Phison E28 Preview: Here’s The Future Of Low Power Speedy Gen 5 SSDs

Phison E28 Preview: Here’s The Future Of Low Power Speedy Gen 5 SSDs
Phison E28 SSD Controller – MSRP TBD The Phison E28 PCIe Gen 5 SSD controller is the follow-up to the company’s popular and speedy E26, which will power the next wave of enthusiast-class, high-performance, more efficient solid state drives. Excellent Performance Improved Power Efficiency Lower Power Not Retail Ready Just Yet Didn’t Always…

Here’s Kia’s new small, affordable electric car: The 2026 EV4 sedan

SEOUL, South Korea—Drive enough electric vehicles from enough different manufacturers and something becomes clear: the Korean automakers know what they’re doing. From small cars like the Niro all the way to three-row SUVs, the EVs coming out of Kia (and its sibling Hyundai) are as efficient as anything out there, usually with a distinctive style. It’s fair to say they’re at the front of the pack, at least as far as EVs offered to North America.

And soon, there will be a new one to consider. It’s the Kia EV4, a small electric sedan that uses a new version of the E-GMP platform that has so impressed us in cars like the EV6. Originally designed for midsize and larger vehicles and operating at 800 V, the E-GMP powertrain is very capable but also relatively expensive to make. Now Kia has taken what it learned with the 800 V experience and applied it to the new 400 V version that’s suitable for smaller and cheaper EVs.

One motor, two packs

Kia told Ars that while the development know-how carried over to the new lower-voltage components, the battery, motors, and power electronics are all new. The car arrives in the US in Q4 of this year and will feature a native NACS charging port. There’s only one motor being offered for now, which generates 201 hp (150 kW) and 209 lb-ft (283 Nm) and drives the front wheels. But there are two choices of battery: the standard 58.3 kWh, which Kia reckons should achieve an EPA range of 235 miles (378 km); and an 81.4 kWh long-range pack, that should be sufficient for 330 miles (531 km) on North American roads. In time, expect a twin-motor, all-wheel drive option, as well as a more powerful EV4 GT.

Read full article

Comments

The Out-of-Touch Adults’ Guide to Kid Culture: ‘Dark Mango Psychology’

This week’s trip into the cultural subconscious of younger people is bleaker than usual. The memes are more chaotic, the Pokémon cards are harder to get, and the ex-boyfriends are somehow worse than usual. From the unexplainable “Dark Mango psychology” to TikTok’s parade of horribles, this week’s youth culture has the distinct energy of an evil amusement park. Let’s descend into the gloom, together.

What is “Dark Mango psychology?”

To understand Generation Alpha’s “dark mango psychology” memes, you have to go to some weird places and make peace with brain rot: Gen-A’s self-referential, exclusively online style of meme-making resists logical explanation, but I’m going to try to anyway, god help me.

In late May, TikTok user @rip_mango20 posted, “Dark Mango psychology explained,” the first video on the subject. In it, a distorted voice asks “Have you ever played Blox Fruits with your life on the line while having a bunch of mangos in your mouth? Well this is called dark mango psychology…” it goes on like that, but no psychology is ever actually explained. You can watch the video here:

If this clip had a few hundred views, you could dismiss it as a self-conscious, “aren’t I so wacky?’ thing, but it’s been viewed millions of times, so it means something to someone. Anyway, here’s my best stab at an explanation, with help from knowyourmeme.com:

The character featured in the video is a variation of “trollface,” a online icon that’s been around since 2008. Blox Fruit is a mini-game within Gen A’s favorite game/gaming platform Roblox. The line “Have you ever played X with your life on the line,” is a reference to an anime called Blue Lock, in which the question is asked about a game of soccer. “Mango” is a reference to this video, that features a “phonk” song about mango, based on audio ripped from this video. “Phonk” is a musical subgenre featuring heavily distorted, lo-fi instruments playing a slower-tempo variation of EDM music. (It is unlistenable.) For reasons that resist explanation, this video caught on among the brain-rotted, who started remixing the original post, adding other nonsense words like “mustard” and “jellybean” (references to even more obscure brain-rot memes) and using the phrase “dark mango psychology” to describe something like—chaotic energy? It’s hard to tell. I’m sure there are layers of meaning here that are understandable only by people under 15 years old, but I’ve done my level best. Perhaps this is something you and I aren’t meant to understand and we should just wait for it to go away.

What is the “man of the year” trend?

Let’s talk about memes made about people—specifically, memes about toxic men, a reliable source of bitter online comedy. The new trend on TikTok is called “Man of the Year,” and it is not a celebration of men behaving awesomely. Instead, women are sharing evidence of the abuse, manipulation, and general grossness visited upon them by ex-boyfriends, accompanied by a few bars of Lorde’s “Man of the Year.” It’s a simple idea, but these are some powerful videos.

