Authorities Investigating Couple Who Dyed Waterfall Blue for Gender Reveal

The gender reveal trend strikes again: A couple in Brazil is facing scrutiny after a viral video on Instagram showed them revealing the gender of their baby by dying a waterfall blue. Brazil’s environment authority is now investigating the incident according to local media outlets.

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Source: Gizmodo – Authorities Investigating Couple Who Dyed Waterfall Blue for Gender Reveal

OpenAI Will Remove Its Waitlist for DALL-E, Giving Anyone Immediate Access

An anonymous reader shares a report:Since the research lab OpenAI debuted the latest version of DALL-E in April, the AI has dazzled the public, attracting digital artists, graphic designers, early adopters, and anyone in search of online distraction. The ability to create original, sometimes accurate, and occasionally inspired images from any spur-of-the-moment phrase, like a conversational Photoshop, has startled even jaded internet users with how quickly AI has progressed. Five months later, 1.5 million users are generating 2 million images a day. On Wednesday, OpenAI said it will remove its waitlist for DALL-E, giving anyone immediate access.

The introduction of DALL-E has triggered an explosion of text-to-image generators. Google and Meta quickly revealed that they had each been developing similar systems, but said their models weren’t ready for the public. Rival start-ups soon went public, including Stable Diffusion and Midjourney, which created the image that sparked controversy in August when it won an art competition at the Colorado State Fair.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – OpenAI Will Remove Its Waitlist for DALL-E, Giving Anyone Immediate Access

Silver in the Bone Delivers a Spooky Peek Into the World of Magical Treasure-Hunters

Want to add a jolt of spine-tingling terror to your day? io9’s got an exclusive except from Silver in the Bone, the latest from best-selling author Alexandra Bracken (The Darkest Minds) that’ll fit the bill quite nicely. The book is about a reluctant treasure hunter, and the scene features an encounter with… well,…

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Source: Gizmodo – Silver in the Bone Delivers a Spooky Peek Into the World of Magical Treasure-Hunters

Everyone Should Sit Down When They Pee

People with penises: If you’ve spent your life standing when you pee, it’s time to rethink your urinary posture. Standing is (probably) the Western world’s most common micturition position among those with penises, but it’s far from universal. Men in some cultures traditionally sit or squat when they pee, and even…

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Source: LifeHacker – Everyone Should Sit Down When They Pee

Astronauts Share Menacing View Of Hurricane Ian As Seen From 260 Miles Above Earth

Astronauts Share Menacing View Of Hurricane Ian As Seen From 260 Miles Above Earth
Hurricane Ian was captured from far above on Monday as the International Space Station moved over the colossal storm. The storm was still south of Cuba and making its way to Florida’s Gulf Coast when the images from 260 miles above were captured.

The International Space Station (ISS) passed above the then-Tropical Storm Ian, capturing just

Source: Hot Hardware – Astronauts Share Menacing View Of Hurricane Ian As Seen From 260 Miles Above Earth

Apple Removes Russia's Largest Social Network From the App Store

Apple has removed the iOS apps belonging to VK, the technology conglomerate behind Russia’s version of Facebook called VKontakte, from its App Store globally. From a report: In a translated statement on its website, VK said that its apps “are blocked by Apple” but that it will “continue to develop and support iOS applications.” In response to an inquiry by The Verge, Apple spokesperson Adam Dema confirmed that VK’s apps have been removed and its developer accounts shut down.

“These apps are being distributed by developers majority-owned or majority-controlled by one or more parties sanctioned by the UK government,” Dema said in a statement. “In order to comply with these sanctions, Apple terminated the developer accounts associated with these apps, and the apps cannot be downloaded from any App Store, regardless of location. Users who have already downloaded these apps may continue to use them.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Apple Removes Russia’s Largest Social Network From the App Store

Watch Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman Explain Wolverine in Deadpool 3… Sort Of

What we’ve got here is a gimmick. Ryan Reynolds, after announcing yesterday that Wolvervine—and Hugh Jackman—would be returning to the MCU for Deadpool 3, has once again taken to Twitter to give some more background and explain a few things. Take a listen to the men themselves below.

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Source: Gizmodo – Watch Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman Explain Wolverine in Deadpool 3… Sort Of

NYU is building an ultrasonic flood sensor network in New York's Gowanus neighborhood

People made some 760 million trips aboard New York’s subway system last year. Granted, that’s down from around 1.7 trillion trips, pre-pandemic, but still far outpaced the next two largest transit systems — DC’s Metro and the Chicago Transit Authority — combined. So when major storms, like last year’s remnants of Hurricane Ida, nor’easters, heavy downpours or swelling tides swamp New York’s low lying coastal areas and infrastructure, it’s a big deal.

Subway service notice is seen at the 63rd St. and Lexington Avenue early afternoon in Manhattan after remnants of Hurricane Ida caused serious flooding in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, in New York, U.S., September 2, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Oatis
Jonathan Oatis / reuters

And it’s a deal that’s only getting bigger thanks to climate change. Sea levels around the city have already risen a foot in the last century with another 8- to 30-inch increase expected by mid century, and up to 75 additional inches by 2100, according to the New York City Panel on Climate Change. To help city planners, emergency responders and everyday citizens alike better prepare for 100-year storms that are increasingly happening every couple, researchers from NYU’s Urban Flooding Group have developed a street-level sensor system that can track rising street tides in real time.

