
The White House has indicated that the summit for his new ad hoc council at the renamed Donald J Trump Institute of Peace will heavily function as a fundraising round, with Trump announcing on social media that countries have pledged more than $5bn toward rebuilding Gaza, which has been devastated in the war with Israel and remains in a humanitarian crisis.
Continue reading...Feb. 18, 2026 — San Diego State University’s Women in STEM Seminar will feature a public lecture by Kathy Yelick, Vice Chancellor for Research at University of California, Berkeley and a senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The event, organized by the SDSU Division of Research and Innovation, highlights women’s contributions to science and engineering while connecting the campus and broader community with leading scholars. The lecture will take place at the KPBS Community Engagement Center on on Thursday, March 5, 2026, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
Dr. Katherine Yelick is the Vice Chancellor for Research and the Robert S. Pepper Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at UC Berkeley, as well as a Senior Faculty Scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Her research spans high performance computing, programming languages, compilers, and parallel algorithms, with notable contributions to partitioned global address space languages, automatic performance tuning, and high performance genome analysis. She led the ExaBiome project on scalable microbial data analysis tools and served for a decade as Associate Laboratory Director for Computing Sciences at LBNL. Yelick is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
About the Women in STEM Seminar Series
Since 2018, SDSU’s Women in STEM Seminar is an annual event that brings exceptional female scientists and engineers to San Diego State University for programming with students, faculty and the community. The seminar includes a public lecture delivered by the invited scholar, providing a forum for the recognition of women’s contributions to STEM.
The mission of the Women in STEM (WIS) Seminar Series is to inspire and connect the SDSU community with leading women scholars in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics by hosting lectures and interactive events that promote excellence, mentorship, and inclusion in STEM.
The 2025-2026 event is sponsored by the SDSU Division of Research and Innovation, multiple academic colleges across SDSU, Applied Data Systems, NetApp, and Neuvys Technologies.
Learn more about the event and RSVP here.
More from HPCwire
Source: SDSU
The post SDSU Women in STEM Seminar to Host Public Lecture by Kathy Yelick on March 5 appeared first on HPCwire.
President Donald Trump has said that Americans are now paying or will pay “the lowest price anywhere in the world for drugs,” thanks to the administration’s negotiations with pharmaceutical companies. The administration has announced discounted cash prices for a small number of brand-name drugs. There isn’t evidence Trump’s deals so far have led to broad decreases in drug prices, nor is it certain they will in the future.

Despite these caveats and ambiguities, Trump often has presented lower drug prices as a fait accompli. “We now are paying the lowest price anywhere in the world for drugs,” he said in a Jan. 27 speech in Iowa. “Every other president tried for it. They didn’t try very hard. They didn’t get anything. I got it done.”
“The American people were effectively subsidizing the cost of drugs for the entire world, and it’s not going to happen any longer,” he said during the Feb. 5 launch for TrumpRx, the new federal website pointing people toward cash prices negotiated by the administration for brand-name drugs. “We ended it.”
The TrumpRx website makes similarly sweeping statements, claiming that the approach of basing U.S. prices off of prices in other countries — referred to as most favored nation, or MFN, pricing — is “guaranteeing huge savings for Americans.”
Trump’s efforts may have lowered prices for some consumers buying certain drugs. But experts told us there’s no guarantee of substantial savings for Americans in general.
Thus far, the Trump administration’s drug price negotiations have resulted in voluntary agreements with 16 companies, though many of the details remain unclear. Under those agreements, drug manufacturers have promised to offer discounts on select drugs to people who pay cash and are not using insurance. Companies have also agreed to launch new drugs or to offer Medicaid drugs at MFN prices. In exchange, the companies have said, they have been promised exemptions from tariffs and other benefits, such as exemptions from future mandatory MFN pricing.
“With rare exception,” the negotiations with drugmakers “don’t appear to have translated into actual savings for people at the pharmacy counter or for public or commercial payers yet,” Rena Conti, a health economist at Boston University Questrom School of Business, told us. These exceptions include certain weight loss and fertility drugs, which are often not covered by insurance to begin with and are now being offered at reduced cash prices, she said.
There is no single, easily tracked measure of drug prices in the U.S., making it challenging to assess broad claims about whether drug prices are rising or falling. Companies provide list prices, but individuals, health insurers and the government rarely pay these prices, often benefiting from rebates or other discounts.
That said, there are no signs of widespread slashing of list prices in the U.S. “Typically in January, we will see price increases for already-launched brand drugs, and just like we’ve seen in previous years, we saw prices rise,” Conti said. The median list price increase for hundreds of brand-name drugs so far in 2026 was 4%, which is the same median increase as in 2025, according to the research firm 46brookyln.
When we asked whether Trump is claiming that Americans in general are now paying the lowest prices, a White House spokesperson asserted they would in the future. “We are going to be paying the same if not lower than other wealthy nations,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. “Either via TrumpRx or once the MFN deals are codified upon passage of Great Healthcare Plan.”
The Great Healthcare Plan is a series of health policy proposals, released Jan. 15, which Trump has called on Congress to pass as legislation. To lower drug prices, the plan calls for “codifying” MFN deals. The Trump administration has also said it will add more drugs to TrumpRx, and in December the administration released proposals to apply MFN pricing to a subset of Medicare beneficiaries.
It is unclear how or whether the MFN deals will be codified, however. Nor is it a given that even a widely applied MFN policy would reduce prices substantially.
Trump’s claim that he is the first president to lower drug prices also ignores past efforts that have had some success.
Separate from the MFN pricing efforts, the Trump administration has continued to negotiate lower Medicare prices for some specific drugs under the Inflation Reduction Act. However, this law was passed in 2022 under the Biden administration.
And rather than promoting these Medicare negotiations, the Trump administration is “talking about this unclear political pressuring that the White House is applying in general in the health industry and specifically on drugs,” Joseph Antos, a senior fellow emeritus at the American Enterprise Institute, told us. AEI is a conservative-leaning think tank. “Is there any way to actually objectively measure the impact of any of that? I don’t think there is.”
Below, we explain what we know and don’t know about the impacts of Trump’s MFN negotiations and proposed policies on drug prices.
There is some support for Trump’s claim that he has lowered drug costs, in the case of a few specific drugs being offered at relatively low cash prices.
However, TrumpRx, the website the administration built to promote these cash prices, echoes Trump’s exaggerated claims about the scope of the price reductions.

TrumpRx shows cash prices for 43 drugs from five manufacturers that made deals with the administration. People can either print a coupon to use at pharmacies or, in some cases, go to a manufacturer’s website to make the purchase.
GoodRx, a prescription drug coupon site that launched in 2011, has partnered with the administration to provide many of the TrumpRx-branded coupons, and people can in some cases use GoodRx to access coupons providing the same Trump administration-negotiated prices.
The TrumpRx website advertises the “lowest cash prices” and shows discounts of 50% to 93% off the list price. But most people, particularly those with insurance coverage, don’t pay the list price.
“Manufacturers have agreed to discount prices on some drugs that are not well covered by insurance or already have generic competition, and that’s not nothing, but it’s not necessarily going to help a lot of people, right now anyway,” Juliette Cubanski, deputy director of the Program on Medicare Policy at KFF, told us. KFF is a nonpartisan health policy organization. She explained that most people with health insurance will fare better using their insurance than paying in cash.
For example, a person with health insurance who pays a flat copay for medications is unlikely to get a better price by going to TrumpRx, two economists from the University of Washington explained in an opinion piece published in STAT. In fact, the TrumpRx website says: “If you have insurance, check your co-pay first—it may be even lower.”
People with insurance also benefit from caps on their spending in the form of deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums, the economists wrote, as well as prices for drugs negotiated by their insurers. But for now, drugs purchased via TrumpRx are not counted toward deductibles or out-of-pocket maximums. “A family might hit their out-of-pocket maximum by midyear using insurance, after which their insurer pays 100% of the prescription cost for the rest of the year,” the economists wrote. “Under TrumpRx, the family would pay full freight all year long, with no ceiling on their out-of-pocket spending.”
One group of people who are sometimes asked to pay list prices for drugs are those without insurance or whose insurance does not cover a specific drug, Cubanski explained.
But even for those without insurance or whose insurance doesn’t cover a certain drug, Conti said, there are better deals available on the U.S. market for some drugs featured on TrumpRx. “The majority of drugs that are listed on the TrumpRx website actually have generic competition, and for consumers it pays to shop,” she said. “You can get a better deal by simply buying the generic, even when this coupon is being offered.”
GoodRx or Mark Cuban’s Cost Plus Drugs, another website that negotiates with drug manufacturers, offer cheaper cash prices for generic versions of at least 18 of the 43 brand-name drugs promoted on TrumpRx, according to a review by STAT. TrumpRx does not notify people that generics may be cheaper than the brand-name drugs.
Conti did highlight some drugs for which cash prices appear to be “good deals.” These include insulin, the fertility drug Gonal-F and the GLP-1 weight loss drug Zepbound. Patients may benefit from low-cost insulin, which is offered at $25 per 10 milliliters, if they have gaps in their insurance coverage or have a health plan requiring high out-of-pocket payments, she said. Fertility and GLP-1 drugs for weight loss cost more but are often not covered by insurance even for those who have it, so patients may benefit from buying them for reduced cash prices.
Gonal-F is now available on TrumpRx at $168 for the lowest strength, compared with its list price of around $966. There were already discounts available for people paying for the drugs without insurance, but “the price that’s listed on the TrumpRx coupon is lower than the price being offered by the specialty pharmacy, even with other special discounts available,” Conti said.
Zepbound is being offered for $299 per month for the lowest dose, reduced from a list price of $1,087. (However, the lowest dose of the drug had previously been available for $349 per month for cash buyers.)
Cubanski said the latest weight loss medication discounts “can be seen as a pretty direct byproduct of negotiations between the manufacturers and the White House,” but said that the makers of these drugs have been “steadily offering increasing discounts” even before the negotiations. This is partly because for a while, there were shortages of the drugs, she explained, and companies have been allowed to market relatively inexpensive compounded versions, even though the drugs are under patent and do not have generics.
“The competitive pressures in the GLP-1 market have likely been responsible to some degree for bringing down cash pay prices,” Pragya Kakani, a health economist and assistant professor at Weill Cornell Medical College, told us. She added that it is “challenging to disentangle the effects from the Trump administration’s MFN initiatives vs. pre-existing competitive pressures.”
As for the claim on the website that TrumpRx is offering the “world’s lowest prices,” or the lowest in the developed world, this is challenging to check.
The Trump administration has provided limited information on how the prices were arrived at during the closed-door negotiations with drug companies. We asked the White House for more detail on what international prices the TrumpRx prices are being compared with, and a spokesperson told us the administration was using prices from other G7 nations but did not provide more details.
Cubanski said it is difficult to check whether prices are the lowest, as “there’s not a lot of transparency in drug pricing internationally.” It’s possible to find prices, but it’s unclear what rebates or discounts countries have negotiated off of these prices.
Conti agreed, adding that in many cases, brand-name drugs may not even be offered in other countries because other countries drop brand-name drugs once a generic is available. Since many of the drugs now promoted on TrumpRx are available as generics, it is challenging to determine international prices.
People can make statements about offering the lowest drug prices internationally “because it’s impossible to check,” Conti said.
The Trump administration has also said that as part of the MFN deals, companies agreed to sell drugs at MFN prices to Medicaid programs. A voluntary initiative invites companies to negotiate prices for certain drugs “aligned with those paid in select other countries,” according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services website. The initiative launched in January, a spokesperson for the agency told us.
It remains unclear exactly what drugs are being offered to Medicaid at these prices and what companies and states are participating, Cubanski said. The CMS spokesperson told us that the agency hasn’t yet published a list with these details.
It’s also not clear MFN prices would compare favorably to the prices the programs are already getting. “States pay among the lowest prices through the Medicaid program for prescription drugs of all payers in the U.S.,” Cubanski said. “So whether the so-called most favored nation price that pharmaceutical companies will be offering on specific medications is lower than what states are currently paying isn’t really something that we’re able to rigorously quantify.”
The average net Medicaid prices for top-selling drugs are 65% lower than those in Medicare Part D, according to an analysis from the Congressional Budget Office, Kakani said.
Furthermore, Cubanski said, “People on Medicaid pay very little if not nothing for prescriptions, so the savings would be to the state and federal government, not to people with Medicaid directly.”
Conti said that the larger current issue for drug affordability for people on Medicaid is that provisions of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will lead to health care coverage losses. The CBO estimated that the law would increase the number of uninsured people in the U.S. by 10 million over 10 years, with 7.5 million of those due to changes to Medicaid. “The administration is weakening insurance protections at the same time that they are offering out the hope of these potential deals,” she said.
Despite the discounts for a limited group of cash payers, experts said that the Trump administration’s MFN deals do not so far directly affect drug affordability for those with private insurance.
“The biggest affordability challenges are ones that are related to very high-cost brand drugs,” Conti said. “It’s not obvious that much of what the administration is pursuing right now is going to really make a difference for people who are commercially insured and who are using these high-cost brand drugs.”
Kakani said that the MFN deals have only addressed commercial insurance in a limited way, to the degree that the negotiations might indirectly influence negotiations between drugmakers and insurers. However, she added that the TrumpRx prices “are unlikely to be lower than net prices commercial plans were already negotiating,” as many of the drugs “face significant competition.”
Recently, CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz has argued that the cash discounts the Trump administration has negotiated will translate into wider price reductions, including for people with private insurance, due to increased transparency.
“Now that everyone knows the true worldwide most favored nation drug prices, it’s going to allow employers, insurers and everyone in between to be able to take out the middlemen and drive those prices down,” Oz said in a Feb. 6 CNN interview. He suggested on CNN two days later that if employers saw a drug price on TrumpRx that was lower than what they were paying, they would ask for that price.
However, Conti disagreed that transparency would uniformly lead to better deals for Americans. She explained that the current opaque system likely allows some Americans to get particularly good deals on drug prices, because plans and pharmacy benefit managers are negotiating and passing on some savings as lower out-of-pocket costs and premiums.
“If we move towards more radical transparency in this system, yes, there are consumers that will benefit, absolutely,” she continued. “But it also might erode the company’s willingness to offer really good deals” to some payers.
Trump has often said that drug prices will dramatically fall due to MFN policies, referring to discounts of as much as 80% or 90%.
As we have said, proposed MFN strategies range from voluntary deals to launch new drugs or offer Medicaid drugs at lower prices to mandatory MFN pricing for some Medicare beneficiaries or a “codified” MFN strategy.
However, experts said that many details are missing regarding these strategies. Drugs are often launched in the U.S. before they are available in other countries, Conti said. It’s unclear how the U.S. will ensure it is getting the lowest prices internationally if there are no prices in other countries yet.
In the case of Medicare, CMS has proposed mandatory pilot programs testing MFN prices for some beneficiaries. But it’s unclear what drugs and companies will participate. Drug companies that voluntarily agreed to Medicaid MFN pricing may be exempted, Cubanski said, which “could potentially undercut savings.” CMS has estimated that its two initiatives — impacting drugs given by physicians or prescription drugs picked up at pharmacies — will generate around $12 billion of savings to Medicare over seven years and $14 billion over six years. “That’s not nothing, but given that Medicare spends roughly $200 billion per year approximately on drugs,” Cubanski said, the programs don’t “really move the needle all that much.”
As for broader, mandatory MFN pricing, it could face political headwinds, Cubanski said. “Historically, Republicans have not been in support of efforts to regulate drug prices,” she said, and pharmaceutical companies would also be expected to push back.
Even if widely implemented, MFN pricing may or may not lead to widespread and substantial reductions in drug prices.
A survey of health policy experts published Feb. 4 in Health Affairs found that around half thought MFN pricing would “substantially reduce” average net prescription drug prices in the U.S. for branded drugs, even if such a policy were broadly implemented.
“The overall takeaway was it’s really hard to predict what the effect of this policy is going to be, and the simplistic idea that this is going to suddenly reduce drug prices by … 80%, 90% are probably just that – overly simplistic,” said Kakani, the study’s lead author.
Companies would likely change their international strategies in response to a broad MFN policy, Kakani said. Companies could make it more difficult for the U.S. government to determine what other countries were paying, by issuing rebates in other countries and not disclosing them; they could delay product launches abroad, particularly in countries with very low prices, to set a higher benchmark; or they could increase international prices to a degree that the U.S. did not pay significantly less than before.
Kakani added that drug prices in the U.S. are not as high as Trump’s 80% or 90% discount claims have implied, when compared with other countries. A RAND report, based on 2022 data, found that on average, U.S. prices are 2.78 times higher than in other developed countries, and 4.22 times higher when looking at brand-name drugs before adjusting for discounts by manufacturers, as we’ve written in the past. Generic drugs had lower prices overall in the U.S. than in most countries.
Antos pointed to practical challenges to setting MFN prices. For example, he said it is unclear how the proposed Medicare programs to try out MFN pricing are supposed to work. “CMS doesn’t have the authority to force Germany to tell them everything about their pricing, and they also don’t have the ability to get Pfizer to open its books,” he said.
“Trying to tie it to some kind of European price is doing it the hard way,” Antos said, suggesting that if the U.S. wants price controls, it could just ask more broadly for the already-good prices it gets for Medicaid. “We have domestic reference pricing right here.”
While Trump claimed that it would be other countries that now pay higher prices, Antos said that “by and large” manufacturers “are not in a position to renegotiate a price” with other countries. (As part of tariff negotiations, the U.K. did agree to increase what it pays for new drugs, although it’s unclear what will happen with drug prices in other countries overall.)
Antos said that regardless, any attempt at price setting is “not going to necessarily translate into lower prices at the drug store for most people.”
And it will be difficult to evaluate whether U.S. policies are making a difference for consumers. If copays or deductibles went down, for example, perhaps insurance companies would make up for this by slightly increasing the growth rate of premiums, Antos said, which would be hard to quantify because premiums go up each year and are driven by hospital and doctor costs.
“In other words, it’s very hard to know what the net impact of any of these policies is,” he said.
Update, Feb. 18: We added that Conti is at the Boston University Questrom School of Business.
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The post Trump Misleads on Drug Pricing Deals appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Trump’s disapproval rating indicates he’s less popular with Americans than some insects like ants. Will it mean anything in November?
This was originally published in This Week in Trumpland; sign up to receive it in your inbox every Wednesday
A couple of years ago, the polling company YouGov asked people about insects. The resulting survey found that butterflies are America’s favorite insect, with eight in 10 people having a “very or somewhat positive” reaction to them.
Many journalists will tell you to never trust the polling, and they’ve been proven right many times over. Still, aren’t you curious how a random group of 1,148 adults feels about bugs?
Continue reading...The wreck of the stone-hauling vessel is in the same area where the founder of the Cleveland Underwater Explorers died in 2024.
Want to borrow equity with a HELOC or home equity loan now? These are the interest rates you'll need to know first.
Google's Quick Share is expanding, allowing more Pixel phones to send media between Android and iPhone devices.
Linus Torvalds has told The Register how Linux went from a solo hobby project on a single 386 PC in Helsinki to a genuinely collaborative effort, and the path involved crowdsourced checks, an FTP mirror at MIT, and a licensing decision that opened the floodgates. Torvalds released the first public snapshot, Linux 0.02, on October 5, 1991, on a Finnish FTP server -- about 10,000 lines of code that he had cross-compiled under Minix. He originally wanted to call it "Freax," but his friend Ari Lemmke, who set up the server, named the directory "Linux" instead. Early contributor Theodore Ts'o set up the first North American mirror on his VAXstation at MIT, since the sole 64 kbps link between Finland and the US made downloads painful. That mirror gave developers on this side of the Atlantic their first practical access to the kernel. Another early developer, Dirk Hohndel, recalled that Torvalds initially threw away incoming patches and reimplemented them from scratch -- a habit he eventually dropped because it did not scale. When Torvalds could not afford to upgrade his underpowered 386, developer H. Peter Anvin collected checks from contributors through his university mailbox and wired the funds to Finland, covering the international banking fees himself. Torvalds got a 486DX/2. In 1992, he moved the kernel to the GPL, and the first full distributions appeared in 1992-1993, turning Linux from a kernel into installable systems.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Feb. 18, 2026 — Google is launching the Google.org Impact Challenge: AI for Science.
AI isn’t just helping people solve problems faster, it’s unlocking new possibilities for discovery and scalability. To support organizations at the forefront of scientific discovery and build on its inaugural AI for Science fund, Google is launching a new $30 million global open-call, the Google.org Impact Challenge: AI for Science.
This new initiative provides catalytic funding and technical expertise to help researchers, nonprofits and social enterprises unlock Nobel-level breakthroughs. Google is specifically seeking projects in Health and Life Sciences, Crisis Resilience and Environmental Science.
In addition to funding, selected organizations will have the opportunity to participate in a Google.org Accelerator, receiving engineering support, technical mentorship and Google infrastructure to scale their solutions.
Google is looking for the next generation of breakthrough scientific discoveries. Applications are open until April 17, 2026 — apply now and join in Google’s goal to drive scientific breakthroughs that transform how society tackles its biggest challenges.
Source: Google
The post Google Announces $30M Global Open Call for AI for Science Projects appeared first on HPCwire.
Billionaire retail tycoon Les Wexner testified before a House committee Wednesday as part of the panel's investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.
Actor zeroes in on Westerns ... but he can dance, too.
Exclusive: After investigators concluded an abuse incident occurred, women speak out for first time – ‘I was so scared to tell anybody’
Two women incarcerated in a California prison are calling for the prosecution of a staff cook who they say sexually assaulted them.
The women say Marcus Johnson, a former supervisory cook at the California Institution for Women (CIW), raped them in 2020 while they were working for him in kitchen jobs. The women, who were making under 40 cents an hour, said in federal civil complaints he threatened disciplinary action if they reported him.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader writes: Electric buses are proving unreliable this winter for Vermont's Green Mountain Transit, as it needs to be over 41 degrees for the buses to charge, but due to a battery recall the buses are a fire hazard and can't be charged in a garage. Spokesman for energy workers advocacy group Power the Future Larry Behrens told the Center Square: "Taxpayers were sold an $8 million 'solution' that can't operate in cold weather when the home for these buses is in New England." "We're beyond the point where this looks like incompetence and starts to smell like fraud," Behrens said. "When government rushes money out the door to satisfy green mandates, basic questions about performance, safety, and value for taxpayers are always pushed aside," Behrens said. "Americans deserve to know who approved this purchase and why the red flags were ignored." General manager at Green Mountain Transit (GMT) Clayton Clark told The Center Square that "the federal government provides public transit agencies with new buses through a competitive grant application process, and success is not a given."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The $499 Pixel 10A has a number of features that outdo its more expensive siblings, especially when it comes to its battery size and charging speed.
Novelist George RR Martin says RSC is ‘obvious choice’ to put on new play The Mad King, which will open after spring
A new prequel to George RR Martin’s blockbuster fantasy saga Game of Thrones is to be staged this summer by the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon.
The bestselling author, whose novels have been turned into a juggernaut TV franchise, said the RSC was the “obvious choice” to put on the play, Game of Thrones: The Mad King, because Shakespeare had been a constant source of inspiration to him. “Not only that, he faced similar challenges in how to put a battle on stage,” added Martin. “So we are in good company.”
Continue reading...Without AI you will be a ‘weaker and poorer nation’, says former UK chancellor two months into job at US firm
The former chancellor George Osborne has said countries that do not embrace the kind of powerful AI systems made by his new employer, OpenAI, risk “Fomo” and could be left weaker and poorer.
Osborne, who is two months into a job as head of the $500bn San Francisco AI company’s “for countries” programme, told leaders gathered for the AI Impact summit in Delhi: “Don’t be left behind.” He said that without AI rollouts they could end up with a workforce “less willing to stay put” because they might want to seek AI-enabled fortunes elsewhere.
Continue reading...The eclipse will be visible across North America, but you'll need to stay up late to see it.
Take a stand for your health with the best standing desks of 2026.
Kerstin G froze to death on Großglockner when Thomas P descended mountain to fetch help
An Austrian mountaineer is to appear in court accused of gross negligent manslaughter after his girlfriend died of hypothermia when he left her close to the summit on a climb that went dramatically wrong.
The 33-year-old woman, identified only as Kerstin G, froze to death on 19 January 2025, about 50 metres below the summit of the Großglockner, Austria’s tallest mountain, after an ascent of more than 17 hours with her boyfriend, Thomas P, 36.
Continue reading...Threat of 9.5% property tax increase puts pressure on Governor Hochul, who is seeking re-election this year
Zohran Mamdani, New York’s democratic socialist mayor, has unveiled two new budget proposals for the city – one to raise income and corporate taxes, or another to raise property taxes – triggering resistance from some political figures in and out of the state.
Mamdani’s two proposals include either raising taxes on the city’s wealthiest residents – which would require approval from New York’s governor, Kathy Hochul – or a “last resort” measure of a 9.5% property tax increase, which could affect “more than 3 million single-family homes, co-ops and condos and over 100,000 commercial buildings”, according to the New York Times.
Continue reading...Microsoft says a Microsoft 365 Copilot bug has been causing the AI assistant to summarize confidential emails since late January, bypassing data loss prevention (DLP) policies that organizations rely on to protect sensitive information. From a report: According to a service alert seen by BleepingComputer, this bug (tracked under CW1226324 and first detected on January 21) affects the Copilot "work tab" chat feature, which incorrectly reads and summarizes emails stored in users' Sent Items and Drafts folders, including messages that carry confidentiality labels explicitly designed to restrict access by automated tools. Copilot Chat (short for Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat) is the company's AI-powered, content-aware chat that lets users interact with AI agents. Microsoft began rolling out Copilot Chat to Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and OneNote for paying Microsoft 365 business customers in September 2025.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Lawsuit from health and environmental justice groups challenges the EPA’s rollback of the ‘endangerment finding’
More than a dozen health and environmental justice non-profits have sued the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over its revocation of the legal determination that underpins US federal climate regulations.
Filed in Washington DC circuit court, the lawsuit challenges the EPA’s rollback of the “endangerment finding”, which states that the buildup of heat-trapping pollution in the atmosphere endangers public health and welfare and has allowed the EPA to limit those emissions from vehicles, power plants and other industrial sources since 2009. The rollback was widely seen as a major setback to US efforts to combat the climate crisis.
Continue reading...The Climate Briefing: The geopolitics of deep-sea mining Audio thilton.drupal
Anna speaks to Dr Isaac Kardon (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) and Meredith Schwartz (Centre for Strategic and International Studies) about how the race to source critical raw materials from the ocean floor is impacting geopolitics.
The race to secure critical raw materials is turning attention towards an unlikely place: the ocean floor. In this episode, Anna speaks with Dr Isaac Kardon (Senior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace) and Meredith Schwartz (Associate Fellow at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies) about the geopolitics of deep-sea mining.
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.
At KBIS 2026, we got a first look at Toto's industry-first Aurora Washlet Plus, which aims to solve a frustrating cleanliness problem.
Google launches the Pixel 10A today, and we're excited for the new affordable phone, even if it does seem similar to last year's Pixel 9A.
With the reversal from the FDA, Moderna said it is aiming to make the vaccine available for the 2026-27 flu season.
Four congressional Democrats are asking inspectors general to probe whether ex-lobbyists in the administration broke ethics rules to benefit former clients.
A group of 15 backcountry skiers was reportedly involved in the incident, the sheriff's office says. Nine remain unaccounted for.
If your goal is to be more active, these fitness devices will keep you motivated.
NEW DELHI, Feb. 18, 2026 — Yotta Data Services today announced it will deploy 20,736 liquid-cooled NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs, forming one of Asia’s largest AI superclusters. The deployment represents an investment exceeding $2 billion and is expected to go live by August 2026, positioning India among a select group of geographies capable of hosting frontier-scale AI infrastructure.
In a significant development reflecting strengthening India–U.S. technology alignment, NVIDIA will establish one of APAC’s largest NVIDIA DGX Cloud cluster within Yotta’s HGX B300 Blackwell Ultra supercluster, leveraging Blackwell Ultra GPUs under a four-year engagement valued at over $1 billion. NVIDIA DGX Cloud has been utilizing Yotta’s GPU infrastructure over the past year, and this expanded deployment scales that relationship in line with regional and global demand growth.
The collaboration reflects a broader shift in global AI compute supply chains, where advanced AI infrastructure is increasingly distributed across trusted regions. India’s emergence as a major AI infrastructure node reinforces strategic technology collaboration between India and the United States and strengthens shared priorities around secure, high-performance AI ecosystems.
Yotta’s NVIDIA Blackwell supercluster is built on NVIDIA reference architecture and integrates 800 Gbps NVIDIA Quantum-X800 InfiniBand networking, advanced liquid-cooling systems, and over 40 petabytes of high-performance parallel file-system storage. The platform is engineered to support trillion-parameter foundation model training and high-throughput inference workloads capable of handling multi-million simultaneous prompts.
Yotta’s AI Factories are based on NVIDIA Reference Architecture to deliver fastest time to market, lowest cost per token and highest returns. Global AI model developers, enterprises, and governments are assured that the infrastructure can reliably support frontier-scale training and mission-critical inference deployments.
Beyond infrastructure scale, Yotta is augmenting its Shakti Studio AI platform with NVIDIA Nemotron open models, NVIDIA NIM microservices, and access to the full NVIDIAAI Enterprise software suite . Through Shakti Studio, developers in India gain access to the NVIDIA Nemotron family of truly open models including model weights, training datasets, and recipes enabling transparent fine-tuning, customization, and sovereign AI development at scale. The availability of open architectures alongside optimized inference microservices ensures that startups, enterprises, and public institutions can build secure, production-grade AI applications on world-class infrastructure.
Alongside the NVIDIA’s DGX Cloud deployment, Yotta is committing over 10,000 NVIDIA B300 GPUs from the AI supercluster to the IndiaAI Mission, supporting sovereign Indian foundation model development, research institutions, startups, and population-scale public AI platforms. This parallel allocation ensures that domestic AI priorities advance alongside global AI capacity expansion.
For India, the development aligns with the national vision of building AI “from India, for India, and for the world.” Access to large-scale Blackwell infrastructure within the country reduces structural dependence on offshore compute and enables Indian model builders and enterprises to scale confidently. It allows AI products conceived in India to serve both domestic and international markets from infrastructure located within India advancing India’s ambition to evolve from a technology consumer to a technology creator.
The supercluster will be deployed at Yotta’s 60 MW D2 hyperscale Data Centre within its Greater Noida DC campus, scalable to 250 MW, and supported by Yotta’s Navi Mumbai DC campus, scalable to 2 GW. With integrated extra-high-voltage substations, dedicated power distribution infrastructure, green energy sourcing, and vertically integrated engineering capabilities across data centres, cloud, managed services and GPU compute, Yotta has established a long-term platform capable of scaling beyond one million GPUs within the next three to five years as India’s AI ecosystem accelerates.
The combined capital commitments over $2 billion in Blackwell Ultra infrastructure deployment and a over $1 billion multi-year contracted engagement for DGX Cloud capacity reflect sustained demand for high-performance AI infrastructure in the region and provide meaningful long-term demand visibility.
Darshan Hiranandani, Co-Founder & Chairman, Yotta Data Services, said, “AI infrastructure is becoming foundational economic infrastructure. This NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra supercluster reinforces India’s position in the global AI value chain. Our capital strategy is focused on building scalable infrastructure that serves both national priorities and international AI demand.”
Sunil Gupta, Co-Founder, MD & CEO, Yotta Data Services, added, “India’s AI ambition requires sustained, high-performance compute at scale. By combining Blackwell Ultra infrastructure with open models like NVIDIA Nemotron and the full NVIDIA AI stack, we are enabling developers to build sovereign, globally competitive AI applications from India.”
Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO, NVIDIA, NVIDIA, said, “India is emerging as one of the world’s most important AI markets, driven by extraordinary talent and a bold national vision. Yotta’s deployment of one of the largest NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra superclusters creates advanced AI infrastructure capable of training frontier-scale models and delivering AI at population scale. Expanding AI Factory capacity in India strengthens NVIDIA’s regional footprint while supporting India’s ambition to build secure, sovereign, and globally competitive AI.”
Yotta currently operates over 10,000 NVIDIA GPUs live in production, with another 8,000 NVIDIA GPUs going live within the next quarter, followed by the deployment of 20,736 Blackwell Ultra GPUs by August 2026. The company has outlined a roadmap to scale beyond 80,000 NVIDIA GPUs by FY27, supported by phased infrastructure expansion and long-term capacity planning.
At scale, this trajectory positions India not merely as a high-growth AI market, but as a structurally significant compute hub within the global AI ecosystem where sovereign capability, open innovation, disciplined capital deployment, and strategic international collaboration converge. India is not just participating in the AI revolution. It is building the infrastructure that will power its next phase.
More from HPCwire: Yotta Data and NVIDIA Collaborate to Boost India’s AI and HPC Landscape [Dec. 2023]
About Yotta Data Services
Yotta is a new-age Digital Transformation enabler that derives its value from end-to-end competencies in Hyperscale Data Center and Cloud Infrastructure, Managed IT, Global Connectivity, Holistic Cybersecurity, Application Modernization and a gamut of cutting-edge solutions for every enterprise need.
Source: Yotta Data Services
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The title-chasing Gunners need a win in this top-versus bottom EPL clash.
Google's Pixel 10A includes lots of under-the-hood tweaks. Will you notice the difference? That depends on your previous phone.
Money market account interest rates are still high. Here's how much savers can earn with a $25,000 deposit made now.
After Cati Blauvelt, 22, was murdered in Simpsonville, South Carolina, her husband, former U.S. Army recruiter John Blauvelt, fled with his 17-year-old girlfriend Hannah Thompson. U.S. Marshals led the cross-country chase for the armed fugitive.
Actor, whose credits also included RoboCop 2, Anomalisa and Heaven’s Gate, was also an accomplished playwright
Tom Noonan, the actor known for his Michael Mann collaborations, has died at the age of 74.
His death was confirmed by Fred Dekker, the director of 80s comedy horror The Monster Squad which saw Noonan play Frankenstein’s Monster.
Continue reading...Ring's AI-powered "Search Party" feature, which links neighborhood cameras into a networked surveillance system to find lost dogs, was never intended to stop at pets, according to an internal email from founder Jamie Siminoff obtained by 404 Media. Siminoff told employees in early October, shortly after the feature launched, that Search Party was introduced "first for finding dogs" and that the technology would eventually help "zero out crime in neighborhoods." The on-by-default feature faced intense backlash after Ring promoted it during a Super Bowl ad. Ring has since also rolled out "Familiar Faces," a facial recognition tool that identifies friends and family on a user's camera, and "Fire Watch," an AI-based fire alert system. A Ring spokesperson told the publication Search Party does not process human biometrics or track people.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Union coverage slightly increased last year even as White House tried to eliminate contracts for thousands of workers
The number of workers covered under union contracts increased to a 16-year high in 2025, despite ongoing attempts by the Trump administration to wipe out collective bargaining agreements for tens of thousands of federal workers, according to new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
About 16.5 million workers were covered by a union contract in 2025, up from 16 million in 2024 and the highest level since 2009. The increase stems from workers joining unions as members – 14.7 million US workers were union members in 2025, up from 14.2 million workers in 2024.
Continue reading...The Trump administration is facing a new lawsuit over its decision to deregulate emissions and repeal a landmark scientific finding on climate pollution.
The EV manufacturer avoided a 30-day suspension after an ongoing dispute with the state's DMV.
The restaurant can keep menu term despite claim product is ‘essentially chicken nuggets’, Illinois ruling says
A customer who sued the US restaurant chain Buffalo Wild Wings after finding out their “boneless wings” were not in fact made of wings has been told by a US judge that his claim has “has no meat on its bones”.
Buffalo Wild Wings can continue using the term “boneless wings” on its menu even though the product is “essentially chicken nuggets”, John Tharp, a district judge, ruled, dismissing a lawsuit that claimed the chain was misleading customers.
Continue reading...Feb. 18, 2026 — Quantum computers promise to push beyond the limits of today’s machines, accelerating progress in areas such as medicine discovery, materials science and secure computing. While classical computers and artificial intelligence-powered systems already support innovation in drug development and help manage critical infrastructure, for example, quantum computing could dramatically expand what is possible by tackling certain problems far more efficiently. However, a major challenge remains: noise — any disturbance, whether from a hardware glitch, lab mistake or even a deliberate attack — that can disrupt delicate quantum information.
To address this challenge, a collaborative team at Rice University and Johns Hopkins University, backed by several U.S. National Science Foundation grants, including NSF 2339116, NSF 2243659 and NSF 2528780, developed new algorithms within a common framework that help quantum computers keep working even when noise is present. Researchers call this framework the “adversarial state corruption model“, which assumes that an attacker can tamper with part of a quantum system’s measurements. By designing algorithms with this threat model in mind, the researchers aimed to test how resilient quantum systems can be under realistic and even hostile conditions.
While these algorithms need further testing before they can be deployed at full scale, they already show strong promise for near-term, small-scale quantum systems, especially as improved algorithms are developed. As quantum technology moves from theory into real hardware, companies working with superconducting circuits, trapped ions and photonic systems could be the first to benefit. By strengthening the reliability and security of these emerging systems, the research directly supports national priorities in quantum technology, cybersecurity and advanced computing research, while also training a skilled workforce prepared to operate at the frontier of quantum innovation.
The team also identified important limits on what quantum systems can learn reliably. They found that while many useful quantum states remain stable even when some data is corrupted, extremely complex or disordered states can be disrupted by even a small amount of interference. One example is the maximally mixed state, which behaves like pure noise and is nearly impossible to learn accurately under adversarial conditions. By contrast, well-structured states, such as those used in quantum algorithms for factoring large numbers or searching large databases, can be learned robustly and efficiently. Together, these results help set realistic expectations: Quantum systems will not be perfect, but researchers can identify where they perform reliably and where they need protection.
This research carries important benefits for science and technology. Quantum computers may eventually crack today’s advanced encryption methods, so researchers must ensure that the machines themselves resist tampering. By clearly identifying the strengths and limits, the approach also builds trust, helping prevent hype and guiding investment decisions. The work also supports progress across disciplines by training students who combine skills in quantum physics and advanced statistics, creating a new generation of experts capable of carrying this field forward.
Although the work remains in its early stages, it marks an important step toward quantum systems that operate dependably, securely and in service of American needs, from national defense to health care and beyond.
More from HPCwire: NSF Launches $100M National Quantum and Nanotechnology Research Infrastructure Program
Source: NSF Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering
The post NSF CISE: Making Quantum Computers Resilient to Adversarial Attacks appeared first on HPCwire.
Marius Borg Hoiby faces 38 charges, including raping four women while they were asleep or had passed out.
Mikaela Shiffrin, the most decorated skier of all time, last won a medal at the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang.
The risks of Trump’s peace plan: Two Gazas and an annexed West Bank Expert comment thilton.drupal
Trump’s plan could doom aspirations for a unified Palestinian state. European and Arab states should pressure Washington before it’s too late.
As US President Donald Trump convenes the inaugural meeting of the ‘Board of Peace’ (BoP) in Washington this week, Gaza will be thrust back into the international spotlight. This gives Arab and European governments a chance to review the framework he has set out to end the conflict in Gaza and adjust their engagement strategies.
Although they are mostly keen to accommodate Trump and help maintain the ceasefire, they risk supporting a process that could close off any prospect of Palestinian statehood and deliver a serious blow to Palestinian nationalism. If Arab and European states do not act, they risk letting Palestine become transformed into the Israeli right’s dream.
In 1993, the Oslo Accords were hailed as a breakthrough and presented as a process that would strengthen Israel’s security and open a negotiated path toward Palestinian statehood.
Instead, they created a system of limited Palestinian self‑rule that stalled progress towards statehood by deferring all core issues and leaving Israel in control of borders, security and territory. The Accords also weakened Palestinian unity by formalizing a fragmented administrative structure in the West Bank and Gaza, which deepened political division rather than consolidating a unified national project.
President Trump’s ‘Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict’, which was endorsed by UN Security Council Resolution 2803, risks repeating the same mistakes.
First, the framework places Gaza under a layered external governance system created with minimal Palestinian input or control over the outcomes.
Under the plan, authority is centred in the BoP, chaired by President Trump himself. This authority will be exercised through the Gaza Executive Board (GEB), which does not include any Palestinian or Israeli members, while a temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF) made up of multinational soldiers will provide security.
The plan also establishes a technocratic and depoliticized Palestinian body, the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG). But the composition of the 15-member NCAG, while agreed by Palestinian factions including both Fatah and Hamas, was vetted by Israel under US oversight. Fundamentally, it is a body chosen and approved by outside actors, with little, if any, real authority awarded to Palestinians.
Second, UNSCR 2803’s narrow focus on Gaza risks cutting the enclave’s remaining political and economic ties with the West Bank and closing off all pathways to Palestinian statehood.
The resolution itself treats Palestinian statehood as a conditional prospect, noting that a ‘pathway to self‑determination and statehood’ may emerge only if targets embedded in the plan are met. These ambitious targets include the full demilitarization of Gaza, verified security milestones and a functioning governance structure set up under the GEB, ISF and NCAG, as well as successful reform of the Palestinian Authority (PA).
The reference to statehood represents a concession by the US, which has historically opposed its inclusion. But many delegations noted the failure to refer to the standard UN safeguards for Palestinian rights, starting with UNSCR resolutions 242 and 338.
In other words, UNSCR 2803 does not commit the UN or the international community to establishing a Palestinian state and instead institutionalizes and legitimizes the complete separation of Gaza and the West Bank until at least 31 December 2027, when the BoP’s mandate expires. By that point, it will be too late.
The ‘New Gaza’ plan unveiled by Jared Kushner in Davos last month recasts the entire enclave as a real‑estate redevelopment project. It divides Gaza into designated districts that replace existing neighbourhoods and resemble modern Gulf cities like Dubai.
The plan treats Gaza as vacant beachfront real estate rather than as part of a Palestinian state. It was formulated without meaningful Palestinian consultation and prioritizes the development of economic zones over the needs and rights of Gaza’s population.
Advocates of the plan such as Kushner have presented it as an opportunity for long-term economic development in Gaza, though previous economy-first approaches to resolving the conflict – supported by Tony Blair – have failed in the past.
While Kushner announced that he is planning for ‘catastrophic success’ in rolling out redevelopment across the entire enclave, in practice, reconstruction will likely be dictated by access and control. This means those areas currently under Israeli military authority will likely be the first to see movement.
Indeed, reconstruction is set to begin with ‘New Rafah’, in the part of Gaza controlled by the Israeli military. Meanwhile, many fear that there will initially be little reconstruction in the areas of Gaza not directly controlled by Israel, where most Palestinians live. Israel and its partners will also reportedly decide which Palestinians are allowed to live in the redeveloped areas.
This will effectively result in two Gazas. One will be an inhabitable but sanitized enclave that will be disarmed, depoliticized and tightly supervised. This will likely be run by a Palestinian governor who can work with Israel and the US, such as former Palestinian cabinet minister and national security adviser Mohammed Dahlan. The other, lying outside of the reconstructed areas, will be cut off, marginalized and unstable, though without posing a real threat to Israel.
This could begin a new phase of Palestinian displacement and dispossession, which would likely fuel a new wave of anti-Israeli sentiment not only among Palestinians but also among the wider population of the Middle East.
Meanwhile, Israel’s security cabinet on 8 February approved a sweeping set of measures that expand Israeli authority across the West Bank, accelerate settlement growth and remove legal constraints on land seizure. Announcing the decisions, far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said ‘we will continue to bury the idea of a Palestinian state.’
The de facto annexation of the West Bank has been accelerating quite openly, and the international community’s condemnations ring hollow. While the Trump administration has expressed its opposition to annexation, Israel will likely surge ahead unless it faces a high cost for doing so.
Unresolved ‘sensitive’ issues in peace talks are fate of occupied territories in east Ukraine and Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant
The peace talks ended abruptly today after about two hours, according to reports, in contrast with yesterday’s negotiations that apparently took place over six hours.
Neither side have offered any public sign of progress, but instead said the talks were “difficult” with Russian news agencies quoting sources describing the negotiations as “very tense”.
Continue reading...Before you invest in any physical silver bars, it's important to know what your size and weight options are.
President accused Wes Moore of ‘gross mismanagement’ after federally managed sewer line ruptured last month
A month after one of the largest sewage spills in US history began soiling the Potomac River, Donald Trump and the Maryland governor, Wes Moore, are fighting over who bears responsibility for a disaster involving a federally regulated pipeline that Moore does not control.
The president used his social media platform on Monday to accuse Moore of “gross mismanagement” after a big sewer line ruptured last month, causing what researchers describe as one of the largest sewage spills in US history.
Continue reading...We tested popular carbon monoxide detectors in our lab to determine which models have the best response times across different CO concentrations.
Xalet del Catllaràs contains elements of architect’s naturalistic style, expressed in works such as Park Güell and Sagrada Família
An elegant modernist building in the mountains north of Barcelona, originally constructed to house engineers establishing a nearby mine, has been confirmed as a work of Antoni Gaudí, Catalonia’s most celebrated and distinctive architect.
The Xalet del Catllaràs, about 80 miles from Barcelona in the county of Berguedà, was built in 1905 and commissioned by Eusebi Güell, Gaudí’s lifelong patron. Güell was the owner of a cement company with mines in the region and he needed somewhere to house the engineers, many of them British, who would help extract the coal for his factories.
Continue reading...People of Note blends musical performance, rhythm and turn-based combat in one of the most creative games coming in 2026.
WordPress has started rolling out an AI assistant built into its site editor and media library that can edit and translate text, generate and edit images through Google's Nano Banana model, and make structural changes to sites like creating new pages or swapping fonts. Users can also invoke the assistant by tagging "@ai" in block notes, a commenting feature added to the site editor in December's WordPress 6.9 update. The tool is opt-in -- users need to toggle on "AI tools" in their site settings -- though sites originally created using WordPress's AI website builder, launched last year, will have it enabled by default.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
US ambassador accused of interference after labelling inquiry into suspected illegal circumcisions ‘antisemitic’
A diplomatic row is escalating between Belgium and the US, with Donald Trump’s ambassador refusing to apologise for accusing his host country of antisemitism and reportedly threatening to bar a socialist politician from travelling to the US.
Bill White, a staunch ally of the president like many US ambassadors, on Monday demanded Belgium drop a “ridiculous” and “antisemitic” investigation into three Jewish men suspected of performing circumcisions without medical qualifications.
Continue reading...We all know one – and there’s a good chance you fall into the category yourself. Here’s how to recognise if you’re a ‘walking, talking red flag’ …
Name: Finger princess.
Age: The term circulated this month, but the behaviour has been escalating across digital communication for some time.
Continue reading...Leadership disputes claim of political motive for ousting Jeffrey Rosen, who was praised for non-partisan approach
The first and only museum dedicated to the US constitution has been plunged into turmoil over the sudden departure of its president, a legal scholar widely respected for his commitment to non-partisanship.
The National Constitution Center (NCC) in Philadelphia announced last month that Jeffrey Rosen would step down after 12 years to be replaced by Vince Stango on an interim basis.
Continue reading...County has highest number of reinstated elections following decision not to delay them for 30 English councils
Labour figures in the county with the highest number of reinstated council elections, following the government’s recent U-turn, have said they fear the party will be “annihilated” when voters go to the polls in May.
The polls had expected to be postponed pending a reorganisation of local government in the county and a move to unitary authorities, but earlier this week the local government secretary, Steve Reed, scrapped plans to delay the elections, after Reform UK threatened a legal challenge.
Continue reading...U.S.-brokered Ukraine-Russia peace talks wrap up with little to show, and Zelenskyy accusing Moscow of playing for time
Exclusive: UK graduates in Germany, Belgium and possibly other countries informed of rises as salary threshold is cut
Britons living in some European countries face a huge rise in their student loan repayments later this year, the Guardian can reveal, in a move that threatens to trigger a fresh backlash for Rachel Reeves.
UK graduates working in Germany and Belgium – and possibly other countries – have been told that their monthly repayments will increase from April, the Guardian can reveal.
Continue reading...The top US diplomat’s soothing tone masked a familiar message: Europe can remain America’s ally – but at a cost
• Don’t get This Is Europe delivered to your inbox? Sign up here
“The greatness of America,” wrote the 19th-century French diplomat, political philosopher and historian Alexis de Tocqueville, “lies not in her being more enlightened than any other nation, but rather in her ability to repair her faults.”
For a brief moment at the Munich Security Conference (MSC) last weekend, European leaders half-thought that their most heartfelt wish – the return of the old US, that believed in the EU ideal and backed a rules-based world order – had been granted.
Continue reading...Treasury spokesperson says disability benefits would also be limited under Reform, but Bank of England would stay independent
Reform UK would restore the two-child benefit cap in full, Robert Jenrick has announced, in a major U-turn for the party that critics said would plunge hundreds of thousands of children into poverty.
In his first speech as Reform’s Treasury spokesperson, Jenrick said the party had changed tack since Nigel Farage last year said he would scrap the two-child limit and suggested his party wanted to go “much further to encourage people to have children”.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: In 2013, scientists unveiled the first lab-grown burger at a cost of $330,000. By 2023, the FDA approved cultivated chicken for sale. The price had dropped to around $10-$30 per pound, and over $3 billion in investor money had poured into more than 175 companies developing meat grown from animal cells instead of slaughtered animals. The promise is straightforward: real meat, no slaughter required. You could eat beef without killing cattle, chicken without industrial farming, steak without ethical compromise. The technology works. Federal regulators approved it as safe. And nearly a third of US states have banned it or are trying to. Not because it's dangerous -- because it threatens something deeper than food safety. Start with a small sample of animal cells -- a biopsy, not a slaughter. Place them in a bioreactor with nutrients. The cells multiply, forming muscle tissue identical to conventional meat at the cellular level. Nutritionally comparable, same protein content, but grown without raising and killing an animal. The process uses 64-90% less land than conventional meat production and drastically reduces greenhouse gas emissions. No factory farms, no slaughterhouses, no ethical compromise for people who love meat but hate industrial animal agriculture. For vegetarians who gave up meat for ethical reasons, it offers something impossible before: guilt-free steak. [...] Here's where the dream hits reality. Consumer surveys show people perceive conventional meat as tastier and healthier than lab-grown alternatives. Fewer consumers are willing to try cultivated options than expected. The words "lab-grown" and "cultivated" don't exactly make mouths water. Something about meat grown in a bioreactor triggers deep discomfort for many people, even those who claim to care about animal welfare and environmental impact. It's the same psychological barrier that made "Frankenfood" stick as a label for GMOs. Meat is supposed to come from animals, raised on farms, connected to land and tradition. Growing it in a facility feels wrong to people in ways they struggle to articulate.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
At KBIS, we got our first look at a countertop with induction burners built directly into the surface. It's an intriguing concept that raises serious safety concerns.
Solar storms are associated with the lovely aurora borealis, but they can have negative impacts, too.
A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by an Illinois man who alleged that Buffalo Wild Wings' use of the term "boneless wings" was deceptive.
What made the Manchester United co-owner’s anti-immigrant screed so revolting was his brazen willingness to say it all out loud. Remind you of anyone?
Did British petrochemicals billionaire and Manchester United’s controlling minority owner, Sir Jim Ratcliffe, really mean it when he proclaimed to Sky News that “the UK is being colonized by immigrants”?
Is Ratcliffe simply a gutter racist or actually making a cynical political play that may redound to his benefit down the line when Britain faces down yet another period of political upheaval as the country’s old factions continue to fracture? There’s reasonable debate to be had there.
Continue reading...Reaction to Emerald Fennell’s movie adaptation of Emily Brontë’s novel starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi
My group of six English teachers – aged from 30 to 54 – saw the film on Friday. We are still processing our thoughts in a group chat. We agreed that the visuals were often delightfully shocking. We talked about the contrasts between the lavish costumes and the moor landscape, which we thought Fennell got right. We talked about the Charlie XCX music and how well it evoked the landscape and the spirit of the book.
Continue reading...Nazgul makes unexpected entry in team sprint
Owner says two-year old looking for company
A local dog has missed out on a historic cross-country medal at the Winter Olympics despite a lung-bursting surge in the homestretch.
Nazgul, who according to NPR lives at a nearby hotel in Tesero, broke on to the course on Wednesday morning and sprinted for the line behind Croatia’s Tena Hadzic as she came to the end of the qualifying race for the women’s team cross-country sprint. Even if he had completed the entire race, Nazgul’s time would not have counted as he is male. And a dog.
Continue reading...The U.S. Supreme Court’s winter break ends Friday when the justices gather in their private conference. The traditional break is a time for catching up on reading and writing opinions, and this court has had significant catching up to do.
The justices often have issued several decisions in argued cases in November and December— the “easy” cases resulting in unanimous opinions. But this term’s first opinion in an argued case didn’t come until Jan. 9, 2026. It was, surprisingly, a 5-4 opinion in a case involving post-conviction relief.
The long winter break has only increased expectations, or anxiety, about rulings in several key cases, including in the centerpiece of President Donald Trump’s economic policy—tariffs—and a major voting rights challenge with critical implications for upcoming elections.
Trump’s legal issues dominated the justices’ emergency docket last year and now dominate their argument docket with ongoing questions about executive power, the separation of powers, and citizenship.
Let’s do a little “catching up” before the rest of the term swings into high gear.
Cases Argued and Awaiting Decisions
Tariffs
Learning Resources v. Trump and Trump v. V.O.S. Selections
Much already has been written about the tariff question. The justices will decide whether the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) authorized Trump to impose his worldwide tariffs. Until Trump, no president in the IEEPA's nearly 50-year history had ever invoked that law to impose tariffs.
The justices heard arguments in both cases (combined for argument) on Nov. 5, 2025. Many court watchers expected an early decision because of the issue’s importance, but the justices apparently were in no rush. The U.S. Court of International Trade ruled against the president and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed that decision.
Voting Rights
Louisiana v. Callais and Robinson v. Callais
The Roberts Court’s conservative majority has been no friend of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, known as the crown jewel of the Civil Rights movement. It neutered one key section (Section 5), and civil rights and voting rights advocates fear that the remaining key section—Section 2— could face a similar fate. Section 2 prohibits voting standards, practices or procedures that discriminate on the basis of race, color, or membership in a language minority group. That prohibition applies nationwide.
The justices heard the cases last term but were unable to resolve them and ordered re-arguments that took place Oct. 15, 2026. The two cases, consolidated for argument, involve challenges to the Louisiana legislature’s creation of a second majority Black congressional district in its 2024 redistricting map. For the re-arguments, the justices asked the state and the challengers to brief and argue whether the state’s “intentional creation of a second majority-minority congressional district violates the 14th or 15th amendments to the Constitution.”
President’s Removal Power
Since the creation of the Federal Trade Commission in 1914, the five presidentially appointed commissioners have been protected from removal only for cause, that is for inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office. The Supreme Court upheld the “for cause” requirement in a 1935 decision, Humphrey’s Executor v. United States.
The Roberts Court has chipped away at Humphrey’s Executor, and it appears to be on its death bed. Last year, Trump fired FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter without cause and argued that the removal restriction was unconstitutional. A federal district court temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s action pending an appeal. The Supreme Court, however, took the case before the appeals court. Arguments were heard on Dec. 8, 2025.
The questions for the justices are whether the statutory removal protections for members of the Federal Trade Commission violate the Constitution’s separation of powers and, if so, whether Humphrey’s Executor should be overruled, and whether a federal court has the power to prevent a person’s removal from public office.
From the Federal Trade Commission to the Federal Reserve Board, here we go again.
The Federal Reserve Act authorizes the president to dismiss members of the Board of Governors “for cause.” Last year, Trump decided that cause existed to remove Board member Lisa Cook from the Federal Reserve Board. Trump claimed that before taking office, Cook made contradictory representations in two mortgage agreements a short time apart, claiming that a property in Michigan and a property in Georgia would simultaneously serve as her principal residence.
Trump decided that Cook’s “deceitful and potentially criminal conduct in a financial matter” made her unfit to continue serving on the Board. But a federal district court issued a preliminary injunction reinstating Cook, and a divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit refused to block that order. The Trump administration is asking the Supreme Court to block the district court’s preliminary injunction pending appeal to the D.C. Circuit. The case was argued Jan. 21, 2026.
Transgender Sports
Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J.
Idaho and West Virginia have state laws restricting participation in women’s and girls’ sports to women and girls based on biological sex determined at birth. The cases were argued before the justices on Jan. 13, 2026.
Link: Case Analysis from Constitution Daily
The justices will decide whether these laws and more than 20 similar state laws violate the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment or Title IX of the 1972 Education Act Amendments, which prohibits sex-based discrimination in any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.
Upcoming Arguments
Birthright Citizenship
On April 1, 2026, the justices will hear arguments on the constitutionality of Trump’s executive order on birthright citizenship. The order has been extremely controversial, and the weight of legal and historical research does not favor Trump.
On Jan. 20, 2025, Trump issued Executive Order No. 14,160, “Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship,” which, he contends, restores the original meaning of the Citizenship Clause. The order provides, on a prospective basis only, that children of temporary visitors and illegal aliens are not U.S. citizens by birth. The Citizenship order directs federal agencies not to issue or accept citizenship documents for such children born more than 30 days after the order's effective date. The question before the justices is whether the executive order complies with the Constitution’s Citizenship Clause and with 8 U.S.C. 1401(a), which codifies the clause.
Gun Rights
A federal statute that is part of the Gun Control Act of 1968 states that “it shall be unlawful for any person . . . who is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance” to possess firearms or ammunition. Ali Hemani was indicted in 2023 for violating the federal statute (18 U.S.C. 922(g)(3)). The indictment alleged that in 2022, Hemani knowingly possessed a Glock 19 9mm pistol while being an unlawful user of controlled substances such as marijuana, promethazine, and cocaine. The gun was found in a closet in his parent’s home. The government did not allege Hemani was using drugs at the time he actually possessed the gun but that he was a regular drug user.
Link: Case Preview from Constitution Daily
A district court granted Hemani’s motion to dismiss the indictment and the federal appellate court affirmed, finding the law was unconstitutional as applied to him. The justices will hear arguments on March 2, 2026, on whether the federal statute violates the Second Amendment as applied to Hemani.
The above cases are a snapshot of the more closely watched challenges in the term. The justices may issue decisions on Friday (Feb. 20, 2026) and next Tuesday (Feb. 24,2026) and Wednesday (Feb. 25, 2026). The court’s decisions can be found here. Stay tuned.
Marcia Coyle is a regular contributor to Constitution Daily. She was the Supreme Court Correspondent for The National Law Journal and PBS NewsHour who has covered the Supreme Court for more than three decades.
After two hours of talks in Geneva on Wednesday, the head of the Russian delegation, Vladimir Medinsky, said negotiations had been “difficult but businesslike.”
We boiled litres of water to find the best electric kettles, from hard-water heroes to vintage-style, repairable and wifi-connected models
• The best air fryers, tried and tested for crisp and crunch
Despite the march of progress, the humble kettle remains a kitchen staple. It’s what we turn to in times of strife, when spirits are flagging, or to start our day. And when a visitor calls, one of the first things we do is put the kettle on.
While many small appliances have evolved beyond their original form, the kettle’s basic principles remain largely unchanged. Water goes in and heats up until a thermostat switches it off; the water then pours out, and we enjoy a cuppa. However, the technology that goes into a kettle has been slowly improving: better insulation to keep water hotter for longer and reduce reboils; different temperature settings to suit every drink from green tea to herbal brews; and more features such as filters and concealed elements to keep scale out of our cups.
Best kettle overall:
Bosch Sky kettle
Best budget kettle:
Kenwood Ripple kettle
By repealing the EPA’s determination that greenhouse gases threaten public health, the president is denying reality itself
The climate crisis is killing people. These deaths are measurable, documented and ongoing. Concluding otherwise is just playing pretend. Studies explain the mechanics, but lived experience supplies the truth. The people who suffer the consequences see the fire rising and water closing in. They need their government’s help.
Despite that, the president of the United States stood at a microphone last Thursday and abdicated his duty to them. “It has nothing to do with public health,” he claimed about the climate crisis while announcing that the federal government would repeal the Environmental Protection Agency’s “endangerment finding”, a determination that greenhouse gases endanger human health and welfare. “This is all a scam, a giant scam.”
Jamil Smith is a Guardian US columnist
Continue reading...I was detained for co-writing a op-ed about Gaza as a student at Tufts. My experience has only made me feel more connected to others facing oppression
It started off as a normal Tuesday. On 25 March 2025 I reviewed applications from university students applying for a summer research position at my lab. I told friends I would bring pastries from Harvard Square for the Friday dinner we were planning. I finalized my schedule for an upcoming child development conference. I worked on my dissertation proposal.
The day was busy but not unusual – until I left home after quickly dressing for an iftar dinner at the interfaith center. What followed was my first personal encounter with human-made trauma through state violence.
Continue reading...Google's $499 Pixel 10A comes in four colors, and goes on sale March 5.
The new lower-cost Pixel looks a lot like last year's 9A, but has some quality-of-life improvements.
PARIS, Feb. 18, 2026 — Viridien, an advanced technology and digital solutions company, has announced a collaboration with NVIDIA to transform seismic imaging workflows by leveraging NVIDIA HPC platforms and Viridien’s expertise in Subsurface Imaging technologies and HPC & Cloud Solutions.

Advances in subsurface imaging powered by Viridien HPC reduce exploration risk and inform better drilling decisions. Viridien continuously optimizes its hardware, software, and algorithms, working with strategic partners to deliver compute solutions for seismic imaging. Example from the Laconia Phase I 12Hz E-TLFWI dataset in the Gulf of Mexico. Image Credit: Viridien Earth Data.
The collaboration will focus on optimizing Viridien’s seismic imaging algorithms on NVIDIA accelerated computing platforms, including the integration of advanced techniques such as tensor cores and mixed-precision computing. By working closely together to leverage Viridien’s decades of experience in fully managed HPC solutions for seismic imaging with the power of NVIDIA accelerated computing platforms, the collaboration aims to deliver continued improvements in system performance, imaging accuracy, and operational efficiency for energy and geoscience clients worldwide.
John Josephakis, VP of HPC and Supercomputing, NVIDIA, said: “By combining NVIDIA accelerated computing platforms and AI with Viridien’s expertise in seismic imaging and HPC, together we are enabling subsurface teams to deliver sharper, more reliable images faster and more cost-effectively. Better imaging reduces uncertainty, improves prospect screening and well placement decisions, and ultimately lowers the cost of exploration by cutting dry hole risk and minimizing the time and compute required to reach decision-grade results.”
Anil Vattalai, SVP, HPC & Cloud Solutions, Viridien, said: “We are delighted to work with NVIDIA to accelerate the evolution of HPC for seismic imaging. Viridien is the industry leader in subsurface imaging based on our pioneering expertise in industrial and customized end-to-end HPC and over fifteen years of experience in optimizing complex scientific workflows on GPU accelerators. This agreement underscores our commitment to continuously improving our full HPC stack (hardware, software, and algorithms) to deliver advanced HPC and cloud solutions that empower our clients to achieve greater performance and higher-quality outcomes more efficiently.”
More from HPCwire
About Viridien
Viridien is an advanced technology, digital and Earth data company that pushes the boundaries of science for a more prosperous and sustainable future. With our ingenuity, drive and deep curiosity we discover new insights, innovations, and solutions that efficiently and responsibly resolve complex natural resource, digital, energy transition and infrastructure challenges. Viridien employs around 3,200 people worldwide and is listed as VIRI on the Euronext Paris SA (ISIN: FR001400PVN6).
Source: Viridien
The post Viridien Partners with NVIDIA to Advance HPC for Seismic Imaging Workflows appeared first on HPCwire.
"The Late Show" host Stephen Colbert slammed CBS again on Tuesday night after the network issued a statement about his interview with Texas Democrat James Talarico.
Feb. 18, 2026 — At the center of the Milky Way, the galaxy our planet is in, resides a supermassive black hole (SMBH) called Sagittarius A* (pronounced A-star). While this might fill you with existential dread, Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*) is a surprisingly quiet black hole, almost dormant, so it won’t be consuming our solar system any time soon. Researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (U. of I.) have been using the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) Delta supercomputer to run simulations of Sgr A* that would be nearly impossible to complete without the assistance of high-performance computing resources like those at NCSA.

