It’s crunch time for companies building NASA’s commercial lunar landers

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Source: Ars Technica – It’s crunch time for companies building NASA’s commercial lunar landers

Dealmaster: Early Amazon Prime Big Deal Days sales heat up, Apple deals, and more

Dealmaster: Early Amazon Prime Big Deal Days sales heat up, Apple deals, and more

The Amazon Prime Big Deal Days event is creeping ever closer. For early shoppers, there are plenty of excellent tech deals available today from Amazon and competing retailers. Our curated Dealmaster comes with savings on Sony’s wildly popular WF-1000XM4 noise-canceling earbuds, serious sales on Apple gear (including the AirPods Pro and the still-excellent Apple Watch Series 8), as well as deals on a bevy of home and office gear.

Whatever you’re into, you’ll likely find a great deal or three below. So, why wait for the big sale when it’s already here?

Early Amazon Prime Big Deal Days sales

  • Amazon Echo Buds with Active Noise Cancellation (2021 release) for $65 (was $120) at Amazon
  • Made for Amazon Kids Bluetooth Headset for $16 (was $39) at Amazon
  • Amazon Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition Essentials Bundle for $194 (was $258) at Amazon
  • Amazon Kindle Scribe Essentials Bundle for $382 (was $520) at Amazon
  • Amazon Kindle Kids Essentials Bundle for $113 (was $153) at Amazon
  • Amazon Echo Dot (5th gen) for $23 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Amazon Echo Studio for $155 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Amazon Echo Dot with Clock (5th gen) for $45 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Amazon Echo Pop for $18 (was $40) at Amazon
  • TCL 65-inch Q6 QLED 4K Smart TV with Fire TV for $550 (was $700) at Amazon
  • TCL 65-inch Class S4 4K LED Smart TV with Fire TV for $400 (was $530) at Amazon
  • Amazon Eero 6E Mesh Wi-Fi Router for $180 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Amazon Eero 6+ Mesh Wi-Fi System for $195 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Amazon Eero Pro 6E Mesh Wi-Fi system for $400 (was $550) at Amazon
  • Hamilton Beach The Scoop Single Serve Coffee Maker for $60 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Samsung Galaxy Watch 5 40mm LTE Smartwatch for $300 (was $330) at Amazon
  • Dyson Outsize Cordless Vacuum Cleaner for $449 (was $530) at Amazon
  • Dyson V11 Cordless Stick Vaccum, Large for $460 (was $570) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K (previous gen) for $23 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Cube for $110 (was $140) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Stick Lite for $18 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV Stick with Alexa Voice Remote for $20 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Sony HTX8500 2.1ch Dolby Atmos/DTS:X Soundbar for $198 with Amazon Prime reservation (was $400) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire HD 10 Kids Pro tablet for $120 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 32-inch 2-Series 720p HD smart TV for $110 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 40-inch 2-Series 1080p HD smart TV for $180 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Philips Sparkling Water Maker Soda Maker Soda Streaming Machine for $56 (was $80) at Amazon
  • SodaStream Art Sparkling Water Maker Bundle for $110 with Amazon Prime reservation (was $200) at Amazon
  • Citizen Men’s Promaster Dive Automatic Watch for $200 with Amazon Prime reservation (was $475) at Amazon
  • Philips 3000 Series Air Fryer Essential Compact with Rapid Air Technology for $80 with Amazon Prime reservation (was $180) at Amazon

Apple AirPods, Macbook, iPad, and more

  • Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation, Lightning) Wireless Earbuds for $199 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods (3rd Generation, Lightning) Wireless Earbuds for $150 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Max Wireless Over-Ear Headphones for $479 (was $549) at Amazon
  • Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch Laptop M1 for $899 (was $999) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Air (5th Generation) for $500 (was $599) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad (9th Generation) for $270 (was $329) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Mini (6th Generation) for $469 (was $499) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Pro 12.9-inch (6th Generation) for $1,049 (was $1,099) at Amazon
  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 (GPS and Cellular, 45mm) for $429 (was $529) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 8 (GPS only, 41mm) for $320 (was $400) at Amazon