Man of the year candidates include this guy, who remixed his girlfriend crying into a truly terrible EDM song:

Or this young gentleman who abandoned both his girl and his child:

There’s even a famous man of the year, Justin Bieber:

And the number of cruel texts is just way too high.

Sabrina Carpenter’s new album cover causes controversy

In other news from the frontlines of the gender wars, singer Sabrina Carpenter dropped some photos and the name of her upcoming album, and it’s pure provocation. What might be the cover of Man’s Best Friend looks like this:


This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.

The cover is Carpenter playing against her type, taking her bubblegum pink pop princess image somewhere darker and more provocative. I’m sure causing buzz is the point, and it’s clearly working. Top Instagram comments include: “Sabrina this is not the slay you think it is… :/,” “Love sabrina – but this picture – why is the man in there like that? its not a very empowering image for women. i think its a mistake.” and “Explain to me again how this isn’t centering men? How this isn’t catering to the male gaze?” I think Madonna in her prime would have literally killed these kids.

It’s quaint that anyone can still get worked up over pop stars creating imagery designed to inflame cultural ire and/or sell records, but I think the online critics are wringing their hands for no reason. We won’t really know until the album comes out in August to provide context, but judging by the single, “Manchild,” about idiotic dudes who can’t take care of themselves, and by the fact that Carpenter is a smart person, it seems the intention is to mock the “male gaze,” and the statement is like, “can you believe that these numbskulls see us this way/want us to be this way?”

Also, Spinal Tap did it first:

Gen Z messing up going to bars

Gen Z is bad at going to bars. Apparently, younger people refuse to leave bar tabs open. This could be because they’re more budget-conscious than preceding generations. Or it could be just ignorance. “These kids never learned the proper way to be a barfly,” a bartender told the New York Times.

The bartender has a point, but I do not blame Gen Z for their poor drinking etiquette (if that’s what this is.) If it’s born of money consciousness, I get it: Have you seen how much cocktails cost in 2025? if it’s ignorance, I get that too. Going to bars can be confusing if you’re new to them. They’re loud, busy, chaotic, and ruled by a set of practices and assumptions that no one is taught, and that don’t have any precedent in other kinds of transactions. Particularly the bar tab: It’s not like we hand over our cards and just leave them with any other kinds of shopkeepers.

I love that Gen Z is educating each other, though, and expressing their feelings through TikTok videos like this:

Viral video of the week: Pokemon scalpers

Even this week’s viral video is dark and dystopian, but it’s also educational. Before I saw this week’s viral video I didn’t even know Pokémon scalpers existed.

As you can see, Leo is a little kid who loves Pokémon, and he wants that special edition Pikachu with the kind of pure desire only a pre-teen can have. So he and his mom and dad have spent 151 days trying to beat the scalpers to their local sales kiosks so the little guy can get his packs. But they never beat the scalpers, and Leo never gets his Pikachu.

In economic terms, the scalpers are expending resources (time, money, Red Bull) to gain an uncompensated transfer of wealth from others without creating new value. It’s classic rent-seeking behavior: manipulating a market to extract profits rather than producing anything of value. As Adam Smith, the father of economics, put it, scalpers are trying to “reap where they never sowed”—though Smith probably didn’t foresee a future where the invisible hand of the market would slap a Pikachu card out of a child’s hands and give it to a grown man who smells funny and doesn’t shave. Leo not getting his Pikachu is a negative externality—a cost borne by someone who isn’t party to the transaction. His tears are not priced into the secondary market, which is disturbingly efficient at delivering disappointment.

Look, I get that it’s not the worst thing happening in this wicked world—I hope this is the worst thing that ever happens to Leo, honestly—but maybe capitalism could take some time off for kids who like Pokémon?

Forget The Switch 2 And Score A Switch OLED For $100 Off With This Killer Deal

Forget The Switch 2 And Score A Switch OLED For $100 Off With This Killer Deal
Nintendo is making history with the Switch 2, it’s latest-generation handheld game system that raced to more than 3.5 million units sold in a mere four days, making it the company’s fastest-selling console ever. It also outpaced every other console launch to date, regardless of manufacturer. To say it’s a popular item is an understatement

This Logitech Keyboard Case for the iPad Pro Is at Its Lowest Price Ever

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Right now, this Logitech Combo Touch Keyboard Case for the iPad Pro 11″ is 61% off—its lowest price to date. This is Logitech’s thinnest keyboard case yet, and it connects instantly via the Smart Connector, meaning no Bluetooth pairing or charging required. The iPad itself powers the keyboard, which attaches magnetically and also supports magnetic charging for an Apple Pencil. There are 16 levels of backlighting to give you visibility in low light; an adjustable kickstand; and a detachable, click-anywhere trackpad.

