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Submission + - Tim Cook's Bad Year Keeps Getting Worse (wsj.com)

fjo3 writes: For Tim Cook, the hits keep coming.

On Friday, President Trump targeted Apple AAPL -3.02%decrease; red down pointing triangle with new demands that the company make iPhones in the U.S., threatening 25% tariffs if the company doesn’t comply. “Rise and shine Tim Cook,” Trump whisperer Laura Loomer posted on X, reminding the Apple CEO he is at the center of the president’s trade bull’s-eye.

That is just one of the threats Cook has confronted in what has appeared to be a no good, very bad year for Apple. Aside from Trump, Cook is facing off against two U.S. judges, European and worldwide regulators, state and federal lawmakers, and even a creator of the iPhone, to say nothing of the cast of rivals outrunning Apple in artificial intelligence.

Each is a threat to Apple’s hefty profit margins, long the company’s trademark and the reason investors drove its valuation above $3 trillion before any other company. Shareholders are still Cook’s most important constituency. The stock’s 25% fall from its peak shows their concern about whether he—or anyone—can navigate the choppy 2025 waters.

Submission + - $TRUMP memecoin dinner for top investors (nzherald.co.nz)

hadleyburg writes: The memecoin launched and promoted by the US president is prompting major, first-of-their-kind ethics questions.

Transparency International's "Corruption Perceptions Index" ranked the US 28th as of 2024. It is difficult to see how developments in 2025 would show an improvement.

Submission + - A fungus that can eat your from the inside out may spread due to rising temps (cnn.com)

quonset writes: Climate change is generally looked at it terms of rising sea levels and excess heat. As summers become hotter, more people will die. However, something overlooked is that as tempreatures rise, so will the spread of pathogens which are now relegated to specific zones. A recent study, not yet peer reviewed, found that Aspergillus flavus, which prefers warm, tropical areas, has the potential to spread northward. This particular fungus infects the lungs causing aspergillosis and if not treated, effectively eats the person from the inside out.

“Fungi are relatively under-researched compared to viruses and parasites, but these maps show that fungal pathogens will likely impact most areas of the world in the future,” said Norman van Rijn, one of the study’s authors and a climate change and infectious diseases researcher at the University of Manchester.

Aspergillosis has very high mortality rates at around 20% to 40%, he said. It’s also very difficult to diagnose, as doctors don’t always have it on their radar and patients often present with fevers and coughs, symptoms common to many illnesses.

Fungal pathogens are also becoming increasingly resistant to treatment, van Rijn added. There are only four classes of antifungal medicines available.

This all spells bad news as the climate shifts open up new areas for Aspergillus to colonize.

This species can cause severe infections in humans and is resistant to many antifungal medications. It also infects a range of food crops, posing a potential threat to food security. The World Health Organization added Aspergillus flavus to its critical group of fungal pathogens in 2022 because of its public health impact and antifungal resistance risk.

Submission + - Amazon Cancels The Wheel of Time Prime Video Series After 3 Seasons (deadline.com)

SchroedingersCat writes: Prime Video will not be renewing The Wheel of Time for a fourth season according to Deadline article. The decision, which comes more than a month after the Season 3 finale was released April 17, followed lengthy deliberations. As often is the case in the current economic environment, the reasons were financial as the series is liked creatively by the streamer’s executives. The Season 3 overall performance was not strong enough compared to the show’s cost for Prime Video to commit to another season and the streamer could not make it work after examining different scenarios and following discussions with lead studio Sony TV, sources said.

Submission + - MCP will be built into Windows to make an 'agentic OS'

An anonymous reader writes: MCP will be built into Windows to make an ‘agentic OS’ but security will be a key concern

“Microsoft’s Build developer conference is under way in Seattle, where the company has revealed plans to make the Model Context Protocol (MCP) a native component of Windows, despite concerns over the security of the fast-expanding MCP ecosystem.”