This is a still from a visualization created by NASA to show the size of various SMBH. In this screenshot, you can see the sun at the center of the screen, and Sgr A* on the right side, dwarfing the largest object in our solar system.
Vedant Dhruv is a graduate student fellow at U. of I. working with data and images from the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT). This telescope is actually an array that links eight telescopes around the world to create one powerful virtual telescope. One of the major successes of the EHT was capturing the first image of Sgr A*, a black hole 4 million times larger than our sun.
New Data, New Models
Dhruv worked with his advisor and other collaborators on this project, and they published their findings in The Astrophysical Journal Letters. He’s been able to gain a number of insights from using this data to simulate Sgr A*.
“In recent years, the EHT has produced high-resolution images of two supermassive black holes: Sgr A* at the center of the Milky Way and the black hole in Messier 87 (M87*), a giant elliptical galaxy in the Virgo constellation,” explained Dhruv. “These images provide insight into the plasma accreting onto the black hole.”
One of the images that Dhruv mentions might be one you’ve already seen. When M87* was first captured in an image, it made global news, especially because it was the first image of a black hole. Sgr A* took longer to get a clear image, but scientists have theorized for a while that it was there, even capturing a time-lapse of stars orbiting Sgr A* at the center of the Milky Way.
It’s impossible to take direct physical measurements of something as far away as the center of our galaxy, but fluid simulations of black hole accretion on machines like NCSA’s Delta can bring the sky down to the earth for researchers to study.
“The first horizon-scale image of Sgr A* revealed a bright ring surrounding a central brightness depression, the black hole ‘shadow.’ Comparison with theoretical models suggests that these observations are consistent with a hot, dilute plasma accreting onto a spinning black hole with a mass of roughly 4 million times the mass of the sun,” said Dhruv.
These theoretical models had to make some assumptions because designing and simulating highly realistic models for these phenomena is challenging. As Dhruv explains, most contemporary studies assume the gas behaves like an “ideal” fluid, where particles crash into each other constantly. But reality is more complex. “In reality, however, the hot plasma accreting onto a black hole is largely collisionless,” said Dhruv. “Charged particles can travel long distances before significantly interacting with one another through collisions.”
These older models also predicted that the black hole’s light should “flicker” in a violent and chaotic way. But in reality, the photo of the black hole indicates something different: a steadiness in the light curve.
“In our paper, we attempt to address these issues using ‘weakly collisional’ fluid models that include the leading-order corrections associated with particles having long mean free paths, namely viscosity and heat conduction,” said Dhruv. “In particular, we ask whether these ‘nonideal’ effects play a significant role in the synthetic observations produced by the model. Answering this helps determine whether such effects should be included in future modeling efforts.”
Refining the Simulation
If you wanted to simulate everything about the gas around a black hole, in a one-to-one simulation, you’d likely want to simulate every single atomic particle. As it stands currently, running a model like that would be prohibitively computationally expensive. Researchers also want their work to be reproducible, and creating a more efficient model meant that future researchers would be able to build on the team’s efforts.
To meet their requirement for an accurate model that could run on the available resources, the authors treated the plasma as a magnetized fluid rather than tracking individual particles.
“Our group has developed a fluid model for accreting plasma that includes nonideal processes such as viscosity and heat conduction,” said Dhruv. “These effects are expected to become important when the plasma is effectively collisionless. In that regime, the system is often described as weakly collisional, or, equivalently, as a dissipative fluid. We implemented this model in our group’s open source black hole accretion code, KHARMA, which is designed to run efficiently on modern GPUs and CPUs. We generated synthetic images and spectral energy distributions (SEDs) from simulations of this model by performing radiative transfer calculations and compared the results with those from an otherwise equivalent ideal model. It is worth emphasizing that this work presents the first images of Sgr A* from fluid simulations that explicitly include low-collisionality physics.”
“We found that, when viewed in a time-averaged sense, the weakly collisional fluid models are remarkably similar to the ideal models,” said Dhruv. “However, the low-collisionality physics included in our model tends to make the simulations ‘quieter,’ reducing variability and bringing them closer to observations of the galactic center.”
Using Black Hole Research to Find Your Way to Albuquerque
If black holes can capture humanity’s imagination, supermassive black holes must inspire awe. But studying these phenomena brings us more than just pretty pictures and interesting settings for science fiction cinema. The science derived from accurate modeling of fluid mechanics eventually works its way into many other domains that benefit from the research.
“The same modeling ideas we use here, namely viscosity and heat conduction, also show up in many familiar settings,” explains Dhruv. “Viscosity is what makes honey flow more ‘thickly’ than water, and heat conduction is what spreads heat through a metal spoon or a cooking pan. In a plasma, these processes control how momentum and heat are transported through a hot, magnetized gas. In this work, we ask how these effects change how the flow evolves over time, which is exactly the kind of physics that becomes increasingly important when the goal is to interpret the light curves of astronomical sources.”
Imagine you’re planning a trip to Albuquerque. You check the weather forecast, the road conditions and construction alerts. But what if you also had a “Space Weather” alert on your phone? Dhruv’s discoveries could inspire someone to approach their research into solar flares differently. There is a great deal of research that builds off the results of work in closely related fields. While Dhruv’s work doesn’t directly lead to a project that would prevent GPS satellite outages that power your map systems, every bit of science that better refines plasma physics models makes related science more accurate.
“These transport effects also show up in other important plasma environments where particle collisions are rare,” said Dhruv. “One example is the solar wind, the stream of plasma flowing out from the sun that drives space weather and can influence satellites and communications.”
Finally, because of the way Dhruv’s team designed their model, it can be used in numerous other fields of research.
“To include more realistic plasma physics, we developed a new solver within an open source GPU code,” said Dhruv. “The mathematical structure of the weakly collisional equations requires an implicit method, which iteratively solves for the fluid state at each time step. We designed the solver to be physics-agnostic, so others in the community can reuse the same framework to incorporate and evolve additional physical effects of their own.”
Continued Refinement
Researchers usually continue to innovate and refine their work. This case is no exception. While Dhruv’s team created a model that aligns more closely with observed black hole behavior, they still feel they can make it even more accurate.
There is a tiny element in this study that still requires substantial guesswork: the electron. The gas around a black hole is made up of both ions and electrons, but only one of these is accurately modeled.
“A major uncertainty in most simulations of black hole accretion is the electron physics,” Dhruv explained. “The plasma in these systems is a collisionless, ionized gas, and because ions and electrons differ largely in mass (by a factor of nearly 2,000!), they do not necessarily behave the same way or share energy in the same manner. As a result, the electrons that produce much of the observed radiation can be governed by physical processes that are distinct from those affecting the ions. This makes it important to model the electrons as accurately as possible.”
There is a reason most researchers don’t model electrons: it’s incredibly expensive and difficult to calculate electron movement in real time.
“Developing a fully relativistic, two-component model of an electron-ion plasma is theoretically challenging, and it also comes with substantial computational cost,” said Dhruv. “As a result, most simulations to date treat the plasma as a single fluid that is effectively ion-dominated because the ions carry most of the mass and inertia. The electron physics is then incorporated afterward, using physically motivated prescriptions applied in post-processing.”
Dhruv plans to address this issue by carrying out particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of a small patch of the accretion disk. PIC simulations track the motion of individual charged particles – electrons and protons – and the electromagnetic fields they generate, capturing plasma behavior from first principles. Once the electron-scale behavior is understood, that physics can be folded into larger-scale simulations of the full accretion flow.
“A key challenge is that the mechanisms that heat and accelerate electrons are often not captured reliably by a fluid description. Kinetic approaches, such as PIC simulations, are needed to understand how energy is transferred and partitioned between ions and electrons, especially in a collisionless plasma. To address this, I am performing localized PIC simulations that model a small region of the accretion flow. These simulations allow me to study the particle energization mechanisms, how energy is divided between species, what sets the electron-to-ion temperature ratio and which plasma instabilities control electron evolution. The overarching goal is to use these kinetic results to build a subgrid prescription that can be incorporated into global fluid simulations, enabling them to evolve electron physics more realistically.”
Dhruv’s work benefits greatly from the resources available at NCSA. Through his allocation from the U.S. National Science Foundation’s ACCESS program, Dhruv’s team had access to NCSA’s robust portfolio of HPC resources.
“Because of the structure of the governing equations, weakly collisional simulations are, on average, about 10 times more computationally expensive than otherwise-equivalent ideal simulations,” said Dhruv. “In addition, EHT-style modeling is inherently a parameter-survey problem. To evaluate the impact of the new physics, we needed to run multiple weakly collisional simulations alongside matched ideal counterparts, and then compare both sets of results with observations. In this context, GPU resources on Delta were invaluable. A single weakly collisional simulation that takes on the order of a month on A100s would likely take more than a year on comparable CPU-only resources.”
In addition to the research paper linked above, you can find more context for this research in the following publications:
Source: Megan Meave Johnson, NCSA
The post NCSA’s Delta Helps Smooth the Chaos at Galaxy’s Center appeared first on HPCwire.
The Food and Drug Administration has reversed its decision on Moderna's flu vaccine and has agreed to review it for possible approval, Moderna announced on Wednesday. From a report: Last week, the agency rejected Moderna's application for review of a new flu vaccine, saying the company's research design was flawed. But in subsequent discussions the company said that the agency had relented and agreed to begin a review. Moderna said it split its application for the flu vaccine based on age, seeking a traditional approval for people 50 to 64 years old, and accelerated approval for those 65 and older. The company also said it agreed to conduct an additional study among those 65 and older once the vaccine reached the market. Moderna said on Wednesday that the F.D.A. set a deadline of August to decide whether to approve the vaccine. If it is authorized, it would be available for those older adults in the flu season that begins later this year. The vaccine uses messenger RNA technology, which Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has repeatedly criticized as unsafe and ineffective. The mRNA approach, which instructs the body to produce a fragment of a virus that sets off an immune response, was widely successful in Covid vaccines and is considered generally safe by public health experts and scientists.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| Hi everyone I’m building a compact USB-C Onewheel charger that lets you charge your Onewheel battery from a standard USB-C PD wall adapter (the same kind phones and laptops use). What is it? This is an attempt to make a slim and lightweight charging solution so that you can charge anywhere you are. The final size is going to be around 70x70x30 mm which is smaller than you phone. You can use any USB-C adapter. It is able to use any phone adapter (~65W) to the strongest and newest bricks that are capable of 240W. You can charge any battery pack up to 60 V. The output connector is an XT60, and I will provide adapter cables to the most popular battery connectors (ST3, XLR, Anderson, DC barrel jack). At the end of the post I attached a few AI renders of how the charger will look like, just so that you get a general feeling. What I'm testing - Compatibility across common USB-C PD adapters and cables - Real-world charging behavior (heat, stability) - Usability: connector placement, cable strain relief, enclosure, indicators, etc. Who I'm looking for - You have a battery that charges via XT60, ST3, XLR, Anderson, DC barrel jack,... - You can do a few test charge session and share notes/photos/comments What you get - I will send out the test prototypes without profit, this means that you cover only the material costs + shipping. Estimated material costs are around 50 €. I ship from Slovenia, EU. - Your feedback will shape the final product and i'll credit the testers if you want. - I expect to have the test prototypes ready within 6 months, if I fail you get your money back. How it works Before I ship the charger I will program it to your battery voltage. After that the charger is plug-and-play, no config, no app. You use any USB-C wall adapter to power it and it will charge the connected battery to the programmed voltage. Interested? Reply here or DM me with:
[link] [comments] |
BROOKLYN, N.Y., Feb. 18, 2026 — Qunnect today announced the first entanglement swapping demonstration of its kind over deployed metro-scale fiber using a commercial quantum networking system. The demonstration, which achieved record entanglement swapping rates, combined Qunnect’s room-temperature quantum hardware with Cisco’s quantum networking software stack. This milestone brings practical quantum networks closer to scalable deployment, validating a new spoke-and-hub model for scaling quantum networks through commercial data centers.
To validate this model, the companies conducted a landmark demonstration on Qunnect’s GothamQ testbed which runs throughout New York City, achieving several firsts. The network spanned 17.6 kilometers of deployed telecom fiber connecting Brooklyn and Manhattan through QTD Systems’ data center at 60 Hudson Street. The scientific paper is available on ArXiv.
The collaboration achieved record swapping rates of 1.7M+ pairs/hour locally and 5,400 pairs/hour over deployed fiber—nearly 10,000 times better than previous benchmarks using similar platforms. As the first demonstration of polarization entanglement swapping over deployed fiber, the system maintained >99% polarization fidelity. These results demonstrate the integrated system can operate reliably in one of the world’s most demanding urban environments, providing a deployable blueprint for distributed quantum computing and secure metro-scale quantum networks.
“Entanglement swapping is a fundamental operation in the quantum internet. Today, we not only broke the record for rate and scalability, we did so in New York City using some of the noisiest, most chaotic fiber on Earth,” said Mehdi Namazi, Co-Founder and Chief Science Officer for Qunnect. “This is a milestone the field has been waiting for, and it was proven possible by Cisco and Qunnect.”
Key Performance Milestones:
At the center of this integration is Qunnect’s turnkey Carina system, a breakthrough technology capable of generating entangled photon pairs [LINK]. To maintain signal integrity, Qunnect’s Automatic Polarization Controllers (APCs) [LINK] continuously compensate for polarization drift—a persistent challenge in deployed fiber that has historically limited real-world networking.
These technologies were integrated with Cisco’s unified quantum networking software stack [LINK] for the demonstration. Functioning as a “Digital Air Traffic Controller” for the city-wide network, the software autonomously coordinates Qunnect’s turnkey Carina hardware across geographically separated nodes.
“This milestone accelerates our quantum networking vision. Our orchestration software enabled field-ready entanglement distribution and swapping—foundational capabilities for distributed quantum computing and the global quantum grid,” said Reza Nejabati, Head of Quantum Research at Cisco.
Quantum networks today are often constrained by a complex physical “tether,” relying on a shared master laser to connect all nodes. By using Qunnect’s independent atomic sources, the experiment removed the need for nodes to be physically “tethered” by shared lasers. This decoupling of nodes allows for a scalable hub-and-spoke architecture for quantum networking, enabling new endpoint nodes to be added without dedicated synchronization links to all other nodes. This achievement serves as a first proof point in our journey toward practical, entanglement-based quantum networks, laying the foundation for distributed quantum computing.
More from HPCwire
About Qunnect
Qunnect builds deployable quantum networking infrastructure for provably secure, scalable connectivity over existing fiber optic cables. Based in Brooklyn Navy Yard, Qunnect commercialized the first room-temperature quantum memory in 2021. Our Carina suite—entanglement sources and stabilization tools—powers live quantum networks in NYC and Berlin, and supports use cases in finance, energy, telecom, and defense. To learn more about Qunnect, visit www.qunnect.inc.
Source: Qunnect
The post Qunnect and Cisco Demonstrate Metro-Scale, High-Speed Quantum Entanglement Swapping Over Commercial Fiber appeared first on HPCwire.
His 1972 appearance showed Americans what a beloved community could look like, integrated and full of promise
In a 1972 episode of Sesame Street, Jesse Jackson, then 31, is standing against a stoop on the soundstage modelled after an urban neighborhood block. He’s wearing a purple, white and black striped shirt, accented with a gold medallion featuring Martin Luther King Jr’s profile. The camera cuts to reveal a group of kids, the embodiment of Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition – children under the age of 10 from every ethnicity and racial group. He leads them in a call-and-response of his famous liberatory chant: “I am somebody.”
The adorable, cherub-cheeked kids light up the camera with their enthusiasm as they repeat the same words back to him. They are fidgety, giggly and powerful when they respond to Jackson in a cacophonous and slightly out-of-sync roar: I am somebody. The call-and-response is a wall of activating, energetic sound.
Continue reading...State regulators seek to block Kalshi from offering events contracts that would allow residents to bet on sports
Nevada gaming regulators filed a lawsuit on Tuesday seeking to block the prediction market operator Kalshi from offering events contracts that would allow its residents to bet on sports including football and basketball games.
The Nevada gaming control board filed the lawsuit as part of an escalating battle over the ability of state gaming regulators nationally to police companies like Kalshi that allow users to place financial bets through their prediction markets.
Continue reading...BOSTON, Feb. 18, 2026 — Aliro today announced a $15 million oversubscribed funding round to advance what is the next major technology paradigm shift in cybersecurity: moving trust from mathematical assumptions to physical law. The round was led by Gutbrain Ventures, with participation from existing investors, including Cisco Investments, as well as new investors Argon Ventures and Wonderstone Ventures, the corporate VC of Murata.
Every generational platform shift—from mainframes to PCs, landlines to mobile, on-prem servers to the cloud—shared one trait: it didn’t improve the old model; it made it obsolete.
Security is now at that same inflection point.
For decades, digital trust has been built on encryption derived from computational hurdles. These systems assume attackers are limited by time and resources. That assumption is breaking.
Aliro replaces assumption-based security with physics-based truth enforcement. Location cannot be spoofed. Keys cannot be stolen on the wire. Eavesdroppers are immediately and visibly detected.
“This isn’t about stronger encryption,” said Jim Ricotta, CEO of Aliro. “It’s about changing what trust means. Aliro is transforming digital trust from a mathematical probability into a physical certainty. The TAM for this market is conservatively estimated to be $60B and growing.”
Aliro’s platform runs on existing optical networks, transforming existing routers and switches into transport, while shifting trust to a software-driven, physics-enforced layer. There is no incremental upgrade path for legacy vendors—just as there was none from landlines to mobile or from on-prem hardware to the cloud.
“Aliro enables a fundamental upgrade to the world’s core security and connectivity architecture,” said Bob Davoli, Aliro Chairman and Founder of Gutbrain Ventures. “Our ability to deliver deterministic security to classical networks today while preparing for the quantum tomorrow makes this one of the most exciting infrastructure opportunities in tech.”
Every enterprise, bank, defense organization, telco, and cloud provider must choose between trust based on assumptions, or trust based on physics. The new funding will support expanded deployments, ecosystem partnerships, and Aliro’s mission to redefine global security infrastructure.
The investment comes as Aliro reaches significant technical milestones, recently announcing support for over 50 entanglement and classical network devices within its vendor-agnostic software stack. This interoperability allows organizations to deploy fully operational, high-assurance networks immediately using existing fiber infrastructure.
In addition to its run-time software platform, Aliro offers the world’s most capable physics-accurate entanglement network simulator. This “digital twin” allows organizations to understand the value of these new networks in great detail before making long term commitments.
“We look for visionary teams and disruptive technologies that solve immediate, tangible business problems,” added Bob Mason, Managing Partner at Argon Ventures. “As an engineer and former CTO, I see Aliro solving a most fundamental challenge: enabling irrefutably secure network infrastructure, built on a foundation that is immune to future computational threats.”
About Aliro
Aliro is commercializing the world’s first software-driven entanglement platform for physics-based security. By enforcing trust through the laws of nature, Aliro is redefining cybersecurity for the next generation of global infrastructure. Other use cases for Aliro’s entanglement platform include networking quantum computers, blind quantum computing, position verification, enhanced decision coordination, and networking distributed quantum sensors. With a vendor-agnostic approach, Aliro is building the safe, intelligent, and essential fabric for the future global economy.
Source: Aliro
The post Aliro Raises $15M to Advance Physics-Based Network Security appeared first on HPCwire.
FreePower has expanded its industry-first countertop charging capabilities to laptops and smart watches. We saw it at KBIS 2026.
SAN ANTONIO, Feb. 18, 2026 — BUZZ High Performance Computing, the Canadian Tier-III high-performance computing (HPC) data center platform of HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd., has announced a major step forward in its AI cloud strategy, signing customer agreements representing approximately $30 million in total contract value over two-year fixed terms, subject to performance obligations and deployment milestones (all amounts in US dollars, unless otherwise indicated).
Building on four years of experience operating GPU infrastructure, BUZZ is accelerating its expansion as HIVE’s AI engine, complementing the Company’s established Tier-I hashrate services provider and reinforcing its position as a twin-engine leader in next-generation digital infrastructure.
The new contracts underpin the initial phase of BUZZ’s AI-optimized GPU deployment at its Canada West location in Manitoba, with compute capacity expected to come online during the quarter ending March 31, 2026. The first phase consists of 504 liquid-cooled Dell server-based GPUs, purpose-built for high-performance AI and HPC workloads.
Based on executed contracts, current pricing, and deployment schedules, management expects this initial phase to generate approximately $15 million in annual recurring revenue (“ARR”) to BUZZ’s cloud business once fully operational. Upon full deployment, management expects total annualized revenue attributable to HIVE’s HPC segment, driven by BUZZ, to grow from approximately $20 million currently to roughly $35 million, reflecting strong contracted demand for BUZZ’s AI cloud platform. These projections are subject to capital expenditures, operating costs, customer utilization levels, and other risk factors described herein, and actual results may vary.
To support this growth, the Company expects to incur capital expenditures related to GPU acquisition, supporting electrical and cooling infrastructure, and working capital requirements. Operating expenses are expected to include power, hosting, maintenance, staffing, and network costs. BUZZ continues to expand capacity at its Canada West site in alignment with executed customer agreements.
Frank Holmes, Executive Chairman of HIVE, commented: “We are entering 2026 with strong momentum in our HPC and GPU cloud business. HIVE has built a track record as one of the longest-standing publicly traded crypto Tier-I data center operators, performing through multiple market cycles while protecting cash flow and balance sheet strength. Now, with BUZZ, we are leveraging that foundation to build a high-growth AI cloud platform spanning Canada, Sweden, and Paraguay.
“Tier-I data centers for hashrate services typically require approximately $1 million per megawatt of infrastructure, whereas Tier-III facilities supporting advanced GPU clusters can require materially higher capital intensity due to premium GPU hardware, redundant power architecture, and advanced cooling systems. Industry benchmarks suggest that constructing and equipping a comparable fully self-funded Tier-III facility with similar GPU capacity could require approximately $70 million in capital expenditures, depending on site conditions, financing structure, vendor pricing, and market dynamics.
“Through vendor financing arrangements for GPUs and strategic Tier-III data center partnerships, we are scaling efficiently while reducing upfront capital intensity compared to a fully self-funded build. Where HIVE owns land and buildings and operates its Tier-I facilities, we are pursuing selective Tier-III conversions and colocation strategies for HPC. This showcases our vertically integrated model and diversified revenue streams from both HPC colocation and GPU AI cloud services, reinforcing HIVE’s dual-engine strategy of hashrate services and high-performance computing.”
Aydin Kilic, President and Chief Executive Officer of HIVE, added: “Our vision is to scale our HPC GPU AI cloud business toward approximately $140 million in ARR over the next year, subject to market conditions and successful infrastructure deployment. As we execute, this growth will be supported by continued investment in infrastructure and operations. In our previous earnings webcast, we outlined a target deployment of 2,000 AI-optimized GPUs at our Canada West facility this year. The initial 504-GPU deployment is already backed by executed customer agreements representing approximately $30 million in total contract value over two years, subject to performance obligations and deployment milestones.
“This is just the beginning. Demand for long-term access to high-performance, power-efficient AI compute continues to expand globally, and we are excited to further scale our GPU cloud business throughout 2026.”
Craig Tavares, President and Chief Operating Officer of BUZZ HPC, commented: “Canada requires more sovereign AI compute capacity, both to serve domestic workloads and to support global AI companies from a secure Canadian base. With Dell and Bell Canada as key partners, we are scaling GPU capacity with the infrastructure, connectivity, and resiliency needed to compete on a global stage.
“BUZZ was recently recognized by SemiAnalysis for having one of the fastest data center networks globally and earned a Bronze rating in their ClusterMAX report, validating our technical architecture and execution capabilities.
“Launching this cluster in Canada West marks a significant milestone. It expands BUZZ’s national footprint and advances our vision of coast-to-coast AI infrastructure, with commercial-grade clusters operating at scale to serve both sovereign workloads and international demand. Under HIVE’s dual-engine model, BUZZ is positioned to be a powerful growth catalyst as we accelerate into the global AI supercycle.”
About HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd.
Founded in 2017, HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd. is the first publicly listed company to mine digital assets powered by green energy. Today, HIVE builds and operates next-generation Tier-I and Tier-III data centers across Canada, Sweden, and Paraguay, serving both Bitcoin and high-performance computing clients. HIVE’s twin-turbo engine infrastructure-driven by hashrate services and GPU-accelerated AI computing-delivers scalable, environmentally responsible solutions for the digital economy.
About BUZZ High Performance Computing
BUZZ, a wholly owned subsidiary of HIVE, specializes in AI Cloud and HPC data center services. With facilities in North America and Europe, BUZZ is engineered to support Canada’s ambition in the global AI economy.
Source: HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd.
The post BUZZ HPC Launches 504-GPU AI Cluster Backed by $30M in Contracts appeared first on HPCwire.
I tested dozens of smartwatches from Apple, Google and Garmin. Here are my top picks for every budget and category.
An anonymous reader shares a report: An Indian university has been asked to vacate its stall at the country's flagship AI summit after a staff member was caught presenting a commercially available robotic dog made in China as its own creation, two government sources said. "You need to meet Orion. This has been developed by the Centre of Excellence at Galgotias University," Neha Singh, a professor of communications, told state-run broadcaster DD News this week in remarks that have since gone viral. But social media users quickly identified the robot as the Unitree Go2, sold by China's Unitree Robotics for about $2,800 and widely used in research and education globally. The episode has drawn sharp criticism and has cast an uncomfortable spotlight on India's artificial intelligence ambitions.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Australia experienced a boom in smart-home technology at the start of the 2020s. Years on, some early adopters are experiencing buyer’s remorse
When the smart home devices Elly Bailey was expecting in the post never showed up at her Gold Coast home, she was frustrated. As a technology reviewer, these products were crucial for her work.
When she eventually found the cause, she had to laugh. It wasn’t a sticky-fingered neighbour or a rogue delivery driver causing her to miss parcels but her smart doorbell – the very thing she’d hoped would prevent missed deliveries, and part of exactly the range of internet-connected devices she was meant to be reviewing.
Continue reading...American wins third gold overall and first since 2018
Shiffrin more than a second ahead of Rast in silver
With one last chance to break her barren Olympic run stretching back eight years, Mikaela Shiffrin delivered in style. The 30-year-old American surged to victory in the women’s slalom on a sun-splashed Wednesday in the Dolomites with a two-run time of 1min 39.10sec, becoming the first US skier to win three Olympic gold medals.
Switzerland’s Camille Rast, the reigning world champion and only woman to have beaten Shiffrin in her signature discipline this season, came in a yawning 1.50sec behind for the silver – the largest winning margin in any Olympic alpine skiing event since 1998 – while Anna Swenn-Larsson of Sweden took the bronze. After fourth-placed Wendy Holdener, of Switzerland, the rest of the field trailed by at least two seconds in the final race of the alpine skiing.
Continue reading...Consultancy’s prediction comes after Rachel Reeves said green subsidy costs would be removed from domestic bills
Household energy costs in Great Britain are expected to tumble by an average of £117 a year from April after Rachel Reeves announced in November’s budget that the cost of green subsidies would be removed from domestic bills.
The government’s quarterly cap on energy bills is forecast to fall after the chancellor’s decision to shift the levies used to support renewable energy projects into general taxation, and scrap a bill payer-funded energy efficiency scheme, according to Cornwall Insight, a leading energy consultancy.
Continue reading...Reform UK’s Robert Jenrick has announced party’s plans to cut welfare spending
Robert Jenrick, Reform UK’s Treasury spokesperson, is giving his speech now.
He has announced, or confirmed, three measures to cut welfare spending.
The number claiming disability benefits for an attention disorder has more than doubled since Covid. We all know a significant number of these claims are spurious …
We will stop those with mild anxiety, depression, and similar conditions from claiming disability benefits and instead encourage them into the dignity of work.
We will end the abuse of the Motability scheme, where expensive cars are handed out for conditions like tennis elbow, and paid for by working people who can’t afford them themselves.
Continue reading...The far-left France Unbowed party says it evacuated its Paris office due to a bomb threat as 2 more people were detained over the killing of a far-right activist.
A program dubbed "the Lost Navy" is underway to identify the large number of Swedish naval shipwrecks lying on the bottom of the Baltic.
AI slop is an oil spill in our digital oceans. The cleanup depends on all of us doing our part.
Social Circle, a mostly Maga town, builds strange bedfellow coalition against plans to convert warehouse
On a recent morning Eric Taylor, city manager for a small Georgia town of about 5,000 residents called Social Circle, was contacted by a staffer from Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
“They asked me to turn on the water,” he said of a 1m sq ft warehouse nearby that the federal government recently purchased for $128m, with plans to use it for locking up as many as 10,000 detainees as part of the Trump administration’s mass deportation plan.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Fortune: In 1987, economist and Nobel laureate Robert Solow made a stark observation about the stalling evolution of the Information Age: Following the advent of transistors, microprocessors, integrated circuits, and memory chips of the 1960s, economists and companies expected these new technologies to disrupt workplaces and result in a surge of productivity. Instead, productivity growth slowed, dropping from 2.9% from 1948 to 1973, to 1.1% after 1973. Newfangled computers were actually at times producing too much information, generating agonizingly detailed reports and printing them on reams of paper. What had promised to be a boom to workplace productivity was for several years a bust. This unexpected outcome became known as Solow's productivity paradox, thanks to the economist's observation of the phenomenon. "You can see the computer age everywhere but in the productivity statistics," Solow wrote in a New York Times Book Review article in 1987. New data on how C-suite executives are -- or aren't -- using AI shows history is repeating itself, complicating the similar promises economists and Big Tech founders made about the technology's impact on the workplace and economy. Despite 374 companies in the S&P 500 mentioning AI in earnings calls -- most of which said the technology's implementation in the firm was entirely positive -- according to a Financial Times analysis from September 2024 to 2025, those positive adoptions aren't being reflected in broader productivity gains. A study published this month by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that among 6,000 CEOs, chief financial officers, and other executives from firms who responded to various business outlook surveys in the U.S., U.K., Germany, and Australia, the vast majority see little impact from AI on their operations. While about two-thirds of executives reported using AI, that usage amounted to only about 1.5 hours per week, and 25% of respondents reported not using AI in the workplace at all. Nearly 90% of firms said AI has had no impact on employment or productivity over the last three years, the research noted. However, firms' expectations of AI's workplace and economic impact remained substantial: Executives also forecast AI will increase productivity by 1.4% and increase output by 0.8% over the next three years. While firms expected a 0.7% cut to employment over this time period, individual employees surveyed saw a 0.5% increase in employment.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Business leaders tout AI as a path to shorter weeks and better balance. But without power, workers are unlikely to share the gains
The front-page headline in a recent Washington Post was breathless: “These companies say AI is key to their four-day workweeks.” The subhead was euphoric: “Some companies are giving workers back more time as artificial intelligence takes over more tasks.”
As the Post explained: “more companies may move toward a shortened workweek, several executives and researchers predict, as workers, especially those in younger generations, continue to push for better work-life balance.”
Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is a professor of public policy emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a Guardian US columnist and his newsletter is at robertreich.substack.com. His new book, Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America, is out now
Continue reading...The lower-cost Galaxy phone runs Android 16 with One UI, bringing several of Samsung's features and six years of software updates.
Apple, Garmin, Samsung, Google or Amazfit? I compared each one against a chest strap for heart rate accuracy and found a clear winner.
Alberto Castañeda Mondragón was hospitalized with eight skull fractures after being arrested by ICE agents in January
Minnesota and federal authorities are investigating the alleged beating of a Mexican citizen by immigration officers last month, seeking to identify what caused the eight skull fractures that landed the man in the intensive care unit of a Minneapolis hospital.
Investigators from the St Paul police department and FBI last week canvassed the shopping center parking lot where Alberto Castañeda Mondragón says Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents wrested him from a vehicle, threw him to the ground and repeatedly struck him in the head with a steel baton.
Continue reading...The drama about two startup innovators defeated by their egotistical overreach feels as if it presages these AI times
The crisis facing a couple of middle-aged Belgian tech bros in the 1990s might be better suited to a European streaming-TV drama – maybe with the two antiheroes’ travails confined to the first episode, setting up a lengthier intergenerational drama taking us to the present. Nonetheless, here it is: a feature film in the Berlin competition from screenwriter Angelo Tijssens and director Anke Blondé, handsomely produced and shot, and impeccably acted. But it’s also weirdly parochial, leaving you with the sense that it has not reached beyond its immediate concerns; and it’s not clear as to why, exactly, we need a fictionalised crisis from the 90s inspired by a real-life financial fraud scandal.
Well, perhaps the point is that very smallness and sadness: a pathetic tale of the first, almost-forgotten dotcom bust, which holds an omen for our AI-obsessed present. Arieh Worthalter and Jan Hammenecker play Geert and Luc, two balding guys who, in the late 90s, are Belgium’s pinup boys of tech innovation. Their startup company has gone public and made them both very rich, and all their local friends, family and businesses have plunged every cent of their savings into shares. Geert and Luc are now poised to turn the mud of Flanders into a European Silicon Valley.
Continue reading...Milano Cortina has cutting‑edge replays, chase‑cam drones and exuberant commentary bringing a wave of unexpected nostalgia for anyone who grew up on 90s extreme‑sports games
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As someone whose childhood holidays consisted of narrowboating along the Grand Union canal or wandering the harbour-side at Whitby looking for vampires, I have never been on a skiing break. The idea of plummeting down a hill on anything but a plastic sledge is totally alien to me. And yet, my wife and I have been gripped by the Winter Olympics, especially the snowboarding and freestyle skiing events. And I think I know why. Those events are really channelling the look and feel of the wintery sports sims I’ve always loved – especially those that arrived during a golden period in the mid-1990s.
This was the era in which snowboarding was exploding in popularity, especially among twentysomethings with disposable incomes and no responsibilities – which coincidentally was the games industry’s target market at the time. Perhaps the first title to take advantage of this trend was Namco’s 1996 arcade game Alpine Surfer, which challenged players to stand on a snowboard-shaped controller and swoop as quickly as possible down a mountainside – it was one of the most physically exhausting coin-ops I ever played. Later that year came the self-consciously hip PlayStation sim Cool Boarders, and then in 1998, my absolute favourite, 1080° Snowboarding on the N64, with it’s intuitive analog controls and incredibly authentic sound effects of boards cutting through deep, crisp snow.
Continue reading...William tells radio panel that talking about emotions and mental health should become ‘second nature to us all’
Prince William has called the prevalence of male suicide in the UK a “national catastrophe” in a radio appearance in which he opened up about his approaches to dealing with difficult emotions.
William told a special episode of Radio 1’s Life Hacks that “we need more male role models” to talk about their mental health publicly, to help other men do the same and make open discussions “second nature to us all”.
Continue reading...Assistant to hard-left parliamentarian among those held over fatal attack on 23-year-old Quentin Deranque during protest in Lyon
French authorities have arrested 11 suspects over the killing last week of a far-right activist, including an assistant to a hard-left member of parliament, a prosecutor and an informed source said.
Quentin Deranque, 23, died after sustaining a severe brain injury when he was attacked by at least six people on the sidelines of a far-right protest against a leftwing politician speaking at a university in the south-eastern city of Lyon.
Continue reading...Government considering delay to equalising national minimum wage after jump in youth unemployment
Ministers are considering a slower rise in the minimum wage for younger workers, amid fears over rising youth unemployment.
Labour had promised in its manifesto to equalise national minimum wage rates by the time of the next election, saying it was unfair younger workers were paid less. Government sources said equalisation remained the aim but the rise could come more slowly.
Continue reading...South Lakes Islamic Centre, which has been targeted by far right, will host nightly prayers before official opening in July
It is a cold night before Ramadan, and a group of men are completing health and safety checks inside Cumbria’s partly completed South Lakes Islamic Centre (SLIC).
The building is a mere shell, with exposed bricks, hanging wires and no fitted lights or heaters, but a large area has been cleared of construction materials to host nightly congregational prayers.
Continue reading...The magic of magnets tucked into your joysticks can put an end to drift. But which technology is superior?
Starting next year, MLS will align itself with big European leagues and become a summer-to-spring operation. Executives see the change as an opportunity
Few constants have endured from MLS’s 1996 debut to now. It’s still an operational soccer league, for one thing. There’s the name itself, although its initial logo was shelved in 2015 for its current shield-and-kickstand. Eight of the 10 teams that launched the league remain involved, though each one has changed their name, crest, or both over time.
Another rare constant will soon fade into the rearview: the league’s schedule. MLS has run spring-to-fall/winter since its launch, more specifically from late February to early December in recent years. Preseason kicks off at the start of each new year, three weeks or so after the previous season’s championship bout. It’s a pretty well-ironed routine, even as ancillary competitions like the Leagues Cup and Club World Cup shuffle the middle bits each year.
Continue reading...Kimberly Prost and Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza vow US reprisals will not affect work of international criminal court
When the Canadian Kimberly Prost learned Donald Trump’s administration had imposed sanctions on her, it came as a shock.
For years, she has sat as a judge at the international criminal court, weighing accusations of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity; now she is on the same list as terrorists and those involved in organised crime. “It really was a moment of a bit of disbelief,” she said.
Continue reading...Exclusive: 15 Congress members write to Marco Rubio about nine-month detention of Mohammed Ibrahim
Fifteen members of Congress have written to Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, demanding to know what steps the United States has taken in response to the mistreatment of a Palestinian-American teenager who spent nine months in Israeli detention.
The letter, led by Senator Peter Welch and first seen by the Guardian, is centered around the case of Mohammed Ibrahim, a Florida resident who was 15 when Israeli soldiers arrested him during a raid on his family’s West Bank home in February 2025. He was charged with throwing objects at moving vehicles before being released on 27 November following a guilty plea and suspended sentence, and was taken directly to hospital upon his return.
Continue reading...These "exercise snacks" are all you need daily to boost your heart health.
Chatham House partners with African Mining Indaba 2026 News release jon.wallace
Chatham House staff and associate fellows engaged with national and industry leaders throughout Indaba 2026, the African mining event.
Chatham House was a strategic partner for the Investing in African Mining Indaba 2026 Conference, held from 9–12 February in Cape Town, South Africa.
Throughout the Indaba week, Chatham House staff and associate fellows engaged with national and industry leaders and participated on panels and side events, adding value to discussions about how Africa should respond to the global critical minerals race and harness potential benefits for national development.
Chatham House was also a knowledge partner for a ministerial symposium held on 8 February, which saw mining ministers from across the continent join CEOs, industry and political leaders to discuss the key challenges facing the sector and its relationship with impacted societies.
Chatham House and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) facilitated a roundtable as part of the symposium that generated new thinking on permitting, industrialization and infrastructure linkages.
The Chatham House engagement marked a new collaboration between the Institute’s Critical Minerals Initiative (CMI) and Africa Programme.
Christopher Vandome, head of the CMI, said:
‘The inclusion of global think tanks and development organizations as partners for the Mining Indaba highlights the growing geopolitical relevance of the industry, and political influence and intervention in minerals supply chains in ways we have not seen for decades.
‘Nations are securing the supply chains of mined material that build our modern world, across manufacturing, digitization, energy and security. The steps taken by the US and other global actors in response to China’s domination of mineral supply chains will reshape the global economy.
‘We have moved beyond discussions of resource nationalism, to acknowledging that state equity in mining and processing companies is the new norm and countries without a stake will be left behind. How this is managed, and how governments engage, will determine who reaps the biggest rewards.’
Tighisti Amare, Africa Programme director, said:
‘From the panels we spoke on, meetings we held and extensive engagements that we had across the week it is clear that mining has moved up the global political agenda.
‘Yet deep-rooted challenges persist across the sector in Africa, including how international demand for minerals can contribute to regional development across the continent. Chatham House has an important role as a trusted and independent convenor and thought leader to work with partners in finding solutions to these challenges.’
The series of strikes brought the death toll to at least 145 people since the administration began targeting the small vessels since September.
Exclusive: Research uncovers programme to make centuries-old records legible to detect people’s ancestry
Large numbers of paper restorers and bookbinders were recruited by the Nazis and “contributed directly to genocide” during the second world war, according to research.
A British historian has uncovered a Europe-wide programme in the 1930s and 1940s in which restorers repaired and cleaned historic church and civil records, making them legible so that the Nazis could detect anyone with Jewish ancestry.
Continue reading...Democratic former presidents and Donald Trump respond to the death of the civil rights leader at the age of 84. Plus, how worried should we be about China’s dancing robots?
Good morning.
Three Democratic former presidents led a wealth of tributes to Jesse Jackson, a “titan” of the civil rights movement and “one of America’s greatest patriots”, who has died at the age of 84.
What did Donald Trump say? In a post to social media, the current US president called Jackson “a good man” and a “friend” but then attacked the “scoundrels and Lunatics on the Radical Left” who, he said, “falsely and consistently” called him a racist.
What was on the T-shirt? Civil rights movement leaders, including Martin Luther King Jr and Shirley Chisholm, as well as images of protests from that time.
Continue reading...I have always road esk8s. I got bored of my acedeck n1, 40lb big street cruiser board. I am buying a used GT from a dude for about $1,200 I am wondering what vesc options there are out there for it? I like tinkering with my pc. I have built mine and help friends with theirs. LIke building shit. I am wondering what options there are for vesc? I know I will want more power then stock and want to have the option of chucking a super flux in it maybe. I know avis spark sells all the connectors I would need and then could I just buy a Ubox and throw it into the current esc enclosure? I know I am grossly over simplifying this I am just trying to figure out if I do it myself and use the stock box instead of going and buying a GTV kit drop in kit for $500 and bc I want a project. I also don't plan on going up to a higher voltage battery so I only need a 20s esc right?
If you ever wished you could access your iPhone or Android device directly on a Windows PC, Phone Link lets you do that. But it's not for everyone.
Trying to make the most out of a small space? Here are our picks for the best 43-inch TVs, perfect for the smallest of rooms.
Want that crunchy, snackable ice without the bulky machine? GE Opal's Mini is coming soon.
Sharif Street is something of an anomaly. A Democratic state senator running for Congress, he’s angling to replace retiring Rep. Dwight Evans in a deep-blue Philadelphia seat. He’s Black, Muslim, and relatively moderate. He would not necessarily be a vocal critic of Israel in the House.
Street is walking a fine line on Israel policy, articulating views that range from moderate to evasive. That has rankled some of Philadelphia’s progressive Muslim organizers, but it may well reflect an effort to appease the city’s diverse voting blocs. Philadelphia’s large Muslim and Jewish populations don’t fall neatly on either side of issues related to Israel and Gaza. If elected, Street would be the first Muslim congressman from Pennsylvania, but his supporters and detractors alike argue that they don’t want identity politics to overshadow substantive policy debates.
Many Muslim Philadelphians “may like Street personally,” said Yusuf Abdul Hameed, a supporter of the Philadelphia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, “but they’re upset because of his lack of courage to really condemn Israel for what clearly was a genocide.” Hameed counted himself among those who like Street, but he said he’s backing his opponent, Pennsylvania state Rep. Chris Rabb, a progressive who has carved out a lane on the left by being openly critical of Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
Their competition now stands to turn Philadelphia into a testing ground, where voters have a chance to signal how much Israel and Palestine still matter to them as the Trump administration’s barrage of constant scandals, crackdowns, and excesses dominates the midterms cycle.
Street doesn’t have Israel policies on his campaign website. His stance on the issue has largely come to light through public statements he made in his former role as chair of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party after the October 7, 2023, attacks and over the course of the campaign. His current vagueness has raised questions about whether he would accept campaign funding from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee or other factions of the pro-Israel lobby.
“I recognize that there won’t be peace for the state of Israel without peace for the Palestinian people, but there won’t be peace for the Palestinian people unless there’s peace for the state of Israel at some point,” Street told the Philadelphia Inquirer last month.
Street supporter Salima Suswell, an organizer in Philadelphia’s Black Muslim community, said Street had been a leader for Muslims in the city and in the district and also spoke out on Gaza. She said Street and other Black Muslim officials can face a greater pressure to choose sides between Israel and Gaza but that she was confident in Street’s ability to listen to and act on the needs of residents in the district.
“That said, the Black Muslim community stands in solidarity with our sisters and brothers in Gaza. I fully trust that Senator Street will be a force for good in Congress, and he will fight for our communities both domestically and abroad,” she said.
Home to one of the largest Muslim populations in the country, Philadelphia has a sizable community of Black residents who converted to Islam in the 1960s, during the rise of Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam. The city is also home to many Jewish voters, including younger ones who are more likely to be critical of Israel than the older generation, as well as moderate, pro-Israel Jewish Democrats who make up a large portion of the voting bloc.
The political complexities of Philadelphia’s religious electorate could make things difficult for AIPAC, which has been searching for ways to shape midterm races this cycle without drawing too much negative attention to itself.
AIPAC has not publicly endorsed in the 3rd Congressional District race. But Street was the beneficiary of a short-lived, secret fundraising page hosted by a little-known pro-Israel group — one that AIPAC has used to direct donors to at least one other candidate this cycle.
The fundraising page, hosted by the Pro-Israel Network, urged donors to contribute to Street’s campaign. The page was live until late last year, when it came to the attention of Philadelphia’s progressive circles and suddenly vanished. The Pro-Israel Network is not officially affiliated with AIPAC. But as AIPAC has adopted a quieter role in elections this cycle, the Pro-Israel Network is one of several proxies the more prominent group has used to highlight preferred candidates for its donors.
Street’s campaign said in a statement to The Intercept that they weren’t aware of the page until it was brought to their attention and that they didn’t seek the group’s endorsement or receive any campaign contributions through the page.
“Sharif is not seeking AIPAC’s endorsement, and we weren’t aware of the Pro-Israel Network page until folks showed it to us. We didn’t coordinate with that group and haven’t received any funding from it,” Street’s campaign spokesperson Anthony Campisi said.
Beth Miller, the political director for Jewish Voice for Peace Action, said she hopes the Street campaign will keep it that way.
“Pro-genocide groups like AIPAC are directly at odds with what Democratic voters want. The overwhelming majority of Democratic voters have made it clear that they want the U.S. to stop funding Israel’s atrocities against Palestinians,” Miller said. “No Democratic candidate should be taking a dollar — or any other kind of support — from groups that are so at odds with the party’s own base.”
According to Ahmet Selim Tekelioglu, the executive director of CAIR-Philadelphia, many in the Philadelphia community view the issue of Israel and Palestine as a window into broader debates, and they see reason to be wary of politicians who waver from moral stances.
“The Israel–Palestine issue is not only important as a foreign policy matter, but also as an issue that intersects with rights, with freedoms, with how we stand up for oppressed people in our own communities in the U.S.,” Tekelioglu said. He said Philadelphians “are now asking for more, and are coming closer to an accountability politics point of view.”
As a nonprofit, CAIR-Philadelphia cannot endorse a candidate, but Tekelioglu said he’s volunteering for Rabb in his personal capacity. The national political arm, CAIR Action, plans to endorse in the race but has not yet announced its pick.
Hameed, who has been a member of the Nation of Islam since the 1980s, said it would be nice to have a Muslim representative in Congress, but sharing race or religion with a candidate wasn’t enough to earn his vote. He criticized attempts to make excuses for Black Democrats who have taken support from AIPAC, like Reps. Hakeem Jeffries and Ritchie Torres of New York and Glenn Ivey of Maryland.
“These people support Israel, and they’re getting money from AIPAC, and they’re complicit with genocide,” Hameed said. “They would turn on them in a dime.”
During a candidate forum in December, Street was asked whether he would support legislation to block arms sales to Israel. He said peace and security relied on getting humanitarian aid into Gaza and rebuilding, but that his allotted response time wasn’t enough to answer the question or address such a complicated issue.
“If we’re gonna do this topic justice, talking about peace in the Middle East is not really a one-minute answer,” Street said. “Catchy soundbites sound good, but they don’t save lives.”
“Talking about peace in the Middle East is not really a one-minute answer.”
While several candidates criticized Israel’s destruction in Gaza, Rabb was the only one of the five candidates present to state specifically that he would support such legislation. During another forum in January, Rabb was also clear on his stance on the leading pro-Israel lobbying group, saying, “Fuck AIPAC.”
Street and Rabb are running in a crowded field of more than 10 candidates vying to replace Evans in the May 19 primary. Among them are state Rep. Morgan Cephas, Dr. David Oxman, Dr. Ala Stanford, climate adviser under former President Joe Biden Pablo McConnie-Saad, and real estate developer and nonprofit leader Isaiah Martin. Street is leading the pack in fundraising, with more than $700,000 raised so far. Oxman has raised $497,000 — including $175,000 he gave to his own campaign. Stanford has raised $467,000, and Rabb has raised $384,000, ahead of Cephas, who’s raised $241,000.
Muslims United PAC, a national political action committee that has endorsed candidates including Reps. Rashida Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Summer Lee, endorsed Rabb over Street, mainly because of Rabb’s explicit criticism of the genocide in Gaza. The group declined to comment on the race.
In a statement to The Intercept, Rabb said he couldn’t speculate on who was backing his opponents but that he would never take money from AIPAC. “I have not nor would I even consider meeting with AIPAC because I view them as a racist, extremist organization,” Rabb said.
“Israel and Gaza — and Palestine, more broadly — deserve the opportunity to engage in peaceful self-determination without U.S. military domination preempting that fundamental right. I support a permanent and immediate ceasefire including release of hostages, recognition that a genocide has occurred in Gaza, and oppose export or use of U.S. weapons in ways that violate U.S. or international law,” he said. Rabb is also running on rejecting corporate PAC money, fighting the influence of billionaires in politics, and abolishing Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
The Pro-Israel network funding page, a sign that the lobby has its eyes on the race, is a point of contention among critics who say AIPAC shouldn’t be getting involved in races at all, let alone one in a district which Democrats are largely to the group’s left on policy toward Israel and Gaza.
“AIPAC is a red line,” said Saleem Holbrook, executive director of Straight Ahead, an abolitionist activist group in Philadelphia. The group’s affiliated public interest law firm, the Abolitionist Law Center, advocates for criminal justice reform has worked with Street on state reform efforts in Pennsylvania and cannot endorse in the race due to its nonprofit status.
“There’s no way that our organization or many progressive organizations are going to back any candidate that takes AIPAC support,” Holbrook said. “Because when you look at AIPAC’s track record, all AIPAC has done has taken out Black progressive politicians or candidates that had the interest of the Black community in their heart.”
Suswell, the Street supporter, agreed that the race should be about policies that support the community, pointing to affordable housing, quality education, and public safety. “This should not be about identity politics,” she said. “This is about track record. Senator Street has an impeccable track record in his district and across the Muslim community.”
Progressive groups have been slowly endorsing Rabb, and two sources with knowledge of the race said it’s only a matter of time before they consolidate behind him. Rabb has been endorsed by Philadelphia’s chapter of Democratic Socialists of America, Sunrise Movement’s national and Philadelphia chapters, One PA, and Mt. Airy Democrats.
Both Street and Rabb are actively seeking the endorsement from the Working Families Party, which is planning to announce its pick in the next few weeks. So are CAIR Action and A New Policy.
While Street may not have the backing of leading progressive groups in Pennsylvania, he does have good relationships with their members. That dynamic is one reason progressive groups have taken their time to make endorsements in a race pitting their allies against one another, according to one source close to the race.
Street is endorsed by the Philadelphia Democratic Party, the Muslim League of Voters of the Delaware Valley, and several of Philadelphia’s powerful labor unions including Philadelphia’s powerful Building and Construction Trades Council, which encompasses several local shops. He’s also backed by former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, Philadelphia Sheriff Rochelle Bilal, advocates for gun violence prevention and several prominent leaders for LGBTQ rights.
Street’s campaign pointed to his work advancing religious rights for Muslims in the district, helping to expand healthcare for Pennsylvanians, leading the fight to legalize recreational cannabis and reform the criminal justice system, and protect voting rights. “He’s going to bring that same drive to Washington, where he will be relentlessly focused on lowering costs, expanding health care access, reforming our criminal justice system, and holding Trump accountable,” said Campisi, his spokesperson.
Update: February 18, 2026, 11:54 a.m. ET
This story has been updated to note that as a nonprofit, the Abolitionist Law Center cannot endorse in the race.
The post Philadelphia Could Elect Its First Muslim Congressman. He’s Not Sure Where He Stands on Israel. appeared first on The Intercept.
I am somebody because the reverend told me I was. And I believed him.
Death of Briton along with Polish citizen near La Grave comes four days after fatal avalanche at Val d’Isère
A third British man has been killed in an avalanche in the French Alps.
The man had been skiing with a group of four others when the avalanche struck near the resort town of La Grave on Tuesday morning, local media reported.
Continue reading...Lindsey Vonn's devastating injury when her skis didn't come off has put a spotlight on bindings, which hold boots to skis and are some of the oldest technology in the sport.
For months, President Donald Trump has railed against Latin American narcoterrorists flooding the United States with “lethal poison.” He has used the scourge of drug trafficking as a rationale for dozens of military strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean and eastern Pacific Ocean, which have left more than 140 people dead.
Last month, Trump cheered a military assault by U.S. forces that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, and brought them to the U.S. to face charges related to cocaine trafficking. Maduro, Trump said, led a “vicious cartel” that “flooded our nation with lethal poison responsible for the deaths of countless Americans.”
But when it comes to former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who was tried and convicted in the U.S. in 2024 and sentenced to 45 years in prison for taking bribes and allowing traffickers to export more than 400 tons of cocaine to the U.S., Trump has taken a decidedly softer tone.
Hernández, he said, has been “treated very harshly and unfairly” — so unfairly that on Dec. 1, Trump pardoned the former president after he served less than four of those 45 years.
But the federal government’s magnanimity did not end there. On the day he was to be released, records show, Hernández had an immigration detainer — a request for law enforcement agencies to hold noncitizens for pickup by Immigration and Customs Enforcement — in place.
Here, too, the Trump’s administration’s treatment of Hernández differed from its public objectives. Other noncitizens caught up in recent immigration sweeps — the vast majority of whom do not have criminal records — have faced swift efforts to deport them, even to countries where they may face threats. But in Hernández’s case, the Federal Bureau of Prisons scrambled to get his detainer removed so he could walk free.
And Hernández did not just walk out of the prison. Despite persistent budget and staffing shortages, prison officials paid a specialized tactical team overtime to drive Hernández from a high-security facility in West Virginia to the famed five-star Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York City, according to records and three people familiar with the situation. Before he left, Hernández was allowed to use the captain’s government phone to talk to the federal prison system’s deputy director, Joshua Smith, who was convicted in a drug trafficking conspiracy before Trump pardoned him in 2021.
“The [prisons bureau] administration rolled out the red carpet for him,” said Joe Rojas, a retired prison worker and former union leader who has been speaking to the media on behalf of staff who fear reprisals for doing so since bureau leaders stopped recognizing the union last year. “The staff are disgusted.”
Renato Stabile, the court-appointed lawyer representing Hernández — who has long maintained his innocence — said his client’s treatment was appropriate.
“It would be particularly cruel to grant somebody a pardon and have them released from prison — only to have them immediately shipped back to a place like Honduras where they would’ve immediately arrested him or he would’ve been killed on sight by criminal elements that wanted to do him harm,” Stabile told ProPublica. Through his attorney, Hernández declined to comment.
ICE referred all questions to the White House, which responded with a link to a November social media post announcing the President’s intent to pardon Hernández. Smith didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment. A BOP spokesperson said in an emailed statement that the bureau does not discuss conditions of confinement or security procedures and that employee standards of conduct prohibit staff from giving any prisoners preferential treatment. “Violators may be subject to disciplinary actions, including removal from federal service and criminal prosecution,” the statement said.
The investigation that ultimately ensnared Hernández stretched across several U.S. presidencies. Despite looming legal trouble stateside and widespread allegations of corruption in his country, Hernández — often known by his initials, JOH — was seen as a key U.S. ally under the Obama and first Trump administrations, ostensibly because of his apparent willingness to help tackle drug trafficking and migration issues.
In 2012, as president of Honduras’ National Congress, he famously pushed through a legal change allowing for the extradition of accused criminals to the U.S. — a reform that his attorney pointed out was ironically later used to extradite him.
But in 2018, less than halfway through Hernández’s second term as president, the Drug Enforcement Administration arrested his younger brother, former Honduran congressman Tony Hernández, in Miami for a series of weapons and drug trafficking charges. A jury found him guilty the following year at a Manhattan federal trial in which Emil Bove — the federal prosecutor who would later become Trump’s personal defense lawyer — gave a closing argument replete with allegations implicating the Honduran president in criminal schemes. (Bove could not be reached for comment.)
Although the sprawling criminal case focused on narcotrafficking concerns, Juan Orlando Hernández’s political career was fraught in other ways. Dana Frank, a University of California, Santa Cruz history professor who studies Honduras, described him as a “repressive criminal on multiple fronts.”
While in congress in 2012, he led a “technical coup” in overthrowing the supreme court, she said. Then, he ran for reelection to the presidency in 2017 “in complete violation of the constitution,” she said. Amid the resulting protests, security forces shot and killed at least 16 people, including two children, among other human rights abuses, a United Nations report found. Hernández has said little publicly, but his government told the U.N. it would look into those cases. His party has tweeted that it has an “unwavering commitment to democracy and freedom.”
Weeks after Hernández left office in 2022, he was arrested at his home in Honduras and extradited to the U.S. to face drug trafficking and weapons charges. Prosecutors said he funded his political career with millions of dollars he received from “violent drug-trafficking organizations” in exchange for allowing them to “move mountains of cocaine” out of the country.
Stabile told ProPublica the case against his client was always a weak one, relying heavily on the word of unreliable drug traffickers with outlandish stories and little in the way of hard evidence.
Still, the government’s case was enough to convince a jury to convict Hernández after just over eight hours of deliberations, and in June 2024 he was sentenced to 45 years in federal prison. Afterward, Stabile and his client began working on an appeal, which at that point appeared to be Hernández’s only shot at freedom.
Early last year, prison officials transferred Hernández out of the federal detention center in Brooklyn, which largely holds pretrial detainees, and sent him to the high-security Hazelton penitentiary in West Virginia. Dubbed “Misery Mountain,” the notoriously violent prison is the same facility where mob boss James “Whitey” Bulger was beaten to death in his cell hours after his arrival in 2018.
Yet prison sources said Hernández seemed to do his time quietly, eventually landing in the coveted housing unit set aside for a therapeutic program used to treat drug addiction, mental illness and “criminal thinking errors.”
But after Trump returned to office last year, a much quicker route to freedom suddenly seemed possible: a pardon.
Like Trump, Hernández was a member of his country’s right-wing party. And, like Trump, he believed he’d been targeted by leftist forces. He also had other reasons to be hopeful.
During his time in office, Hernández had championed the creation of special economic zones that could set their own taxes and regulations, a move that benefitted the Trump-aligned Silicon Valley titans who invested in them, including Peter Thiel and Marc Andreessen. But the law was repealed by his successor, center-left party Libre member Xiomara Castro, putting plans for the zones in jeopardy. (Andreessen responded to a request for comment with a link to a social media post disavowing any involvement in the pardon. Thiel could not be reached for comment, though he has previously said he was not involved either.)
Longtime political operative Roger Stone also suggested in a blog post co-authored with conservative activist Shane Trejo in January 2025 that pardoning Hernández could have political benefits for Trump. In the post, Trejo and Stone — who was pardoned by Trump five years ago after he was convicted of obstructing a congressional investigation into Russian election interference — urged the president to “crush socialism and save a freedom city in Honduras” with a “well-timed pardon” that “could be the final death blow to [Xiomara] Castro” in the 2025 elections.
Eventually, Stone took on a more direct role in advocating for clemency when he gave Trump a four-page letter Hernández had written to the U.S. president, asking for a pardon and making the case that his conviction was a “political persecution” by the Biden administration. In a text message with ProPublica, Stone said he had received the letter from a journalist who’d gotten it from the family. He emphasized repeatedly that he was not compensated for his involvement.
“I read the letter and then did my own research and elected to send the letter to President Trump,” Stone wrote. “I actually had no contact with JOH or anyone in his family until after the pardon.”
On Nov. 28, two days before the Honduran presidential election, Trump announced his intent to pardon Hernández. Stabile said he didn’t learn the news until Ana García Carías, the former president’s wife, called him in tears:
“He’s letting him out! Trump’s pardoning Juan Orlando!”
She sent Stabile a screenshot from Truth Social, where Trump had written that he would grant him a “Full and Complete Pardon.”
The decision met with bipartisan backlash from lawmakers. Sen. Tim Kaine, a Democrat from Virginia, called the unexpected reprieve “disgusting and incomprehensible,” while Sen. Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican, described it as “horrible optics.”
In his post, Trump also urged Hondurans to vote for the National Party candidate, Nasry “Tito” Asfura, who was trailing in multiple polls, adding what to observers of Latin American politics was a thinly veiled threat: If Asfura did not win, Trump said, the U.S. would “not be throwing good money after bad” in support of Honduras.
The message was obvious, experts said. “That pardon was a clear green light for the National Party to manipulate the vote,” one former high-ranking U.S. diplomat told ProPublica.
In the end, Asfura narrowly edged out center-right candidate Salvador Nasralla and handily defeated the incumbent Libre party. But the count was plagued by delays, reports of voter intimidation and allegations of fraud, and Nasralla later formally challenged the outcome.
On Dec. 1 — while the votes were still being counted in Honduras — Trump posted again on Truth Social in support of Asfura. “Looks like Honduras is trying to change the results of their Presidential Election. If they do, there will be hell to pay!” The former president’s pardon officially went through that same day.
That evening at Hazelton, after the prisoners had already been fed dinner, corrections officers showed up at the housing unit to get Hernández. Smith, the bureau’s deputy director, wanted to speak with him. The newly pardoned inmate was escorted to the captain’s office, where he used the captain’s phone to talk to Smith, his fellow pardon recipient, according to a source familiar with the situation. The move shocked current and former prison staff.
Hernández was also allowed to talk with his family, who then phoned Stabile and told him the good news. Within the hour, Stabile said, he got a call from Smith, inquiring about a release plan.
“I’m in Manhattan and he’s in West Virginia,” Stabile told Smith. “It would take me six hours to come pick him up. Can you transport him?”
Because most inmate releases are done during the daytime, prison staff had to be called back in to handle the paperwork and logistics of freeing an inmate. But there was a problem: Hernández had an immigration hold.
When noncitizens are convicted of crimes in the U.S., immigration officials routinely sign detainers asking prisons and jails to turn them over to ICE for possible deportation proceedings following their release date. In Hernández’s case, records show immigration agents sent the prison notice of a detainer in February 2025, two months after he was sentenced in court.
For several hours on the night of his release, prison officials scrambled to get the detainer removed so he could walk free, according to several sources familiar with the situation.
“It’s definitely special treatment. That’s not normally the way it goes,” said Lena Graber, a senior staff attorney at the Immigrant Legal Resource Center. “Most people with drug convictions would never get their ICE detainer removed just because the conviction was pardoned.”
Records show immigration officials lifted the detainer on Hernández just after 11 p.m.
Typically, according to a source familiar with the situation, prisoners who are released from Hazelton when there’s inclement weather or when it’s too late in the day to catch a plane or bus home are put up at the Microtel Inn and Suites at the bottom of the hill. It’s a two-star hotel where a room costs $69 per night. In the morning, they’re given a ticket and sent on their way.
But for Hernández, prison officials activated a four-man tactical team, paying at least three of them overtime to drive him to the luxury hotel in Manhattan, according to government records and law enforcement sources. A standard room there costs more than $1,000 per night. Stabile declined to comment on where Hernández stayed but said the government did not pay for it.
It was another move that stunned prisons bureau staff. One official called it “absolutely fucking nuts,” adding, “I don’t even think that’s ever been done, not just for a pardoned inmate but for anyone who’s been released.” Another agreed that it was unprecedented: “Usually, they get a shitty bus ride or a cheap plane ticket. They don’t get the carpet rolled out for them.”
As of now, the former president’s whereabouts are unknown. A few days after his release, Hernández said in Spanish in a social media post that he had “no intention of returning to Honduras” immediately because he and his family would be in “grave danger given the evident persecution and the weaponization of justice against me.”
If Hernández is in the U.S., it’s unclear what his immigration status is.
Meanwhile, Honduran officials have issued a warrant for Hernández’s arrest over years-old fraud allegations and, in a social media post, asked Interpol and other international allies to honor it. But a law enforcement official familiar with the situation told ProPublica there is currently no pending Interpol red notice asking for law enforcement to detain him. The only request the network received to issue such a notice, the official said, was declined while Hernández was still in prison.
The post Amid Mass ICE Arrests, Trump Pardon Recipient Juan Orlando Hernández Given Special Treatment appeared first on ProPublica.
Some critics and physicians said Elizabeth Bruenig’s account of a mother confronting a child’s death from measles felt misleading once they learned the story was reported fiction.
The warning on the government website was stark. Some products and remedies claiming to treat or cure autism are being marketed deceptively and can be harmful. Among them: chelating agents, hyperbaric oxygen therapies, chlorine dioxide and raw camel milk.
Now that advisory is gone.
The Food and Drug Administration pulled the page down late last year. The federal Department of Health and Human Services told ProPublica in a statement that it retired the webpage “during a routine clean up of dated content at the end of 2025,” noting the page had not been updated since 2019. (An archived version of the page is still available online.)
Some advocates for people with autism don’t understand that decision. “It may be an older page, but those warnings are still necessary,” said Zoe Gross, a director at the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, a nonprofit policy organization run by and for autistic people. “People are still being preyed on by these alternative treatments like chelation and chlorine dioxide. Those can both kill people.”
Chlorine dioxide is a chemical compound that has been used as an industrial disinfectant, a bleaching agent and an ingredient in mouthwash, though with the warning it shouldn’t be swallowed. A ProPublica story examined Sen. Ron Johnson’s endorsement of a new book by Dr. Pierre Kory, which describes the chemical as a “remarkable molecule” that, when diluted and ingested, “works to treat everything from cancer and malaria to autism and COVID.”
Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican who has amplified anti-scientific claims around COVID-19, supplied a blurb for the cover of the book, “The War on Chlorine Dioxide.” He called it “a gripping tale of corruption and courage that will open eyes and prompt serious questions.”

