Mycle Cargo is almost the longtail of the people I’ve been waiting for

Last year, I asked if we’d ever see an e-cargo bike “for the people,” with powerful electric assist, generous cargo capacity and an affordable price. Soon after, Mycle got in touch to say its own offering, the Mycle Cargo, was exactly the bike I was looking for. It added that the struggles I’d had with heavy loads and steep hills wouldn’t be a problem for its affordable cargo longtail. After spending the better part of three months riding this thing around, I can heartily agree that it ticks many of the boxes I was hoping for. I may not have fallen head-over-heels in love with it in the way I had hoped, or expected to, but I’m sure it could find a place in the homes of many cyclists.

Mycle is a British-built e-bike which fits into the same category as Tern’s GSD, with a step through frame and beefy longtail. Support struts and plastic panels enclose the thick rear wheel, which houses the surprisingly-powerful 250W hub motor. Now, I won’t bang this drum too much, but this thing is less than half the price of some of its competitors in the cargo longtail space. Here in the UK, a Tern GSD or Yuba’s Spicy Curry will set you back around £5,000 before you start picking optional extras. By comparison, the Cargo’s retail price is £1,999, which will get you the standard setup, including integrated front and rear lights.

Image of the Mycle Cargo bike in a wood.
Daniel Cooper

The model I tested, meanwhile, had a few luxuries added on, including an LCD display which adds £150 to the price. My model also had a front basket (£89) and a caboose to enclose the rear deck to help keep my kids safe (£129). The only other mainstream e-cargo bike in this price bracket is Rad Power’sRadWagon 4, which I’m looking to test in the future to offer a good head-to-head comparison. On paper, the RadWagon has a far lower center of gravity and a bigger payload weight, but a far shorter promised range.

Every issue I could raise about the Mycle Cargo, and I have a few, can likely be answered by its price. These bikes need to be affordable to win over would-be buyers who can quite reasonably say that five grand would get you a decent second-hand car and cover a year’s running costs. And while two thousand pounds is no small investment for a lot of people right now, it may wind up saving them cash if it helps them get around without a car. You can certainly carry at least two kids on the rear deck, and can probably mount a third seat up front should you need.

Image of the Mycle Cargo bike in a wood.
Daniel Cooper

Mycle Cargo measures in at 187cm (73.6in) long and 73cm (28.7in) wide, with a quoted kerb weight of around 80 pounds. Even in my fairly spacious house, it took up a lot of room, and it requires a decent amount of effort to get it up my front steps. Which is a euphemistic way of saying that if you’re in a small space, or don’t have great upper body strength, you might need to look for an alternative. I found that, the longer I rode it, the easier it became to handle, so I think my time with the bike has contributed to some minor enswolening of my arms.

The bike arrives half-assembled, and you’ll need to get a hex key to screw in the footplates, caboose, front basket and fit the handlebars. This requires a decent amount of patience, since there’s so much engineering going on that your fingers won’t have much room to maneuver. If you can, get a bike store to do the finishing off for you, especially if you’ve got chunky hands and a tendency to swear in frustration after the screw falls out three times in a row.

Image of the Mycle Cargo bike in a wood.
Daniel Cooper

The bike is fitted with a wonderfully comfortable seat, and is equipped with a modest, but solid, set of components. There’s Tektro mechanical disc brakes and a 7-speed Shimano Altus set, which might provoke a sniff or two from higher-minded cycling types. Both are what I’d call modestly priced, and aside from the odd stiff gear change, neither felt out of place, with good braking even on steep hills. It’s also clear that cost savings in this area help get the overall price down without causing too much pain for the rider on a daily basis. One nitpick I do have is that the built-in double-sided kickstand is sturdy, it still feels a little weak and I wish it was a bit thicker.

Now, from here on out, we’ll be talking about my experience of riding Mycle Cargo, and I’d say that I’m a general-purpose cyclist at best. Certainly, I’m open about my deficiencies, and hope that I can offer a better perspective for would-be riders than a road-hardened professional. If you’re a novice rider looking for a cargo bike, then these are the issues you’ll probably want to be mindful of, whereas more experienced riders can probably just look at the price, what you get for that chunk of cash, and head to the Mycle website to pre-order one.

Image of the Mycle Cargo bike in a wood.
Daniel Cooper

The issue with weight, for instance, is going to be harder for novices to deal with compared to people who already own more than one pair of waterproof trousers. Mycle Cargo is heavy and, in my early rides, proved to be more than I could handle in terms of its balance issues. Even with fat tyres, which are designed to improve balance, I found it very easy to lose control of this thing at lower speeds. I tried to take the kids to school in rush-hour traffic, and pushed off in a quiet moment, only to find the bike started to wobble. I tried to correct it, but in doing so nearly pitched sideways into a van coming the other way.

