The man behind the sphere, Freeman Dyson, is dead at 96

Dyson’s ideas even made it to where no man has gone before.

Freeman Dyson, a physicist whose interests often took him to the edge of science fiction, has died at the age of 96. Dyson is probably best known for his idea of eponymous spheres that would allow civilizations to capture all the energy radiating off a star. But his contributions ranged from fundamental physics to the practicalities of using nuclear weapons for war and peace. And he remained intellectually active into his 90s, although he wandered into the wrong side of science when it came to climate change.

Degrees? Who needs ’em?

It’s difficult to find anything that summarizes a career so broad, but a sense of his intellectual energy comes from his educational history. Dyson was a graduate student in physics when he managed to unify two competing ideas about quantum electrodynamics, placing an entire field on a solid theoretical foundation. Rather than writing that up as his thesis, he simply moved on to other interests. He didn’t get a doctorate until the honorary ones started arriving later in his career. His contributions were considered so important that he kept getting faculty jobs regardless.

That came after a fairly conventional start to his education: an undergraduate degree from the University of Cambridge. Like many other scientists at the time, his career was interrupted by World War II, with Dyson working at the Royal Air Force’s Bomber Command, evaluating data from completed missions and finding ways of getting more out of the nation’s aircraft. After the war, he returned to Cambridge to finish his degree, then started in a PhD program at Cornell University in the US.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – The man behind the sphere, Freeman Dyson, is dead at 96

Freeman Dyson, Visionary Technologist, Is Dead at 96

darenw shares a report: Freeman J. Dyson, a mathematical prodigy who left his mark on subatomic physics before turning to messier subjects like Earth’s environmental future and the morality of war, died on Friday at a hospital near Princeton, N.J. He was 96. His daughter Mia Dyson confirmed the death. As a young graduate student at Cornell in 1949, Dr. Dyson wrote a landmark paper — worthy, some colleagues thought, of a Nobel Prize — that deepened the understanding of how light interacts with matter to produce the palpable world. The theory the paper advanced, called quantum electrodynamics, or QED, ranks among the great achievements of modern science. But it was as a writer and technological visionary that he gained public renown.

He imagined exploring the solar system with spaceships propelled by nuclear explosions and establishing distant colonies nourished by genetically engineered plants. “Life begins at 55, the age at which I published my first book,” he wrote in “From Eros to Gaia,” one of the collections of his writings that appeared while he was a professor of physics at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton — an august position for someone who finished school without a Ph.D. The lack of a doctorate was a badge of honor, he said. With his slew of honorary degrees and a fellowship in the Royal Society, people called him Dr. Dyson anyway. Further reading: Slashdot’s interview with Freeman Dyson (2013).

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Freeman Dyson, Visionary Technologist, Is Dead at 96

Google may add free trials and YouTube streaming to Stadia soon

At this point, it’s safe to say Google’s Stadia streaming service hasn’t had the smoothest launch. Between missing features and less than stellar performance, the platform is, at the moment, more about future promise than current potential. However,…

Source: Engadget – Google may add free trials and YouTube streaming to Stadia soon

What In The?: Dead Tree Starts Oozing Liquid Rot After Being Cut

liquid-tree-rot-goodness.jpg

This is a video from some tree removers in Paintsville, Kentucky of a tree that started oozing liquid rot after it was cut. In a worker’s own words while I dial Treebeard on my soup can and string phone and ask if he knew about this:

“My company was called out to a routine tree removal in the Paintsville area. When my son, Brad Auxier cut into the tree a river of water and rotten tree poured from the tree. I have seen this before, but never in this large of amount. It made for a very interesting day.”

“I have seen this before, but never in this large of amount.” I can’t even begin to count how many time I’ve said that myself. Also is that really liquid tree rot? Because I have a sneaking suspicion this is actually *dipping finger in* where all the squirrels have been stashing their beanless chili for the winter. *licks finger* Just as I suspec– just kidding I can’t even pretend, holy shit that was awful I think I’m gonna puke you have to try some seriously it’s so nasty I might have to get my tongue amputated just just to get half the taste out of my mouth.

Keep going for a video of the flow.

Source: Geekologie – What In The?: Dead Tree Starts Oozing Liquid Rot After Being Cut

Mike Bloomberg Wouldn't End Oil Exports for Some Strange Reason

In 2016, the U.S. began exporting oil after hitting pause for 40 years. The increase in fracking and domestic energy production in part fueled that change, but the climate crisis is forcing Democratic candidates to weigh whether they’d reinstate that ban if they win the White House.

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Mike Bloomberg Wouldn’t End Oil Exports for Some Strange Reason

Lady Gaga's New 'Stupid Love' Music Video Is an Apocalyptic Sentai Dance Party

In the buildup to Lady Gaga’s upcoming sixth studio album, the singer’s dropped new single “Stupid Love” and an accompanying music video that exists at the intersection of Mad Max: Fury Road, DC’s Emotional Spectrum, and the Power Rangers, of all things.