The lack of clear warning from the government on questionable autism treatments is in line with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s rejection of conventional science on autism and vaccine safety. Last spring, Kennedy brought into the agency a vaccine critic who’d promoted treating autistic children with the puberty-blocking drug Lupron. And in January, Kennedy recast an advisory panel on autism, appointing people who have championed the use of pressurized chambers to deliver pure oxygen to children, as well as some who support infusions to draw out heavy metals, a process known as chelation.
Kennedy has embraced various unconventional measures in his fight against what he views as a government system corrupted by special interests. In October 2024, shortly before Donald Trump won the presidency again, Kennedy vowed on social media that the FDA’s “war on public health” was about to end.
“This includes its aggressive suppression of psychedelics, peptides, stem cells, raw milk, hyperbaric therapies, chelating compounds, ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine, vitamins, clean foods, sunshine, exercise, nutraceuticals and anything else that advances human health and can’t be patented by Pharma,” he wrote.
At his confirmation hearing, Kennedy praised Trump for his wide search for a COVID-19 remedy in his first term, which Kennedy said included vaccines, various drugs and “even chlorine dioxide.”
The FDA, dating back to at least 2010, has urged consumers not to purchase or drink chlorine dioxide, frequently marketed as a Miracle Mineral Solution, because “the solution, when mixed, develops into a dangerous bleach which has caused serious and potentially life-threatening side effects.”
The BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal) has previously reported on the removal of the FDA warnings page. The lack of a warning has also received attention in the Telegram channel Chlorine Dioxide Testimonies.
“Don’t forget the FDA quietly removed warnings about Chlorine Dioxide on their website earlier this year,” read a forwarded post in late December, to which over 100 people reacted with an applauding emoji.
The contributor added a wish for the future: that Kennedy and the FDA commissioner undertake official studies exploring chlorine dioxide’s effects in battling cancer. There currently are no warnings about chlorine dioxide on a consumer page on the FDA website. And HHS did not answer ProPublica’s questions about whether the agency endorses chlorine dioxide as a treatment for autism.
In his book, Kory also expresses optimism about what Kennedy will do. “What I really want is for the FDA to lift its restrictions on studying chlorine dioxide as a therapeutic,” he wrote. “That’s something I’m hoping might finally be possible under this new administration, especially with RFK Jr. as head of Health and Human Services.”
Many autism researchers and advocates have been wary of Kennedy due to his long-held stance that vaccines cause autism. Peer-reviewed studies conducted worldwide, published over decades in leading scientific journals, have rejected such a link.
Under Kennedy, however, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention overhauled its website on vaccines and autism to assert that studies supporting a link have been ignored by health authorities.
The CDC page retained the headline “Vaccines do not cause Autism” but added an asterisk noting that the phrase remained “due to an agreement with the chair of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee.” In order to win confirmation to his post, Kennedy had promised Sen. Bill Cassidy, a physician, that he would not remove the statement.
Kennedy’s replacement of 21 members who were part of an interagency coordinating committee on autism provides another glimpse into where he wants to take federal policy.
The committee provides advice and recommendations on policies, research and services. It now includes people who have promoted unproven remedies for autism, including suramin, a drug developed to treat sleeping sickness in Africa caused by bites from a tsetse fly; hyperbaric oxygen therapy, typically used for decompression sickness and tissue damage; controversial language techniques; and chelation therapy.
A 5-year-old autistic boy died in Pennsylvania in 2005 after a chelation session. Another 5-year-old boy died in Michigan last year in a hyperbaric chamber fire; his parents wanted him treated for an attention disorder.
The Autistic Self Advocacy Network published a statement on its website saying that the newly reconfigured HHS autism panel is now “overwhelmingly made up of anti-vaccine advocates and peddlers of dangerous quack autism ‘treatments.’”
HHS told ProPublica in an emailed statement that such claims are “false” and that the new members are experienced in research and clinical care. “They are committed to advancing innovation in autism research, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention to align federal policy with current gold-standard science,” HHS said.
Dr. Paul Offit, a pediatrician and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, told ProPublica that Kennedy’s removal of committee members with solid expertise in favor of people who support alternative medicine shows that the secretary is “perfectly willing to embrace bogus therapies.”
Another leading expert, Yale University professor emeritus Dr. Fred Volkmar, who edited the “Handbook of Autism and Pervasive Developmental Disorders,” a definitive guide, said early diagnosis and proven treatments have led to dramatic improvements for people with autism. “These days, probably 70% to 75% of children on the autism spectrum will grow up to be fully independent or semi-independent adults.”
Sadly, however, he said, some parents fall prey to promises of easy and fast cures, when there are none. One of the dangers, he said, is that children are drawn away from treatments that are shown to be beneficial.
“It’s a shame that the federal government is not being more helpful to parents in understanding what does and doesn’t work,” Volkmar said.
The post Chlorine Dioxide, Raw Camel Milk: The FDA No Longer Warns Against These and Other Ineffective Autism Treatments appeared first on ProPublica.
In New York, Philadelphia and elsewhere, elected Democrats are taking steps to try to limit immigration crackdowns like the one winding down in Minneapolis.
In a small double-blind clinical trial, a single intravenous dose of DMT produced rapid and clinically meaningful reductions in symptoms of major depressive disorder within a week, with effects lasting up to three months in some patients. "Unlike psilocybin and lysergic acid diethylamide ( LSD), whose effects can last for hours, intravenous DMT has a half-life of around five minutes," notes ScienceAlert. "Its psychedelic effects are correspondingly brief, potentially making it more practical to administer in clinical settings." From the report: "A single dose of DMT with psychotherapeutic support produced a rapid, significant reduction in depressive symptoms, sustained up to three months," writes a team led by neuroscientists David Erritzoe and Tommaso Barba of Imperial College London. [...] They recruited 34 participants with major depression and divided them into two groups of 17 for a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. In the first stage of the trial, one group received an intravenous dose of DMT, while the other received an active placebo. Neither the researchers nor the participants were informed which participants received the DMT. The doses took around 10 minutes to administer, and a therapist sat with each participant to ensure comfort and safety while the psychedelic effects were active, remaining silent throughout the treatment. The treatment was generally well tolerated. Most side effects were mild to moderate, and included nausea, temporary anxiety, and pain at the injection site. No serious adverse events related to the treatment were reported, although brief increases in heart rate and blood pressure were observed immediately after dosing. In the second, open-label stage, two weeks after the first dose, all participants were given the opportunity to receive a dose of DMT. Participants were assessed before and at intervals after each dose using the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale. Just a week after the first dose, participants who had received DMT had improved scores compared to the placebo group, and improvements were sustained during follow-up assessments. Two weeks after the first dose, the participants who received DMT scored about seven points lower, on average, than those who received a placebo. On this commonly used clinical scale, a drop of that size is generally considered a meaningful reduction in symptom severity. There was no significant difference between patients who received one or two doses of DMT, suggesting a single dose may be sufficient. These effects persisted for up to three months, and some patients remained in remission for at least six months following the treatment. The findings have been published in Nature Medicine.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Why Should Delaware Care?
In December, the Delaware’s education secretary announced that she was placing the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence under formal review due to enrollment concerns. It marked marking the second time in two years that the charter school had been placed under formal review. On Tuesday, state officials was recommended that the school’s charter be revoked.
Delaware education officials on Tuesday recommended that the state close a Georgetown charter school due to its persistent struggles with low enrollment.
If approved, the closure of the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence (BASSE) would be the first for a Delaware charter school in seven years and the first to be closed by state regulators in a decade. It would also leave Sussex County with just two charter schools, compared to six in Kent County and 15 in New Castle County.
In 2016, the state Board of Education revoked the charter of the Delaware STEM Academy. In recent years though, most shuttered charter schools have voluntarily closed due to enrollment or finance concerns, although they have often come under pressure from regulators.
Charter schools are publicly funded but independently operated by their own board of directors. They are not eligible to receive taxpayer dollars for facilities and capital projects, but do receive state funding for each enrolled student.
The tuition-free schools feature specialized missions or academic curriculums that differ from traditional public schools, and that requires them to maintain certain enrollment levels and reporting duties to the state Department of Education, which issues their founding charters.
The closure recommendation from the Charter School Accountability Committee now goes before Delaware Education Secretary Cindy Marten, who will announce a final decision about whether to revoke BASSE’s charter of the on March 19.
If she does revoke the charter, the school – which in recent months has served about 120 sixth through ninth graders – would close by the end of this academic year.
On Tuesday, a spokeswoman for Marten said the secretary will make her decision after considering “the full record, which will include public input collected at the upcoming public hearing,” on March 9.
Get Involved
The public hearing about the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence is scheduled for 5 p.m. on March 9 at the William A. Carter Partnership Center at DelTech in Georgetown.
In a statement to Spotlight Delaware, the school said it did not agree with Tuesday’s decision and is committed to remaining open.
But “we understand it was the decision (the committee) felt they needed to make with the information they had,” the school stated.
Named after the prominent civil rights attorney who was born in nearby Milton, the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence was founded in 2018.
The school’s inaugural academic year did not start until the fall of 2024, in part because it had struggled to attract enough students, according to a 2023 report from Delaware Public Media.
Among the founders of the school was Delaware lawmaker Rep. Alonna Berry (D-Milton). She declined to comment on Tuesday about the charter school committee’s recommendation. In an interview in 2021 with Delmarva Life, Berry said the school carried a service-learning mission, in which students would learn by going out into their communities.
She also noted then that the school had received a $1 million grant from the du Pont family’s Longwood Foundation to help finance the construction of their facility in Georgetown, west of U.S. Route 113.
Editor’s note: The Longwood Foundation has also funded Spotlight Delaware.
During the tense, three-hour-long meeting on Tuesday, charter school accountability committee members expressed particular concern about the school’s ability to grow, or even maintain enrollment levels.
Speaking to school staff directly, committee member Brook Hughes noted that “every single snapshot that we’ve taken of your enrollment has decreased.”
The committee members also discussed a recent survey of existing students’ families that showed about half of them were not certain they would return to the school for the next academic year.

In response, school staff explained that they struggled to convince families to respond to the survey. They argued that an announcement from Marten in December that the school would be placed under a formal review caused some parents to feel uncertain about their kids’ future at the school.
The state describes the formal review process as a “lawful investigation of a charter school” that could include on-site visits, records inspections and interviews of parents, and staff.
The subsequent review involved public meetings that included Tuesday’s gathering, where frustration was expressed by both members of the committee by school staff who were in attendance.
Toward the end of the meeting, Charter Schools Network Executive Director Kendall Massett spoke openly about the visible frustration while noting that authorizing and regulating charter schools “is not easy.”
“It’s not supposed to be because we have children that we are responsible for as authorizers,” said Massett, who serves as a non-voting member of the Charter School Accountability Committee.
The post State committee recommends closure of Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
After State Senator Dave Lawson (R-Marydel) announced last month that he would not seek re-election later this fall, two first-time candidates have tossed their hats in the ring to succeed the long-serving Kent County Republican. The upcoming matchup will be the first contested election for the seat since Lawson first won in 2010.
The brewing political battle to replace a long-serving senator from Kent County could become a political barometer that shows where voters in rural Delaware stand today.
State Sen. Dave Lawson’s (R-Marydel) announcement last month that he will not seek re-election later this fall opened up Delaware’s 15th Senate District to new representation in the General Assembly for the first time in more than 15 years.
In a video announcing his retirement, the 80-year-old lawmaker threw his support behind Republican newcomer Emily Thompson, calling her an “awesome lady,” and a “true servant.”
Lawson’s endorsement will likely carry Thompson, a program administrator for the state’s Division of Public Health, far in the western Kent County district – long a Republican stronghold. Since unseating a Democratic incumbent in 2010, Lawson ran unopposed in each of his two re-election campaigns.
But a Democratic challenger with institutional connections – Nisha Lodhavia – has already tossed her hat in the ring, setting up a contested election in the district for the first time in more than 15 years.
Lodhavia, a member of the University of Delaware’s Board of Trustees, announced her candidacy on the steps of Legislative Hall in January. She was joined by a slew of Kent County Democrats.
Senate District 15, which spans the length of western Kent County, covers towns including Felton, Marydel and Harrington. With both a Democrat and a Republican now in the race, this year’s election could be the first real litmus test of the district’s political leaning since boundaries were redrawn following the 2020 census.
As of this month, the district is home to nearly 40,000 registered voters. Of those voters, just less than 29% are registered Democrats. Nearly 36% are registered Republicans, and the rest are not affiliated with a political party.
Lodhavia, a retired Delaware Technical Community College professor, has already raked in more than $16,000 in donations, according to her most recent campaign finance report.
The report includes campaign contributions from Nov. 10, 2025, through the end of last year. Although Lodhavia did not formally file to run for office until January, she was required to submit a report because she created a candidate committee last November in anticipation of her run, said a spokesperson for the Delaware Department of Elections.
In comparison, Lawson raised nearly $25,500 between April and October of 2010 when he first ran for the SD 15 seat – or more than $38,000 when accounting for inflation.
Unless she faces a primary race, Thompson’s finances will likely not be publicly available until mid-October, when candidates across the state are required to submit their 30-day general election reports.
In an interview with Spotlight Delaware, Lodhavia said her vision for the future of the 15th District includes investments in education, health care, small business, and making agriculture a “top priority.”
“And woven throughout all of that,” Lodhavia said, “is affordability.”
Though she has not sought elected office before, Lodhavia said she realized recently that her resume – from board service to volunteer work – has prepared her for it.
A self-described moderate Democrat, Lodhavia said her party affiliation was not a deterrent from choosing to run for State Senate. The issues at the heart of her campaign, she said, are not partisan. And making them so, she added, would only act as a roadblock to finding solutions.
“I feel like the time is now because my district needs change,” she said. “And I’m here for it.”
Lodhavia said she plans to embark on a listening tour across the district in the coming weeks to ensure she gets face time with as many voters as possible across all pockets of the district.
When Lawson announced his plans to retire at the end of this year’s legislative session, he said it was important to “step out of the way” for the next generation of political leaders.
One of those people, Lawson said in his announcement video, is Thompson.
“I think she will carry on, or work even harder, and be more successful in the 15th senatorial district than I,” Lawson said.

The praise was not lost on Thompson. In an interview with Spotlight Delaware, she said Lawson has been “an incredible mentor.”
She explained that she had met the senator about six months before she officially filed to run in January. She expressed her interest in being his successor, and the pair began attending community events together so she could better “understand the political landscape.”
Through that work, Thompson said she has homed in on improving education and preserving the district’s agricultural community as two of her top priorities.
Thompson previously worked in child welfare, and now she oversees Delaware’s home visiting programs for young families through the state’s Division of Public Health. That work, she said, showed her just how few resources are available to children and their families.
If elected, Thompson said she wants to ensure families in Delaware schools understand what resources are available to them, and ensure that taxpayer dollars are being used effectively and transparently to do so.
Along with education, Thompson, who grew up on her family’s horse farm, said she is passionate about preserving the agricultural footprint of the 15th district. If farmers are not supported, she said, more farmland will inevitably become housing developments or solar farms.
“If we don’t have policies and legislation in place, that financially supports farmers and makes it advantageous for them to continue farming … they obviously have to look at other avenues,” she said.
While Thompson and Lodhavia are currently the only two candidates running to succeed Lawson, the possibility of either woman facing a primary election challenge is still on the table. The deadline for all prospective candidates to officially file to run for office is July 14.
The post Political newcomers vie to succeed Lawson in State Senate appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
A large shark was caught on camera for the first time in Antarctica's waters, surprising researchers. "There's a general rule of thumb that you don't get sharks in Antarctica," one said.
FTSE 100 company reports 6% fall in annual profits weeks after collapse of $260bn merger with Rio Tinto
Glencore is to give $2bn (£1.47bn) to shareholders after a turbulent year in which profits slumped and talks collapsed over a blockbuster $260bn merger with the fellow mining company Rio Tinto.
The FTSE 100 company announced the payout on Wednesday despite reporting that annual profits slipped 6% on the previous year to $13.5bn.
Continue reading...Do AI summits work? Expert comment jon.wallace
The AI Impact Summit in New Delhi is ambitious – but little progress on international governance is expected. Smaller and regional gatherings are a better prospect to develop the solutions the world needs.
This week, AI policymakers, experts and developers descend on New Delhi for the world’s biggest ever gathering dedicated to the technology – the AI Impact Summit. Indian government officials estimate a quarter of a million people will join the conference and expo to discuss how to build and govern AI – Chatham House’s Digital Society Programme among them.
The summit has sky-high ambitions, and potentially great value, bringing together high-level decision-makers alongside ground-up tech builders and experts under one roof (or ten). Useful, important conversations will be had.
But it will likely fall short of producing any meaningful international governance agreement. It is too crowded a platform, with too many agendas.
To really make progress on AI governance, policymakers, developers, scientists and civil society actors interested in better governance should throw their weight behind developing solutions in smaller settings – with the opportunity to scale up them using major gatherings later.
The AI Impact Summit takes place at a crucial moment. Institutions of global governance are under significant strain, as commitments to shared principles and the rule of international law give way to transactionalism.
All the while, a global AI struggle is intensifying. The US and China have the world’s most powerful tech and without their buy-in, any ambitions to reach a global agreement on AI governance are a non-starter. But US and Chinese labs are racing to the frontiers, intent on maintaining an advantage. That means AI capabilities are advancing rapidly, as is the magnitude of risk.
Recently, global scientists cautioned that real-world evidence for severe AI risks is on the rise – ranging from potential cyberattacks to biological weapons development.
In this context, other countries feel compelled to explore alternative partnerships, seeking to develop AI in way that promotes their safety and sovereignty – an approach underscored by calls for middle power solidarity like those made by Mark Carney at the World Economic Forum last month.
There has never been a harder time for global cooperation on AI governance. Nor has there ever been such urgency to figure it out. Recent years have seen valiant efforts from the UN, the G20, G7, the OECD and EU. In 2023, the UK convened the first AI summit at Bletchley Park.
Each subsequent international gathering has pushed the needle forward. But the limited, non-binding, principles-based efforts at governance made so far shrink in the face of accelerating technology and growing tensions. A global treaty on AI is a distant dream.
In this environment, international summitology might look like a dying art. But India is an enthusiastic host. New Delhi is primed for the arrival of tech CEOs and heads of state, joining closed-door high-level events later in the week.
Every few hundred meters, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s face adorns bright posters, alongside catchy quotes (‘India has the power of double AI: Artificial Intelligence and Aspirational India’, one reads). The conference venue is huge, with queues for events and some delegates flagging down buggies to travel across the site.
The summit is a monument to India’s AI ambitions, drumming up business and showcasing tech from India and partner countries. India is anxious to maintain the resilience of its tech sector – long globally competitive but potentially threatened by labour displacement triggered by automation in key industries like manufacturing and business process outsourcing.
India is also keen to maintain sovereign control of AI – in line with its hope for strategic autonomy over foundational tech despite deep reliance on the US or China. The summit showcases sovereign and government-backed models: trained on Indian data, and hosted on an Indian cloud, an important proof of concept for a more sovereign solution.
In that respect, the summit can be seen as the latest diplomatic attempt to position India as an alternative to the US and China on tech cooperation – emphasizing equitable development and distribution of AI and the deployment of AI in developing countries. The summit may see announcements for improving Global South coordination on issues like safety. Emphasizing real-life use cases – in healthcare, energy and education – is a priority.
India also hosts the BRICS summit later in the year, and may host visits from the US and Chinese leaders – requiring a careful balancing act as it seeks to build its AI autonomy, broker Global South cooperation, and navigate the great powers. Many middle powers will face similar challenges and will hope to learn from India’s approach.
This year’s summit has already been criticized by technical experts and advocates for its content and design. The conference has incredibly broad aims rooted in seven AI chakras, including science and human capital. The summit’s main day convenes tech executives and state representatives. There are also concerns that the summit sidelines voices from civil society. Some will head to fringe events instead.
Since 2023, summit membership has bloated to include more countries, companies and organizations than ever before. Safety and security once defined the agenda. Now those issues vie for attention with promises to accelerate and diffuse ever-more-powerful AI. Such overcrowding will prevent this summit’s main track from tangibly advancing international AI governance.
This is unfortunate, but not world-ending. As AI governance experts have argued, an imperfect summit is better than no summit at all.
But policy solutions on AI governance puzzles will not come from a crowded conference room. They will come from smaller expert or regional gatherings designed to capture global, diverse inputs and operationalize them. Smaller conventions offer an opportunity to garner support for tested, trusted governance solutions, which can be scaled later in bigger gatherings.
For example, Chatham House has argued that scientist-led venues (like the International AI Safety Report, and hopefully the future UN Scientific Panel on AI) can generate a strong depoliticizing effect, building trust in scientific outputs across geopolitical chasms.
That kind of ‘splintering to scale’ is possible and, in this fragmented geopolitical environment, preferable.
Next week will see the reconvening of the independent International Association of Safe and Ethical AI’s annual conference. This is a smaller gathering, free of attachment to national prestige, with attendance from a diversity of global scientists (including from China), promising to platform technical research and regulatory solutions.
In the meantime, efforts are underway to build agreement over digital technical standards for AI safety. Civil society groups are convening scientists and experts to seek agreement on a set of ‘red lines’ for unacceptable AI risks, like bioterrorism. Governance labs and academics in India and globally are exchanging ideas on participatory governance solutions to long-standing tech policy problems.
The value of these smaller efforts is their potential to produce globally scalable outputs with expert buy-in – championed by consensus-building states, like Singapore, Brazil or Switzerland. They can create trust in mechanisms and process, laying the groundwork for consensus on principles for AI governance (an optimistic objective) and implementing pragmatic governance solutions (a more likely aim).
But they must also be wary of replicating power asymmetries that are so often a stumbling block to effective AI governance.
AI governance hopefuls face a steep hill. The question is not whether to scale trusted solutions, but how. Political appetite for global cooperation on AI is waning. The US did not back the AI Safety Report and has sought to remove guardrails on AI development, as it competes bitterly with China for influence over global AI.
In the 2010s it described an insurgent rhetorical style; in the 2020s it is inadequate to account for the wildly diverging fates of the left and right
“Populism” may well have been the defining word of the previous decade: a shorthand for the insurgent parties that came to prominence in the 2010s, challenging the dominance of the liberal centre. But no sooner had it become the main rubric for discussing both the far left and far right than commentators began to question its validity: worrying that it was too vague, or too pejorative, or fuelling the forces to which it referred.
Now, with the fortunes of the two political poles heading in different directions – the right gaining ground across the west while much of the left struggles to rebound from serial defeats – the notion that this word could encompass such different players seems even less plausible. For a lucid account of these forces, we might have to shift our focus elsewhere: finding terms that can explain their unequal balance of power, so that we can in turn find the proper remedy.
Oliver Eagleton is managing editor at Phenomenal World
Continue reading...Environment minister says Alcoa cleared known habitat of protected species to enable bauxite mining
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The environment minister, Murray Watt, has handed a $55m penalty to the US mining giant Alcoa for unlawful land clearing for bauxite mining in Western Australia’s northern jarrah forests, south of Perth.
As Watt announced the “unprecedented” remediation order, he said he had also granted the company an exemption to clear further habitat for 18 months while the government considered a proposal for an extension of the company’s mining operations to 2045.
Continue reading...Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 18.
Sara Duterte, daughter of a former president who is facing charges of crimes against humanity at the Hague, pledged to offer her ‘life, strength and future’ in service of the Philippines
Philippine vice-president Sara Duterte, daughter of the imprisoned former leader Rodridgo Duterte, has announced she will run for president in the country’s 2028 election.
Sara Duterte, 47, said she would offer her “life, strength and future” in service of the Philippines, in a speech on Wednesday that accused President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, of presiding over a period marked by rampant corruption.
Continue reading...Substances include chemicals that can cause cancer, neurodevelopmental problems and the feminisation of males
You wear them at work, you wear them at play, you wear them to relax. You may even get sweaty in them at the gym.
But an investigation into headphones has found every single pair tested contained substances hazardous to human health, including chemicals that can cause cancer, neurodevelopmental problems and the feminisation of males.
Continue reading...Longtime Slashdot reader walterbyrd shares a report from ABC News: In a study of nearly 28 million older Americans, long-term exposure to fine particle air pollution raised the risk of Alzheimer's disease. That link held even after researchers accounted for common conditions like high blood pressure, stroke and depression. Fine particle air pollution, known as PM2.5, consists of tiny particles in the air that come from car exhaust, power plants, wildfires, and burning fuels, according to the American Lung Association. They are small enough to travel deep into the lungs and even reach the bloodstream. The research, conducted at Emory University and published in PLOS Medicine, tracked health data over nearly two decades to explore whether air pollution harms the brain indirectly by causing high blood pressure or heart disease, which, in turn, leads to dementia. However, these "middleman" conditions accounted for less than 5% of the connection between pollution and Alzheimer's, the research found. The researchers say this suggests that over 95% of the Alzheimer's risk comes from the direct impact of breathing in dirty air, likely through inflammation or damage to brain cells. "The relationship between PM2.5 and AD [Alzheimer's disease] has been shown to be pretty much linear," said Kyle Steenland, a professor in the departments of environmental health and epidemiology at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, and senior author of the study. "The reason this is particularly important is that PM2.5 is known to be associated with high blood pressure, stroke and depression -- all of which are associated with AD. So, from a prevention standpoint, simply treating these diseases will not get rid of the problem. We have to address exposure to PM2.5."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 18, No. 513.
Donald Trump says deals ‘end our foolish dependence on foreign sources’, while Japanese PM hails enhanced economic security
Japan has drawn up plans for investments in US oil, gas and critical mineral projects worth about $36bn under the first wave of a deal with Donald Trump.
The US president and Sanae Takaichi, Japan’s prime minister, announced a trio of projects including a power plant in Portsmouth, Ohio, billed by the Trump administration as the largest natural gas-fired generating facility in US history.
Continue reading...Despite strong opposition from neighbors, city council last week OK’d a proposal to add four housing units to an already-approved subdivision in northern Newark.
Newark’s April election has been canceled after one candidate dropped out of the only contested race on the ballot.
Eye-catching martial arts performance at China gala had viewers and experts wondering what else humanoids can do
Dancing humanoid robots took centre stage on Monday during the annual China Media Group’s Spring Festival Gala, China’s most-watched official television broadcast. They lunged and backflipped (landing on their knees), they spun around and jumped. Not one fell over.
The display was impressive, but prompted some to wonder: if robots can now dance and perform martial arts, what else can they do?
Continue reading...Former Stone Balloon owner Bill Stevenson pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges he killed his wife.
Ideally close to Rheinland Pfalz. Not looking for anything crazy, I'd be happy with a Pint. As long as I can get a good deal. Wouldn't want to spend more than 700 euros or 850 usd.
Thanks in advance
Google, Anthropic and OpenAI bosses to mingle with global south leaders wrestling for control over technology
Silicon Valley tech billionaires will land in Delhi this week for an AI summit hosted by India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, where leaders of the global south will wrestle for control over the fast-developing technology.
During the week-long AI Impact Summit, attended by thousands of tech executives, government officials and AI safety experts, tech companies valued at trillions of dollars will rub along with leaders of countries such as Kenya and Indonesia, where average wages dip well below $1,000 a month.
Continue reading...Latin America’s warning for U.S. democracy.
CEO said services have restarted after termination of grants led to criticism that US was ceding ground to China
Radio Free Asia has resumed broadcasts to people in China, its chief executive said on Tuesday, after Trump administration cuts last year largely forced the US-funded outlet to cease operations.
For years, RFA and its sister outlets, including Voice of America (VOA), had been financed with funding approved by the US Congress and overseen by the US Agency for Global Media (USAGM).
Continue reading...More than a million people around the world reported the popular video site had gone dark. Just in time for Olympics coverage!
The "signal sniffer" being used in the Nancy Guthrie investigation was mounted on a helicopter on Monday.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: Agrochemical maker Bayer and attorneys for cancer patients announced a proposed $7.25 billion settlement Tuesday to resolve thousands of U.S. lawsuits alleging the company failed to warn people that its popular weedkiller Roundup could cause cancer. The proposed settlement comes as the U.S. Supreme Court is preparing to hear arguments in April on Bayer's assertion that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's approval of Roundup without a cancer warning should invalidate claims filed in state courts. That case would not be affected by the proposed settlement. But the settlement would eliminate some of the risk from an eventual Supreme Court ruling. Patients would be assured of receiving settlement money even if the Supreme Court rules in Bayer's favor. And Bayer would be protected from potentially larger costs if the high court rules against it. Germany-based Bayer, which acquired Roundup maker Monsanto in 2018, disputes the assertion that Roundup's key ingredient, glyphosate, can cause non-Hodgkin lymphoma. But the company has warned that mounting legal costs are threatening its ability to continue selling the product in U.S. agricultural markets. "Litigation uncertainly has plagued the company for years, and this settlement gives the company a road to closure," Bayer CEO Bill Anderson said Tuesday. The proposed settlement could total up to $7.25 billion over 21 years and resolve most of the remaining U.S. lawsuits surrounding the cancer-related harms of Roundup. The report notes that more than 125,000 claims have been filed since 2015, and while many have already been settled, this deal aims to cover most outstanding and future claims tied to past exposure. Individual payouts would vary widely based on exposure type, age at diagnosis, and cancer severity. Bayer can also cancel the deal if too many plaintiffs opt out.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
This live blog is now closed.
A Texas-sized showdown is brewing deep in the heart of the largest red state in the US. As early voting begins on Tuesday for the Lone Star state’s 3 March primaries, Republicans and Democrats alike face a high-stakes choice that could set the stage for one of the fiercest Senate races of the 2026 midterm cycle.
At the center of the fractious Republican contest is a clash between the party’s old guard and a Maga culture warrior, with four-term incumbent John Cornyn, a conservative fixture of Senate leadership locked in the fight of his political career against the state’s scandal-plagued attorney general, Ken Paxton.
Continue reading...The clash over an investigation into suspected unlicensed ritual circumcisions underscores heightened tensions between the U.S. and Europe under President Trump.
Alysa Liu, Amber Glenn and Isabeau Levito, collectively known as the "Blade Angels," began their Olympic medal campaigns in women's figure skating on Tuesday.
I tested every smartwatch that Apple sells, and here are the best ones to buy based on health features, battery life and your budget.
National Park Service also sued for removing rainbow Pride flag from Stonewall national monument in New York
Conservation and historical organizations sued the Trump administration on Tuesday over National Park Service policies that the groups say erase history and science from America’s national parks.
A lawsuit filed in Boston says orders by Donald Trump and the interior secretary, Doug Burgum, have forced park service staff to remove or censor exhibits that share factually accurate and relevant US history and scientific knowledge, including about slavery and climate change.
Continue reading...US family who were 100th to be granted residency under investor scheme say they want to give back to ‘amazing’ New Zealand
Wealthy Americans are dominating applications for New Zealand’s “golden visa”, driven by a love for the country’s natural beauty and entrepreneurial spirit, as well a desire to escape Trump’s administration.
New rules for the Active Investor Plus visa came into effect in April 2025, lowering investment thresholds, removing English-language requirements and cutting the amount of time applicants must spend in the country to establish residency from three years to three weeks. Successful applicants can only purchase homes in New Zealand worth more than $5m.
Continue reading...Anthropic has released Claude Sonnet 4.6, the first upgrade to its mid-tier AI model since version 4.5 arrived in September 2025. The new model features a "1M token context window" and delivers a "full upgrade of the model's skills across coding, computer use, long-context reasoning, agent planning, knowledge work, and design." From Anthropic: Sonnet 4.6 brings much-improved coding skills to more of our users. Improvements in consistency, instruction following, and more have made developers with early access prefer Sonnet 4.6 to its predecessor by a wide margin. They often even prefer it to our smartest model from November 2025, Claude Opus 4.5. Performance that would have previously required reaching for an Opus-class model -- including on real-world, economically valuable office tasks -- is now available with Sonnet 4.6. The model also shows a major improvement in computer use skills compared to prior Sonnet models. The free tier now uses Sonnet 4.6 by default and with "file creation, connectors, skills, and compaction" included.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
‘We have nothing to hide,’ former secretary of state says ahead of her and Bill Clinton’s depositions next week – key US politics stories from Tuesday 17 February
Hillary Clinton has accused the Trump administration of a “cover-up” over the Epstein files, while claiming that she and her husband are being forced to testify before Congress to deflect scrutiny from Donald Trump.
In an interview with the BBC, Clinton said the US Department of Justice was “slow-walking” the release of documents relating to Jeffrey Epstein’s catalogue of crimes and urged the administration to “get the files out”. Despite periodic document dumps of the files since Congress mandated their release late last year, the justice department is still withholding about 3m files.
Continue reading...
Part 5 of the Delaware Civics 101 Series:
Understanding How Delaware Organizes, Spends, and Balances Its Money
These are the facts of modern life: Populations keep rising. People’s needs keep growing. Costs keep heading higher. The big question facing Delaware’s lawmakers is this: How fast should state spending be rising to meet these realities?
Since 2020, Delawareans have watched state budgets begin a sharp, steep climb: Over the past five years, state spending skyrocketed by about 53%. Meanwhile, the population was up by just 7.6%.
Many in the state are closely (and warily) watching these diverging trajectories, and posing some questions: Could the gap between population growth and budget growth get wider in the years ahead? Just how much more are we willing (or able) to pay? And where will all that money come from?
Since the start of the century, Delaware’s operating budget has more than tripled, jumping from about $2.1 billion in 2000 to $6.5 billion in FY2026 – an increase of nearly 210%. In the same time frame, Delaware’s population grew from 786,000 to about 1.05 million – a 33% rise.
The wide discrepancy is mainly a result of rising costs – especially in education and healthcare – but it’s also seen as a corollary of having plentiful revenue. Delaware has enjoyed some boom years in its corporate franchise business, which collects taxes and fees from companies across the world, and fuels a good portion of the rising budget.
Increased spending isn’t necessarily a bad thing in and of itself, as the thousands of Delawareans who receive services from the state might attest. Higher spending can mean better classrooms, more teachers, nicer roads, safer streets.
But the people guiding the process know they need to be mindful of realities as well, and in this case, those realities come in the form of revenue — and the up-and-down fortunes of finding it. The past 25 years saw Delaware’s overall revenue benefit from broader economic gains, and recent action from the legislature successfully avoided a big hit to revenue from federal tax changes.
It’s also important to realize that a good portion of Delaware’s recent revenue windfalls came from the federal government during the COVID 19 pandemic – and those funds have just about dried up. That’s one of the reasons Gov. Matt Meyer’s recent FY2027 state budget proposal keeps spending growth below 5%, for the first time in years. The budget grew by more than 7% in the current fiscal year and 9% in FY 2025.
Part of that growth was needed just to keep up with inflation. But looking ahead, it seems clear that cost pressures will only rise, for Delaware and every other state. An aging population demands more Medicare, and schools say they need increasing financial support to attract good teachers, and to care for special needs students. Some of the spending that began under COVID has become “sticky” – federal funds may be dried up, but there is pressure to maintain the programs it once paid for.
There was a time when budget growth was a little more closely aligned with population growth in the state – but those were not very good times for many people. From 2000-2010, the state’s population grew by 14.6%, while the General Fund grew by roughly 55%, or at a rate of 3 times population growth. Those “slow growth” years of the Delaware budget were a time of budget cuts and freezes on spending, driven by the 2001 dot-com collapse and the Great Recession in 2008.
Spending growth resumed as financial turbulence receded, powered in part by a boom in corporate franchise‑tax revenues and that avalanche of COVID funds. But the cost pressures have only gotten more cumbersome for states.
In recent times, the pressures driving increased spending have been particularly people-centered. Spending had to be hiked to help resolve staffing shortages for key positions like police and teachers, who often have their choice of better offers elsewhere.
There’s also growing concern that Delaware and other states pay so much more these days to cover unfunded pension liabilities for retired workers — an unpaid bill that has been growing for some time, but is hitting harder now as more workers retire.
With federal COVID aid gone and corporate receipts softening, FY2026–27 marks a reset of sorts for Delaware — one that raises questions about how to sustain core services if costs keep outrunning revenue, population, and gross domestic product.
| Category | Year 2000 | FY2026 (* Projected) | Growth/Change |
| Operating Budget | ~$2.1B | $6.5B | +$4.4B (~210%) |
| Population | ~786,000 | ~1.05 Million * | +264,000 (~33%) |
| GDP (Current $) | ~$40B | ~$97B * | +$57B (~142%) |
Looking at the numbers a different way, Delaware’s general fund spends far more per resident than in 2000: $6,136 per resident today, but only $2,671 in the year 2000. That’s a 136% jump, but factoring in inflation, it’s the equivalent of a 23% rise.
Delaware’s budget has been growing much faster in the past five years than it did over the prior two decades. From 2000 to 2020, the operating budget rose from about $2.1 billion to $4.5 billion — a +114% increase, or roughly 3.9% a year — driven by steady growth in Medicaid, education, and personnel costs. But from 2020 to 2025, the budget jumped again to $6.9 billion, a +53% surge in just five years — about 8.8% a year, more than double the long-term pace. Part of the increase was needed just to keep pace with rising costs: Inflation-adjusted budget growth was just. The rise was also fueled by federal COVID relief, a corporate franchise-tax boom (peaking in 2023), and higher Medicaid and education spending.
The implication is clear: Delaware’s budget grew faster in 2020–25 than in the entire 20 years before COVID, and much of that acceleration was temporary and federally fueled. With those one-time funds gone and corporate receipts softening, the FY2026–27 pullback represents a reset, even as underlying pressures in health care and education remain. And the impact of inflation still lingers.



Delaware Health Care Spending (operating budget; approx.):
Delaware’s role as corporations’ favorite home fueled a long rise in franchise‑tax receipts — crossing $1B in 2018 and peaking near $1.6B in 2023. It’s now about 25-30% of General Fund revenue. Policy changes and a growing incorporation base enabled bigger K‑12 and health budgets without a sales tax and with low property taxes. But this leaves the state exposed to federal tax changes and corporate activity cycles; receipts have eased since 2023.
Here’s the side-by-side bar chart showing the growth in Delaware’s major revenue sources from 2019 to 2025, including the Corporate Franchise Tax front and center:
🟦 2019 vs. 🟥 2025 (est.)
| Revenue Source | 2019 (approx.) | 2025 (est.) | % Growth |
| Corporate Franchise Tax | $1.0B | $1.4B | +40% |
| Personal Income Tax | $1.6B | $2.0B | +25% |
| Realty Transfer Tax | $250M | $350M | +40% |
| Gross Receipts Tax | $250M | $325M | +30% |
| Lottery & Gaming | $200M | $275M | +38% |
| Corporate Income Tax | $400M | $375M | –6% |
The chart above shows how Delaware’s revenue mix has shifted:
Delaware’s General Fund relies on two pillars: residents’ personal income tax (PIT) and business-centric revenues (franchise/entity fees, gross receipts, corporate income tax).

This year, Delaware will add higher brackets under the John Kowalko, Jr. Fairness in Taxation Act (HS 1 for HB 13), effective for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2025. Income between $60,000 and $125,000 remains at 6.6%, while income over $125,000 is taxed at 6.75%, and income over $250,000 at 6.95%—a shift aimed at increasing progressivity so top earners pay a slightly larger share. Sponsors and fiscal analyses indicate well over 90% of taxpayers won’t see an increase (some estimates put it around 94%), concentrating new revenue at the top.
Why it matters now: The changes bolster revenue as federal one-time funds fade and healthcare and education costs keep rising, while limiting impacts on middle- and lower-income families. However, increasing pressure on high-income taxpayers can reduce total income if they elect to move their primary residence to another state.
Part 6 – Looking ahead: Take a deeper dive into the budget challenges that will be top of mind for Delaware lawmakers in 2026.
About the Civics 101 Series: Civics 101 is a continuing explanatory series by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team designed to help readers understand how state government works and how budget decisions affect everyday life in Delaware. To read other stories in the series, visit the Civics 101 home page.
The post Civics 101: Delaware’s population is rising. But nowhere near as fast as the budget. appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Minnesota and federal authorities are investigating claims that immigration officers shattered a Mexican man's skull while taking him into custody last month.
According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman (paywalled), Apple is reportedly developing AI-powered smart glasses, a wearable pendant, and camera-equipped AirPods that connect to the iPhone and use "visual context" to let Siri perform real-world actions. The Verge reports: Apple is reportedly aiming to start production of its smart glasses in December, ahead of a 2027 launch. The new device will compete directly with Meta's lineup of smart glasses and is rumored to feature speakers, microphones, and a high-resolution camera for taking photos and videos, in addition to another lens designed to enable AI-powered features. The glasses won't have a built-in display, but they will allow users to make phone calls, interact with Siri, play music, and "take actions based on surroundings," such as asking about the ingredients in a meal, according to Bloomberg. Apple's smart glasses could also help users identify what they're seeing, reference landmarks when offering directions, and remind wearers to complete a task in specific situations, Bloomberg reports. The company is reportedly planning to develop the frames for the smart glasses in-house, instead of partnering with a third-party company like Meta does with Ray-Ban and Oakley. Prototypes of the glasses use a cable to connect to a battery pack and an iPhone, but Bloomberg reports that "newer versions have the components embedded in the frame." Apple reportedly wants to make its smart glasses stand out by offering a high-quality build and advanced camera technology. The company is still working on AI-powered smart glasses with a display, though their launch "remains many years away," Bloomberg says. Apple's plans for AI hardware don't end there, as the company is expected to build upon its Google Gemini-powered Siri upgrade with an AirTag-sized AI pendant that people can either wear as a necklace or a pin. This device would "essentially serve as an always-on camera" for the iPhone and has a microphone for prompting Siri, Bloomberg reports. The pendant, which The Information first reported on last month, is rumored to come with a built-in chip, but will mainly rely on the iPhone's processing power. The device could arrive as early as next year, according to Bloomberg.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
I i have a 84v vesc with the stock xr+ stator and magnets. It works fine no problems, but considering I only get around GT torque when comparing to my gt, im wondering for the future on what options are worth it. The way I see it i have 3 options:
1: mte 5 inch hub, with n48 or n52 magnets, it would work and wouldn't require me to do any wiring, though compared to other options, it doesn't seem worth the money.
2: get the new fungineers 5 inch motor. This would double my torque and at another 10mph of top speed if I were to ever go that fast. The only problems I see are A: price, with it and the axle blocks plus a tire being 800+ and B: i would have to find a solution to the female port connecting to the box. I have "the box" from float life which has a square hole for the xr motor port, but i haven't found any adapter for this motor port to allow me to easily add this connector; I will probably have to make my own.
Or option 3: go with the original fungeneers hs motor, seems like the obvious choice, 500 bucks plus the female connector, includes everything including the tire for some reason, for the price to performance this seems like to right choice, I just have no idea if itsa 5 inch hub is worth my while (ive never ridden one), or if I can find an easy solution for the connectors.
But I wrote this for your opinions. Let me which one I should go with. Btw if anyone knows how to get less working on both sides with different colors using a little focer v4 controller please let me know before I go too deep into old forums.
| You can use coupon code “renowheel25” to save on your next order from TFL! [link] [comments] |
Following backlash over Discord's global rollout of strict age-verification checks, users are flocking to rival platform TeamSpeak and overwhelming its servers. According to PC Gamer, the Discord alternative said its hosting capacity has been maxed out in a number of regions including the U.S. From the report: [A]s I saw for myself while testing out free Discord alternatives, it's hard to deny the appeal of TeamSpeak. It's quick and easy to make an account, join or start a group chat, or join a massive, game-based community voice server, and at no point does TeamSpeak cheekily ask if it can scan your wizened visage. During my testing, I was able to dive into 18+ group chats without tripping over an age gate. However, there's no guarantee TeamSpeak won't have to deploy its own age verification mechanism in the future. In the UK at least, the Online Safety Act makes those sorts of checks a legal obligation, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer recently stating "No social media platform should get a free pass when it comes to protecting our kids." Besides all of that, if you'd rather not chat to randoms who also happen to have an unhealthy obsession with Arc Raiders, you'll likely need to pay an admittedly small subscription fee to rent your own ten-person community voice server. By that point, you're handing over card details and essentially fulfilling an age assurance check anyway. If you'd rather limit how much info your chat platform of choice has about you, there are arguably better options out there.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
We asked registered dietitians for their top healthy air fryer recipes. Their picks are perfect for easy meals.
Lawyer for defendants accused of terrorism at ICE protest decried by Trump appointee over shirt’s potential for ‘bias’
A federal judge in Texas declared a mistrial on Tuesday after a defense lawyer wore a shirt in court with images from the civil rights movement, delaying a closely watched case in which the Trump administration is accusing a group of protesters of being terrorists and says they are part of a “North-Texas antifa cell”.
US district judge Mark Pittman, an appointee of Donald Trump, declared a mistrial only hours after jury selection began at the federal courthouse in downtown Fort Worth. He abruptly halted the proceedings after MarQuetta Clayton, an attorney for one of the defendants, had been questioning potential jurors for about 20 minutes, taking issue with a shirt she was wearing underneath a black blazer. The shirt contained images of civil rights movement leaders, including Martin Luther King Jr and Shirley Chisholm, as well as images of protests from that time.
Continue reading...Europe may trail its North American and Asian counterparts in several areas of computing, which makes the continent dependent on outside suppliers. But it’s looking to plant a flag in the ground in one critical category: sovereign, large-scale AI models.
That’s the takeaway from recent news from the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking, which announced that it’s holding a continent-wide competition called the Frontier AI Grand Challenge to develop a sovereign frontier AI model that can compete with OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini, and Anthropic’s Claude.
The Frontier AI Grand Challenge calls for AI developers to propose their ideas for the creation of a large mixture-of-experts (MoE) model consisting of at least 400 billion parameters. A panel will judge the proposals across several criteria, including the presence of “innovative enhancements” and “novel approaches addressing current model limitations.”

The winning proposal will be trained upon EuroHPC’s collection of supercomputers, including JUPITER, EuroHPC’s first exascale supercomputer, which operates at the Jülich Supercomputing Centre (JSC) Germany, and Alice Recoque, EuroHPC’s second exascale system, which will be installed at France GENCI. Participants have until April 13 to submit their proposal for the Frontier AI Challenge competition, and the winner will be announced in May.
The stakes for the competition are high: European AI sovereignty.
“While several promising European initiatives are emerging, no frontier-level models are currently being operated at a scale comparable to the leading global actors. This strategic gap must be addressed, as Frontier AI holds transformative potential across manufacturing, healthcare, autonomous systems, and other key EU strategic sectors,” EuroHPC states in its description of the competition.
“Mastering these advanced models is therefore strategically critical for the EU to reduce dependencies on non-EU companies, foster innovation, and ensure technological sovereignty and industrial competitiveness,” it concludes.
The winning AI model will be shared with others across Europe, including with government entities, the scientific community, and businesses. The challenge will reward innovative European leading AI actors and lead to the development of “large-scale AI models that will provide a competitive edge for Europe,” EuroHPC said.

Source: Gartner (February 2026)
The Frontier AI Grand Challenge is the just the latest example of the European push for sovereignty in computing, data, and AI. The people of Europe signaled their dissatisfaction with global trends with the passage of restrictive laws, such as the General Data Protection Regulation and AI Act. In many categories of computing, personal data is forbidden to leave the constituent.
These restrictive policies have caused a boom in sovereign cloud infrastructure. Gartner recently predicted that European spending on sovereign cloud infrastructure would more than triple through 2027, going from $6.9 billion in 2025 to $23.1 billion in 2027. That’s significantly faster than the 43% growth in sovereign cloud infrastructure Gartner sees globally during that time.
“As geopolitical tensions rise, organizations outside the U.S. and China are investing more in sovereign cloud IaaS to gain digital and technological independence,” said Rene Buest, senior director analyst at Gartner. “The goal is to keep wealth generation within their own borders to strengthen the local economy.”
In the case of the EuroHPC’s Frontier AI Grand Challenge, the goal is also to keep the spoils of AI-powered science and engineering within the boundaries of Europe.
Editor’s note: The feature image for this story was updated to reflect the current map of EuroHPC countries.
The post Frontier AI Grand Challenge Puts European HPC Sovereignty in the Spotlight appeared first on HPCwire.
KDE Plasma 6.6 has been released, and brings with a whole slew of new features. You can save any combination of themes as a global theme, and there’s a new feature allowing you to increase or decrease the contrast of frames and outlines. If your device has a camera, you can now scan Wi-F settings from QR codes, which is quite nice if you spend a lot of time on the road.
There’s a new colour filter for people who are colour blind, allowing you to set the entire UI to grayscale, as well as a brand new virtual keyboard. Other new accessibility features include tracking the mouse cursor when using the zoom feature, a reduced motion setting, and more. Spectacle gets a text extraction feature and a feature to exclude windows from screen recordings. There’s also a new optional login manager, optimised for Wayland, a new first-run setup wizard, and much more.
As always, KDE 6.6 will find its way to your distribution’s repositories soon enough.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Washington Post: David Greene had never heard of NotebookLM, Google's buzzy artificial intelligence tool that spins up podcasts on demand, until a former colleague emailed him to ask if he'd lent it his voice. "So... I'm probably the 148th person to ask this, but did you license your voice to Google?" the former co-worker asked in a fall 2024 email. "It sounds very much like you!" Greene, a public radio veteran who has hosted NPR's "Morning Edition" and KCRW's political podcast "Left, Right & Center," looked up the tool, listening to the two virtual co-hosts -- one male and one female -- engage in light banter. "I was, like, completely freaked out," Greene said. "It's this eerie moment where you feel like you're listening to yourself." Greene felt the male voice sounded just like him -- from the cadence and intonation to the occasional "uhhs" and "likes" that Greene had worked over the years to minimize but never eliminated. He said he played it for his wife and her eyes popped. As emails and texts rolled in from friends, family members and co-workers, asking if the AI podcast voice was his, Greene became convinced he'd been ripped off. Now he's suing Google, alleging that it violated his rights by building a product that replicated his voice without payment or permission, giving users the power to make it say things Greene would never say. Google told The Washington Post in a statement on Thursday that NotebookLM's male podcast voice has nothing to do with Greene. Now a Santa Clara County, California, court may be asked to determine whether the resemblance is uncanny enough that ordinary people hearing the voice would assume it's his -- and if so, what to do about it. Greene's lawsuit cites an unnamed AI forensic firm that used its software to compare the artificial voice to Greene's. It gave a confidence rating of 53-60% that Greene's voice was used to train the model, which it considers "relatively high" confidence. "If I was David Greene I would be upset, not just because they stole my voice," but because they used it to make the podcasting equivalent of AI "slop," said Mike Pesca, host of "The Gist" podcast and a former colleague of Greene's at NPR. "They have banter, but it's very surface-level, un-insightful banter, and they're always saying, 'Yeah, that's so interesting.' It's really bad, because what do we as show hosts have except our taste in commentary and pointing our audience to that which is interesting?"
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Local workers can be difficult to attract because of poor pay and conditions, say researchers
Keir Starmer’s plan to force employers to be less reliant on overseas staff and instead train UK-based workers may not lower net migration, researchers have found.
Skill shortages are just one of the factors contributing to employers’ demand for migrant workers, according to the University of Oxford’s Migration Observatory.
Continue reading...Figures from Aviva also show number of homes being built in risky areas is rising
One in nine new homes in England built between 2022 and 2024 were constructed in areas that could now be at risk of flooding, according to new data.
The figures show the number of homes being built in risky areas is on the rise – a previous analysis showed that between 2013 and 2022, one in 13 new homes were in potential flooding zones.
Continue reading...Lack of regulation leading to procedures being carried out in sheds, hotel rooms and public toilets, committee finds
Brazilian butt lifts should be banned in the UK, MPs have said, as a report found a lack of regulation had led to a “wild west” of cosmetic procedures being carried out in garden sheds, hotel rooms and public toilets.
The women and equalities committee (WEC) said high risk procedures such as non-surgical buttock augmentation should be outlawed immediately, and a licensing system for lower risk treatments was urgently needed. People with no training can carry out potentially harmful procedures, putting the public at risk, the group of MPs added.
Continue reading...Many products contain substances banned because of serious and sometimes irreversible health risks, says CTSI
Illegal skin lightening products are being sold in an increasingly wide range of UK outlets, including butchers, specialist food shops and small grocery stores, trading standards officers have warned.
The Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI) is warning that many of the products contain substances that are banned because of the serious risks they pose to health, including skin damage, infections and pregnancy complications.
Continue reading...Japan’s skaters stole the spotlight as the Americans largely struggled in their attempts to end a two-decade medal drought
Japanese teenager Ami Nakai was the surprise leader after the short program of the Olympic women’s figure skating competition on a night when her country’s skaters largely stole the spotlight from Team USA’s Blade Angels in their bid to end America’s two-decade medal drought.
Nakai delivered a clean, commanding skate on Tuesday, highlighted by a soaring triple axel for a personal-best score of 78.71, edging three-time world champion Kaori Sakamoto (77.23) into second. Only Alysa Liu of the United States was able to break the Japanese hold on the top spots, scoring 76.59 to come in ahead of fourth-placed Mone Choba (74.00).
Continue reading...Apple has glasses, AirPods and an AI pin in the works, according to the latest report from Bloomberg. And they'll all likely work with Apple's next wave of Google-infused AI.
A reconciliation bill lets Congress adjust spending, revenue, or the debt limit and pass it in the Senate quickly with only a simple majority.
A recess is a temporary pause in Congressional business within a session, halting legislative work without ending the session.
A ranking member is the senior minority‑party member on a committee, serving as its lead spokesperson and counterpart to the committee chair.
The Federal Employees' Compensation Act (FECA) provides medical, disability, and survivor benefits to federal workers injured, made ill, or killed on the job.
Continuation of Pay (COP), a provision of FECA, provides up to 45 days of regular pay for federal workers unable to work after a traumatic injury.
The federal budget is the government’s yearly plan that outlines what it will spend, how it will pay for it, and whether it ends in surplus or deficit.
The Antideficiency Act bars federal agencies from spending during funding lapses or accepting unpaid services, and from obligating funds beyond what Congress approves.
A government spending bill, or appropriations bill, gives federal agencies permission to spend money for specific purposes and is passed each year.
A shutdown furlough happens when Congress doesn’t pass funding, forcing agencies to stop non‑excepted work. Staff funded elsewhere may keep working.
An Employment Authorization Document (EAD) is a USCIS‑issued work permit that lets certain non‑citizens work legally in the US and apply for a Social Security number.
Redistricting is the process of redrawing voting districts to reflect population changes. States control the process under federal rules and set their own timelines.
Immigration parole lets certain noncitizens enter the US temporarily for urgent humanitarian or public‑benefit reasons, and doesn’t provide immigration status or formal admission.
Two amazing games will be available soon for Xbox Game Pass subscribers.
Moves come after Gordon Brown’s claim that files show that US sex offender used Stansted airport in Essex to ‘fly in girls’
British police have expanded their interest in the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s links to Britain, by admitting for the first time they are looking at claims he used dozens of private flights into UK airports to traffic women.
It comes after former prime minister Gordon Brown said that documents about Epstein released in the US showed in “graphic detail” how the disgraced financier, with links to high-profile people including the former Prince Andrew, was able to use Stansted airport in Essex to “fly in girls from Latvia, Lithuania and Russia”.
Continue reading...Feb. 17, 2026 — Understanding what complex chemical measurements reveal about materials and reactions can take weeks or months of analysis. But now, an AI-powered platform developed by researchers at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) could reduce this interpretation cycle to minutes, enabling much faster insight into chemical processes relevant to energy storage, catalysis, and manufacturing.

A closeup view of the Digital Twin for Chemical Science platform at the Advanced Light Source. Credit: Marilyn Sargent, Berkeley Lab.
The new platform, called “Digital Twin for Chemical Science” (DTCS), allows researchers to observe chemical reactions, adjust experimental parameters, and validate hypotheses simultaneously during a single experiment. Traditional approaches require researchers to first develop a hypothesis, and then design an experiment to collect data and develop theoretical models to analyze that data before they can finally conduct follow-up experiments to validate the model.
“A common challenge that many researchers face during complex experiments is that although we have sophisticated tools that collect data, interpreting that data is another beast,” said Jin Qian, a computational chemist and staff scientist in Berkeley Lab’s Chemical Sciences Division who designed the DTCS platform. “Traditionally, we collect as much data as possible, then run simulations to analyze it offline. This back-and-forth process often takes months before theory and experiment reach consensus. DTCS could help overcome this bottleneck.”
The advance is a significant step toward autonomous chemical characterization, where AI-guided experiments could accelerate the timeline for discovering and characterizing new materials and chemical processes for useful applications.
“The Digital Twin for Chemical Science platform represents a new capability for Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source (ALS) and DOE’s scientific user facilities,” said Ethan Crumlin, a staff scientist at the ALS and program lead specializing in interface chemistry and characterization. “The idea of partnering with a computational, machine-learning construct will be the future for how science is done.”
Crumlin and Qian are co-lead authors of a study and research briefing on DTCS published in the journal Nature Computational Science.
Digital Twins for the Win
Chemistry is entering a new digital era, from automated synthesis labs to voice-activated quantum calculations, Qian explained. And yet chemical characterization — which guides everything from material design to performance optimization — has been left behind. The DTCS platform is changing this by enabling chemical insight with digital twins.

Ethan Crumlin preparing a sample for observation at the Digital Twin for Chemical Science (DTCS) platform housed in Beamline 9.3.2 at the Advanced Light Source. Credit: Marilyn Sargent, Berkeley Lab.
Broadly defined, digital twins are virtual replicas that use real-time data from physical systems to model a complex system’s performance and predict future behavior.
While digital twins have been used for decades in aerospace, healthcare, and manufacturing, DTCS is one of the first digital twins designed specifically for chemical research, and one of the first digital twins to augment the characterization of chemical reactions at interfaces. DTCS is one of several digital twin technologies that the Department of Energy is developing to accelerate innovation across various sectors, including nuclear energy, smart grids, and the chemical sciences.
DTCS could bring new insights into interface science and catalysis — chemical processes critical to batteries, fuel cells, and chemical manufacturing. By pairing DTCS with state-of-the-art spectroscopy instruments, researchers can now understand step-by-step reaction mechanisms in real time.
Building on Decades of Innovation
For the study, the Berkeley Lab team created a digital replica of ambient-pressure X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (APXPS) techniques at the ALS, Berkeley Lab’s synchrotron X-ray user facility, available to scientists around the world. Synchrotrons are specialized particle accelerators that produce ultrabright X-ray light for scientific research.
To develop the DTCS code, Qian used computing resources at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), the mission computing facility for the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science at Berkeley Lab. “NERSC, especially NERSC’s JupyterHub, has been instrumental in hosting the DTCS platform to rapidly connect supercomputer-generated theoretical data and facility-specific experimental data,” she said.
Over the past two decades, the ALS has advanced the field of surface science by innovating APXPS instruments that have been adopted by synchrotron facilities worldwide and commercialized for energy applications. APXPS is one of the best ways to study interfacial chemistry because it shows how chemical species evolve during reactions. It identifies molecular compounds by their unique chemical “fingerprints” or spectra as they form on the solid surface of an operating device such as a battery. APXPS advances at the ALS have enabled powerful techniques for characterizing a wide array of interfaces — including solid/gas, solid/liquid, solid/solid, and liquid/vapor interfaces — under real-world operating conditions.
However, with conventional APXPS, researchers cannot practically use experimental spectra in real time to gain insights into how different chemical species are physically interacting at the atomic level on a surface. DTCS offers a powerful yet approachable alternative: By comparing experimental spectra and theoretical modeling, the DTCS platform gains insights about the dynamics of the reaction overall, the concentration of each species, the chemical potentials driving the reaction, and even the real-world likelihood of different molecules being in proximity to one another, representing an enormous leap in the power of interpreting APXPS spectra in real time.
Putting DTCS to the Test
By optimizing experiments on the fly with real-time simulations of the interface, DTCS works through two connected pathways: The “forward loop” matches simulated spectra with experimental observations, while the “inverse loop” takes experimental data and solves for the underlying chemical mechanisms.
Data collected by an APXPS instrument teaches DTCS’s AI algorithms which chemical reaction mechanisms and kinetic parameters led to the current observation. The platform’s physics-based simulations provide real-time snapshots of a reaction and predict which experimental parameters within this “chemical reaction network” will be explored next.
To test the platform, the researchers studied a fundamental catalytic system — a silver/water interface relevant to batteries, catalysis, and corrosion prevention. The results were striking: DTCS’s predictions matched established experiments and theory, and the platform could predict how, when, and where oxygen-containing species would appear on the silver surface within minutes.
“This lets you see how the concentration profiles within the reaction network and spectra will evolve over time, and then you can compare that with what you’re observing at the instrument,” Qian said. “Instead of waiting weeks or months to analyze results, researchers can validate hypotheses and change experimental plans based on new findings in real time.”
Looking Ahead to DTCS 2.0
The research team is already developing DTCS 2.0, preparing it for broader community use and training its AI algorithms with new data. They’re also building digital twins for other analytical techniques including Raman and infrared spectroscopy, which complement APXPS by providing information about chemical bonds.
The researchers expect to make DTCS available to other scientific institutions and user facilities within the next few years, potentially transforming how chemistry research is conducted worldwide.
The work was supported by the DOE Office of Science, including funding from an Early Career Award in the Condensed Phase and Interfacial Molecular Science Program, and Berkeley Lab’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program.
The researchers used computing resources at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) to develop the DTCS code.
The Advanced Light Source and NERSC are DOE Office of Science user facilities at Berkeley Lab.
Source: Theresa Duque, Berkeley Lab
The post Berkeley Lab Demonstrates AI-Guided Digital Twin for Chemical Science Experiments appeared first on HPCwire.
Police in Pawtucket, Rhode Island said they are still searching for motive following Monday's deadly mass shooting at a high school hockey game, but said it was an attack targeting family members.
The actor was charged with two counts after allegedly punching two men and causing chaos at bars
The actor Shia LaBeouf was arrested early on Tuesday for alleged battery in New Orleans after apparently spending the long weekend partying across the city during Mardi Gras.
The New Orleans police department confirmed that at approximately 12.45am on Tuesday officers were called to Faubourg Marigny, located next to the French Quarter, the heart of the revelry, where LaBeouf was allegedly becoming increasingly aggressive at Royal Street Inn and Bar.
Continue reading...Took my used XR out today first the first time in a LONG time. Went well, but I’m afraid to go past 10 mph lol any tips?
SvarDOS is an open-source project that is meant to integrate the best out of the currently available DOS tools, drivers and games. DOS development has been abandoned by commercial players a long time ago, mostly during early nineties. Nowadays it survives solely through the efforts of hobbyists and retro-enthusiasts, but this is a highly sparse and unorganized ecosystem. SvarDOS aims to collect available DOS software and make it easy to find and install applications using a network-enabled package manager (like apt-get, but for DOS and able to run on a 8086 PC).
↫ SvarDOS website
SvarDOS is built around a fork of the Enhanced DR-DOS kernel, which is available in a dedicated GitHub repository. The project’s base installation is extremely minimal, containing only the kernel, a command interpreter, and some basic system administration tools, and this basic installation is compatible down to the 8086. You are then free to add whatever packages you want, either from local storage or from the online repository using the included package manager. SvarDOS is a rolling release, and you can use the package manager to keep it updated.
Aside from a set of regular installation images for a variety of floppy sizes, there’s also a dedicated “talking” build that uses the PROVOX screen reader and Braille ‘n Speak synthesizer at the COM1 port. It’s rare for a smaller project like this to have the resources to dedicate to accessibility, so this is a rather pleasant surprise.
Team USA's Alysa Liu, Amber Glenn and Isabeau Levito competed in the women's short program at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Tuesday and qualified for the free skate on Thursday.
A proposal within the Fedora Linux community suggests improving the kernel's DRM Panic screen to a more user-friendly, BSOD-style experience. Phoronix reports: Open-source developer Jose Exposito proposed today a nicer experience for DRM Panic integration on Fedora. Rather than using DRM Panic with just the kernel log contents being encoded in the QR code displayed when a kernel panic occurs, the proposal is to have a customized Fedora web-page with the encoded QR contents to be shown on that web page. Besides having a more pleasant UI/UX, from this web page the intent would also be to make it easier to report this error to the Fedora BugZilla. Being able to easily pass the kernel log to the Fedora bug tracker could help in making upstream aware of the problem(s) and seeing if other users are also encountering similar panics. Right now this idea was just raised earlier today as a "request for comments" on the Fedora mailing list. While a prototype at this point, Exposito already developed a basic web interface for demoing the solution.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A 71-year-old woman from Bear has died following a fiery crash on U.S. 40 over the weekend.
Tricia McLaughlin, the Department of Homeland Security's top spokeswoman, is leaving her post next week.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said the electric vehicle maker plans this year to greatly expand its self-driving taxi business.
| Hello, I’m having issues with my Onewheel that I cannot quite explain. Im at about 1600 miles on my gt and I have had friends confirm my board feels weird. When I am switching directions quickly (waiting around or something), the board just doesn’t respond and I hit my nose/tail. I thought originally I was just used to the board now, but friends have switched boards with me and have confirmed what I said. I’ve tried tuning the board but it seems to happen no matter what. I’ll drop my settings below just in case. I think I’m still under warranty for a little while. Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Thousands of lawsuits accuse the agrochemical maker of failing to warn people that its weedkiller could cause cancer
The agrochemical maker Bayer and attorneys for cancer patients announced a proposed $7.25bn settlement on Tuesday to resolve thousands of US lawsuits alleging the company failed to warn people that its popular weedkiller Roundup could cause cancer.
The proposed settlement comes as the US supreme court is preparing to hear arguments on Bayer’s assertion that the Environmental Protection Agency’s approval of Roundup without a cancer warning should invalidate claims filed in state courts. That case would not be affected by the proposed settlement.
Continue reading...Mahdawi, arrested last year during US citizenship interview, says he is ‘grateful to the court for honoring the rule of law’
An immigration judge has blocked the Trump administration from deporting Mohsen Mahdawi, a 34-year-old Columbia University student and pro-Palestinian activist who was arrested by federal agents last year during a US citizenship interview in Vermont.
Lawyers for Mahdawi gave details of the decision in a court filing on Tuesday with a federal appeals court in New York, which had been reviewing a ruling that led to his release from immigration custody in April.
Continue reading...Mehdi Mahmoudian released 17 days after arrest for signing a statement condemning Iran’s supreme leader and regime’s protest crackdown
Mehdi Mahmoudian, the Oscar-nominated co-writer of It Was Just an Accident, has been released from an Iranian prison 17 days after his arrest, according to local media reports.
Mahmoudian was arrested in Tehran shortly after signing a statement condemning Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the regime’s violent crackdown on demonstrators. On Tuesday, he was released from the Nowshahr prison, along with two other signatories of the statement, Vida Rabbani and Abdollah Momeni.
Continue reading...Longtime Slashdot reader jrepin writes: KDE Plasma is a popular desktop (and mobile too) environment for GNU/Linux and other UNIX-like operating systems. Among other things, it also powers the desktop mode of the Steam Deck gaming handheld. The KDE community today announced the latest release: Plasma 6.6. In this new major release, Spectacle can recognize texts from screenshots, a new on-screen keyboard and new login manager are available for testing, and a first-time wizard Plasma Setup was added. Your current theme can be saved as a new global theme, which can also be used for the day and night theme-switching feature. Emoji selector got a new easier way to select skin tone. If your computer has a camera available, you can now connect to a Wi-Fi network by scanning a QR code. Application sound volume can now be changed by scrolling over an application taskbar button via mouse wheel. When screencasting and sharing your desktop, you can now filter windows so they are not shared. A setting was added to enable having virtual desktops only on the primary screen. If your device has an ambient light sensor, you can enable automatic screen brightness adjustment. Game controllers can now be used as regular input devices. For complete list of new features and changes, check out the KDE Plasma 6.6 release announcement and the complete changelog.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
It’s been a while since we’ve talked about AsteroidOS, the Linux distribution designed specifically to run on smartwatches, providing a smartwatch interface and applications built with Qt and QML. The project has just released version 2.0, and it comes with a ton of improvements.
AsteroidOS 2.0 has arrived, bringing major features and improvements gathered during its journey through community space. Always-on-Display, expanded support for more watches, new launcher styles, customizable quick settings, significant performance increases in parts of the User Interface, and enhancements to our synchronization clients are just some highlights of what to expect.
↫ AsteroidOS 2.0 release announcement
I’m pleasantly surprised by how many watches are actually fully supported by AsteroidOS 2.0; especially watches from Fossil and Ticwatch are a safe buy if you want to run proper Linux on your wrist. There are also synchronisation applications for Android, desktop Limux, Sailfish OS, and UBports Ubuntu Touch. iOS is obviously missing from this list, but considering Apple’s stranglehold on iOS, that’s not unexpected. Then again, if you bought into the Apple ecosystem, you knew what you were getting into.
As for the future of the project, they hope to add a web-based flashing tool and an application store, among other things. I’m definitely intrigued, and am now contemplating if I should get my hands on a (used) supported watch to try this out. Anything I can move to Linux is a win.
While some Hollywood icons are feeling doom and gloom over the AI-generated clip, labor unions are fighting back with legal threats.
Team GB were disappointed in a men’s curling match against Canada while Tormod Frostad’s big air win was one for the ages
Heinis of France is in the air, it feels hein just looking at him, and he jumps 129, giving him 133.8 points; he moves above Karhumaa and into the lead.
I’ve also got the curling on and, if you’ll excuse my parochialism, I’m not watching pool leaders Switzerland monstering defending champions Sweden, rather USA v China, for reasons of relevance to GB. The Americans now lead 2-1 playing the fifth.
Continue reading...Skiers are reported missing after an avalanche in the Sierra Nevadas while other areas see heavy rain and flooding
California is being blanketed by a winter storm that has brought the coldest air mass in three years to the state – along with heavy snowfall, road closures and power outages.
The University of California Berkeley’s Central Sierra Snow Lab, near Donner Pass, reported 28in of snow on Tuesday, with another 3ft expected in the next two days. I-80 is closed from Colfax to the Nevada state line due to snow.
Continue reading...Every modern iOS, macOS, watchOS, and tvOS application uses Asset Catalogs to manage images, colors, icons, and other resources. When you build an app with Xcode, your
.xcassetsfolders are compiled into binary.carfiles that ship with your application. Despite being a fundamental part of every Apple app, there is little to none official documentation about this file format.In this post, I’ll walk through the process of reverse engineering the
↫ ordinal0 at dbg.re.carfile format, explain its internal structures, and show how to parse these files programmatically. This knowledge could be useful for security research and building developer tools that does not rely on Xcode or Apple’s proprietary tools.
Not only did ordinal0 reverse-engineer the file format, they also developed their own unique custom parser and compiler for .car files that don’t require any of Apple’s tools.
Host claims lawyers barred him from discussing decision to drop Texas Democrat segment amid FCC rules scrutiny
Talkshow host Stephen Colbert has accused the Trump administration and CBS of censorship after he said the network told him not to air a television interview with a Texas Democrat running for Senate.
On his show, Colbert told viewers of the Late Show that network lawyers told him he was also prohibited from talking about their refusal to air his interview with James Talarico, a Texas state representative seeking his party’s nomination to challenge the Republican incumbent, John Cornyn, for a Senate seat in November.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: More than two years after Broadcom took over VMware, the virtualization company's customers are still grappling with higher prices, uncertainty, and the challenges of reducing vendor lock-in. Today, CloudBolt Software released a report, "The Mass Exodus That Never Was: The Squeeze Is Just Beginning," that provides insight into those struggles. CloudBolt is a hybrid cloud management platform provider that aims to identify VMware customers' pain points so it can sell them relevant solutions. In the report, CloudBolt said it surveyed 302 IT decision-makers (director-level or higher) at North American companies with at least 1,000 employees in January. The survey is far from comprehensive, but it offers a look at the obstacles these users face. Broadcom closed its VMware acquisition in November 2023, and last month, 88 percent of survey respondents still described the change as "disruptive." Per the survey, the most cited drivers of disruption were price increases (named by 89 percent of respondents), followed by uncertainty about Broadcom's plans (85 percent), support quality concerns (78 percent), Broadcom shifting VMware from perpetual licenses to subscriptions (72 percent), changes to VMware's partner program (68 percent), and the forced bundling of products (65 percent). When Broadcom bought VMware, some customers shared horror stories about receiving quotes that showed prices increasing by as much as 1,000 percent. CloudBolt's survey paints a more modest picture. Fourteen percent of respondents said their VMware costs have at least doubled, while 12 percent reported increases of 50-99 percent, 33 percent reported increases of 24-49 percent, and 31 percent reported increases of less than 25 percent. Despite survey participants suggesting smaller price hikes than originally anticipated under Broadcom, companies are still struggling with the pricing changes. Eighty-five percent are concerned that VMware will become even more expensive, according to CloudBolt's survey. [...] CloudBolt's survey also examined how respondents are migrating workloads off of VMware. Currently, 36 percent of participants said they migrated 1-24 percent of their environment off of VMware. Another 32 percent said that they have migrated 25-49 percent; 10 percent said that they've migrated 50-74 percent of workloads; and 2 percent have migrated 75 percent or more of workloads. Five percent of respondents said that they have not migrated from VMware at all. Among migrated workloads, 72 percent moved to public cloud infrastructure as a service, followed by Microsoft's Hyper-V/Azure stack (43 percent of respondents). Overall, 86 percent of respondents "are actively reducing their VMware footprint," CloudBolt's report said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
The company's latest Android application packages, spotted by a leaker online, include references to animations for the rumored phone.
If you're looking for an elevated sound experience, these are CNET's current picks, including a few budget options, for earbuds that deliver the best sound quality.
Three boats targeted in eastern Pacific and Caribbean as Trump continues pursuit of alleged ‘narco-terrorists’
US military officials have said American forces launched assaults on three alleged drug-smuggling boats, killing 11 in one of the deadliest days of the Trump administration’s months-long campaign against alleged traffickers.
The military action on Monday brought the number of fatalities caused by US strikes to 145 since September, when Donald Trump called on American armed forces to attack people deemed “narco-terrorists” on small vessels. There have been 42 known strikes in notorious drug-trafficking routes such as the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean, according to the Associated Press reported.
Continue reading...Feb. 17, 2026 — What happens inside a material that powers lasers, heals bodies, and locks away waste — when no one is looking?
Phosphate-based glass materials find wide applications in high tech areas from biomedical devices and high power lasers to waste storage and specialty coatings, but what exactly happens inside them at the atomic level and how they change the properties remains a mystery.