Headphones

  • Beats Solo3 Wireless On-Ear Headphones for $129 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Bose Headphones 700 Wireless Noise Cancelling Over-the-Ear Headphones for $299 (was $379) at Best Buy
  • Sony WF-1000XM4 True Wireless Noise Canceling Earbuds for $223 (was $280) at Amazon
  • Poly Voyager 4320 Wireless Noise Cancelling Stereo Headset with mic for $158 (was $170) at Best Buy
  • Jabra Elite 10 Dolby Atmos True Wireless In-ear Headphones for $225 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • Jabra Elite 7 Active True Wireless for $80 with Amazon Prime reservation (was $180) at Amazon
  • Samsung Galaxy Buds 2 Pro True Wireless Earbuds for $190 (was $230) at Best Buy

Home, office, and personal care

  • Shark AV993 IQ Robot Vacuum with Self Cleaning Brushroll for $200 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Shark HV322 Rocke Deluxe Pro Corded Stick Vacuum for $120 (was $250) at Amazon
  • INIU Wireless Charger 15W for $16 (was $27) at Amazon
  • Hypervolt 2 Pro Heat Pack (new launch) for $358 (was $388) at Hyperice
  • Beurer Bluetooth Wrist Blood Pressure Monitor for $35 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Upper Arm Blood Pressure Monitor for $25 (was $35) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Abdominal Muscle EMS Belt for $46 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Pulse Oximeter for $31 (was $40) at Best Buy
  • Beurer Bluetooth Body Fat Scale for Full Body Analysis for $44 (was $50) at Best Buy
  • Theragun PRO 4th Generation for $499 (was $599) at Therabody
  • Therabody RecoveryAir JetBoots Medium for $799 (was $899) at Best Buy

AirTag, iPhone, and laptop chargers, cables, and accessories

  • Apple MagSafe Charger for $33 (was $39) at Amazon
  • ESR for iPhone 15 Plus Case, Compatible with MagSafe for $19 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Spigen Ultra Hybrid Designed for iPhone 15 case for $15 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Spigen Tempered Glass Screen Protector [GlasTR EZ FIT] designed for iPhone 15 Pro for $17 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Spigen Tempered Glass Screen Protector [GlasTR EZ FIT] designed for Apple Watch Ultra 2 (49 mm) for $16 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Pebblebee Clip 4-pack for $100 (was $120) at Pebblebee
  • Pebblebee Card & Clip Multi-pack for $100 (was $120) at Pebblebee
  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • 2 Pack Waterproof Air Tag Keychain Case for $7 (was $11) at Amazon
  • Belkin Apple AirTag Secure Holder with Key Ring for $12 (was $13) at Amazon
  • Case-Mate AirTag Holder 4 Pack for $33 (was $40) at Amazon
  • GRIIID AirTag Wallet for $30 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Card Case for AirTag Tag Card 2 Pack for $12 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Anker Nano II 30W Fast GaN II Compact Charger for $24 (was $34) at Amazon
  • 192 PCS Cable Management Kit for $14 (was $20) at Amazon
  • INIU braided USB-C to USB-C Cable, 100 W [2-Pack 6.6ft] PD 5A Fast Charging Cable for $13 (was $16) at Amazon
  • 100 PCS Reusable Cable Ties for $7 (was $14) at Amazon

DeWalt and Greenworks tools

  • DeWalt 20V Max XR Multi-Tool Kit for $165 (was $269) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Impact Wrench with Brushless Motor for $269 (was $349) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max XR Drill/Driver for $139 (was $169) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max XR Hammer Drill Kit for $319 (was $399) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Drill / Driver Kit for $99 (was $179) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Drill and Impact Driver for $140 (was $239) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max XR Impact Driver, Brushless for $95 (was $149) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Impact Wrench for $187 (was $279) at Amazon
  • DeWalt 20V Max Cordless Drill Combo Kit for $163 (was $271) at Amazon
  • DeWalt Atomic 20V Max* Cordless Drill, 1/2-Inch, Tool Only for $70 (was $110) at Amazon
  • DeWalt Xtreme 12V Max* Impact Driver Kit, 1/4-Inch for $106 (was $159) at Amazon
  • Greenworks 10-inch 80 Volt Cultivator/Tiller for $340 (was $400) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 24-Volt 22-Inch Cordless Hedge Trimmer for $130 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks Pro Electric Pressure Washer up to 3000 PSI at 2.0 GPM for $380 (was $430) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 80 Volt 2Ah Battery for $129 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks 24 Volt 2000 Lumen LED Work Light AC/DC for $62 (was $70) at Best Buy
  • Greenworks TORQDRIVE 24-Volt 12-Inch Cutting Diameter Straight Shaft Grass Trimmer and Edger for $120 (was $130) at Best Buy

Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

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Source: Ars Technica – Dealmaster: Early Amazon Prime Big Deal Days sales heat up, Apple deals, and more

They have begun: Attacks exploiting vulnerability carry maximum 10 severity rating

They have begun: Attacks exploiting vulnerability carry maximum 10 severity rating

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Ransomware hackers have started exploiting one or more recently fixed vulnerabilities that pose a grave threat to enterprise networks around the world, researchers said.

One of the vulnerabilities has a severity rating of 10 out of a possible 10 and another 9.9. They reside in WS_FTP Server, a file-sharing app made by Progress Software. Progress Software is the maker of MOVEit, another piece of file-transfer software that was recently hit by a critical zero-day vulnerability that has led to the compromise of more than 2,300 organizations and the data of more than 23 million people, according to security firm Emsisoft. Victims include Shell, British Airways, the US Department of Energy, and Ontario’s government birth registry, BORN Ontario, the latter of which led to the compromise of information for 3.4 million people.

About as bad as it gets

CVE-2023-40044, as the vulnerability in WS_FTP Server is tracked, and a separate vulnerability tracked as CVE-2023-42657 that was patched in the same October 28 update from Progress Software, are both about as critical as vulnerabilities come. With a severity rating of 10, CVE-2023-40044 allows attackers to execute malicious code with high system privileges with no authentication required. CVE-2023-42657, which has a severity rating of 9.9, also allows for remote code execution but requires the hacker to first be authenticated to the vulnerable system.

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Source: Ars Technica – They have begun: Attacks exploiting vulnerability carry maximum 10 severity rating

Probiotic bacterium kills preterm infant; FDA blasts supplement maker

A premature baby in the neonatal intensive care unit at University of Iowa Stead Family Children's Hospital in Iowa City, Iowa on August 13, 2021. The baby was born two days earlier at 22 weeks and at birth weighed just 1 lb., 0.1 oz.

Enlarge / A premature baby in the neonatal intensive care unit at University of Iowa Stead Family Children’s Hospital in Iowa City, Iowa on August 13, 2021. The baby was born two days earlier at 22 weeks and at birth weighed just 1 lb., 0.1 oz. (credit: Getty | Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post)

The Food and Drug Administration is warning health care providers not to use probiotics containing live bacteria or yeast in preterm infants after the agency began investigating the July death of a preterm, low-weight infant given such a product in an unnamed hospital.

The infant developed sepsis from the bacterium in the probiotic product—Evivo with MCT Oil made by Infinant Health—and subsequently died.

In a statement to Ars, the FDA said it quickly investigated the death after receiving an initial report on July 31. “Infant deaths are especially tragic and determining causality of preterm infant death can be particularly complicated,” an agency spokesperson said. The agency reviewed medical records and laboratory tests from the case and collected clinical samples and product samples for analysis.

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Source: Ars Technica – Probiotic bacterium kills preterm infant; FDA blasts supplement maker

Ars takes a close-up look at the first US lunar lander in half a century

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Source: Ars Technica – Ars takes a close-up look at the first US lunar lander in half a century

A new “time window”: Meet the winners of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics

drawings of two men and one woman

Enlarge / Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L’Huillier have been awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics for their work using attosecond pulses to study the dynamics of electrons inside atoms. (credit: Niklas Elmehed/Nobel Prize Outreach)

Electrons move and change energies at such a blistering speed that physicists long believed it would never be possible to capture their dynamics, even with the fastest lasers. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics to three scientists who used ultrafast pulses of light to do just that with a technique known as attosecond spectroscopy. Per the citation, Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz, and Anne L’Huillier “have given humanity new tools for exploring the world of electrons inside atoms.”

It’s well known that to capture detailed images of, say, a hummingbird mid-flight, one needs to use exposure times that are shorter than a single beat of the hummingbird’s wings. But atoms in a molecule move in billionths of a second, aka femtoseconds; electrons move and change energies faster, between one and a few hundred attoseconds. (An attosecond is one billionth of a billionth of a second.) If you sent a flash of light from one end of a room to the other, it would take 10 billion attoseconds. Physicists had long believed that a femtosecond was the fundamental limit for producing short bursts of light—at least with existing technology—and thus capturing the behavior of electrons in atoms was beyond reach.