Reviewers call this case a game-changer for digital art, studying, and working. It’s also a helpful accessory for anyone traveling who doesn’t want to be weighed down by a laptop but wants a full keyboard. It’s worth noting that at 1.27 lbs, it’s heavier and larger than some Apple tablet cases and the pricier Magic Keyboard, but it offers more protection and durability. Additionally, it works best on flat surfaces—if you work on your lap or in a bed, it won’t be ideal. The quality of the kickstand is debated in Amazon reviews; some people call it flimsy, while others describe it as flexible yet secure and stable once positioned. 

While there are cheaper third-party keyboard cases on the market, Logitech is a trusted name with a reputation for responsive, high-quality tech accessories. It’s also a major perk that the iPad powers the keyboard. If you’re an iPad 11 Pro owner who wants laptop-style functionality without buying a new computer (and you don’t mind a slightly bulky footprint), the Logitech Combo Touch Keyboard Case is a strong option at $140 off. 

How to download your information from Facebook

Once upon a time Facebook was filled with posts about the minutiae of your day and album after album of photos of just about every experience you had. By now, a lot of this media is likely hidden with the “only me” setting. But, regardless of how much you use Facebook these days, it’s probably home to a lot of memories you want to hold on to — or at least have the opportunity to laugh at later. 

The good news is that you can download your Facebook information. You can access things such as your posts, photos you’re tagged in, groups you belong to, friendships and your search history. You can also see apps that you’ve connected to through Facebook and your interactions with ads. However, you won’t see content you’ve deleted and some information might not be available for your entire time on Facebook — depending on when and how the platform stored specific media.

So, how do you download your Facebook information from Meta? You can start by clicking on your profile picture and then selecting the “settings and privacy” tab. From there you can click onto “settings” and then choose “download your information.” Then click “continue,” followed by “download or transfer information.” 

You will be prompted to choose which profiles you want to save information from and then click “next” to reach the “how much information you want to download” option. Now you have the option to click “specific types of information” to narrow down what you want and to get a copy of your data logs. The only decision left is whether you want to download the information to you device or to a specific place. 

You should see a “pending” status once you’ve submitted your request, and you’ll have four days to download everything after it processes. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/how-to-download-your-information-from-facebook-121403031.html?src=rss

Walmart’s Drone Deliveries Expand, Now in Five Different US States

“Walmart is bringing drone deliveries to three more states,” reports CNBC:

On Thursday, the big-box retailer said it plans to launch the speedier delivery option at 100 stores in Atlanta, Charlotte, Houston, Orlando and Tampa within the coming year. With the expansion, Walmart’s drone deliveries will be available in a total of five states: [parts of northwest] Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and [the Dallas-Fort Worth area of] Texas… The drone operator will have an up to a six-mile range from stores.
Walmart tells CNBC the most frequently delivered items include ice cream, fresh fruit, and pet food, as well as “urgent items, such as hamburger buns for a cookout, eggs to make brownies or Tylenol or cold medicine needed when sick.” It’s all part of Walmart’s effort to compete with Amazon:

With more than 4,600 Walmart stores across the U.S., the retailer has used its large footprint to get online orders to customers faster. It has an Express Delivery service that drops purchases at customers’ doors in as fast as 30 minutes, along with InHome, a subscription-based service, that puts items directly into people’s fridges. The company began same-day prescription deliveries last fall and has expanded the service across the country…. Walmart stores have an assortment of over 150,000 items in a location. Over 50% of those can be delivered by drone, said Greg Cathey [Walmart’s senior VP for U.S. transformation and innovation]… Walmart’s drone delivery count so far is modest. The company did not share the specific count, but said it has racked up a total of more than 150,000 drone deliveries since 2021.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Nintendo Switch 2: The Ars Technica review

When Nintendo launched the Switch in 2017, the sheer novelty of the new hardware brought the company a lot of renewed attention. After the market disaster of the Wii U’s homebound “second screen” tablet, Nintendo exploited advances in system-on-a-chip miniaturization to create something of a minimum viable HD-capable system that could work as both a lightweight handheld and a slightly underpowered TV-based console. That unique combination, and Nintendo’s usual selection of first-party system sellers, set the console apart from what the rest of the gaming market was offering at the time.

Eight years later, the Switch 2 launched into a transformed gaming hardware market that the original Switch played a large role in shaping, one full of portable gaming consoles that can optionally be connected to a TV. That includes full-featured handheld gaming PCs like the Steam Deck and its many imitators, but also streaming-focused Android-based gaming handhelds and retro-focused emulation machines on the cheaper end. Even Microsoft is preparing to get in on the act, streamlining the Windows gaming experience for an Asus-powered handheld gaming PC that hides the Windows desktop.