Fortunately, this problem did eventually go away, but it took me a lot of (solo) trial-and-error and some counterintuitive tyre-deflating before I put the kids back on it again. Once I’d got the Mycle set up the way I did, riding became a lot easier and I had some fairly glorious runs around the local area. But don’t expect to climb on this in the first hour or two and expect to be zooming around your town without a care in the world. The learning curve is there, and it is steep, and I found the damped steering – designed to prevent you making risky, aggressive turns – was a bit of a pain in my early trips.

Image of the Mycle Cargo bike in a wood.
Daniel Cooper

Once you get past the slow-speed wobbles, however, do you find Mycle Cargo’s comfort zone, which is unleashing its vast reserves of power. Accelerate a bit, and you’ll find riding the bike is easy and comfortable, but if you only run it on flat ground, you’ll miss out on its party piece. My kids’ school is at the top of a hill that measures around 11 degrees (or more) at its gentlest point. And I’ve ridden a few 250W hub motor bikes up there with varying levels of comfort, and even a light single-seater can sometimes struggle.

This thing? With all the added weight in its frame and two kids in the back? I have never seen a bike move this fast. It shot up the hill faster than the car I was passing, and I very quickly had to dial down the assistance level to stop feeling uncomfortable. When that pedal assist kicks in after a second or so’s delay, you feel as if you’re being towed by a car. It ships with a throttle but I don’t think I was ever compelled to use it outside of trying to intentionally test it, because one full turn of the pedal and this thing moves like a rocket.

Image of the Mycle Cargo bike in a wood.
Daniel Cooper

I cannot overstate how much power Mycle has managed to wring out of this motor, to the point where I’d almost want to joke that it’s really a 500W motor with the wrong label. I cannot imagine anyone riding this thing and thinking that it’ll do anything but conquer any terrain you put in front of it. If I had infinite time and money, I’d take this to France and irritate everyone doing a mountain cycle climb as I lap them while lazily pedaling my way to lunch. The downside is the lack of refinement; dial down the electric assist and you’ll very quickly feel a lurch as the motor steps down a notch.

That’s really where your money isn’t going with a bike like this – into the refinements that would see it go from a two grand bike to a five grand one. I can think of plenty of tweaks I’d like to see, including a lighter weight, lower center of gravity and better handling. But if the choice is this bike or one that’ll cost more than twice the price, I’d rather keep my cash in the bank.

You can pre-order the Mycle Cargo now, with deliveries slated for some point in August. That will come with a few tweaks, including upgraded brakes – hydraulic, rather than mechanical – and fittings for a new rear-caboose. The new model will also be able to use a new clubhouse-style weather tent to keep your kids dry on windier days, but there’s no word on how much that’ll cost you at present.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mycle-cargo-is-almost-the-longtail-of-the-people-ive-been-waiting-for-130046591.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Mycle Cargo is almost the longtail of the people I’ve been waiting for

Two Classic Zelda Blockbusters Just Dropped For Switch

What a treat! It’s not the Link’s Awakening Remake-style makeover some (read: me) were hoping for, but Nintendo just threw two all-time great Zelda games up on its Switch Online subscription service. The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons and Oracle of Ages are available to play starting July 27, and the timing…

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Source: Kotaku – Two Classic Zelda Blockbusters Just Dropped For Switch

Everything You Need to Know About Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 6

Earlier today, Samsung announced two new Galaxy Watch devices, the Galaxy Watch 6 and Galaxy Watch 6 Classic. While they look similar to the previous Galaxy Watch 5, the new Watch 6 line sports plenty of upgrades and new features over Samsung’s other wearable devices, including better specs, a more compact design, and…

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Source: LifeHacker – Everything You Need to Know About Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 6

GNU Assembler Adds Support For Intel's 2024~2025 ISA Extensions

Going along with Intel adding Lunar Lake and Arrow Lake support to the GCC compiler, Intel has also now contributed the new ISA extensions for these future processors to the GNU Assembler “Gas” support as part of their early compiler toolchain enablement…

Source: Phoronix – GNU Assembler Adds Support For Intel’s 2024~2025 ISA Extensions

Photoshop can now use generative AI to expand images

Generative AI in Photoshop is now useful for more than filling in gaps. Adobe has updated the Photoshop beta with a Generative Expand feature that grows an image using AI-made content. Drag the crop tool beyond the original picture size and you can add material with or without a text prompt. This can help when an image is simply too small, of course, but Adobe also believes it can help when you want to change aspect ratios, fix a cut-off subject or otherwise touch up artwork.

At the same time, generative AI text prompts in the beta now work in over 100 languages. You won’t have to use a very common language like English to produce content.

Generative Expand and the wider text prompt support should be available once you’ve updated the Photoshop beta app. Adobe is teasing more generative AI features arriving this fall, so you’ll have more creative tools before long.