Navid Marchin, a PhD candidate in Materials Science and Engineering at the University of North Texas (left) with Professor Jincheng Du, Department of Materials Science and Engineering at UNT (right).
Unlocking this hidden world could help scientists discover valuable new glass materials with improved properties that are stronger, safer, more durable, and even more versatile than ever before.
Unlike crystalline materials, glasses do not have a regular, repeating structure. Instead, their atoms form complex, disordered networks that are hard to capture accurately by experimental methods alone.
Together, these challenges have limited scientists’ ability to reliably design and optimize them, highlighting the need for more advanced and accurate modeling approaches.
More advanced models demand greater computing power, and matching those results with real-world experimental data remains challenging, particularly for phosphorus-rich glasses. This makes computer simulations a necessity to understand their complex structures and behaviors.
Navid Marchin, a PhD candidate in Materials Science and Engineering at the University of North Texas (UNT), is the lead author on a a paper in the Journal of the American Ceramic Society from October 2025.
Marchin is trying to answer the question: How can HPC based atomistic simulations help scientists better understand the atomic structure of sodium aluminophosphate glasses?
“Improving the ability to model the atomic structure would help accelerate the design of safer, more durable, and more efficient glass materials without relying solely on costly trial-and-error experiments,” he said.
Stepping into Supercomputing
Marchin was first introduced to supercomputing resources in 2023 in Professor Jincheng Du’s Computational Materials Science course at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at UNT.
“Introducing our students to the world of high performance computing, or generally the computational material science methods, is critical for them to understand how these powerful tools can help to understand materials behaviors and to design new materials in addition to traditional experimental based materials research approaches,” said Du, who is a University Distinguished Research Professor and Chair of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering.
In Du’s Functional Glasses and Materials Modeling Laboratory, the students utilize atomistic simulation methods to elucidate complex structural issues of glasses, nano, and other materials for applications including communications, biomedicine, and nuclear waste disposal.
“We access TACC’s systems such as Lonestar6 or Stampede3 through projects funded by the UNT Research Computing Servies. TACC is critical to our daily and federally funded research projects,” Du said.
Now, Marchin regularly relies on TACC resources, specifically Lonestar6, for his research. “The system’s massive processing power and robust software ecosystem let me run large models and long molecular dynamics simulations that simply would not be possible on a local machine,” he said. “As a result, Lonestar6 has dramatically accelerated my work and strengthened the quality of my results.”
New Potential
In recent studies, Marchin and colleagues have developed an advanced interatomic potential that can more accurately capture the atomic structure of phosphate-based glasses. Improving the accuracy of these models is a critical step toward better predicting material properties, understanding how glasses form during processing, and designing new compositions with enhanced performance.
These models were developed based on highly accurate quantum-mechanical calculations and validated through experimental measurements, according to Marchin.
“In this work specifically, the new aluminophosphate glass model significantly reduces the gap between computer simulations and experimental observations, particularly in describing the atomic environment surrounding aluminum atoms,” he said. “TACC’s Lonestar6 CPU/GPU computing time and useful software packages, like LAMMPS, enabled us to perform large-scale molecular dynamics simulations much more efficiently.”
The researchers used supercomputers to run extensive molecular dynamics simulations of multiple glass compositions, including model development, structural relaxation, property calculations, and statistical analysis.
“Access to high performance computing allows us to simulate larger systems over longer timescales, which was essential for accurately capturing short- and medium-range atomic structures and for systematically refining and validating the new potential.”
A Clearer Picture Emerges
The new model results significantly improve agreement between simulations and experimental data, particularly for aluminum coordination and bond-angle distributions in aluminophosphate glasses. It narrows the gap between computational predictions and laboratory measurements and provides more realistic descriptions of glass structure.
“I’m pleased that technological advancements enable progress in computational materials science,” Marchin said. “Our results show that the gap between modeling and experiments can be narrowed using the latest technologies with strong potential for further improvement in future studies.”
Future work will extend this modeling approach to more complex glass compositions and apply the improved model to predict properties such as chemical durability and thermal behavior, further strengthening the link between simulations, experiments, and materials design.
This work was funded by AGC Inc. and AGC researchers provided experimental validation of some of the simulation results. This work signifies the importance of university-industrial collaborations and integration of HPC based simulations and experiments to address fundamental material science issues.
Source: Faith Singer, TACC
The post TACC: HPC Simulations Shed Light on Atomic Structure of Phosphate Glasses appeared first on HPCwire.
Crystal Hefner says she was removed from her position as president of the Hugh M. Hefner Foundation after raising concerns over the "Playboy" founder's scrapbooks.
The Colorado State Patrol says four people were killed in a crash on I-25 south of Pueblo involving at least 30 vehicles during what are being called "brownout" conditions with low visibility on Tuesday morning.
Remarks by a top administration official appeared to be aimed at dispelling skepticism of its assertions, as President Donald Trump vows to restart U.S. tests.
Rosabella-brand moringa capsules could be linked to Salmonella cases in seven U.S. states, health officials said.
AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 17, 2026 — AI Loves Data (ALD) is the new brand set to energize the community previously known as Data Science Salon (DSS)—one of North America’s most trusted, vendor-neutral communities for AI and data science professionals. The rebrand will be officially announced at the organization’s upcoming event in Austin on February 18, marking a defining milestone as Data Science Salon celebrates its 10-year anniversary.
Founded at a time when “data science” was still emerging into the mainstream, Data Science Salon was among the early communities bringing practitioners together to share real-world learnings, advanced technical insight, and practical applications of machine learning. Over the last decade, that community has grown into a diverse and values-driven network of 225,000+ AI and data science professionals committed to responsible innovation, knowledge-sharing, and building trustworthy systems.
The community’s evolution into AI Loves Data reflects both how far the industry has come—and how much the definition of “data science” has changed.
“Data Science Salon isn’t my first venture—but it’s one of the closest to my heart,” said Anna Anisin, CEO of Data Science Salon and FormulatedBy, the company behind the organization. “Watching it evolve from a niche gathering into a bold, values-driven movement has been deeply rewarding. Our rebrand to AI Loves Data reflects that growth. It’s not just a new name—it’s a statement about who we are now: a diverse community built on trust, inclusivity, and shared curiosity about the future of AI and data.”
A Decade of Community—and a Brand Built for What Comes Next
Over the past 10 years, the industry has undergone a major transformation: AI has rapidly accelerated the practice of data science, shifting the focus from purely analytical exploration to productionized intelligence—where models, automation, and intelligent systems are embedded into business workflows.
In many ways, AI didn’t replace data science—it expanded it, absorbing much of the experimentation and modeling that once defined the “science” side of the field.
AI Loves Data is a brand built for this new era: where applied AI moves faster, reaches more teams, and carries higher stakes—requiring stronger community, clearer leadership, and more collaboration across disciplines.
Leading With Inclusion—and Building Trust Through Community
Since its inception, Data Science Salon has prioritized creating an inclusive and welcoming environment for data science and AI professionals from all backgrounds.
“We are bold in featuring women, people of color, and leaders from a wide range of professional and social backgrounds—so their voices can be heard,” says Anisin. “This rebrand is also for them and by them. The love for data, increased emphasis on AI, and updated voice reflects how their leadership and impact have shaped this community over the years.”
In addition to in-person events hosted across the United States, AI Loves Data will continue to expand year-round programming through webinars, podcasts, newsletters, and articles—strengthening community connection far beyond conference day.
Upcoming Events Under the AI Loves Data Brand
Beginning with Austin on February 18, all events will take place under the AI Loves Data brand, including:
Details about upcoming events, meetings, and meetups will be available on the Data Science Salon website and soon on the AILovesData website.
About AI Loves Data
Since 2016, AI Loves Data (ALD) has cultivated a diverse, vendor-neutral community for data science and AI professionals across North America. With a commitment to eliminating bias in both recruitment and algorithms, ALD provides a trusted platform for learning, collaboration, and responsible innovation through face-to-face and virtual events, AI Loves Data Webinars, podcasts, meetups, and training sessions—creating a casual yet high-value environment where practitioners share best practices and shape a more inclusive future for AI and data science.
Source: AI Loves Data
The post AI Loves Data Launches as Successor Brand to Data Science Salon appeared first on HPCwire.
At Google's annual midyear developer showcase, we expect to see updates for Android, Chrome, XR and everything Gemini.
A US law firm has accused Lenovo of violating Justice Department strictures about the bulk transfer of data to foreign adversaries, namely China. From a report: The case filed by Almeida Law Group on behalf of San Francisco-based "Spencer Christy, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated" centers on the Data Security Program regulations implemented by the DOJ last year. According to the suit, these were "implemented to prevent adversarial countries from acquiring large quantities of behavioral data which could be used to surveil, analyze, or exploit American citizens' behavior." The complaint states the DOJ rule "makes clear that sending American consumers' information to Chinese entities through automated advertising systems and associated databases with the requisite controls is prohibited." The case states the threshold for "covered personal identifiers" is 100,000 US persons or more and lists a range of potential identifiers, from government and financial account numbers to IMEIs, MAC, and SIM numbers, demographic data, and advertising IDs.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
President Trump and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore are feuding over who's responsible for addressing one of the largest sewage spills in U.S. history.
"The Late Show" host Stephen Colbert criticized CBS on Monday night, saying the network blocked his interview with U.S. Senate hopeful James Talarico from airing.
Germany's Bayer has faced thousands of lawsuits after buying Roundup maker Monsanto in 2018 for $63 billion.
The DNA profile was recovered from gloves found during the investigation into the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie in Arizona.
Tricia McLaughlin is leaving just over a year into Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem’s tenure leading the department.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 18 #983.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 18, No. 1,705.
Check out Ponies, the new spy thriller series starring Haley Lu Richardson and Emilia Clarke.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 18, No. 717.
Within the major operating system of its day, on popular hardware of its day, ran the utterly dominant relational database software of its day. PC Magazine, February 1984, said, “Independent industry watchers estimate that dBASE II enjoys 70 percent of the market for microcomputer database managers.” Similar to past subjects HyperCard and Scala Multimedia, Wayne Ratcliff’s dBASE II was an industry unto itself, not just for data-management, but for programmability, a legacy which lives on today as xBase.
[…]Written in assembly, dBASE II squeezed maximum performance out of minimal hardware specs. This is my first time using both CP/M and dBASE. Let’s see what made this such a power couple.
↫ Christopher Drum
If you’ve ever wanted to run a company using CP/M – and who doesn’t – this article is as good a starting point as any.
Interim president José Jerí voted out by country’s congress amid scandal concerning secretive meetings
Peru’s interim president has been forced out of office in an “express impeachment” after a political scandal over his secretive meetings with Chinese businessmen.
Lawmakers voted by 75 votes to 24 to proceed with the removal of José Jerí, who had been at the helm for just four months.
Continue reading...Interest earnings on a $40,000 traditional savings account will be minimal this year, but it isn't the only option.
Residents of Potters Bar, a small town just north of London, are trying to block what would be one of Europe's largest data centers from being built on 85 acres of rolling farmland that separates their community from the neighboring village of South Mimms. Multinational operator Equinix acquired the land last October after the local council granted planning permission in January 2025, and the company intends to break ground this year on a development it estimates will cost more than $5 billion. The UK government's decision to classify data centers as "critical national infrastructure" and a new "gray belt" land designation that loosens building restrictions on underperforming greenbelt parcels helped clear the path for approval -- even though objections from locals outweighed signatures of support by nearly two-to-one during the public consultation. A protest group of more than 1,000 residents has since appealed to a third-party ombudsman and the UK's Office of Environmental Protection, but has so far failed to overturn the decision.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Al Sharpton, Donald Trump and more react to death of the civil rights leader at the age of 84
Three Democratic former presidents led a wealth of tributes to Jesse Jackson, a “titan” of the civil rights movement and “one of America’s greatest patriots” who has died at the age of 84.
Joe Biden said history would remember Jackson as “a man of God and of the people”, calling him in a social media post : “Determined and tenacious. Unafraid of the work to redeem the soul of our Nation.”
Continue reading...More than half of jobs in manufacturing and transportation could be automated over the next 20 years, according to Oxford Economics.
OpenAI and OpenClaw's alliance may set the stage for a growing trend of agentic AI in 2026.
U.S. Capitol Police that the individual was in custody and that there did not appear to be other suspects or an ongoing threat.
Data analytics firm moves from Denver after about six years and joins host of businesses relocating to south Florida
Palantir announced on Tuesday that it has moved its headquarters to Miami from Denver. The data analytics company, criticized for its role in the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, joins a host of other businesses and billionaires that recently moved to Florida in search of a more business-friendly climate.
Palantir’s move across state lines comes after its chair, Peter Thiel, announced on 31 December that he opened a Miami office for his private investment firm. Thiel already has a mansion in Miami Beach. The company, previously headquartered in Palo Alto, announced the move on X but did not provide further details or respond to a request for comment. Palantir’s stay in Colorado lasted about six years; the company exited California in August 2020 – with its CEO, Alex Karp, citing disagreements with the state’s values.
Continue reading...I’ve vesced a onewheel pint and I haven’t figured out charging yet. Currently after the battery dies I disassemble the whole thing and charge via a xt-60 which is as annoying as it sounds. I’m wondering what plugs are commonly used among the vesc community.
Could Apple unveil new MacBooks next month? We expect to see M5 chip updates soon with a budget MacBook and OLED MacBook Pros to follow later in the year.
I rode my pint hard last year, and as it warms up I was getting my stuff around to get out riding again soon. But to my surprise, my one wheel will not turn on, light up, or do anything when I press the button. I plugged it in and the light on the charger doesn’t turn red. I left it plugged in for a full 24 hours and no change. I’m starting to get scared, I’m really hoping it’s a safety feature. The board was kept in a warm dry place during winter and last used 3-4 months ago.
Is there a safety feature that can be reset? Do I need to get into the board and look for issues? Am I just screwed?
Please help.
Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman expects "human-level performance on most, if not all professional tasks" from AI, and believes most work involving "sitting down at a computer" -- accounting, legal, marketing, project management -- will be fully automated within the next year or 18 months. He pointed to exponential growth in computational power and predicted that creating a new AI model will soon be as easy as "creating a podcast or writing a blog."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Rimay, a Quantum-Enhanced Feature Extraction Service is made available through the Kipu Quantum Hub platform
BERLIN, Feb. 17, 2025 — Kipu Quantum, a leading provider of quantum software applications, today announced general availability of Rimay Quantum Feature Extraction, a service the company says boost the performance of classical machine learning (ML) models. Rimay integrates into existing ML pipelines and enhances model accuracy by extracting richer quantum features from the same data. This applies particularly to cases where data is scarce, noisy, or imbalanced.
Enterprise users across manufacturing, financial services, life sciences, and energy have already seen evidence of value when using Rimay on IBM Quantum hardware, demonstrating the potential of quantum computers to improve workflows as the technology matures.
High Impact Results Across Sectors
Rimay has supported customer projects, including:
Organizations have also seen results across a wide range of other industry use cases:
How It Works: Quantum for Machine Learning
Rimay Quantum Feature Extraction operates as a closed-loop ecosystem where Classical AI and Quantum Computing continuously amplify one another. By mapping complex datasets into a quantum state space, Rimay exposes hidden patterns and high-order correlations that are mathematically invisible to classical computers. At its core, the feature extraction protocol employs digitized counterdiabatic driving to rapidly evolve the system, bypassing typical noise constraints to leverage k-local many-body spin dynamics.
These capture both linear variable-to-variable contributions and higher-order multi-correlations, signal that classical models miss and as a result overfit, and feed them back as superior features to maximize ML performance. Results validate the potential value of integrating IBM’s 156-qubit processors across image, tabular, and time-series data over purely classical methods. Rimay converts theoretical quantum dynamics into practical, immediate industrial quantum usefulness that scales along with hardware roadmaps.
“IBM offers a global fleet of quantum computers today over the cloud, which industries are using today to explore the benefits quantum is poised to deliver as it scales,” said IBM’s Scott Crowder. “We look forward to working with Kipu and our ecosystem to uncover new ways quantum computing can be integrated into computing architectures and transform our approach to problems.”
Rimay is now available on the Kipu Quantum Hub, alongside other quantum services like Illay and Miray Quantum Optimizers. Rimay is the first module of Kipu’s growing QML toolkit.
For more information or to request access, visit https://hubspot.kipu-quantum.com/rimay.
About Kipu Quantum
Kipu Quantum is a Berlin-based software company focused on delivering industrially useful applications powered by quantum computing. The company develops application- and hardware-specific solutions designed to generate measurable impact across industries, including financial services, energy, life sciences, and manufacturing. Through its platform, the Kipu Quantum Hub, more than 300 organisations access advanced tools for quantum-enhanced machine learning, optimisation, and agentic AI, enabling seamless integration into existing enterprise workflows.
Source: Kipu Quantum
The post Kipu Quantum Announces Quantum-Enhanced Feature Extraction Service for Machine Learning appeared first on HPCwire.
Karime Macías, ex-wife of a state governor, is wanted for allegedly pilfering nearly £5m of public money and now lives in London
The Mexican president, Claudia Sheinbaum, has said her government will send a formal letter of complaint to officials in the United Kingdom after the wife of a former governor wanted for allegedly pilfering £4.8m of public money was granted asylum in Britain.
Karime Macías, ex-wife of jailed former Veracruz governor Javier Duarte, is wanted for extradition to Mexico for allegedly siphoning millions from the state welfare office, but has reportedly spent the last few years in London.
Continue reading...Members' question time: What next for Hungary? 14 April 2026 — 12:00PM TO 12:45PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
As Hungarians prepare to go to the polls, Grégoire Roos, Director of the Europe and Russia and Eurasia Programme at Chatham House, will outline what the elections mean for Hungary and Europe’s future. Submit your questions in advance.
Following the elections in Hungary on April 12th, Gregoire Roos, Director, Europe and Russia and Eurasia Programmes, will assess the implications for Hungary and the European Union. Submit your questions in advance.
On 12 April 2026, Hungarian voters head to the polls in one of the most consequential elections for Hungary – and for Europe – in over a decade.
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and his Fidesz party have dominated Hungary’s political landscape for over 15 years, reshaping the country’s identity at home and abroad. His tenure has been defined by hardline immigration policies, the erosion of judicial independence, and a foreign policy orientation that includes notably close ties with Russian President Vladimir Putin. These choices have placed Budapest in repeated confrontation with the European Union and fuelled ongoing debates about democratic backsliding within the bloc.
This year’s election, however, presents Orbán with his most credible challenge in years. Péter Magyar, leading the emerging TISZA movement, is polling at levels that suggest a potential upset. His pro‑EU stance and centrist positioning represent a stark departure from Fidesz’s direction. A Magyar victory would not only reshape Hungary’s domestic and foreign policy trajectory but could also signal a wider shift in Europe — challenging the momentum of right‑leaning populist parties that have gained ground across the continent.
Join us for a timely conversation with Grégoire Roos, Director of the Europe and Russia and Eurasia Programme at Chatham House, who will unpack the immediate aftermath of the vote. He will examine the implications of the result for Hungary’s future, assess the potential recalibration of its European alliances, and explore the broader implications for political currents across the EU.
A $20,000 credit card debt may be more common than you think — but that doesn't make it any less urgent.
‘I’m trying to figure out if I can actually do this’
Woods says he could play in this year’s Masters
Tiger Woods has confirmed he has been asked to captain the USA team at the Ryder Cup next year. Woods, who has not played competitively since the 2024 Open Championship, has also somewhat remarkably left the door open to teeing up in the Masters this year.
With the USA still reeling from defeat by Europe at Bethpage in September, thoughts have turned towards attempts to reclaim the Ryder Cup in Ireland. Woods is the PGA of America’s first choice as captain. The 50-year-old will determine whether he believes he can commit sufficiently to the role.
Continue reading...Secretary of state spoke of ‘golden age’ of US-Hungary relations at time of tense transatlantic relations with traditional allies
Even before he in effect endorsed Hungary’s Viktor Orbán before a crucial parliamentary election, Marco Rubio’s itinerary for Europe promised to be provocative. After meeting US allies at the Munich Security Conference during a particularly tense moment in transatlantic relations, the US secretary of state departed for Slovakia and Hungary – the two EU states most dependent on Russian energy and sceptical of the bloc’s support for Ukraine.
In what bordered on an explicit political endorsement, Rubio told Orbán that relations between Hungary and the US had entered a “golden age” – and would stay like that for as long as Orban remains in power.
Continue reading...Multi‑billion-dollar collaboration strengthens supply chain resiliency and supports growing demand for chips
MALTA, N.Y. and TOKYO, Feb. 17, 2026 — GlobalFoundries (GF) and Renesas Electronics Corporation have announced an expanded strategic collaboration through a multi‑billion-dollar manufacturing partnership that broadens Renesas’ access to GF technologies including its differentiated technology platforms. This agreement reflects a shared commitment to secure, resilient supply chains and aligns with U.S. priorities to strengthen domestic semiconductor production for economic and national security.
As vehicles become more intelligent and electrified, and factories more automated, the chips inside them are doing far more than basic processing, they enable radar for advanced driver assistance, manage battery systems in electric vehicles and power for secure connectivity for industrial IoT. Reliable semiconductor supply is mission-critical for these applications, and GF’s globally distributed manufacturing footprint—spanning the U.S., Europe and Asia—provides customers with flexibility and supply assurance to meet these challenges.
Under this partnership, Renesas will gain further access to GF’s technology portfolio, including FDX (FD-SOI), BCD and feature-rich CMOS technologies with non-volatile memory features to support its SoCs, power devices and MCUs. Tape-outs under this expanded collaboration are on track to begin in mid-2026.
This expanded partnership, starting with manufacturing in the U.S. and extending to facilities across GF’s global footprint, including in Germany and Singapore, as well as through GF’s manufacturing partnership in China, will help Renesas address the growing demand and requirements of customers developing increasingly advanced systems and products. Renesas and GF are also considering the option of porting select GF process technologies into Renesas’ inhouse fabs in Japan to further enhance manufacturing resilience and support future capacity needs.
“This partnership strengthens a proven relationship and underscores GF’s role as a trusted partner for essential semiconductor technologies,” said Tim Breen, CEO of GlobalFoundries. “The automotive landscape is changing fast. Semiconductors are now the foundation of innovation, powering advanced driver assistance, battery management and secure connectivity. These systems demand performance and efficiency under extreme conditions, and GF’s differentiated platforms are built for that. We’re focused on delivering what matters most: reliable supply and the technologies that enable the vehicles of tomorrow.”
This initiative is part of a broader effort to onshore essential chip technologies and reinforce U.S. leadership in semiconductor manufacturing, while providing Renesas and its customers with secure, localized production options. With the expanded partnership with Renesas, GF now manufactures semiconductors used by the top three automotive MCU manufacturers globally.
“Access to a broader range of GF technologies gives us the flexibility and supply assurance our customers need,” said Hidetoshi Shibata, CEO of Renesas. “This expanded partnership enables a stable, long-term supply of semiconductors while ensuring the highest quality and reliability for our products. These capabilities are essential as we deliver advanced solutions, with demand for electrification and connectivity — and the rapidly growing compute requirements driven by AI applications — accelerating worldwide.”
This expanded collaboration comes as the automotive industry accelerates toward software-defined vehicles, electrification and advanced safety systems—all of which depend on a secure and resilient semiconductor supply chain.
About GF
GlobalFoundries (GF) is a leading manufacturer of essential semiconductors the world relies on to live, work and connect. We innovate and partner with customers to deliver more power-efficient, high-performance products for the automotive, smart mobile devices, internet of things, communications infrastructure and other high-growth markets. With our global manufacturing footprint spanning the U.S., Europe and Asia, GF is a trusted and reliable source for customers around the world. Every day, our talented global team delivers results with an unwavering focus on security, longevity and sustainability. For more information, visit www.gf.com.
About Renesas Electronics Corporation
Renesas Electronics Corporation (TSE: 6723) empowers a safer, smarter and more sustainable future where technology helps make our lives easier. A leading global provider of microcontrollers, Renesas combines our expertise in embedded processing, analog, power and connectivity to deliver complete semiconductor solutions. These Winning Combinations accelerate time to market for automotive, industrial, infrastructure and IoT applications, enabling billions of connected, intelligent devices that enhance the way people work and live. Learn more at renesas.com.
Source: GF
The post GlobalFoundries and Renesas Expand US Semiconductor Manufacturing Partnership appeared first on HPCwire.
Anderson Cooper will report multiple stories for "60 Minutes" before the end of the television season in May.
MIGDAL HAEMEK, Israel, and GRENOBLE, France, Feb. 17, 2026 — Tower Semiconductor, a leading foundry for high-value analog semiconductor solutions, and Scintil Photonics, a technology leader in Heterogeneous Integrated Photonics for next-generation AI infrastructure, today announced availability of the world’s first heterogeneously integrated Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) laser sources for AI infrastructure using Scintil’s SHIP (Scintil Heterogeneous Integrated Photonics) technology.
SHIP leverages Tower’s high-volume silicon photonics platform and combines it with heterogeneous integration of monolithic laser sources, capable of meeting the most demanding DWDM technical requirements for AI. DWDM lasers are an essential component of Co-Packaged Optics (CPO) based next generation of AI infrastructure that aims to deliver ever-growing bandwidth density, ultra-low tail latency, and lower energy per bit, while improving GPU utilization and hyperscaler ROI needed in the agentic AI era.
“The scale-up networking opportunity is about to increase significantly as these server interconnects move to multirack CPO. Scale-up networking will consume an increasing portion of AI Networking’s $200B 2030 market as the market moves towards optical architectures, reducing the constraints on beachhead and copper bandwidth limitations per GPU/XPU,” said Alan Weckel, Founder and Technology Analyst at 650 Group, LLC. “Manufacturing and foundry to vendor alignment is the key to unlocking the CPO market to ensure the reliability and volumes that Hyperscalers need to hit their AI goals.”
Scintil’s SHIP technology has been validated on Tower’s silicon photonics platform. LEAF Light is the industry’s first DWDM-optimized, intelligent external laser source fabricated with SHIP. Tower Semiconductor’s multi-site silicon photonics manufacturing footprint provides resilient capacity and supply continuity aligned with hyperscale deployment needs. This positions the partnership for high-volume hyperscale deployment with the capacity flexibility and supply continuity required at scale.
The collaboration supports customer evaluations for DWDM CPO programs, establishing a defined path from qualification to volume manufacturing.
“Next-generation AI infrastructure demands optical interconnects that deliver more bandwidth per fiber at lower power per bit,” said Matt Crowley, Chief Executive Officer of Scintil Photonics. “DWDM co-packaged optics meets that bar. LEAF Light brings the DWDM laser source technology; Tower’s SiPho platform brings the manufacturing scale. With SHIP now validated on Tower’s production lines, customers have a path from evaluation to millions of units per month.”
“We deeply value our long-term partnership with Scintil, and are excited to bring this revolutionary monolithic DWDM laser technology to market to enable next generations of scale-up architectures,” said Dr. Ed Preisler, VP and GM of RF Business Unit at Tower Semiconductor. “Scintil’s platform complements our PH18M platform already in mass production for optical transceivers at our facilities worldwide.”
As AI data center growth accelerates, hyperscalers need networking solutions that reduce power, improve utilization, and scale with the next generation of models. DWDM CPO, with higher bandwidth density, lower energy per bit, and ultra-low tail latency, are where the industry is heading. LEAF Light is the first production-ready DWDM laser source that uses heterogeneous integration to monolithically integrate active lasers and established silicon photonics on a single chip.
Additional information and OFC: For more detailed information on this and Scintil manufacturing roadmap, please visit Scintil at the OFC 2026 Conference in Los Angeles, March 17-19, booth #5537. To learn more about Tower’s advanced silicon photonics (SiPho) platform and RF & HPA technology offerings, visit Tower’s booth #2221 at the upcoming OFC 2026 conference, March 17-19. Additional information is also available on the company’s website: here. Representatives from both companies will be available for meetings during the event.
More from HPCwire: Scintil Photonics Raises $58M to Scale Integrated Photonics for AI Factories
About Scintil Photonics
Scintil Photonics is the global leader in DWDM laser sources for AI. Using its SHIP (Scintil Heterogeneous Integrated Photonics) technology, Scintil developed LEAF Light, the world’s first single-chip DWDM laser source for high-density optical connectivity in scale-up networks. LEAF Light enables hyperscalers to meet the power, tail latency, utilization, and bandwidth demands of large-scale GPU clusters, leveraging next-generation co-packaged optics (CPO). Headquartered in Grenoble, France, with operations across North America, Scintil is built to support global needs for advanced AI infrastructure.
Source: Scintil Photonics
The post Tower Semiconductor and Scintil Photonics Debut Heterogeneously Integrated DWDM Lasers for AI Infrastructure appeared first on HPCwire.
The scale of the Trump administration’s plans to warehouse human beings is hard to fathom. Here’s one way to put it in perspective: On a given day, New York City’s notorious Rikers Island jail complex holds approximately 7,000 detainees. President Donald Trump’s regime, which is currently holding a record 70,000 people in immigration detention, now plans to develop a network of Rikers-sized concentration camps for immigrants nationwide.
The Department of Homeland Security is racing to buy up and convert two-dozen-plus warehouses into mass detention centers for immigrants, some capable of holding up to 10,000 people. According to documents released last week, Immigration and Customs Enforcement expects to spend $38.3 billion acquiring warehouses across the country and retrofitting them to collectively hold nearly 100,000 beds.
“If these mega-camps are utilized to the full capacity ICE intends, they’ll be the largest prisons in the country, with little real oversight,” noted Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, senior fellow at the American Immigration Council. “The federal government hasn’t operated a prison camp inside the United States that large since Japanese Internment.”
When Trump’s border czar, Tom Homan, last week announced that ICE’s “surge” in Minnesota would wind down, it marked a significant victory for the thousands of Minnesotans who have fought back against the federal forces terrorizing their state; resistance forced the Trump regime to change its plans. But nothing is ramping down when it comes to the deportation machine at large. When billions of dollars are spent to turn industrial spaces into detention camps, authoritarian desires meet market logic: The warehouses must be filled.
Local communities are nonetheless pushing back, even in the face of seemingly insurmountable federal forces with unlimited funding, abetted by powerful private interests who stand to gain from this carceral build-out.
As The Appeal reported last week, investors on a recent quarterly earnings call for private prison giant CoreCivic were worried that ICE’s unprecedented detention numbers were still not high enough. “I think people thought we’d be at that 100,000 level,” one caller reportedly said of the number of people currently held by ICE. “We’re at a little over 70,000.”
The Trump administration has made clear that it can afford anything when it comes to the rounding up and brutalizing of immigrants and antifascist protesters.
The company’s CEO stressed the major financial gains made though Trump’s anti-immigrant campaign and assured callers that the drawdown in Minnesota did not, in his view, portend “meaningful changes in enforcement style or approach.” That is to say, the racial profiling, cruelty, and mass roundups will continue, and private prison corporations like CoreCivic and Geo Group, alongside giants of surveillance infrastructure like Palantir, will collectively make billions from DHS spending. What author John Ganz has called “ICE’s function as an employment program for the Trumpenproletarian mob” — now with 22,000 officers — will also continue to be handsomely funded.
None of this is a surprise: When Congress passed Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act allocating ICE nearly $80 billion in multiyear funding, the administration made clear that money would be no object in enacting its project of ethnic cleansing and the expansion of the carceral system for targeted groups of immigrants and opponents. The warehouse purchases and related government contracts have, as The Lever reported, been a boon for Trump-connected real estate brokers and a bailout for “commercial real estate owners, who have struggled to sell their properties over the past year under the weight of macroeconomic headwinds and Trump’s tariff war.”
Economic stimulus based in ethnic cleansing would, of course, be despicable. But the Trump regime can’t even pretend this dizzyingly expensive project serves its own base. Only a small number of interested businesses and parties stand to gain. Meanwhile, as public resistance in both Republican- and Democratic-majority locales has already made clear, everyone else stands to lose. And hundreds of thousands of our immigrant neighbors stand to lose the most.
Trump’s mass deportation plan is estimated by the libertarian Cato Institute to have a fiscal cost of up to $1 trillion over a decade. And the losses? Due to the loss of workers across U.S. industries, the American Immigration Council found that mass deportation would reduce the U.S. gross domestic product by 4.2 to 6.8 percent. It’s money that could be spent improving our collective lives. The $45 billion total budgeted for ICE detention centers is nearly four times the $12.8 billion the U.S. spent on new affordable housing in 2023. The huge budget for ICE mega warehouses reflects the most Trumpian mix: cronyist dealmaking in service of white nationalism.
The historian Adam Tooze has at various points recalled the words of economist John Maynard Keynes, who said in 1942 that “anything we can actually do we can afford.” Keynes was arguing that sovereign governments have extraordinary capacity to mobilize finances; the constraints lie elsewhere. Tooze has stressed that the limits of what a government can “actually do” are political, technical, material, and logistical — and extremely complicated as such. But, he points out, they are not budgetary. The Trump administration has made clear that it can afford anything when it comes to the rounding up and brutalizing of immigrants and antifascist protesters. That, however, does not mean the government can actually do everything it wants.
A number of warehouse owners, facing local backlash and pressure, have already backed out of lucrative sales to ICE. According to Bloomberg, Canadian billionaire Jim Pattison’s company announced that a transaction to sell a 550,000-square-foot warehouse in Ashland, Virginia, “will not be proceeding.” The company made clear that the move was political, saying, “We understand that the conversation around immigration policy and enforcement is particularly heated, and has become much more so over the past few weeks. We respect that this issue is deeply important to many people.”
For ICE, money is no object. But constant and relentless public protest, blockades, boycotts, and local government pressure significantly lessen the appeal for warehouse owners and potential contractors to do this fascist work.
Deals for warehouses near Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Salt Lake City, and Byhalia, Missouri, have also fallen through. In each case, warehouse owners faced protests and mounting pressure. In some jurisdictions, backlash to ICE warehouses have come in the worst sort of NIMBY variety — including complaints from Republicans who do not want immigrant detainees brought to their town en masse. Concerns about water and sewage systems and economic strains in remote areas also abound. But if local self-interest becomes a barrier to the expansion of Trump’s deportation regime, that’s no bad thing, given the urgent need to hold back Trump’s deeply unpopular but otherwise unrestrained forces.
We need every possible limit on what Trump and his loyalists can actually do.
The post Can Trump’s Plan for Warehouse Immigrant Detention Camps Be Stopped? appeared first on The Intercept.
Kay Mason Billig accuses Steve Reed of forcing council to agree to poll delay in return for extra funding and powers
• What made ministers think they could delay local elections?
A Norfolk council leader has accused the government of “bullying” her local authority into postponing elections in return for extra funding and powers, as she pulled out of long-awaited devolution deal for the county.
Kay Mason Billig, the Conservative leader of Norfolk county council, said she would no longer take part in local government reorganisation (LGR) or devolution plans in the area, saying the council could not participate in that and simultaneously hold elections.
Continue reading...Feb. 17, 2026 — The first users for Roihu, CSC’s next-generation supercomputer, have now been selected. These pilot projects will run as a part of Roihu’s acceptance phase, providing essential real world workloads to validate the system.
A substantial number of high‑quality proposals were submitted by universities, research institutes and companies alike. CSC’s resource allocation group evaluated all 49 applications and selected 28 projects whose computational profiles are best suited to testing the full breadth of the new system.
Together, these projects will ensure that Roihu’s capabilities are exercised comprehensively under demanding, scientifically meaningful conditions. The projects not chosen are moved to a waiting list, from which they can be promoted to pilot projects if any of Roihu’s computing capacity remains unused.
Many of the selected pilot projects utilize artificial intelligence. These include projects developing new language models (Cheng, Ginter, Tiedemann), identifying new areas with mineral potential from complex geophysical datasets (Nidhi), and advancing faster, more efficient and more accurate weather‑forecasting methods (Bouvier).
Tigany Zarrouk investigates solid electrolyte interphase in Li/Na-ion batteries, in which solid electrolyte could significantly improve battery longevity and safety.
Ina Pöhner examines whether experimental data could be used to refine a new AI model—and whether such a model might replace current virtual‑screening approaches in the search for drug candidates.
The chosen pilot projects:
The pilot phase for Roihu will begin at the end of March. If the four‑week testing period proceeds without major issues, Roihu will be opened for general use at the end of April.
Roihu is Finland’s next national supercomputing system, set to replace the current Mahti and Puhti supercomputers. Roihu is built on BullSequana XH3000 hybrid system by Eviden.
More from HPCwire
Source: CSC
The post CSC: Pilot Users Selected for the Roihu Supercomputer appeared first on HPCwire.
Feb. 17, 2026 — In November, the Department of Energy Office of Science renewed the Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center (SQMS), hosted by Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, with $125 million over the next five years to accelerate breakthroughs in quantum information science.

LLNL scientist Gianpaolo Carosi (right) discusses the inner workings of the Axion Dark Matter eXperiment. Expertise in this cavity technology (shown here plated in copper) is enhancing current efforts in quantum computing. Photo credit: Pat McGiffert/UW.
The investment continues to unite more than 300 experts from 43 partner institutions across national laboratories, universities and industry to advance the next generation of quantum computing, communication and sensing technologies. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) is one of those partners, bringing a deep expertise in materials and microwave cavities to the table.
As part of this collaboration, LLNL scientist Keith Ray is studying niobium and tantalum, materials used to create 3D cavities and 2D resonators for superconducting qubits.
“Regardless of the institution you’re at or the qubit design you’re working on, you want more information about the materials that you’re employing,” he said. “It’s great to see a bunch of experimental and theoretical work coming out of SQMS that’s focused on materials for quantum computers. The more data I have on these materials, the more refined my models can be, and the more informative and relevant they can be.”
Niobium cavity superconducting qubits work by trapping single photons inside a hollow chamber, where they resonate with a particular frequency. For those photons to function as qubits and store useful information, they need to bounce back and forth off the cavity while dissipating as little energy as possible. In other words, the niobium surface must be free from imperfections.
“We’ve developed methods to look at these interfaces and what causes loss in superconducting qubits,” said Ray. “A lot of effort has been undertaken on other projects here at Livermore to develop those methods, and we can now apply them to interfaces and materials that are useful for SQMS and potentially leverage our work to do very targeted things for the collaboration.”
SQMS is focused on developing these cavity-based quantum computing platforms. And LLNL’s work on the Axion Dark Matter eXperiment (ADMX) — which uses similar types of 3D cavities to search for axions, a candidate particle for dark matter — provides insights beyond the materials and into the cavities themselves.
“My role with SQMS is to help with the cavity design,” said LLNL scientist Gianpaolo Carosi. “So far, one of their cavities was able to get a photon to exist in that cavity for on the order of a few seconds. It’s kind of crazy, a little trapped photon bouncing around for actual seconds.”
The longer a photon sticks around in the cavity, the more time to compute and the lower the error rate.
This quantum technology also goes beyond computing, circling back to improve the hunt for axions and extending out to a search for “dark photons,” another dark matter candidate. The cavities could also detect gravitational waves, which would physically squeeze and stretch the chamber, changing its resonant frequency.
“I am really curious to see how the designs they have for gravitational wave sensing could be used for other types of sensing that may be applicable to national security,” said Carosi. “I think SQMS has the ability to bring an interesting set of resources together to try and tackle things at a pretty large scale.”
Ray and Carosi emphasized that there are many projects at LLNL that could tie in further with SQMS and its mission. This resonance and potential for amplification, they said, is exciting.
“We can all share ideas to develop better models and simulations to describe these materials and cavities,” said Ray. “All of this adds up to better quantum computers in the long run.”
More from HPCwire: SQMS Center Awarded $125M to Accelerate Quantum Computing and Sensing Research
Source: LLNL
The post LLNL Scientists Advance Superconducting Qubit Materials Through Renewed SQMS Program appeared first on HPCwire.
Case became focal point for immigration after he was deported to El Salvador where he faces gang threats
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) cannot re-detain Kilmar Ábrego García because a 90-day detention period has expired and the government has no viable plan for deporting him, a federal judge ruled on Tuesday.
The Salvadorian national’s case has become a focal point in the immigration debate after he was mistakenly deported to his home country last year. Since his return, he has been fighting a second deportation to a series of African countries proposed by Department of Homeland Security officials.
Continue reading...National Crime Agency says rise in child sexual abuse being driven by technology and online forums
Child sexual abuse in the UK is soaring, police have said, with 1,000 paedophile suspects being arrested each month and the number of children being rescued from harm rising by 50% in the last five years.
The National Crime Agency said the growth in offending across the UK was driven by technology and linked to the radicalisation of offenders in online forums, encouraging people to view images of child sexual abuse by reassuring them it was normal.
Continue reading...No database match for sample found two miles from home offers as search for TV host’s mother enters third week
DNA found on a glove about two miles from Nancy Guthrie’s house did not result in any leads on the case, officials confirmed on Tuesday.
Unknown male DNA was found on a glove that resembled one worn by Guthrie’s abductor in the surveillance video from the night of the 84-year-old’s disappearance, the FBI said on Sunday.
Continue reading...Three new strikes against alleged South American drug boats come as the Pentagon pulls its warships back from the region to refocus on the Middle East.
At least 80 film-makers and stars sign open letter after German festival jury president Wim Wenders says they should keep out of politics
More than 80 current and former participants of the Berlinale, including Javier Bardem, Tilda Swinton and Adam McKay have signed an open letter condemning the festival’s “silence” on Gaza.
It comes after the film festival was swept up in what it called a “media storm” over the alleged sidelining of political discourse at the event.
Continue reading...The GOP tax and spending bill creates a tax deduction for workers in tipped occupations. Here's what to know.
While the latest generation of GPUs have emphasized lower precision performance that are favored for AI workloads, higher precision computing, such as 64 bit floating point (FP64), is still is “very important” to Genesis Mission and its goal of accelerating scientific discovery through AI, the Department of Energy’s Under Secretary for Science Darío Gil told HPCwire last week.
“In discussions I’ve had with both [AMD CEO] Lisa Hsu and with [Nvidia CEO] Jensen [Huang], they have expressed a strong commitment for FP64, that it will continue,” Gil said in an interview last week. “For us, it’s very important, because we don’t view this [as a] substitution. These are complementary.”
It’s important to have high performance hardware to power the modeling and simulation workloads that have traditionally been the backbone of scientific computing, as well as the performance for newer AI techniques, Gil said, adding that those two types of computing will work together to support Genesis Mission’s goal of pushing the limits in AI-powered science and engineering.
“You have the high-fidelity simulation codes that run with high precision. You use those, once validated, as the basis to generate training examples with which you train a surrogate model that you end up running on an AI supercomputer,” Gil said. “You end up with benefits in terms of productivity, in terms of time to solution, often 10x, 20x, 100x.”

Department of Energy’s Undersecretary of Science Darío Gil speaks with HPCwire last week
The productivity boost that one can get with AI models is massive, he added, but it’s dependent on retaining the loop composed of experimentation, simulation, and training.
“If you break the loop and you say I no longer have the simulation codes, and then you have a problem because you never have enough experimental data to be able to do this,” Gil said. “For us it is fundamental, not only for the legacy codes that we’ve got to continue to maintain, and they’re so important to our mission. But also even to enable the AI workflow. People have to appreciate that there’s this loop occurring. So yes, it’s very important for us that we maintain the different architectural approaches.”
There has been some concern in the HPC community about the lack of performance gains for FP64 in the latest GPUs. The University of Tennessee’s Jack Dongarra brought up the issue during the Top500 press conference at SC25 in November, stating “The floating-point capability of the platform is not improved–not improved–over the previous generation.”
Let’s look at the last three generations of Nvidia GPUs to get an idea of what’s happening here. The Nvidia Hopper H100 chip, which shipped in 2022, featured 34 teraflops of FP64, while the first-generation Blackwell B100 chip featured 30 teraflops. The second-generation Blackwell B200 delivered 37 teraflops, with the GB200 Blackwell featured in NVL4 and NVL72 systems delivered 40 teraflops of FP64 compute.
Data shared by Nvidia last month show the native FP64 performance of the upcoming Rubin GPU will be only 33 teraflops, down from the native FP64 performance of Blackwell and even below that of Hopper. However, Rubin GPU will deliver 200 teraflops of FP64 matrix when the Tensor Core-based emulation feature is turned out. That compares to 150 teraflops of emulated FP64 matrix performance in the Blackwell GPU and 67 teraflops of emulated FP64 in Hopper.

Rubin will deliver 33 teraflops of native FP64 performance (Source: Nvidia blog “Inside the NVIDIA Rubin Platform: Six New Chips, One AI Supercomputer“)
As Nvidia puts the pedal to the metal to power lower precision AI workloads with its latest Rubin GPUs, it will increasingly rely on cuBLAS, a CUDA-X math library that emulates double-precision computing on Tensor Cores to keep the FP64 metric increasing.
“We’re trying to expose these capabilities to the developer environment so that they can…get the FP64 required,” Dion Harris, the senior director of HPC and AI hyperscale infrastructure solutions at Nvidia, told HPCwire in December.
Nvidia emulation techniques rely on the Ozaki Scheme, which is a technique first described in 2012 by Katsuhisa Ozaki. The method provides a way to perform matrix multiplication with high accuracy by leveraging low-precision computations. “It achieves this by splitting high-precision input matrices into multiple components and then performing matrix multiplications on these components using low-precision arithmetic,” HPCwire contributor Doug Eadline wrote in April 2025. “The results are then combined to obtain the final accurate high-precision matrix product.”
Nvidia says using the Ozaki scheme to emulate higher precision workloads on lower precision Tensor Core hardware is warranted because increasing raw FP64 performance by adding more Cuda Cores won’t actually increase the overall performance of HPC applications.
“Analysis of production simulation codes shows that the highest sustained FP64 performance often comes from matrix-multiply kernels,” Nvidia wrote in a January 5 blog post. “Hopper used dedicated hardware to accelerate these paths. With Blackwell and now Rubin, Nvidia has evolved this strategy, achieving high FP64 matrix throughput via multiple passes over lower-precision tensor cores while preserving architectural flexibility for converged workloads.”

Nvidia shared specs of its upcoming Rubin GPU
“At the same time, dedicated FP64 vector performance remains critical for scientific applications that are not dominated by matrix kernels,” Nvidia continued. “In these cases, performance is constrained by data movement through registers, caches, and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) rather than raw compute. A balanced GPU design therefore provisions sufficient FP64 resources to saturate available memory bandwidth, avoiding over-allocation of compute capacity that cannot be effectively utilized.”
There are a lot of moving parts at play here. Traditional modeling and simulation workloads have a need for some raw FP64 horsepower provided by CUDA Cores in Nvidia GPUs and Stream Processors in AMD Instinct GPUs. At the same time, there is a need for improving AI performance, which runs at lower precision on Tensor Cores in Nvidia Chips and Matrix Cores in AMD chips.
Genesis Mission is likely to generate a variety of AI for science and engineering applications, and each one likely will have slightly different computational needs. Whether Nvidia and AMD have achieved the optimal balance by juicing the matrix math cores and leaning on Ozaki emulation for FP64 has yet to be determined, but it’s certainly a factor that many in the HPC community will be watching.
Related Items:
Nvidia Says Rubin Will Deliver 5x AI Inference Boost Over Blackwell
Nvidia Says It’s Not Abandoning 64-Bit Computing
Have You Heard About the Ozaki Scheme? You Will
The post Genesis Mission Will Lean Heavily on Ozaki Scheme for FP64 Capability appeared first on HPCwire.
Feb. 17, 2026 — The European Commission has launched a new call, the Frontier AI Grand Challenge, in collaboration with EuroHPC Joint Undertaking.
The initiative aims to close the strategic gap in high-end AI by supporting the creation of “frontier” general-purpose AI systems capable of adapting across domains with minimal modification, and by leveraging Europe’s world-class supercomputing infrastructure.
The challenge invites leading European actors to develop frontier AI models with a computational capacity equivalent to at least 400 billion parameters. By using efficient, modular architectures like Mixture-of-Experts (MoE), these models are expected to set new benchmarks for performance and efficiency.
By granting access to world-class European supercomputing infrastructure, EuroHPC JU will help ensure that frontier AI systems can be developed and trained within Europe.
Implemented under the EU-funded AI-BOOST project, the Frontier AI Grand Challenge will select one proposal to train a frontier AI model designed to outperform state-of-the-art systems on a range of relevant tasks, using EuroHPC computing resources.
The selected project will receive up to 2.5% of the overall EuroHPC computing capacity for one year on one or more AI-optimized EuroHPC supercomputers.
The deadline for submission of applications is set for April 13, 2026 at 17:00 CET (Brussel’s Time).
See the European Commission’s press release here.
Background Information
This initiative complements wider EU efforts to make Europe the AI continent, as set out in the AI Continent Action Plan, and to strengthen Europe’s AI startup and scale-up ecosystem, ensuring that the most promising innovators have access to the infrastructure needed to compete globally.
The EuroHPC JU is a legal and funding entity that brings together the European Union and participating countries to coordinate efforts and pool resources with the objective of making Europe a world leader in supercomputing.
To equip Europe with a cutting-edge supercomputing infrastructure, the EuroHPC JU has already procured 12 supercomputers, distributed across Europe including JUPITER in Germany, and Alice Recoque, Europe’s first exascale systems.
European scientists and users from the public sector and industry can benefit from EuroHPC supercomputers via the EuroHPC Access Calls no matter where in Europe they are located, to advance science and support the development of a wide range of applications with industrial, scientific and societal relevance for Europe.
Currently, the EuroHPC JU is also overseeing the implementation of 19 AI factories (AIF) across Europe, complemented by 13 AI Factory Antennas, to offer free, customized support to SMEs and startups.
The EuroHPC JU also funds research and innovation projects to develop a full European supercomputing supply chain, from processors and software to applications to be run on these supercomputers and know-how to develop strong European HPC expertise.
With the recent adoption of Council Regulation (EU) 2026/150, the EuroHPC JU’s mandate has been expanded with new action pillars dedicated to the deployment of AI Gigafactories across Europe and the advancement of quantum technologies.
More from HPCwire
Source: EuroHPC JU
The post EuroHPC and European Commission Launch Frontier AI Grand Challenge to Train Large-Scale AI Model appeared first on HPCwire.
Britain has lost more than 14,000 pubs since 2009, a decline from roughly 54,000 registered public houses and bars to under 40,000 by 2022, according to a new analysis of UK business register data by data analyst Lauren Leek. The North East, North West, Yorkshire and the Midlands lost 25 to 30% of their stock; London saw the smallest decline. Leek trained a random forest model on 49,840 pubs and found spatial isolation -- how far a pub stood from its nearest neighbour -- was the single strongest predictor of closure. Median nearest-neighbour distance for surviving pubs is roughly 280 metres; for closed pubs, 640 metres. Each closure pushes remaining pubs further into isolation, a dynamic Leek calls a "spatial death spiral." Much of that isolation traces to ownership. Stonegate, Britain's largest pub company and a holding of PE firm TDR Capital, carries over $4 billion in debt from its 2019 leveraged acquisition of Ei Group. PE-backed and overseas-owned companies now control roughly a quarter to a third of all British pubs.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Jackson’s two presidential runs brought the civil rights movement into the heart of the Democratic party and opened doors for others to walk through
He witnessed the assassination of Martin Luther King at the Lorraine motel in Memphis, Tennessee. Forty years later, he joined the jubilant crowd in Chicago’s Grant Park to greet Barack Obama’s election victory and had tears streaming down his face.
Jesse Jackson, who died on Tuesday at the age of 84, was hailed by Martin Luther King III and his wife Andrea King as “a living bridge between generations”. He was the most influential African American political voice between King and Obama. His two runs for the Democratic nomination created the imaginative space for a Black president. He was the architect of a “rainbow coalition” that shapes the Democratic party today.
Continue reading...Group says they intend to establish permanent settlement but Mauritius attorney general calls their move a ‘publicity stunt’
Four Chagos Islanders have landed on one of the archipelago’s atolls to establish what they say will be a permanent settlement, in an attempt to complicate a British plan to transfer the territory to Mauritius.
The Mauritius attorney general said the move was a publicity stunt designed to create conflict over a 2025 agreement with Britain on handing over sovereignty of the British Indian Ocean Territory, which is opposed by some Chagossians who accuse Mauritius of decades of neglect. Mauritius has denied the accusations.
Continue reading...The Kennedy-era robin's egg blue that's currently on the planes is being updated to navy, red and gold.
Chair of UK government review says dramatic changes in labour market risks putting ‘a generation on the scrapheap’
On any given day, Poppy Blackman is engaged in the “soul-crushing” process of applying for a new job, and rarely ever hearing anything back.
The 22-year-old has been unemployed since January 2025 and says she applies to an average of 50 roles a month, using one of four different CVs she has written for different types of jobs and sectors.
Continue reading...Hamdan Ballal says violence on West Bank as bad as ever, nearly a year after his Oscar-winning film shocked the world
The co-director of the Oscar-winning No Other Land has said his home and family have come under renewed attack, almost a year after the documentary on Israeli settler and army violence in the West Bank received an Academy Award.
Hamdan Ballal said a group of settlers who had conducted a long-running campaign of harassment against Palestinian villagers came on Sunday to his home in Susya, in the Masafer Yatta area on the southern edge of the West Bank.
Continue reading...
Este artículo también está disponible en español.
One of the sticking points in the standoff between Democrats and Republicans over funding for the Department of Homeland Security has been the Trump administration’s expanded use of administrative warrants to forcibly enter people’s homes to make immigration arrests. Democrats argue the new DHS policy runs afoul of the Constitution and have demanded immigration officers obtain judicial warrants — a higher legal bar that requires a judge’s approval — to forcibly enter a home.