Mario is excited! Are you?
Credit:
Kyle Orland

Those market changes make the Switch 2 a lot less of a novelty than its predecessor. As its name implies, it is essentially a direct sequel to the original Switch hardware, with improvements to the physical hardware and internal architecture. Rather than shaking things up with a new concept, Nintendo seems to be saying, “Hey, you liked the Switch? Here’s the same thing, but moreso.”

Read full article

Comments

LibreOffice Explains ‘Real Costs’ of Upgrading to Microsoft’s Windows 11, Urges Taking Control with Linux

KDE isn’t the only organization reaching out to ” as Microsoft prepares to end support for Windows 10.

“Now, The Document Foundation, maker of LibreOffice, has also joined in to support the Endof10 initiative,” reports the tech blog Neowin:
The foundation writes: “You don’t have to follow Microsoft’s upgrade path. There is a better option that puts control back in the hands of users, institutions, and public bodies: Linux and LibreOffice. Together, these two programmes offer a powerful, privacy-friendly and future-proof alternative to the Windows + Microsoft 365 ecosystem.”

It further adds the “real costs” of upgrading to Windows 11 as it writes:

“The move to Windows 11 isn’t just about security updates. It increases dependence on Microsoft through aggressive cloud integration, forcing users to adopt Microsoft accounts and services. It also leads to higher costs due to subscription and licensing models, and reduces control over how your computer works and how your data is managed. Furthermore, new hardware requirements will render millions of perfectly good PCs obsolete…. The end of Windows 10 does not mark the end of choice, but the beginning of a new era. If you are tired of mandatory updates, invasive changes, and being bound by the commercial choices of a single supplier, it is time for a change. Linux and LibreOffice are ready — 2025 is the right year to choose digital freedom!”
The first words on LibreOffice’s announcement? “The countdown has begun….”


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Fake Bands and Artificial Songs are Taking Over YouTube and Spotify

Spain’s newspaper El Pais found an entire fake album on YouTube titled Rumba Congo (1973). And they cite a study from France’s International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers that estimated revenue from AI-generated music will rise to $4 billion in 2028, generating 20% of all streaming platforms’ revenue:

One of the major problems with this trend is the lack of transparency. María Teresa Llano, an associate professor at the University of Sussex who studies the intersection of creativity, art and AI, emphasizes this aspect: “There’s no way for people to know if something is AI or not….” On Spotify Community — a forum for the service’s users — a petition is circulating that calls for clear labeling of AI-generated music, as well as an option for users to block these types of songs from appearing on their feeds. In some of these forums, the rejection of AI-generated music is palpable.

Llano mentions the feelings of deception or betrayal that listeners may experience, but asserts that this is a personal matter. There will be those who feel this way, as well as those who admire what the technology is capable of… One of the keys to tackling the problem is to include a warning on AI-generated songs. YouTube states that content creators must “disclose to viewers when realistic content […] is made with altered or synthetic media, including generative AI.” Users will see this if they glance at the description. But this is only when using the app, because on a computer, they will have to scroll down to the very end of the description to get the warning….

The professor from the University of Sussex explains one of the intangibles that justifies the labeling of content: “In the arts, we can establish a connection with the artist; we can learn about their life and what influenced them to better understand their career. With artificial intelligence, that connection no longer exists.”

YouTube says they may label AI-generated content if they become aware of it, and may also remove it altogether, according to the article. But Spotify “hasn’t shared any policy for labeling AI-powered content…”

In an interview with Gustav Söderström, Spotify’s co-president and chief product & technology officer, he emphasized that AI “increases people’s creativity” because more people can be creative, thanks to the fact that “you don’t need to have fine motor skills on the piano.” He also made a distinction between music generated entirely with AI and music in which the technology is only partially used. But the only limit he mentioned for moderating artificial music was copyright infringement… something that has been a red line for any streaming service for many years now. And such a violation is very difficult to legally prove when artificial intelligence is involved.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Amazon’s Return-to-Office Mandate Sparks Complaints from Disabled Employees

An anonymous reader shared this report from Bloomberg:

Amazon’s hard-line stance on getting disabled employees to return to the office has sparked a backlash, with workers alleging the company is violating the Americans with Disabilities Act as well as their rights to collectively bargain. At least two Amazon employees have filed complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the National Labor Relations Board, federal agencies that regulate working conditions. One of the workers said they provided the EEOC with a list of 18 “similarly situated” employees to emphasize that their experience isn’t isolated and to help federal regulators with a possible investigation.

Disabled workers frustrated with how Amazon is handling their requests for accommodations — including exemptions to a mandate that they report to the office five days a week — are also venting their displeasure on internal chat rooms and have encouraged colleagues to answer surveys about the policies. Amazon has been deleting such posts and warning that they violate rules governing internal communications. One employee said they were terminated and another said they were told to find a different position after advocating for disabled workers on employee message boards. Both filed complaints with the EEOC and NLRB.