Submission + - Microsoft Says Its Aurora AI Can Accurately Predict Air Quality, Typhoons (techcrunch.com)

An anonymous reader writes: One of Microsoft’s latest AI models can accurately predict air quality, hurricanes, typhoons, and other weather-related phenomena, the company claims. In a paper published in the journal Nature and an accompanying blog post this week, Microsoft detailed Aurora, which the tech giant says can forecast atmospheric events with greater precision and speed than traditional meteorological approaches. Aurora, which has been trained on more than a million hours of data from satellites, radar and weather stations, simulations, and forecasts, can be fine-tuned with additional data to make predictions for particular weather events.

AI weather models are nothing new. Google DeepMind has released a handful over the past several years, including WeatherNext, which the lab claims beats some of the world’s best forecasting systems. Microsoft is positioning Aurora as one of the field’s top performers — and a potential boon for labs studying weather science. In experiments, Aurora predicted Typhoon Doksuri’s landfall in the Philippines four days in advance of the actual event, beating some expert predictions, Microsoft says. The model also bested the National Hurricane Center in forecasting five-day tropical cyclone tracks for the 2022-2023 season, and successfully predicted the 2022 Iraq sandstorm.

While Aurora required substantial computing infrastructure to train, Microsoft says the model is highly efficient to run. It generates forecasts in seconds compared to the hours traditional systems take using supercomputer hardware. Microsoft, which has made the source code and model weights publicly available, says that it’s incorporating Aurora’s AI modeling into its MSN Weather app via a specialized version of the model that produces hourly forecasts, including for clouds.

Submission + - KU Leuven researchers develop method to permanently disable HIV virus (belganewsagency.eu)

nrosier writes: Researchers at KU Leuven have developed a method to render HIV viruses permanently harmless. The research was published on Thursday in the scientific journal Nature Communications.

Currently, 600,000 people worldwide still die from HIV infection every year. However, thanks to antiretroviral drugs, patients' quality of life has improved significantly and the number of new infections has fallen dramatically. However, as the medication only suppresses the virus, patients must take it for life.

Researchers at KU Leuven have now discovered a way to disable the virus completely in cells in a laboratory environment. Professor of molecular medicine Zeger Debyser describes this as a "scientific breakthrough". "Much clinical research is still needed before a new treatment can be developed, but this is already a big step forward."

Submission + - Pausing AI Developments Isn't Enough. We Need to Shut it All Down (time.com)

fjo3 writes: Many researchers steeped in these issues, including myself, expect that the most likely result of building a superhumanly smart AI, under anything remotely like the current circumstances, is that literally everyone on Earth will die. Not as in “maybe possibly some remote chance,” but as in “that is the obvious thing that would happen.”

Submission + - UK veterans minister used Xenon in Germany to prepare to climb Everest (telegraph.co.uk)

Bruce66423 writes: 'A British minister was part of a record-breaking climbing party that reached the summit of Mount Everest in five days.

'Al Carns, the veterans minister, was in a group of ex-British Special Forces soldiers who flew the Union flag on the summit on Wednesday.

'An ascent usually takes around two months with traditional acclimatisation methods, but Mr Carns and his team used xenon gas to help with their acclimatisation.'

Nepal is unhappy because it will reduce the time climbers will spend in the country, but is claiming that it is 'dangerous'.

Submission + - Infrared Contact Lenses Allow People To See In the Dark, Even With Eyes Closed (phys.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Neuroscientists and materials scientists have created contact lenses that enable infrared vision in both humans and mice by converting infrared light into visible light. Unlike infrared night vision goggles, the contact lenses, described in the journal Cell, do not require a power source — and they enable the wearer to perceive multiple infrared wavelengths. Because they're transparent, users can see both infrared and visible light simultaneously, though infrared vision was enhanced when participants had their eyes closed. [...] The contact lens technology uses nanoparticles that absorb infrared light and convert it into wavelengths that are visible to mammalian eyes (e.g., electromagnetic radiation in the 400–700 nm range). The nanoparticles specifically enable the detection of "near-infrared light," which is infrared light in the 800–1600 nm range, just beyond what humans can already see.

