act The Vinyl Factory: Reverb exhibition extended until 22 December By www.factmag.com Published On :: Wed, 18 Sep 2024 12:18:58 +0000 Reverb features new works by Es Devlin and Theaster Gates, plus Devon Turnbull's Listening Room. The post The Vinyl Factory: Reverb exhibition extended until 22 December appeared first on Fact Magazine. Full Article Exhibitions Featured Stories Featured Top Reverb
act Marcus and Dom Voice Actors to Return for Gears of War: E-Day By www.vgchartz.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 20:52:58 GMT Publisher Xbox Game Studios and developer The Coalition have announced John DiMaggio, the voice actor for Marcus Fenix, and Carlos Ferro, the voice actor for Dom Santiago, will reprise their roles for the prequel Gears of War: E-Day. "On today's 18th anniversary of Gears of War, we're proud to share that John DiMaggio and Carlos Ferro are reprising their roles as the iconic voices of Marcus Fenix and Dominic Santiago in Gears of War: E-Day," announced the developer. Gears of War: E-Day is in development for the Xbox Series X|S, PC, and Xbox Game Pass. We are so back. ???????? On today's 18th anniversary of Gears of War, we're proud to share that John DiMaggio and @RealCarlosFerro are reprising their roles as the iconic voices of Marcus Fenix and Dominic Santiago in Gears of War: E-Day. pic.twitter.com/x9uaH9R0sR — Gears of War (@GearsofWar) November 7, 2024 A life-long and avid gamer, William D'Angelo was first introduced to VGChartz in 2007. After years of supporting the site, he was brought on in 2010 as a junior analyst, working his way up to lead analyst in 2012 and taking over the hardware estimates in 2017. He has expanded his involvement in the gaming community by producing content on his own YouTube channel and Twitch channel. You can contact the author on Twitter @TrunksWD.Full Article - https://www.vgchartz.com/article/463012/marcus-and-dom-voice-actors-to-return-for-gears-of-war-e-day/ Full Article Analysis Charts Industry
act Watch Liam Payne’s Phenomenal ‘X-Factor’ Audition That Made Him a Star By www.thedailybeast.com Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2024 22:14:43 GMT YouTube ScreenshotA collective gasp echoed like a thunderclap in a valley in our Daily Beast newsroom late Wednesday afternoon at the news that singer Liam Payne, who became famous as a member of the group One Direction, died at age 31.TMZ reports that Payne fell from a hotel balcony in Argentina, where he had reunited with bandmates at 1D-er Niall Horan’s concert. He had, according to the site, been behaving “erratically,” earlier in the day, and was spotted smashing a laptop in the hotel lobby and having to be carried back to his room. He had been in headlines on gossip blogs over tension with his ex-fiancée Maya Henry, who, TMZ says, alleged “he'd left her after asking her to get an abortion.”In the shock of his death, fans couldn’t ignore the eerie nature that Payne had just connected with his One Direction bandmates. Dark questions emerge when a celebrity dies so young: What role did the often horrific toll of fame have on a person like Payne, who has been open about addiction and suicidal ideation? But there’s also an impulse to go back to the roots of a person’s talent, to revisit what it was that we all fell in love with—and was their passion—in the first place.Read more at The Daily Beast. Full Article
act Slitterhead review: body-hopping action horror that's best left dispossessed By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 11:01:00 +0000 I was excited for Slitterhead, an action adventure game by Bokeh Studio, a studio founded by none other than your boy Keiichiro Toyama: the creator of Silent Hill, Gravity Rush, and the Siren series. And within that first hour, Slitterhead's body-possessing and Hong Kong-inspired streets had me thinking, "Is this it, the sleeper hit of 2024?!" No, sadly not. It's no doubt built a compelling universe filled with brain-sucking aliens that masquerade as humans, and it attempts plenty else besides: bouncing between bodies as you stealth around dingy apartment blocks, fighting with blood katanas, and gorging on pools of red plasma to refuel skills, many of which require more body-flitting. Thing is, they are ultimately just attempts, attempts that fall victim to an emptiness and jitteriness that quickly reveals Slitterhead's true, irritating form. Read more Full Article Horror Bokeh Game Studio PS5 PC Wot I Think Slitterhead Xbox Series X/S Action Adventure
act Baldur’s Gate 3's reactivity didn’t ruin Veilguard's linearity for me - it let me enjoy it more By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Mon, 04 Nov 2024 15:08:15 +0000 Minor spoilers for the first few hours of Veilguard and heavy spoilers for Baldur’s Gate 3 For all the things I ended up enjoying about Dragon Age: The Veilguard, it isn’t much of an RPG. What little roleplaying it does offer revolves around what flavour of supportive hero you prefer, and you can count the number of impactful dialogue decisions on a three-fingered hand. This might sound utterly damning in the wake of Baldur's Gate 3’s incredible reactivity, and if I approached games as some sort of tedious comparative intellectual exercise rather than just, y’know, seeing how I felt about them, then I suppose it would be. Weirdly, though, the recent memory of Baldur’s Gate 3 didn’t diminish my time with Veilguard at all. It was actually the opposite: it freed Dragon Age from having to carry the torch for a certain period in Bioware’s history, and let me enjoy Veilguard for what it was. Read more Full Article Strategy Electronic Arts RPG Dragon Age: The Veilguard Action Adventure Single Player Bioware