Amazon has told employees with disabilities they must now submit to a “multilevel leader review,” Bloomberg reported in October, “and could be required to return to the office for monthlong trials to determine if accommodations meet their needs.” (They received calls from “accommodation consultants” who also reviewed medical documentation, after which “another Amazon manager must sign off. If they don’t, the request goes to a third manager…”)

Bloomberg’s new article remembers how several employees told them in November. “that they believed the system was designed to deny work-from-home accommodations and prompt employees with disabilities to quit, which some have done. Amazon denied the system was designed to encourage people to resign.”
Since then, workers have mobilized against the policy. One employee repeatedly posted an online survey seeking colleagues’ reactions, defying the company’s demands to stop. The survey ultimately generated feedback from more than 200 workers even though Amazon kept deleting it, and the results reflected strong opposition to Amazon’s treatment of disabled workers. More than 71% of disabled Amazon employees surveyed said the company had denied or failed to meet most of their accommodation requests, while half indicated they faced “hostile” work environments after disclosing their disabilities and requesting accommodations.
One respondent said they sought permission to work from home after suffering multiple strokes that prevented them from driving. Amazon suggested moving closer to the office and taking mass transit, the person said in the survey. Another respondent said they couldn’t drive for longer than 15-minute intervals due to chronic pain. Amazon’s recommendation was to pull over and stretch during their commute, which the employee said was unsafe since they drive on a busy freeway… Amazon didn’t dispute the accounts and said it considered a range of solutions to disability accommodations, including changes to an employee’s commute.

Amazon is also “using AI to parse accommodation requests, read doctors’ notes and make recommendations based on keywords,” according to the article — another policy that’s also generated internal opposition (and formed a “key element” of the complaint to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission).

“The dispute could affect thousands of Amazon workers. An internal Slack channel for employees with disabilities has 13,000 members, one of the people said…”


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Mitsubishi Launches EV Battery Swap Network in Tokyo – for Both Cars and Trucks

In Tokyo Mitsubishi is deploying “an innovative new battery swap network for electric cars” in a multi-year test program reports the EV news site Electrek.

But it’s not just for electric cars. Along with the 14 modular battery swapping stations, Mitsubishi is also deploying “more than 150 battery-swappable commercial electric vehicles” from truck maker Fuso:

A truck like the Mitsubishi eCanter typically requires a full night of AC charging to top off its batteries, and at least an hour or two on DC charging in Japan, according to Fuso. This joint pilot by Mitsubishi, Mitsubishi Fuso Trucks, and [EV battery swap specialist] Ample aims to circumvent this issue of forced downtime with its swappable batteries, supporting vehicle uptime by delivering a full charge within minutes.

The move is meant to encourage the transport industry’s EV shift while creating a depository of stored energy that can be deployed to the grid in the event of a natural disaster — something Mitsubishi in Japan has been working on for years.
The article’s author also adds their own opinion about battery-swapping technology. “When you see how simple it is to add hundreds of miles of driving in just 100 seconds — quicker, in many cases, than pumping a tank of liquid fuel into an ICE-powered car — you might come around, yourself.”


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Meta’s Llama 3.1 Can Recall 42% of the First Harry Potter Book

Timothy B. Lee has written for the Washington Post, Vox.com, and Ars Technica — and now writes a Substack blog called “Understanding AI.”
This week he visits recent research by computer scientists and legal scholars from Stanford, Cornell, and West Virginia University that found that Llama 3.1 70BÂ(released in July 2024) has memorized 42% of the first Harry Potter book well enough to reproduce 50-token excerpts at least half the time…
The paper was published last month by a team of computer scientists and legal scholars from Stanford, Cornell, and West Virginia University. They studied whether five popular open-weight models — three from Meta and one each from Microsoft and EleutherAI — were able to reproduce text from Books3, a collection of books that is widely used to train LLMs. Many of the books are still under copyright… Llama 3.1 70B — a mid-sized model Meta released in July 2024 — is far more likely to reproduce Harry Potter text than any of the other four models….
Interestingly, Llama 1 65B, a similar-sized model released in February 2023, had memorized only 4.4 percent of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. This suggests that despite the potential legal liability, Meta did not do much to prevent memorization as it trained Llama 3. At least for this book, the problem got much worse between Llama 1 and Llama 3. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone was one of dozens of books tested by the researchers. They found that Llama 3.1 70B was far more likely to reproduce popular books — such as The Hobbit and George Orwell’s 1984 — than obscure ones. And for most books, Llama 3.1 70B memorized more than any of the other models…

For AI industry critics, the big takeaway is that — at least for some models and some books — memorization is not a fringe phenomenon. On the other hand, the study only found significant memorization of a few popular books. For example, the researchers found that Llama 3.1 70B only memorized 0.13 percent of Sandman Slim, a 2009 novel by author Richard Kadrey. That’s a tiny fraction of the 42 percent figure for Harry Potter… To certify a class of plaintiffs, a court must find that the plaintiffs are in largely similar legal and factual situations. Divergent results like these could cast doubt on whether it makes sense to lump J.K. Rowling, Richard Kadrey, and thousands of other authors together in a single mass lawsuit. And that could work in Meta’s favor, since most authors lack the resources to file individual lawsuits.