The team previously showed that these nanoparticles enable infrared vision in mice when injected into the retina, but they wanted to design a less invasive option. To create the contact lenses, the team combined the nanoparticles with flexible, nontoxic polymers that are used in standard soft contact lenses. After showing that the contact lenses were nontoxic, they tested their function in both humans and mice. They found that contact lens-wearing mice displayed behaviors suggesting that they could see infrared wavelengths. For example, when the mice were given the choice of a dark box and an infrared-illuminated box, contact-wearing mice chose the dark box whereas contact-less mice showed no preference. The mice also showed physiological signals of infrared vision: the pupils of contact-wearing mice constricted in the presence of infrared light, and brain imaging revealed that infrared light caused their visual processing centers to light up. In humans, the infrared contact lenses enabled participants to accurately detect flashing morse code-like signals and to perceive the direction of incoming infrared light.

An additional tweak to the contact lenses allows users to differentiate between different spectra of infrared light by engineering the nanoparticles to color-code different infrared wavelengths. For example, infrared wavelengths of 980 nm were converted to blue light, wavelengths of 808 nm were converted to green light, and wavelengths of 1,532 nm were converted to red light. In addition to enabling wearers to perceive more detail within the infrared spectrum, these color-coding nanoparticles could be modified to help color-blind people see wavelengths that they would otherwise be unable to detect. [...] Because the contact lenses have limited ability to capture fine details (due to their close proximity to the retina, which causes the converted light particles to scatter), the team also developed a wearable glass system using the same nanoparticle technology, which enabled participants to perceive higher-resolution infrared information. Currently, the contact lenses are only able to detect infrared radiation projected from an LED light source, but the researchers are working to increase the nanoparticles' sensitivity so that they can detect lower levels of infrared light.

Submission + - People should know about the "beliefs" LLMs form about them while conversing (theatlantic.com)

JonZittrain writes: Following on the bridge-obsessed Golden Gate Claude, colleagues at Harvard's Insight+Interaction Lab have produced a dashboard that shows what judgments Llama appears to be forming about a user's age, wealth, education level, and gender during a conversation. I wrote up how weird it is to see the dials turn while talking to it, and what some of the policy issues might be.

What Viégas and her colleagues found were not only features inside the model that lit up when certain topics came up, such as the Golden Gate Bridge for Claude. They found activations that correlated with what we might anthropomorphize as the model’s beliefs about its interlocutor. Or, to put it plainly: assumptions and, it seems, correlating stereotypes based on whether the model assumes that someone is a man or a woman. Those beliefs then play out in the substance of the conversation, leading it to recommend suits for some and dresses for others. In addition, it seems, models give longer answers to those they believe are men than to those they think are women.

Viégas and Wattenberg not only found features that tracked the gender of the model’s user; they found ones that tracked socioeconomic status, education level, and age. They and their graduate students built a dashboard alongside the regular LLM chat interface that allows people to watch the model’s assumptions change as they talk with it. If I prompt the model for a gift suggestion for a baby shower, it assumes that I am young and female and middle-class; it suggests diapers and wipes, or a gift certificate. If I add that the gathering is on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, the dashboard shows the LLM amending its gauge of my economic status to upper-class—the model accordingly suggests that I purchase “luxury baby products from high-end brands like aden + anais, Gucci Baby, or Cartier,” or “a customized piece of art or a family heirloom that can be passed down.” If I then clarify that it’s my boss’s baby and that I’ll need extra time to take the subway to Manhattan from the Queens factory where I work, the gauge careens to working-class and male, and the model pivots to suggesting that I gift “a practical item like a baby blanket” or “a personalized thank-you note or card.”


Submission + - Inventwood is about to mass produce wood thats stronger than Steel. (techcrunch.com)

ndsurvivor writes: It sounds like the stuff of science fiction, but it actually comes from a lab in Maryland.

In 2018, Liangbing Hu, a materials scientist at the University of Maryland, devised a way to turn ordinary wood into a material stronger than steel. It seemed like yet another headline-grabbing discovery that wouldn’t make it out of the lab.