As with Generative Fill, Expand is meant primarily for creators who are more interested in artistic expression than accuracy. The catch, of course, is that you can also distort or exaggerate images. You can create a dramatic panorama of a pristine beach when the reality is far uglier, for instance. While manipulating images in editors like Photoshop is nothing new, the AI makes it easier to spread misinformation or otherwise mislead viewers.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/photoshop-can-now-use-generative-ai-to-expand-images-133421406.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Photoshop can now use generative AI to expand images

All the Places You Can Get a ‘Free’ Netflix Subscription

Netflix has officially made their password-sharing crackdown policy global, and it’s been working for them—the streaming company has gained 5.9 million new subscribers in the last three months, according to The Guardian. But what if you could still get Netflix for “free”? I use quotes here because, as you know,…

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Source: LifeHacker – All the Places You Can Get a ‘Free’ Netflix Subscription

Play This Excellent Cyberpunk Action-RPG Before It Leaves Game Pass

Game Pass is losing a big one this month. 2021’s The Ascent, a gritty top-down action-RPG about investigating the mysterious disappearance of a megacorporation in a futuristic dystopia, is finally leaving Microsoft’s Netflix-like subscription service at the end of July. You should give it a try before it does.

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Source: Kotaku – Play This Excellent Cyberpunk Action-RPG Before It Leaves Game Pass

Five Areas Where Generative AI Could Make a Real Difference

Generative AI has hit the world like a storm. Right now, it’s focused in either user tools like what Microsoft has supplied, or customer interactions and general operational assistance like IBM’s watsonx. It is certainly good that both of those companies are focused on using this to enhance us rather than replace us (the actor and writer strike comes to mind). Since I agree that enhancement should be the purpose of these tools, I’ll focus on implementations that make us better, not those that make us obsolete.  

Let’s get to it.

Remote employee onboarding

Human resources (HR) units have a serious problem that began back in the 1970s when HR stopped being about providing an alternative to unions by creating better places to work. Instead, they became compliance organizations concerned with keeping the company from being sued. Sadly, for me, that happened right after I got my middle degree in manpower management, a skill set focused on what HR was supposed to be because it made that degree obsolete. 

But the pandemic changed a lot of things. With unions once again regaining a foothold, there’s a need for HR to not only return to making their companies a better place to work but to deal with the unique needs of remote employees without having to force them back into the office has become pronounced. 

Generative AI could be effectively used to better onboard all employees, but it would be particularly useful for remote workers who are complaining they feel disconnected from their firms. They simply don’t have the contacts, relationships, or face time they need to feel a part of the company, and onsite employees don’t seem to have the time or inclination to engage with them. 

Generative AI could be used to not only create a pervasive voice interface for these employees but also to supply an always-available, always-listening assistant that can help them navigate the new firm. And it can do even more. That ‘more’ includes being a relationship service that helps people meet other remote or local co-workers and help them form connections, alert management if an employee is struggling so they can be given timely help, and generally focus on the care and wellbeing of the employee. This could reduce the turnover and unionization problems that firms are dealing with now.  

CEO assistant

As I write this, Elon Musk has done something else that is incredibly foolish. He changed the name of Twitter to X, which is already trademarked by both Microsoft and Facebook. It is not going well

CEOs tend to surround themselves with people who agree with them. They don’t want to hear unwelcome news, yet avoiding a mistake is vastly less expensive than making one. I trained to be a CEO at IBM and learned enough to realize that I never wanted that job. New CEOs are seldom aware of their risks, are poorly mentored, and often make avoidable mistakes. 

Yet they cannot really confide in anyone due to insider trading risks, staff envy (everyone wants to be the CEO’s confidant), not knowing who to trust, and generally suffering from a bit too much ego. An AI trained to be a CEO and dedicated to a chief executive could be the confidant that a CEO, particularly a new CEO, could be open with. It could (hopefully) help that CEO avoid mistakes that often kill the companies they manage, or at least walk them through their alternative choices to better choose the best one. 

One person in a position of power can make or break a company, and while it would be expensive given how much these folks are paid, it would be a terrific way to assure the CEO investment. 

Company spokesperson 

People do not interact with companies. Not really. They interact with employees, yet the employees they interact with seldom learn about the customer. When used in advertising, spokespeople are problematic, too, because they are human, and humans make mistakes. Now I said that I was not going to talk about replacing people, but the job of a company media spokesperson is unfilled today. 

Even brands like McDonald’s and Jack in The Box have dropped their human representatives because they were just too problematic. You may recall that Dell used a kid in their ads until that kid had a drug problem years ago

And this role is not good for the person enacting it, either, as they are always on stage or must be on their best behavior constantly, which has turned out to be impossible for humans. So, this is a role that companies shouldn’t try to fill with people but would be perfect for an AI that can scale while a person can’t. An AI can answer the phone or make calls, remember the details of everyone it communicates with, and never get angry or upset, making it a perfect representative of a company brand.  