Why is it happening? “Maybe Meta had trouble finding 15 trillion distinct tokens, so it trained on the Books3 dataset multiple times. Or maybe Meta added third-party sources — such as online Harry Potter fan forums, consumer book reviews, or student book reports — that included quotes from Harry Potter and other popular books…”

“Or there could be another explanation entirely. Maybe Meta made subtle changes in its training recipe that accidentally worsened the memorization problem.”


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Apple Migrates Its Password Monitoring Service to Swift from Java, Gains 40% Performance Uplift

Meta and AWS have used Rust, and Netflix uses Go,reports the programming news site InfoQ. But using another language, Apple recently “migrated its global Password Monitoring service from Java to Swift, achieving a 40% increase in throughput, and significantly reducing memory usage.”

This freed up nearly 50% of their previously allocated Kubernetes capacity, according to the article, and even “improved startup time, and simplified concurrency.”

In a recent post, Apple engineers detailed how the rewrite helped the service scale to billions of requests per day while improving responsiveness and maintainability… “Swift allowed us to write smaller, less verbose, and more expressive codebases (close to 85% reduction in lines of code) that are highly readable while prioritizing safety and efficiency.”
Apple’s Password Monitoring service, part of the broader Password app’s ecosystem, is responsible for securely checking whether a user’s saved credentials have appeared in known data breaches, without revealing any private information to Apple. It handles billions of requests daily, performing cryptographic comparisons using privacy-preserving protocols. This workload demands high computational throughput, tight latency bounds, and elastic scaling across regions… Apple’s previous Java implementation struggled to meet the service’s growing performance and scalability needs. Garbage collection caused unpredictable pause times under load, degrading latency consistency. Startup overhead — from JVM initialization, class loading, and just-in-time compilation, slowed the system’s ability to scale in real time. Additionally, the service’s memory footprint, often reaching tens of gigabytes per instance, reduced infrastructure efficiency and raised operational costs.
Originally developed as a client-side language for Apple platforms, Swift has since expanded into server-side use cases…. Swift’s deterministic memory management, based on reference counting rather than garbage collection (GC), eliminated latency spikes caused by GC pauses. This consistency proved critical for a low-latency system at scale. After tuning, Apple reported sub-millisecond 99.9th percentile latencies and a dramatic drop in memory usage: Swift instances consumed hundreds of megabytes, compared to tens of gigabytes with Java.

“While this isn’t a sign that Java and similar languages are in decline,” concludes InfoQ’s article, “there is growing evidence that at the uppermost end of performance requirements, some are finding that general-purpose runtimes no longer suffice.”


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

How to set up a WhatsApp account without Facebook or Instagram

There’s no shortage of reasons to stay off the Meta ecosystem, which includes Facebook and Instagram, but there are some places where WhatsApp remains the main form of text-based communication. The app is a great alternative to SMS, since it offers end-to-end encryption and was one of the go-to methods to send uncompressed photos and videos between iPhone and Android users before Apple adopted RCS. Even though Facebook, which later rebranded to Meta, acquired WhatsApp in 2014, it doesn’t require a Facebook or Instagram account to get on WhatsApp — just a working phone number.

How to create a WhatsApp account without Facebook or Instagram

To start, you need to download WhatsApp on your smartphone. Once you open the app, you can start the registration process by entering a working phone number. After entering your phone number, you’ll receive a unique six-digit code that will complete the registration process. From there, you can sort through your contacts on your attached smartphone to build out your WhatsApp network, but you won’t have to involve Facebook or Instagram at any point.

Alternatively, you can request a voice call to deliver the code instead. Either way, once you complete the registration process, you have a WhatsApp account that’s not tied to a Facebook or Instagram account.

How to link WhatsApp to other Meta accounts 

If you change your mind and want more crossover between your Meta apps, you can go into the app’s Settings panel to change that. In Settings, you can find the Accounts Center option with the Meta badge on it. Once you hit it, you’ll see options to “Add Facebook account” and “Add Instagram account.” Linking these accounts means Meta can offer more personalized experiences across the platforms because of the personal data that’s now interconnected.

