Big Trees in Amazon More Climate-Resistant Than Previously Believed

The biggest trees in the Amazon are growing larger and more numerous, according to a new study that shows how an intact rainforest can help draw carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and sequester it in bark, trunk, branch and root. From a report: Scientists said the paper, published in Nature Plants on Thursday, was welcome confirmation that big trees are proving more climate resilient than previously believed, and undisturbed tropical vegetation continues to act as an effective carbon sink despite rising temperatures and strong droughts.

However, the authors warned this vital role was increasingly at risk from fires, fragmentation and land clearance caused by the expansion of roads and farms. “It is good news but it is qualified good news,” said Prof Oliver Phillips from the University of Leeds. “Our results apply only to intact, mature forests, which is where we are watching closely. They suggest the Amazon forest is remarkably resilient to climate change. My fear is that may count for little, unless we can stop the deforestation itself.”


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Nintendo Of America Says Goodbye To Bowser And Hello To Its First Female President

Nintendo Of America Says Goodbye To Bowser And Hello To Its First Female President
Nintendo of America made a bombshell announcement that its current president, Doug Bowser, is stepping down in favor of his successor, Devon Pritchard. Doug Bowser has been President of Nintendo of America since April of 2019, following the end of Reggie Fils-Aime’s 13-year tenure. With Bowser set to step down on December 31st of this year,

Is ‘Backwards Running’ a Worthwhile Fitness Trend for Runners?

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Earlier this month, we saw a new running world record—more specifically, running backwards. In heels. Christian Roberto López Rodríguez claimed the fastest 100m backwards in high heels with an impressive time of 16.55 seconds.

I may not be setting that sort of record, but I do see running backwards crop up time and time again as a trendy idea for the average runner. Sometimes called “reverse running,” it’s exactly what it sounds like: runners literally turning around and jogging backwards. But does running backwards genuinely help improve forward running performance, or is it simply another fitness fad destined to fade?

Does running backwards actually help?

From a physiological perspective, backwards running fundamentally alters how your body moves and which muscles bear the workload. Physiotherapist Alex Lee explains the dramatic shift that occurs when you reverse direction: “Your quadriceps do the majority of the job of slowing your body down. Your hamstrings work differently too because they aren’t pushing you forwards. This variation alleviates stress from the knee joint, specifically the ACL.” He further explains how running backwards also causes your ankles to “move with greater dorsiflexion,” which trains balance and body awareness, known as proprioception.

As any runner can attest, going easy on the knees is a major draw. Lee notes additional advantages when he trains athletes, explaining how he incorporates running backwards to “shield their knees, develop leg strength, and enhance coordination.”

Supplemental, not essential

While the biomechanical benefits are real, running coach Will Baldwin offers a more measured approach to backwards running’s place in training programs. “I think the biggest benefit from running backwards is it helps you engage some of your posterior chain and muscles that aren’t typically recruited in forward running, like your glutes, some hamstring, and it helps with your pushback a little bit,” Baldwin explains.

However, he’s quick to temper expectations about performance gains: “I don’t think it makes runners faster. It’s probably a good supplemental tool. I don’t even think it’s a necessity in training, but it definitely can wake some muscles up and can be a fun, different type of coordination skill to work on that’s still similar to running.”

Baldwin’s perspective highlights a crucial consideration in training philosophy—the principle of specificity. “The law of specificity applies here. If we want to get better at a skill, we need to practice that skill in the specific way we want to compete. We’ve got to be careful with how much time we waste, especially for busy people. That could be time better spent doing core work or some specific strength training.”

For most recreational runners juggling work, family, and training, Baldwin suggests backwards running falls into the “nice to have” rather than “must have” category: “You’d really have to be someone with a lot of extra time to experiment and play around with things like this.”

Getting started safely

Running backwards is awkward at best, and genuinely risky at worst. You could fall, and it’s easy to twist an ankle or pull something because you can’t see where you’re landing. If you’d like to experiment with backwards running, start conservatively. Baldwin suggests beginning with walking: “If someone wanted to try it, I’d start with walking backwards. Especially uphill, on a treadmill or outside, it can really engage, work, and stretch certain muscles. It can be a fun skill to play with, but I’d definitely start with walking before running backwards.”