act This bite-size free horror game has you study an ancient artefact that holds a dark secret By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:36:52 +0000 I have zero archaeology experience or knowledge, but I bet archaeologists really love their jobs (for the most part). They get to analyse and discover cool artefacts and educate us on the histories of forgotten civilisations. That's dreamy stuff, that is. But I do wonder what it's like for archaeologists to discover and study something they shouldn't have; something with a disturbing secret - a curse, maybe. Bite-sized horror game The Children Of Clay explores this idea and I'd like more of it, please. Read more Full Article Horror The Children Of Clay Indie PC Balazs Ronyai Point and Click Free-to-play
act Factorio: Space Age review: a stellar expansion produces a masterful final form By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 15:00:00 +0000 To say that Factorio: Space Age throws out the rulebook is an understatement. It'd be more fitting to say it's somehow automated the whole process: an inserter plucked out the rulebook from my brain and deposited it in hot magma, while a new rulebook was churned out in a nearby machine and plopped into my brain from the other side - only for that to be immediately plucked out and incinerated as well. With each new planet and each new phase, Space Age reinvents itself. I'm battling hyperbole here, but ah hell, I admit defeat. Factorio: Space Age is a masterpiece, the final form of perhaps the most well-crafted building game I'll ever play. Read more Full Article Strategy Indie Wube Software Simulation Multiplayer Competitive Multiplayer Cooperative PC Bird view / Isometric Single Player Factorio
act Metal Slug Tactics, the surprising genre-twist of the classic run-and-gunner, is out now By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 20:34:43 +0000 I would never have predicted there'd be an isometric tactics game based on run-and-gun series Metal Slug, yet here Metal Slug Tactics is, and I am here for it. We've been following its development for a while but it's out now on Steam, and seemingly as strong as its demo suggested. Read more Full Article Fighting Strategy Nintendo Switch Indie PC Leikir Studio Metal Slug Tactics RPG Bird view / Isometric Single Player DotEmu
act Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater will have new dialogue, and EVA’s actor reveals why she chose a pseudonym based on her pet dog By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 09:14:28 +0000 Putting aside my natural annoyance at Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater for almost beating out the Twarhammer series in the headline real estate wars, I am more than a little excited to play. Some days, you simply must feast on a tree frog, and while we still don’t have a solid release date, that day doesn’t feel too far away. Good news for stealth fans, and perhaps gooder news for a dozen strapline writers sweating profusely, soiling themselves in anticipation of using “kept you waiting, huh?”. Until then, I at least have a steady drip feed of new information to keep me sated, the latest of which is the substantial hint that there'll be some new dialogue in the game, as per the video below. Alongside that, the previously pseudonymous Suzetta Miñet - who was credited with voicing EVA in MGS3 and Peace Walker - has revealed herself to be Jodi Benson, the voice of Ariel in Disney’s The Little Mermaid. Cheers for the spot, Automaton West. Read more Full Article Single Player Konami Third person PS5 PC Stealth Shooter Xbox Series X/S Action Adventure Metal Gear Solid Delta: Snake Eater
act The Raid homage Acts Of Blood is Sifu’s jankier, snackier cousin By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 09:35:13 +0000 Calling a game ‘no frills’ or ‘no nonsense’ is always a back-handed compliment, because it sounds like you're saying it's a bit straightforward and simple. And yes, that’s exactly what I’m saying here. Acts Of Blood feels like a spiffy PS2 action brawler; a slightly tighter old Yakuza game, or a stripped-back Sifu. It’s snacky and a bit janky, but it’s also great coffee break fodder, assuming you want to spend your break breaking a selection of heavy objects over the crumbly skulls of ne’er-do-wells. I mean, they might have done some things well, I don’t know them. But they aren’t doing any well to my character in the game, so violence it is. Read more Full Article Fighting PC Indiescovery Arcade Acts Of Blood
act The Warframe devs want you to come try their luxurious fantasy action-RPG Soulframe By www.rockpapershotgun.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 18:09:24 +0000 Warframe developers Digital Extremes have announced a new round of early access for their 2025-bound fantasy action-RPG Soulframe, which I saw a bit of last year and think is pretty promising. They're now adding 2000 players to a Preludes build of the game every week, with each invite email including an additional four invite codes, so you can get your friends involved. Read more Full Article MMORPG Third person PC RPG Soulframe Digital Extremes