The Trump administration contends that immigrants in the country illegally who have received a final order of removal from immigration judges are not entitled to Fourth Amendment protections — a position many immigration law experts dispute. And several lawmakers have argued that the additional requirement for judicial warrants would significantly curtail immigration enforcement efforts.
Funding for DHS lapsed on Feb. 14 as Republicans have balked at Democrats’ demands to rein in several immigration enforcement measures. Among other requests, Democrats are asking for a ban on ICE agents wearing masks, requirements for displaying identification and using body-worn cameras, and the use of judicial warrants on private property. As Congress failed to pass legislation on Feb. 13, parts of DHS, including the Transportation Security Administration, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Coast Guard, will be affected by the lapse in funding. ICE has enough money to keep operating due to billions in funding from the Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act, passed last summer.
Debate over the use of administrative versus judicial warrants has emerged as one of the main impediments in the negotiations.
During a press conference on Jan. 30, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries emphasized that Democrats would “not walk away from” their demand that “judicial warrants should be required before ICE can storm homes and rip people out of their cars.” On Feb. 4, Jeffries joined Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer in writing a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senate Majority Leader John Thune to propose “targeted enforcement,” where “DHS officers cannot enter private property without a judicial warrant.” In the letter, Jeffries and Schumer proposed 10 “common sense solutions that protect constitutional rights and ensure responsible law enforcement.”
Meanwhile, during a Feb. 1 interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Republican Sen. Ron Johnson called the Democrats’ demand for judicial warrants “completely unacceptable,” stating that “immigration has always been enforced through administrative warrants.” Also, on Feb. 3, House Speaker Johnson said that “adding an entirely new layer of judicial warrants” was “unimplementable.”
We’ll explain the differences between the two types of warrants and how the Trump administration’s use of administrative warrants has departed from past practices.
According to the National Immigration Law Center, judicial warrants are “formal written [orders] authorizing a law enforcement officer to make an arrest, a seizure, or a search.” They are issued by state and federal courts and signed by judges or magistrate judges. As these warrants allow search, seizures and arrests on private property, they are more specific than administrative warrants, and include details like the address, time frame and targets of the search.
Administrative warrants authorize law enforcement officers with federal agencies to make an arrest or seizure, but not a search. “An administrative warrant does not confer authority to enter a home or private area,” the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service explained in a 2021 report, linking to a 2007 DHS letter.
“Administrative warrants are not reviewed or signed by a federal judge or even an immigration judge, they are reviewed and signed by immigration officers,” John Gihon, an immigration attorney and past chair of the American Immigration Lawyers Association Central Florida Chapter, told us in an email.
There are two forms of administrative warrants, known as I-200 and I-205 forms. According to the American Immigration Council, I-200 forms are issued to arrest “anyone federal agents believe to be present in the United States in violation of federal immigration law.” Conversely, the I-205 form “authorizes an immigration officer to arrest and deport someone who has previously been ordered removed from the United States.”
Under the Trump administration, immigration arrests by ICE have increased considerably, and agents can more quickly obtain administrative, versus judicial, warrants, experts said.
Regarding Speaker Johnson’s characterization of judicial warrant requirements as “unimplementable,” Kathleen Bush-Joseph, a lawyer and U.S. immigration policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute, told us in a phone interview that when you consider “the number of arrests that the Department of Homeland Security says that they made last year, which is in the hundreds of thousands … if they had to get judicial warrants for all of those people, that would certainly be a significant administrative burden.”
Historically, Sen. Johnson’s statement that immigration enforcement has “always” been conducted with administrative warrants is accurate. According to Gihon, “immigration law has always been enforced through [administrative] warrants,” as “[u]nder the Immigration and Nationality Act, a judicial warrant is not required to make an immigration arrest.”
However, the Trump administration has determined — contrary to the practice of previous administrations — that administrative warrants allow immigration officers to “arrest illegal aliens with final orders of removal in their homes,” as DHS has said. This position has raised concerns about the Fourth Amendment.
The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” That has historically prevented immigration agents with only an administrative warrant from forcibly entering homes.
In an analysis updated on Feb. 4, Hannah James, a counsel in the Brennan Center for Justice’s Liberty and National Security Program, wrote that “the home receives the highest protection under the Fourth Amendment,” and reiterated that the ability to enter a home with a judicial versus an administrative warrant is “very different from a Fourth Amendment perspective.”
However, in January, the Associated Press obtained a leaked May 12, 2025, memo written by Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons, in which he said: “Although the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has not historically relied on administrative warrants alone to arrest aliens subject to final orders of removal in their place of residence, the DHS Office of General Counsel has recently determined that the U.S. Constitution, the Immigration and Nationality Act, and the immigration regulations do not prohibit relying on administrative warrants for this purpose.”
Lyons was referring to the I-205 warrants, which target noncitizens with a final order of removal. According to an American Immigration Council fact sheet, final orders of removal are issued when “an immigration judge finds a noncitizen to be removable” and the noncitizen fails to file an appeal within 30 days, waives the right to appeal or has an appeal dismissed by the Board of Immigration Appeals. The government can then choose to execute the removal order, where it notifies the noncitizen to surrender to ICE for deportation or face arrest.
In using the I-205 warrant, the DHS memo said, immigration officers should knock on a resident’s door and identify themselves. Then, they should “allow those inside the residence a reasonable chance to act lawfully. Should the alien refuse admittance, ICE officers and agents should use only a necessary and reasonable amount of force to enter the alien’s residence, following proper notification of the officer’s or agent’s authority and intent to enter.”
In a Feb. 4 DHS press release setting “the record straight on administrative warrants,” DHS stated that there is “broad judicial recognition that illegal aliens aren’t entitled to the same Fourth Amendment protections as U.S. citizens.” Accordingly, the press release said, “While administrative warrants may satisfy the Fourth Amendment for any arrest of an illegal alien, ICE currently uses these warrants to enter an illegal alien’s residence only when the alien has received a final order of removal from an Immigration Judge.”
Therefore, immigration enforcement agencies have claimed the power to use administrative warrants to enter private homes to arrest noncitizens with final orders of removal. However, immigration experts told us this interpretation runs contrary to constitutional protections, particularly the Fourth Amendment.
Bush-Joseph told us that “the understanding had been that immigrants, like U.S. citizens, were protected by the Fourth Amendment from forcible entry into their homes without a judicial warrant.”
James wrote that the Supreme Court “has never held, nor suggested, that undocumented immigrants within the United States receive lesser Fourth Amendment protection than citizens or noncitizens with legal status.” James explained that “among lower courts, the [prevailing view] is that undocumented immigrants within the United States have the same Fourth Amendment protections as U.S. citizens.”
On Feb. 3, Speaker Johnson described his frustration with limitations on administrative warrants, specifically when someone runs into a private home. Johnson commented that “the controversy has erupt where if someone is … going to be apprehended and they run behind a closed door and lock the door. I mean, what is ICE supposed to do?”
The DHS press release echoed such concerns, arguing that “[b]ecause Congress hasn’t created a mechanism to obtain a judicial warrant, this meant that under previous presidential administrations, ICE would sit outside the homes of fugitive aliens waiting for them to come outside before arresting them.” DHS said, “Illegal aliens quickly identified this loophole” and would “openly taunt the ICE officers” waiting outside.
When asked about the situation Johnson described, Gihon said via email, “Prior to the current Trump term, immigration officers were trained not to enter private residences or private areas of public property without consent or an exception to the 4th amendment’s warrant requirement.”
We reached out to Johnson’s office for comment, but did not receive a response.
The May 2025 DHS memo said that “standard exceptions to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement apply equally in the context of Form I-205 warrants,” including getting consent to go into a person’s home and “exigent circumstances,” such as “hot pursuit,” risks of evidence destruction or potential violence, attempts to flee, and “a substantial risk of harm to the persons involved or to the law enforcement process if the officer or agent must wait for a warrant.”
According to a 2021 Congressional Research Service report, the hot pursuit doctrine “provides that police may pursue a fleeing felony suspect into a home, when they have probable cause to make an arrest and when they set that arrest in motion in a public place.”
However, Gihon told us that the hot pursuit exception wouldn’t apply to arrests for civil immigration violations. “The U.S. Supreme Court has held that hot pursuit does not even extend to all criminal offenses,” he said, citing the 2021 Supreme Court case Lange v. California.
Referring to the DHS concerns about judicial warrants, James wrote that “DHS’s view that it lacks sufficient access to judicial warrants is not a valid basis for the agency to dispense with the requirements of the Fourth Amendment,” and that “constraints on ICE’s ability to obtain judicial warrants … may very well reflect Congress’s decided judgment that civil immigration violations should not be pursued by entering people’s homes.”
Finally, regarding the DHS position that ICE can use administrative warrants to enter a person’s residence when there is a final order of removal, Gihon told us that he was unaware of “any previous controlling interpretation of administrative or constitutional law” that would permit such entry.
Ultimately, the issue could be decided by the courts. James wrote that “the case law in this area is sparse,” citing three rulings by District Courts. “The paucity of case law is likely in part because DHS has historically conceded that administrative arrest warrants do not authorize ICE officers to enter people’s homes to arrest them. As a result, courts have rarely had occasion to comment on the issue.”
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The post The Disagreement over Judicial and Administrative Warrants for ICE appeared first on FactCheck.org.
At the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, competing under the American banner has put some athletes at odds with their own government, transforming them — in a handful of candid remarks — from cereal-box patriots into political liabilities swiftly pilloried by the conservative establishment.
When reporters asked American freestyle skier Hunter Hess how it felt to wear the U.S. flag in front of the world in this moment, he said it “brings up mixed emotions.” Hess drew a clear line between the country he competes for and the policies coming out of Washington, saying, “Just because I’m wearing the flag doesn’t mean I represent everything that’s going on in the U.S.”
Hess’s plain, honest answer triggered one of the most striking political crosscurrents of these Games: President Donald Trump logged on to Truth Social to call Hess “a real loser” who shouldn’t have tried out for the Olympic team at all.
Hess wasn’t alone in speaking out. Curler Rich Ruohonen, an attorney and Minnesota native, criticized recent federal law enforcement actions in the state, saying the operations were “wrong” and violated Americans’ constitutional rights. Snowboarder Chloe Kim, whose parents immigrated to the United States from South Korea, defended her fellow teammates, saying Trump’s immigration policies “hit pretty close to home” and that athletes are “allowed to voice” their opinions.
The response from conservative media was instant: shame, dismissal, and, at times, openly cheering against the very athletes carrying the American flag.
Vice President JD Vance told reporters that Olympians are “not there to pop off about politics” and said they should expect “pushback” if they do. Florida Rep. Byron Donalds went further on social media, telling U.S. athletes that if they don’t want to represent the flag, “GO HOME.”
Sports in America are advertised, sold, and draped in red, white, and blue so completely that they become impossible to separate from nationalism.
Conservative commentators also charged in on behalf of the administration. After U.S. figure skater Amber Glenn, who won gold in the team event, voiced support for her LGBTQ community, conservative podcaster and former Fox News host Megyn Kelly branded her “another turncoat to root against” to her 3.6 million followers. The outrage snowballed, and Glenn said she received a “scary amount of hate/threats,” prompting her to take a break from social media altogether. (She later returned to TikTok with a carousel of images of her and teammate Alysa Liu wearing their team gold medals and addressing her critics: “They hate to see two woke bitches winning.”)
The intensity of the backlash illustrates how symbolic these Games have become — not just for who wins medals, but for who gets to define what national representation means on the international stage. While the Olympic Committee and the U.S. government prefer to present the Games as a neutral display of discipline, athletic poise, and national pride, the truth is less tidy. The Olympics have always served as a global window into the political and social conditions athletes come from — and when that window opens, protest has rarely been far behind.
Although the modern Olympic Charter’s Rule 50 aims to ban political, religious, or racial “propaganda” from competition, the idea that the Games have ever been apolitical ignores more than a century of history. Long before the International Olympic Committee tried to censor athletic competition, athletes and states recognized there was no separating sports from politics. At the 1906 Athens Games, Irish track and field star Peter O’Connor protested being listed as a British competitor by climbing a 20-foot flagpole and unfurling a green flag bearing the words “Erin Go Bragh” — Ireland forever — and went on to win gold.
As the Olympics entered the broadcast era and the audience stretched far beyond the stadium, political leaders were acutely aware they could use the Games’ reach to bolster their legitimacy. By the 1936 Berlin Olympics, Adolf Hitler and his propagandists transformed the Games into a showcase for the Nazi regime’s image and ideology. The widely publicized spectacle of a nation unified under Nazism was engineered to sanitize the Third Reich at home and abroad, cementing the modern Olympics as a global platform for state propaganda — and, inevitably, for those willing to resist it. Jewish organizations, labor leaders, and civil rights groups in the United States and Europe tried to organize a boycott of the event, warning that participation would validate Hitler’s regime and its persecution of Jews, but the effort ultimately failed. Athletes responded with the most direct act of resistance available to them: by winning, in open defiance. Jesse Owens — an African American runner — shattered Hitler’s carefully staged narrative of “Aryan” superiority by winning four gold medals, turning his victories into a de facto rebuke of the regime’s racial ideology.
Decades later, the 1968 Mexico City Games delivered one of the clearest political statements in Olympic history: sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos raising black-gloved fists on the medal stand in protest of racial injustice in the United States — an enduring image that turned the podium into a site of public dissent in front of the world.
The backlash was swift. Olympic officials expelled them from the Games, much of the press cast them as radicals, and both men faced threats and professional fallout for years afterward. Their protest remains one of the most controversial moments in Olympic history — and, as Smith later put it, entirely necessary: “We had to be seen because we couldn’t be heard.”
At the 2024 Paris opening ceremony, Palestinian boxer Waseem Abu Sal wore a shirt depicting the bombing of children in Gaza and told AFP it was meant to represent “the children who are martyred and die under the rubble,” bringing the war’s human toll visibly into the Olympic spotlight.
Across decades and continents, athletes and nations alike have used both participating in and abstaining from the Olympics to make statements about war, occupation, racial oppression, and human rights. This long history underscores a simple truth: When the whole world is watching, both governments and their critics understand the Games are too powerful a platform to leave unused.
It’s important that dissent shows up at the Olympics for more than just symbolic reasons: The conditions that shape who gets to compete are deeply connected to the social and political structures in the athletes’ home countries. Sports in America are advertised, sold, and draped in red, white, and blue so completely that they become impossible to separate from nationalism, transforming competition into a ritual where athletic achievement is inseparable from the story the nation tells about itself.
American Olympic success is not a vacuum. An analysis by researchers at George Mason University found that roughly 3 percent of athletes on Team USA at the 2026 Winter Games were born abroad and another 13.5 percent are children of immigrant parents — meaning nearly 17 percent of the delegation has direct ties to immigrant communities. That reality reflects how the United States develops and recruits athletic talent across communities, including immigrant families and underrepresented groups whose contributions have long powered American sports on the world stage.
For athletes whose families or personal histories intersect with immigration pathways, this shift is not an abstraction. It’s about who has secure status in the United States and who faces potential removal or legal uncertainty. The ways in which these forces shape an athlete don’t stop when they step on the snow or ice, no matter what flag is on their back.
The Games are built on spectacle, but beneath the pageantry is a hard truth: Athletes do not compete only for themselves, they compete as symbols of the nation they represent. When Americans step onto that global stage, they are presented as proof of what the United States claims to stand for — freedom, dignity, equality — even as the country itself struggles to live up to those ideals. That contradiction carries a real moral weight. Competing under the flag is not just an honor; it’s a responsibility to confront the distance between national image and national reality.
The post It’s Correct and Moral to Use the Olympics to Speak Out About Politics appeared first on The Intercept.
Planning to invest in silver soon? Here's how to spot the right dealers and avoid costly mistakes in the process.
Mark Fischbach, the YouTube creator known as Markiplier who has spent nearly 15 years building an audience of more than 38 million subscribers by playing indie-horror video games on camera, has pulled off something that most independent filmmakers never manage -- a self-financed, self-distributed debut feature that has grossed more than $30 million domestically against a $3 million budget. Iron Lung, a 127-minute sci-fi adaptation of a video game Fischbach wrote, directed, starred in, and edited himself, opened to $18.3 million in its first weekend and has since doubled that figure worldwide in just two weeks, nearly matching the $19.1 million debut of Send Help, a $40 million thriller from Disney-owned 20th Century Studios. Fischbach declined deals from traditional distributors and instead spent months booking theaters privately, encouraging fans to reserve tickets online; when prospective viewers found the film wasn't screening in their city, they called local cinemas to request it, eventually landing Iron Lung on more than 3,000 screens across North America -- all without a single paid media campaign.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A lawsuit by radio host David Greene alleges that Google used his voice to train its AI. Google denies the allegation.
Pinterest is giving some settings for you to control AI slop. Here's where to find them.
Official rules say government should keep gifts worth more than £140 unless ministers pay the value over that limit
Keir Starmer has bought a pair of personalised silver cufflinks which were given to him by Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, according to the latest transparency records.
The cufflinks, which were worth more than £140, were an official gift from the Trumps during the US president’s second state visit last September. They were the second gift from Trump that Starmer has chosen to buy, having paid for a personalised necklace last year.
Continue reading...Shooting at hockey game in Pawtucket that left three dead and three injured may have also been a ‘targeted event’
The shooting at a Rhode Island high school hockey game that left three dead and three injured may have been a “targeted event” stemming from a “family dispute”, officials have said, with local media reporting that one of the victims was the suspect’s son.
The Pawtucket police chief, Tina Goncalves, confirmed the suspect was also among the three people who died.
Continue reading...Some universities and colleges have taken action involving faculty or affiliates named in the documents. We want to hear about what’s happening where you study or work
As fallout from the large release of documents connected to Jeffrey Epstein continues, a handful of US universities have taken action against faculty or affiliates named in the files.
At some campuses, professors have been placed under review, research centres closed, conferences cancelled or public explanations issued. Students and staff have responded in different ways, including petitions, open letters and campus forums.
Continue reading...Follow latest updates as public figures praise civil rights leader who was a protege of Martin Luther King Jr and twice ran for Democratic presidential nomination
You can watch Jesse Jackson’s famous 1988 speech at the Democratic convention urging Americans to “keep hope alive” below. It quickly became an American political classic and was echoed in the “hope and change” slogan of Barack Obama’s historic 2008 presidential campaign.
The civil rights campaigner, Al Sharpton, has paid tribute to his “mentor” Jesse Jackson, whom he worked closely with over the civil rights era. In a tribute posted to X, Sharpton wrote:
My mentor, Rev. Jesse Jackson, has passed. I just prayed with his family by phone. He was a consequential and transformative leader who changed this nation and the world.
He shaped public policy and changed laws. He kept the dream alive and taught young children from broken homes, like me, that we don’t have broken spirits.
Continue reading..."There's something about this administration's attitude toward this, which I think really leads us to conclude they have something to hide," she told the BBC.
Hallo zusammen,
ich komme aus Zürich (Schweiz) und bin aktuell auf der Suche nach einem gebrauchten Onewheel – idealerweise ein GTS oder ein vergleichbares Modell (kein Pint / Pint X).
Das Board sollte möglichst in gutem Zustand sein, ungefähr bis etwa ein Jahr alt wäre super.
Falls jemand eines verkauft oder jemanden kennt, der seins abgeben möchte, freue ich mich über eine Nachricht oder einen Kommentar 🙂
Gerne auch Austausch mit anderen Fahrern aus der Schweiz.
Vielen Dank!
The meeting Tuesday occurred against the backdrop of an expanded U.S. military presence in the Middle East, as President Donald Trump threatens to attack Iran if a deal cannot be reached.
Exclusive: ICE more than tripled the amount of data stored in Microsoft’s cloud at the same time that its arsenal of surveillance technology ballooned
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) deepened its reliance on Microsoft’s cloud technology last year as the agency ramped up arrest and deportation operations, leaked documents reveal.
ICE more than tripled the amount of data it stored in Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform in the six months leading up to January 2026, a period in which the agency’s budget swelled and its workforce rapidly expanded, according to the files.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: A moderator on diyAudio set up an experiment to determine whether listeners could differentiate between audio run through pro audio copper wire, a banana, and wet mud. Spoiler alert: the results indicated that users were unable to accurately distinguish between these different 'interfaces.' Pano, the moderator who built the experiment, invited other members on the forum to listen to various sound clips with four different versions: one taken from the original CD file, with the three others recorded through 180cm of pro audio copper wire, via 20cm of wet mud, through 120cm of old microphone cable soldered to US pennies, and via a 13cm banana, and 120cm of the same setup as earlier. Initial test results showed that it's extremely difficult for listeners to correctly pick out which audio track used which wiring setup. "The amazing thing is how much alike these files sound. The mud should sound perfectly awful, but it doesn't," Pano said. "All of the re-recordings should be obvious, but they aren't."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
A prototype that uses an "infinity mirror" has been built by Penn State researchers.
Prof Michael Wooldridge says scenario such as deadly self-driving car update or AI hack could destroy global interest
The race to get artificial intelligence to market has raised the risk of a Hindenburg-style disaster that shatters global confidence in the technology, a leading researcher has warned.
Michael Wooldridge, a professor of AI at Oxford University, said the danger arose from the immense commercial pressures that technology firms were under to release new AI tools, with companies desperate to win customers before the products’ capabilities and potential flaws are fully understood.
Continue reading...Read on for how to tune into the hit show starring Kaitlin Olson on ABC and Hulu.
Claude Sonnet 4.6, released Tuesday, can apparently fill out multistep web forms and use several browser tabs.
The move follows pressure from an activist shareholder group seeking end to DEI requirements
Goldman Sachs is removing race, gender and other diversity-related considerations when evaluating prospective candidates for its executive board after pressure from an activist shareholder group to remove the criteria.
The National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC), a small Goldman shareholder, quietly submitted a request to the company last September asking the bank to eliminate its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) board criteria.
Continue reading...Tricia McLaughlin is leaving the Department of Homeland Security in the coming week, the agency confirmed
Tricia McLaughlin, the Department of Homeland Security’s top spokesperson and one of the most visible defenders of the Trump administration’s deportation raids, is leaving the agency in the coming week, the department confirmed.
McLaughlin’s impending exit, comes at one of the most fraught moments in the department’s history. Public support for the administration’s immigration enforcement push has fallen to its lowest point since Trump took office, after a series of violent confrontations in US cities and the fatal shootings of two US citizens – Alex Pretti and Renee Good – by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis.
Continue reading...Hey, so I’ve got an issue that just started today, I have a gt that has about 1200 miles, and almost all stock parts other than my tire. I turned it on today and when I ride it a little it feels like super chunky, like the battery’s cutting in and out, and the light bar’s flickers as well, I took it apart and realized also that even though the motor and foot pad are disconnected, I can still turn it on and it doesn’t flash red. I know part of the issue is my bearings need replaced cause they’re rusted, but I don’t understand why It’s acting so weird all of the sudden, last night I rode home from work and plugged it in to charge like every other night. Someone let me know if you’ve got any ideas, thank you!
Micron has begun mass production of the 9650 series, the industry's first PCIe 6.0 SSD, capable of sequential read speeds up to 28 GB/s and random read performance of 5.5 million IOPS -- roughly double the throughput of the fastest PCIe 5.0 drives available today. The drive targets AI and data center workloads and ships in E1.S and E3.S form factors across two variants: the Pro, available in capacities up to 30.72 TB, and the endurance-oriented Max, topping out at 25.6 TB. Both variants share the same peak sequential and random speeds but diverge on mixed workloads and endurance ratings -- the Max 25.6 TB carries a random endurance rating of 140,160 TBW compared to 56,064 TBW on the Pro 30.72 TB. Power draw holds at 25 watts, unchanged from high-end PCIe 5.0 enterprise SSDs, though the 9650 is Micron's first drive to support liquid cooling alongside air. Consumer platforms are not expected to adopt PCIe 6.0 until 2030.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In an interview at the Munich security conference, Clinton urged the Trump administration to ‘get the files out’
Hillary Clinton has accused the Trump administration of a “cover-up” over the Epstein files, while claiming that she and her husband are being forced to testify before Congress to deflect scrutiny from Donald Trump.
In an interview with the BBC, Clinton said the US Department of Justice was “slow-walking” the release of documents relating to Jeffrey Epstein’s catalogue of crimes and urged the administration to “get the files out”. Despite periodic document dumps of the files since Congress mandated their release late last year, the justice department is still withholding about 3m files.
Continue reading...PARIS, Feb. 17, 2026 — A 140-qubit neutral atom quantum computer developed by Pasqal has arrived at the DAMA Emilia-Romagna Technopole in Bologna, at the site of CINECA, Italy’s largest public supercomputing operator and a member of ICSC – Italian Center for Research on High Performance Computing, Big Data, and Quantum Computing, making the center even more powerful.
The new quantum computer is co-funded by the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking and, through ICSC, by the Italian Ministry of University and Research, which has been investing for years to make Italy a strategic hub of innovation and a leader in artificial intelligence and supercomputing in Europe and worldwide. This installation fits, in fact, into the broader European plan to develop a sovereign infrastructure of hybrid systems that combine high-performance computing (HPC) and Quantum Computing to provide researchers and SMEs with the computing capabilities needed to tackle increasingly complex scientific and industrial challenges in key sectors of the European economy.
The system delivered to Italy is a neutral atom quantum computer with over 140 qubits, engineered for tight integration with the Leonardo pre-exascale EuroHPC supercomputer, one of the world’s most powerful HPC platforms. This hybrid architecture will allow users to seamlessly offload specialized workloads – such as complex optimization problems, advanced materials simulation, and machine learning tasks – to the QPU, while relying on Leonardo for classical processing and large-scale data handling.
“Thanks to the clear strategic vision of the Ministry of University and Research, particularly Minister Anna Maria Bernini’s, synergistic with the European strategy for the development of quantum computing, and its ongoing commitment and support to implement it, Italy can now claim to be at the forefront of advanced computing capabilities at global level”, said Antonio Zoccoli, President of the ICSC Research Center. “When the integration of the Pasqal quantum computer with Leonardo becomes operational in the coming months, the national scientific community and industry will have computing resources at their disposal that will strengthen their competitiveness and be a useful tool for sustainable growth”.
This deployment contributes directly to Europe’s ambition to foster hybrid computing systems adoption across the Union. The integration of the system with Leonardo is expected to become fully operational and available to the academic and industrial research communities in the coming months.
Pasqal, a global leader in quantum computing, co-founded by Physics Nobel Prize winner Alain Aspect, is already operating two quantum devices under the EuroHPC JU project, at CEA/GENCI in France and Forschungszentrum Jülich (FZJ) in Germany. With the Italian installation, Pasqal now powers three of the eight quantum computers deployed under the EuroHPC JU, confirming its position as a key technology leader in the provision of European quantum computing infrastructure and reinforcing European supply chain with pioneering quantum computing capabilities.
“The delivery of this QPU to CINECA is a new milestone for European quantum computing,” said Loïc Henriet, CEO at Pasqal. “By coupling our neutral atom quantum technology with Leonardo, CINECA is enabling researchers to explore computational frontiers that were previously out of reach. This deployment further reinforces Pasqal’s role as a strategic actor to deliver Europe’s hybrid HPC–quantum federated infrastructure in the ground.”
About Pasqal
Pasqal is leading the industrialization and deployment of neutral atom quantum computing, transforming Nobel Prize-winning research into real-world solutions for industry, science, and governments. Since 2019, the company has built high-performance quantum systems and cloud-ready software that tackle the world’s most complex challenges in optimization, simulation, and AI. With a truly global footprint — including teams and facilities across Europe, North America, and Asia — and backed by over $215 million from international investors, Pasqal is accelerating the adoption of robust, high-performance quantum computing.
About ICSC
ICSC – Italian Research Centre on High Performance Computing, Big Data and Quantum Computing is one of five National Centers established and funded under Mission 4 “Education and Research” of Italy’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), dedicated to strategic sectors for the country’s development under the “From Research to Business” framework. ICSC’s mission is to carry out, manage, and coordinate research and development activities at both national and international levels, fostering innovation in computational and data storage technologies, including hardware and software solutions for simulation, computing, and data analytics. The Centre aims to build a globally attractive ecosystem that supports research, industry, and society, strengthening Italy’s competitiveness and sustainable growth.
These goals are pursued by federating and enhancing existing national resources and by developing a state-of-the-art cloud-based supercomputing and big data infrastructure. ICSC brings together leading Italian expertise and activities while training highly skilled professionals across its ten key scientific domains.
About CINECA
Founded in 1969, CINECA is a interuniversity consortium bringing together 121 member institutions, including two Italian Ministries (the Ministry of University and Research – MUR, and the Ministry of Education and Merit – MIM), 70 Italian universities, and 49 national public institutions (15 research organizations, 10 university hospitals and IRCCS, 19 AFAM institutions, and 5 agencies and public bodies). CINECA supports and drives digital transformation through innovation, designing and developing advanced technological solutions, building integrated, tailor-made platforms for its members, and delivering services that support public bodies and administrations. It is also one of the world’s leading computing centers and among the most advanced in High Performance Computing (HPC), with activities ranging from infrastructure management to the development of cutting-edge applications, as well as the co-design of technological solutions and research and innovation projects. Acting on behalf of the Ministry of University and Research, CINECA represents Italy in PRACE (the Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe), serves as a hosting entity of the European High Performance Computing Joint Undertaking (EuroHPC JU), and participates in the ITER nuclear fusion project.
Source: Pasqal
The post Pasqal Delivers Italy’s 1st Neutral Atom Quantum Computer appeared first on HPCwire.
Leader says move should end claims of one-man band and shows party is ‘creating a machine for government’
Nigel Farage has unveiled the first part of Reform UK’s frontbench team, saying it shows that the party is no longer reliant entirely on him – while also warning that he will not tolerate any dissent from his colleagues.
Two of the four appointees are recent defectors from the Conservatives: Robert Jenrick, who takes on the Treasury brief, and Suella Braverman, whom Farage has put in charge of education, skills and equalities.
Continue reading...Juliette Bryant says not long after meeting Jeffrey Epstein, he assaulted her, and she realized, "this is not a modeling opportunity, I've been kidnapped."
Iran and the U.S. traded threats and warnings even as negotiators sat down to discuss a deal to avert a war, but Tehran says "we now have a clearer path ahead."
Martin Luther King Jr.'s daughter Bernice King shared a photo on social media of Jackson and King and wrote, "Both ancestors now..."
President Trump and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who died Tuesday at the age of 84, knew each other for decades.
A number of prominent figures have stepped down or are facing investigations after their communications with Jeffrey Epstein and his former longtime companion, Ghislaine Maxwell, were released last month.
PHILADELPHIA and TEL AVIV, Israel, Feb. 17, 2026 — Classiq, Comcast and AMD today announced the completion of a groundbreaking trial aimed at improving Internet delivery by leveraging quantum algorithms to supercharge network routing resilience.
“What our customers want is simple: fast, secure and reliable connectivity, but when you operate a network as large and dynamic as ours, delivering on that promise is complex, especially in the face of growing network demand,” said Elad Nafshi, Chief Network Officer, Comcast Connectivity and Platforms. “We launched these trials with Classiq last year with the goal of understanding how quantum software and technology could tackle real network challenges. Our results have shown that quantum computing for network optimization isn’t theoretical – it’s practical, scalable, and grounded in the needs of our customers.”
About the Trial
The joint trial tackled a fundamental network design challenge: identifying independent backup paths for network sites when implementing network maintenance and change management. The goal being that if a network site is taken offline for routine maintenance, should a second site unexpectedly fail during that window, network traffic could be seamlessly rerouted without any disruption or degradation to customer connectivity. To achieve this outcome, operators must identify unique backup paths that are fast, resilient to simultaneous link failures, and optimized for the lowest latency delivery, a task that becomes exponentially harder to identify as networks grow.
The trial applied quantum techniques, alongside high-performance classical computing, to test whether quantum algorithms could successfully identify unique network backup paths in real-time across change management scenarios. It comprised of execution on quantum hardware and in accelerated simulation environments that made use of AMD Instinct GPUs to achieve meaningful computational capacity (qubit scale) not yet possible through quantum hardware alone. With the GPU-accelerated simulations, the teams were able to iterate rapidly and validate algorithm behavior, together with runs executed on quantum hardware to assess implementation success. Review more detailed trial results in this scholarly article authored by the research team and this blog post for quantum developers.
Classiq provided quantum software and engineering support, empowering rapid modeling, optimized implementation and execution across both hardware and simulated environment executions.
Optimization problems in global telecommunications networks represent large combinatorial search spaces that grow exponentially with network size, making them computationally intensive to solve – the perfect challenge for quantum computing.
“Enterprise quantum R&D requires rapid iterations and repeatable workflows,” said Nir Minerbi, co-founder and CEO of Classiq. “This collaboration demonstrates how teams can ideate, model complex optimization problems and then run them quickly and efficiently across different backends, including both GPU-accelerated simulation and quantum hardware, while keeping the work portable as the ecosystem evolves.”
“The future of computing is a convergence of classical and quantum computing,” said Madhu Rangarajan, corporate vice president, Compute and Enterprise AI Products, AMD. “As a leader in high-performance classical computing, we’re exploring how we take our high-performance computing products and use them to support quantum. This collaboration shows a real-world example of how accelerated simulation and quantum execution can co-exist to solve a problem that matters to network operations.”
About Classiq
Classiq, with global offices in the U.S., Europe and APAC is the leading quantum computing software company, providing the technology that makes it practical for enterprises and researchers to access and harness the power of quantum computing. Classiq’s platform leverages AI coding and a high-level modeling language (Qmod) to automatically implement optimized, scalable hardware-ready quantum circuits. Classiq enables quantum teams to develop algorithms faster, optimize for cost and performance, and execute on any quantum hardware.
Source: Classiq
The post Comcast, Classiq and AMD Demonstrate Quantum Algorithm for More Resilient and Reliable Internet appeared first on HPCwire.
MOLLY PENHALE
Staff Reporter
Growing up, I was told that college would be the best four years of my life. Many freshmen go into their new schools with that expectation — I definitely did. For many, it’s the prime years of discovering yourself, mixed with lessons learned along the way.
College students have so much pressure on them to achieve good grades, get involved, make friends and find a romantic partner. The weight of it all can feel extreme. For many students aged 18-22, these kinds of obstacles can cause extreme mental health struggles.
Although I’m only a sophomore, I have had my fair share of deep mental health struggles myself. Coming to college as a freshman, I developed depression and my anxiety worsened. The stress of my academics, mixed with trying to find my people, was hard for me. Coming into sophomore year, I tried to have a more positive mindset that this year would be better.
At the beginning of the fall semester, I had a really bad mental health crisis. It caused me to end up in the hospital, leaving me feeling like I had hit rock bottom. I have since learned that it’s okay to not be okay, as well as how important it is to acknowledge mental health struggles.
How I felt is common among young adults. Everyone struggles at some point and college can add to the stress. I used to feel embarrassed discussing my story with mental health, but after talking to many of my peers about it, I’ve learned that many have had similar feelings. The number of students who take some form of medication for their mental health is a lot more than some may think.
I decided to ask other students around the university about their mental health experiences to get insight into the struggles that the average student might have.
“Sophomore year was rough,” Matthew Gast, a senior kinesiology major at the university, says. “I had seven family members die over the summer and then I also got broken up with. I didn’t exactly go to class. It made it hard to go to class. I was on a sleep schedule of 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.”
Academics in a college environment are important to most students. They tend to put pressure on themselves to succeed academically by getting good grades and a good GPA which can cause intense stress.
“I think my mental health has affected some of my academics, especially in junior year,” Jared Wierzbicki, a senior mechanical engineering major at the university, says. “It was a really tough semester with extracurriculars or with classes, and that really stressed me out. I had a lot of anxiety, which definitely impacted some of my classes and some of my grades.”
Mental health struggles among college students is extremely common. Everyone has personal battles, so finding ways to cope is important. I asked these same students how they personally cope when they feel down or anxious.
“I’m a perfectionist and anything less than an A to me is not perfection,” Justin Burger, a senior computer science major at the university, says. “But as a result of that, a lot of times I stress myself out unnecessarily, and I miss out on hanging out with my friends and spending time with them because I’m so busy locked in my room doing work.”
Professional services are important to utilize when dealing with mental health challenges. Therapy and a psychiatrist can work with someone to ensure their goals and needs are being met.
This ensures healing happens with the proper support someone may need and to know they are not alone in their healing. There are many little ways to support your mental health day by day that do not require professional help like reaching out to your friends and family for support as well.
“Mostly by spending time with my friends,” Burger says. “I mean, I’ve been getting better about doing that and taking breaks from my work to spend time with them. It’s my senior year so I want to get in the time with them I have left.”
Mental health in college can seem overwhelming to manage but small steps to overall mental wellness can go a long way. Making a routine out of going to the gym or just simply moving your body while walking everyday can increase your mood significantly.
“Exercise and working out is a big thing,” Casey Forbes, a sophomore elementary education major at the university, says. “Like even just walking and listening to music is great, but also coloring, like a little coloring book with some nice markers.”
The initial step of asking for help can be hard, but ends up being so rewarding once someone who is struggling finds what is right for them. There are so many resources at and around the university that can help. I asked the students what campus resources they have heard of and what their experiences with them were.
“Sometimes, it’s just good to take a break,” Wierzbicki says. “Other times, if you have frustrations, it’s good to talk to people about it. I found that this is really good for dealing with my mental health.”
Sean’s House was brought up by many students, who had only good things to say.
“I’ve heard of Sean’s House. I went there once and they’re really good,” Wierzbicki says. “They’re actually student-run. They were very, very friendly. They were very understanding. I would highly recommend.”
Many also brought up TimelyCare, an app with 24/7 support that any student can text or call if they are having a mental health crisis. Additionally, many of the students were familiar with Warner Hall, the university’s Wellbeing Center.
The university has a variety of resources for students who may be struggling. The first step of asking for help can be difficult, but there are organizations and trained professionals here who care and are here to help.
Mental health awareness is super important for helping students realize that they are not alone, since so many students may feel similarly.
It's an all-Ligue 1 clash at the Stade Louis II on the Côte d'Azur.
Belgian authorities call the U.S. ambassador's intervention in the case of three Jewish religious figures "dangerous disinformation."
Party leader tells FT journalist she should ‘write some silly story’ after press conference revealing roles for his top team
Nigel Farage is speaking.
He starts by saying that 4.6m voters will get the right to to vote in the local elections because of his party.
I am writing a book on Nigel Farage for @headlinepg.
No holds will be barred.
Continue reading...Want to build your savings by $10,000 this year? Here's exactly how the $27.39 rule can help you achieve that goal.
Up to a third of people worldwide have shoulder pain; it's one of the most common musculoskeletal complaints. But medical imaging might not reveal the problem -- in fact, it could even cloud it. From a report: In a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine this week, 99 percent of adults over 40 were found to have at least one abnormality in a rotator cuff on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The rotator cuff is the group of muscles and tendons in a shoulder joint that keeps the upper arm bone securely in the shoulder socket -- and is often blamed for pain and other symptoms. The trouble is, the vast majority of the people in the study had no problems with their shoulders. The finding calls into question the growing use of MRIs to try to diagnose shoulder pain -- and, in turn, the growing problem of overtreatment of rotator cuff (RC) abnormalities, which includes partial- and full-thickness tears as well as signs of tendinopathy (tendon swelling and thickening). "While we cannot dismiss the possibility that some RC tears may contribute to shoulder symptoms, our findings indicate that we are currently unable to distinguish clinically meaningful MRI abnormalities from incidental findings," the study authors concluded.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Users of Birdex get points for each bird they see and can compete with friends, with 200,000 sightings logged so far
A new app has launched that aims to gamify birdwatching by allowing people to collect digital cards of UK bird species whenever they record seeing one.
Users of Birdex accumulate points for each bird they see, with less common and rare species yielding the greatest rewards. It is possible to add friends and compete over bird sightings. The app has got birdwatchers talking online – though it has raised hackles among some for its use of AI-generated artwork.
Continue reading...It's possible to shorten the duration of a cold. You just have to take the right vitamins and supplements.
The IRS' Fresh Start program could help you catch up on delinquent tax debt — but you'll have to qualify first.
These debt relief companies could help you slash your debt, but there are a few things to know before signing up.
Bankruptcy can wipe the financial slate clean, but in some instances, you may not be allowed to file for it.
Are you looking for a fast way out of credit card debt? Credit card debt forgiveness might help. Here's how.
When it comes to purchasing physical gold, there are plenty of options available. These are the best to consider.
A former aide to Martin Luther King Jr., he launched two historic presidential campaigns while spreading a message of hope and resilience: “I am — somebody.”
The U.S. is brokering a 3rd round of Russia-Ukraine talks, but there's little hope of a breakthrough to end the deadliest war on European soil in 80 years.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy earlier called for ‘justice and strength’ in diplomacy after Russia hit Ukraine with 400 drones and 29 missiles hours before talks
The European Commission is just giving its daily midday press briefing, and it has confirmed plans to adopt the new, 20th, round of sanctions against Russia by 24 February, the fourth anniversary of the full-scale invasion on Ukraine.
Foreign affairs spokesperson Anouar El Anouni said:
“We keep on working on measures to deprive Russia of the funds, goods and technologies sustaining its war against Ukraine.
This indeed includes the 20th package that you have mentioned, and indeed we aim to adopt it … by 24 February, as the High Representative [Kaja Kallas] mentioned at the last foreign affairs council. Member states are discussing it.”
Continue reading...China's courts are now handling more than 550,000 intellectual-property cases a year -- making it the world's most litigious country for IP disputes -- as the nation's own companies, once notorious for copying foreign designs and technology, find themselves on the defensive against a domestic counterfeiting epidemic fueled by excess factory capacity. The problem runs from knockoff "Lafufu" plush toys (cheap copies of Pop Mart's wildly popular Labubu dolls, which prompted a nationwide crackdown and a Shanghai police bust of a $1.7 million stash in July) to copied motorcycles and solar panels. Judges in Shanghai, the preferred venue for IP litigation, are working through cases at a rate of roughly one per day, and it still takes three months for a case to land on a court's docket. Chinese companies are also increasingly clashing abroad: patent-related cases involving Chinese businesses in America surged 56% in 2023, according to data from GEN, a Chinese law firm. Luckin Coffee and Trina Solar have both filed suits against foreign-based copycats.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Rodman, Thompson and Girma feature in 26-player team
US will face Argentina, Canada and Colombia in March
Emma Hayes has struck a balance of experience and rising young talent in her squad for the 2026 SheBelieves Cup. The friendly competition will pit the US women against Argentina, Canada and Colombia in early March.
This year marks the first time that teams can select 26 players for their SheBelieves squad, although each coach must determine 23 players who will be available for each game.
Continue reading...Prior of hermitage says digital technologies are designed to be addictive and present ‘challenge for monastic life’
The prior of a hermitage in Tuscany has urged monks living in the secluded retreat to avoid the use of social media and streaming services, arguing that their rooms are sacred places for prayer and “not for Netflix or other platforms”.
Father Matteo Ferrari, the prior general of the Camaldolese congregation and of the Camaldoli monastery and hermitage in Arezzo, Tuscany, said such digital technologies were “specifically designed to create addiction” and “should absolutely be avoided”.
Continue reading...3D printing isn't just a hobby for me. I've been using it to make useful tools and accessories around my home for years. Here's how.
The US civil rights leader Jesse Jackson has died at the age of 84, his family said on Tuesday. Jackson, an eloquent Baptist minister raised in the segregated south, became a close associate of Martin Luther King Jr and twice ran for the Democratic presidential nomination. He had advocated for the rights of Black Americans and other marginalised communities since the civil rights movement of the 1960s
Continue reading...LOUISVILLE, Colo., Feb. 17, 2026 — Infleqtion, a global leader in quantum computing and quantum sensing powered by neutral-atom technology, today became a publicly listed company trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) under the ticker symbol “INFQ” following the completion of its previously announced business combination with Churchill Capital Corp X, a publicly traded special purpose acquisition company.
The strong support from Churchill X’s shareholders resulted in Infleqtion receiving over $550 million of gross proceeds, including nearly 100% of the cash held in Churchill X’s trust account prior to the redemption deadline and more than $125 million of incremental capital raised through a common stock PIPE from leading existing Infleqtion stockholders and new institutional investors.
“Infleqtion was founded on a simple conviction: neutral atoms are the best path for commercializing quantum technology because they are scalable and economical. That architectural advantage, paired with our vertically integrated hardware and software stack that spans quantum computing and sensing, has translated into growing commercial traction across government and industry,” said Matthew Kinsella, Chief Executive Officer of Infleqtion. “As a public company we can accelerate our technology roadmap and expand deployments in areas such as aerospace, defense and critical infrastructure, bringing practical quantum solutions to market at increasing speed and scale.”
Infleqtion’s product portfolio includes quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors, all engineered for real-world deployment and optimized with Infleqtion’s proprietary software. These systems are already in use by the U.S. Department of War, NASA, and the U.K. government, and also form elements of multiple collaborations with NVIDIA.
Infleqtion will be ringing the opening bell at the NYSE tomorrow, Wednesday, February 18 to celebrate the company’s public listing. A live stream of the event can be viewed by visiting https://tv.nyse.com.
More from HPCwire
About Infleqtion
Infleqtion, Inc. (NYSE: INFQ) is a global leader in quantum technology, delivering neutral atom solutions for quantum computing, networking, sensing, and security. With a product portfolio spanning quantum computers, quantum optical clocks, RF receivers, and inertial sensors, Infleqtion’s full-stack approach combines high-performance hardware with the company’s proprietary Superstaq quantum computing software platform. Infleqtion’s systems are already in use by the U.S. Department of War, NASA, the U.K. government, and in multiple collaborations with NVIDIA. Infleqtion, in collaboration with NVIDIA, published the world’s first demonstration of a materials science application using logical qubits. With operations in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, Infleqtion meets the demands of government and commercial customers across the space, defense, energy, finance and telecommunications sectors.
Source: Infleqtion
The post Infleqtion Becomes 1st Neutral-Atom Quantum Company to Go Public appeared first on HPCwire.
Waiver from Netflix allows film company to engage with rival bidder if it could lead to a ‘reasonably superior offer’
Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) has reopened talks with Paramount Skydance, giving the company seven days to table its best and final offer and top an existing agreement with Netflix.
WBD has so far stuck to its binding agreement with Netflix and rejected a series of sweetened offers from Paramount, resulting in the company pursuing a hostile $108.4bn (£76.8bn) takeover directly with shareholders
Continue reading...Lawmakers say the panel will compel testimony to uncover what happened at Epstein’s Zorro ranch and who knew
New Mexico has approved a “truth commission” to investigate abuse on Jeffrey Epstein’s ranch outside Santa Fe, amid ongoing calls for transparency about the late sex-offender’s crimes.
The move by legislators on Monday follows the justice department’s release of millions of investigative documents into Epstein last month, which has renewed interest into the financier’s Zorro ranch.
Continue reading...Opposition councillor says 20,000-home development in Adlington put forward with ‘no consultation, no scrutiny’
A Cheshire council leader is being urged to resign after it emerged he had written a letter backing a new town of 20,000 homes for the area, which led to it being listed on the government’s list of proposed sites and has since sparked a huge backlash.
Residents said they were blindsided when Adlington appeared on the government’s list of 12 proposed sites for new towns across England, with work on at least three due to start this parliament.
Continue reading...Warner Bros. Discovery said that Paramount Skydance is considering enhancing its buyout offer for the entertainment company.
Mazda, the automaker that for years defended its scroll-wheel infotainment system as a safer alternative to touchscreens, is abandoning the approach entirely in the 2026 CX-5 in favor of a 15.6-inch touchscreen and zero physical buttons. The current lineup -- the CX-50 Hybrid, CX-70 and CX-90 -- still relies on a console-mounted scroll wheel and dedicated action buttons to navigate a tablet-like screen perched atop the dashboard. Upper-trim CX-70 and CX-90 models do have 12.3-inch touchscreens, but touch input only works when parked and only inside CarPlay; it disables automatically once the car is in drive. The new CX-5 goes the other direction entirely, eliminating all hard buttons including the volume knob and physical climate controls that current models still offer. Mazda says the touchscreen is safe because core functions like climate are pinned to a persistent bottom bar -- an approach Ford, Rivian, and most of the industry adopted years ago.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Despite reset in India–US relations, New Delhi retains commitment to strategic hedging Expert comment jon.wallace
The Modi government may conclude a trade agreement, but its relationship with the Trump administration has been scarred by a year of hostility and tariffs.
In a joint statement issued on 6 February the Trump administration announced it had reached an agreement to lower tariffs on India. The agreement has reduced the reciprocal tariff on India from 25 per cent to 18 per cent, and removed the additional 25 per cent tariff imposed for India’s purchase of Russian crude. In exchange, India will commit to buying $500 billion worth of US products over five years and stop buying Russian oil.
This significantly reduces the US tariff level on India from 50 per cent – which was among the highest in the world – to levels on par with other countries in South and Southeast Asia.
Both sides had noted they were close to concluding a deal for months. The recent appointment of Sergio Gor as US ambassador to India likely helped get this agreement over the line.
The agreement paves the way for a partial reset in the relationship. It is only partial for several reasons.
First, the trade negotiations remain a work in progress. The joint statement will be followed by an interim agreement in March, which will culminate in a bilateral trade agreement. Interestingly, this reflects India’s longstanding position for a phased negotiation process.
There also remain several ambiguities associated with these commitments. India has significantly reduced its purchase of Russian crude – from a peak of 40 per cent of its total imports to less than 25 per cent in December. But so far there is no indication that the Indian government has directed Indian refiners to completely stop buying Russian oil. Private refiners like Reliance – which maintains the world’s largest refinery – have stopped. But state refiners have not. Russia has reaffirmed this point, noting that they have not yet received any communication from the Indian government indicating it will terminate its purchase of Russian crude.
How both sides will square this circle remains unclear. The narrowing price differential between Brent crude and discounted Russian crude will make it easier for Indian refiners to pivot away from the latter. However, New Delhi will remain reluctant to take any action that jeopardizes its longstanding relationship with Moscow.
The direction of travel in the India–Russia relationship is towards a managed decline. French President Emmanuel Macron’s visit to India this week may include the conclusion of India’s largest defence deal, reflecting efforts by New Delhi to reduce its dependence on Russian military hardware. But Moscow remains a key strategic partner for New Delhi, as noted by President Vladimir Putin’s visit to New Delhi in December.
On the same day as the India–US Joint Statement, the White House also issued an executive order in which it threatens to take ‘additional action’ against India if ‘India resumed directly or indirectly imports [of] Russian Federation oil’.
Related to this is the question of what substitutes for Russian oil. India is the world’s third largest crude importer, so any shift in its oil imports can have a knock-on effect on global energy prices – indeed, New Delhi has argued that its purchase of Russian crude helped to stabilize global crude prices.
President Donald Trump has noted that the US and potentially Venezuela could ramp up their exports to India to compensate for the loss of Russian oil. However, Venezuela’s crude production remains low after years of sanctions and under-investment. And Venezuelan crude is of a heavy sour quality, which only a limited number of Indian refineries can process.
India’s purchase of US crude and other products will help to address Trump’s perennial obsession with the trade imbalance. However, meeting the trade agreement’s $500 billion purchase requirement will be no easy task. At present, India imports just over $40 billion from the US.
The $500 billion is over a five-year time horizon and includes energy, defence and technology products. That may make it easier to achieve. And Indian policymakers argue that these commitments are nonbinding.
The most politically significant concessions New Delhi has made related to the country’s agricultural sector, which employs over 40 per cent of the workforce. This had been a key sticking point during the trade negotiations and remains a politically sensitive issue for both leaders.
The Indian government argues that the market access promised by the agreement with the US excludes staples like wheat and rice. That has not prevented renewed farmer protests and criticism from the opposition. The Modi government’s calculation has been that any political blowback is manageable compared to prolonged elevated tariffs, which would have more lasting damage on the wider Indian economy.
Hanging over all of this is the knowledge that there is no guarantee that Washington will not reimpose tariffs on India: the US recently threatened to raise tariff levels on South Korea over its failure to meet the terms of a trade deal the countries concluded last year.
The reset in relations has been accompanied by positive statements. Trump referred to Modi as ‘one of my greatest friends and a powerful and respected leader of his country’. Modi reciprocated by calling Trump ‘my dear friend’ and saying that ‘India fully supports his efforts for peace’.
However, there is no doubt there has been lasting damage to the relationship. At the start of the second Trump term, India believed that Trump and Modi maintained similar worldviews and that India and the US would maintain a privileged partnership.
This has now faded. New Delhi is now likely to maintain a more pragmatic and cautious approach in its engagement with Washington. The hostility of Trump’s tariffs and statements by the president referring to India as a ‘dead economy’ will not be forgotten. Neither will Trump’s outreach to Islamabad in the aftermath of the brief India–Pakistan conflict last year, which has left a permanent scar on the bilateral relationship.
Indeed, in the months since the downturn in India–US relations, New Delhi has doubled down on its longstanding commitment to strategic autonomy in its foreign policy.
On the economic side, India has concluded a string of trade negotiations; three in 2025 alone (with Oman, New Zealand and the United Kingdom) followed by a deal with the European Union in January this year. It has also revived negotiations with countries including Canada, Israel, Qatar, and Peru. This is a significant achievement for a country that is historically seen as protectionist.
These developments demonstrate New Delhi’s efforts to diversify India’s export markets and ensure that it is not beholden to any one country – particularly the United States. They also reflect efforts to enhance India’s attractiveness as a foreign investment destination and make the country a global manufacturing hub.
LA 2028 committee voted last week to keep Wasserman
Emails with Ghislaine Maxwell were revealed in files
Pressure is building on Casey Wasserman, the head of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics organizing team, after the city’s mayor urged him to leave over his ties to Jeffrey Epstein’s former girlfriend.
LA mayor Karen Bass told CNN late on Monday that “my opinion is that he should step down” despite Wasserman getting support last week from the LA 2028 organizing board to stay.
Continue reading...Descendants of Jewish brothers forced to sell company to Nazis say appropriation by German far right is ‘repulsive’
The Jewish descendants of a German motorbike manufacturer that was forced by the Nazis to be relinquished have voiced their repulsion at the appropriation of the vehicle by far-right populists.
Members of the family, whose ancestors were forced to flee Germany in the 1930s, say they consider the use of the bike’s name by the anti-immigrant Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) as a “mockery of our history”.
Continue reading...Marco Rubio arrived at the Munich security conference with a disturbing message for European governments: empire is great
Fresh from toppling the president of Venezuela and taking control of the world’s largest oil reserves, the Trump administration’s top diplomat arrived at the Munich security conference on Saturday with a rather new and very disturbing message for European governments.
Empire is great. Empire is back. Empire is American.
Mehdi Hasan is the editor-in-chief and CEO of Zeteo
Continue reading...Good eye health starts with a healthy diet.
Discussions through Omani intermediaries may pave way for further meeting on nuclear programme, Iran says
Iran has described the latest round of indirect talks with the US as “more constructive” than the previous set earlier this month, and said agreement had been reached on “general guiding principles” that could lead to a further meeting to discuss its nuclear programme.
The talks – held in Geneva through Omani intermediaries – were to discuss the terms for Tehran constraining its nuclear programme under the supervision of the UN nuclear weapons inspectorate. They ended after three and a half hours.
Continue reading...HAMBURG, Germany, Feb. 17, 2026 — ISC High Performance is pleased to share that the workshop committee has selected 24 diverse topics to give this year’s attendees the possibility to explore emerging research, technologies, and operational practices in high performance computing, artificial intelligence, and quantum computing.
The workshops are designed to provide a focused environment for researchers, developers, engineers, and industry professionals to address technical challenges, share knowledge, and explore emerging trends. They will consist of peer-reviewed workshops with proceedings and those without, catering to both formal research dissemination and practical community exchange. The list of selected workshops can be found here.
Workshops with proceedings feature peer-reviewed papers that will be published in Springer’s Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series, providing academic recognition and contributing to the scientific body of knowledge. Workshops without proceedings emphasize interactive discussion, emerging topics, and collaboration, offering participants opportunities to share operational experience and discuss evolving technologies.
Who Should Attend?
The ISC workshops program serves a broad audience, including academic researchers presenting peer-reviewed work, HPC and AI practitioners optimizing applications and infrastructure, technology developers evaluating emerging architectures, and industry professionals exploring future computing solutions. Students and early-career professionals can also gain valuable technical insights and connect with experts working at the forefront of advanced computing.
All workshops will take place on Friday, June 26, at the Congress Center Hamburg. Attendees must register to participate and can benefit greatly from early-bird registration, which opens on March 25, 2026.
Join ISC High Performance 2026 in #ConnectingTheDots
ISC 2026 returns to the Congress Center Hamburg from June 22 – 26 for its 41st edition. Since its inception in 1986, it has been recognized as the world’s oldest and Europe’s most attended event for the HPC community, and increasingly for AI and quantum professionals interested in performance, energy efficiency, and cost-effectiveness.
More from HPCwire
Source: ISC
The post ISC 2026 Unveils Workshops for Advanced Computing Community appeared first on HPCwire.
The software industry's decades-old habit of charging companies a flat fee for every employee who uses a product is running into a fundamental problem: AI agents don't sit in chairs, and they don't need licences. As autonomous agents take on tasks that human workers once handled, the per-seat pricing model that made SaaS revenue so predictable is giving way to consumption-based and hybrid alternatives. Snowflake and Databricks (valued at $134 billion) already charge based on usage. Salesforce initially priced its Agentforce customer relations bot at $2 per conversation but faced customer pushback and now offers action-based pricing, upfront credits and fixed fees. ServiceNow's finance chief Amit Zavery said last month that some customers aren't ready for purely consumption-based models. Goldman Sachs estimates US software spending will nearly triple to $2.8 trillion by 2037 as automated tasks blur the boundary between IT and wage budgets, but that money will no longer arrive in the neat recurring instalments that investors and private equity firms have come to expect.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Democrats made their counteroffer on overhauling immigration enforcement on Monday, the latest step in talks to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
I’m an ex-OneWheeler. I had an OG XR, then Pint, Pint X, and finally GT before I ended up selling the GT and not replacing it 2 years ago.
During the nice weather recently, I was going for a walk and I realized how much I missed my OneWheel so I decided to punch the trigger on a Pint X again.
It delivers Friday and I’m super excited to be floating again soon! Thought I’d share my excitement :D
MP leads UK tributes to African American campaigner, who has died aged 84
Jesse Jackson was a “direct connection to the great era of civil rights”, Diane Abbott said, leading UK tributes to the African American campaigner.
The Rev Jackson was also intimately connected to the battle for racial equality in the UK, where he campaigned for decades to address institutional racism, as well as economic, health and criminal justice inequalities.
Continue reading...SANTA CLARA, Calif. and MUMBAI, India, Feb. 17, 2026 — AMD, a leader in high-performance and AI computing, and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), a global leader in IT services, consulting, and business solutions, have expanded their strategic collaboration. TCS, through its subsidiary HyperVault AI Data Center Limited (HyperVault), and AMD will codevelop a rack-scale AI infrastructure design based on the AMD “Helios” platform in support of India’s national AI initiatives.
Powered by AMD Instinct MI455X GPUs, next-generation AMD EPYC “Venice” CPUs, AMD Pensando Vulcano NICs and the open ROCm software ecosystem, “Helios” is purpose-built to deliver a rack-scale AI platform supporting sovereign AI factories. “Helios,” combined with TCS’ enterprise expertise and scale, will accelerate deployment and enhance operational efficiencies for enterprises. As part of this strategic collaboration, both companies will offer an AI-ready data center blueprint supporting up to 200 MW of capacity and will work with hyperscalers and AI companies to accelerate data center build-outs in India.
Dr. Lisa Su, Chair and CEO, AMD, said, “AI adoption is accelerating from pilots to large-scale deployments, and that shift requires a new blueprint for compute infrastructure. With ‘Helios,’ we are delivering an open, rack-scale AI platform designed for performance, efficiency, and long-term flexibility. Together with TCS, we are enabling enterprises across India to deploy AI at scale today while building the compute foundation of tomorrow.”
K. Krithivasan, MD and CEO, TCS, said, “This collaboration lays the foundation for AMD’s first ‘Helios’ powered AI infrastructure in India. By combining our strengths in AI, connectivity, sustainable power, and advanced data center engineering, we are poised to deliver state-of-the-art infrastructure solutions for AI companies and global enterprises. We are thrilled to deepen our longstanding partnership with AMD as we expand our participation in the AI ecosystem – Infrastructure to Intelligence.”
TCS established HyperVault in 2025 with the vision of delivering GW-scale, secure, and reliable AI-ready infrastructure for hyperscalers, AI companies, and global enterprises. This announcement builds on the recent strategic collaboration between TCS and AMD to help enterprises scale AI adoption and modernize hybrid environments.
About AMD
AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) drives innovation in high-performance and AI computing to solve the world’s most important challenges. Today, AMD technology powers billions of experiences across cloud and AI infrastructure, embedded systems, AI PCs and gaming. With a broad portfolio of AI-optimized CPUs, GPUs, networking and software, AMD delivers full-stack AI solutions that provide the performance and scalability needed for a new era of intelligent computing. Learn more at www.amd.com.
Tata Consultancy Services Ltd
Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) (BSE: 532540, NSE: TCS) is a digital transformation and technology partner of choice for industry-leading organizations worldwide. Since its inception in 1968, TCS has upheld the highest standards of innovation, engineering excellence and customer service. Rooted in the heritage of the Tata Group, TCS is focused on creating long term value for its clients, its investors, its employees, and the community at large. With a highly skilled workforce of over 580,000 spread across 55 countries and 202 service delivery centers across the world, the company has been recognized as a top employer in six continents. With the ability to rapidly apply and scale new technologies, the company has built long term partnerships with its clients – helping them emerge as perpetually adaptive enterprises. Many of these relationships have endured into decades and navigated every technology cycle, from mainframes in the 1970s to Artificial Intelligence today. TCS sponsors 14 of the world’s most prestigious marathons and endurance events, including the TCS New York City Marathon, TCS London Marathon and TCS Sydney Marathon with a focus on promoting health, sustainability, and community empowerment. TCS generated consolidated revenues of over US $30 billion in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2025. For more information, visit www.tcs.com.
Source: AMD
The post AMD Partners with TCS on Rack-Scale AI Platform Supporting India’s National AI Efforts appeared first on HPCwire.
Valve has updated the Steam Deck website to say that the Steam Deck OLED may be out of stock "intermittently in some regions due to memory and storage shortages." From a report: The PC gaming handheld has been out of stock in the US and other parts of the world for a few days, and thanks to this update, we now know why. The update comes shortly after Valve delayed the Steam Machine, Steam Frame, and Steam Controller from a planned shipping window of early 2026 because of the memory and storage crunch. "We have work to do to land on concrete pricing and launch dates that we can confidently announce, being mindful of how quickly the circumstances around both of those things can change," Valve said in a post about that announcement from earlier this month. Its goal is to launch that new hardware sometime in the first half of 2026, and the company is working to finalize its plans "as soon as possible."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
| I had a GT two years ago, went through puddles and light rain never an issue, last year I bought an ADV2 and have been riding through the same weather as well as down pours and through puddles as deep as 4 inches at most a few times a month. Am I just lucky or are these boards safe from water damage? [link] [comments] |
The civil rights icon, who died on Tuesday, used his progressivism as rebellion
By the early 1980s, the Democratic party was facing a crossroads. The 1980 landslide election of Ronald Reagan, who clinched the presidency with a whopping 489 electoral college votes against Democratic incumbent Jimmy Carter, swiftly pulled the Democratic party to the right in the political and cultural wave of the “Reagan Revolution”.
For those Democratic constituents left behind, however, a challenge was mounting, mostly within US industrial cities whose economies were ransacked by Reagan’s “trickle-down” economics. Record tax cuts for the wealthy had come at the expense of a contracted social safety net, thus exacerbating inequality and collapsing much of the working class into the poor. Grassroots resistance campaigns spawned across the country in response to this dire urban crisis that had disproportionately devastated African Americans, and between 1982 and 1984 they had registered 2 million new Black voters – the largest gain in registered Black voters since the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
Continue reading...Many voice hope that moment will mark move away from repression and unrest and a chance to revive economy
Bangladesh’s new prime minister has been sworn in, sealing a dramatic comeback for the Bangladesh Nationalist party (BNP) and formally closing the turbulent chapter that toppled Sheikh Hasina in 2024.
The swearing-in of Tarique Rahman restored an elected government after 18 months of caretaker rule led by the Nobel peace prize laureate Muhammad Yunus.
Continue reading...American fractured tibia in downhill last week
Vonn was initially treated in Italy for injuries
Lindsey Vonn is back home in the US to continue treatment after she broke her leg during the Winter Olympic downhill.
“Haven’t stood on my feet in over a week… been in a hospital bed immobile since my race. And although I’m not yet able to stand, being back on home soil feels amazing,” Vonn posted on X with an American flag emoji. “Huge thank you to everyone in Italy for taking good care of me.”
Continue reading...One of the US’s most prominent civil rights leaders who was a protege of Martin Luther King and a presidential hopeful
The veteran civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, who has died aged 84, made history when he stood for the White House in 1984 and 1988. He was not the first African American to seek the US presidency, but he was the first to mount a serious challenge, breaking through racial barriers, securing millions of votes and, at one point, becoming frontrunner for the Democratic nomination.
His run opened the way for Barack Obama two decades later. But Jackson deserves to be remembered as more than a footnote in Obama’s biography. It took courage and self-confidence to stand in the 1980s, with memories of segregation and the civil rights battles of the 60s still raw.
Continue reading...Democrats, who haven’t won statewide race since 1994, aim to gain ground with rising stars as Republicans clash between incumbent and embattled Maga ally
A Texas-sized showdown is brewing deep in the heart of the largest red state in the US. As early voting begins on Tuesday for the Lone Star state’s 3 March primaries, Republicans and Democrats alike face a high-stakes choice that could set the stage for one of the fiercest Senate races of the 2026 midterm cycle.
At the center of the fractious Republican contest is a clash between the party’s old guard and a Maga culture warrior, with four-term incumbent John Cornyn, a conservative fixture of Senate leadership locked in the fight of his political career against the state’s scandal-plagued attorney general, Ken Paxton.
Continue reading...The late Rev. Jesse Jackson might best be remembered as a longtime civil rights leader, but he also played a pivotal role in presidential politics.
Investigators searching for Nancy Guthrie, the mother of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie, have uncovered several notable pieces of evidence as they try to identify a suspect.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson marched alongside Martin Luther King Jr., ran for president in the 1980s and led the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition in Chicago for decades.
High casualties and economic trouble signal time is no longer on Russia’s side, but Moscow isn’t backing off political and territorial demands to weaken Ukraine.
Integration or deregulation? Europe’s split over how to achieve sovereignty Expert comment thilton.drupal
Ideological differences risk paralysing the EU at a crucial juncture. But a synthesis offers a path forward.
The Belgian painter René Magritte famously remarked that art was meant to uncover the truth by encouraging the eye to look beyond the obvious, for ‘everything we see hides another thing.’ In our times of permacrisis and geopolitical complexity, Magritte’s view might help us to look past appearances and to understand a fundamental logic of political developments: they are almost always driven by conflicting forces.
The European Industry Summit in Antwerp, which brought together hundreds of European industrialists and top government officials last week under the intellectual and political auspices of Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever, offered a good example.
The summit crystallized a divide that has been brewing for several years within the EU. Opinion is split on a central question: what does European strategic sovereignty actually entail – and how can it be achieved?
At first glance, the split appears binary. On one side stand those who see sovereignty as requiring deeper integration: joint industrial policy, coordinated fiscal instruments, common borrowing where necessary, and stronger EU-level regulatory capacity.
This camp includes Emmanuel Macron, whose long-standing advocacy for ‘European autonomy’ has matured into calls for sectoral champions and common financing mechanisms, and Mario Draghi, whose pragmatic federalism favours incremental but irreversible integration in key domains such as defence, energy and digital infrastructure.
The integrationist camp defines strategic sovereignty as the capacity to act collectively in a hostile world. Amid US–China rivalry, weaponized interdependence and volatile supply chains, no single EU member state – not even Germany or France – can secure technological independence, energy resilience or defence credibility alone. The response, therefore, must be transnational: pooled procurement, joint R&D funding, coordinated industrial policy and, crucially, fiscal instruments capable of matching American or Chinese scale.
This logic was visible in the Recovery and Resilience Facility during the pandemic. It is now re-emerging in debates over defence bonds and common energy infrastructure financing. For Macron and Draghi, Europe’s fragmentation is precisely what makes it vulnerable. Sovereignty, in this reading, is indivisible.
On the other side, leaders such as De Wever, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italy’s Giorgia Meloni argue that Europe’s malaise stems not from insufficient centralization but from overregulation and anaemic growth.
Their thesis is straightforward: reduce bureaucratic drag, restore competitiveness, unleash private investment – and autonomy will follow organically. In their view, prosperity is sovereignty’s precondition, not its consequence.
Those in this deregulatory growth camp do not necessarily reject cooperation, but they resist further institutional centralization. They see Europe’s competitiveness gap with the US and parts of Asia as self-inflicted: excessive environmental, digital and financial regulation has raised costs and dampened innovation. The answer is not more Brussels, but better Brussels – slimmer, faster, less intrusive.
De Wever argued for sovereignty through growth and deregulated industry. Merz’s rhetoric about restoring Germany’s economic dynamism, and Meloni’s emphasis on defending national industrial bases, converge on the same theme. Sovereignty is not engineered at the EU level; it is aggregated from strong, competitive member states.
This divergence is not a mere theoretical feud over tactics. It risks causing fragmentation in policy strategy that paralyses European decision-making at a crucial juncture.
The risk of a formal rupture in EU institutions, however, remains low. The EU has always contained diversity: from Schengen to the euro, differentiation has been the rule rather than the exception.
Yet the deeper risk is subtler. Fragmentation could occur not through formal secession or treaty rupture, but through policy incoherence: overlapping initiatives, underfunded ambitions, and divergent national strategies marketed as European sovereignty.
On defence, this might prove a hindrance that shouldn’t be underestimated. The integrationist view calls for joint procurement and possibly common debt issuance to scale up capabilities. The growth-oriented camp supports rearmament but prefers national spending within looser EU frameworks. The outcome could be duplication rather than synergy – 27 defence revivals rather than one European capability leap.
The show of relative European unity on the need for sovereignty displayed at the Munich Security Conference reinforced the sense that precedence will be given to whatever enables the EU to translate declarations into capability. From this standpoint, the deregulatory growth camp might have a head start on the integrationists. For now.
In energy policy, the tension is similar. Strategic sovereignty could mean common investment in grids, hydrogen corridors and nuclear capacity. Alternatively, it could mean easing state aid rules and letting national champions expand. Both approaches aim at resilience; they diverge on governance.
With France crippled by endemic public debt and parliamentary marasmus, and Macron’s presidency at its nadir, much depends on Berlin.
If Germany under Merz tilts decisively towards deregulation and fiscal orthodoxy, the Franco-German engine could sputter even further. If, however, Germany accepts selective integration – particularly in defence and technology – while pressing for regulatory simplification, a synthesis may emerge.
Germany’s economic predicament complicates matters. Its industrial model, heavily reliant on exports to China and cheap Russian gas, has been destabilized. Calls for deregulation are therefore politically resonant.
But Germany also recognizes that scale matters in semiconductors, AI and defence manufacturing. This duality could either bridge or widen the European divide.
The apparent split is arguably overstated: strategic sovereignty is indeed multidimensional. Regulatory reform can coexist with deeper integration if both are framed within a coherent competitiveness agenda.
The EU’s challenge is therefore not choosing between federalism and deregulation; it is sequencing and calibrating both. And this precision matters more than we might think.
Want to skip the lengthy cooking time for that dish? Here's how to convert it into a fast and friendly air fryer recipe.
Samsung's lower-cost Galaxy phone hits all the right check boxes, but it's easily overwhelmed when multitasking.
San Francisco’s AI startups are pushing workers to grind endlessly, hinting at pressures soon hitting other sectors
Not long after the terms “996” and “grindcore” entered the popular lexicon, people started telling me stories about what was happening at startups in San Francisco, ground zero for the artificial intelligence economy. There was the one about the founder who hadn’t taken a weekend off in more than six months. The woman who joked that she’d given up her social life to work at a prestigious AI company. Or the employees who had started taking their shoes off in the office because, well, if you were going to be there for at least 12 hours a day, six days a week, wouldn’t you rather be wearing slippers?
“If you go to a cafe on a Sunday, everyone is working,” says Sanju Lokuhitige, the co-founder of Mythril, a pre-seed-stage AI startup, who moved to San Francisco in November to be closer to the action. Lokuhitige says he works seven days a week, 12 hours a day, minus a few carefully selected social events each week where he can network with other people at startups. “Sometimes I’m coding the whole day,” he says. “I do not have work-life balance.”
Continue reading...When daily life feels like a black hole of apps and feeds, it’s no surprise we crave the intimacy of physical media
Usually, my handbag is a medley of digital devices and life essentials – my phone, iPad, chargers, keys, tampons. But lately, you’re likely to also find a half-done newspaper crossword, a ton of stationery, the book I’ve restarted three times, and whatever scraps and trinkets I’ve picked up throughout the day to put in my scrapbook.
Analog is back, and it feels like we need it more than ever. In a world where getting just about anything done means being sucked into a digital black hole of apps, sign-up forms, harrowing social media feeds and carnivorous advertisers, it’s no surprise that we keep reaching back for the comfort of the physical: Polaroids, vinyl records, real birthday cards. It all helps us slow down and appreciate a world where not everything is online.
Continue reading...Retail mogul’s name was this week unredacted from trove of files – how did he and his model town fuel Epstein’s rise?
Les Wexner’s alleged note to Jeffrey Epstein marking his 50th birthday in 2003 included a hand-drawing of a woman’s breasts.
And yet today, the billionaire Wexner’s name and portrait sits front and center across Ohio’s most respected institution – the Ohio State University.
Continue reading...Half of social media users said they want better labels on AI-generated and edited posts.
Sony Group has developed a technology that can identify the underlying music used in tunes generated by AI, making it possible for songwriters to seek compensation from AI developers if their music was used. From a report: Sony Group's technology analyzes which musicians' songs were used in learning and generating music. It can quantify the contribution of each original work, such as "30% of the music used by the Beatles and 10% by Queen," for example. If the AI developer agrees to cooperate for the analysis, Sony Group will obtain data by connecting to the developer's base model system. When cooperation is not attainable, the technology estimates the original work by comparing AI-generated music with existing music. The AI boom has sparked numerous cases in which AI developers are accused of using copyrighted music, video and writing without permission to train machines. In the music industry, AI-generated songs using the voices of well-known singers have been distributed online. The Japanese company thinks the technology will help create a system that distributes revenue generated by AI music to original songwriters based on their contribution.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
CNET's experts have tested dozens of popular electric kettles to find the best for making your favorite hot beverage.
As an assembly member, Mamdani backed the Stop Fakes Act. Now, the NYPD has admitted to spying online – but wielding actual power as mayor is complex
When Zohran Mamdani was a New York state assembly member, he sponsored the Stop Fakes Act, which would have prohibited law enforcement from creating fake electronic communication service accounts and collecting users’ account information.
“Digital dragnet surveillance is widespread and dangerous, yet it continues to go unregulated,” Mamdani co-wrote in a 2023 City & State op-ed. “Although the NYPD claimed in a Department of Justice report to keep detailed records of its undercover accounts, the department refuses to provide any documentation of its social media surveillance policies or practices for public review.”
Continue reading...Make sure your kitchen is well stocked with these tools to keep your health in top form this year.
Huge project by Norwegian-owned Scottish Sea Farms gets go-ahead amid concerns over the environmental cost of fish farming and threat to traditional way of life
At Collafirth, north Shetland, Sydney Johnson is unloading two-dozen bags of scallops by throwing them over his head like medicine balls to the pier above. Johnson, who has just finished a 10-hour shift on his boat, the Golden Shore, is concerned that plans for a new salmon farm will put fishers like him and his two sons out of business.
“They say it’s just one farm,” says Johnson. “But it’s one farm more. There’s only so much water and we’re at saturation point.”
Continue reading...At least 20 federal suits filed against companies like Kalshi and Polymarket as lawmakers call it ‘loophole’ for gambling
State lawmakers and gaming regulators across the US are escalating their fight against prediction markets, arguing that the fast-growing platforms are “basically gambling but with another name”.
At least 20 federal lawsuits have been filed nationwide, disputing whether companies such as Kalshi and Polymarket should be treated as federally regulated financial exchanges, as they maintain, or as gambling operations that should be regulated like state-licensed sportsbooks.
Continue reading...Exclusive: Council in one of England’s poorest areas says it needs urgent help with ballooning children’s social care bill
Keir Starmer is facing a mass resignation of Labour councillors in one of England’s poorest areas over a “betrayal” of funding for children in care.
Labour councillors in Hartlepool, County Durham, said they were “between despair and open revolt” over an “unfair” cash settlement that would leave them unable to balance the books.
Continue reading...A fixture in Democratic politics who ran for the 1988 presidential nomination, Jackson was once close to Martin Luther King Jr. Plus, did a prize-winning novelist steal a woman’s life story?
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Good morning.
The Rev Jesse Jackson, the civil rights campaigner who was prominent for more than 50 years and who ran a strong campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988, has died. He was 84.
What was Jesse Jackson’s role in the civil rights movement? Once close to Martin Luther King Jr, Jackson was a fixture of Democratic politics since the 1960s. In an interview with the Guardian in May 2020, Jackson said: “I was a trailblazer, I was a pathfinder. I had to deal with doubt and cynicism and fears about a Black person running [for president]. There were Black scholars writing papers about why I was wasting my time. Even Blacks said a Black couldn’t win.”
How has the Minnesota governor responded to the news? Tim Walz demanded an “impartial” investigation into the shootings. “Trump’s left hand cannot investigate his right hand,” he said.
Continue reading...Trump’s repeal of landmark climate ruling is a strategic own goal Expert comment LToremark
The Trump administration’s reversal of the endangerment finding is a brutal assault on global efforts to confront climate change – and an act of economic and strategic self-sabotage.
The Trump administration has revoked the landmark endangerment finding, a 2009 scientific ruling determining that greenhouse gases endanger public health – and the legal basis underpinning US climate regulation. This will limit the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)’s ability to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, while vehicle emission standards and energy efficiency rules are being rolled back.
The regulatory retreat will result in significantly increased greenhouse gas emissions from the US transport sector. The sector already emits roughly as much each year as the entire Russian economy. If it were treated as a standalone country, the US transport sector would rank as the world’s fifth-largest emitter. Estimates of the impact of the rollback suggest that an additional 7.9 to 15.3 billion metric tons of emissions could be added by 2055, a substantial increase with far-reaching implications.
But for the US, the negative effects of this deregulation go far beyond the climate.
The Trump administration has framed the policy as a win for American consumers and domestic manufacturers. Fewer regulations, it argues, will reduce production costs, lower vehicle prices and improve affordability for consumers, and protect US car manufacturers from bureaucratic overreach.
It might look like this on the surface, but the opposite is true. Deregulation will not reverse the transition to electric transport that is accelerating globally. By attempting to dismantle policies that have been in place for over 15 years and throttle technological progress, President Trump risks postponing, rather than preventing, the ‘Kodak moment’ for traditional automakers unwilling or unable to adapt.
By removing standards, the Trump administration risks locking the US automotive sector into legacy internal combustion technologies just as the global market accelerates towards electrification. Ford shutting down its battery factory in Kentucky shows how the large car manufacturers are struggling with the shift to new technologies. Ford’s decision followed the July 2025 revocation of Biden-era consumer tax credits of $7,500 for electric vehicles (EVs) – which naturally caused a significant, immediate drop in consumer demand.
US companies like Tesla, which became one of the most valuable companies in the world by manufacturing innovative EVs, will be hit by the deregulation. In September 2025, Elon Musk urged the EPA under the Trump administration to preserve key Biden-era tailpipe emissions rules, which required over 50 per cent of US cars to be electric by 2032. Musk also defended the endangerment finding, arguing that the legal foundation for regulating greenhouse gases should be preserved.
The Trump administration claims that removing efficiency and emissions standards reduces upfront vehicle costs. But it overlooks the total cost of ownership. Outside China, EVs tend to have higher purchase prices, but they generally have lower operating and maintenance costs due to electricity’s relative price advantage over fuel, and fewer moving parts. Multiple studies and consumer surveys show that driving an EV is cheaper than driving a combustion engine vehicle. In the US, for example, driving 100 miles can cost as little as $5 for an EV when charging at home, compared to $13 for a conventional car.
But the central question is technological primacy. If the objective is to ‘make America great again’, that primacy will not come from doubling down on legacy technologies, but from leading in the industries that are beginning to define the 21st century, especially batteries, electric mobility, advanced manufacturing and clean energy systems. Retreating from innovation and jettisoning environmental standards does not strengthen American industry, it weakens its competitive position in the global race.
While deregulation may provide short-term relief to incumbent US automakers, it ultimately entrenches China’s strategic, technological and industrial advantage. Vehicle efficiency and emissions rules are not simply environmental measures – they are industrial policy. They drive innovation in batteries, power electronics, lightweight materials and software-defined vehicles.
China continues to scale EV production, dominate battery supply chains and invest heavily in next-generation mobility. The result: while Washington deregulates, Beijing innovates and builds its competitive advantage. A recent example of cutting-edge Chinese innovation is bringing sodium-ion batteries to the mass-produced passenger car market, as announced by CATL in January 2026. As sodium is abundant and commonplace, such battery chemistries have the potential to lower costs, ease supply chain tensions and reduce environmental impacts.
US car makers also risk losing export markets to Chinese brands in Europe and Asia, where emissions standards and EV policies will remain in place. In effect, US manufacturers may save on compliance costs today, only to abandon the global market tomorrow.
There are potential strategic implications for national economic security. This policy reversal is not just about the US sidestepping its responsibility to tackle climate change, but also about geopolitical industrial competition. By slowing domestic electrification, the US risks further weakening its position in clean-tech supply chains and undermining its long-term competitiveness in advanced manufacturing.
The current US administration views low-carbon technologies with suspicion and contempt, dismissing solar panels, wind turbines and EVs as inferior and unnecessary, a means of ‘virtue-signalling’. However, it is a global outlier in this respect. Governments, businesses and consumers around the world are increasingly investing in clean technology for non-climate reasons. Renewables have become the cheapest and fastest way of generating electricity in most countries. EVs are growing in technical sophistication while falling in cost. As the global automotive market continues to go electric – EV sales reached 20.7 million units in 2025, a 20 per cent year-on-year increase – and Chinese EVs and investments in EV manufacturing are being welcomed in many key markets, the US retreat from climate-aligned industrial policy will prove strategically costly.
The global EV and clean energy transition is not slowing down, therefore US companies competing internationally cannot afford to retreat technologically. They should continue investing in battery innovation, electrification and cost reductions. To access international markets – especially more stringent European and Asian markets – US manufacturers must continue designing vehicles to meet future global standards.
Born from his civil rights work with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the product of two separate organizations fighting for social justice, economic opportunity and equal rights, Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr.'s legacy lives on in the Rainbow PUSH Coalition.
Nothing promises the Phone 4A will have a "bold new experimentation of color." We think we might know what that means.
Company, which also owns Oasis, Warehouse and Karen Millen, to use cash to cut debts and fund turnaround
The owner of Boohoo and Debenhams is raising £35m from shareholders in a move that could open a fresh conflict with Sports Direct founder Mike Ashley.
The company, which also owns Oasis, Warehouse, Pretty Little Thing and Karen Millen, said on Tuesday that the new cash would help reduce debts and fund its turnaround plans. These involve slashing costs, selling off a distribution centre and operating Debenhams as an online marketplace for other brands.
Continue reading...Israel accused of denying doctors re-entry into territory after they gave first-hand testimony on conflict
Medics in the UK and US believe they have been denied re-entry to Gaza after speaking out on the conflict.
Following reports of rising refusal rates, medical workers and organisationswho have provided humanitarian aid in Gaza have described what they see as arbitrary denials.
Continue reading...The US civil rights leader Jesse Jackson, a pioneer of progressive Democratic politics, close ally of Martin Luther King Jr, and two-time candidate for the presidential nomination, has died at 84
Continue reading...Programme launched by last Tory government was worked on by Deloitte and IBM but was paused in 2024
The UK government has shelved a project to simplify trade border processes post-Brexit after spending £110m on a contract with Deloitte and IBM for it, according to reports.
The last Conservative government promised in 2020 to create the “world’s most effective border” by 2025 as part of its plan for a new trade system after Britain left the EU.
Continue reading...Billionaire says he exercised ‘terrible judgment’ in maintaining contact with sex offender and Ghislaine Maxwell
The billionaire Thomas Pritzker has stepped down as executive chair of the hotel chain Hyatt, after revelations over his ties with the late child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Pritzker said he had exercised “terrible judgment” in maintaining contact with the sex offender and Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted in 2021 for her role in recruiting and grooming underage girls.
Continue reading...Some weekends arrive quietly and leave quietly, slipping into the background of our lives without much ceremony. And then there are weekends like this one, the kind that feel alive while they’re happening, and that stay with you long after the lights go out. It was L.A.’s turn to host the NBA All‑Star festivities this year, and I found myself right in the middle of it, surrounded by the past, the present, and the future of the game I’ve loved for most of my life.
The league had invited me to speak with the All‑Star rookies, a group of young men who are just beginning to understand what it means to carry the weight of expectation, opportunity, and responsibility all at once. I’ve always enjoyed spending time with the younger generation. There’s something refreshing about their honesty, their curiosity, the way they’re still forming their identities both as players and as people. They remind me of the early days of my own journey, when everything felt big and new and a little overwhelming.
When I arrived at the Regent Hotel, the room was packed with young talents. All were polite, a little shy, but sharp and focused. I could tell they felt they were right at the start of something important. We broke into small groups, and the conversations flowed easily. We talked about staying grounded and focused, and about navigating the noise that comes with success.
I shared what I could. I told them about the challenges I faced, the moments I stumbled, the times I had to remind myself that the person I was off the court mattered just as much as the one the cameras saw. I talked about the importance of surrounding yourself with people who tell you the truth, not just what you want to hear. I talked about the value of humility, of curiosity, of never believing you’ve learned everything you need to know. And as always happens in these conversations, I walked away feeling like I had learned just as much as I had taught. That’s the beauty of these exchanges.
House of 2K at Cosm was next on my schedule, and I’ll be honest, I had no idea what I was walking into. I’d never been there before. Cosm feels like someone took the game I grew up playing on a real hardwood floor and mixed it with the game kids play today with a controller in their hands.
I’ve been part of the 2K family for a long time, and people love to tease me about it. They’ll say, “How does a traditional guy like you end up in the gaming world?” Well, my manager, Deborah, keeps me trending. When I walked into the House of 2K, the music was loud and the video technology looked so real I almost checked to see if I was in the game. I chatted with a few fans, took some pictures, and then I made a strategic exit before I went completely deaf.