Read more…



Source: io9 – Lady Gaga’s New ‘Stupid Love’ Music Video Is an Apocalyptic Sentai Dance Party

'Animal Crossing: New Horizons' has more customization options than ever

Animal Crossing: New Horizons is one of Nintendo’s most anticipated games of 2020. We’ve seen plenty of the game’s content from Nintendo Direct streams, but this weekend, fans are getting their first hands-on experience with Nintendo’s island life si…

Source: Engadget – ‘Animal Crossing: New Horizons’ has more customization options than ever

Here's How To Fix Latest Android Gmail Bug Affecting Spam And Trash Folders

Here's How To Fix Latest Android Gmail Bug Affecting Spam And Trash Folders
Users of Gmail on Android devices may have noticed that there is an issue that prevents some from being able to empty their trash. The same flaw prevents some users from being able to empty their spam bin as well. Not all Android devices are impacted by the issue, but those who are have no “Empty trash now” or “Empty spam now” options on their

Source: Hot Hardware – Here’s How To Fix Latest Android Gmail Bug Affecting Spam And Trash Folders

HotHardware And Asetek Alienware Aurora Ryzen Invasion Gaming PC Giveaway

HotHardware And Asetek Alienware Aurora Ryzen Invasion Gaming PC Giveaway
It has been a few weeks since out last amazing giveaway, so it’s time to dial things up a few notches and offer something truly incredible to all of you. Our friends at Asetek are giving away a handful of powerful Alienware Aurora Ryzen Edition gaming PCs, which are liquid cooled by Asetek-powered closed-loop AIO CPU coolers, and they’ve chosen

Source: Hot Hardware – HotHardware And Asetek Alienware Aurora Ryzen Invasion Gaming PC Giveaway

Senate Unanimously Approves Bill To Ban Purchase of Huawei Equipment With Federal Funds

The Senate unanimously approved legislation on Thursday that would ban the use of federal funds to purchase telecommunications equipment from companies deemed a national security threat, such as Chinese group Huawei. From a report: The bipartisan Secure and Trusted Telecommunications Networks Act, which the House passed in December, bans the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) from giving funds to U.S. telecom groups to purchase equipment from companies deemed threats. The bill would require the FCC to establish a $1 billion fund to help smaller telecom providers to rip out and replace equipment from such companies, and to compile a list of firms seen as posing a threat to telecom networks.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Senate Unanimously Approves Bill To Ban Purchase of Huawei Equipment With Federal Funds

Review: The Invisible Man is a horror film that works on multiple levels

Elisabeth Moss gets the gaslighting treatment in Universal’s reinvention of The Invisible Man.

A traumatized woman escapes her abusive relationship, only to find she is being stalked by an unseen entity in The Invisible Man, (very) loosely based on the H.G. Wells science fiction novel. It’s less a direct adaptation than a reinvention, written and directed by Leigh Whannell, best known for the Saw and Insidious horror franchises. The Invisible Man is horror in the best sense of the word, working on multiple levels and firmly anchored by star Elisabeth Moss’ intensely emotional, yet nuanced, performance.

(Some spoilers below.)

First serialized and then published as a book in 1897, the novel tells the story of a scientist named Griffin, whose research into optics leads him to invent a means of turning himself invisible with a serum that chemically alters his body’s refractive index to match that of air. Wells cited Plato’s Republic as one of his influences, notably a legend involving a magic ring that renders a man invisible, which Plato used to explore whether a person would behave morally if there were no repercussions for bad behavior.

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Review: The Invisible Man is a horror film that works on multiple levels

More than 2,200 agencies and companies have tried Clearview, report finds

More than 2,200 agencies and companies have tried Clearview, report finds

Enlarge (credit: Spencer Whalen | EyeEm | Getty Images)

Secretive startup Clearview AI distributes an apparently very powerful facial recognition tool that matches anyone against an enormous database of photos—it claims more than 3 billion—scraped from basically every major US platform on the Internet. A leaked list now reveals that more than 2,200 government agencies and private businesses have tried the service.

Clearview, which first came to light courtesy of a New York Times report from January, claims to have about 600 customers, all in law enforcement. The company has repeatedly refused to make a client list public, however, and previous reports find that at least some of its marketing claims are significantly exaggerated.

Earlier this week, Clearview disclosed that its client list and some information about searches those customers have run was lost in a data breach. Reporters at BuzzFeed ended up with access to a copy and found far more in it than Clearview has ever admitted.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – More than 2,200 agencies and companies have tried Clearview, report finds

Telescope Image Shows Earth’s New ‘Mini-Moon’

Our planet recently adopted a mini-moon that’s roughly the size of a car, though astronomers aren’t sure yet if it’s an asteroid or an artificial object. An observatory in Hawaii is now providing us with a clearer view of Earth’s intriguing new—yet temporary—celestial companion.

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Telescope Image Shows Earth’s New ‘Mini-Moon’

Eye Candies: 4K Super-Zoomed, Slow-Motion Video From Air Show

Note: Gif really doesn’t do it justice at all.

This is a video released by Warped Perception of some 4K ultra slow motion, super-zoomed footage captured at Chicago’s Annual Air Show, including some beautiful A-10s, F-16s, F-22 Raptors, and the Red Arrows and Blue Angels. And if you thought the jet scenes from Top Gun got you excited, this footage will make you question if you ever really knew what a boner was. “Oh wow.” Right? My head is reeling and my pants ache.

Keep going for the full video along with a screenshot I took of his timestamp clip so you can skip directly to a particular aircraft if you’re interested.

Source: Geekologie – Eye Candies: 4K Super-Zoomed, Slow-Motion Video From Air Show