This gradual approach allows your body to adapt to the different movement patterns while minimizing injury risk. Treadmills provide an ideal controlled environment for initial backwards movement practice, eliminating the hazard of unseen obstacles.

The bigger concerns, according to Baldwin, relate to training efficiency: “Wasted time and lack of specificity are probably the bigger ones, but again, not major.” For time-strapped runners, the opportunity cost of backwards running sessions might outweigh the supplemental benefits.

The bottom line

Backwards running offers legitimate benefits—improved proprioception, reduced knee stress, enhanced muscle activation patterns, and increased coordination.

However, for the average recreational runner seeking to improve their forward running times, backwards running is more of a fun bonus activity, rather than a true game-changer. The time investment might be better allocated to proven training methods like tempo runs, interval training, strength work, or simply building up more forward-running mileage.

Backwards running sits comfortably in the category of “helpful but not essential” training methods. It’s not the revolutionary breakthrough some social media posts might suggest, but it’s also not entirely without merit. Like many fitness trends, the truth lies somewhere between.

So, for runners with specific needs—such as rehabilitation from knee injuries, athletes requiring enhanced proprioception, or those simply seeking variety in their training routine—backwards running can serve a valuable purpose. For everyone else, it remains an interesting option worth considering if time and safety conditions permit, but not a priority that should displace more fundamental aspects of training.

Scientists want to treat complex bone fractures with a bone-healing gun

Most guns are tools for doing harm, but a team of American and Korean scientists has developed one that does the opposite, helping to patch up bone injuries. It comes a bit short of the Medigun from Team Fortress 2 or Ana’s Biotic Rifle, which featured in Overwatch. But it’s probably one of the first shots we have at making healing guns real.

3D printing on the fly

In more complex bone problems like severe, irregular fractures or resections done as part of bone cancer treatment, the bone won’t heal on its own. The most common means of stabilizing the injured site and making recovery possible is metal-based grafts, implants usually made with titanium alloys.

The problem with such implants is that they are difficult and expensive to manufacture, and it’s very hard to make them patient-specific. “3D printing has been highlighted as a novel approach to make such personalized implants, but this also requires substantial time and money,” said Jung Seung Lee, a biomedical engineering researcher at the Sungkyunkwan University in Korea. So his team wanted to find a way to make bone implants that would be faster and cheaper than a 3D printer.

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This battery-powered Ring doorbell is 47 percent off ahead of Prime Day

The Ring Battery Doorbell Plus is on sale for almost half off and is at the lowest price we’ve ever seen for this model. Normally retailing for $150, the smart doorbell is on sale for $80, a discount of 47 percent. This aggressive sale comes ahead of another Prime Day that runs October 7-8.

The Battery Doorbell Plus offers a 150-by-150-degree “head to toe” field of vision and 1536p high-resolution video. This makes it a lot easier to see boxes dropped off at your front door since it doesn’t cut off the bottom of the image like a lot of video doorbells.

This model features motion detection, privacy zones, color night vision and Live View with two-way talk, among other features. Installation is a breeze since you don’t have to hardwire it to your existing doorbell wiring. Most users report that the battery lasts between several weeks and several months depending on how users set up the video doorbell, with power-heavy features like motion detection consuming more battery life.

With most video doorbells today, you need a subscription to get the most out of them, and Ring is no exception. Features like package alerts require a Ring Home plan, with tiers ranging from Basic for $5 per month to Premium for $20 per month. You’ll also need a plan to store your video event history.