Sunday morning brought a different kind of excitement. I arrived at the YouTube Theater early, partly out of habit and partly because I wanted a few quiet minutes before the whirlwind began. Instead, I walked straight into a reunion. Oscar Robertson and Julius Erving were already there, and seeing them felt like stepping back into a familiar rhythm, the kind of friendship where the years melt away the moment you sit down.
We talked about the old days, the battles we fought, the things we miss, and the things we definitely don’t. At one point we started joking about our knees, and let’s just say the laughter was loud enough to make a couple of staff members peek in to see what was going on. Age has a way of humbling you, but it also gives you the gift of being able to laugh at yourself. There’s a certain freedom in that.

Backstage, Bob Costas joined us. Bob has a memory like a steel trap: dates, scores, arenas, the color of the socks someone was wearing in 1984, he remembers it all. He started telling stories from games we’d long forgotten, and suddenly we were all leaning in like kids around a campfire. And then Magic walked in, carrying that big smile of his, the one that lights up a room before he even says a word. The energy shifted instantly, brighter, louder, warmer. That’s the thing about Magic: he doesn’t just enter a room, he lifts it. Before long, the whole place was filled with laughter, old jokes, and the kind of easy camaraderie that only decades of shared history can create.
Eventually, it was time to head to the backstage. The NBA was presenting me with the Lifetime Achievement Award; and even after all these years, moments like that still make my heart beat a little faster. I stood behind the curtain, listening to the muffled hum of the crowd, holding the acceptance speech I’d written the night before. It wasn’t nerves, exactly, more like a quiet wave of gratitude washing over me. Gratitude for the game, for the people, for the journey. Gratitude for the kid I used to be, who never could have imagined any of this.

You can watch my acceptance speech by clicking here: Lifetime Achievement Award
I walked out onto that stage seeing familiar faces in the audience. The lights, the applause, the crowd, it all blended into one warm, overwhelming moment. I spoke from the heart, thanked the people who shaped me, and tried to honor the lessons this game has given me. And when it was over, when the applause faded and the lights dimmed, I felt something I didn’t expect: a deep, peaceful sense of completion. Not an ending, just a moment of recognition, a pause to appreciate the road behind me before continuing on the one ahead.
On the drive home, I kept replaying the day in my mind: the conversations, the laughter, the memories, the young faces full of hope. And somewhere between the arena and my front door, it hit me how lucky I am. Lucky to have lived long enough to see the game evolve. Lucky to still be part of it, lucky to have a community—all of you, who care enough to read these reflections and share this journey with me.
I was excited to get home, sit down, and write this for you, my loyal subscribers. Writing has become another kind of court for me, a place where I can show up and share what I’ve learned, and stay connected to the people who’ve supported me through every chapter of my life. So, thank you for being here and allowing me to share moments like this.
Some weekends fade. This one won’t.
Citizen Lab report suggests Cellebrite software was used to break into Boniface Mwangi’s phone while he was under arrest
When Boniface Mwangi, the prominent Kenyan pro-democracy activist who plans to run for president in 2027, had his phones returned to him by Kenyan authorities after his controversial arrest last July, he immediately noticed a problem: one of the phones was no longer password protected and could be opened without one.
It was Mwangi’s personal phone, which he used to communicate with friends and mentors, and contained photos of private family moments with his wife and children. Knowing that its contents could be in the hands of the Kenyan government made Mwangi – who has described harassment and even torture – feel unsafe and “exposed”, he told the Guardian.
Continue reading...We did the math: Here's how much a new fridge model can save you over one that's a decade old.
The Californian once had ambitions of winning gold at the Winter Olympics. But now he is more interested in what skiing can do for the soul
Growing up in the Hayward Hills, just south of Oakland, California, Mallory Duncan lived a hybrid lifestyle throughout his childhood. Weekdays were spent at school, avoiding homework, disrupting class and getting in trouble. Weekends at Alpine Meadows, a ski resort on the north-west shores of Lake Tahoe, were for jumping off cliffs and skiing powder with friends. Every Sunday he would have dinner at his grandad’s house, watch football and listen to jazz.
“I’ve come to accept that I don’t always fit into the ski industry,” says Duncan, a professional skier, award-winning film-maker, entrepreneur and saxophonist. “I live in Portland and love the city life, music and the integration of art into my work. Being exposed to many different types of experiences helps me be more creative in everything I do.”
Continue reading...The Trump administration has bought warehouses across the US that could hold thousands. But resistance is growing
There is a vast building, reportedly the size of seven football fields, in Surprise, Arizona, a suburb of Phoenix; ICE bought it for $70m. Another building, along the southern border in San Antonio, Texas, was valued at $37m; it’s 640,000 sq ft. In January, ICE bought a warehouse in Upper Bern Township, Pennsylvania, not far outside of Philadelphia, for $87.4m. In Williamsport, Maryland, outside Hagerstown, the cost of a facility on a nearly 54-acre plot was $102m.
These are massive, industrial spaces, built for holding goods to be shipped elsewhere. Warehouses are drafty and difficult to heat, hard-floored and high-ceilinged, not meant for human habitation. But the Trump administration is aiming to convert them into vast detention camps for immigrants. Some of the buildings could house as many as 9,000 people at a time. The rapid slew of new warehouse purchases by deportation agencies brings to mind the words of the ICE director, Todd Lyons, who told a conference last year that he wanted the effort to operate “like Amazon Prime, for human beings”.
Continue reading...Acolytes of the far-right activist urged employers to fire his critics. Now those who were terminated are suing and claiming their right to free speech
Julie Strebe, a 55-year-old sheriff’s deputy in the small Bible belt town of Salem, Missouri, was on a date with her husband at a Buffalo Wild Wings when her husband slid his phone across the table. On Facebook, people were demanding Strebe’s immediate termination, calling her a “wacko” with “extreme mental health issues”.
It was the afternoon of 13 September 2025, just a few days after Charlie Kirk had been killed by a sniper’s bullet on a college campus. Shortly after his assassination, Strebe had posted on her personal Facebook page: “Empathy is not owed to oppressors.” In comments underneath, she did not mince words. She called Kirk a racist, a sexist, an antisemite and the kind of person who wants to see gay people, like her own son, stoned to death. “I don’t feel bad,” she says, months later, speaking from her home. “I refuse to feel bad for this man, and the hateful things he stood for.”
Continue reading...Bloc also examines ‘addictive design’ of shopping site, including rewards, and its recommender systems
The EU is to open a formal investigation into the Chinese retailer Shein over multiple suspected breaches of European laws including the sale of childlike sex dolls and weapons.
The European Commission said on Tuesday it had launched the inquiry after demanding information from the fast-growing company last year.
Continue reading...The conditions were treacherous in the Pacific Ocean, hundreds of miles off the Mexico–Guatemala border. There were https://www.weather.gov/mfl/beaufort#:~:text=Sea%20heaps%20up%20and%20white,when%20walking%20against%20the%20wind.&text=Moderately%20high%20waves%20of%20greater,off%20trees;%20generally%20impedes%20progress.&text=Very%20high%20waves%20with%20long,uprooted;%20considerable%20structural%20damage%20occurs.&text=Exceptionally%20high%20waves%20(small%20and,accompanied%20by%20wide%2Dspread%20damage.&text=The%20air%20is%20filled%20with,spray;%20visibility%20very%20seriously%20affected.gale-force winds and 9-foot seas. It https://boattest.com/article/boating-accidents-week-january-7-2023would be dangerous if you https://wbsm.com/new-bedford-boat-sinking-a-holiday-heartbreaker-opinion/were on a boat, nevermind if yours was blown out of the water.
Eight men leapt into those rough seas on December 30 when the U.S. rained down a barrage of munitions, sinking three vessels. They required immediate rescue; chances were slim that they could survive even an hour. In announcing its strike, U.S. Southern Command or SOUTHCOM, said it “immediately notified” the Coast Guard to launch search and rescue protocols to save the men.
But it took the United States Coast Guard almost 45 hours to begin searching the attack zone for survivors, new reporting by Airwars and The Intercept reveals.
Help did not arrive in time. A total of 11 civilians died due to the U.S. attack on December 30 — including the eight who jumped overboard, according to information provided https://theintercept.com/2026/01/08/us-military-boat-strike-deaths-undercount/exclusively to The Intercept by SOUTHCOM, which is responsible for U.S. military operations in and around Latin America and the Caribbean. This represents one of the largest single-day death tolls since the U.S. military began targeting alleged drug smuggling boats last September.
“SOUTHCOM doesn’t want these people alive.”
Using open-source flight tracking data, Airwars and The Intercept learned that a Coast Guard plane did not head toward the site of the attack for almost two days. A timeline provided by the Coast Guard confirmed that it was roughly 45 hours before a flight arrived at the search area.
The slow response and lack of rescue craft in the area suggests there was scant interest on the part of the U.S. in saving anyone. It’s part of a pattern of what appear to be imitation rescue missions that since mid-October have not saved a single survivor.
On December 30, Secretary of War https://x.com/Southcom/status/2006024586643599782Pete Hegseth told the Coast Guard’s parent agency — the Department of Homeland Security — that SOUTHCOM stood ready to provide them with “specialized maritime capabilities” in support of their missions. But just hours later, it was SOUTHCOM that called on the Coast Guard to conduct the search and rescue mission for the eight men.
The Coast Guard told The Intercept that it received the initial report of people in distress from SOUTHCOM at 1:40 p.m. Pacific time on December 30. (The exact timing of the U.S. strike is not known, but when SOUTHCOM posted about the attack on X the following day it wrote that it had “immediately notified” the Coast Guard).
The survivors jumped into the Pacific approximately 400 nautical miles southwest of Ocos, Guatemala. They faced extreme conditions: 9-foot seas and 40-knot winds, according to Kenneth Wiese, a spokesperson for the Coast Guard Southwest District.
The Coast Guard said it soon began contacting Maritime Rescue Coordination Centers in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, and Costa Rica; the Central American Air Navigation Services Corporation, which provides regional air traffic control and search and rescue coordination; and eight commercial vessels within 200 nautical miles of the last known position of the survivors. A lone container vessel, the Maersk Eureka, responded to the call. On December 31 at 6:44 a.m. Pacific time, the ship arrived at the last known position of the survivors and found nothing.
That morning at 9:19 a.m. Pacific time, a Coast Guard C-130 search and rescue plane took off from Sacramento, California, and headed to Liberia, Costa Rica, “for refueling and crew rest.” A day later, on January 1 at 7:33 a.m. Pacific time, the aircraft left Costa Rica and headed toward the “search area,” according to the Coast Guard. It finally arrived “on scene” at 10:18 a.m. Pacific time on New Year’s Day.
The Coast Guard said that it suspended its search on January 2, https://www.news.uscg.mil/Press-Releases/Article/4370416/coast-guard-suspends-search-for-individuals-in-the-pacific-ocean/reporting “no sightings of survivors or debris.” A U.S. government official, https://theintercept.com/2026/01/07/boat-strikes-survivors/who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press, said the men were presumed dead when the search was ended.
“Suspending a search is never easy, and given the exhaustive search effort, lack of positive indications, and declining probability of survival, we have suspended active search efforts pending further developments,” said Coast Guard Capt. Patrick Dill, chief of incident management, Southwest District, at the time.
A second government official who spoke with The Intercept said the Coast Guard response didn’t look like “foot dragging,” but questioned why, after months of attacks in the region, search and rescue assets weren’t pre-positioned closer to the Eastern Pacific.
“SOUTHCOM doesn’t want these people alive,” that official said.
Asked for comment on the allegation, Southern Command spokesperson Steven McLoud said: “SOUTHCOM does not comment on speculative or unfounded reporting.”
The Coast Guard confirmed the C-130 sent from Sacramento was its only aircraft in the area. “There were no other Coast Guard assets in the area to assist with the search,” said spokesperson Lt. Cmdr. Lauren Giancola.
The Coast Guard would not explain why it hadn’t pre-positioned assets in the region. “Any questions regarding military operations including recent strikes should be referred directly to the Department of War,” Giancola told The Intercept.
Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson did not return a request for comment.
The search and rescue operation for the boat strike survivors differs starkly from the U.S. response when a U.S. Marine involved in the military campaign in the Caribbean fell overboard from the amphibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima in the SOUTHCOM area of operations this month. It sparked a “nonstop search and rescue operation” that included hundreds of flight hours and extensive aviation support, according to a statement from the Marines’ II Marine Expeditionary Force. Five Navy ships, a rigid-hull inflatable boat, surface rescue swimmers from the Iwo Jima, and 10 aircraft from the Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force joined the search efforts. (Lance Cpl. Chukwuemeka E. Oforah, 21, was declared deceased on Feb. 10, 2026.)
The slow pace of the U.S. search for boat strike survivors suggests the goal wasn’t to save lives, said Brian Finucane, a former state department lawyer who is a specialist in counterterrorism issues and the laws of war.
“It does not appear as if they were eager to rescue additional survivors and then be faced with the question of ‘what do we do with them?’” he told The Intercept. “We’re going to hand off responsibility to the Coast Guard, which is going to arrive in a few days from California and look around and not find anything. So you can draw your own conclusions from that sequence.”
The U.S. military has carried out more than three dozen known attacks, destroying 40 boats, in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean since September, killing at least 134 civilians. The most recent attack on Friday – the first known strike in the Caribbean Sea since early November – killed three people.
From the first strike, crewmembers have periodically survived initial attacks, leading the U.S. to employ a hodgepodge of strategies to deal with them, ranging from execution to repatriation. The Intercept was the first outlet to report that the U.S. military killed two survivors of the initial boat attack on September 2 in a follow-up strike. The two survivors clung to the wreckage of a vessel attacked by the U.S. military for roughly 45 minutes before Adm. Frank Bradley, then the head of Joint Special Operations Command, ordered a follow-up strike that killed the shipwrecked men.
Following an October 16 attack on a semi-submersible in the Caribbean Sea that killed two civilians, two other men were rescued by the U.S. and quickly repatriated to Colombia and Ecuador, respectively. President Donald Trump called them “terrorists” in a Truth Social post and said they would face “detention and prosecution.” But both men were released without charges in their home countries. Since this attack, the U.S. appears to have settled on a strategy of calling for what increasingly resemble imitation rescue missions.
Following three attacks on October 27 that killed 15 people aboard four separate boats, a survivor of a strike was spotted clinging to wreckage, and the U.S. alerted Mexican authorities. The man was not found, and he is presumed dead.
Last month, SOUTHCOM again called on the Coast Guard. “On Friday, January 23rd, the U.S. Coast Guard was notified by the Department of War’s Southern Command of a person in distress in the Pacific Ocean,” Coast Guard spokesperson Roberto Nieves told The Intercept. A timeline provided by the Coast Guard shows that it took about 17 hours for a Coast Guard C-130 to arrive at the survivor’s last known position, but that aircraft only conducted an hourlong search before “diverting to El Salvador for fuel and crew rest.” It returned to the last known position of the survivor on January 25, about 51 hours after the initial distress call. The search was suspended that night just before 8 p.m. Pacific time, and that person is now also presumed dead.
“The expected result is essentially the same as putting a gun to their head.”
Following a strike last week — the third since Marine Gen. Francis L. Donovan became SOUTHCOM’s new commander earlier this month — the command announced that it had once again notified the Coast Guard “to activate the Search and Rescue system for the survivor.” The Coast Guard, in turn, told The Intercept that Ecuador’s Maritime Rescue Coordination Center “assumed coordination of search and rescue operations, with technical support provided by the U.S. Coast Guard.” The Coast Guard then walked it back and said the U.S. had only “offered” assistance. Ecuador’s rescue authorities did not return multiple requests for an update on the search.
The second government official, who spoke with The Intercept on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment about the boat strikes, said that survivors created “complications and questions” for the U.S. military and intelligence community. Rather than risk exposing intelligence sources and methods by bringing these men to court, the official said it was simpler to leave them to drown. Finucane echoed this assessment. “After rescuing the men in October, it was apparent there would be a strong incentive not to have additional survivors on their hands,” he said.
William Baumgartner, a retired U.S. Coast Guard rear admiral and former chief counsel of that service branch, said the December 30 attack was tantamount to a death sentence. “Once the people jump in the water and you blow up the only thing that could possibly save their lives, that’s essentially killing them,” Baumgartner told The Intercept last month. “The expected result is essentially the same as putting a gun to their head.”
Experts say the survivors of the December 30 attacks likely https://theintercept.com/2026/01/07/boat-strikes-survivors/died within minutes. Accomplished swimmers, clinging to wreckage or flotation devices in warmer waters, could survive longer, some said. None considered that likely in this case.
“The combination of the wind and the waves would force feed water into the victim. If the waves don’t drown you, the hypothermia will kill you,” said Tom Griffiths, the founder of the http://www.aquaticsafetygroup.com/Aquatic Safety Research Group, who previously served as the director of aquatics and safety officer for athletics at Penn State University. “Drowning often takes as little as four to six minutes for a non-swimmer but can be as quick as 90 seconds. I would think under these conditions it could be almost as quick.”
John Fletemeyer, an aquatics expert and co-author of “The Science of Drowning,” said that people have survived in the water for up to two days. But such cases, he said, are “outliers.”
“It can be almost instantaneous, where it can happen in just a couple minutes if someone cannot swim and they go underwater,” Fletemeyer said. A frequent expert in murder-homicide cases, he explained in detail the pain and suffering involved in drowning. There is also the potential for shark attack, he said, due to blood in the water from those killed in the initial strike.
“If we know somebody is in the water dying,” he said, “I think we have a human responsibility to try to save them.”
The post U.S. Sent a Rescue Plane for Boat Strike Survivors. It Took 45 Hours to Arrive. appeared first on The Intercept.
Trump says everyday Americans deserve a chance to buy higher-risk ‘alternative’ investments. Critics say this could lead to big losses for small investors
On a summer day in 2018, Cathy Shubert, then 58, hopped in her Toyota Rav 4 and drove to the Jacksonville, Florida, office of Mario Payne, an investment adviser at the financial services firm Raymond James. She had a lot on her mind. She was not happy with her job at a local bank branch and wanted to see if Payne thought she had saved enough to retire.
“He said what I was retiring with would carry me and everything would be wonderful,” she remembered. “I went home and told my husband, ‘Oh my God, I want you to go meet him.’”
Continue reading...A trailblazer in the civil rights movement and Democratic politics, Jackson championed the rights of Black, poor and working-class people with his ‘rainbow coalition’
The Rev Jesse Jackson, the civil rights campaigner who was prominent for more than 50 years and who ran strongly for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988, has died. He was 84.
“Our father was a servant leader – not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world,” the Jackson family said in a statement.
Continue reading...They call them “box cutters,” but everyone on the flightline knows what the term really means. The blades slide out at the push of a button, revealing high-end knives made and marketed for active combat. They cost the federal government hundreds of dollars each — and come free to maintenance workers in the Air Force who order them through the supply system and hand them out as favors.
For nearly a decade, Air Force maintenance units spent more than $1.79 million in taxpayer funds buying 5,166 high-end knives and other luxury items, including switchblades and combat-style tactical knives with no legitimate maintenance use, The Intercept has found. It’s a drop in the bucket of a U.S. military budget creeping ever closer to a trillion dollars, about $300 billion of which belongs to the Air Force. But with a military budget so bloated, the knife-ordering frenzy illustrates how obviously frivolous spending can go unchecked.
“Everyone knew we didn’t need them,” said a former noncommissioned officer recently honorably discharged from Hill Air Force Base. “There was literally zero justification in any maintenance field.”
“There was literally zero justification in any maintenance field.”
The Benchmade Infidel and Mini Infidel, the most popular choices, are sleek and black, with automatic blades that slide straight out the front. Their presence on the flightline, where maintainers work to repair and tune up airplanes between flights, is difficult to justify — and often outright banned. Procurement records obtained via Freedom of Information Act requests show that Air Force maintenance units have been buying the knives as far back as at least 2017 and as recently as June 2025, spanning multiple major commands.
Accounting for roughly a quarter of troops in the Air Force, maintainers are the technicians and mechanics responsible for upkeep of approximately 5,000 planes. They’re chronically understaffed and overworked, as The Intercept previously reported, and maintainers spanning nine bases and major commands said that some of the crucial supplies they need for maintenance — like safety wire, specialized hydraulic fluids, and calibrated test equipment — are difficult to obtain. Maintainers said that while essential tools and materials were often delayed or unavailable, nonessential items like high-end knives moved easily through the supply system, likely due to an apparent misclassification, as a procurement expert explained to The Intercept.
“It always felt like we were just putting duct tape on these jets to keep them flying,” said an active-duty senior airman who previously served in the 57th Maintenance Wing at Nellis Air Force Base. “Jets would come back with the same broken parts or worse, just so we could meet flight numbers. We never had money for proper tools, but there would be brand-new computers, unit flags, or other items to make the unit look better.”
For some maintainers, the option to order a shiny combat knife for free is something of a silver lining. “This is one of the only good things that maintainers get,” said a former maintainer from Edwards Air Force Base.
In other cases, the knives were markers of inclusion. “Tech sergeants would come in for a short time and get a knife as a welcome present,” said the former maintainer from Hill.
Nine current and former Air Force maintainers who spoke to The Intercept for this story were granted anonymity because they feared retaliation. As is common in the military, maintainers who raise concerns about excessive spending can face ostracization or professional consequences.
“It wasn’t like higher-ups would be mad if they caught you,” said the source from Hill. “They had knives too.”
“We were told that if you wanted one, all you had to do was be friends with people attached to the supply line,” said a source who worked in the backshop at Nellis. “I knew plenty of people who would do favors for supply troops to get their hands on a knife.”
Six people stationed at Nellis between 2017 and 2024 confirmed that misuse of the supply system was common. One source said they still have six Benchmade knives, gifted by a noncommissioned officer in the 57th Wing. The source said they were never told how those knives were obtained.
More than 59 active-duty Air Force bases in the United States and numerous overseas installations operate under the same supply system. The Intercept submitted requests for procurement data to 28 Air Force bases and received responsive records from 12 installations. Every base that returned records showed similar knife-ordering patterns across its flightline maintenance units.
“Most things were done with handshakes, winks and nods. Definitely a good ol’ boys club,” said Micah Templin, a former weapons troop in the 57th Maintenance Wing at Nellis. “There were quid pro quos and IOUs. If you did someone a favor one day, maybe your chief or leadership would feel comfortable looking the other way on another.”
“This is one of the only good things that maintainers get.”
Sources from U.S. Air Force units in the continental United States, South Korea, and Germany said personnel routinely used the term “box cutters” as a euphemism for the knives. This made them sound simple and practical, several maintainers said, while the knives themselves were prized largely for their appearance, retail price, and the status of owning one rather than any maintenance-related use. Maintainers interviewed by The Intercept said the knives were popular largely because they “look cool.”
While Defense Logistics Agency records show how many knives were purchased overall, FOIA responses from individual bases offer only a partial picture of where those orders originated. But every installation that did provide records showed recognizable patterns, suggesting the practice was not limited to a single base or command.
Several maintainers said they believed leadership used unit funds to purchase high-end items that were later diverted for personal use, describing a culture in which “nothing was given out without a take.” Maintainers said those who resisted or questioned practices could find themselves scrutinized or under extra pressure, which discouraged reporting and allowed misuse of the supply system to continue unchecked.
“I feel like maintainer leadership will legally do everything they can to keep someone from speaking out and do anything to protect their careers. That’s the trend within senior leadership in maintenance,” the backshop source said.
Seven sources from domestic and overseas units said this often means senior enlisted personnel direct junior troops to place orders, move items, or handle deliveries on their behalf. For those with access, it’s easy to order items with minimal oversight. The practice, sources said, allowed leadership to benefit from questionable purchases while shielding themselves from scrutiny and leaving lower-ranking airmen exposed to potential disciplinary or legal consequences.
“A tech sergeant ordered a ton of Yeti coolers and then told me to load them directly into his private vehicle.”
Knives were the most common example of the misspending, but maintainers described similar practices involving other high-end items. Five airmen who served in the 64th Aggressor Squadron’s maintenance units at Nellis Air Force Base between 2018 and 2020 said senior noncommissioned officers in the squadron’s Combat Oriented Supply Organization routinely ordered new flat-screen televisions for maintenance spaces, then placed the fully functional replaced sets into unit storage areas. According to the airmen, senior noncommissioned officers later removed some of the televisions from unit spaces for personal use.
“I remember a time when a tech sergeant ordered a ton of Yeti coolers and then told me to load them directly into his private vehicle,” said an active-duty avionics troop stationed in Europe, granted anonymity for fear of retaliation. “It was always ordered in ones and twos. Anything else would raise too much suspicion.”
According to Dallas Sharrah, a former staff sergeant who served at Nellis Air Force Base: “People were mainly ordering switchblades or Oakley sunglasses for their buddies. Supply could hook them up a bit before they got yelled at.”
Outside of toolkits, knives are never allowed on the flightline. They’re considered Foreign Object Debris, according to former maintenance officers, meaning they’re at risk of being sucked into an aircraft intake and damaging the engine.
The Air Force Materiel Management Handbook says that all orders must be justified for official use, but classification issues in the procurement catalog blurred the lines that define what qualifies. The knives are broadly available through standard supply channels, making repeated or bulk orders easy to place. At Nellis, purchases often averaged 20 knives per order, with some as high as 47.
“In the aggregate, someone had to be doing an audit somewhere and said to themselves, ‘Why did we order so many knives? Why are those requisitions restricted to certain bases and certain units? What is going on here?’ Clearly, no one was looking,” said Steve Leonard, a retired senior military strategist, procurement expert, and professor at the University of Kansas.
The procurement catalog is divided into subsections, Leonard explained, and knives were listed as Class IX, a category shared with maintenance-related items. But in his view, the knives should have been considered Class II items, which are intended for individual issue and subject to stricter justification, approval, and accountability requirements.
“Clearly, no one was looking.”
Items classified as Class II are typically restricted from purchase with unit funds if they primarily benefit individuals, while Class IX repair parts move through maintenance supply channels with far less scrutiny. “Most people aren’t interested in stealing hydraulic valves,” he said.
Defense Logistics Agency procurement records show the knives carry a “J” security code, meaning they are treated as security-related items rather than maintenance equipment, a designation that undermines their classification as routine repair parts.
When asked about the findings, an Air Force spokesperson did not address specific allegations or installations. The Intercept provided the Department of the Air Force with FOIA records, national stock numbers, and other evidence of more than $1 million in suspect knife purchases across six installations.
“The Department of the Air Force takes all allegations of fraud seriously and has processes and procedures in place to investigate them,” the spokesperson wrote in response. “If service members or citizens have concerns or evidence of specific wrongdoing, they are encouraged to report the information to local law enforcement or their Office of Special Investigation.”
Benchmade, the manufacturer of the Infidel and Mini Infidel knives most named in procurement records and troop testimonies, declined to comment.
It remains unclear how many knives airmen have obtained in recent months. On June 9, 2025, The Intercept submitted FOIA requests to 28 Air Force bases. Twelve installations provided responsive procurement records, while the remaining bases delayed, obstructed, or did not meaningfully respond.
At Hill Air Force Base, officials falsely claimed records from another installation were their own. Davis–Monthan Air Force Base admitted it had gone months with no staff to process FOIA requests. Joint Base San Antonio–Randolph reported spending only 30 minutes searching eight years of procurement records before declaring no knife purchases existed. At Luke Air Force Base, an officer sent conflicting messages about whether a request had been received, then attempted to delete an earlier acknowledgment email.
Air Force spokesperson Ann Stefanek said she had not previously been aware of the purchases or inconsistencies in the bases’ FOIA replies. “I am literally trying to understand what to look for and who to ask,” she wrote in an email.
The Defense Department’s inspector general system, responsible for oversight of potential fraud and other misconduct, declined to comment on the knife purchases. An inspector general spokesperson said the office does not comment on active investigations and would not say whether any investigation related to the purchases was underway. The IG system is undergoing a major overhaul, with many positions open under the second Trump administration.
At the same time, Air Force inspector general complaint records obtained by The Intercept through FOIA requests show that from January 2016 through December 2022, maintenance and munitions units at Nellis Air Force Base generated at least 274 complaints. The allegations included abuse of authority, reprisal, potential contracting fraud, and hostile work environments.
Many of the complaints were recorded as “assisted” or closed within days, averaging roughly three complaints per month over six years from the same units later tied to irregular knife purchases documented in this reporting.
Scott Amey, general counsel at the Project on Government Oversight, a nonpartisan watchdog, said the pattern reflects broader concerns about misuse of government funds and poor oversight. “While every instance might not be fraudulent, I’ll expect many of the knives purchased are for personal use with taxpayers picking up the tab,” he said. “Wasted money and unauthorized use is a bad mix, and only the tip of the iceberg.”
At Moody Air Force Base in Georgia, FOIA-obtained records describe a “recurring problem with physical location and quantity consistency” of supply items and note that “thievery is not out of question.” As a corrective step, the documents say leadership submitted an unfunded request for surveillance cameras through the procurement system.
The post Air Force Maintenance Staff Can’t Stop Buying Fancy Knives With Tax Dollars appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Over the last two years, Delaware environmental regulators have found that equipment failures and other related operational issues at the Delaware City refinery led to the unpermitted release of hundreds of thousands of hazardous chemicals into the atmosphere. Now the company is appealing some $300,000 in fines and other measures that came in response to those releases.
State environmental regulators said last week that the Delaware City refinery has appealed their recent orders to install air monitoring equipment, and to pay a $300,000 penalty for releasing hazardous pollutants into the air.
The appeals will be considered by the state’s Environmental Appeals Board. No hearing dates have been scheduled.
The refinery’s appeals came in response to two state orders, issued in December, that included penalties for an 18-day stretch of emissions that sent nearly a million pounds of sulfur dioxide, and thousands of pounds of other toxic chemicals, such as carbon monoxide, ammonia and hydrogen cyanide, into the air in the spring of 2025.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says that short-term exposure to sulfur dioxide “can harm the human respiratory system and make breathing difficult.”
Less than six months after the spring emissions, the Delaware City Refining Company told DNREC that a “mechanical failure” at the facility had caused another pollution incident – this time an overnight release of 1,000 pounds of butane. The refinery company later revised the report, stating it actually released more than 100 tons of chemicals, including nearly 50,000 pounds of butane alone.
Weeks later, on Dec. 12, the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control demanded that the refinery install additional air monitors.
A spokesperson for the refinery, which is owned by New Jersey-based PBF Energy, declined comment for this story, but shared a Dec. 31 statement from the company that said it would be “technically infeasible” to meet the timeline DNREC set to install fenceline air monitors.
The statement also said the company would work “collaboratively with DNREC to amend and ultimately comply with” that order.
Less than two weeks after the first December order, DNREC issued a second order that outlined multiple air pollution violations spanning 2024 and 2025, including the stretch of continuous emission from May 25 to June 11 of last year.

In the order, which landed on the Sunday before Christmas, DNREC Secretary Gregory Patterson fined the refinery company $300,000, as an administrative penalty. The order also noted that ongoing problems with boilers at the refinery’s coking unit were supposed to have been resolved following a settlement the facility signed in 2023.
By law, state regulators can impose fines of up to $10,000 per day for such violations.
In response, Delaware City Mayor Paul Johnson said it was refreshing to see DNREC be more involved with ongoing issues at the refinery.
“We support anything that’s gonna be done to improve the health and safety of our residents,” he said.
When DNREC announced the Dec. 12 order requiring the company to install new monitoring equipment, the agency also noted it would pursue new statewide regulations for fenceline air monitoring at industrial facilities like the refinery. That process is now underway, according to a regulatory notice that Patterson signed on Feb. 1.
The agency has also ordered additional air monitoring equipment that will be added to an existing monitoring device on Route 9 downwind of the Delaware City Refinery.
The post Delaware City refinery appeals two state sanctions for past emissions appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
The city of Dover is one step closer to implementing a slew of opioid use remedies after a task force appointed by the mayor has finalized its list of recommended proposals. The city plans to use the first round of its 12 designated opioid settlement fund allotments to implement youth-focused initiatives.
An appointed group of Dover city leaders finalized a list of recommendations last week, proposing six ways the capital city could use its quarter-million-dollar share of the state’s opioid settlement commission funds, with a focus on youth outreach.
In response to pushback over Mayor Robin Christiansen’s controversial suggestions last fall for the city to use its share of the settlement funds to build a swimming pool, Christiansen created a “Blue Ribbon Opioid Use Disorder Task Force” to examine how the city could best allocate its first $250,000.
The recommendation the task force is prioritizing most strongly is a youth-focused campaign allowing kids to express their emotions and struggles with drug use through social media videos and live theater, said City Councilman Roy Sudler, who chairs the task force.
“We feel as though a unique way to grasp the attention of the youth and do outreach to the youth is through theater, arts, and Tik Tok,” he told Spotlight Delaware.
Sudler, who has a background in mental health and drug abuse research, said the task force is already working on a partnership to carry out the recommendation with the Capital School District – which includes the city of Dover – Delaware State University, and the Biggs Museum of American Art.
A spokesperson for the Capital School District confirmed the planned partnership in a message to Spotlight Delaware. Representatives from Delaware State University and the Biggs Museum did not respond to requests for comment.
At the same time, Sudler said, the city will work with the state’s Prescription Opioid Settlement Distribution Commission (POSDC) – which distributes money from legal settlements with drug manufacturers to municipalities and local organizations – to set up an online portal for other youth-focused organizations to apply for a portion of the city’s first funding allocation later this spring.
The other five recommendations include investing funds in a detox treatment center, expanding telehealth services for opioid users and standing up a mobile intervention unit to provide immediate referrals for drug users.
Sudler said Christiansen is “in total agreement” with the task force’s recommendations, but it will be up to the city council to approve them before the POSDC gives them final approval in late-March.
Christiansen did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment about the task force.
The POSDC will direct 15% of its total funding to 10 local jurisdictions – including Dover, Wilmington, Seaford and each of the state’s three counties – for the first time this spring, said POSDC Director Brad Owens.
The amount of money each jurisdiction will receive was determined based on a formula of population size, drug overdose deaths, and the number of admissions to substance use treatment facilities, Owens added.
Sudler presented the same six recommendations at the first task force meeting in October 2025 that the group ultimately voted to approve this month.
He initially spent time researching the city’s opioid use environment and having conversations with community members before he first brought the ideas to the task force.
From there, he said, he gave the task force a chance to propose any amendments or other recommendations, but the group ended up agreeing with his original ideas.
When asked about the youth initiative at a Feb. 12 task force meeting, member Bernard Pratt, an employee at Delaware State University, said he was just “being a sponge” and absorbing what experts were presenting to the committee.

Other members, including community activist Chelle Paul, praised the youth recommendation as an effective way to address the problem early and reach the many struggling kids in the community.
To Tammy Anderson, a University of Delaware professor who studies drug use, the youth initiative is a good way of focusing on prevention, and reaching kids on the platforms they like to use, like Tik Tok.
“It’s worth investing in because so many young people are tuned into it,” she said. “That’s where you’ll capture them.”
Anderson also said she’d encourage the city to pursue the task force’s recommendations relating to detox center infrastructure and expanded behavioral health resources. However, she said she is “less enthusiastic about’ the ideas of more telehealth services and a mobile intervention unit, as they have been shown to have fewer results for decreasing drug use.
While Anderson highlighted the nuances of which recommendations might be more effective, Owens, the POSDC director, said the commission will allow Dover to pursue whichever recommendations the city council elects to focus on with the settlement money.
“It’s ultimately their discretion,” Owens said. “That’s the whole point to give locals some authority as to how they spend the money.”
At a city council committee meeting in September 2025, Christiansen suggested the city “be creative” with its opioid settlement funding, and put money toward a proposed $20 million pool.
While Christiansen defended the idea in an interview with Spotlight Delaware in September, the suggestion drew a wide range of criticism from city council members, residents and other state officials.
Owens told Spotlight Delaware spending the money on a pool would be “a hard stretch.”
“I told the mayor to focus on initiatives that are more directly linked to opioid use,” Owens said.
In an effort to quiet concerns about his pool suggestion, Christiansen stood up the task force to create recommendations for how Dover could best use its first round of settlement funds.
The city will continue to receive $250,000 annually for the next 12 years from the POSDC.
The city of Dover’s first round of money comes on the heels of past controversies involving central Delaware nonprofits misusing opioid settlement funds.
Code Purple Kent County, a nonprofit that provides overnight homelessness services during the winter months, was investigated by the Delaware Department of Justice in the summer of 2024 for misusing the roughly $300,000 it received from the POSDC.
Karen Wilder, the former director of the Dover Interfaith Mission for Housing, which has men’s and women’s homeless shelters in Dover, was sentenced to prison in January for embezzling $700,000 of the organization’s funds, some of which came from the opioid money.
The task force’s final meeting on Feb. 12 included both discussion about the proposed youth-focused initiative and community member perspectives on the opioid use situation in Dover.
Cammerin Norwood, a community advocate who works in youth violence intervention, said at the meeting that he has found the best way to reach kids is by meeting them where they are.
“Kids won’t just come out and say things immediately,” Norwood, who founded a youth outreach program, said. “It’s just when they feel that the space is safe.”
Other attendees spoke to the group about their own struggles with addiction and feeling disenchanted as youth, and the types of outreach that helped push them into recovery.
According to data from the Delaware Department of Health and Human Services, the city of Dover recorded 34 suspected overdose deaths in 2024. That number was down from 44 deaths in 2023, and 40 in 2022.
The agency does not yet have numbers for 2025.

Sudler said it was important to him that the task force meetings be a part of the “healing process, the bonding and the village,” for Dover residents to come together and share experiences.
City Councilman Brian Lewis, who is not an official member of the task force but was present at the meeting, gave a similar speech about the need for more patience and leadership, especially at a time when the city government has become divided, he said.
“I think we need to sit back and listen,” Lewis said. “That’s one of the problems right now in this city with the leadership – they don’t listen.”
Since last fall, the Dover city government has become bitterly divided over discussions of an anti-panhandling ordinance, which have been drawn out over a series of months. Sudler and Lewis have been outspoken critics of the proposal, while Christiansen and City Council President Fred Neil stand in support.
Sudler said he believes the city council used to be open and welcoming with its meetings – like he said the task force has been – but the body is not like that now.
“I hope that city council can get to that point again, he added.
The post Dover task force advances youth-focused opioid recommendations appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Charging people with loitering has been controversial across Delaware in the years since the ACLU sued the state and the city of Wilmington for enforcing such laws unconstitutionally. Wilmington is now aiming to revise its loitering ordinance, but is facing backlash from advocates, who say the bill will perpetuate racial profiling and criminalize homelessness.
Two years after Wilmington agreed in a settlement to not enforce loitering and panhandling laws, the City Council is now drafting a new proposal that would restrict individuals from lingering on public sidewalks, among other places.
Supporters say the measure would stop individuals from disrupting business and hanging around homes.
But opponents have raised concerns, saying the proposal is vague and could create opportunities for law enforcement to profile residents.
“There’s no clear standard. It’s whatever the enforcer feels like that day,” Northeast city resident Meme Sebelist said during a City Council Public Safety committee last week.
The proposal comes about three years after the American Civil Liberties Union sued Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings and the City of Wilmington over policing tactics used on homeless people. The two sides settled in 2024, with an agreement that barred local police from arresting individuals who had asked strangers for money or who had lingered in public areas.
Jennings promised not to enforce existing state and city loitering statutes until they were amended to address questions about their constitutionality.
In November, City Councilman Chris Johnson proposed the first version of a new loitering ordinance for Wilmington. He says it was not aimed at unhoused individuals, but instead sought to address concerns of homeowners and businesses about individuals obstructing sidewalks, lingering in front of private properties, and engaging in illegal activity.

Initially scheduled to be discussed during a Feb. 9 City Council meeting, Johnson removed the ordinance from consideration after the ACLU of Delaware sent him a letter calling the measure unconstitutional. In the letter, the organization’s interim legal director, Jason Beehler, asked Johnson to permanently withdraw the ordinance to “prevent the need for a federal lawsuit.”
ACLU staff attorney Jared Silberglied later told Spotlight Delaware that his team is “very concerned” about the ability of unhoused people to exercise rights.
And he said “all options remain on the table as we assess” the ongoing proposals.
For his part, Johnson has asserted that the ACLU’s letter wasn’t the only reason he pulled the legislation, saying he wants to have more conversations about the ordinance with his colleagues on the Council, police, and with residents.
He noted that he has already been in discussions with the Wilmington Police Department and with Mayor John Carney’s office, and plans to conduct public forums to discuss the legislation with residents.
Asked if Carney supported the bill, a spokeswoman from Carney’s office told Spotlight Delaware that Carney has not been directly involved in conversations about Johnson’s ordinance.
Over the past year, Carney has publicly stated that he plans to restrict homeless encampments to Christina Park in Wilmington’s Eastside. Carney’s spokeswoman Caroline Klinger said the mayor still plans to do so with a separate measure that will be proposed to the City Council or to another regulatory body.
Klinger did not provide a timeline for when Carney’s proposal would be introduced.
Johnson told Spotlight Delaware that he plans to re-introduce his loitering legislation later this year.
Despite the plans to rework the ordinance, over a dozen residents voiced their opposition to the proposal during last week’s City Council meeting.
Many asserted the version would disproportionately impact the city’s unhoused population, people of color, and could negatively affect the city’s immigrant community.
“There are no edits that you can make to this bill to make it better,” said Shyanne Miller, a city resident and homelessness advocate. “Just drop the bill.”
The initial draft of Johnson’s loitering proposal would have barred people from obstructing the passage of others, deliberately walking slowly, or lingering within 50 feet of homes, schools, restaurants, entertainment venues, or vacant properties in residential or commercial areas.
When determining whether a person is loitering, the draft ordinance states that a police officer can also consider several factors that fall outside the scope of the general loitering definition. Those include a refusal to provide identification, an attempt to run away or hide, or the use of threatening or harassing conduct or language.
Police could also charge someone with loitering if the time of day was considered “not usual for law-abiding individuals under circumstances that warrant an immediate and reasonable alarm for the safety” of others.
The bill would have also imposed a $100 fine for a first loitering offense, increasing to $250 for a second offense, $450 for a third offense, and $500 for each additional violation after that.
Lena Grayson, owner of Lena’s and Ant’ Bumpy’s, a soul food restaurant that has sat on the corner of Shipley and 8th streets for the past five years, told Spotlight Delaware that she hasn’t had any bad experiences with people loitering outside of her business.
Grayson’s restaurant sits across the street from the Episcopal Church of Saints Andrew and Matthew, which provides services to the city’s homeless community. The outside of the church is often frequented by unhoused residents.
Grayson said sometimes individuals will come in asking for food or money, and at times she will provide a meal before telling them to leave.
She says the city needs to provide more shelter for the homeless.
“They have nowhere else to go,” she said.

The Rev. Patrick Burke, pastor at the Church of Saints Andrew and Matthew, characterized the loitering proposal as one that criminalizes homelessness. As it is currently written, he said it provides police with broad discretion on how to enforce the policy.
“Criminalizing standing on the sidewalk or on private property, waiting for services, criminalizing that behavior only makes their re-entry into all these different services harder,” Burke said.
In response to the criticism, Johnson said during the February meeting that his motive behind the proposal is public safety. He also noted that he and other council members have been “on the side of progressive justice” with respect to various reforms in the city.
He also said that for every 20 opponents of the ordinance, “there’s probably 200, 300 more that actually support this.”
“Understand that grandmother, that homeowner who owns their house, they have a right to enjoy their house,” he said.
Echoing the concerns of residents at the meeting were Councilman Coby Owens and City Council President Ernest “Trippi” Congo.
Johnson’s loitering ordinance comes as the state of Delaware and other municipalities grapple with how to deal with loitering and solicitation.
The Dover City Council, for example, has divided into factions and is weighing threats of a legal challenge over a proposed ordinance that would prohibit people from stopping and standing on street medians. The city government is set to vote on the measure later this month.
At the state level, Attorney General Kathy Jennings announced last week that her office would draft its own amended state legislation for the Delaware General Assembly to curb loitering and panhandling.

But that proposed legislation has already caused tension, as some state lawmakers noted they were not unaware that she would be sending over a bill.
Mat Marshall, a spokesperson for the Attorney General’s Office, said the bill has not yet been filed and there is no timeline for when it might be discussed during this year’s legislative session.
He further stated that the DOJ’s proposal is not the only option available to lawmakers, “but if they want a constitutional loitering [bill], this is something they could use as a solution.”
Marshall noted that the AG’s office had been in discussion with Wilmington officials recently about the issue. He said Jennings’ bill had been sent to Wilmington’s city solicitor and to Claire DeMatteis, who served as chair for Carney’s Homelessness Task Force.
With regards to Johnson’s proposal, Marshall said the language in the ordinance has “deviated tremendously” from what Jennings has proposed. He said the AG’s office had not been in discussions with Johnson.
The post Debate grows as Wilmington crafts new loitering ordinance appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Official says blockade on ‘shadow fleet’ would be illegal, and raises prospect of retaliation against European vessels
A senior Russian official has said Moscow could deploy its navy to protect Russian-linked vessels from potential European seizures, raising the prospect of retaliatory action against European shipping as pressure on the Kremlin’s so-called shadow fleet intensifies.
Nikolai Patrushev, a former FSB director who heads Russia’s maritime board, said on Tuesday that the country’s navy should be ready to counter what he described as “western piracy”.
Continue reading...Singer-songwriter Sam Battle has built online fanbase through building and playing unusual instruments
The YouTuber and experimental singer-songwriter Look Mum No Computer will represent the UK at the Eurovision song contest in Vienna in May, the BBC has announced.
The performer and self-professed Eurovision fan, whose real name is Sam Battle, launched his YouTube channel in 2016. He has amassed more than 85m views and 1.4 million subscribers and followers across his various social accounts.
Continue reading...An anonymous reader shares a report: The European Parliament has disabled AI features on the work devices of lawmakers and their staff over cybersecurity and data protection concerns, according to an internal email seen by POLITICO. The chamber emailed its members on Monday to say it had disabled "built-in artificial intelligence features" on corporate tablets after its IT department assessed it couldn't guarantee the security of the tools' data. "Some of these features use cloud services to carry out tasks that could be handled locally, sending data off the device," the Parliament's e-MEP tech support desk said in the email. "As these features continue to evolve and become available on more devices, the full extent of data shared with service providers is still being assessed. Until this is fully clarified, it is considered safer to keep such features disabled."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Hopes of success remain low after Trump points finger at Zelenskyy and Moscow keeps up hardline demands
Senior Ukrainian and Russian officials are to meet this week in Switzerland for a third round of talks brokered by the Trump administration, days before the fourth anniversary of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
The two-day meeting, kicking off on Tuesday, is expected to mirror negotiations held earlier this month in Abu Dhabi, with representatives from Washington, Kyiv and Moscow in attendance. Despite renewed US efforts to revive diplomacy, hopes for any sudden breakthrough remain low, with Russia continuing to press maximalist demands on Ukraine.
Continue reading...There’s a lesson here for the UK and the anti-WHO Nigel Farage – Trump attacks it in public, but in private he knows he still needs it
Donald Trump is persistent. In his first term as president, he withdrew the US from the World Health Organization (WHO) on 6 July 2020, giving the necessary one-year notice period. Soon after, Joe Biden was elected, and he reversed this executive order within days of being in office, reinstating the US support for the agency on 20 January 2021. While many hoped this would be the end of the story, Trump came back with a vengeance in his second term and immediately signed an executive order withdrawing on 20 January 2025.
This means that – buried under news of other Trump-related chaos – the US formally left the WHO at the end of last month. It is just the second time in the agency’s history a major power has left. In 1949, during the cold war, the USSR withdrew citing unhappiness with the US influence over the organisation. In 1956, with concerns over disease surveillance and spread, the USSR re-engaged with the UN system.
Prof Devi Sridhar is chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh
Continue reading...Australian Antarctic Program scientists say virus on Heard Island has spread to new species
The gentoo penguin has become the first bird to test positive for the H5N1 bird flu on an Australian territory, with samples confirming the virus has spread on a sub-Antarctic island.
The deadly and contagious strain of bird flu, which has already killed millions of seabirds, wild birds and poultry overseas, was confirmed in southern elephant seals on Heard Island in November 2025.
Continue reading...Its ‘fibre checker’ tool confirmed I could have a connection, but a month later it changed its mind
My internet provider informed me by email that full fibre broadband had become available for my property, confirmed by Openreach’s “fibre checker” tool.
After a month, Openreach declared the connection uneconomical due to blockages in the conduits below the road.
Continue reading... | We are streaming all the races and skill tests this year. Hope to see you in chat! Look out for the onewheel obstacle course race, it's my favorite. [link] [comments] |
Tarique Rahman set to take oath and become prime minister after landslide victory prompted by ousting of Sheikh Hasina
Bangladesh’s incoming prime minister Tarique Rahman and other politicians were sworn into parliament on Tuesday, becoming the first elected representatives since a deadly 2024 uprising.
Rahman is set to take over from an interim government that has led the country of 170 million people for 18 months since the autocratic government of Sheikh Hasina was overthrown.
Continue reading...Sales of refurbished PCs are on the up amid shortages of key components, including memory chips, that are making brand new devices more expensive. From a report: Stats compiled by market watcher Context show sales of refurbished PCs via distribution climbed 7 percent in calendar Q4 across five of the biggest European markets -- Italy, the UK, Germany, Spain, and France. Affordability is the primary driver in the secondhand segment, the analyst says, with around 40 percent of sales driven by budget-conscious users shopping in the $235 to $355 price band for laptops. The $355 to $475 tier is also expanding -- representing 23 percent of the refurbished market, up from 15 percent a year earlier -- indicating some buyers are prepared to spend a bit more for improved specifications.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Plans for a new seven-story student apartment building in Newark appear to be in jeopardy after several city council members expressed their opposition to the project.
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Feb. 17.
Japanese prime minister’s refusal to back down over Taiwan comments brings more criticism and travel warnings from China
Chinese tourists are continuing to shun Japan in large numbers, with the country falling out of the top 10 destinations for those celebrating the lunar new year with a trip abroad.
Japan has had a dramatic drop in the number of Chinese visitors since the end of last year as a diplomatic row between Tokyo and Beijing over the security of Taiwan continues.
Continue reading...Industry using ‘diversionary’ tactics, says analyst, as energy-hungry complex functions such as video generation and deep research proliferate
Tech companies are conflating traditional artificial intelligence with generative AI when claiming the energy-hungry technology could help avert climate breakdown, according to a report.
Most claims that AI can help avert climate breakdown refer to machine learning and not the energy-hungry chatbots and image generation tools driving the sector’s explosive growth of gas-guzzling datacentres, the analysis of 154 statements found.
Continue reading...By trusting the US, we handed Trump a kill switch. Yet Europe’s digital sovereignty is an achievable goal
The French judge Nicolas Guillou knows exactly how deep Europe’s dependence on US tech is. Guillou and his colleagues at the international criminal court are under US sanctions. They can no longer use e-commerce, book hotels online or hire a car. Their home smart devices ignore them. Credit cards from European banks no longer function, because Europe has still not developed its own EU-wide payments system, so most electronic purchases go through Visa and Mastercard. Converting euros to foreign currencies is extraordinarily difficult because everything passes through dollars. Living in Europe is no protection against Donald Trump bricking your digital life.
This dependence is not limited to mod-cons. Last year, the chairman of the Danish parliament’s defence committee said that he regretted his part in Denmark’s decision to buy US-made F-35 fighter jets: “I can easily imagine a situation where the USA will demand Greenland from Denmark and will threaten to deactivate our weapons and let Russia attack us when we refuse. Buying American weapons is a security risk that we can not run.” He is not alone. Spain has abandoned plans to buy F-35s.
Johnny Ryan is director of Enforce, a unit of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties
Continue reading...Why America must build a new operating system.
Learning the right lessons for the conflicts of the future.
The rising risk of NATO-Russia conflict.
A Response to “The West’s Last Chance”
How U.S. strategy failed—and ceded the advantage to China.
The global authoritarian backlash to gender equality.
Geopolitical power, private gain.
And the unilateral temptation.
Will Washington Repeat Moscow’s Mistakes?
Can José Mourinho pull off another shock win over his old club?
Will Washington Repeat Moscow’s Mistakes?
What battery can I put into my newly built GTFO board? It now has Fungineers Thor 301 with the new BMS, but still has the old FM hypercore motor. (Which has tons of power now. WTF FM?)
I'm worried about getting the wrong size, wrong voltage, wrong connectors. Everyone says now I can put "anything" in there, but I don't want to be soldering on connectors or fry my motor or something.
does anyone make a clear film protector (or other tricks) to protect a (pint) carbon fender.
got a new board and even the most basic film would help from basic scratches...which I know are inevitable, but trying to minimize.