That changed over the last 20 years. “The ability to generate attoseconds of light has opened the door on an extremely tiny timescale, and it also opened the door to the world of electrons,” said Eva Olsson, chair of the Nobel committee for physics, at the press conference announcing the prize. “Back in 1925, Werner Heisenberg argued that this world cannot be seen. Thanks to attosecond physics, this is now starting to change.” The work is expected to have a significant impact on electronics, where understanding and controlling how electrons behave in materials is critical to achieving faster electronics, as well as in medical diagnostics, which requires being able to identify different molecules.

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Source: Ars Technica – A new “time window”: Meet the winners of the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics

Mercury is still shrinking as it cools

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Source: Ars Technica – Mercury is still shrinking as it cools

Tom Hanks warns of AI-generated doppelganger in Instagram plea

A cropped portion of the AI-generated version of Hanks that the actor shared on his Instagram feed.

Enlarge / A cropped portion of the AI-generated version of Hanks that the actor shared on his Instagram feed. (credit: Tom Hanks)

News of AI deepfakes spread quickly when you’re Tom Hanks. On Sunday, the actor posted a warning on Instagram about an unauthorized AI-generated version of himself being used to sell a dental plan. Hanks’ warning spread in the media, including The New York Times. The next day, CBS anchor Gayle King warned of a similar scheme using her likeness to sell a weight-loss product. The now widely reported incidents have raised new concerns about the use of AI in digital media.

“BEWARE!! There’s a video out there promoting some dental plan with an AI version of me. I have nothing to do with it,” wrote Hanks on his Instagram feed. Similarly, King shared an AI-augmented video with the words “Fake Video” stamped across it, stating, “I’ve never heard of this product or used it! Please don’t be fooled by these AI videos.”

Also on Monday, YouTube celebrity MrBeast posted on social media network X about a similar scam that features a modified video of him with manipulated speech and lip movements promoting a fraudulent iPhone 15 giveaway. “Lots of people are getting this deepfake scam ad of me,” he wrote. “Are social media platforms ready to handle the rise of AI deepfakes? This is a serious problem.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Tom Hanks warns of AI-generated doppelganger in Instagram plea

Google’s claim that search users have choice is “bogus,” Microsoft CEO tells judge

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella arrives at federal court on October 2, 2023 in Washington, DC. Nadella is testifying in the antitrust trial to determine if Alphabet Inc.'s Google maintains a monopoly in the online search business.

Enlarge / Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella arrives at federal court on October 2, 2023 in Washington, DC. Nadella is testifying in the antitrust trial to determine if Alphabet Inc.’s Google maintains a monopoly in the online search business. (credit: Drew Angerer / Staff | Getty Images North America)

On Monday, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella showed up at the Google antitrust trial to back the Department of Justice’s argument that “Google used unfair tactics”—most significantly, default search contracts—to block opportunities for search competitors like Bing, The Wall Street Journal reported.

A Microsoft spokesperson provided Ars with a transcript of Nadella’s morning testimony. It excludes approximately an hour’s worth of testimony from the afternoon session (that transcript is not yet available). But it includes about an hour of questioning from DOJ lawyer Adam Severt, during which Nadella said that due to Google’s grip on mobile providers and browsers’ default search placements, the idea that users have real choices when selecting a search engine is “bogus.”

However, Nadella’s efforts to back the DOJ seemingly required that the CEO walk back some of his earliest remarks hyping AI-powered Bing as potentially giving Microsoft a long-sought-after competitive advantage over Google.

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Source: Ars Technica – Google’s claim that search users have choice is “bogus,” Microsoft CEO tells judge

OpenCore Legacy Patcher project brings macOS Sonoma support to 16-year-old Macs

Unsupported Mac models like this 2017 iMac can install macOS Sonoma using the OpenCore Legacy Patcher project.

Enlarge / Unsupported Mac models like this 2017 iMac can install macOS Sonoma using the OpenCore Legacy Patcher project. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

When Apple decides to end update support for your Mac, you can either try to install another OS or you can trick macOS into installing on your hardware anyway. That’s the entire point of the OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a community-driven project that supports old Macs by combining some repurposed Hackintosh projects with older system files extracted from past macOS versions.