The city of New York is set atop a series of low lying islands and has been subject to the furies of mid-Atlantic hurricanes throughout its history. In 1821, a hurricane reportedly hit directly over the city, flooding streets and wharves with 13-foot swells rising over the course of just one hour; a subsequent Cat I storm in 1893 then scoured all signs of civilization from Hog Island, and a Cat III passed over Long Island, killing 200 and causing major flooding. Things did not improve with the advent of a storm naming convention. Carol in 1954 also caused citywide floods, Donna in ‘60 brought an 11-foot storm surge with her, and Ida in 2021 saw an unprecedented amount of rainfall and subsequent flooding in the region, killing more than 100 people and causing nearly a billion dollars in damages.

NYC floodplains
NOAA

As the NYC Planning Department explains, when it comes to setting building codes, zoning and planning, the city works off of FEMA’s Preliminary Flood Insurance Rate Maps (PFIRMs) to calculate an area’s flood risk. PFIRMs cover the areas where, “flood waters are expected to rise during a flood event that has a 1 percent annual chance of occurring,” sometimes called the 100-year floodplain. As of 2016, some 52 million square feet of NYC coastline falls within that categorization, impacting 400,000 residents — more than than the entire populations of Cleveland, Tampa, or St. Louis. By 2050, that area of effect is expected to double and the probability of 100-year floods occuring could triple, meaning the chances that your home will face significant flooding over the course of a 30-year mortgage would jump from around 26 percent today to nearly 80 percent by mid-century.

NYC 500 year floodplain
NOAA

As such, responding to today’s floods while preparing for worsening events in the future is a critical task for NYC’s administration, requiring coordination between governmental and NGOs at the local, state and federal levels. FloodNet, a program launched first by NYU and expanded with help from CUNY, operates on the hyperlocal level to provide a street-by-street look at flooding throughout a given neighborhood. The program began with NYU’s Urban Flooding Group.

“We are essentially designing, building and deploying low cost sensors to measure street level flooding,” Dr. Andrea Silverman, environmental engineer and Associate Professor at NYU’s Department of Civil and Urban Engineering, told Engadget. “The idea is that it can provide badly needed quantitative data. Before FloodNet, there was no quantitative data on street level flooding, so people didn’t really have a full sense of how often certain locations were flooding — the duration of the floods, the depth, rates of onset and drainage, for example.”

FloodNet inner workings
Urban Flooding Group, NYU

“And these are all pieces of information that are helpful for infrastructure planning, for one, but also for emergency management,” she continued. “So we do have our data available, they send alerts to see folks that are interested, like the National Weather Service and emergency management, to help inform their response.”

FloodNet is currently in early development with just 23 sensor units erected on 8-foot tall posts throughout the Gowanus neighborhood in Brooklyn, though the team hopes to expand that network to more than 500 units citywide within the next half decade. Each FloodNet sensor is a self-contained, solar-powered system that uses ultrasound as an invisible rangefinder — as flood waters rise, the distance between the street surface and the sensor shrinks, calculating the difference between that and baseline readings shows how much the water level has risen. The NYU team opted for an ultrasound-based solution rather than, say LiDAR or RADAR, due to ultrasound tech being slightly less expensive and providing more focused return data, as well as being more accurate and requiring less maintenance than a basic contact water sensor.

The data each sensor produces is transmitted wirelessly using a LoRa transceiver to a gateway hub, which can pull from any sensor within a one-mile radius and push it through the internet to the FloodNet servers. The data is then displayed in real-time on the FloodNet homepage.

Floodnet map of NYC
URban Flooding Group, NYU

”The city has invested a lot in predictive models [estimating] where it would flood with a certain amount of rain, or increase in tide,” Silverman said. Sensors won’t have to be installed on every corner to be most effective, she pointed out. There are “certain locations that are more likely to be flood prone because of topology or because of the sewer network or because of proximity to the coast, for example. And so we use those models to try to get a sense of locations where it may be most flood-prone,” as well as reach out to local residents with first-hand knowledge of likely flood areas.

In order to further roll out the program, the sensors will need to undergo a slight redesign, Silverman noted. “The next version of the sensor, we’re taking what we’ve learned from our current version and making it a bit more manufacturable,” she said. “We’re in the process of testing that and then we’re hoping to start our first manufacturing round, and that’s what’s going to allow us to expand out”.

FloodNet is an open-source venture, so all of the sensor schematics, firmware, maintenance guides and data are freely available on the team’s GitHub page. “Obviously you need to have some sort of technical know-how to be able to build them — it may not be right now where just anyone could go build a sensor, deploy it and be online immediately, in terms of being able to just generate the data, but we’re trying to get there,” Silverman conceded. “Eventually we’d love to get to a place where we can have the designs written up in a way that anyone can approach it.”