“All these people came to him,” said Alex Lau, CEO of InventWood, “He’s like, OK, this is amazing, but I’m a university professor. I don’t know quite what to do about it.”

Rather than give up, Hu spent the next few years refining the technology, reducing the time it took to make the material from more than a week to a few hours. Soon, it was ready to commercialize, and he licensed the technology to InventWood.

Now, the startup’s first batches of Superwood will be produced starting this summer.

“Right now, coming out of this first-of-a-kind commercial plant — so it’s a smaller plant — we’re focused on skin applications,” Lau said. “Eventually we want to get to the bones of the building. Ninety percent of the carbon impact from buildings is concrete and steel in the construction of the building.”

To build the factory, InventWood has raised $15 million in the first close of a Series A round. The round was led by the Grantham Foundation with participation from Baruch Future Ventures, Builders Vision, and Muus Climate Partners, the company exclusively told TechCrunch.

Submission + - FCC Threatens EchoStar Licenses For Spectrum That's 'Ripe For Sharing' (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr has threatened to revoke EchoStar licenses for radio frequency bands coveted by rival firms including SpaceX, which alleges that EchoStar is underutilizing the spectrum. "I have directed agency staff to begin a review of EchoStar's compliance with its federal obligations to provide 5G service throughout the United States per the terms of its federal spectrum licenses," Carr wrote in a May 9 letter to EchoStar Chairman Charles Ergen. EchoStar and its affiliates "hold a large number of FCC spectrum licenses that cover a significant amount of spectrum," the letter said.

Ergen defended his company's wireless deployment but informed investors that EchoStar "cannot predict with any degree of certainty the outcome" of the FCC proceedings. The letter from Carr and Ergen's statement is included in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing submitted by EchoStar today. EchoStar's stock price was down about 8 percent in trading today. EchoStar bought Dish Network in December 2023 and offers wireless service under the Boost Mobile brand. As The Wall Street Journal notes, the firm "has spent years wiring thousands of cellphone towers to help Boost become a wireless operator that could rival AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile, but the project has been slow-going. Boost's subscriber base has shrunk in the five years since Ergen bought the brand from Sprint." [...]

EchoStar will have to prove its case in the two FCC proceedings. The FCC set a May 27 deadline for the first round of comments in both proceedings and a June 6 deadline for reply comments. The proceedings could result in the FCC letting other companies use the spectrum and other remedies. "In particular, we seek information on whether EchoStar is utilizing the 2 GHz band for MSS consistent with the terms of its authorizations and the Commission's rules and policies governing the expectation of robust MSS," the SpaceBureau's call for comments said. "We also seek comment on steps the Commission might take to make more intensive use of the 2 GHz band, including but not limited to allowing new MSS entrants in the band."

Submission + - Student's Robot Obliterates 4x4 Rubik's Cube World Record (bbc.com)

An anonymous reader writes: A student's robot has beaten the world record for solving a four-by-four Rubik's cube – by 33 seconds. Matthew Pidden, a 22-year-old University of Bristol student, built and trained the "Revenger" over 15 weeks for his computer science bachelor's degree. The robot solved the cube in 45.305 seconds, obliterating the world record of 1 minute 18 seconds. However, the human record for solving the cube is 15.71 seconds.

Mr Pidden's robot uses dual webcams to scan the cube, a custom mechanism to manipulate the faces, and a fully self-built solving algorithm to generate efficient solutions. The student now plans to study for a master's degree in robotics at Imperial College London.

Submission + - Why Bell Labs Worked. (Or, how MBA culture killed Bell Labs) (substack.com) 2

jakimfett writes: Apparently, I've been chasing the Bell Labs culture this whole time.

areoform says via Substack that:
"The reason why we don't have Bell Labs is because we're unwilling to do what it takes to create Bell Labs — giving smart people radical freedom and autonomy.

The freedom to waste time. The freedom to waste resources. And the autonomy to decide how."

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