act News Wrap: Sessions insists he didn’t lie about Russian contacts to Senate By www.pbs.org Published On :: Wed, 18 Oct 2017 22:45:56 +0000 Watch Video | Listen to the AudioHARI SREENIVASAN: In the day’s other news: Attorney General Jeff Sessions insisted he never lied to the Senate Judiciary Committee about his conversations with the Russian ambassador during the presidential campaign. At a hearing today, he bridled at Democratic Senator Al Franken’s accusation that he’d — quote — “moved the goalposts” on the nature of his discussions. SEN. AL FRANKEN, D-Minn.: First it was, I didn’t have communications with Russians, which wasn’t true. Then it was, I never met with any Russians to discuss any political campaign, which may or may not be true. Now it’s, I didn’t discuss interference in the campaign. JEFF SESSIONS, Attorney General: Well, let me just say without hesitation, that I conducted no improper discussions with the Russians at any time regarding the campaign or any other item facing this country. HARI SREENIVASAN: Sessions has recused himself from the Justice Department’s investigation into Russia’s election meddling. President Trump had new criticism today for former FBI Director James Comey over the Hillary Clinton e-mail probe. He complained again that Comey decided to clear Clinton before she was even interviewed. That’s based on newly released draft statements by Comey from May of 2016. FBI officials say it was already clear that no charges were warranted. On another issue, the president faced fallout over the death of Army Sergeant La David Johnson in Niger this month. Congresswoman Frederica Wilson says she was with Mrs. Johnson when the president called. The Florida Democrat told The Washington Post that Mr. Trump said — quote — “He knew what he was signing up for, but I guess it hurts anyway.” The sergeant’s mother confirmed it, but the president denied it, and White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders went after Wilson. SARAH SANDERS, White House Press Secretary: This is a president who loves our country very much, who has the greatest level of respect for men and women in uniform and wanted to call and offer condolences to the family, and I think to try to create something from that, that the congresswoman is doing, is, frankly, appalling and disgusting. HARI SREENIVASAN: The Post also reported on another incident today. It quoted the father of a soldier killed in Afghanistan as saying the president offered $25,000 from his personal account, but never followed through. We will get more detail on all of this after the news summary. The death toll in Northern California’s wildfires rose to 42 today. Officials in Sonoma County found the remains of the latest victim, as they searched hundreds of burned homes. Meanwhile, fire crews made new gains overnight with the help of cooler weather and low winds. A two-time Olympic medalist says the former team doctor for U.S. women’s gymnastics sexually abused her for years. McKayla Maroney is the highest profile athlete to come forward in the scandal. In a statement today, she said Dr. Larry Nassar began molesting her when she was just 13. He’s awaiting sentencing on a child pornography charge, but has denied any sexual abuse. More questions tonight about drug pricing. A new study finds the costs of injectable cancer drugs, approved since 1996, rose an average of 25 percent over eight years. That’s far higher than the rate of inflation. The study was based at Emory University and published in “The Journal of Clinical Oncology.” And on Wall Street, health insurers and IBM fueled a surge in stocks today. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 160 points, more than half-a-percent, to close above 23000 for the first time. The Nasdaq rose just a fraction, and the S&P 500 was up two points. The post News Wrap: Sessions insists he didn’t lie about Russian contacts to Senate appeared first on PBS NewsHour. Full Article james comey jeff sessions senate judiciary committee
act Huge asteroid impact may have knocked over Jupiter's largest moon By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 03 Sep 2024 11:00:08 +0100 Ganymede, the largest moon in the solar system, has signs of an enormous ancient impact that would have redistributed its mass, changing its orientation in relation to Jupiter Full Article
act We finally know exactly how dark deep space is By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 03 Sep 2024 23:00:58 +0100 A faint glow from all of the galaxies that have ever existed fills the cosmos, and NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has made the best measurement ever of just how faint it is Full Article
act Bacteria on the space station are evolving for life in space By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 20 Sep 2024 07:00:20 +0100 Genetic analysis shows that microbes growing inside the International Space Station have adaptations for radiation and low gravity, and may pose a threat to astronauts Full Article