Initial crisis response

People tend to panic when something big, bad, and unexpected happens. They need a calming influence that can help them make rapid decisions to mitigate the damage. Yet when a crisis hits, everyone is so busy running around they don’t have time to stop and think about what the best decisions should be. Crisis plans are forgotten, particularly if the people who wrote them are no longer with the company, and people are put at risk by conflicting directives, bad decisions, and people that act without forethought. 

Generative AI does not panic, it can be triggered by an event, and it can provide near-instant relevant vocal guidance on what to do. Take the example of an active shooter tied into the building security system. AI can direct people away from the danger rather than a typical evacuation which may have people running towards a shooter. 

Building on products like BlackBerry’s AtHoc, AI could do a far better job of keeping employees safe and assuring that whatever can be done to protect both the site and the people in and around it is done. It can step in for missing or lost critical information and decision-making resources and better assure the outcome for almost any unplanned event by aggregating the information from similar events both at the company and all over the world. 

Freedom

As with most of you, I have been watching the writers’ and actors’ unions go on strike partially because of fears generative AI will take their jobs. But were they to use generative AI, these creatives could form smaller companies and move around the studios to make their own content and better control their own destinies. I used to be an actor. You rarely get the roles you really want, writers’ scripts (even good ones) often go unpurchased, and the result is that much of the creativity that industry could use is lost. With the generative AI tools out there now, you can create ever more professional-looking content with fewer people, leaving the truly creative people the freedom to forge their own path away from the studios and their convoluted, biased staffing and creative process.  

For people who want to follow their dream, generative AI will increasingly supply a way to explore their muse, seek out new opportunities and go where they only dreamed of going before. Why be a part of someone else’s dream when you have the potential to make your dream real? Generative AI doesn’t have to be a threat. It can be an enabler so that the project you imagine can become real whether it is just a proof of concept, pilot, or a complete movie. These tools could change the lives of those that use them and give artists the freedom to dream, create and produce content like never before and give the rest of us access to a level of content diversity never seen in the world before or since. 

Wrapping up:

Generative AI is a potential game-changer. To be most effective, it needs to focus on where it is needed most, like remote employee onboarding, CEO aid (Elon Musk really needs this), company spokesperson, crisis response, and supplying the freedom for creators to truly create. 

Perhaps focusing AI on helping those that most need it is the path that we should be on. Here’s hoping some of you find your own path with this amazing technology. 



Source: TG Daily – Five Areas Where Generative AI Could Make a Real Difference

The Best Gear to Keep Your Workspace Clean (and Sanitary)

Research shows that a decluttered workspacewhether digital or physical—can be beneficial for your productivity and your sense of wellbeing. Decluttering is great, but once you’ve tackled that, you know what else is good for you? Working somewhere clean—really clean. Disinfecting, sanitizing, and cleaning up dust and…

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Source: LifeHacker – The Best Gear to Keep Your Workspace Clean (and Sanitary)

A Nearly 20-Year Ban on Human Spaceflight Regulations Set To Expire

An anonymous reader shares a report: In 2004, Congress passed a law that established a moratorium on federal safety regulations for commercial astronauts and space tourists riding to space on new privately owned rockets and spacecraft. The idea was to allow time for new space companies to establish themselves before falling under the burden of regulations, an eventuality that spaceflight startups argued could impede the industry’s development. The moratorium is also known as a “learning period,” a term that describes the purpose of the provision. It’s supposed to give companies and the Federal Aviation Administration — the agency tasked with overseeing commercial human spaceflight, launch, and re-entry operations — time to learn how to safely fly in space and develop smart regulations, those that make spaceflight safer but don’t restrict innovation. Without action from Congress, by the end of September, the moratorium on human spaceflight regulations will expire. That has many in the commercial space industry concerned.

The House Science Committee is considering a commercial space bill that might extend the learning period, but the content of the bill hasn’t been released yet. Rep. Frank Lucas (R-Okla.), chair of the House Science Committee, said one of his priorities in developing the space bill is ensuring a “thoughtful regulatory environment that supports innovation.” Given the hotly partisan tenor of Capitol Hill and a range of other priorities, it’s not clear if the bill — whatever it says — can be passed before October 1. “Things are sort of moving, but… how do you deal with the moratorium? Can you get that by October 1 and get something passed? Is that something everyone can agree to, or is that going to get bogged down? You just don’t know right now, and that’s just a bad place to be,” said Allen Cutler, president of the Coalition for Deep Space Exploration, in a panel discussion at the John Glenn Memorial Symposium earlier this month.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – A Nearly 20-Year Ban on Human Spaceflight Regulations Set To Expire

‘Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ probes the limits of redemption

The following contains spoilers for “Under the Cloak of War.”