Ring was acquired by Amazon in 2018, and now offers a full suite of home security products including outdoor cameras, home alarm systems and more. This deal is part of a larger sale on Ring and Blink devices leading up to Prime Day.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/this-battery-powered-ring-doorbell-is-47-percent-off-ahead-of-prime-day-154508654.html?src=rss

Humain’s Laptop Powered By Snapdragon X2 Elite Flexes AI 100x Faster Than Human Thought

Humain's Laptop Powered By Snapdragon X2 Elite Flexes AI 100x Faster Than Human Thought
Riyadh-based AI company Humain has collaborated with Qualcomm to unveil a Snapdragon X Elite-powered laptop designed from the ground up for artificial intelligence. Announced at the Snapdragon Summit 2025 in Maui this week, the Humain Horizon series isn’t just another PC with a dedicated AI button, the company claims that its agentic AI operating

Meta to Open Second Permanent Store in Preparation for Next Wave of Smart Glasses

Meta announced its LA-based pop-up store is returning as a flagship retail location, which is slated to arrive alongside more Meta branded pop-ups in New York and Las Vegas.

The News

The company opened its first retail store in Burlingame, California in 2022, located right next to its Reality Labs HQ.

Back then, it featured Meta Quest 2, Ray-Ban Stories smart glasses (now called Ray-Ban Meta), and its now-defunct Facebook Portal smart home device. The store still exists, although it’s stocked with new devices: Quest 3S, Ray-Ban Meta (Gen 2), and the soon-to-launch Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses.

Partnered with EssilorLuxottica, Meta already has a pretty wide mix of online and brick-and-mortal retail locations, including Ray-Ban Stores, LensCrafters, Sunglass Hut, Best Buy and Meta’s online storefront. And it’s about to get a few more.

Meta Ray-Ban Display Glasses & Neural Band | Image courtesy Meta

Now, Meta says its bringing back its LA pop-up from last year on October 24th, which is said to expand to over 20,000 square feet of permanent retail space. In perspective, that’s about as big as one of the larger Trader Joe’s or a newer Aldi.

Located on Melrose Avenue, the multi-level retail concept is launching with a theme too, which Meta says will be ‘Skating in Southern California, From Dogtown to Present’, slated to celebrate the Santa Monica skate scene and its evolution through the years.

The expansion is for good reason too. The new flagship store isn’t just devoted to Ray-Bay Meta glasses, but the the full line-up of smart glasses and XR headsets. That includes Meta Ray-Ban Display & the Meta Neural Band, Ray-Ban Meta (Gen 2), Oakley Meta HSTN, Oakley Meta Vanguard, and Quest 3/3S headsets.

Meta says both its Burlingame and LA flagship store will host a “premium demo experience” for Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses, although you can count on a similar experience at both Las Vegas and New York City pop-ups soon to follow.

The Las Vegas pop-up is slated to open on October 16th at the Wynn Las Vegas, including a 560-square-foot space. The New York pop-up opens November 13th, located on 5th Avenue in Midtown Manhattan.

My Take

While Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses were the biggest news to come out of Connect last week, the soon-to-launch glasses likely aren’t shooting for broad availability. Not only are they over double the price of its audio-only smart glasses at $800, but you actually need an in-person consultation to find the right size for both the glasses and included Neural Band, which means booking a demo at those stores mentioned above.

And despite committing to its second permanent retail location, it also doesn’t appear Meta’s own brick-and-mortar ambitions are going to be very broad either—at least not in the near term. That may change eventually though, as true all-day AR glasses supplant smart glasses as the next big thing. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves.

Smart glasses with built-in displays (i.e. not AR glasses) are very much in the same “what the heck are those” stage that VR went through a number of years ago—compounded by the fact that users need to make sure they even fit (and look good) in the first place.

Inside Meta’s LA Pop-up Store (2024) | Image courtesy Meta

But as the current ‘experimental’ first gen of Meta Ray-Ban Display gives way to more mature hardware, the company will probably need those retail chops if they hope to further seed the best version of the Meta brand image—a familiar model pioneered by none other than its biggest future rival, Apple.

While you can just as easily buy at Best Buy or online, there’s a reason every major city has an Apple Store or two (or three). Repairs, trade-ins and access to the full gamut of devices are all important aspects to physical retail, but arguably more important is the tangible brand image that comes with it—something Meta doesn’t really have right now. Can Meta Stores be cool? If its LA location is any indication, they’re definitely trying.