You can always remove your WhatsApp account from Meta’s Account Center by going back into the same Settings panel. However, any previously combined info will stay combined, but Meta will stop combining any personal data after you remove the account.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/how-to-set-up-a-whatsapp-account-without-facebook-or-instagram-210024705.html?src=rss

Could This City Be the Model for How to Tackle the Both the Climate and Housing Crisis?

NPR looks at the “high-quality, climate-friendly apartments” in Vienna, asking if it’s a model for addressing both climate change and the housing crisis.
About half the city’s 2 million people live in the widespread (and government-supported) apartments, with solar panels on top and very thick, insulated walls that reduce the need for heating and cooling. (One resident tells NPR they don’t even need an air conditioner because “It’s not cold in winter times. It’s not hot in summer times.”)

Vienna council member Nina Abrahamczik, who heads the climate and environment committee, says as the city transitions all of its buildings off planet-heating fossil fuels, they’re starting with the roughly 420,000 housing units they already own or subsidize…. As Vienna makes an aggressive push to completely move away from climate-polluting natural gas by 2040, it’s starting with much of this social housing, says Jürgen Czernohorszky, executive city councilor responsible for climate and environment. City-owned buildings are now switching from gas to massive electric heat pumps, and to geothermal, which involves probing into the ground to heat homes. Another massive geothermal project that drills even deeper into the earth to heat homes is also underway.
The city is also powering housing with solar energy. As of a year and a half ago, Vienna mandates all new buildings and building extensions to have rooftop solar. And Vienna’s older apartment buildings are getting climate retrofits, says Veronika Iwanowski, spokesperson for Vienna’s municipal housing company, Wiener Wohnen. That includes new insulation, doors and windows to prevent the city’s wind from getting in the cracks. The increase in energy efficiency and switching from gas to renewables doesn’t just have climate benefits from cutting fossil fuel use. It also means housing residents are paying less on electric bills…
With city-subsidized housing, housing developers can compete to get land and low-interest loans from the city. Officials say those competitions are a critical lever for climate action. “As we can control the contents of the competitions, we try to make them fit to the main goals of the city,” says Kurt Hofstetter, city planner for Vienna, “which is of course also ecological….” Now the housing judges give out points for things like increased energy efficiency, green roofs and sustainable building materials… Now the climate innovations in subsidized housing are inspiring the private market as well, Hofstetter says…
The article notes that most of the city’s funding is provided in the form of low-interest loans, according to a researcher at the Austrian Federation of Limited-Profit Housing Associations. (And the average social housing rents are about $700 for a large one-bedroom apartment, says Gerald Kössl, researcher at the Austrian Federation of Limited-Profit Housing Associations.)


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Delightfully irreverent Underdogs isn’t your parents’ nature docuseries

Narrator Ryan Reynolds celebrates nature’s outcasts in the new NatGeo docuseries Underdogs.

Most of us have seen a nature documentary or two (or three) at some point in our lives, so it’s a familiar format: sweeping majestic footage of impressively regal animals accompanied by reverently high-toned narration (preferably with a tony British accent). Underdogs, a new docuseries from National Geographic, takes a decidedly different and unconventional approach. Narrated by with hilarious irreverence by Ryan Reynolds, the five-part series highlights nature’s less cool and majestic creatures: the outcasts and benchwarmers, more noteworthy for their “unconventional hygiene choices” and “unsavory courtship rituals.” It’s like The Suicide Squad or Thunderbolts*, except these creatures actually exist.

Per the official premise, “Underdogs features a range of never-before-filmed scenes, including the first time a film crew has ever entered a special cave in New Zealand—a huge cavern that glows brighter than a bachelor pad under a black light thanks to the glowing butts of millions of mucus-coated grubs. All over the world, overlooked superstars like this are out there 24/7, giving it maximum effort and keeping the natural world in working order for all those showboating polar bears, sharks and gorillas.” It’s rated PG-13 thanks to the odd bit of scatalogical humor and shots of Nature Sexy Time

Each of the five episodes is built around a specific genre. “Superheroes” highlights the surprising superpowers of the honey badger, pistol shrimp, and the invisible glass frog, among others, augmented with comic book graphics; “Sexy Beasts” focuses on bizarre mating habits and follows the format of a romantic advice column; “Terrible Parents” highlights nature’s worst practices, following the outline of a parenting guide; “Total Grossout” is exactly what it sounds like; and “The Unusual Suspects” is a heist tale, documenting the supposed efforts of a macaque to put together the ultimate team of masters of deception and disguise (an inside man, a decoy, a fall guy, etc.).  Green Day even wrote and recorded a special theme song for the opening credits.