Yesterday, the OCLP team announced version 1.0.0 of the software, the first to formally support the recently released macOS 14 Sonoma. Although Sonoma officially supports Macs released mostly in 2018 or later, the OCLP project will allow Sonoma to install on Macs that go back to models released in 2007 and 2008, enabling them to keep up with at least some of the new features and security patches baked into the latest release.

But OCLP supports some Macs better than others, and generally, the older your Mac is, the more problems you will have.

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Source: Ars Technica – OpenCore Legacy Patcher project brings macOS Sonoma support to 16-year-old Macs

Netflix waiting for strikes to end before jacking up prices

Boy in straw hat on the proof of a pirate ship, arms outstretched to the sky

Enlarge / Netflix’s pirate series, One Piece, recently debuted on the platform. (credit: Netflix)

Netflix, one of the only profitable TV streaming services (along with Hulu), is reportedly planning on increasing the monthly price of its ad-free subscription, The Wall Street Journal reported today. However, the price bump reportedly won’t come for “a few months,” as Netflix is waiting for the actors’ and writers’ strike to formally end, the publication said.

WSJ said “people familiar with the matter” informed it that Netflix will probably launch its price hike in the US and Canada. WSJ couldn’t confirm how much prices will increase or when the increases will start. A representative for Netflix could not immediately be reached by Ars Technica for comment. Netflix declined to comment to the Journal.

The Writers Guild of America (WGA) is voting on a tentative agreement with TV and movie studios this week, while the Screen Actors Guild is undergoing negotiations.

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Source: Ars Technica – Netflix waiting for strikes to end before jacking up prices

The $10,000-plus golden Apple Watch is now “obsolete,” according to Apple

18-karat rose gold Apple Watches in a light wood display

Enlarge / 18-karat rose gold Apple Watches on display, ready for you to invest more than five figures into their inevitably limited lifespan as a functional timekeeping device. (credit: Getty Images)

When purchasing a luxury watch, you might consider it more of an heirloom than a simple timekeeper. You can pass a well-maintained Submariner down to your progeny. You can generally sell a Nomos or an Omega long after you purchase it, often at a profit. Or you can simply keep it on your wrist as a reminder of the inexorable march of time, the importance of punctuality, and the genius of so many tiny mechanical pieces working together toward one simple but crucial function.

This will not happen with the first Apple Watch Edition models, despite Jony Ive’s strong desire to enter that realm. As of September 30, Apple moved the original Apple Watch models to its “obsolete” list, at least internally. That includes the “Edition” models that ranged from $10,000 to $17,000 at their April 2015 launch. When a product is “obsolete,” Apple no longer offers parts, repairs, or other replacement services for it.

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Source: Ars Technica – The ,000-plus golden Apple Watch is now “obsolete,” according to Apple

Driving a priceless, historic Porsche: Meet the very first 356 from 1948

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Source: Ars Technica – Driving a priceless, historic Porsche: Meet the very first 356 from 1948

Dish botches satellite deorbit, gets hit with FCC’s first space-debris fine

Image of a satellite in outer space.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Anton Petrus)

The Federal Communications Commission said it has issued a space debris enforcement action for the first time ever by imposing a fine of $150,000 on Dish for failing to properly deorbit a TV satellite.

“To settle this matter, Dish admits that it failed to operate the EchoStar-7 satellite in accordance with its authorization, will implement a compliance plan, and will pay a $150,000 civil penalty,” the FCC said in an order issued yesterday. The FCC said the action is “a first in space debris enforcement” and part of its increased focus on satellite policy that included the establishment of a Space Bureau. The FCC added:

The FCC’s investigation found that the company violated the Communications Act, the FCC rules, and the terms of the company’s license by relocating its direct broadcast satellite (“DBS”) service EchoStar-7 satellite at the satellite’s end-of-mission to a disposal orbit well below the elevation required by the terms of its license. At this lower altitude, it could pose orbital debris concerns.