“Some things break in a way that can never be repaired, only managed.” It’s the final line in a powerhouse episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. “Under the Cloak of War” lays out a host of questions about memory, grief and redemption – reiterating the key obsessions of this season – none of which it could possibly answer. For some shows, this would be a bad thing, but Strange New Worlds is becoming increasingly comfortable living with ambiguity. Much as I may be flush with recency bias, I already feel it may be the standout of the season.

The Enterprise has been asked to carry Dak’Rah (An unrecognizable Robert Wisdom), a successful, but deeply controversial, Federation ambassador to the Prospero system. Controversial because he’s a Klingon who defected during the recent war, who is also known as the “Butcher of J’Gal.” Not just because of the orders he gave, including massacring his own civilians, but because he killed all of his generals just before he defected. Dak’Rah is embraced by Pike, Una and Uhura as a beacon of hope for a more peaceful future. But Ortegas, who fought in the war, and M’Benga and Chapel, who actually served in a field hospital on J’Gal, can’t get over the past, or their own pain. 

We flash back to Chapel’s arrival on J’Gal, where she’s greeted by Trek good luck charm Clint Howard’s commanding officer. Her orientation lasts for all of a minute before she’s picking up casualties from the transporter pad and trying to save them without key medical tech. One soldier gets loaded into the pattern buffer to keep him alive until rescue arrives, while others get operated on the old-fashioned way. M’Benga and Chapel quickly bond over their rough time in the medical trenches, and develop a shorthand to help each other along.

L-R Anson Mount as Pike, Robert Wisdom as Dak'Rah and Christina Chong as La’an appearing in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds streaming on Paramount+, 2023. Photo Credit: Best Possible Screengrab/Paramount+
Paramount+

In the present, Pike asks all three to quell their objections and come to dinner with Dak’Rah, who is trying to hold court over the captain’s table. None of them are able to make nice for too long, and Ortegas quickly leaves, with Chapel following behind. Pike notices that while M’Benga remains, he’s gripping the arms of his seat so tightly that he’s about to rip them off, and asks him to go look after the absent pair. But not before Ra, knowing that M’Benga loves martial arts, asks to set up a session between the two with an arm grip that’s a little too aggressive.

Back on J’Gal, M’Benga treats a wounded soldier who wonders what the point of this battle really is. The doctor gives a rousing speech, bringing to mind the “you want me on that wall” speech from Aaron Sorkin’s A Few Good Men. He says the risk of Klingon expansionism is too great, and that Starfleet fights so that others can live their lives in peace. But while the speech is effective, it’s delivered a little too convincingly, especially given we soon learn that M’Benga used to be the guy wielding the knife rather than the scalpel.

Soon after, a special forces commander asks M’Benga for some Protocol 12, the green steroids M’Benga and Chapel used in “The Broken Circle.” As annoyed as I was that M’Benga himself created it – I’m never a fan of secret origin stories where the same five characters are at the center of literally everything in the universe – I was pleased we didn’t get an over-explanation of its genesis. The doctor refuses, so the commander asks if M’Benga himself, under his old guise of “The Ghost” will join the team on its daring mission given how effective his murder skills are, or were.

The military is planning to send a small unit to try and wipe out J’Gal’s leaders once and for all, while committing the bulk of its forces to a grand frontal assault as a distraction. The soldier M’Benga previously patched up is going back out there to get chopped up, everyone knowing ahead of time they’re being sent to the meat grinder. But the Klingons are ready for them, disabling the field hospital’s power generators, preventing them from saving the casualties as they pile up. Chapel gets a transporter online, but can’t activate it without wiping the soldier who was kept in the pattern buffer earlier, something M’Benga does with little hesitation.

Back on the ship, M’Benga and Dak’Rah start their sparring session, with Dak’Rah doing his best to try and make nice with the doctor. He talks about how good the symbolism of two former enemies, quite literally on the opposite sides of the same battle, standing side-by-side would be. But M’Benga can’t bring himself to be friends, just allies, and soon starts to ask Dak’Rah which of his generals fought the hardest during his final day on J’Gal. Dak’Rah can’t answer, because it wasn’t Dak’Rah that killed them, but M’Benga, hopped up on his own fury steroids and looking for revenge.

The Enterprise takes a shortcut to get their unwanted Klingon off the ship before someone gets hurt, but not before Dak’Rah once again goes to M’Benga. The Doctor is looking at his little personal effects case, which includes a D’k tahg he kept as a reminder from J’Gal. They discuss the fallout from their prior discussion, with M’Benga angry that Dak’Rah has used the deaths M’Benga caused to launder his own reputation. We cut, then, to the other side of the doctor’s office, through partially-opaque glass, as the pair scuffle, before cutting back to Dak’Rahdead on the floor with a dagger in his chest.