Read full article

Comments

Tesla blows past stopped school bus and hits kid-sized dummies in Full Self-Driving tests

A revealing demonstration with Tesla’s Full Self-Driving mode is raising concerns about whether fully autonomous cars are ready to hit the streets. Tesla has reportedly pushed back the rollout of its upcoming all-electric, fully autonomous car called the Cybercab, while a recent demonstration in Austin, Texas showed a Tesla Model Y running through a school bus’ flashing lights and stop signs, and hitting child-size mannequins. The tests were conducted by The Dawn Project, along with Tesla Takedown and ResistAustin, and showed Tesla’s Full Self-Driving software repeating the same mistake eight times.

It’s worth noting that Tesla’s autonomous driving feature is formally known as Full Self-Driving (Supervised) and “requires a fully attentive driver and will display a series of escalating warnings requiring driver response.” Tesla even has a warning that says, “failure to follow these instructions could cause damage, serious injury or death.” However, it’s not the first time that Tesla’s FSD software has found itself in hot water. The Dawn Project, whose founder Dan O’Dowd is the CEO of a company that offers competing automated driving system software, previously took out ads warning about the dangers of Tesla’s Full Self-Driving and how it would fail to yield around school buses. In April 2024, a Model S using Full Self-Driving was involved in a crash in Washington, where a motorcyclist died.

With anticipation building up for an eventual Cybercab rollout on June 22, the company’s CEO posted some additional details on X. According to Elon Musk, Tesla is “being super paranoid about safety, so the date could shift.” Beyond that, Musk also posted that the “first Tesla that drives itself from factory end of line all the way to a customer house is June 28.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/tesla-blows-past-stopped-school-bus-and-hits-kid-sized-dummies-in-full-self-driving-tests-183756251.html?src=rss

Facial Recognition Error Sees Woman Wrongly Accused of Theft

A chain of stores called Home Bargains installed facial recognition software to spot returning shoplifters. Unfortunately, “Facewatch” made a mistake.
“We acknowledge and understand how distressing this experience must have been,” an anonymous Facewatch spokesperson tells the BBC, adding that the store using their technology “has since undertaken additional staff training.”

A woman was accused by a store manager of stealing about £10 (about $13) worth of items (“Everyone was looking at me”). And then it happened again at another store when she was shopping with her 81-year-old mother on June 4th:

“As soon as I stepped my foot over the threshold of the door, they were radioing each other and they all surrounded me and were like ‘you need to leave the store’,” she said. “My heart sunk and I was anxious and bothered for my mum as well because she was stressed….”
It was only after repeated emails to both Facewatch and Home Bargains that she eventually found there had been an allegation of theft of about £10 worth of toilet rolls on 8 May. Her picture had somehow been circulated to local stores alerting them that they should not allow her entry. Ms. Horan said she checked her bank account to confirm she had indeed paid for the items before Facewatch eventually responded to say a review of the incident showed she had not stolen anything. “Because I was persistent I finally got somewhere but it wasn’t easy, it was really stressful,” she said. “My anxiety was really bad — it really played with my mind, questioning what I’ve done for days. I felt anxious and sick. My stomach was turning for a week.”
In one email from Facewatch seen by the BBC, the firm told Ms Horan it “relies on information submitted by stores” and the Home Bargains branches involved had since been “suspended from using the Facewatch system”. Madeleine Stone, senior advocacy officer at the civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch, said they had been contacted by more than 35 people who have complained of being wrongly placed on facial recognition watchlists.

“They’re being wrongly flagged as criminals,” Ms Stone said.
“They’ve given no due process, kicked out of stores,” adds the senior advocacy officer. “This is having a really serious impact.” The group is now calling for the technology to be banned. “Historically in Britain, we have a history that you are innocent until proven guilty but when an algorithm, a camera and a facial recognition system gets involved, you are guilty.

The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology said: “While commercial facial recognition technology is legal in the UK, its use must comply with strict data protection laws. Organisations must process biometric data fairly, lawfully and transparently, ensuring usage is necessary and proportionate.

“No one should find themselves in this situation.”

Thanks to alanw (Slashdot reader #1,822) for sharing the article.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

New York State Begins Asking Employers to Offically Identify Layoffs Caused by AI

The state of New York is “asking companies to disclose whether AI is the reason for their layoffs,” reports Entrepreneur:
The move applies to New York State’s existing Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) system and took effect in March, Bloomberg reported. New York is the first state in the U.S. to add the disclosure, which could help regulators understand AI’s effects on the labor market.

The change takes the form of a checkbox added to a form employers fill out at least 90 days before a mass layoff or plant closure through the WARN system. Companies have to select whether “technological innovation or automation” is a reason for job cuts. If they choose that option, they are directed to a second menu where they are asked to name the specific technology responsible for layoffs, like AI or robots.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.