act ESA prepares Hera mission to investigate aftermath of NASA DART impact By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Feb 2024 11:48:51 +0000 The European Space Agency's Hera spacecraft must be thoroughly tested before being sent to investigate the aftermath of the collision of NASA's DART probe with Dimorphos Full Article
act Chinese nuclear reactor is completely meltdown-proof By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 19 Jul 2024 17:56:39 +0100 The first ever full-scale demonstration of a nuclear reactor designed to passively cool itself in an emergency was a success, showing that it should be possible to build nuclear plants without the risk of dangerous meltdown Full Article
act Millions of websites could be impacted by UK deal on Chagos Islands By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2024 11:15:40 +0100 The UK government's decision to return the Chagos Islands to Mauritius surprisingly threatens the extinction of millions of website addresses ending in ".io", and no one is quite sure what will happen next Full Article
act How 'quantum software developer' became a job that actually exists By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2024 18:57:35 +0100 While quantum computers are still in their infancy, more and more people are training to become quantum software developers Full Article
act Why Do People Hate This Minor Character Actress From Anora? By www.vulture.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:45:21 GMT Or, for the other half of you: Here Is Our Ivy Wolk Explainer. Full Article anora ivy wolk news sean baker neon movies film controversy twitter english teacher know this
act How a Robot Is Grabbing Fuel From a Fukushima Reactor By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Mon, 07 Oct 2024 12:00:02 +0000 Thirteen years since a massive earthquake and tsunami struck the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in northern Japan, causing a loss of power, meltdowns and a major release of radioactive material, operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) finally seems to be close to extracting the first bit of melted fuel from the complex—thanks to a special telescopic robotic device. Despite Japan’s prowess in industrial robotics, TEPCO had no robots to deploy in the immediate aftermath of the disaster. Since then, however, robots have been used to measure radiation levels, clear building debris, and survey the exterior and interior of the plant overlooking the Pacific Ocean. It will take decades to decommission Fukushima Dai-ichi, and one of the most dangerous, complex tasks is the removal and storage of about 880 tons of highly radioactive molten fuel in three reactor buildings that were operating when the tsunami hit. TEPCO believes mixtures of uranium, zirconium and other metals accumulated around the bottom of the primary containment vessels (PCVs) of the reactors—but the exact composition of the material is unknown. The material is “fuel debris,” which TEPCO defines as overheated fuel that has melted with fuel rods and in-vessel structures, then cooled and re-solidified. The extraction was supposed to begin in 2021 but ran into development delays and obstacles in the extraction route; the coronavirus pandemic also slowed work.While TEPCO wants a molten fuel sample to analyze for exact composition, getting just a teaspoon of the stuff has proven so tricky that the job is years behind schedule. That may change soon as crews have deployed the telescoping device to target the 237 tons of fuel debris in Unit 2, which suffered less damage than the other reactor buildings and no hydrogen explosion, making it an easier and safer test bed.“We plan to retrieve a small amount of fuel debris from Unit 2, analyze it to evaluate its properties and the process of its formation, and then move on to large-scale retrieval,” says Tatsuya Matoba, a spokesperson for TEPCO. “We believe that extracting as much information as possible from the retrieved fuel debris will likely contribute greatly to future decommissioning work.”How TEPCO Plans to Retrieve a Fuel SampleGetting to the fuel is easier said than done. Shaped like an inverted light bulb, the damaged PCV is a 33-meter-tall steel structure that houses the reactor pressure vessel where nuclear fission took place. A 2-meter-long isolation valve designed to block the release of radioactive material sits at the bottom of the PCV, and that’s where the robot will go in. The fuel debris itself is partly underwater. The robot arm is being preceded by a smaller telescopic device. The telescopic device, which is trying to retrieve 3 grams of the fuel debris without further contamination to the outside environment, is similar to the larger robot arm, which is better suited for the retrieval of larger bits of debris.Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the International Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissioning and UK-based Veolia Nuclear Solutions developed the robot arm to enter small openings in the PCV, where it can survey the interior and grab the fuel. Mostly made of stainless steel and aluminum, the arm measures 22 meters long, weighs 4.6 tons and can move along 18 degrees of freedom. It’s a boom-style arm, not unlike the robotic arms on the International Space Station, that rests in a sealed enclosure box when not extended. The arm consists of four main elements: a carriage that pushes the assembly through the openings, arm links that can fold up like a ream of dot matrix printer paper, an arm that has three telescopic stages, and a “wand” (an extendable pipe-shaped component) with cameras and a gripper on its tip. Both the arm and the wand can tilt downward toward the target area. After the assembly is pushed through the PCV’s isolation valve, it angles downward over a 7.2-meter-long rail heading toward the base of the reactor. It continues through existing openings in the pedestal, a concrete structure supporting the reactor, and the platform, which is a flat surface under the reactor. Then, the tip is lowered on a cable like the grabber in a claw machine toward the debris field at the bottom of the pedestal. The gripper tool at the end of the component has two delicate pincers (only 5 square millimeters), that can pinch a small pebble of debris. The debris is transferred to a container and, if all goes well, is brought back up through the openings and placed in a glovebox: A sealed, negative-pressure container in the reactor building where initial testing can be performed. It will then be moved to a Japan Atomic Energy Agency facility in nearby Ibaraki Prefecture for detailed analysis.While the gripper on the telescopic device currently being used was able to reach the debris field and grasp a piece of rubble—it’s unknown if it was actually melted fuel—last month, two of the four cameras on the device stopped working a few days later, and the device was eventually reeled back into the enclosure box. Crews confirmed there were no problems with signal wiring from the control panel in the reactor building, and proceeded to perform oscilloscope testing. TEPCO speculates that radiation passing through camera semiconductor elements caused electrical charge to build up, and that the charge will drain if the cameras are left on in a relatively low-dose environment. It was the latest setback in a very long project. “Retrieving fuel debris from Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station is an extremely difficult task, and a very important part of decommissioning,” says Matoba. “With the goal of completing the decommissioning in 30 to 40 years, we believe it is important to proceed strategically and systematically with each step of the work at hand.”This story was updated on 15 October, 2024 to clarify that TEPCO is using two separate tools (a smaller telescopic device and a larger robot arm) in the process of retrieving fuel debris samples. Full Article Nuclear power plant Industrial robotics Robots Radiation Fukushima
act Why you should be using a VPN to safeguard your stock trading activities By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Sat, 26 Oct 2024 08:00:36 -0400 Every stock trader should consider a virtual private network to safeguard their trading, according to tech guru Kurt "CyberGuy" Knutsson. Full Article 249e9ec5-64f0-546f-8978-cdd0f688fb70 fnc Fox News fox-news/tech fox-news/tech/topics/security fox-news/us/personal-freedoms/privacy fox-news/tech/topics/cybercrime fox-news/politics/finance fox-news/us fox-news/us/crime fox-news/tech article
act How VPNs shield your identity and secure your financial transactions from theft By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 10:00:09 -0500 A virtual private network is a service that encrypts your internet connection, ensuring your online activity remains private and secure. Full Article 84af7ed4-6441-5599-8486-c667456675f6 fnc Fox News fox-news/tech fox-news/tech/topics/security fox-news/us/personal-freedoms/privacy fox-news/tech/topics/cybercrime fox-news/tech/topics/hackers fox-news/us fox-news/tech article
act 'Bring on Lampard and Morris!' - Chelsea fans react to reports of Gianfranco Zola exit By www.sport.co.uk Published On :: Sun, 16 Jun 2019 08:20:00 +0000 The Italian is reportedly set to leave Stamford Bridge at the end of his contract.. Full Article
act Exclusive: 'Horrific' impact of third lockdown on schoolchildren's physical and mental health revealed By www.telegraph.co.uk Published On :: Mon, 10 May 2021 10:01:46 GMT Full Article topics:things/exercise topics:in-the-news/uk-coronavirus-lockdown topics:things/childrens-health structure:sport storytype:standard
act Sport governing bodies will have to sign up to 'diversity action plans' but not boardroom targets By www.telegraph.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 01 Jul 2021 21:37:18 GMT Full Article topics:events/premier-league structure:sport storytype:standard
act New study finds 'conclusive' proof contact-sports athletes 68 times more likely to develop CTE By www.telegraph.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 26 Jul 2022 11:42:10 GMT Full Article topics:things/dementia structure:sport storytype:standard
act Exclusive: Liz Truss urged to act with Britain facing biggest loss of sports facilities in a generation By www.telegraph.co.uk Published On :: Mon, 05 Sep 2022 16:57:53 GMT Full Article topics:in-the-news/energy-crisis topics:people/elizabeth-truss structure:sport storytype:standard