Chapel provides cover for M’Benga, saying Dak’Rah caused the fight, which M’Benga agrees to, despite Pike pressing him for an off-the-record admission of guilt. He tells his captain he’s not responsible, but he’s glad his old enemy is he kept as a reminder from J’Gal. They discuss the fallout from their prior discussion, with M’Benga angry that Dak’Rah has used the deaths M’Benga caused to launder his own reputation. We cut, then, to the other side of the doctor’s office, through partially-opaque glass, as the pair scuffle, before cutting back to Dak’Rah dead on the floor with a dagger in his chest.

L-R Babs Olusanmokun as Dr. M'Benga and Anson Mount as Capt. Pike in Star Trek: Strange New Worlds streaming on Paramount+, 2023. Photo Credit: Michael Gibson/Paramount+
Michael Gibson/Paramount+

If there’s one thing that Star Trek (both back in the day and now) can sometimes forget, it’s that history doesn’t just happen to other people. As much as it focuses on the great people of history making soliloquies on the bridge of their starships, that’s the start of things, not the end. Despite its apparent progressivism, it rarely engages with the material concerns of the ordinary people living and serving in Starfleet on that sort of level. That’s why the fact we got to see the Klingon war from something approaching the ground is a refreshing change.

And at the start of the season, I talked about how confident Strange New Worlds’ storytelling had become. Bursting out of the gate, even its weaker episodes were elevated by a production team pulling their hardest in the same direction. With a strong script, credited to writer/producer Davy Perez and directed by Jeff W. Boyd, there’s not much that can go wrong. It helps, too, that Strange New Worlds this year has restrained its urge to explain, and over-explain, every facet of what’s going on. But what really makes this episode is the towering, blockbuster performance by Babs Olusanmokun as Dr. M’Benga who, once again, demonstrates he’s this series secret weapon.

It’s Olusanmokun who holds the broad tangle of ideas in this script together, including the key issues around memory, grief and forgiveness. There’s a clear dichotomy between those in the crew who are motivated for revenge and those who are looking toward a better future. I’m sure that particular conflict can be mapped over several real-world fault lines, for better or worse. The episode, wisely, doesn’t necessarily take one side over the other, although the fact M’Benga and Chapel are our POV characters this week means we’re already on side.

It’s a shame that there’s less emphasis on making Dak’Rah as fully rounded-out a character as he could, or should be. He’s not given space to justify Pike’s faith in him, and it’s clear pretty much as soon as he arrives that he’s ever so slightly phony. Much of this can be attributed to our old enemy running time, and the fact that Strange New Worlds’ storytelling is that much more ambitious this time out. But I’m never going to criticize a series for having too many ideas and not enough time to explore all of them in enough detail.

Oh, and I wanted to draw attention to Strange New Worlds’ excellent use of virtual stages both here and for much of the season. The world of J’Gal feels pretty believable, rendered as a living backdrop behind the field hospital in the flashback sequences. Given the cost and logistical demands of trying to set up a series of night shoots on rough terrain, I can understand why the team opted to shoot the scene in the studio. But while keen-eyed fans will be looking for the edges of the stage, the atmosphere feels a lot more real than if they were acting in front of a green screen.

It’s clear now that each season of Strange New Worlds conforms to a similar shape across its run. After a mission-setting premiere, you get three episodes exploring standard Trek tropes, with a focus on Una and La’an. Episode five is a Spock-heavy romantic comedy romp, followed by a heavy episode that emphasizes the season’s overall theme. Seven is a lighter episode, while eight is primarily focused on Dr. M’Benga, while nine is one of two big showcase episodes to cap the season. And I’m hoping I get some credit for clocking – last year – that we were going to see a musical episode, which is what we’re getting next week.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/star-trek-strange-new-worlds-probes-the-limits-of-redemption-130025700.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – ‘Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ probes the limits of redemption

GoodRx now offers an iOS 'Medicine Cabinet' for managing prescription meds

GoodRx, best known for its prescription drug price comparison tool, has launched a new free offering called “Medicine Cabinet.” The tool will allow GoodRx app users to manage their prescription medications on a single platform. This comes on the heels of the news that the company is working with CVS Health to develop the Caremark Cost Saver, which could lower pharmacy out-of-pocket drug costs for shoppers.

Medicine Cabinet will automatically integrate within the GoodRx app and will feature tools like a “prescriptions dashboard” where a consumer can set up refill reminders and find the best pharmacies to pick up their medications at the lowest price. At the heart of the app are daily pill reminders that are customizable to any treatment plan that is uploaded into the app. GoodRx Chief Product Officer Mark Hull said the reminders feature is huge because 50 percent of the time, Americans are struggling to take their medications as prescribed for reasons as simple as forgetfulness or cost.

The Medicine Cabinet also includes a dashboard for GoodRx’s rewards program which offers users monetary perks like e-gift cards for staying on top of medication refills. “Nobody’s integrating or rewarding people for having those healthy habits,” Hull said.