In a line of attack that Empire State Republicans have deployed over many election cycles, Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman has focused on New York’s tax climate as he mounts a campaign to unseat Gov. Kathy Hochul.
The Long Island Republican said New York ranks No. 1 in the nation for highest individual tax burden.
Given the state’s notorious tax reputation, we were curious if it indeed has the highest tax burden in the country.
There are several ways to measure a tax burden, and different analyses result in different rankings. Some rankings include property and sales taxes. Some just one or the other.
We started with the Tax Foundation, which completes extensive studies of tax policies in every state. The last study of state and local tax burden was from 2022, and New York was at the top of the list, with an effective tax rate of 15.9%. The conservative-leaning think tank defined "tax burden" as state and local taxes paid by residents divided by that state’s share of net national product. This study took into account tax incidence, which measures which entity pays a tax, both under the law and in the economy.
Though this data is older, this analysis "comes closest to answering the question of which state actually has the highest burdens on residents, and on that, New York is unequivocally highest," said Jared Walczak, senior fellow at the Tax Foundation.
The think tank also measured how much state and local governments collect per person in every state, and it published its findings in 2025. The nationwide average of state and local tax burden per capita was $7,109, according to U.S. Census data from 2022. In the Tax Foundation’s study, the District of Columbia was the costliest place to live when it comes to local taxes, collecting $14,974. But New York was the costliest state, with the highest combined state and local per capita tax burden at $12,685. California came in second.
Another study from the Tax Foundation found that when tax collections are calculated as a percentage of personal income, New Mexico came in at the top, and New York placed second.
When individual income taxes are taken into account, New York ranks second behind Oregon. It’s worth noting the Beaver State has no sales tax.
"There isn’t just one single way to define state tax burdens," Walczak said. "But by a measure that accounts for tax incidence, New York has the highest tax burdens - and by any conceivable measure, it’s at or near the top," he said.
WalletHub, a personal finance company, found that New York has the second-highest tax burden in the country in a study it published in April. The site looked at the proportion of total personal income that people pay in state and local taxes, including personal income, sales, excise and property taxes.
New York’s overall tax burden as a share of personal income was 13.56%, while Hawaii had the highest, at 13.92%. Considering only personal income taxes, New York is first, at 5.76%. Counting only property taxes, Vermont ranks first for that burden, with New York fourth. The total sales and excise tax burden rankings has New York at No. 22.
New York has the highest tax burden when the state and local personal income tax revenues are divided by the personal income of all the people living in that state, based on U.S. Census data from 2022, said Aravind Boddupalli, a senior research associate at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.
But these rankings miss the fact that there are high-income earners in New York, and that New York has a relatively progressive income tax structure, meaning that people who earn more pay more in income taxes. The metrics don’t measure fairness, he said.
"There are a lot more people with a lot more resources in New York, and the tax burden metric measures revenue raising, not necessarily who pays how much," he said.
After Blakeman made his claim, the Citizens Budget Commission, a centrist New York-based think tank, found that state and local governments in New York collect the highest taxes per person and the second highest per $1,000 of personal income, based on 2023 data.
In 2018, when Republican Marc Molinaro ran for governor, he claimed that New York had "among the highest tax burdens of any state in the nation," and PolitiFact rated it True.
We reached out to Blakeman’s spokesperson but did not hear back. The state Republican Party responded, saying that it uses the Tax Foundation competitiveness index, which in 2026 ranked New York the least competitive state. Individual taxes, for which New York ranks 50th, is part of that analysis.
Tax analysts have found that the tax burden in New York is at the top, or near the top, depending upon how you calculate tax burden. An expert said that one of the best analyses shows New York "unequivocally highest," though the data is nearly four years old. A different study from nearly a year ago shows New York at second place in a contest no state wants to win.
Blakeman’s statement is accurate, but needs some context, so we rate it Mostly True.
The music industry's long romance with an ever-expanding catalog of songs appears to be souring, as streaming platforms and rights holders confront a daily deluge that now includes 60,000 wholly AI-generated tracks uploaded to Deezer alone -- roughly 39% of the French service's daily intake, a statistic the company shared during Grammys week last month. Streaming services now host 253 million songs, according to Luminate's most recent annual report, after adding 51 million tracks over the course of 2025 at an average pace of 106,000 uploads a day. Spotify has already responded by requiring songs to hit at least 1,000 plays in the previous 12 months to qualify for royalties, and Luminate reported that 88% of tracks received 1,000 or fewer plays in 2025. The distribution layer is in flux too: Universal Music Group is trying to acquire Downtown Music, owner of DIY distributor CD Baby, TuneCore's head recently stepped down without a planned replacement, and DistroKid is reportedly up for sale.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Trump envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner will meet delegates from Russia and Ukraine in Geneva. Key US politics stories from 16 February at a glance
Donald Trump has piled pressure on Ukraine to reach a deal with Russia “fast” before US-brokered talks in Geneva on Tuesday. “Ukraine better come to the table, fast,” the US president told reporters onboard Air Force One while en route to Washington.
Trump is pushing to end the conflict, which began when Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, but two previous rounds of US-mediated talks in Abu Dhabi did not yield any signs of a breakthrough.
Continue reading...I'll be starting college in July and would love to have a onewheel to get around campus. From what I have seen on campus electric scooters seem to be popular but a onewheel seems like alot more fun. I'm around 175 pounds in wight and want one that I can ride to class and ride around campus for fun. Basically just trying to figure out what exactly I can expect from which. My campus is rather small compared to some of the bigger state schools but not small by any means (About a 20-30 minute walk across the whole campus if you're walking slowly) anyways any pointers would be great as to which range would be best to look at as I'll more then likely buy one off Facebook market place as I see those are alot cheaper then the new ones especially for a broke college student who just got sucked dry of every token he has :(
Elana Meyers Taylor has won her first Olympic gold in women's monobob, and she made history as the oldest American woman to do it at the Winter Games.
All family members of Nancy Guthrie have been cleared as suspects in her disappearance, authorities in Arizona said.
Police said the deadly shooting during a high school boys' hockey game in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, appears to have stemmed from a family dispute.
Cooper is leaving the fabled news show after nearly 20 years amid a shake-up under new editor-in-chief Bari Weiss
Anderson Cooper will leave the CBS News program 60 Minutes after nearly two decades, he said on Monday, in the latest staffing shake-up to hit the storied news magazine amid broader newsroom changes under the new editor-in-chief, Bari Weiss.
“Being a correspondent at 60 Minutes has been one of the great honors of my career. I got to tell amazing stories, and work with some of the best producers, editors and camera crews in the business,” Cooper said in a statement. “For nearly twenty years, I’ve been able to balance my jobs at CNN and CBS, but I have little kids now and I want to spend as much time with them as possible, while they still want to spend time with me.”
Continue reading...Yoon Suk Yeol could face the death penalty when judges rule on the martial law crisis that many in South Korea see as a dark moment they would rather forget
South Korea is awaiting one of the most consequential court rulings in decades this week, with judges due to deliver their verdict on insurrection charges against the former president Yoon Suk Yeol and prosecutors demanding the death penalty.
When Yoon stands in courtroom 417 of Seoul central district court on Thursday to hear his fate, which will be broadcast live, he will do so in the same room where the military dictator Chun Doo-hwan was sentenced to death three decades ago. The charge is formally the same. Last time, it took almost 17 years and a democratic transition to deliver a verdict. This time, it has taken 14 months. Chun’s death sentence was later reduced to life imprisonment on appeal, and he was eventually pardoned.
Continue reading...A Newark man has been sentenced to life in prison, plus 50 years, for killing a man in Wilmington five years ago.
In ruling, judge cited quote from Orwell’s novel 1984 describing process by which authoritarians rewrite history
A federal judge in Pennsylvania on Monday ordered the National Park Service to reinstall a slavery exhibit at a Philadelphia historic site, pending the outcome of ongoing litigation after the city sued the federal government over its removal.
The National Park Service last month dismantled and removed a long-established slavery-related exhibit at the Independence National Historical park, which holds the former residence of George Washington, in response to Donald Trump’s claims, which have been rejected by civil rights groups, of “anti-American ideology” at historical and cultural institutions.
Continue reading...London police say criminal gangs are using Snapchat to offer cash rewards of up to £380 for stolen iPhones
Gangs are recruiting children to go out to steal smartphones before they head to school, using Snapchat to offer rewards of up to £380 for the latest Apple iPhones, police have revealed.
The Metropolitan police said they were deploying new resources including drones and Surron ebikes to chase suspects as they step up their fight against phone snatching.
Continue reading...Samsung has all but confirmed that its upcoming Galaxy S26 will feature a built-in privacy display, releasing an ad that demonstrates a "Zero-peeking privacy" toggle capable of blacking out on-screen content for anyone peering over the user's shoulder. The underlying technology is reportedly Samsung Display's Flex Magic Pixel OLED panel, first shown at MWC 2024, which adjusts viewing angles on a pixel-by-pixel basis -- and leaker Ice Universe has shared a video of the feature selectively hiding content in banking and messaging apps using AI. Samsung's Unpacked event is scheduled for February 25th.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
An undocumented immigrant is someone born in another country (not a tourist) who is living in the US without federal authorization.
Messages from ex-wife of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to sex offender, sent after his conviction, came to light last month
Six companies linked to Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, are being wound down in the wake of revelations about her relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
According to Companies House, an application to strike off each company was filed after new details about Ferguson’s contact with Epstein came to light in the millions of documents released by US authorities as part of the Epstein files.
Continue reading...Their respective semifinal wins on Monday set up a seventh gold-medal showdown between Team USA and Canada later this week.
Stuart Leslie, 46, and Shaun Overy, 51, died while skiing off-piste in Val d’Isère amid red avalanche alert
Two British skiers who died in an avalanche in the French Alps have been named as Stuart Leslie and Shaun Overy.
The pair were part of a group of five people, accompanied by an instructor, skiing off-piste in Val d’Isère in south-east France on Friday when they were swept away by falling snow.
Continue reading...Advisory board member says Europe already paying price for lack of preparation but adapting is ‘not rocket science’
Keeping Europe safe from extreme weather “is not rocket science”, a top researcher has said, as the EU’s climate advisory board urges countries to prepare for a catastrophic 3C of global heating.
Maarten van Aalst, a member of the European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change (ESABCC), said the continent was already “paying a price” for its lack of preparation but that adapting to a hotter future was in part “common sense and low-hanging fruit”.
Continue reading... | Selling because I broke my Humerous. Wife did not find it funny. Now I play hockey and skate board. Hockey expensive. Only continental US please! Due to the battery shipping over seas is pretty expensive. I’m asking 3,000 (obo) + shipping Board has 9 miles on it everything works. Charger included Will include Fox elbow and Knee Pads as well as a thousand coastal blue helmet size large. Also including the brown wrist guards. Will also include all extras I got with it. Electric pocket pump Battery cover (blue) Fender (blue) Rim covers (see through orange) Low boy footpads installed and good to go If I can find the stock footpads I’ll send those as well. Thank you! [link] [comments] |
Hey all, I’m looking g at a used pint and need some opinions on whether this is a good deal or not.
The only real worry I have is the battery which is likely degraded now, no?
Anyway, thanks in advance y’all!
Solberg of Norway looks like he’s going nicely, but he’s still well off the lad at every checkpoint. Increasingly, it looks like getting out first was a big advantage, Atle Lie McGrath still in front, as Sala of Italy joins the growing list of those who didn’t finish.
Visibility isn’t great as Dave “The Rocket” Ryding” sets off for his penultimate Olympic run. The GB veteran isn’t likely to trouble the podium, but he’ll want to make the second run, and he finishes 13th, 3.74 off the lead.
Continue reading...Police confirm suspect is one of dead in incident at boys’ hockey game that injured four in Pawtucket
At least three people are dead and three more hospitalized in critical condition in a mass shooting at an indoor ice rink in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, during a high school hockey match on Monday afternoon, the police said.
The Pawtucket police chief, Tina Goncalves, told reporters at a news conference that the suspect is one of the dead.
Continue reading...
After the Justice Department released millions of pages of documents linked to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, social media users touted supposed revelations in the files and accused famous people of depraved acts.
Former television host Ellen DeGeneres was one target.
"The Epstein files expose Ellen DeGeneres as Hollywood's ‘most prolific cannibal.’ She ate children's flesh," a Feb. 14 X post read. It had gained 12.5 million views as of late afternoon Feb. 16.
It was the latest in a string of baseless claims trying to connect DeGeneres to crimes involving children. PolitiFact found no files in the Justice Department’s Epstein Library that show evidence DeGeneres took part in Epstein’s criminal activities or engaged in cannibalism. The library comes with caveats; text in some documents is not searchable.
We traced this claim to The People’s Voice, a frequent source of misinformation. On Feb. 11, the People’s Voice released a video and an article that cited an "inside source." The video contained a supposed audio clip from a "whistleblower" who spoke about DeGeneres having a separate kitchen without cameras. The "whistleblower" also mentioned babies in refrigeration units.
Four analysts told PolitiFact the audio was likely generated with artificial intelligence. V.S. Subrahmanian, a Northwestern University computer science professor, and Marco Postiglione, a postdoctoral researcher who works with Subrahmanian, analyzed the audio clip using 83 deepfake detection algorithms, 63 of which found that the audio clip is more likely to be fake than real.
Other signs also showed the audio is likely AI-generated, including a lack of verbal stumbles — which are typical in usual conversation — and "emotional breaks typical of genuine testimony," Subrahmanian and Postiglione found.
The analysts also found the speech sounded like "written prose" and not like it was delivered spontaneously. For example, the voice described DeGeneres watching people eat her dumplings "not hungrily, not nervously, but with that sociopathic calm."
Hafiz Malik, University of Michigan – Dearborn electrical and computer engineering professor, also analyzed the clip and said it was AI-generated. He pointed to the flatness of the speaker’s voice, and a stationary noise throughout the audio. "If you’re talking to somebody, noise does change, so you don’t see a fixed kind of pattern in noise in general," he said.
The article from The People’s Voice cited no information from the Epstein files pointing to correspondences from, to or about DeGeneres.
Searching "Ellen DeGeneres" in the Justice Department’s Epstein Library showed some news and feature story clippings mentioning her. We found no news reports detailing any connection between DeGeneres and Epstein.
New York Magazine’s Intelligencer compiled a list of prominent people who have been linked to Epstein, using information from Epstein’s black book, flight logs and Justice Department files. DeGeneres is not on the list.
The claim that the Epstein files prove DeGeneres was a cannibal is baseless. We rate that Pants on Fire!
PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.
Western Digital's entire hard drive manufacturing capacity for calendar year 2026 is now fully spoken for, CEO Irving Tan disclosed during the company's second-quarter earnings call, a stark sign of how aggressively hyperscalers are locking down storage supply to feed their AI infrastructure buildouts. The company has firm purchase orders from its top seven customers and has signed long-term agreements stretching into 2027 and 2028 that cover both exabyte volumes and pricing. Cloud revenue now accounts for 89% of Western Digital's total, according to the company's VP of Investor Relations, while consumer revenue has shrunk to just 5%.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

After Nancy Guthrie’s Feb.1 abduction from her Tucson, Arizona, home, her daughter "Today" host Savannah Guthrie put out a call on social media for tips on her mother’s whereabouts, pleading for her safe return.
So far, social media users have been less than helpful. With the Justice Department’s Jan. 30 release of more than 3 million pages of files related to Jeffrey Epstein, X users proposed bogus links between the abduction and the file release.
Multiple X posts include a photo of Savannah Guthrie’s family and an accusation about her husband, Michael Feldman.
"Her husband’s company is listed as a co conspirator in the Epstein files… FGS Global," reads a Feb. 12 X post with over 1 million views. "In case you're wondering why now of all times for Savannah Guthrie's mother to be 'kidnapped.'"
The co-anchor’s husband isn’t named in the Epstein files, and neither is his current company.
Searching the digital Epstein files, we found one 2013 email to Epstein from a person named Michael Feldman, but it seems to be someone else, introducing himself as a "theoretical physicist."
Guthrie’s husband is a communications consultant who previously worked in the Clinton administration as chief liaison to Congress and senior adviser for former Vice President Al Gore. Feldman currently works as North American co-chairman of FGS Global, an international public relations firm.
We did not find FGS Global listed in Justice Department files, but another public affairs company that was merged to found FGS Global was listed. As a community note on one of the X posts said, Feldman helped found Glover Park Group in 2001, and its name appears twice in the Epstein files. The firm merged with other companies to form FGS Global in 2021.
PolitiFact reached out to FGS Global, but didn’t receive an immediate response.
The first mention was in 2014. The office of Terje Rød-Larsen, a former diplomat and former president of the International Peace Institute, shared a list of articles with Epstein, and one story mentioned the Glover Park Group’s work lobbying for Egyptian interests.
The second was in a 2015 email forwarded by Larry Summers, former U.S. Treasury secretary and former Harvard University president. Summers suggested that Epstein contact Joe Lockhart, who worked at the Glover Park Group and served as press secretary during the Clinton administration, as well as other Democratic politicians. The initial email says Lockhart "helped Clinton and Genera= (sic) Petraeus." (Former CIA director and retired U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus had an extramarital affair uncovered in 2012.)
(Screenshot of a Jan. 8, 2015, email exchange in the Epstein files)
These mentions are not evidence that Feldman, FGS Global or Glover Park Group were "co-conspirators" with Epstein.
Being mentioned in the files does not mean criminal wrongdoing. We reported in 2025 that figures such as President Donald Trump and Clinton appear in the files, but that doesn’t mean they are guilty or charged with crimes. As of February 2026, Epstein and his coconspirator Ghislaine Maxwell are the only people who have been convicted in the scheme to sexually exploit and abuse multiple minor girls.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said Feb. 16 on X that the Guthrie family, including "all siblings and spouses," had been cleared as possible suspects in the Nancy Guthrie case.
We rate the X posts’ claims about Guthrie’s husband’s company False.
Defending Olympic champion Eileen Gu took silver in freeski big air at the 2026 Winter Olympics as Canada's Megan Oldham won the gold medal on Monday night.
American was competing in her fifth Olympics
Ties Bonnie Blair for US women’s medal record
It took her five Olympics, but she finally got there: USA’s Elana Meyers Taylor won gold in the monobob on Monday, capping a long and brilliant career.
The 41-year-old competed in her first Olympics at Vancouver 2010, and since then she has won three silver medals and two bronze across two events, the monobob and the two-woman bobsleigh. Her victory at the Milano Cortina Games came down to the final run of the competition with Laura Nolte competing to best Meyers Taylor’s time of 3min 57.93 sec. But the German could not respond and Meyers Taylor became America’s oldest-ever female Winter Olympic champion.
Continue reading...Minnesota's top investigative agency said Monday the federal government has formally refused to hand over evidence and information in the killing of Alex Pretti.
Robert Duvall was in such classics as "The Godfather," "To Kill a Mockingbird," "M*A*S*H," "The Great Santini" and "Tender Mercies."
As the Trump administration heads into nuclear talks with Tehran after a government crackdown killed thousands, widespread outrage has not abated, Iranians say.
Here are some hints and the answers for the NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 17 #982
Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Feb. 17, No. 512.
Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle for Feb. 17, No. 716.
Here are hints and the answer for today's Wordle for Feb. 17, No. 1,704.
Human software engineers and AI are currently in a "centaur phase" -- a reference to the mythical half-human, half-horse creature, where the combination outperforms either working alone -- but the window may be "very brief," Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said on a podcast. He drew on chess as precedent: 15 to 20 years ago, a human checking AI's moves could beat a standalone AI or human, but machines have since surpassed that arrangement entirely. Amodei said the same transition would play out in software engineering, and warned that entry-level white-collar disruption is "happening over low single-digit numbers of years."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
State’s governor had demanded impartial inquiry into the shooting of the VA nurse by federal immigration agents
Minnesota law enforcement authorities have said the FBI is refusing to share any evidence on its investigation into the death of Alex Pretti, the man killed by federal immigration authorities in late January.
Pretti was shot on 24 January by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials in Minneapolis during the Trump administration’s surge of immigration enforcement operations in the city. His killing came just two weeks after an immigration official shot and killed Renee Good and 10 days after the shooting of Julio C Sosa-Celis.
Continue reading...CBS News California built a first-of-its-kind public accountability tool tracking state audit recommendations to lawmakers — detailing what lawmakers were told to fix, how audit-backed bills died, and what remains unresolved.
From the classic To Kill a Mockingbird to blockbuster Gone in 60 Seconds, the Oscar-winning actor’s films spanned a remarkable range
Robert Duvall, the veteran actor who had a string of roles in classic American films including Apocalypse Now, The Godfather, M*A*S*H and To Kill a Mockingbird, has died aged 95.
“Bob passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort,” wrote his wife, Luciana Duvall, in a message on Facebook.
Continue reading...Abbas Araghchi is steeped in more than a decade of nuclear dealmaking with a book on the art of negotiations
If the US and Iran are to avoid a regional war, both sides need to start to make concessions at talks in Geneva on Tuesday, and also to accommodate one another’s very different bargaining styles.
The Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi, steeped in almost 15 years of Iranian nuclear talks, is a near lifelong diplomat who has written a book on the art of negotiations that reveals the secrets of the Iranian diplomatic trade – the feints, the patience, the poker faces.
Continue reading...State lawmakers are promising accountability after a CBS News California investigation found they failed to enact three out of four state audit recommendations. CBS News California built an audit accountability tracker to help.
New Delhi's air quality index averaged 349 in December and 307 in January -- levels the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency classifies as hazardous -- and the months-long smog season that forces more than 30 million residents to endure respiratory illness has this year sparked something new: public protest. Hundreds of demonstrators gathered at India Gate on November 9 to demand government action; police detained more than a dozen people, and a follow-up protest later that month turned violent. The government's response has been largely cosmetic. Authorities deployed truck-mounted "smog guns" and "smog towers" that scientists widely regard as ineffective, and a cloud seeding trial in October failed outright. A senior environment minister told Parliament in December that no conclusive data linked pollution to lung disease -- a claim doctors sharply disputed. The government cut pollution control spending by 16% in the latest federal budget. Almost 1.7 million deaths were attributable to air pollution in India in 2019, according to the Lancet. A 2023 World Bank report estimated the crisis shaves 0.56 percentage point off annual GDP growth.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Judge says people should not lose chance of parenthood ‘by the ticking of a clock’ after 10-year deadline missed
More than a dozen fertility patients have won a high court battle to save their embryos, eggs and sperm from destruction after errors meant they did not renew consent to store them within the 10-year window required by law.
Ruling that the material could be kept, the judge said they should not “have the possibility of parenthood … removed by the ticking of a clock”.
Continue reading...Calls grow for reform of England’s vaccination system including delivery of jabs in pharmacies as take-up falls
Children are at risk of measles because the NHS is “clearly failing” to ensure they get the MMR vaccine and its system needs an urgent overhaul, MPs and health experts have warned.
Calls are growing for major reform of how MMR jabs are delivered as it emerged that vaccination rates in some parts of England are now on a par with those in Afghanistan and Malawi.
Continue reading...Austrian public prosecutors filed terrorism-related charges Monday against a 21-year-old defendant who they say planned to attack Taylor Swift's Eras Tour in 2024.
Ruthless Americans reel off 5-0 victory v Sweden
Poulin leads Canada to 2-1 win over Switzerland
Olympic final is set for Thursday in Milan
A United States women’s hockey team already being hailed as one of the best ever assembled is right where they expected to be: playing for Olympic gold. The Americans brushed aside Sweden 5-0 in the first of Monday’s semi-finals, setting the stage for a seventh gold-medal showdown with Canada, who held on for a closer-than-expected 2-1 win over Switzerland in the nightcap.
Twenty years ago, almost to the day, the USA women absorbed one of the great Olympic shocks when Sweden stunned them at the same stage in a shootout just down the A4 autostrada in Torino, ending a streak of 25 straight losses to the Americans during which they’d been outscored 187-29. There would be no such ambush this time, even if Sweden coach Ulf Lundberg had suggested the US team were “just human beings” and might not have been overly keen on facing his team in the semi-finals.
Continue reading...PM under fire from his own MPs and opposition leaders after ditching plan to postpone elections for 30 councils
Keir Starmer has been forced to abandon plans to delay local elections with less than three months’ notice in another policy U-turn that has prompted anger among his own MPs and scorn from opposition leaders.
The prime minister is under fire after ministers said on Monday they were abandoning plans to delay local elections in 30 places in England – a decision that will cost taxpayers millions of pounds in administrative costs.
Continue reading...A device that can pick up certain electronic signals is being used in the search for Nancy Guthrie, as it may detect emissions from her pacemaker, sources told CBS News.
Government drops plan to delay May ballots for 30 councils undergoing reorganisation, leaving 11 weeks to prepare
Councils are experiencing “whiplash” and face an “unnecessary race against time” to organise ballots after the government abandoned plans to delay 30 council elections in England, local authority leaders have said.
Ministers had wanted to delay elections at councils undergoing major reorganisation, with many set to be merged or subsumed into others, but faced a legal challenge from Reform UK, which argued the delay was undemocratic.
Continue reading...President says it is inappropriate for UK to be dealing with Gavin Newsom after Ed Miliband meets governor in London
Donald Trump has vented his fury against a green energy deal between the British government and California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, a likely future Democratic presidential candidate.
“The UK’s got enough trouble without getting involved with Gavin Newscum,” Trump said in an interview with Politico, using the derogatory nickname he reserves for Newsom. “Gavin is a loser. Everything he’s touched turns to garbage. His state has gone to hell, and his environmental work is a disaster.”
Continue reading...Forecasters predicted filers would benefit from larger checks this year due to a series of new tax provisions in the "one big, beautiful" bill.
After a decade of rapid growth, Lululemon is struggling to find its footing in an increasingly saturated market.
Instagram head Adam Mosseri told a Los Angeles courtroom last week that a teenager's 16-hour single-day session on the platform was "problematic use" but not an addiction, a distinction he drew repeatedly during testimony in a landmark trial over social media's harm to minors. Mosseri, who has led Instagram for eight years, is the first high-profile tech executive to take the stand. He agreed the platform should do everything in its power to protect young users but said how much use was too much was "a personal thing." The lead plaintiff, identified as K.G.M., reported bullying on Instagram more than 300 times; Mosseri said he had not known. An internal Meta survey of 269,000 users found 60% had experienced bullying in the previous week.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Experts say the detention centres were a breeding ground for extremism and a new generation of IS members
Humanitarians warned for years that the camps in north-east Syria holding tens of thousands of family members of suspected Islamic State (IS) fighters would have to be dealt with. Calling them a “ticking time bomb”, relief groups said the women and children could not just be left to rot in squalid desert camps indefinitely, because eventually they would come home.
Despite the warnings, most states ignored the problem, refusing to repatriate their citizens. At least 8,000 women and children from more than 40 countries have been stranded in the camps of north-east Syria since 2019.
Continue reading...Dana Eden, 52, co-creator of hit TV series Tehran, reported by Greek police to have taken her own life on Sunday
The co-creator of an Israeli hit TV series has been found dead in a hotel room in Athens where the fourth season of the spy thriller is being filmed.
Dana Eden, 52, was discovered by her brother late on Sunday, Greek police said, attributing her death to suicide.
In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org
Continue reading...Fulton county office was raided in January amid Donald Trump’s claims that 2020 election was fraudulent
Rights groups have sued to protect voter information that was seized by the FBI in a controversial raid in Georgia at the behest of Donald Trump in his renewed push to invalidate the 2020 election.
The NAACP and other civil rights organizations filed a motion on 15 February to “prohibit the Trump administration from misusing the voter information” taken from an elections warehouse in Fulton county, Georgia, late last month.
Continue reading...Exclusive: First meeting to be held over domestic payments system aimed at reducing reliance on US networks
UK bank bosses will hold their first meeting to establish a national alternative to Visa and Mastercard, amid growing fears over Donald Trump’s ability to turn off US-owned payment systems.
The meeting, chaired by Barclays’ UK chief executive, Vim Maru, will take place this Thursday and bring together a group of City funders that will front the costs of a new payments company to keep the UK economy running if problems were to occur.
Continue reading...Sara Blakely, the founder of Spanx, offered her wedding dress to a newly-engaged bride a decade ago. Now, the so-called "traveling wedding dress" has been worn by 13 brides and never altered.
Quentin Deranque, 23, who was on sidelines of a protest, died from a brain injury after attack that has fuelled political tensions
French police have launched a murder inquiry after a far-right activist died in hospital having been beaten up in an attack that has fuelled political tensions in France.
Quentin Deranque, a 23-year-old mathematics student, died from a severe brain injury at the weekend. The Lyon prosecutor, Thierry Dran, said Deranque was assaulted by at least six masked individuals. Police were working to identify suspects and no arrests had been made, Dran said.
Continue reading...Five-time All-Pro suffered season-ending ACL injury
Miami had signed Hill to $120m extension in 2022
Pass rusher Bradley Chubb also cut in flurry of moves
The Miami Dolphins are releasing star wide receiver Tyreek Hill in a cost-cutting move, multiple outlets reported Monday.
Releasing Hill, an eight-time Pro Bowl wide receiver who turns 32 on 1 March, will save the Dolphins $22.8m against the 2026 salary cap, per ESPN.
Continue reading...Hansi Flick's men make the short journey to the Estadi Montilivi, needing a win to reclaim top spot.
A partner at KPMG Australia has been fined $7,000 by the Big Four firm after using AI tools to cheat on an internal training course about using AI. From a report: The unnamed partner was forced to redo the test after uploading training materials into an AI platform to help answer questions on the use of the fast-evolving technology. More than two dozen staff have been caught over this financial year using AI tools for internal exams, according to KPMG. The incident is the latest example of a professional services company struggling with staff using artificial intelligence to cheat on exams or when producing work for clients. "Like most organisations, we have been grappling with the role and use of AI as it relates to internal training and testing," said Andrew Yates, chief executive of KPMG Australia. "It's a very hard thing to get on top of given how quickly society has embraced it."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Actor shouted down and pelted with fruit during Catarina, or the Beauty of Killing Fascists
An actor at a theatre in Germany was at the weekend shouted down, pelted with fruit and subjected to an attempted stage invasion as he delivered a final monologue in character as a far-right activist.
The violent scenes came on Saturday during the German premiere of the Portuguese playwright Tiago Rodrigues’s work Catarina, or the Beauty of Killing Fascists in Bochum, North Rhine-Westphalia.
Continue reading...We're tracking hundreds of products to bring you a curated list of the best Presidents Day sales.
Barack Obama has caused a frenzy after saying he thinks aliens are real during a podcast interview. The former US president was forced to release a statement clarifying he had not seen any evidence of extraterrestrials. There is a long-running conspiracy theory claiming the US government is hiding extraterrestrials at Area 51, a highly classified air force site in Nevada.
Lucy Hough speaks to the host of the Guardian’s Science Weekly podcast, Madeleine Finlay
Feb. 16, 2026 — The NVIDIA Blackwell platform has been widely adopted by leading inference providers such as Baseten, DeepInfra, Fireworks AI and Together AI to reduce cost per token by up to 10x. Now, the NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra platform is taking this momentum further for agentic AI.
AI agents and coding assistants are driving explosive growth in software-programming-related AI queries: from 11% to about 50% last year, according to OpenRouter’s State of Inference report. These applications require low latency to maintain real-time responsiveness across multistep workflows and long context when reasoning across entire codebases.
New performance data shows that the combination of NVIDIA’s software optimizations and the next-generation NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra platform has delivered breakthrough advances on both fronts. NVIDIA GB300 NVL72 systems now deliver up to 50x higher throughput per megawatt, resulting in 35x lower cost per token compared with the NVIDIA Hopper platform.
By innovating across chips, system architecture and software, NVIDIA’s extreme codesign accelerates performance across AI workloads — from agentic coding to interactive coding assistants — while driving down costs at scale.
GB300 NVL72 Delivers up to 50x Better Performance for Low-Latency Workloads
Recent analysis from Signal65 shows that NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 with extreme hardware and software codesign delivers more than 10x more tokens per watt, resulting in one-tenth the cost per token compared with the NVIDIA Hopper platform. These massive performance gains continue to expand as the underlying stack improves.
Continuous optimizations from the NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM, NVIDIA Dynamo, Mooncake and SGLang teams continue to significantly boost Blackwell NVL72 throughput for mixture-of-experts (MoE) inference across all latency targets. For instance, NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM library improvements have delivered up to 5x better performance on GB200 for low-latency workloads compared with just four months ago.
Building on these software advances, GB300 NVL72 — which features the Blackwell Ultra GPU — pushes the throughput-per-megawatt frontier to 50x compared with the Hopper platform.

This performance gain translates into superior economics, with NVIDIA GB300 lowering costs compared with the Hopper platform across the entire latency spectrum. The most dramatic reduction occurs at low latency, where agentic applications operate: up to 35x lower cost per million tokens compared with the Hopper platform.

For agentic coding and interactive assistants workloads where every millisecond compounds across multistep workflows, this combination of relentless software optimization and next-generation hardware enables AI platforms to scale real-time interactive experiences to significantly more users.
GB300 NVL72 Delivers Superior Economics for Long-Context Workloads
While both GB200 NVL72 and GB300 NVL72 efficiently deliver ultralow latency, the distinct advantages of GB300 NVL72 become most apparent in long-context scenarios. For workloads with 128,000-token inputs and 8,000-token outputs — such as AI coding assistants reasoning across codebases — GB300 NVL72 delivers up to 1.5x lower cost per token compared with GB200 NVL72.

Context grows as the agent reads in more of the code. This allows it to better understand the code base but also requires much more compete. Blackwell Ultra has 1.5x higher NVFP4 compute performance and 2x faster attention processing, enabling the agent to efficiently understand entire code bases.
Infrastructure for Agentic AI
Leading cloud providers and AI innovators have already deployed NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 at scale, and are also deploying GB300 NVL72 in production. Microsoft, CoreWeave and OCI are deploying GB300 NVL72 for low-latency and long-context use cases such as agentic coding and coding assistants. By reducing token costs, GB300 NVL72 enables a new class of applications that can reason across massive codebases in real time.
“As inference moves to the center of AI production, long-context performance and token efficiency become critical,” said Chen Goldberg, senior vice president of engineering at CoreWeave. “Grace Blackwell NVL72 addresses that challenge directly, and CoreWeave’s AI cloud, including CKS and SUNK, is designed to translate GB300 systems’ gains, building on the success of GB200, into predictable performance and cost efficiency. The result is better token economics and more usable inference for customers running workloads at scale.”
NVIDIA Vera Rubin NVL72 to Bring Next-Generation Performance
With NVIDIA Blackwell systems deployed at scale, continuous software optimizations will keep unlocking additional performance and cost improvements across the installed base.
Looking ahead, the NVIDIA Rubin platform — which combines six new chips to create one AI supercomputer — is set to deliver another round of massive performance leaps. For MoE inference, it delivers up to 10x higher throughput per megawatt compared with Blackwell, translating into one-tenth the cost per million tokens. And for the next wave of frontier AI models, Rubin can train large MoE models using just one-fourth the number of GPUs compared with Blackwell.
Source: Nvidia
The post Nvidia Says Blackwell Ultra Delivers up to 50x Better Performance and 35x Lower Costs for Agentic AI appeared first on HPCwire.
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Team USA star skater Ilia Malinin, after multiple falls at the Winter Games, speaks of a struggle to "stay sane through the endless insurmountable pressure."
Yvette Cooper may think so, and use of epibatidine may seem exotic, but experts say situation is more ambiguous
It was a very particular choice of weapon, but experts say it remains unclear whether the dart frog toxin used to kill the Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was intended to convey a message.
Known as epibatidine, the poison is produced by wild dart frogs native to parts of South America – meaning Navalny could not have accidentally taken the poison.
Continue reading...Property where abuse took place purchased for $13.4m in 2023 by Texas businessman Donald Huffines’ family
The family of a self-identified “Trump Republican” running for office in Texas bought Jeffrey Epstein’s New Mexico ranch where the sex trafficker abused teenage girls and young women, according to new documents.
A spokesperson for Donald Huffines, a Texas businessman and former GOP state senator now running for comptroller, confirmed the purchase to the Santa Fe New Mexican, a local media outlet.
Continue reading...It’s awkward, nobody seems to know what is going on, and the president’s thumb is at half-mast. It’s almost a metaphor for diplomatic relations between the US and the UK
When Liz Truss tweeted a photo of herself standing next to Donald Trump, she captioned it “right about everything”. All that effort, all that security clearance and long-haul travel and whatnot, to reach the pinnacle of proximity to your spiritual leader, and that’s the best she could come up with? It was bafflingly lame. And yet the least confusing thing about this scene were the words.
What exactly is going on in this photo? Truss clearly knows where she is, because she’s grinning with a kind of victorious serenity, as if she’s finally achieved the plaudit she knew all along was hers. At the same time – not wishing to be unsisterly – she doesn’t appear to have brushed her hair, so it doesn’t feel like this photo opportunity was in anyone’s diary. It looks like a selfie you’d catch when you run into your favourite contestant from The Traitors on your way through an airport. No time to worry about your grooming; it’s the chance of a lifetime, every second counts.
Continue reading...Former US president clarifies ‘they’re real’ answer that he gave during quick-fire interview round
Hours after Barack Obama caused a frenzy by saying aliens were real on a podcast, the former US president has posted a statement clarifying that he has not seen any evidence of them and that he was merely trying “to stick with the spirit” of an interviewer’s rapid round of questioning.
In a conversation with the American podcast host Brian Tyler Cohen over the weekend, Obama appeared to confirm the apparent existence of aliens during a segment in which the host asks guests quick questions and the guests respond with quick answers.
Continue reading...“We want this country to do well,” Marco Rubio said during a visit to Budapest, “especially as long as you’re the prime minister.”
In Instagram post, TV host whose mother disappeared 15 days ago in Arizona says ‘you’re not lost or alone’
The TV news anchor Savannah Guthrie issued a fresh appeal to anyone who knows the whereabouts of her missing mother, saying that “you’re not lost or alone” and “it is never too late to do the right thing”.
The Today anchor, who is stepping away from NBC’s morning broadcast, urged “whoever has her or knows where she is” to come forward, but did not make reference to any ransom demands or communication with any abductor.
Continue reading...The post Ignite Your Next Career Move appeared first on Linux.com.
The event could yield new MacBooks, a new iPad or even the long-awaited iPhone 17E.
Prime minister says action will be taken on young people’s social media access in ‘months, not years’
Keir Starmer has pledged action on young people’s access to social media in “months, not years”, while saying this did not necessarily mean a complete ban on access for under-16s.
Speaking at an event in London after the government promised to extend the crackdown to AI chatbots that place children at risk, Starmer said the issue was nuanced and that a ban was not definite, noting concerns from charities such as the NSPCC.
Continue reading...Labor chose a day when attention was focused on the opposition to slip out a handful of announcements
On Friday, as Angus Taylor ascended to the leadership of a riven and defeated political party, the Albanese government slipped out a handful of announcements on contentious climate and environment issues.
Here is what you may have missed.
Continue reading...First-of-its-kind project will see bogong moths tagged in the Australian Alps and monitored as they reach breeding grounds
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Researchers and citizen scientists will, for the first time, tag and track 10,000 bogong moths as they travel hundreds of kilometres from the Australian Alps to breeding grounds across the country’s south-east.
The massive moth-tagging project was modelled on Monarch Watch, a citizen science program that has traced the migration of monarch butterflies across North America over decades. Both species undertake long-distance journeys, with butterflies travelling by day and bogong moths by night.
Continue reading...Chatham House appoints Professor Marc Weller as the new Director of the Global Governance and Security Centre News release thilton.drupal
Professor Weller begins the new role immediately.
Chatham House, the Royal Institute of International Affairs, is pleased to announce that Professor Marc Weller will from today take over the directorship of its Global Governance and Security Centre (GGSC). Professor Weller is currently Director of Chatham House’s International Law Programme, one of the four programmes in the Centre, alongside International Security, Digital Society and Global Health. He is also a professor of international law at the University of Cambridge.
Professor Weller will lead the Centre, set up a year ago, in its ground-breaking work into the future of international rules and order: whether that is in retreat, or will be determined by the US and China, or can be remade by other countries and companies.
Among the issues covered in Professor Weller’s early expert commentaries for Chatham House were Gaza and Ukraine. He has also argued that the US capture of President Nicolás Maduro has no justification in international law and examined the history of Greenland.
Earlier this month he gave evidence to the UK House of Lords International Relations and Defence Committee about the legality of US actions in Venezuela. He set out how developing countries are uniting in defence of international law, and described Chatham House’s work to defend the international legal system.
Professor Weller holds the Chair of International Law and International Constitutional Studies at the University of Cambridge, where his teaching focuses on public international law, including the use of force, dispute settlement, self-determination and peace-making.
In 2011/12 he served as a full-time senior mediation expert in the Department of Political Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat in New York and was senior legal advisor in the UN-led Vienna process of final status negotiations between Kosovo and Serbia.
He also served as senior advisor to UN Special Representatives for Syria (Kofi Annan, Lakhdar Brahimi and Staffan de Mistura) and to Jamal Benomar, former UN Under Secretary-General for Yemen.
Under Professor Weller’s leadership the Global Governance and Security Centre will, through its research and convening, pursue improved governance and institutional reform worldwide.
The Centre utilizes Chatham House’s unique reputation to draw together stakeholders from policy, the private sector and civil society, helping to bridge the gap between policymakers, business and the public.
Upon the announcement of his appointment, Professor Weller said:
‘Global governance is under pressure. But the urgent global issues requiring global answers remain, including security threats, the need to ensure preparedness for the next global health crisis, or to ensure governance of AI in the new knowledge economy, along with the international rule of law more broadly.
‘I am delighted to lead our effort at Chatham House to offer answers to these challenges through the Global Governance and Security Centre, making full use of the opportunity to draw upon the amazing expertise and experience within the Centre and Chatham House as a whole.’
Bronwen Maddox, Director and Chief Executive of Chatham House, said:
‘I am delighted that Marc, who joined us last year and has already made a considerable impact on our work and influence, will lead the Global Governance and Security Centre at this time when the world wants the answers to the questions it is addressing.’
Chatham House is a London-based international affairs think-tank. Its purpose is to address geopolitical challenges and international problems. Through this, we aim to help governments and societies to build a secure, sustainable, prosperous and just world.
We do this by providing independent analysis and advice, and by convening meetings of the people and organizations that can bring about change. Read more about our mission and values here: https://www.chathamhouse.org/about-us/our-mission-and-values
More than 130,000 people considered missing or disappeared in Mexico as drug cartels expand
It was a bright morning in August 2022 when Ángel Montenegro was taken. A 31-year-old construction worker, Montenegro had been out all night drinking with some work buddies in the city of Cuautla and was waiting for a bus back to nearby Cuernavaca, where he lived.
At about 10am, a white van pulled up: several men jumped out and dragged Montenegro and a co-worker inside before speeding off. Montenegro’s co-worker was released a few hundred meters down the street, but Montenegro was driven away.
Continue reading...
Part 4 of the Delaware Civics 101 Series:
Understanding How Delaware Organizes, Spends, and Balances Its Money
Every June, while most Delawareans are dreaming of long summer days and trips to the beach, weary state officials are stuck indoors, trying to finish a document that will shape nearly every aspect of our lives — the Delaware State Budget.
It has taken nearly 12 months for this multi-billion-dollar spending plan to take shape. For a year, it has been reviewed, tweaked and reconfigured – line by line, department by department, program by program.
Then, almost as soon as it has been signed into law, it’s time to start the whole process over again.
To truly understand Delaware’s budget — and to know the best moments for making your voice heard — you also need to understand the whole story of how it’s created.
The process runs on a strict yearly cycle that balances planning, legislative oversight, and public accountability. It begins with agency requests in summer, and ends only when the Governor signs — by law, no later than June 30 every year.
Each state department — Education, Health and Social Services, Transportation, and eight
more – drafts budget requests for the next fiscal year. They list how much is needed to maintain existing services, along with any additional “enhancements” for new programs or staff.
Those requests are formally presented by agency heads to lawmakers in budget hearings that take place in November. Frequently, those agencies seek more money, and just as frequently, they face polite but firm pushback from skeptical lawmakers. This can become a make-or-break moment for each agency’s aspirations.
The OMB reviews requests against projected revenues from the Delaware Economic and Financial Advisory Council (DEFAC), whose sole mission is to make a clear-eyed and realistic assessment of how much money will be in hand over the next 12 months. Appointed by the governor, its members “broadly represent both the public and private sectors of the State’s economy,” and have included finance professionals, attorneys, and business leaders. Members of the General Assembly also serve on the council.
With DEFAC’s revenue forecast in hand, the Governor and cabinet secretaries work to align their policy goals with the funds they expect to see. Under Delaware’s Constitution, they are obligated to keep spending in line with revenue, ensuring a “balanced budget.”
Citizen Involvement:
In late January, the Governor delivers the annual Budget Address and releases the official Recommended Budget. It includes three main bills: the Operating Budget Bill, the Bond Bill, and the Grant-in-Aid Bill.
Citizen Involvement:
The Joint Finance Committee (JFC) of the legislature holds hearings where agencies defend their requests. Advocates, nonprofits, and residents can testify about funding needs or proposed reductions. Members of the JFC then make their final votes on how much funding each “line item” on the budget will get (or not get), usually in May.
It’s important to make your voice heard before that “mark-up” vote occurs – once votes are cast, these decisions are very difficult to change. The mark-up is also when JFC members must go “on the record,” so it is a good time for citizens to see how lawmakers are voting on specific issues.
Live streams of the budget hearings, which typically run from February through June, can be accessed on the Delaware General Assembly website, legis.delaware.gov. The “What’s Happening” box on the homepage lists upcoming hearings – you can register to attend, or click through to the livestream, on each event page. You can also go to legis.delaware.gov/WatchAndListen to see a live hearing (if one is occurring). JFC hearings are also detailed at legis.delaware.gov/Committee/JointFinance.
The hearings also feature “virtual public comment,” where you can join the Zoom webinar and make your voice heard. Public comment typically occurs following each state agency’s budget presentation, and all public comments are limited to two minutes per speaker. To sign up to make a comment, find the hearing through the “What’s Happening” calendar at legis.delaware.gov. Click on the meeting you want, then click the “register” link. Once registration is complete, you’ll get an email that includes the joining link, meeting ID, and password.
Another panel of lawmakers – the Joint Committee on Capital Improvement (Bond Bill Committee) – holds its own hearings on whether to authorize state borrowing to fund construction and long-term investments.
Citizen Involvement:
DEFAC meets several times a year to project Delaware’s revenue outlook. The committee’s June forecast determines the spending limit. Delaware law allows spending of no more than 98% of projected revenues.
Citizen Involvement:
The “Final Negotiations” of Delaware’s budget often happen behind closed doors, between the “Big Six” (leadership from both parties in the House and Senate) and the Governor. It’s often a high-pressure, rapid-fire process — lawmakers must pass the budget bills by June 30 so the fiscal year can begin July 1. (Note: Each fiscal year actually includes parts of two years — Fiscal Year 2026, for example, runs from July 1, 2025-June 30, 2026.)
There is no official mechanism for hearing from the public at this stage, so it’s important to step up and speak out early.
Citizen Involvement:
After the Governor signs the budget, agencies begin implementation. Spending is tracked by the OMB and visible through the Delaware Open Checkbook at checkbook.delaware.gov.
Citizen Involvement:
While Delaware’s process is efficient and balanced, critics often point to recurring issues:
Despite these challenges, Delaware consistently passes its budget on time and maintains a AAA bond rating, which helps the state save money by keeping borrowing costs down.
Delaware’s smaller size allows for efficiency and consistency, but citizens must act early to influence outcomes. Larger states like Pennsylvania and Maryland often face political gridlock or delays.
Delaware’s budget is more than a financial document — it’s a statement of priorities. Knowing when decisions are made, who makes them, and how to participate gives every citizen a stronger voice in shaping their community’s future.
A transparent process works best when the people it serves are paying attention.
Part 5 – Budget Trends: See the areas where rising costs and changing demographics are posing challenges for the people who craft the state’s budget.
About the Civics 101 Series: Civics 101 is a continuing explanatory series by Delaware LIVE and the Spotlight Delaware content marketing team designed to help readers understand how state government works and how budget decisions affect everyday life in Delaware. To read other stories in the series, visit the Civics 101 home page.
The post Civics 101: How Delaware’s budget is decided — and how you can participate appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
US politicians break rank at Munich Security Conference to hit out at ‘destructive’ president and urge Europe to stand up to Trump
Donald Trump’s most unbridled critics at this weekend’s Munich Security Conference have not been Europeans but Americans – and not just Democrats.
A few Republicans, out of earshot of the US president’s favoured Fox News, have had the courage to challenge Trump’s diet of tariffs and unpredictability.
Continue reading...
Why Should Delaware Care?
The Sussex County Council has seen a backlash from residents over the onslaught of new developments in the county. Now it also is fielding a formal complaint from the other side of the debate, after a developer sued the county over a zoning denial for a shopping center. If the county loses this suit, its ability to control that development could be limited.
The fight over plans to build a Costco-anchored shopping center in the Lewes-Rehoboth Beach area may not be over after all.
The project’s Baltimore-based developer, Southside Investment Partners, filed a complaint last week in the Delaware Court of Chancery claiming that the Sussex County Council’s denial last month of its rezoning request amounted to a “misapprehension of the applicable law and facts.”
In the lawsuit, the developer also emphasized that the denial came despite a recommendation from county planners that the council approve the rezoning.
“The land use approval process is not a game of ‘gotcha,’” the complaint stated.
The legal claim marks the latest in months of drama over plans to build a 655,000-square-foot retail development – about half the size of the Christiana Mall – that would include a Costco, Target and Whole Foods. The proposal, dubbed Atlantic Fields, would be located about 5 miles from Delaware’s popular beaches and a mile southwest of Route 1.
The claim also highlights years of tension in rapidly growing southern Delaware between developers who say the region needs more amenities, and residents who fear that new projects will bring worse traffic and environmental degradation.
Prior to the vote that denied Atlantic Fields’ zoning request last month, County Councilwoman Jane Gruenebaum was the only councilmember to speak on the issue. The others simply stated they agreed with her comments, which centered around concerns about the tens of thousands of additional cars the project could bring to Route 24, and the lack of housing within the plan.

“The list of transportation deficiencies that exist today or that will be felt if this development gets approved are too great,” Gruenebaum said then.
The Delaware Department of Transportation has plans to upgrade the roads around the development, but they are not likely to be completed until at least the early 2030s — after the shopping center was to have opened in 2028.
Additionally, a scheduled completion date for all road improvements in the larger Cape Henlopen Transportation Improvement District is 2045.
Gruenebaum said she believed that area roads could not handle the added traffic until then.
In response to such claims, the attorneys for Southside Investment Partners stated in their complaint that the company had already agreed as part of their proposal to pay for legally required traffic improvements.
Any delays for the other road work within the corridor should not be a legal reason to stop their project, they said.
“If this were true, then no projects should be allowed to move forward until all the improvements are in place,” the attorneys stated in the complaint.
The complaint further states that Southside Investment Partners spent two and a half years and over $3.5 million preparing for the proposed rezoning.
The county has not yet filed a response to the complaint. A spokesman for the county declined to comment for this story.
In her comments last month, Gruenebaum also said she felt that retail developments in C-4 districts — the type of zoning that Southside Investment Partners sought — need to include both housing and retail.
“The housing component is important because it allows people to reside near where they shop, thus cutting the necessary trips on the road,” she said.
But in its appeal, Southside Investment Partners’ attorneys asserted that county officials never said housing was required for its plans to be approved. They further said the plan followed everything in the county code,
The C-4 zoning district that Southside Investment Partners applied for does not appear to explicitly require housing. But county code does state that the zoning district is meant to “encourage carefully planned large-scale commercial, retail, and mixed-use developments.”
The post Developer sues Sussex County over Atlantic Fields denial appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

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.
UPDATE: The state budget hearing scheduled for Wednesday with the Delaware Department of Education has been cancelled.
Below are some of the most important or interesting public meetings happening around the state this week.
Delaware’s Charter School Accountability Committee will hold its final public meeting Tuesday to discuss an investigation into the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence – a Georgetown charter school that has struggled with low enrollment since its inaugural year in 2024.
The meeting comes about two months after Delaware Education Secretary Cindy Marten placed the school under a formal review in response to a recent drop in enrollment that raised concerns about finances and day-to-day operations.
The state describes the formal review process as a “lawful investigation of a charter school” that could include on-site visits, records inspections and interviews of parents, and staff.
Marten is expected to release a decision about the charter school’s future next month. She could take no action against the school. She could place it onto a form of probation. Or she could close the school.
Named after the prominent civil rights attorney who was born in nearby Milton, the Bryan Allen Stevenson School of Excellence was co-founded by Delaware lawmaker Rep. Alonna Berry (D-Milton).

During Tuesday’s meeting, school officials will have the opportunity to share details about improvements they have taken, or plan to take, for the school, according to the meeting agenda.
During a previous meeting last month, the new head of school Raushann Austin said that reduced enrollment had hurt the school’s ability to maintain a full staff.
“Staff members have taken on multiple roles, and the administrative team has limited administrative and clerical support,” Austin said then.
📍 The Charter School Accountability Committee will meet publicly at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Townsend Building, located at 401 Federal St. in Dover. For more details, including information about virtual attendance, click here.
The Delaware legislature’s budget hearings are continuing this week with testimony from environmental regulators, court administrators, and education officials, among others.
As part of the education hearing, lawmakers will hear a presentation that is, in part, about the Redding Consortium, which in December recommended that Delaware merge Wilmington’s four school districts into one.
If ultimately approved by the legislature, the redistricting proposal would represent a seismic shift in Delaware’s public education.
While the hearings this week are ostensibly about next year’s state budget, it is possible for lawmakers on the powerful Joint Finance Committee to discuss their feelings about the Redding Consortium’s redistricting recommendation.

The full legislature is expected to weigh in on the landmark redistricting proposal later in the year.
Two state lawmakers — Rep. Nnamdi Chukwuocha (D-Wilmington) and State Sen. Eric Buckson (R-Dover) — sit on both the Joint Finance Committee and the Redding Consortium.
Aside from Redding and the education department, lawmakers on the Joint Finance Committee may also share opinions during the hearings about how DNREC, the state’s environmental office, had undergone what Gov. Matt Meyer called a “sea change,” including to its air and water permitting.
📍 The Joint Finance Committee will meet 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at Legislative Hall, located at 411 Legislative Ave. in Dover.
Tuesday’s hearing will include testimony from the Delaware National Guard, the Department of Agriculture in the morning, and then DNREC in the afternoon.
Wednesday’s hearing with the Department of Education has been cancelled.
Thursday’s hearing will feature testimony from the judiciary in the morning, and then from specific legal offices, such as the Office of Defense Services, in the afternoon.
For information about virtual attendance for the Tuesday meeting, click here. For the Wednesday meeting, click here. And for the Thursday meeting, click here.
A little-known Delaware committee, called the Advisory Council on Tidal Finfisheries, will meet this week to discuss a handful of curious topics, including the state’s response to a lawsuit over an endangered sturgeon, and a proposal to build a fish hatchery on the Brandywine River.
The lawsuit, at issue, involves regulations imposed by Delaware, New Jersey and New York regarding the bycatch of Atlantic sturgeon by commercial fishers within the Delaware and Hudson rivers.
Filed in 2024 by the Delaware RiverKeeper Network and another environmental group, the lawsuit claims those states have not sufficiently monitored the incidental catch of those endangered fish.
The case has been paused since November to allow the sides to negotiate a potential settlement.
Also during the meeting this week, the fisheries council will discuss the possibility of a fish hatchery being built for American shad along the Brandywine River.
The proposal follows years of efforts by the state to restore habitat for the fish species that nearly disappeared from the Wilmington waterway. Chiefly among those efforts was the removal of area dams.
The Cape Gazette reported last fall that a separate Delaware council discussed the proposed hatchery during a meeting that revealed that state officials “hope to raise at least 500,000” juvenile shad on the Brandywine each year.
A similar shad hatchery already exists in Sussex County along the Nanticoke River.
📍 The Delaware Advisory Council on Tidal Finfisheries will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Little Creek Hunter Education Training Center, located at 3018 Bayside Drive in Dover. The meeting is specifically characterized as a hybrid gathering and those wishing to attend virtually can find login information here.
Up for consideration this week by the Wilmington City Council is an ordinance to place a moratorium on smoke shops in the city, and a resolution to oppose installing a Christopher Columbus statue in Little Italy, among other proposals.

The smoke shop moratorium, introduced by Councilman Chris Johnson, is scheduled for its third and final reading, meaning the City Council is likely to hold a final vote on the measure.
Advocates of the proposal say that such a moratorium would give local officials time to assess the health and safety impacts of smoke shops – which typically sell cigarettes, cigars, pipes, and, more recently, hemp-derived THC products.
The ordinance’s introduction followed at least two arrests in Wilmington over the previous three months involving the alleged selling of marijuana within smoke shops that were not licensed cannabis retailers.
Also scheduled to be heard this week are several City Council resolutions, including one that calls for the legislative body to formally oppose a proposal to reinstall a Christopher Columbus statue at Father Tucker Park.
Until 2020, the statue stood alongside Pennsylvania Avenue in the city, near North Franklin Street.
Introduced by Councilwoman Shané Darby, the resolution states that reinstalling the statue at the city park “runs counter to our City’s commitment to ensuring that our public spaces reflect, truth, accountability and shared humanity.”
📍The Wilmington City Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Louis L. Redding City County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. For more information about virtual attendance, click here and scroll all of the way to the bottom of the page.
Earlier this month, the New Castle County Council passed an ordinance that took authority over appointments to the county’s Police Accountability Board away from community groups and gave it to County Executive Marcus Henry.
The move – which has been criticized by advocates for police reform – also removes mandated representation on the board from a civil rights group and a faith-based leader; mandates board members complete 20 hours of police training; and reduces the number annual board meetings from 10 to six.
On Tuesday, the County Council will consider a slate of new nominees to the board. Among those is former New Castle County Councilman Kenneth R. Woods.
📍 The New Castle County Council’s Boards & Commissions Subcommittee will meet at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Louis L. Redding City County Building, located at 800 N. French St. in Wilmington. For more information, including about virtual attendance, click here.
The post Get Involved: Charter school probe, police accountability board reform, and a Wilmington fish hatchery? appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
Rubio to Europe: A softer tone than Vance. But same message? Audio sseth.drupal@c…
In a special edition of Chatham House’s Independent Thinking podcast recorded at the Munich Security Conference 2026 over the weekend, Chatham House Director Bronwen Maddox and Grégoire Roos, Director of the Europe and Russia and Eurasia Programmes, unpack the key issues that emerged from this year’s forum.
The main speaker, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, adopted a different tone from Vice President JD Vance, who shocked many in the audience last year when he delivered a verbal broadside against Europe at the same conference.
But does it signify a shift in the Trump administration’s newly assertive stance, or was it the same message in a different wrapping?
In a recording session in a side room amid the hustle and flow of the conference, they also discuss innovations in defence technology and drone development, the resilience of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, what level of support Ukraine can expect from Europe, and whether European companies and policymakers will respond effectively in the face of increasing competition from Chinese manufacturers.
Independent Thinking is a weekly international affairs podcast hosted by our director Bronwen Maddox, in conversation with leading policymakers, journalists, and Chatham House experts providing insight on the latest international issues.
More ways to listen: Apple Podcasts, Spotify.
Why recognizing a new border could serve Kyiv’s interests.
Year of the horse signals optimism and opportunity, with authorities keen that the extra day of holiday this year provides an economic boost
Chinese officials are hoping that this year’s extra long lunar new year holiday will provide a boost to the country’s economy, where increasing domestic spending has been identified as a key priority for the year ahead.
The government expects a record 9.5 billion passenger trips to be made across China during the 40-day spring festival period, up from 9 billion trips last year. Hundreds of millions of people will be crisscrossing the country to make what is often their only trip home to see their families for the Chinese new year celebrations.
Continue reading...Former state representative John Viola, who served the Newark and Bear area for more than two decades, died Saturday. He was 75.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Delaware began to cover commercial weight-loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy for state employees in 2023 as part of the state health plan. Now, claims for the drug have skyrocketed, and administrators are considering changes.
As state spending on blockbuster weight-loss drugs continues to skyrocket, employees currently covered under the state’s health plan could soon pay much more out-of-pocket to get their weight-loss prescriptions or be uncovered altogether.
Drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound have exploded in popularity in America as they have proven to aid weight loss, which results in both short-term and long-term health benefits. But the drugs are expensive – a 30-day supply of Ozempic is about $1,000 without manufacturer rebates – and are now among the largest pharmaceutical expenditures for those covered by the state’s Group Health Insurance Plan.
The State Employee Benefits Committee (SEBC), a board responsible for managing Delaware’s state employee health insurance plans, met on Friday to discuss at what level the state would fund the drugs going into 2027. The Group Health Insurance Plan covers state employees, retirees, and their eligible family members.
They heard multiple different options that could save the state money, but they would pass costs onto consumers using the drugs in the form of higher co-pays, almost four or five times higher than the current rate.
According to a presentation at the meeting, members pay $32 for a 30-day supply of the drug or $64 for a 90-day supply. If new copays are added to the state plan, those numbers would jump to $120 and $200, respectively.
Another option would be to completely eliminate coverage of the drugs for state employees who use them for weight loss, which officials suspect would save the state $179 million over the next three years.
If the state continues its coverage as is, the SEBC estimates it would cost nearly $211 million by 2029.
Get involved
SEBC members are set to make a decision on new coverage levels at 9 a.m. Monday, Feb. 23, at Delaware Department of Human Resources 841 Silver Lake Blvd., Suite 100 in Dover. Information about virtual attendance can be found here.
Members of the board were left with a bad taste in their mouths as they heard the potential options that would guide the future of state spending on weight-loss drugs that have since grown into the tens of millions of dollars each year.
Their options essentially boiled down to doing nothing, taking away coverage, implementing boosted copays, or removing guardrails around coverage in exchange for a lower net cost on the drug.
One board member, Jeff Taschner, executive director of the Delaware State Education Association, expressed his frustration with the options. And for the options that would put higher copays onto employees he said it was “unconscionable.”
“Like I said before, that’s going to result in $1,000 more, or $2,000 more for some of our employees who make $25,000 a year,” Taschner said. “So these freaking drug companies can open up the market?”

Brian Maxwell, who chairs the board and is also the director of the Office of Management and Budget, recoiled at an option presented that would remove prior-authorization requirements on the weight-loss drugs.
“We’ll be giving these things out like Tic Tacs,” Maxwell said.
If the state were to pursue that option, a consultant hired by the board said the pharmaceutical companies could increase their drug rebates to the state, bringing down the pinch taxpayers feel on the drug.
But removing those barriers could also open the door for people not clinically fit to take the drug being able to get a prescription without any outside oversight.
Another member of the board Bill Oberle, a former state representative, said this option works in the favor of pharmaceutical companies by lowering the cost to consumers, but increasing the volume of drugs they sell to the state.
The question is whether we treat a chronic disease early or pay far more for its complications later.
Christina Tarabicos
Christina Tarabicos, a member of the public, said the state should not adjust its coverage to the weight-loss drugs, saying eliminating them would delay further costs associated with separate health complications.
Tarabicos echoed the idea that putting inflated copays onto consumers is not something most state employees could manage without financial strain.
“The question before this committee is not whether we cover a lifestyle drug,” Tarabicos said. “The question is whether we treat a chronic disease early or pay far more for its complications later.”
Delaware Health Secretary Christen Linke Young said the state should work to increase the rebates it receives from the drug companies.
She based her position on a patent for a key ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy set to expire this year in Canada, opening the door for competitors to enter the market.
“I would like us to be thinking about opportunities to negotiate supplemental rebates if we have that kind of authority, or to otherwise strengthen our rebate position and achieve a lower price,” Young said.
That is the reality for the state’s commercial insurance plans, or those that cover the employees of private companies or individual consumers. Delaware Insurance Commissioner Trinidad Navarro, reported late last year that the cost of GLP-1s was virtually offset by rebates provided by pharmaceutical manufacturers on those plans.
However, his office was unable to understand the impact on the state’s budget, because it doesn’t have access to full data from the state’s pharmacy benefit manager.
Delaware’s reckoning with its spending on weight-loss drugs comes as states nationwide have pulled back on coverage.
In 2021, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration approved a formulation of Ozempic – a drug that has long treated type 2 diabetes – for use in weight loss. The drug mimics a hormone that targets the appetite-regulating area of the brain, reducing a patient’s perceived hunger.
In 2023, the Delaware state employee health care plan began to cover most of those costs for weight-loss patients. Officials initially budgeted about $2 million in the 2024 fiscal year, but the actual price tag reached more than $14 million that year and has continued to grow since.
Workers on the state’s health plan pay anywhere from 4% to 13% of the cost out of pocket. The remainder is paid by taxpayers through the state’s General Fund.
In early 2024, Spotlight Delaware first reported that commercial weight-loss drugs, such as Ozempic and Wegovy, were among the most prescribed and expensive medicines for state workers.
Delaware also recently filed a lawsuit against multiple pharmaceutical juggernauts in January, accusing them of conspiring to artificially inflate insulin and GLP-1 drug prices at the expense of patients.