act Competition Bureau obtains court order to further investigation into Google’s ad practices By www.itbusiness.ca Published On :: Fri, 01 Mar 2024 20:17:35 +0000 The Competition Bureau has announced that it has expanded its investigation into Google’s online ad practices. This is the first major update to the investigation since it began in 2020, and a year later the competition watchdog obtained a court order from the Federal Courts of Appeal, requiring Google to produce records and written information […] The post Competition Bureau obtains court order to further investigation into Google’s ad practices first appeared on ITBusiness.ca. Full Article Companies Government & Public Sector Competition Bureau Google investigation Top Story
act Study: Cylinder Seals and Sealing Practices Stimulated Invention of Writing in Ancient South-West Asia By www.sci.news Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 19:11:00 +0000 Administrative innovations in south-west Asia during the 4th millennium BCE, including the cylinder seals that were rolled on the earliest clay tablets, laid the foundations for proto-cuneiform script. The post Study: Cylinder Seals and Sealing Practices Stimulated Invention of Writing in Ancient South-West Asia appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News. Full Article Anthropology Archaeology Paleoanthropology Asia Clay tablet Cuneiform Cylinder seal Iraq Proto-cuneiform Script Seal Uruk Writing Writing system Writing tablet
act Hubble Spots Pair of Interacting Galaxies in Coma Cluster By www.sci.news Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 11:51:20 +0000 This stunning new image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope is one of the best ever views of a galaxy duo called MCG+05-31-045. The post Hubble Spots Pair of Interacting Galaxies in Coma Cluster appeared first on Sci.News: Breaking Science News. Full Article Astronomy Coma cluster ESA Galaxy Hubble MCG+05-31-045 NASA
act Video games are good, actually, find scientists By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Aug 2024 17:00:29 +0100 The World Health Organization considers "gaming disorder" a condition, but researchers have now found that playing video games can boost well-being Full Article
act Engineered bacteria destroy antibiotic resistance DNA in wastewater By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Thu, 22 Aug 2024 23:44:04 +0100 Wastewater is a major reservoir for antibiotic resistance genes, but modified bacteria can chop up this DNA before the dangerous microbes reach people Full Article
act Pain relief from the placebo effect may not actually involve dopamine By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 24 Sep 2024 20:00:18 +0100 Dopamine was long thought to play a part in the placebo effect for pain relief, but a new study is questioning its true role Full Article
act Radioactive ion beam could target tumours more precisely By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 09:00:06 +0100 A beam of radioactive carbon ions has been used to destroy cancer cells in mice, demonstrating a therapy that may cause less collateral damage than current techniques Full Article
act Parkrun events could boost your life satisfaction By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 20:00:35 +0100 People report greater life satisfaction six months after starting Parkrun events, which could partly be due to the supportive environment Full Article
act The surprisingly simple supernutrient with far-reaching health impacts By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 17:00:00 +0000 Most ingredients touted as the key to better health fail to live up to the hype but fibre bucks this trend, with benefits for the whole body, not just the gut Full Article
act The science of exercise: Which activity burns the most calories? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 18:00:00 +0000 Running, swimming, HIIT or walking – what is the best way to work out? The answer is complicated, and depends on the person, finds Grace Wade Full Article
act Domino’s Pizza customers may have been exposed to typhoid fever bacteria By www.foodsafetynews.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 21:41:22 +0000 Health officials in Saskatchewan Canada are urging customers of Domino’s Pizza in Martensville to watch for symptoms of typhoid fever. The restaurant’s customers may have been exposed to Salmonella typhi, also known as typhoid fever. Anyone who consumed food or drink from the Domino’s store at 717 Centennial Drive South... Continue Reading Full Article Foodborne Pathogens For Consumers World Canada Domino's Pizza typhoid fever
act RFK Jr. and the Make America Healthy Again agenda could impact food safety By www.foodsafetynews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 05:02:00 +0000 RFK Jr., a lawyer-politician, could replace lawyer-politician Xavier Becerra as Secretary of Health and Human Services. Or RFK Jr could be the next Secretary of Agriculture, replacing Tom Vilsack, a lawyer. Deputy FDA Commissioners are sometimes lawyers. Dr. Robert Califf, a cardiologist, is the outgoing FDA Commissioner. The fact that... Continue Reading Full Article Food Policy & Law Food Politics Food Safety Leaders Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack Dr. Robert Califf Make America Healthy Again RFK Jr. Xavier Becerra