Source: Engadget – NYU is building an ultrasonic flood sensor network in New York’s Gowanus neighborhood

The Difference Between Problem-Based and Emotion-Based Coping

When you’re dealing with undue stress, there’s no one right way to cope with the challenge. Different situations call for different reactions, primarily depending on whether or not the problem at hand is within your control. How can you tell when you’re being overly emotional, or when the only thing you can do is…

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Source: LifeHacker – The Difference Between Problem-Based and Emotion-Based Coping

AMD PMF Cool & Quiet Framework Readied For Linux 6.1

One of the new drivers set to make its debut with Linux 6.1 is the AMD Platform Management Framework “PMF” with an intent on “making AMD PCs smarter, quieter, power efficient by adapting to user behavior and environment” with next-generation hardware. Another part of AMD PMF, the Cool and Quiet Framework (CnQF) has also been queued up for introduction in Linux 6.1…

Source: Phoronix – AMD PMF Cool & Quiet Framework Readied For Linux 6.1

Announcing the GNU Toolchain Infrastructure Project

The backers of the GNU Toolchain Infrastructure Project, which was the
subject of an intense discussion at the GNU
Tools Cauldron, have finally posted
their plans
publicly.

Linux Foundation IT services plans for the GNU Toolchain include
Git repositories, mailing lists, issue tracking, web sites, and
CI/CD, implemented with strong authentication, attestation, and
security posture. Utilizing the experience and infrastructure of
the LF IT team that is already used by the Linux kernel community
will provide the most effective solution and best experience for
the GNU Toolchain developer community.



Source: LWN.net – Announcing the GNU Toolchain Infrastructure Project

I Played 1,167 Hours Of Dragon Age: Origins And Lived

Dragon Age is an immensely popular fantasy roleplaying series that has spawned several main entries, spin-off games, novels, comics books, a tabletop game, an animated film, and a web series. Yet the first entry in the series was relatively modest: Origins is a single-player game with a main story campaign that…

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Source: Kotaku – I Played 1,167 Hours Of Dragon Age: Origins And Lived

Here's Your Fix For NVIDIA's GeForce GPUs Stuttering In Games On Windows 11 PCs

Here's Your Fix For NVIDIA's GeForce GPUs Stuttering In Games On Windows 11 PCs
The first major update to Windows 11 (version 2H22) brought with it some nifty new features and security upgrades, but unfortunately it also caused major headaches for some GeForce owners. Complaints included dropped framerates, game stuttering, broken G-Sync functionality, and other annoying issues. Fortunately, NVIDIA was quick to issue

Source: Hot Hardware – Here’s Your Fix For NVIDIA’s GeForce GPUs Stuttering In Games On Windows 11 PCs

Tune into our Amazon hardware event liveblog at 12PM ET!

Amazon is holding its annual fall showcase of new devices on September 28 at 9AM PT/12PM ET and as usual for an Amazon event, we expect things to get a little chaotic. Amazon’s stream is not open to the public, or even to all members of the press. Meanwhile, and during the one-hour-or-so presentation, we expect the company to unleash a firehose of new products ahead of the holiday season, from Fire TV devices to Echo speakers and displays to who knows what else. (Remember that time Amazon surprised us with an Alexa-powered microwave?) 

Fortunately, Team Engadget are among the media outlets that can view the livestream, and we’ll be liveblogging everything that comes out of the event. Bookmark this page and tune in below to our liveblog, kicking off around the same time the event does, at noon ET on Wednesday.

Alzheimer's Drug Slows Cognitive Decline in Key Study

The pharmaceutical companies Biogen and Eisai said this week that a drug they are developing for Alzheimer’s disease had slowed the rate of cognitive decline in a large late-stage clinical trial. From a report: The strong results boost the drug’s chances of winning approval and offer renewed hope for a class of Alzheimer’s drugs that have repeatedly failed or generated mixed results. The positive data also offer Biogen a second chance after the company’s disastrous rollout of another Alzheimer’s drug, Aduhelm. That medication won regulatory approval last year despite little evidence that it could slow cognitive decline, received only sharply limited coverage by Medicare and has proved to be a commercial failure.

The results appear stronger for the new medication, lecanemab. Cognitive decline in the group of volunteers who received lecanemab was reduced by 27 percent compared with the group who received a placebo in the clinical trial, which enrolled nearly 1,800 participants with mild cognitive impairment or mild Alzheimer’s disease, the companies said. The trial of lecanemab, which is administered via intravenous infusion, was the largest to date to test whether clearing the brain of plaques formed by the accumulation of a protein called amyloid could slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease. Aduhelm is designed to work in a similar way.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Alzheimer’s Drug Slows Cognitive Decline in Key Study

You Can Still Get DVDs From Netflix (and Maybe You Should)

Am I the only one who didn’t know Netflix still offered DVDs? The company has been all-in on streaming for so long, I guess I assumed its physical media fell away at some point between House of Cards and Squid Games. However, even in 2022, you can mail yourself movies and TV shows directly from Netflix, so long as…

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Source: LifeHacker – You Can Still Get DVDs From Netflix (and Maybe You Should)