The lawsuit, filed by Attorney General Kathy Jennings’ office in the Delaware Court of Chancery, targets both pharmaceutical manufacturers like Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, as well as pharmaceutical middlemen – better known as pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) – who negotiate drug prices between manufacturers and insurers, like CVS Caremark and Express Scripts.
At the center of the 141-page complaint is an accusation that both drug manufacturers and PBMs have profited from artificially inflated drug prices and kickbacks secured through exclusionary practices.
According to the complaint, manufacturers have dramatically increased the price of insulin and other diabetes drugs in recent years, despite a decrease in the cost of production.
“Despite this decrease in production costs and no new research and development, the reported price of the at-issue drugs has risen astronomically over the last 15 years,” the complaint said.
The lawsuit also claims that PBMs work in tandem with manufacturers to exclude competitors by giving preferential treatment to those that pay the PBMs the largest share of profits generated by those artificially inflated prices.
Through this practice, the lawsuit says cheaper and more affordable formulas are often excluded from prescription coverage, leaving patients with fewer options.
The lawsuit said diabetes costs Delaware $1.1 billion each year, and that many rely on daily insulin injections, as well as the use of GLP-1s, naming Ozempic as one of the medications included in the alleged price-gouging scheme.
The post Delaware considers cutting GLP-1 weight-loss coverage on state plan appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
New York City’s public hospital system is paying millions to Palantir, the controversial ICE and military contractor, according to documents obtained by The Intercept.
Since 2023, the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation has paid Palantir nearly $4 million to improve its ability to track down payment for the services provided at its hospitals and medical clinics. Palantir, a data analysis firm that’s now a Wall Street giant thanks to its lucrative work with the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence community, deploys its software to make more efficient the billing of Medicaid and other public benefits. That includes automated scanning of patient health notes to “increase charges captured from missed opportunities,” contract materials reviewed by The Intercept show.
Palantir’s administrative involvement in the business of healing people stands in contrast to its longtime role helping facilitate warfare, mass deportations, and dragnet surveillance.
In 2016, The Intercept revealed Palantir’s role behind XKEYSCORE, a secret NSA bulk surveillance program revealed by the whistleblower Edward Snowden that allowed the U.S. and its allies to search the unfathomably large volumes of data they collect. The company has also attracted global scrutiny and criticism for its “strategic partnership” with the Israeli military while it was leveling Gaza.
But it’s Palantir’s work with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement that is drawing the most protest today. The company provides a variety of services to help the federal government find and deport immigrants. ICE’s Palantir-furnished case management software, for example, “plays a critical role in supporting the daily operations of ICE, ensuring critical mission success,” according to federal contracting documents.
“It’s unacceptable that the same company that is targeting our neighbors for deportation and providing tools to the Israeli military is also providing software for our hospitals,” said Kenny Morris, an organizer with the American Friends Service Committee, which shared the contract documents with The Intercept.
Established by the state legislature, New York City Health and Hospitals is the nation’s biggest municipal health care system, administering over 70 facilities throughout New York City, including Bellevue Hospital, and providing care for over 1 million New Yorkers annually.
“NYC Health + Hospitals’ use of Palantir technology is strictly limited to revenue cycle optimization, helping the public health care system close gaps between services delivered and charges captured, protect critical revenue, and reduce avoidable denials,” spokesperson Adam Shrier told The Intercept, adding that the contract is due to expire this fall. “Ensuring that we collect all insurance revenue to which we are entitled is critical as we navigate impacts to health care coverage and insurers’ increasing use of AI technologies to review and deny claims.” Palantir spokesperson Drew Messing said the company does not use or share hospital data outside the bounds of its contract.
Palantir’s contract with New York’s public health care system allows the company to work with patients’ protected health information, or PHI. With permission from New York City Health and Hospitals, Palantir can “de-identify PHI and utilize de-identified PHI for purposes other than research,” the contract states. De-identification generally involves the stripping of certain revealing information, such as names, Social Security numbers, and birthdays. Such provisions are common in contracts involving health data.
Activists who oppose Palantir’s involvement in New York point to a large body of research that indicates re-identifying personal data, including in medical contexts, is often trivial.
“Any contract that shares any of New Yorkers’ highly personal data from NYC Health & Hospitals with Palantir, a key player in the Trump administration’s mass deportation effort, is reckless and puts countless lives at risk,” said Beth Haroules of the New York Civil Liberties Union. “Every New Yorker, without exception, has a right to quality healthcare and city services. New Yorkers must be able to seek healthcare without fear that their intimate medical information, or immigration status, will be delivered to the federal government on a silver platter.”
Palantir has long provided similar services to the U.K. National Health Service, a business relationship that today has an increasing number of detractors. Palantir “has absolutely no place in the NHS, looking after patients’ personal data,” Green Party leader Zack Polanski recently stated in a letter to the U.K. health secretary.
“Palantir is targeting the exact patients that NYCHH is looking to serve.”
Some New York-based groups feel similarly out of distrust for what the firm could do with troves of sensitive personal data.
“Palantir is targeting the exact patients that NYCHH is looking to serve,” said Jonathan Westin of the Brooklyn-based Climate Organizing Hub. “They should immediately sever their contract with Palantir and stand with the millions of immigrant New Yorkers that are being targeted by ICE in this moment.”
“The chaos Palantir is inflicting through its technology is not just limited to the kidnapping of our immigrant neighbors and the murder of heroes like our fellow nurse, Alex Pretti,” said Hannah Drummond, an Asheville, North Carolina-based nurse and organizer with National Nurses United, a nursing union. “As a nurse and patient advocate, I don’t want anything having to do with Palantir in my hospital — and neither should any elected leader who claims to represent nurses.”
Palantir’s vocally right-wing CEO Alex Karp has been a frequent critic of New York City’s newly inaugurated democratic socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani. Health and Hospitals operates as a public benefit corporation, but the mayor can exert considerable influence over the network, for instance through the appointment of its board of directors. Its president, Dr. Mitchell Katz, was renominated by Mamdani, then the mayor-elect, late last year.
The mayor’s office did not respond in time for publication when asked about its stance on the contract.
Update: February 17, 2026, 6:27 p.m. ET
This post has been updated to include a statement from New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation received after publication.
The post Palantir Gets Millions of Dollars From New York City’s Public Hospitals appeared first on The Intercept.
The USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier and its escort ships are expected to head to the Middle East, three U.S. officials told CBS News, as U.S.-Iran tensions simmer.
Feb. 13, 2026 — The U.S. National Science Foundation is investing up to $100 million to establish a nationwide network of open-access research facilities for quantum and nanoscale technologies, innovation, and workforce training.
Through the new NSF National Quantum and Nanotechnology Infrastructure (NSF NQNI) program, NSF will support up to 16 sites over five years, providing students, researchers, and industry with access to state-of-the-art fabrication and characterization tools, instrumentation, and expertise. Together, the sites will form a shared national resource serving regional innovation ecosystems, including community colleges and small businesses.
NSF NQNI will accelerate U.S. leadership in quantum information science and engineering, nanotechnology, semiconductors, biotechnology, advanced manufacturing, and other emerging technologies.
“This NSF investment in research facilities will power U.S. discovery in quantum and nanotechnologies to fuel our economy,” said Don Millard, head of Engineering at NSF. “With facilities open to students, faculty and small businesses, NQNI will enable transformative ideas to be explored, scaled, and translated.”
NSF has invested in nanotechnology infrastructure for nearly 50 years, most recently through the NSF National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (2015–2025).
Letters of Intent are required and due March 16, 2026. For more information, contact NQNI@nsf.gov.
Learn more about this funding opportunity.
Source: NSF
The post NSF Launches $100M National Quantum and Nanotechnology Research Infrastructure Program appeared first on HPCwire.
Last week Los Alamos National Laboratory revealed that it will be uniting its various quantum computing research groups with the creation of a new Center for Quantum Computing. The new center, located in downtown Los Alamos, is designed to coordinate research spanning algorithms, hardware evaluation, hybrid quantum-classical workflows, and national security applications, while also reinforcing workforce development and education efforts such as the Lab’s quantum computing summer school.
Carleton Coffrin, senior scientist and quantum science coordinator for LANL, told HPCwire that quantum activity at the lab has expanded organically in response to growing federal and state interest, resulting in multiple successful but largely independent research efforts. Consolidating those groups under a single center, he said, is intended to foster deeper collaboration and combine complementary expertise in ways that could accelerate progress.
Beyond research coordination, Coffrin said the center formalizes a stronger workforce pipeline with universities across New Mexico.
“Another piece of the story, which is particularly important for the universities, is workforce development,” Coffrin said. “This new center will have a significant training component. We’ll be bringing in students from the universities to do internships or postdocs, and then when they’ve finished their training period, that becomes a way that we can identify potential new staff members, or they could find a fantastic job in the universities in New Mexico or potential companies in the area.”
He described the training pipeline as one of the center’s most important points of connection with higher education institutions in the state.
The dedicated facility will initially house roughly 15 staff scientists and 15 postdoctoral researchers. During the summer, it will also host LANL’s quantum computing summer school, bringing an additional 20 students into the space for 10 weeks.
“So at peak, it would be [around] 50 people,” Coffrin said.
While the new center provides a physical hub, it represents only part of the laboratory’s broader quantum effort. More than 100 scientists across LANL are engaged in quantum computing research, with the center serving as a coordinating structure for that wider community.
Laboratory researchers affiliated with the new center potentially include those contributing to DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative, the Department of Energy’s Quantum Science Center, and the National Nuclear Security Administration’s Advanced Simulation and Computing program through its Beyond Moore’s Law project, as well as multiple Laboratory Directed Research and Development efforts.
The consolidation brings those efforts into a more unified structure at a moment when commercial quantum claims are accelerating.
“The industry is making many bold claims about what might be possible in quantum computing,” Coffrin said. “I personally come with a bit of skepticism about those claims and if they can really do it, but it seems like there’s so much going on that we need to prepare in case one or two companies succeed.
“It’s really hard to anticipate when a technological transition will happen. We’re trying to make sure we’re ready, if it happens.”
The post Los Alamos Consolidates Quantum Research Under New Center appeared first on HPCwire.
A social media post cited by Elon Musk to bolster his argument that mail-in voting should be curtailed, and which was subsequently amplified by President Donald Trump, makes the false and long-ago debunked claim that in the 2020 election, “Pennsylvania sent out 1,823,148 mail-in ballots but received back around 2.5 MILLION mail-in ballots.”
As the Pennsylvania Department of State’s final report on the 2020 election shows, there were 2,673,272 mail-in ballot applications approved for the 2020 general election, so that’s how many were sent out. And of those, 2,273,490 votes were cast. (See charts 6.2 and 6.3 in the report.) Another 435,932 absentee ballots were also approved, and 374,659 of them were cast.
“This claim is based on mixing up statistics from the primary and the general election,” Charles Stewart III, director of the MIT Election Data and Science Lab, explained to us via email.
As online Pennsylvania records show, there were roughly 1.8 million absentee and mail-in ballots approved for the primary election in 2020, nearly 1.5 million of which were cast. In other words, the post mixes up the number of mail-in ballots (including absentee ballots) sent out for the 2020 primary election and then cites approximately the number of mail-in ballots cast in the 2020 general election.
“These are long-ago debunked claims that will not disappear despite the availability of official data,” Stewart said.
Trump has been making false and unfounded claims related to mail-in voting for years. And he has long called for ending mail-in voting “other than if you’re in the military, or you’re sick, or you’re away, or some reasonable but good excuse,” as he said on Feb. 9.
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Musk, a former Trump adviser, agrees, according to a Feb. 8 post from an X account called The Leading Report: “Elon Musk calls for mail-in voting to be abolished nationwide except for troops overseas or a serious medical condition.” Musk reposted it and commented, “Critical to avoid fraud.”
The same day, The SCIF — an X account whose bio identifies the operator as a “Digital Operator, Creator and Intelligence Researcher” with the motto, “Truth is the most effective weapon in a war of information filled with lies” — weighed in with an X post that read: “Elon is right, banning mail-in voting is critical to avoiding fraud in our elections. During the 2020 election, Pennsylvania sent out 1,823,148 mail-in ballots but received back around 2.5 MILLION mail-in ballots. This accounts for Biden’s fraudulent and impossible 682,000+ vote spike, which were counted with NO observers and were all for Biden, which magically just happened to be enough to steal Trump’s almost 700,000 vote lead in PA before swing states shut down counting locations at the same time, to steal the 2020 election. PA’s own Secretary of State website then wiped the 2.5 MILLION mail-in ballot number after the total number was questioned. Trump won the 2020 election in a landslide.”
Musk reposted that, and commented, “Essential to stop fraud in elections.” On Feb. 10, Trump reposted the claim and Musk’s response on Truth Social, without comment.
This latest criticism of mail-in voting comes as Congress considers the SAVE America Act, which would require voters to provide documentary proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote, and also photo identification to vote in federal elections. It would not abolish mail-in voting, but it would require a copy of identification to both request and submit a mail-in ballot.
Mail-in voting is widely used around the country. Eight states and Washington, D.C., conduct their elections mostly by mail, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Another 28 states — including Pennsylvania — offer “no excuse” mail-in voting, meaning that any voter can request a mail-in ballot without needing to provide a reason. (Pennsylvania has both no-excuse mail-in ballots as well as absentee ballots for those who can’t make it to a polling place due to illness, disability, work or travel.)
The post claiming there were hundreds of thousands more mail-in ballots received than were actually sent out in Pennsylvania — a swing state that broke for Biden in 2020 — originated in a Nov. 25, 2020, hearing held by Pennsylvania Senate Republicans (a video of which is attached to the post). During that hearing, then-Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani referred to Pennsylvania voting data and said, “Now this is the part that is a mystery. Mailed ballots sent out: 1,823,148. But when you go to the count of the final count of the vote, there are 2,589,242 mail-in ballots.” Giuliani asked witness Phil Waldron, a retired Army colonel, “How do you account for the 700,000 mail-in ballots that appeared from nowhere?”
Waldron, who has promoted many unfounded theories about manipulated voting machines, speculated the voting machines may have been tampered with and called for a “detailed forensic analysis” of the voting machines used in Pennsylvania.
(Waldron later circulated a PowerPoint document to Trump allies that drew the attention of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. At the time, Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson, chair of the panel, called the document “an alarming blueprint for overturning a nationwide election.” According to the Jan. 6 committee report, Waldron was among those who “invoked their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination when asked by the Select Committee what supposed proof they uncovered that the election was stolen.”)
But again, the premise of Giuliani’s question was flawed. There were not more ballots returned in Pennsylvania than had been sent out.
“This is completely false,” Kathy Boockvar, who was the Pennsylvania secretary of the commonwealth at the time of the 2020 election, said in an email to us about the online claim. She explained the same thing at the time in a Dec. 16, 2020, letter to U.S. Sens. Ron Johnson and Gary Peters about similar claims.
All of the election data are, and were, in public records available online, and they contradict Giuliani’s claim.
The claim is also contradicted by the contemporaneous reporting made to the U.S. Elections Project, a clearinghouse for voting data maintained by Mike McDonald, a professor at the University of Florida.
“The individual-level Pennsylvania 2020 mail ballot data I received on a daily basis from the Secretary of State’s office does not substantiate these allegations,” McDonald told us via email. “Pennsylvania election officials reported issuing a little over 3 million mail ballots during the COVID crisis, of which election officials accepted a little more than 2.6 million returned ballots.” Those figures include both mail-in and absentee ballots.
And the claim is further contradicted by news accounts before the election that cited the correct number of ballot requests for the general election.
Indeed, the bogus claim was widely debunked at the time.
“It’s pretty unbelievable this is still being used,” Eric Kraeutler, a member of the board of directors and former chair of the Committee of Seventy, a Philadelphia-based election watchdog, told us in a phone interview. “They mixed up data for these two separate elections (the 2020 primary and general elections). … As far as we’re concerned, this was disposed of five or six years ago.”
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The post Trump and Musk Amplify Long-Ago Debunked Mail-In Vote Fraud Claim appeared first on FactCheck.org.
Feb. 13, 2026 — Last week the Government of Andhra Pradesh, a State in southern India, began construction on Quantum Valley Tech Park in the capital city of Amaravati. Quantum Valley Tech Park will soon host India’s first IBM quantum computer, and tech park members already enjoy access to IBM’s cloud-based quantum computers thanks to a partnership between IBM and India’s Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), first announced last spring.
These initiatives are bringing renewed national focus to India’s ongoing efforts in quantum education and workforce development. According to a report published by the Government of India’s apex policy think tank NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India) in December, India will need to train approximately 100,000 quantum developers to secure its place as a quantum computing leader in the 2030s, a decade that will be shaped by the emergence of large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computing. The message is clear: India’s long-term competitiveness in quantum computing will hinge on the strength of its talent pipeline.
“With Quantum Valley Tech Park, Andhra Pradesh is building a global innovation hub that will empower our students, researchers, and industry to lead in this transformative field,” said N. Chandrababu Naidu, Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh. “By collaborating with global leaders like IBM and TCS, we are accelerating India’s progress toward the goals of our National Quantum Mission and shaping a future defined by opportunity, discovery, and economic growth.”
“The start of construction at Quantum Valley Tech Park is an exciting milestone in our collaboration with the Government of Andhra Pradesh,” said Scott Crowder, Vice President, IBM Quantum Adoption and Business Development. “India has rapidly expanded its quantum education and research infrastructure. Now, as it prepares to welcome its first IBM quantum computer, this emerging ecosystem is poised to drive new scientific discoveries, advance real-world applications, and accelerate the journey to quantum advantage and beyond.”
The new Quantum Valley Tech Park will play a pivotal role in building India’s talent pipeline, and in making India a true force in the global quantum industry. The tech park’s ground breaking follows similar momentum across IBM’s global quantum network, where regions from Europe to East Asia are scaling infrastructure and workforce programs to prepare for the next era of quantum computing.
A Nationwide Learning Engine
India’s push to build that quantum talent pipeline is already well underway through India’s National Quantum Mission, which aims to make the country a hub of technological innovation and economic growth in the global quantum computing industry. It’s also being driven by organizations like IBM, which has been actively engaged in quantum education and upskilling initiatives across the country since 2021.
A flagship component of IBM’s work there has been Introduction to Quantum Computing, a beginner-friendly, Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) launched in partnership with IIT Madras in 2021 and offered through the Government of India’s National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning (NPTEL) platform. This free, four-week-long course is recognized by the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), and has quickly become India’s biggest on-ramp to quantum skills-building.
NPTEL’s Introduction to Quantum Computing course has already trained over 37,000 learners in the last four years, and enrollment is accelerating fast. Enrollment for 2026 has already crossed a staggering 208,785 participants with over 100,000 of those coming from Andhra Pradesh.
In addition to the introductory quantum computing MOOC, NPTEL also offers a more advanced quantum computing course comprising 24 weeks of learning modules that provide a deep dive into the subject over the course of a year. This paid course has trained now 300+ learners, many of whom have been supported by industry sponsorships.
These community-level learning programs sit alongside broader efforts across academia in India. For example, IBM has spent years helping to integrate quantum education more deeply into India’s formal academic system. This has included support for the introduction of a minor degree in quantum technologies at the undergraduate level and a masters program in quantum technology that is now available across all AICTE engineering institutions nationwide.
IBM Quantum researchers have contributed extensively to curriculum design, faculty training, and textbook development through these efforts, and that work is paying off. Together with partners from all across India’s quantum community, IBM has delivered year-long faculty development programs that have already trained over 9,500 faculty members in just the past year. These faculty will form the teaching force tasked with preparing India’s next generation of quantum professionals.
A Foundation for Long-Term Leadership
Students and faculty trained through India’s growing quantum talent pipeline will benefit immensely from the completion of the Quantum Valley Tech Park in Andhra Pradesh. The tech park will host India’s first IBM quantum computer, an IBM Quantum System Two powered by the latest available IBM Quantum processor. With its modular design, engineered for HPC integration, IBM Quantum System Two delivers the scalable infrastructure needed to support India’s research and future workforce for years to come.
However, a quantum workforce isn’t just built after the hardware arrives. While construction is underway, Quantum Valley Tech Park members can work with Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) to access IBM quantum computers over the cloud. TCS has had IBM Quantum cloud access since November 2025 and has already run skills development workshops and an internal hackathon.
Beyond facilitating access to IBM quantum computers and runtime services, TCS has also partnered with IBM to support the development of new algorithms and applications that will help Indian industry and academia tackle the nation’s most challenging and valuable problems.
What Comes Next
As India solidifies its quantum industry foundation, its students and researchers gain a real advantage. The country’s quantum talent pipeline is maturing at the same time that the technology and science of quantum computing is approaching long-sought, paradigm-shifting milestones.IBM expects that the first cases of verified quantum advantage will emerge by the end of 2026, and has shared its plans to deliver fault-tolerant quantum computers by 2029. These advances will fundamentally reshape the computing landscape, and the countries like India that are working towards quantum readiness today will be well-positioned to become the quantum industry leaders of tomorrow.
More from HPCwire
Source: Anupama Ray and Robert Davis, IBM
The post IBM: Breaking Ground on India’s Quantum Future appeared first on HPCwire.
How can West Africa strengthen its collective security against violent extremism? 9 March 2026 — 4:30PM TO 5:45PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Join us at Chatham House where the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone explore strategies for rebuilding regional order and security in the Sahel.
At this event, the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone will examine strategies capable of addressing the root causes of rising insecurity. They will also consider approaches to bilateral relations and practical options to revive West African regionalism, including mechanisms to restore trust and cooperation at a time of acute crisis.
From the Lake Chad Basin to western Mali, insecurity in West Africa is profoundly transnational. Yet regional political fragmentation, driven by the recent wave of coups in the central Sahel, has undermined effective cross‑border security cooperation.
With the decline of multilateral frameworks such as the G5 Sahel and the Multinational Joint Task Force, progress on core issues–including the right of hot pursuit, joint military operations, intelligence sharing and tackling illicit finance–has stalled. As the Alliance of Sahel States develops its own security architecture, Mali’s ongoing fuel blockade underscores the unavoidable interdependence of landlocked states with their neighbours.
At this event, the foreign ministers of Nigeria, Ghana and Sierra Leone examine strategies capable of addressing the root causes of rising insecurity. They consider approaches to bilateral relations and practical options to revive West African regionalism, including mechanisms to restore trust and cooperation at a time of acute crisis.
Kenya’s expanding foreign policy interests in a changed world order 9 March 2026 — 1:00PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) Chatham House and Online
Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs, HE Dr Musalia Mudavadi EGH, reflects on Kenya’s influence and status within a rapidly changing international context.
At this event, Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs will reflect on Kenya’s agency and positioning within a rapidly changing and geopolitically complex international context.
Kenya has long been recognized as a regional anchor state and an assertive voice for Africa on the international stage. Its strategic importance has grown amid global power shifts and a turbulent security landscape in eastern Africa.
Kenya’s new foreign policy strategy, released in 2024, emphasizes regional integration and collaboration while outlining ambitions for a more influential international role.
This global positioning encompasses deep economic and security ties with Western countries, a comprehensive strategic partnership with China, and closer relations with emerging actors such as the UAE.
At this event, Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs HE Dr Musalia Mudavadi EGH will reflect on Kenya’s role and its positioning within a rapidly changing and geopolitically complex international context.
This event will discuss:
Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday, defending the Justice Department’s widely criticized rollout of the Epstein files against accusations that her department is shielding powerful men, including President Donald Trump, at the expense of survivors.
Democrats, who reviewed the unredacted files for the first time this week, revealed that the names of “wealthy, powerful men” were improperly redacted, while the names of victims were left exposed.
This week on The Intercept Briefing, co-hosts Jessica Washington and Akela Lacy gave their rundown of the politics stories they’re watching right now. Washington also spoke with Spencer Kuvin, an attorney representing nine of Epstein’s victims, about the failures of the Department of Justice to protect survivors.
“From the beginning of this case, the government, both from a state and federal level, have been trying to bury this, cover it up, and avoid any full exposure of the extent of the operation that was involved here,” Kuvin said, “and they’re doing it … because of all the both political, wealthy, and powerful individuals who were involved with Epstein and knew what was going on with these young women.”
Kuvin also spoke about the DOJ’s failure to redact the names of victims in the files, including two of his clients who were victimized as children. “The current Department of Justice has a focus on something different than victims and helping victims and prosecuting bad people that victimize these young girls,” he said. “Their focus instead appears to be on the important people — powerful people that are contained within these files and protecting them instead of protecting who needs the protection, the young victims in this case.”
Listen to the full conversation of The Intercept Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
Jessica Washington: Welcome to The Intercept Briefing. I’m Jessica Washington, politics reporter at The Intercept.
Akela Lacy: And I’m Akela Lacy, senior politics reporter at The Intercept.
JW: We’re going to be doing something a little bit different this week and start off the show by discussing the topics that are on our mind as political reporters. Akela, what do you have your eye on this week?
AL: The midterms are here. There has been an onslaught of news this week from New York to Illinois to New Jersey — where after days of tearing my hair out, waiting for them to finalize the election results in the special election in New Jersey, 11 — it appears that the pro-Israel lobby strategy backfired and helped elect a progressive critic of Israel. So we’ve been writing about that.
We also had done some reporting on AIPAC donors backing the Lieutenant Governor Tahesha Way in that race. And it appears that she is now potentially thinking about running against the winner Analilia Mejia in the next primary, which unfortunately is not that far away because there will be another race for the full term for this seat.
On Thursday, we published a story about a new endorsement in Illinois, where over the last week there’s been several ads, millions of dollars spent in four races, where AIPAC is making one of its biggest investments this cycle. Our story is about a candidate in the ninth district, Kat Abughazaleh, who is now running with the endorsement of Justice Democrats and a new pro-Palestine political action committee that launched on Wednesday and is endorsing several candidates in the upcoming midterms.
JW: Can you tell me a little bit about AIPAC strategy and how they’re viewing the midterms?
AL: Yeah, so we’ve done a lot of reporting on this. Basically the 2024 midterms, AIPAC was extremely loud and vocal about its endorsements, its investments in these races, and there has been sort of a groundswell in criticism of AIPAC. Lots of groups popping up. I think we’ve seen a big shift in the number of people in the general public who are paying really close attention to how this lobby is operating in these midterms.
And in response to that, AIPAC has retreated to the way that it operated before it started spending directly on elections and launching the Super Pac and the regular PAC that many people are familiar with now, distancing itself from candidates, directing donors to fundraise for candidates that it hasn’t publicly endorsed. On the other hand, you have candidates who are fundraising with AIPAC or aware that they’re receiving tens of thousands of dollars from big AIPAC donors are saying that they’re not seeking the endorsement of this group that they’re not involved, that they’re happy to take support from whoever wants to support their campaigns. And so this has made reporting on this a little bit more difficult in some ways because we’re looking at donors where they overlap between these two groups.
We’re trying to read between the lines of statements that officials and the group are making about whether or not they’re involved in this race. And, in Illinois in particular, as I was interviewing Kat Abughazaleh on Wednesday evening, she said, AIPAC knows how toxic it is and that’s why it’s trying so hard to make it appear that it’s not involved in this race when it very clearly is. And that I think is an evergreen statement about how it’s operating in lots of races that are coming up.
Jessie, I know you’re also focusing on the midterms. What do you have your eye on right now?
JW: Yeah. First I have my eye on all of your reporting because it’s been excellent.
AL: [Laughs.] Thank you.
JW: You have been writing a lot and really interestingly on AIPAC, so I’ve definitely been following your coverage.
I think for me, ICE is really something I’m watching going into the midterms. In my conversations with campaigns candidates and their teams are bringing up ICE over and over again.
They recognize that part of what this election is going to be about is what kind of country we want to live in, and people are really rejecting the violence that they’re seeing really publicly. Obviously, ICE and the Department of Homeland Security has been acting in ways that are violent towards communities in much quieter ways for years. But this violence that people are seeing, they’re really rejecting. So I’m seeing a lot of traction with that, with campaigns.
And I think it’s also an interesting juxtaposition with everything that’s gone on with the Epstein files. This week and last week, you’re really seeing this idea of conservatives as protectors of the innocent protectors of the weak, the ways that they’ve been trying to champion themselves to voters fall apart, both with the ways in which voters can see that they’re not protecting the survivors connected to the Epstein files, and also the ways in which they’re seeing that the authoritarianism that they have justified on the backs of, “hey, we have to protect the weak and vulnerable” is fake. So that’s something I’m really watching, for campaigns to touch on.
AL: And I just think it’s important to note here that Analilia Mejia, who you know, was elected in New Jersey as we were talking about, made that a cornerstone of her campaign. And like I know her campaign was really pushing that information out to reporters, that something that was so successful was that they were doing these ICE trainings at her campaign events — she was a critic of Israel. She was a supporter of all these progressive policies. But that specifically — the ICE issue — was what was resonating with voters in this district that was represented by a Republican before Mikie Sherrill was elected in 2019. So in terms of this everlasting quest to unite people across the ideological spectrum, it seems like that is being really effective.
JW: Yeah, it’s definitely a message that we’re seeing campaigns latch onto and we’re seeing the public latch onto. And what you just said about the trainings, I’ve found to be so interesting, just the ways in which people have — despite being really afraid; I think it’s rational to be afraid when we’re seeing the kinds of violence publicly on video — but instead of just staying inside of their house, we’re seeing people really resonate with this moment, go out, do these trainings, get into the streets, and that energy is something a lot of campaigns are trying to harness.
Now, whether or not they turn on that same energy, the ways in which we saw the George Floyd energy, which had been harnessed by Democrats and they really lost that momentum. It’ll be curious to see if Democrats can hold onto the momentum from activists on the streets who are angry about ICE or whether we’re going to see that exact same kind of turn we saw on organizers and activists who are connected to the George Floyd protests.
AL: Also this week I’m sure people were paying attention to the electric Pam Bondi hearing and the Epstein files. Jessie, you spoke to Spencer Kuvin, an attorney representing nine of Epstein’s survivors.
JW: Yeah, I did. It was a really great conversation. Spencer drove home the ways in which the Trump justice department has been protecting the powerful at the expense of the victims in this case.
AL: Let’s hear that conversation.
JW: Spencer, welcome to The Intercept Briefing.
Spencer Kuvin: Thank you so much for having me today.
JW: I want to start off by asking how the women that you represent are reacting to this latest batch of documents.
SK: Well, and thank you for asking about the victims, which really is the focus or should be the focus of everything that has been going on for the last 20 years.
Unfortunately, I had to make a very difficult call after the documents had been released. One of my clients, actually two of my clients were unfortunately unredacted and disclosed in those documents that included the first victim that came forward to police— the 14-year-old that I represented back in 2007, who the federal government was well aware of.
And another young victim who was 16 at the time that she was brought to Epstein’s home in Palm Beach, they were both disclosed in these documents, unredacted. So I had to make that awful call to let them know that they had been disclosed and that I had notified the Department of Justice of what had happened.
And then thankfully within a day the redactions took place. But it’s just unbelievable the failures of this Department of Justice.
JW: Yeah. Why do you think we saw such sloppy redactions in these files?
SK: I think you saw the sloppiness because of the lack of focus on what was important, and that was the victims.
I think unfortunately, the current Department of Justice has a focus on something different than victims and helping victims and prosecuting bad people that victimize these young girls. Their focus instead appears to be on the important people — powerful people — that are contained within these files and protecting them instead of protecting, who needs the protection, the young victims in this case.
JW: You’re talking about someone who was abused at 14 years old, and I guess my question for you is just what does that re-traumatization look like when you’re publicly outed in this way?
SK: It’s awful. It’s absolutely devastating. This is a young lady, for example, that chose to remain anonymous and wanted to move on with her life. And because of the drip of information over the last 20 years with respect to Epstein, she hasn’t been able to move on with her life. She is now someone who is in her thirties and has a family of her own. And really does not want to have to look back at this dramatic and awful period of her life. And remaining anonymous allowed her to do that. And unfortunately the federal government is re-traumatizing these victims by making them have to go back through this awful period.
JW: Spencer, you’ve been working on this case for roughly 20 years. Can you give us some of the background, particularly on the sweetheart deal that Epstein got originally?
SK: Yeah, so I started working on these cases when victim number one, the first victim to go to the police in Palm Beach, walked into my office and needed help because she had, along with her parents, reported what had happened to her at Epstein’s home. And that really started the snowball of this entire investigation for all of the future victims that came forward in the FBI investigation.
But what it started as was a local investigation by the town of Palm Beach, and Joe Recarey was the lead officer that I met with during that initial investigation. It was only after the state attorneys in Palm Beach refused to prosecute this case that it ended up at the FBI and the Southern District of Florida.
Then the FBI took over this case and started the prosecution and had an indictment that we now see that they’ve revealed unsealed that had almost 50 counts against Epstein and other potential co-conspirators that they shelved. And they shelved it because they entered into an awful, awful sweetheart deal with Epstein at the time.
That Epstein sweetheart deal was never provided to the victims. As an attorney on behalf of one of the victims, I had to fight in court just to see the crappy deal that they had entered into with Epstein and the immunity that they had given others. And that fight lasted a year in the litigation before I was able to even see it. And then once I saw it, I realized why they didn’t want anyone to see it because it was such an awful deal.
JW: There are some truly horrifying allegations inside of these files, but so far there haven’t been any high-profile arrests or charges brought. I think you’re uniquely qualified to speak on this. What does justice look like here for the victims, and is it going to have to come from outside of the legal system?
SK: That’s a good question and a very difficult one. In handling these types of cases, specifically the Epstein cases over the last 20 years, I get a lot of calls that are just not credible.
And unfortunately there is a mental health crisis in the United States and unfortunately, some of the people that have some issues will call in and make allegations that just factually don’t hold water. Having said that, there are a lot of very valid tips that deal with individuals. So the FBI just seemed to categorize all of the tips that came in as not credible without even investigating them. And that’s a problem.
In addition to that, Epstein entered into the sweetheart deal with the federal government as a result of the initial prosecution here in West Palm Beach in South Florida. And when they did that there were four co-conspirators that were clearly named in that agreement.
Four people that the federal government knew had assisted in the sex trafficking that Epstein was involved in. And by the way, one of those four was not Ghislaine Maxwell. She was not even named in the sweetheart deal at all. Most people don’t realize that there were four other people, four other women, that were part of this conspiracy that have never been prosecuted to the state.
So the victims want them prosecuted. That’s number one. There is enough information to prosecute those people and bring them to justice. Number two, they want this information out in the public so that the public can then see the full extent of this heinous operation that was going on for years. And then judge who they want to be running these important companies, corporations, in politics and whatnot, and have the public judge them for what they did, or what they didn’t do, and then have them be held publicly accountable.
JW: I want to talk about these redactions again and the ways in which powerful people have been shielded as you’ve been just discussing now. Members of Congress were able to view the unredacted files this week. Before we get into some of the shocking revelations, I just wanted to ask you about the use of redactions to protect powerful people within the files and what you make of that, and what the women that you represent make of that.
“How do we hold the Department of Justice accountable for breaking federal law? … [W]ithout a penalty clause in the law, the only way to do that is contempt of Congress.”
SK: It breaks the law. It violates federal law. The Department of Justice broke the law, and they are continuing to break the law. Make no question about this. The Epstein Transparency Act is very clear. You can read it. It is only about two pages long, and it states that no redactions shall be made for the purpose of merely embarrassment or protecting important or powerful people. In addition, it gives a deadline for the full disclosure of records. Both of those things have been violated by the Department of Justice.
The question really is just accountability at this point. How do we hold the Department of Justice accountable for breaking federal law? That’s a quandary that unfortunately, or fortunately, our country has not had to deal with yet. But right now we have to figure out a way to be able to hold the Department of Justice accountable. And I think legally speaking right now without a penalty clause in the law, the only way to do that is contempt of Congress.
JW: So on Tuesday, representative Ro Khanna revealed the names of these six, powerful, wealthy men, whose names had previously been redacted in the files. Those names included billionaire, former Victoria’s Secret owner Les Wexner and Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem. What did those new names add to our understanding of Epstein and his world?
SK: I can tell you Les Wexner name was connected with Jeffrey Epstein, even back during the original prosecution of these cases I was involved in 2007. We were well aware of Epstein’s connections with Wexner, and he was on our witness list as somebody, as a person of interest, that needed to be talked to or subpoenaed for a deposition.
Now the case is resolved before we got to that point. But the connection was clear even back then, and I think there were stories that came out in the news dating back into the late 2000s that identifies that connection.
The other wealthy, important and powerful people who were out outed in some of these records that shows the world the breadth —the true worldwide breadth —of Epstein’s conspiracy and sex trafficking. And I think that there was a lot of rumor that had circulated for years, and people would call other individuals who would talk about those rumors as conspiracy theorists and crazy. And, you’re making up crazy stories.
What we’re seeing with these documents is that that is the reality that wealthy and powerful men around the world were trading young girls like trading cards.
JW: I should note here that Wexner’s legal representative issued a statement saying “The Assistant U.S. Attorney told Mr. Wexner’s legal counsel in 2019 that Mr. Wexner was neither a co-conspirator nor target in any respect. Mr. Wexner cooperated fully by providing background information on Epstein and was never contacted again.”
I just want to get into the conspiracy element of this because I think it’s important. There’s been so much talk about how these files have validated conspiracy theories, like QAnon, but in my opinion, there’s been far less discussion about the ways in which these files have validated the accounts of women who were abused by Epstein as children and have been speaking about it, frankly, for years.
What would it have meant to listen to these women when they spoke out instead of waiting for a trove of government documents?
SK: Huge. It’s huge from an emotional standpoint a victim goes through a huge emotional trauma just reporting what she has been through or he has been through. Latest government statistics show that one out of every three women, literally, if you are in the room with three women, one of them was likely subjected to some kind of sexual trauma in their life, and one out of every five men, by the way, also according to government statistics.
“A victim goes through a huge emotional trauma just reporting what she has been through or he has been through.”
And what happens is that these young women, for example, in this case, that report this, when they’re met with denials, accusations, attacks, all it does is drive them deeper into a depression because they know the truth. I think what it teaches us as a society is that we have to believe victims and what they’re telling us because it takes a huge amount of bravery to even come forward and report these types of things.
I think that if that had occurred, if people had believed victims, then they would’ve been able to work through the healing process. Part of what I do as an advocate for victims in the civil arena is I listen to victims and I believe them.
I then fight for them based upon that belief. And just that alone can help a victim knowing that there is someone out there that’s fighting for them, believing in them, and wanting to get them justice. So being a part of the system and finding an advocate for them that is a very significant thing.
Look at, for example, Virginia Giuffre. She, for years, for years had been called a liar. And we are now seeing the absolute proof that everything she was telling us was true. She may not have unfortunately committed suicide had she been able to be believed and supported as a true victim.
[Break]
JW: I want to turn towards Donald Trump because obviously he casts a large shadow over the story. On Tuesday, Maryland Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin claimed that Donald Trump appears in the Epstein files more than a million times. He also said that Trump never asked Jeffrey Epstein to leave Mar-a-Lago as he previously claimed. What is your response to these revelations?
SK: I think it’s important to look at these documents within the context of what they are and the timeframe within which they were gathered. These documents were gathered after the FBI began their operation, which was around 2007. We know historically that Epstein and Trump were friends. He’s admitted that, and they were friends for years. But that friendship predated a lot of this investigation.
So a lot of the information we’re seeing in these files is after the 2007 period when the investigation began. What we’re not seeing is the extent of that relationship and what Trump may or may not have done with Jeffrey Epstein before 2007. We know because we’ve seen videos of them at parties and socializing together. He admitted that he knew that he liked young girls. And Trump now is trying to obviously distance himself as far as he can from Jeffrey Epstein.
But the reality is that there was a close connection, there was a good friendship. They did go to parties together. And this is something that the FBI never fully investigated. And unfortunately, given the fact that Trump is now the President and it seems as though he has a tight grip on the Department of Justice, I don’t know that there will be a full and complete investigation of his activities.
JW: I think Donald Trump complicates this story in so many ways because at its core, this is a story about the violent sexual exploitation of children, and we have to hold space for that. But it’s also a political story because of Donald Trump’s involvement. So I guess, how do you think about holding space for what these women have gone through as children, while also acknowledging the politics involved here?
SK: Yeah, I agree with you. I think that politics definitely complicates the issue, but we have to remember that Donald Trump is the one that actually brought this to the forefront. We have to thank him to a certain extent because during his campaign he made this a major issue as part of his campaign that he was going to release this information.
It was only after he was elected and realized what was actually in those documents, that he then started backpedaling on the release of information to the general public. Politics always complicates truth because politicians seem to have a very difficult time just being truthful with the general public.
We have to always remember that the Department of Justice is supposed to be neutral. They are not supposed to be a political arm of any political party, whether it be Democrats or Republicans. Unfortunately, Donald Trump has turned our Department of Justice into a political animal, and as we saw, for example, through the testimony of Pam Bondi the other day in front of Congress. The Department of Justice no longer has any credibility as a nonpolitical or apolitical organization. They are political, without a doubt. It is now controlled by the president and the executive branch, and that’s a shame because now victims cannot trust even our own Department of Justice to investigate crimes and do the right thing.
JW: As you’ve just mentioned, Attorney General Pam Bondi testified before the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday. What jumped out to you from that testimony? I wanted to get your thoughts on that.
SK: Everything jumped out, including the Attorney General. It was an absolute embarrassment to our country that the highest ranking law enforcement officer in our country acted like a child.
That is exactly what the Attorney General was doing. She was acting like a child and she was clearly exhibiting pro-political leanings toward the current administration with absolutely no respect for the rule of law or her job, which is to remain neutral, and not favor either political party in any investigation or potential investigation.
And frankly, it was sad to me as a member of one of the branches of government to see a person like our own U.S. attorney general acting in that manner. It was sad and it was an embarrassment.
JW: Can justice be achieved with Pam Bondi as the attorney general? Is there a path towards that?
SK: No, I’m convinced that based upon the performance that she put on the other day, I don’t believe that there’s any way that justice can be accomplished. When we talk about an organization that is now a political arm of the executive branch, I don’t see there’s any possibility that justice can fully be accomplished while she’s in office. I think that if Congress frankly had any integrity whatsoever they would do one of two things, either begin impeachment proceedings against the attorney general, or alternatively hold her in contempt of Congress.
JW: As you pointed out, Pam Bondi, Donald Trump, they all came into office using Epstein’s survivors using the threat of violence against young women to really push a lot of their more authoritarian impulses.
This is historically true, for the Republicans and for conservatives, but particularly true in this moment. Did the Epstein files and the high profile men in Trump world mentioned in the files, plus what we’ve seen from the attorney general, reveal those concerns about violence against young women to be a farce?
SK: I think that what it revealed is the true nature of what politicians do. What politicians do is they find key issues that can separate society or inflame fears or tension within a society in order to trump up votes. I use that analogy and word specifically in this case because that’s exactly what the president did, right?
“What politicians do is they find key issues that can separate society or inflame fears or tension within a society in order to trump up votes.”
It’s exactly what other Congress people did, is that they utilized an inflaming type of language and situation to be able to get votes. And then once they’re in office, they completely retract what they said they were going to do. We see this in all types of enforcement actions when a government wants to move toward a more authoritarian type system where they justify actions through fear.
Be afraid of the illegals. Be afraid of the immigrants. Be afraid of the pedophiles that are in society. We are here to protect you, so you need more police and more military and more authoritarian governments to protect you from all of these bad people, when in reality that’s not what they want. What they want is control.
That’s how they get it is through fear. And I think that the way to combat that is really through truth and not being afraid, but instead standing up to power and questioning them and making them be held accountable in the public eye. And thankfully in a democratic society, we can vote people out of office if they fail to be held up to the standards that we expect of them.
JW: Do you think the American public is waking up to that reality? Because I see people in the streets, particularly in Minneapolis, but in LA throughout the country, really standing up against authoritarian power. And we also see people calling out what’s been now dubbed the Epstein class. These group of people — powerful people — who abuse women, but also, and children, and more broadly abuse our society. Do you think there’s been a wake up in our culture?
SK: I do think that certain people are now coming around to realize that these are not all just conspiracy theories, that there is a lot of truth behind what people have been saying for years about the elite billionaire class and their ploy to control society and the way that they think about the ordinary citizens in the world throughout the world, including the United States. But I also think that there is a certain group of society that looked at, for example, the testimony of Pam Bondi and cheered her on and said, “Wow, she did awesome, she did a great job.” And there are still people that look at what Trump is doing and defend his every action and defend everything he’s saying. So it won’t be until we get to those people that things will really change, right? You need to be able to get on a level where you are communicating with people you disagree with, but you’re discussing facts, not just bullet points, and not just points that are given to them by talking heads on television. You have to have a conversation with people you disagree with in a way that it can be fruitful to both sides to understand where they’re coming from and understand why they think the way they do.
And only then I think, will there be true change. Because otherwise you’re going to continue to have a society that is fractured along a very definitive line. There used to be gray, there used to be a middle, and now there is just team A and team B, and that’s the problem.
JW: A lot of people have called this a coverup, down from the federal government all the way to the local level. Do you see it as a coverup?
SK: 100 percent. From the beginning of this case, the government, both from a state and federal level, have been trying to bury this, cover it up, and avoid any full exposure of the extent of the operation that was involved here, and they’re doing it for many obvious reasons because of all the both political, wealthy, and powerful individuals who were involved with Epstein and knew what was going on with these young women.
“It is a billionaire crowd trying to protect their own.”
So as a result, you’ve got institutions that are controlled by wealthy, powerful politicians and individuals who are trying to cover up potential crimes of other wealthy, powerful politicians and powerful people. So it is a billionaire crowd trying to protect their own.
JW: That’s a really good point and a good point to end on. But just first I wanted to give you a chance if you had any final thoughts that you wanted to share.
SK: I think the most important thing that I want people to remember is that victims need to be heard and victims need to be believed. And as a society, we need to trust what victims are saying first, until evidence shows otherwise, and not immediately accuse people of lying or exaggerating because by trusting them you can at least hear them out. And at least give them the space to talk about what they’re going through. And even if it doesn’t prove to be true, which is frankly only about less than 5 percent of the allegations that come out, according to statistics, but even if it doesn’t, they believe it. And they’re saying it for a reason that they truly believe. Whether they have some kind of issue going on in their life or not, it doesn’t matter. Whether they remember an exact date, it doesn’t matter.
They are going through something emotionally, so we should listen to what they have to say and allow them the space to say it without any judgment or accusation and then get them the help they need.
JW: Thank you, Spencer. That was a really important conversation and I really appreciate you taking the time to share both your point of view and then also the points of view from your clients who deserve to be heard.
SK: Thank you.
JW: Thank you for joining me on The Intercept Briefing.
SK: Thank you so much for having me today.
JW: That does it for this episode.
This episode was produced by Laura Flynn. Sumi Aggarwal is our executive producer. Ben Muessig is our editor-in-chief. Maia Hibbett is our Managing Editor. Chelsey B. Coombs is our social and video producer. Desiree Adib is our booking producer. Fei Liu is our product and design manager. Will Stanton mixed our show. Legal review by David Bralow.
Slip Stream provided our theme music.
This show and our reporting at The Intercept doesn’t exist without you. Your donation, no matter the amount, makes a real difference. Keep our investigations free and fearless at theintercept.com/join.
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Until next time, I’m Jessica Washington.
The post Attorney for Epstein Survivors Warns That Justice Is Impossible With Bondi as AG appeared first on The Intercept.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Charging individuals with loitering and solicitation violations has been a hot button topic across Delaware in recent years. When Attorney General Kathy Jennings mentioned at her department’s Joint Finance Committee hearing an updated loitering and solicitation bill that her office has written, a number of legislators took issue with the fact that they had not been informed of the proposed legislation.
As municipalities across Delaware grapple with the impacts of homelessness and panhandling, a revelation by Attorney General Kathy Jennings that her office has drafted a bill to help address the issue prompted questions and confusion from a number of lawmakers on Wednesday.
During the Department of Justice’s budget presentation before the General Assembly’s Joint Finance Committee (JFC), Jennings said her office had drafted a bill to curb loitering and solicitation – two issues often intertwined with addressing homelessness. She also said she had shared this draft bill with members of leadership in the House and Senate.
The move sparked surprise from a number of members of the JFC, who said they had not been included on any communications about the bill, but have been concerned about similar issues in their own districts.
“I have never heard of it,” State Sen. Laura Sturgeon (D-Brandywine Hundred West) said in response to the draft bill. “I had no idea you all had a bill written that addresses this problem.”
The updated loitering and solicitation bill, which would prohibit individuals from impeding pedestrian and car traffic, comes after years of controversy surrounding anti-panhandling and anti-solicitation laws in the state.
“I’ll make sure you get it,” Jennings said to the 12 lawmakers on the committee, which is tasked with rewriting the governor’s recommended budget and preparing a proposal for the General Assembly to consider in the spring.
Each department head discusses their budget proposal with the panel every February, but the hearings frequently veer into other questions around policy and current events.
Members of the JFC said on Wednesday they have heard repeated concerns from constituents about loitering and panhandling, and that the issues are top of mind for many Delawareans.
At the same time, municipalities across the state have been exploring in recent months whether they can pass an anti-loitering ordinance that would comply with the First Amendment.
The Dover City Council, for example, has divided into factions and is weighing threats of a legal challenge over a proposed ordinance that would prohibit people from stopping and standing on street medians. The city government is set to vote on the measure later this month.
Controversy over these laws at the state level began in mid-2023, when the ACLU of Delaware sued the state and the city of Wilmington over their anti-loitering and anti-solicitation laws, saying the laws violated the First Amendment. That case was settled in early 2024, when Jennings told the state and all its municipalities not to enforce any anti-loitering and anti-solicitation laws they had on the books.
Since then, her department has reportedly encouraged municipalities to rely on other nuisance-related offenses for individuals who are caught loitering, such as trespassing and disorderly conduct.
Passing an updated loitering and solicitation law that does not raise constitutional concerns is one step in the process of solving these quality of life issues, Jennings said. But factors such as addiction, mental health struggles, and a lack of housing are other parts of the problem that must be addressed.
“I don’t think it’s going to solve all the problems of homelessness and people being nuisances and sitting on peoples’ porches and sleeping there,” Jennings told the JFC. “I understand that.”

While members of the JFC expressed dismay on Wednesday that they had not been informed about the drafted bill, members of House and Senate leadership — who Jennings said had been told about the proposal — did not have a concrete response to the legislation.
Senate Majority Leader Bryan Townsend (D-Newark/Glasgow) wrote in a message to Spotlight Delaware that “Yes, the law needs to be rewritten,” while keeping in mind that more supportive housing, drug treatment options, and other efforts are needed to fully address the issues facing communities.
Townsend did not, however, comment specifically on Jennings’ draft bill.
Members of House leadership did not respond to Spotlight Delaware’s request for comment.
The updated loitering and solicitation law, which has not been posted publicly but was obtained by Spotlight Delaware, amends the original law’s language to be more focused on individuals disrupting traffic than on individuals soliciting money or rides.
Mat Marshall, a spokesperson for the DOJ, told Spotlight Delaware the new drafted legislation takes a more “focused scope” to address pedestrian safety issues, instead of wading into First Amendment considerations.
“The problem with the legislation that was challenged in the lawsuit was essentially that it was overly broad in the way that it’s written, and it would have prohibited protected speech,” Marshall said.
For example, the drafted bill replaces the phrase “soliciting rides or business” from the original legislation with “impeding vehicular and bicycle traffic.”
Rep. Stephanie Bolden (D-Wilmington) made her surprise about the bill particularly clear during the hearing on Wednesday.
Bolden, who represents Wilmington’s Eastside, where she said she frequently encounters trespassing and loitering, said she had brought her concerns about the issue to Jennings’ office, but never received an update.

“I think it’s disingenuous that no one has informed me,” Bolden said to the committee. “I’m very sensitive about this situation because I live there on the Eastside, and I want to see the improvements.”
Marshall said the AG’s office has been in conversations with state lawmakers and city officials, like the Wilmington City Council, about the drafting process since work began on drafting an updated bill in late 2024.
He said, specifically, that Jennings’ office has spoken with Rep. Kim Williams (D-Stanton), co-chair of the JFC, about the bill multiple times.
Williams confirmed to Spotlight Delaware that she had inquired about the bill a couple times since late 2024, but said she was surprised to hear on Wednesday that the bill had been drafted. The last update Williams had received, she said, was that the DOJ was facing “roadblocks” with the legislation.
Williams said she did not know what the roadblocks referred to.
In response to legislators’ disappointment that they had not been looped in on communications about the bill, Marshall said it is typical for the DOJ to go directly to House and Senate leadership for communication about certain legislation that has “statewide interest” or focuses on a “major issue.”
Bolden added that she anticipates some lawmakers seeing Jennings’ proposed bill coming into conflict with House Bill 135, sometimes called a “homeless bill of rights,” which aims to protect the rights of unhoused people to use public spaces for congregating and sleeping when they don’t have a shelter bed or permanent housing available.
Rep. Sophie Phillips (D-Christiana) introduced HB 135 to the House of Representatives last May. While several lawmakers refer to the legislation as a homeless bill of rights, Phillips pushes back against the characterization, pointing out that hers is distinct from past years’ bills that were also given that name.
Jennings herself said at the hearing there “most definitely” is tension between the homeless bill of rights and her updated loitering bill.
Bolden, however, said she thinks loitering and homelessness are separate issues, and both bills could work simultaneously.
“I think these things can be addressed and they will work,” she said, “but it has to be from a holistic approach.”
The post AG Jennings talks updated loitering bill, sparks pushback from lawmakers appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.

Why Should Delaware Care?
Both Kent and Sussex counties are designated health care shortage areas, with residents experiencing access barriers. A new proposed ChristianaCare campus located within the Sussex County seat, a town with a population of more than 7,000, could help close that gap.
ChristianaCare, Delaware’s largest health care system, announced Thursday it aims to open a new $65 million campus in Georgetown, marking its first significant entrance into Sussex County, the state’s fastest growing region, but one that is already marked by competition in health care.
The health care system expects its new 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.
It’s not a given, however, as the new facility still requires regulatory approval by Delaware’s Health Resources Board, which provides oversight on plans to expand health care services in order to ensure that they don’t drive up the costs of care for consumers.
Five years ago, that board denied a similar project by local competitor Beebe Healthcare.
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.
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 has enjoyed for decades in Delaware.
“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.”
The health care system says it expects the new campus to occupy 42,000 square feet on the outskirts of Georgetown’s city center. ChristianaCare framed its decision to expand into Georgetown as part of a commitment to serve Delaware’s aging population.
Separately, ChristianaCare announced in July it would spend $865 million to invest in Delaware health facilities across the state. One of those projects was a new cancer center in Middletown as part of its larger expansion into the suburbs south of the C&D Canal.
In a statement to Spotlight Delaware, a spokesperson for ChristianaCare said the project would not rely on the incoming federal dollars and would be part of its $865 million investment.
“We began this process more than a year ago with an in-depth market analysis to better understand the critical health care needs in Sussex County,” the spokesperson said.
ChristianaCare has also made moves out of state, as it looks to expand in the greater region.
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 on the sidelines.
However, late last year the hospital and New Jersey-based Virtua Health terminated a letter of intent they signed this 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 press conference in July.
“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.
For decades, Delaware’s three major health care systems largely fit into geographic monopolies: ChristianaCare serving New Castle County, Bayhealth serving Kent County and Beebe Healthcare serving Sussex County.
Over the last five years, however, a health care arms race has heated up between Bayhealth, Beebe and now TidalHealth, coming up from Salisbury, Md. They have all built or broken ground on major projects in places like Lewes, Milton or Millsboro in recent years.
That comes on the back of a post-COVID population boom in Sussex County. The region is now designated as a “Medically Underserved Area” by the federal government, with projections showing that the population will increase from 237,000 in 2022 to over 361,000 by 2050. The county is also rapidly graying, as the population growth is largely driven by retirees who will demand more health care needs.
The arrival of ChristianaCare, which to date only had primary care offices in Milford and Rehoboth Beach, will bring needed resources, but also new competition to the crowded market. Representatives from Beebe and Bayhealth declined or didn’t respond to a request for comment on ChristianaCare’s plans.
The proposal by ChristianaCare may be the biggest test of the state’s Certificate of Need law in years, especially as the booming Sussex County community is frequently requesting more health care options and Republicans decry the existence of the regulatory oversight.
In 1974, the federal government was trying to tamp down rapidly rising health care costs in America – the cost of hospital stays doubled between 1967 and 1974, and required all states to establish Certificate of Need boards that would review proposed health care facility and equipment expansions, which were thought to be unnecessarily driving up the cost of care.
It was repealed in 1987, but many states chose to continue utilizing such boards. In Delaware, the process was renamed the Certificate of Public Review in 1999 and placed under the Health Resources Board, a 16-member panel that meets monthly to review plans for new health facilities or significant expansions of existing ones.
In 2019, the board was central in a debate over whether to allow Beebe to build a freestanding emergency room in Georgetown. It ultimately denied that project, saying it was too close to Bayhealth’s Milford campus and Nanticoke Hospital in Seaford.
The board was also expected to be critical of plans by Bayhealth to build its own freestanding emergency room in Milton, which led the Dover-based health system to pull its plans.
In the years afterward, state legislators looked at weakening the board’s powers, but the proposals ultimately never proceeded. The cause of repealing the board has become a key topic for Republicans in recent years as health care costs have risen again.
The board has also been more lenient in its post-COVID reviews, however, as health care demand has also markedly grown. Bayhealth ultimately was approved for its Milton ER, and it opened the facility in 2023, while Beebe broke ground in recent months on a Millsboro ER.
The Delaware Health Resources Board is set to meet at 2 p.m. Feb. 26, when the board is likely to acknowledge it has received ChristianaCare’s proposal. No agenda has been posted, but a vote on the ChristianaCare project would likely take place at a later meeting.
Still, members of the public are able to comment.
Get Involved
The Delaware Health Resources Board will meet at 2 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 26, at the Herman M. Holloway Sr. Campus in New Castle. Information about virtual attendance can be found here.
The post ChristianaCare eyes Sussex market with $65M Georgetown campus appeared first on Spotlight Delaware.
The AU summit is an opportunity for decisive action to end the war in Sudan Expert comment LToremark
The upcoming African Union summit is an opportunity for African leaders to reset the union’s role on Sudan and take decisive action to end the war.
The war in Sudan is one of the African Union’s (AU) most consequential failures of political leadership. Sudan has spiralled into the world’s largest humanitarian emergency: two-thirds of the country’s 53 million people now require humanitarian assistance; more than 13.6 million are displaced; and nearly half of the population face severe food insecurity. The level of devastation goes far beyond a conventional civil war.
The upcoming AU summit in Addis Ababa on 14–15 February is an opportunity for decisive AU leadership on Sudan – it must not be missed.
For nearly three years, the AU has struggled to find a coherent political strategy on Sudan. Early diplomacy, normative consistency and broad engagement with partners have proved insufficient. The AU has been reactive, fragmented and increasingly peripheral to competing diplomatic tracks. Internal divisions and a lack of robust enforcement mechanisms has left it unable to secure a ceasefire, protect civilians or generate meaningful leverage over the two warring parties; the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
The election of a new AU Commission (AUC) – the AU’s secretariat and executive branch – last year briefly raised expectations of renewed continental leadership. But little has changed. The renewed push to reopen the AU Liaison Office in Port Sudan – a city controlled by the SAF – and decision to uphold Sudan’s suspension from all AU activities following the 2021 coup have failed to achieve political influence and protect civilians. The suspension has also created structural ambiguity: the AU must still engage the de facto authorities it has formally excluded.
This tension was laid bare when AUC Chair Mahmoud Ali Youssouf’s publicly endorsed the Port Sudan peace initiative. By endorsing a process led by the SAF-aligned administration, Youssouf openly contradicted the AU’s own norms relating to coups and other forms of unconstitutional changes of government (UCGs), thereby weakening the credibility of Sudan’s suspension. Sudanese civil society reacted sharply, interpreting the endorsement as further evidence of bias.
Institutional inconsistency has created space for diplomatic manoeuvring around established norms at precisely the moment when clarity and assertiveness are most needed.
The diplomatic environment surrounding Sudan has become increasingly congested, without a clear centre of gravity. The AU asserts that it alone has the legitimacy to convene Sudanese stakeholders without privileging armed groups or external agendas. Yet it has struggled to consolidate parallel initiatives under an authoritative AU-led process.
The US-led Quad (comprising the US, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt) remains the most influential forum for ceasefire and humanitarian talks. Its influence, however, has frayed as Washington’s attention has shifted elsewhere. Tensions between the UAE and Saudi Arabia have further slowed progress.
The AU-led Quintet (comprising the AU, UN, Arab League, EU and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD)) is designed to unify major multilateral actors around an AU framework. Instead, it has highlighted the AU’s inability to impose coherence across external partners. Coordination problems – including with the Quad – inconsistent engagement and divergent political priorities have prevented it from providing strategic direction. The EU, the AU’s biggest partner, remains divided on strategy and overstretched by crises closer to home. The result is an uncoordinated diplomatic arena that empowers both the SAF and RSF to resist meaningful concessions.
The AU’s internal mechanisms are also struggling to find a coherent approach. An AU high-level panel (HLP) on Sudan was established in January 2024 but it was doomed from the outset. It lacked the political weight to advance its mandate, complicating AU efforts to secure meaningful engagement with Sudanese civilian actors and backing from civil society.
The panel has gradually faded into the background, signalling institutional fatigue and a growing sense within some AU circles that although Sudan is undoubtedly a humanitarian emergency, it is no longer a political priority. This retreat is profoundly misaligned with the scale and urgency of the crisis, and risks further eroding confidence in the AU’s leadership.
The ad hoc presidential committee of the AU’s Peace and Security Council (PSC), led by Uganda, faces similar credibility issues. Kampala is viewed by many Sudanese civilian actors as leaning towards the RSF. Overlaps between the committee and the high-level panel have created competing channels of engagement – and another obstacle for AU effectiveness.
Egypt’s role further complicates an already fragmented AU response. Cairo is widely perceived by Sudanese civilian and political actors as aligned with the SAF. Egypt is currently the chair of the AU PSC and has made a renewed push to reintegrate Sudan into the AU – after unsuccessful attempts during its previous stint as chair in October 2024. The PSC statement following its 12 February ministerial meeting on Sudan reinforces concerns that council deliberations are being shaped by regional power plays rather than adherence to AU norms. By referring to SAF as the ‘transitional government of Sudan’, the council has effectively moved to legitimize one side of the conflict.
Egyptian officials are also reportedly advocating for Kamal Idris, prime minister of the SAF-aligned administration, to attend the upcoming AU summit. Such moves risk further eroding confidence in PSC neutrality at a moment when assertive leadership and collective resolve are urgently needed.
The 2026 AU summit presents a narrow but critical window to reset the continental response. Without decisive action, Sudan risks irreversible fragmentation: de facto regional administrations could consolidate, national institutions could collapse entirely, and cross-border spillovers could intensify.
A reset requires a minimum of three urgent steps. First, the AU must reassert its primacy and enforce diplomatic coherence. It must consolidate all diplomatic tracks under a unified continental strategy to ensure alignment with its decisions on Sudan. The AU should support the Quad’s ceasefire and humanitarian negotiations and propose linking these efforts to an AU-led political process. This would help prevent parallel diplomacy from diluting leverage.
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In the second and third quarters of 2025, the U.S. economy grew at its fastest pace in two years. Those growth rates were not “numbers unheard of,” or figures the U.S. “never had” before, as President Donald Trump has claimed.
In addition, economic experts told us that federal data do not support Trump’s claim that there was economic “stagflation” during the Biden administration and “the complete opposite” during Trump’s first year back in office. Inflation was high during much of Joe Biden’s presidency, but economic growth was not stagnant, another key indicator of stagflation, the experts said.
They also said that Trump’s tariff policies likely hindered economic growth, rather than helped spur it, as the president has suggested.
Trump made those claims while touting the U.S. economy in recent speeches and remarks, as well as in a late January opinion piece written for the Wall Street Journal.
During a Jan. 27 speech in Iowa, Trump said, “So, under my leadership, economic growth is exploding to numbers unheard of. They’ve never had them before.”
He later said in an interview with NBC News on Feb. 4, “We have low inflation and we have tremendous growth. You haven’t had these numbers like this.”
And when claiming to have achieved “unprecedented” growth numbers in a Jan. 29 Cabinet meeting at the White House, Trump said that if not for the 43-day federal government shutdown last fall, “we would have picked up about a point and a half more than [the] already high numbers, record setting numbers.”
While the U.S. economy grew significantly in the second and third quarters of 2025, according to the most recent data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the numbers did not set records, as Trump claimed.
After declining by an annualized rate of 0.6% in the first quarter of 2025, which covers the three months from January to March, real gross domestic product (meaning it has been adjusted for inflation) grew at an annualized rate of 3.8% in the second quarter of 2025 and at a rate of 4.4% in the third quarter. Those were the largest quarterly increases since the third quarter of 2023, under Biden, when the economy expanded at an annualized rate of 4.7%, according to BEA estimates.
The record for quarterly growth is 34.9% in the third quarter of 2020, which happened right after the economy shrunk by 28% at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The pre-pandemic quarterly growth record is 16.7% in the first quarter of 1950, according to BEA quarterly data going back to 1947.
On several occasions, Trump has said that fourth quarter growth is projected to be 5.4%, a figure that he has attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank in Atlanta. But that projection is now out of date.
Throughout much of January, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s GDPNow model was projecting growth of 5.4% for the fourth quarter of 2025. Then, on Jan. 29, the projection lowered to 4.2%, and, as of Feb. 10, it was down again, to 3.7% projected growth.
The BEA is scheduled to release its advanced estimate of GDP for the fourth quarter, and all of 2025, on Feb. 20.
Trump also has claimed that he turned around an economy that had stalled under Biden.
“Under the Biden administration, America was plagued by the nightmare of stagflation, meaning low growth and high inflation, a recipe for misery, failure and decline. But now, after just one year of my policies, we are witnessing the exact opposite – virtually no inflation and extraordinarily high economic growth,” Trump said at a World Economic Forum meeting on Jan. 21.
He repeated the “stagflation” claim in his Jan. 30 opinion piece published in the Wall Street Journal.
But economists told us that the U.S. economy under Biden did not experience stagflation, which has a specific economic meaning.
“It refers to a sustained period of high inflation combined with weak or stagnant real economic growth, typically alongside rising unemployment,” Kyle Handley, a professor of economics at the University of California, San Diego, told us in an email. “By that definition, the U.S. economy during the Biden years does not qualify as stagflation.”
Handley said that the annual inflation rate did “rise sharply” during Biden’s first two years in office. It peaked in June 2022, at 9.1%, before declining dramatically in Biden’s last two years in office.
“However, real GDP growth during the Biden presidency was positive and often above trend, and unemployment remained historically low,” Handley said. “Real GDP grew strongly in 2021 during the post-pandemic recovery, slowed in 2022 as monetary policy tightened, and then re-accelerated in 2023 and 2024. That is not a period of economic stagnation.”
In an infographic from November, the staff of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland wrote that the “last major case” of stagflation in the U.S. “occurred in the mid-1970s, when global crude oil prices surged, triggering widespread rises in other prices and fueling inflation of more than 12 percent and unemployment that peaked at 9 percent.” The infographic said that stagflation — the combination of rising unemployment and inflation, and slowing economic growth all at the same time — was “rare” and “an unusual pattern.”
When we asked about the basis for the president’s stagflation claim, a White House spokesperson told us that “[r]eal wages shrank markedly during the Biden presidency, and growth – once you put aside the early bit of Biden admin when Democrat state officials finally started lifting unscientific and draconian lockdowns – was tepid with inflation at 40-year highs.”
There was a decrease in real wages under Biden, as we’ve written. But the economy grew by well over 2% each year during his administration, and the rate of inflation, while still elevated, was not near a 40-year high when he left office. The 9.1% annual rate in June 2022 was the highest since November 1981. The rate was 3% in Biden’s final 12 months.
The unemployment rate also decreased under Biden, going from 6.4% when he was inaugurated to 4% in his last month, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The average monthly rate for Biden’s presidency was 4.1%, below the historical average.
“You had high inflation, yes, but paired with strong growth and a robust labor market,” Aeimit Lakdawala, an associate professor of economics at Wake Forest University, told us in an email. “That’s just not stagflation by any standard definition of the term.”
He said that Trump’s claim of engineering a complete turnaround from the Biden economy is an overstatement.
“What we’re really seeing is a continuation of trends that were already well underway before Trump took office in January 2025,” Lakdawala said.
He noted that the annual inflation rate had cooled to 3% when Trump’s second term started. It had been as low as 2.4% in September 2024.
“That disinflation happened under Biden, driven largely by the resolution of supply chain issues and Fed monetary policy,” he said, referring to the Federal Reserve. “Under Trump’s second term so far, inflation has averaged about 2.7%. That’s modestly lower, but it’s not a dramatic reversal.”
Although Trump considers the 2.7% annual inflation rate, as of December, to be “very low” or “virtually no inflation,” it is still above the 2% target set by the Federal Reserve. Prices are still increasing, just at a slightly slower pace than before he became president again.
As for economic growth, Lakdawala said that the increase in real GDP has “averaged about 2.5% annualized so far under Trump’s second term, which is solid but actually a touch lower than the 2.9% we saw” in Biden’s last two years as president.
“So characterizing this as ‘extraordinarily high economic growth’ is a stretch,” he said about Trump’s claim. “It’s good growth, roughly in line with where we’ve been.”
The unemployment rate, meanwhile, was 4.3% in January, slightly higher than when Trump took office.
In his Wall Street Journal opinion piece, Trump said that the “entire Trump economic agenda deserves credit for this explosion of growth” — but he specifically gave credit for the country’s “economic success” to his tariff policies.
“We have proven, decisively, that, properly applied, tariffs do not hurt growth — they promote growth and greatness, just as I said all along,” the opinion piece said.

But the experts we consulted told us that the economy likely grew despite the tariffs, not because of them.
“Year-over-year real GDP growth over the past year looks similar to the years immediately preceding the new tariffs,” Handley said. “Outside of the pandemic period, growth has been relatively stable across administrations, which makes it difficult to attribute recent performance to tariffs rather than economic momentum.”
He noted that the tariffs that Trump placed on imported foreign goods last year were not as high as the rates he originally proposed, and that tariff revenue, which did increase significantly in 2025, is still quite small in relation to GDP (about 1% of GDP as of the third quarter of 2025, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis).
“By construction, a policy of that size cannot plausibly explain an increase in aggregate economic growth,” he said.
Lakdawala had a similar take.
“Crediting tariffs for economic growth gets the causation backwards,” he said. “The economics on this is fairly clear and there is broad consensus among economists: tariffs are essentially a tax on imports that raises costs for domestic consumers and businesses. If anything, they’ve been a modest drag on growth, not a driver of it.”
He pointed to an analysis done by the Budget Lab at Yale, a nonpartisan research center, that said that in 2025 tariffs slowed real GDP growth by 0.5 percentage points and increased the unemployment rate by 0.3 percentage points. The Budget Lab estimated that tariffs will reduce real GDP growth by 0.4 percentage points in 2026, and said that “[i]n the long run, the US economy is persistently 0.3% smaller, the equivalent of $100 billion annually in 2025 dollars,” because of tariffs.
“These aren’t catastrophic numbers and the economy is resilient and has absorbed the tariff shock reasonably well,” Lakdawala said. “But they clearly point in the wrong direction for someone trying to credit tariffs with economic success.”
The pro-business Tax Foundation also said that Trump’s imposed tariffs, if the Supreme Court rules that some of them can remain in effect, “will raise $2.0 trillion in revenue from 2026-2035 on a conventional basis and reduce US GDP by 0.5 percent, all before foreign retaliation” from other countries.
The White House told us that, under Trump, the “[a]nnualized rate of inflation has been trending in the mid-twos and GDP growth in Q3 surpassed expectations by over a full point, hitting above 4 percent. Largely driven by the investments we are seeing thanks in part to tariffs.”
But Handley noted that many of the investments touted by Trump are “announcements rather than realized outcomes.”
“Foreign investment commitments do not directly enter GDP, and they often reflect projects planned years in advance,” he said, adding that some of the pledges made by foreign countries and companies “may never come to fruition.”
We’ve already written that Trump’s claim that he has brought in about $18 trillion in investments to the U.S. is exaggerated, according to experts and a White House webpage.
Giacomo Santangelo, a senior lecturer of economics at Fordham University, told us in an interview that consumption is the “largest portion” of GDP, and that people are currently taking on more debt to finance that spending. “That’s what’s driving this economy,” he said.
Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM, wrote in December that the third-quarter growth was due to “[h]ousehold consumption driven by higher-income consumers and AI-related investment,” which he said “accounted for just under 70% of total growth during the [third] quarter.”
In its news release about third-quarter growth in 2025, the BEA said, “The increase in real GDP in the third quarter reflected increases in consumer spending, exports, government spending, and investment.” For the second quarter, the BEA said the increase “primarily reflected a decrease in imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, and an increase in consumer spending.”
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The post Trump Oversells Recent U.S. Economic Growth appeared first on FactCheck.org.
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