act Multiband Antenna Simulation and Wireless KPI Extraction By www.ansys.com Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 13:07:30 +0000 In this upcoming webinar, explore how to leverage the state-of-the-art high-frequency simulation capabilities of Ansys HFSS to innovate and develop advanced multiband antenna systems. OverviewThis webinar will explore how to leverage the state-of-the-art high-frequency simulation capabilities of Ansys HFSS to innovate and develop advanced multiband antenna systems. Attendees will learn how to optimize antenna performance and analyze installed performance within wireless networks. The session will also demonstrate how this approach enables users to extract valuable wireless and network KPIs, providing a comprehensive toolset for enhancing antenna design, optimizing multiband communication, and improving overall network performance. Join us to discover how Ansys HFSS can transform wireless system design and network efficiency approach. What Attendees will LearnHow to design interleaved multiband antenna systems using the latest capabilities in HFSSHow to extract Network Key Performance IndicatorsHow to run and extract RF Channels for the dynamic environment Who Should Attend This webinar is valuable to anyone involved in antenna, R&D, product design, and wireless networks.Register now for this free webinar! Full Article Antennas Multiband Type:webinar Wireless networks
act Touchscreens Are Out, and Tactile Controls Are Back By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Sun, 03 Nov 2024 14:00:03 +0000 Tactile controls are back in vogue. Apple added two new buttons to the iPhone 16, home appliances like stoves and washing machines are returning to knobs, and several car manufacturers are reintroducing buttons and dials to dashboards and steering wheels. With this “re-buttonization,” as The Wall Street Journal describes it, demand for Rachel Plotnick’s expertise has grown. Plotnick, an associate professor of cinema and media studies at Indiana University in Bloomington, is the leading expert on buttons and how people interact with them. She studies the relationship between technology and society with a focus on everyday or overlooked technologies, and wrote the 2018 book Power Button: A History of Pleasure, Panic, and the Politics of Pushing (The MIT Press). Now, companies are reaching out to her to help improve their tactile controls.Rachel Plotnick on...Researching the history of buttonsThe renaissance of physical controlsWorking with companies on “re-buttoning”You wrote a book a few years ago about the history of buttons. What inspired that book?Rachel Plotnick: Around 2009, I noticed there was a lot of discourse in the news about the death of the button. This was a couple years after the first iPhone had come out, and a lot of people were saying that, as touchscreens were becoming more popular, eventually we weren’t going to have any more physical buttons to push. This started to happen across a range of devices like the Microsoft Kinect, and after films like Minority Report had come out in the early 2000s, everyone thought we were moving to this kind of gesture or speech interface. I was fascinated by this idea that an entire interface could die, and that led me down this big wormhole, to try to understand how we came to be a society that pushed buttons everywhere we went. Rachel Plotnick studies the ways we use everyday technologies and how they shape our relationships with each other and the world.Rachel PlotnickThe more that I looked around, the more that I saw not only were we pressing digital buttons on social media and to order things from Amazon, but also to start our coffee makers and go up and down in elevators and operate our televisions. The pervasiveness of the button as a technology pitted against this idea of buttons disappearing seemed like such an interesting dichotomy to me. And so I wanted to understand an origin story, if I could come up with it, of where buttons came from.What did you find in your research?Plotnick: One of the biggest observations I made was that a lot of fears and fantasies around pushing buttons were the same 100 years ago as they are today. I expected to see this society that wildly transformed and used buttons in such a different way, but I saw these persistent anxieties over time about control and who gets to push the button, and also these pleasures around button pushing that we can use for advertising and to make technology simpler. That pendulum swing between fantasy and fear, pleasure and panic, and how those themes persisted over more than a century was what really interested me. I liked seeing the connections between the past and the present.