In the near term though, it seems the company’s 2024 LA pop-up has served the company well enough to trust the Melrose Avenue location to pump their more mature smart glasses platform alongside the new Display model—probably (and sadly) less than they care about showing off Quest right now. After all, Ray-Ban Meta has been pretty dang profitable, handily selling over two million Ray-Ban Meta (Gen 1) following its release in 2023. And the thing doesn’t even have an app store.

The real prize all along though has been those all-day AR glasses still yet to come, and Meta knows it. And they may just be preparing for it right now. Okay, let’s get way ahead of ourselves.

The big caveat in the following prediction is whether Meta truly wants to go toe-to-toe with Apple. Anyway, here’s my imaginary retail playbook for Meta, which I’m happy to disavow at any point. I don’t have any special information, only a speculative hunch from watching the company’s moves over the last decade.

  • 2026 – 2027: a deliberate creep of permanent retail based on performance of pop-ups during its smart glasses phase, possibly covering two generations of Display glasses.
  • Before 2030: Meta releases first AR device (before 2030, Meta says), and more flagship retail locations are added. The company still relies on EssilorLuxottica partnership to demo and move product.
  • Closer to 2030: A second gen of AR glasses arrives, marking more mature hardware and app ecosystem. Wider rollout of permanent retails locations across key cities.

If Meta wants to be more like Apple, that is.

The post Meta to Open Second Permanent Store in Preparation for Next Wave of Smart Glasses appeared first on Road to VR.

YT Industries enters insolvency as CEO prepares to relaunch brand after buying it back

YT Industries has suspended most of its operations and released the majority of its employees as the German mountain bike brand undergoes insolvency proceedings, CEO and founder, Markus Flossman confirmed in a statement.

The company entered into self-administration in July after its main shareholder, a private equity investor, announced it would no longer finance the business. This left YT three months to secure a new backer, the company said in the statement.

“Unfortunately, the offers we received were an absolute joke and not worth considering,” Flossman said.

“That’s why I decided to buy the company back myself. The creditors’ committee has already approved my offer, and we are now in the process of finalising the contracts to relaunch the business under the new setup. As you can imagine, this is anything but a small undertaking, both financially and in terms of effort.”

Flossman confirmed that most staff had been released, though a small team remains in place to handle customer inquiries and process orders “to ensure that no work is performed by employees that the old company would no longer be able to pay for.”

“We hope to conclude the negotiations as quickly as possible to minimise the impact on our customers,” he added.

Flossman also stressed that the situation affects only YT Industries GmbH in Germany. “Our U.S. subsidiary is not affected, business there continues as usual, and there are no restrictions,” he said.

YT had previously blamed its financial struggles on the post-Covid market downturn, which left many bike brands with unsold inventory and forced heavy discounting.

“While customers scored deals, small brands like us were pushed to the limit,” Flossman said in a video released earlier this year, describing the situation as a “brutal discount war for survival.”

Since returning as CEO in 2024, he said YT had been improving its position by developing new products and reinvesting in the business, but setbacks with a key supplier and instability in the U.S. market compounded difficulties earlier in 2025.

The company is now preparing for a relaunch under Flossman’s ownership, with details expected once contracts are finalised.

Editor’s note: This article has been updated, clarifying the position of YT Industries and including a statement issued by the brand

Horror-tinged sidescroller Possessor(s) hits PC and PS5 on November 11

The long-awaited sidescroller Possessor(s) will be available on November 11 for PC and PS5. It’s a horror-tinged action game with Metroidvania elements. It also happens to look extremely beautiful.

The game was developed by Heart Machine, which is the same company behind Hyper Light Drifter and its prequel Hyper Light Breaker. Publishing duties fall to Devolver, which has had a hand in a boatload of recent indie hits from Enter the Gungeon to Cult of the Lamb. The developer just dropped a launch date trailer for Possessor(s) and it’s filled with both gameplay and story elements.