FCC Enforcement Bureau Chief Loyaan Egal called the consent decree “a breakthrough settlement, making very clear the FCC has strong enforcement authority and capability to enforce its vitally important space debris rules.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Dish botches satellite deorbit, gets hit with FCC’s first space-debris fine

Researchers show how easy it is to defeat AI watermarks

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Source: Ars Technica – Researchers show how easy it is to defeat AI watermarks

Review: Framework Laptop finally gets an AMD Ryzen config—and it’s pretty good

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Source: Ars Technica – Review: Framework Laptop finally gets an AMD Ryzen config—and it’s pretty good

Ad-free Facebook, Instagram access planned for $14 per month in Europe

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Source: Ars Technica – Ad-free Facebook, Instagram access planned for per month in Europe

Shift Happens is a beautifully designed history of how keyboards got this way

Photos of an Olivetti Praxis 48 electric typewriter

Enlarge / Marcin Wichary’s photos of an Olivetti Praxis 48 electric typewriter. (credit: Marcin Wichary)

It’s the 150th anniversary of the QWERTY keyboard, and Marcin Wichary has put together the kind of history and celebration this totemic object deserves. Shift Happens is a two-volume, 1,200-plus-page work with more than 1,300 photos, researched over seven years and cast lovingly into type and photo spreads that befit the subject.

You can preorder it now, and orders before October 4 (Wednesday) can still be shipped before Christmas, while orders on October 5 or later will have to wait until December or January. Preorders locked in before Wednesday also get a 160-page “volume of extras.”

Wichary, a designer, engineer, and writer who has worked at Google, Medium, and Figma, has been working in public to get people excited about type, fonts, and text design for some time now. He told the Twitter world about his visit to an obscure, magical Spanish typewriter museum in 2016. He put a lot of work into crafting the link underlines at Medium and explaining font fallbacks at Figma. Shift Happens reads and looks like Wichary’s chance to tell the bigger story around all the little things that fascinate him and to lock into history all the strange little stories he loves.

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Source: Ars Technica – Shift Happens is a beautifully designed history of how keyboards got this way

Musk sued for falsely accusing Jewish man of joining a neo-Nazi brawl

Musk sued for falsely accusing Jewish man of joining a neo-Nazi brawl

Enlarge (credit: Bloomberg / Contributor | Bloomberg)

On Wednesday, a Los Angeles-based 22-year-old college graduate, Ben Brody, sued Elon Musk for more than $1 million. Brody’s lawsuit alleged that over a series of social media posts, the X (formerly Twitter) owner falsely identified Brody—described as a “shy young man”—as a participant “in a violent street brawl on behalf of a neo-Nazi extremist group” near Portland, Oregon, this summer.

Perhaps even worse, according to Brody’s complaint, one of Musk’s X posts also allegedly amplified conspiracy theories that “Ben Brody’s alleged participation in the extremist brawl meant the incident was probably a ‘false flag’ operation to deceive the American public.”

The lawsuit defined a “false flag” as a term that’s been “popularized among conspiracy theory media figures to mean a hostile or harmful action (typically an attack or other act of violence) that is designed to look like it was perpetrated by someone other than the person or group responsible for it.” It also noted that a “false flag” is a “type of ‘psyop’ or ‘psychological operation,'” which the lawsuit alleged is “a concept which Musk has fixated on for several months.”

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Source: Ars Technica – Musk sued for falsely accusing Jewish man of joining a neo-Nazi brawl

Psychedelics plus psychotherapy can trigger rapid changes in the brain

Psychedelic drug or psychedelics hallucinogenic drugs and hallucinogens representing states of consciousness and psychology or psychological hallucinating by taking mind altering substances in a 3D illustration style.

Enlarge / New research hints at how psychedelics can trigger rapid, lasting change. (credit: wildpixel/Getty Images)

The human brain can change—but usually only slowly and with great effort, such as when learning a new sport or foreign language, or recovering from a stroke. Learning new skills correlates with changes in the brain, as evidenced by neuroscience research with animals and functional brain scans in people. Presumably, if you master Calculus 1, something is now different in your brain. Furthermore, motor neurons in the brain expand and contract depending on how often they are exercised— a neuronal reflection of “use it or lose it.”

People may wish their brains could change faster—not just when learning new skills, but also when overcoming problems like anxiety, depression, and addictions.

Clinicians and scientists know there are times the brain can make rapid, enduring changes. Most often, these occur in the context of traumatic experiences, leaving an indelible imprint on the brain.

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Source: Ars Technica – Psychedelics plus psychotherapy can trigger rapid changes in the brain