[Back to top]We’ve experienced the rise of touchscreens, but now we might be seeing another shift—a renaissance in buttons and physical controls. What’s prompting the trend?Plotnick: There was this kind of touchscreen mania, where all of a sudden everything became a touchscreen. Your car was a touchscreen, your refrigerator was a touchscreen. Over time, people became somewhat fatigued with that. That’s not to say touchscreens aren’t a really useful interface, I think they are. But on the other hand, people seem to have a hunger for physical buttons, both because you don’t always have to look at them—you can feel your way around for them when you don’t want to directly pay attention to them—but also because they offer a greater range of tactility and feedback. If you look at gamers playing video games, they want to push a lot of buttons on those controls. And if you look at DJs and digital musicians, they have endless amounts of buttons and joysticks and dials to make music. There seems to be this kind of richness of the tactile experience that’s afforded by pushing buttons. They’re not perfect for every situation, but I think increasingly, we’re realizing the merit that the interface offers.What else is motivating the re-buttoning of consumer devices?Plotnick: Maybe screen fatigue. We spend all our days and nights on these devices, scrolling or constantly flipping through pages and videos, and there’s something tiring about that. The button may be a way to almost de-technologize our everyday existence, to a certain extent. That’s not to say buttons don’t work with screens very nicely—they’re often partners. But in a way, it’s taking away the priority of vision as a sense, and recognizing that a screen isn’t always the best way to interact with something. When I’m driving, it’s actually unsafe for my car to be operated in that way. It’s hard to generalize and say, buttons are always easy and good, and touchscreens are difficult and bad, or vice versa. Buttons tend to offer you a really limited range of possibilities in terms of what you can do. Maybe that simplicity of limiting our field of choices offers more safety in certain situations.It also seems like there’s an accessibility issue when prioritizing vision in device interfaces, right?Plotnick: The blind community had to fight for years to make touchscreens more accessible. It’s always been funny to me that we call them touchscreens. We think about them as a touch modality, but a touchscreen prioritizes the visual. Over the last few years, we’re seeing Alexa and Siri and a lot of these other voice-activated systems that are making things a little bit more auditory as a way to deal with that. But the touchscreen is oriented around visuality.It sounds like, in general, having multiple interface options is the best way to move forward—not that touchscreens are going to become completely passé, just like the button never actually died. Plotnick: I think that’s accurate. We see paradigm shifts over time with technologies, but for the most part, we often recycle old ideas. It’s striking that if we look at the 1800s, people were sending messages via telegraph about what the future would look like if we all had this dashboard of buttons at our command where we could communicate with anyone and shop for anything. And that’s essentially what our smartphones became. We still have this dashboard menu approach. I think it means carefully considering what the right interface is for each situation. [Back to top]Several companies have reached out to you to learn from your expertise. What do they want to know?Plotnick: I think there is a hunger out there from companies designing buttons or consumer technologies to try to understand the history of how we used to do things, how we might bring that to bear on the present, and what the future looks like with these interfaces. I’ve had a number of interesting discussions with companies, including one that manufactures push-button interfaces. I had a conversation with them about medical devices like CT machines and X-ray machines, trying to imagine the easiest way to push a button in that situation, to save people time and improve the patient encounter. I’ve also talked to people about what will make someone use a defibrillator or not. Even though it’s really simple to go up to these automatic machines, if you see someone going into cardiac arrest in a mall or out on the street, a lot of people are terrified to actually push the button that would get this machine started. We had a really fascinating discussion about why someone wouldn’t push a button, and what would it take to get them to feel okay about doing that. In all of these cases, these are design questions, but they’re also social and cultural questions. I like the idea that people who are in the humanities studying these things from a long-term perspective can also speak to engineers trying to build these devices.So these companies also want to know about the history of buttons? Plotnick: I’ve had some fascinating conversations around history. We all want to learn what mistakes not to make and what worked well in the past. There’s often this narrative of progress, that things are only getting better with technology over time. But if we look at these lessons, I think we can see that sometimes things were simpler or better in a past moment, and sometimes they were harder. Often with new technologies, we think we’re completely reinventing the wheel. But maybe these concepts existed a long time ago, and we haven’t paid attention to that. There’s a lot to be learned from the past. [Back to top] Full Article History of technology Tactile display Interfaces Control systems Touchscreens
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