As for that story, the game’s set in a quarantined metropolis that’s been invaded by ghostly forces. Exploration will slowly unravel what happened to the city. There’s an open-ended narrative with multiple paths and plenty of characters to meet.

The combat looks really slick, with lots of melee using found objects. The protagonist can also slide down long corridors and swing from a grappling hook. Weapons can be upgraded and there looks to be a skill tree of some kind.

We only have around five weeks until we can get our hands on this one. Pre-orders on both platforms are up right now, but there’s no price yet.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/horror-tinged-sidescroller-possessors-hits-pc-and-ps5-on-november-11-152851427.html?src=rss

Raspberry Pi’s Upgraded Keyboard Computer Gets RGB Lighting, Mechanical Switches and SSD Storage

Raspberry Pi has launched the Raspberry Pi 500 Plus for $200, more than doubling the $90 price of the standard model. The keyboard computer now includes an M.2 2280 SSD socket alongside the SD card slot, 256GB of storage and 16GB of LPDDR4x-4267 RAM instead of 8GB. The company added Gateron KS-33 Blue mechanical switches, replaceable low-profile keycaps finished to allow RGB lighting to shine through and an RP2040 microcontroller running QMK firmware.

The 500 Plus retains Wi-Fi 5, Bluetooth, gigabit Ethernet, two micro HDMI ports, three USB-A ports, and USB-C power from the base model. A $220 Desktop Kit bundles necessary cables, power supply, and mouse.


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Former Police Security Drones Are Now Being Offered To Chase Shoplifters

Former Police Security Drones Are Now Being Offered To Chase Shoplifters
A company called Flock Safety is pitching a new turnkey aviation program for private enterprises to lease security drones formerly used by police departments. Part of the pitch is that these drones can track shoplifters as they flee the perimeter, with little fuss on the part of the business establishment. Our question is, will Walmart still

50+ scientific societies sign letter objecting to Trump executive order

Last month, the Trump administration issued an executive order asserting political control over grant funding, including all federally supported research. In general, the executive order inserts a layer of political control over both the announcement of new funding opportunities and the approval of individual grants. Now, a coalition of more than 50 scientific and medical organizations is firing back, issuing a letter to the US Congress expressing grave concerns over the order’s provisions and urging Congress to protect the integrity of what has long been an independent, merit-based, peer-review system for awarding federal grants.

As we previously reported, the order requires that any announcement of funding opportunities be reviewed by the head of the agency or someone they designate, which means a political appointee will have the ultimate say over what areas of science the US funds. Individual grants will also require clearance from a political appointee and “must, where applicable, demonstrably advance the President’s policy priorities.”

The order also instructs agencies to formalize the ability to cancel previously awarded grants at any time if they’re considered “no longer advance agency priorities.” Until a system is in place to enforce the new rules, agencies are forbidden from starting new funding programs.

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Meta Launches Vibes, an Endless Feed of AI Slop for Your Viewing Displeasure

Meta has rolled out Vibes, an endless feed of AI-generated videos within its Meta AI app and meta.ai website. Users can create short-form synthetic videos from scratch or remix existing AI content from the feed, adding music and adjusting styles before redistributing the artificial output to Instagram, Facebook Stories and Reels. The feed promises to become “more personalized over time” as it learns user preferences for machine-generated content. Meta positioned the feature as part of its broader AI video strategy, adding another stream of synthetic media to platforms already saturated with algorithmic content. The company says additional AI creation tools are coming.


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Euclid Mission Taps A Supercomputer To Model 3.4 Billion Galaxies To Probe The Dark Universe

Euclid Mission Taps A Supercomputer To Model 3.4 Billion Galaxies To Probe The Dark Universe
An international team of scientists has unveiled the Flagship 2 galaxy mock-up. No, it’s not a cardboard diorama for a school science fair project, but is instead the most massive and detailed cosmological simulation of the universe ever created. How detailed, you may ask? How does a digital model replicating the evolution of 3.4 billion galaxies