“What we’ve found is that the winning model for us is to marry the discounts, the value and the rewards, with the basic healthy habits and reminder stuff,” he added. GoodRx claims it can save consumers up to 80 percent off the price of prescription drugs by partnering with pharmacy benefits managers to negotiate deals on drugs. Normally, the average consumer wouldn’t otherwise have access to these discounts without middlemen like GoodRx.

GoodRx Medicine Cabinet
GoodRx

The Medicine Cabinet tool has only been in development for roughly six months and will be available on iOS, but not on Android just yet.

“GoodRx was able to develop Medicine Cabinet so quickly in part due to the data it has already amassed from users and providers over the last decade,” Hull said. “If a startup were doing this, it would take a long time, they don’t have the data, they don’t have the relationships with retailers, they don’t already have the customer base,” Hull said, adding that GoodRx already has half a billion prescriptions in records from the millions of people who have been using the tool for the last 12 years.

Hull said he actually wishes Medicine Cabinet could have come sooner. He recalls when his stepfather had a heart attack a couple of years ago. “When he came home from the hospital, he had like a dozen medications he had to manage,” Hull said, remembering it as a nerve wracking time for his family and specifically his mother. “For the average person who’s managing a condition with multiple medications, it’s a lot of work and so we’re really trying to make it simple, clear and obvious what you need to do at any given point to help manage your condition.”

Medicine Cabinet app from GoodRx
GoodRx

Down the line, Hull hopes Medicine Cabinet will be easier for older people to use, with the inclusion of features that will let a user take a photo of a medication instead of having to look it up in the database.

Still, GoodRx’s history of being caught up in legal trouble related to data privacy issues is worth noting. Earlier this year, the Federal Trade Commission fined the company for the unauthorized disclosure of customers’ identifiable health information with third parties, such as Facebook and Google. “Our privacy policy applies to Medicine Cabinet, which sits within the GoodRx app. We are very transparent about what information we collect and how we use it to personalize and customize our products for consumers. Additionally, the feature is only available for users who have registered for a GoodRx account,” a representative said. The company’s recent focus on transparency and adherence to privacy policies suggests it’s taking the issue seriously, though as with any telehealth company, data privacy will always be a front-and-center concern.

Update, July 27th 2023, 9:39 AM ET: This story has been updated to clarify a quote by Hull on the number of prescriptions in records aggregated by GoodRx.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/goodrx-now-offers-an-ios-medicine-cabinet-for-managing-prescription-meds-130002408.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – GoodRx now offers an iOS ‘Medicine Cabinet’ for managing prescription meds

Micron Publishes Updated DRAM Roadmap: 32 Gb DDR5 DRAMs, GDDR7, HBMNext

In addition to unveiling its first HBM3 memory products yesterday, Micron also published a fresh DRAM roadmap for its AI customers for the coming years. Being one of the world’s largest memory manufacturers, Micron has a lot of interesting things planned, including high-capacity DDR5 memory devices and modules, GDDR7 chips for graphics cards and other bandwidth-hungry devices, as well as HBMNext for artificial intelligence and high-performance computing applications.



32 Gb DDR5 ICs


We all love inexpensive high-capacity memory modules, and it looks like Micron has us covered. Sometimes in the late first half of 2024, the company plans to roll-out its first 32 Gb DDR5 memory dies, which will be produced on the company’s 1β (1-beta) manufacturing process. This is Micron’s latest process node and which does not use extreme ultraviolet lithography, but rather relies on multipatterning.


32 Gb DRAM dies will enable Micron to build 32 GB DDR5 modules using just eight memory devices on one side of the module. Such modules can be made today with Micron’s current 16 Gb dies, but this requires either placing 16 DRAM packages over both sides of a memory module – driving up production costs – or by placing two 16 Gb dies within a single DRAM package, which incurs its own costs due to the packaging required. 32 Gb ICs, by comparison, are easier to use, so 32 GB modules based on denser DRAM dies will eventually lead to lower costs compared to today’s 32 GB memory sticks.


But desktop matters aside, Micron’s initial focus with their higher density dies will be to build even higher capacity data center-class parts, including RDIMMs, MRDIMMs, and CXL modules. Current high performance AI models tend to be very large and memory constrained, so larger memory pools open the door both to even larger models, or in bringing down inference costs by being able to run additional instances on a single server.


For 2024, Micron is planning to release 128GB DDR5 modules based on these new dies. In addition, the company announced plans for 192+ GB and 256+ GB DDR5 modules for 2025, albeit without disclosing which chips these are set to use.


Meanwhile, Micron’s capacity-focused roadmap doesn’t have much to say about bandwidth. While it would be unusual for newer DRAM dies not to clock at least somewhat higher, memory manufacturers as a whole have not offered much guidance about future DDR5 memory speeds. Especially with MRDIMMs in the pipeline, the focus is more on gaining additional speed through parallelism, rather than running individual DRAM cells faster. Though with this roadmap in particular, it’s clear that Micron is more focused on promoting DDR5 capacity than promoting DDR5 performance.


GDDR7 in 1H 2024


Micron was the first larger memory maker to announce plans to roll out its GDDR7 memory in the first half of 2024. And following up on that, the new roadmap has the the company prepping 16 Gb and 24 Gb GDDR7 chips for late Q2 2024.


As with Samsung, Micron’s plans for their first generation GDDR7 modules do not have them reaching the spec’s highest transfer rates right away (36 GT/sec), and instead Micron is aiming for a more modest and practical 32 GT/sec. Which is still good enough to enable upwards of 50% greater bandwidth for next-generation graphics processors from AMD, Intel, and NVIDIA. And perhaps especially NVIDIA, since this roadmap also implies that we won’t be seeing a GDDR7X from Micron, meaning that for the first time since 2018, NVIDIA won’t have access to a specialty GDDR DRAM from Micron.


HBMNext in 2026


In addition to GDDR7, which will be used by graphics cards, game consoles, and lower-end high-bandwidth applications like accelerators and networking equipment, Micron is also working on the forthcoming generations of its HBM memory for heavy-duty artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) applications.


Micron expects its HBMNext (HBM4?) to be available in 36 GB and 64 GB capacities, which points to a variety of configurations, such as 12-Hi 24 Gb stacks (36 GB) or 16-Hi 32 Gb stacks (64 GB), though these are pure speculations at this point. As for performance, Micron is touting 1.5 TB/s – 2+ TB/s of bandwidth per stack, which points to data transfer rates in excess of 11.5 GT/s/pin.




Source: AnandTech – Micron Publishes Updated DRAM Roadmap: 32 Gb DDR5 DRAMs, GDDR7, HBMNext

Buy Your Fast Food Sauces by the Bottle

I have an impressive, well organized collection of fast food sauce packets and tubs, some of them quite rare. I keep them around for saucing emergencies, like if Taco Bell decides to ignore my request for 10 Fire Sauce packets, or McDonald’s gives me BBQ sauce instead of Sweet ‘n Sour. (I also hoard McDonald’s straws,…

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Source: LifeHacker – Buy Your Fast Food Sauces by the Bottle

Security Researchers Make A Shocking Backdoor Discovery In Police Radio Encryption Algo

Security Researchers Make A Shocking Backdoor Discovery In Police Radio Encryption Algo
Radio communications are the backbone of much of day-to-day life, but by and large, we routinely take it for granted. This is also aided by the fact that there is much secrecy surrounding this technology, but that did not deter Dutch researchers who discovered vulnerabilities and an intentional backdoor in the encryption standard used in many

Source: Hot Hardware – Security Researchers Make A Shocking Backdoor Discovery In Police Radio Encryption Algo

Lindsey Graham and Elizabeth Warren: When It Comes To Big Tech, Enough Is Enough

Lindsey Graham and Elizabeth Warren, writing at The New York Times: Enough is enough. It’s time to rein in Big Tech. And we can’t do it with a law that only nibbles around the edges of the problem. Piecemeal efforts to stop abusive and dangerous practices have failed. Congress is too slow, it lacks the tech expertise, and the army of Big Tech lobbyists can pick off individual efforts easier than shooting fish in a barrel. Meaningful change — the change worth engaging every member of Congress to fight for — is structural.

For more than a century, Congress has established regulatory agencies to preserve innovation while minimizing harm presented by emerging industries. In 1887 the Interstate Commerce Commission took on railroads. In 1914 the Federal Trade Commission took on unfair methods of competition and later unfair and deceptive acts and practices. In 1934 the Federal Communications Commission took on radio (and then television). In 1975 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission took on nuclear power, and in 1977 the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission took on electric generation and transmission. We need a nimble, adaptable, new agency with expertise, resources and authority to do the same for Big Tech.

Our Digital Consumer Protection Commission Act would create an independent, bipartisan regulator charged with licensing and policing the nation’s biggest tech companies — like Meta, Google and Amazon — to prevent online harm, promote free speech and competition, guard Americans’ privacy and protect national security. The new watchdog would focus on the unique threats posed by tech giants while strengthening the tools available to the federal agencies and state attorneys general who have authority to regulate Big Tech.

Our legislation would guarantee common-sense safeguards for everyone who uses tech platforms. Families would have the right to protect their children from sexual exploitation, cyberbullying and deadly drugs. Certain digital platforms have promoted the sexual abuse and exploitation of children, suicidal ideation and eating disorders or done precious little to combat these evils; our bill would require Big Tech to mitigate such harms and allow families to seek redress if they do not.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Lindsey Graham and Elizabeth Warren: When It Comes To Big Tech, Enough Is Enough