• WD Rolls Out New 2.5-Inch HDDs For the First Time In 7 Years

    WD Rolls Out New 2.5-Inch HDDs For the First Time In 7 Years
    Western Digital has unveiled new 6TB external hard drives -- "the first new capacity point for this hard drive drive form factor in about seven years," reports Tom's Hardware. "There is a catch, though: the HDD is slow and will unlikely fit into any mobile PCs, so it looks like it will exclusively serve portable and specialized storage products." From the report: Western Digital's 6TB 2.5-inch HDD is currently used for the latest versions of the company's My Passport, Black P10, and G-Drive Armo
  • How Misinformation Spreads? It's Funded By 'The Hellhole of Programmatic Advertising'

    How Misinformation Spreads? It's Funded By 'The Hellhole of Programmatic Advertising'
    Journalist Steven Brill has written a new book called The Death of Truth. Its subtitle? "How Social Media and the Internet Gave Snake Oil Salesmen and Demagogues the Weapons They Needed to Destroy Trust and Polarize the World-And What We Can Do."
    An excerpt published by Wired points out that last year around the world, $300 billion was spent on "programmatic advertising", and $130 billion was spent in the United States alone in 2022. The problem? For over a decade there's been "brand safety" tec
  • Not 'Quiet Quitting' - Remote Workers Try 'Quiet Vacationing'

    Not 'Quiet Quitting' - Remote Workers Try 'Quiet Vacationing'
    A new article in the Washington Post argues that a phenomenon called "Quiet vacationing" has "joined 'quiet quitting' and 'quiet firing' as the latest (and least poetic) scourge of the modern workplace.
    "Also known as the hush trip, workcation, hush-cation, or bleisure travel — you get the idea — quiet vacationing refers to workers taking time off, even traveling, without notifying their employers."
    Taking advantage of work-from-anywhere technology, they are logging in from hotels, b
  • Apple's AI Plans Include 'Black Box' For Cloud Data

    Apple's AI Plans Include 'Black Box' For Cloud Data
    How will Apple protect user data while their requests are being processed by AI in applications like Siri?
    Long-time Slashdot reader AmiMoJo shared this report from Apple Insider:
    According to sources of The Information [four different former Apple employees who worked on the project], Apple intends to process data from AI applications inside a virtual black box.
    The concept, known as "Apple Chips in Data Centers" internally, would involve only Apple's hardware being used to perform AI processin
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  • Electric Car Sales Keep Increasing in California, Despite 'Negative Hype'

    Electric Car Sales Keep Increasing in California, Despite 'Negative Hype'
    This week the Washington Post reported that Americans "are more hesitant to buy EVs now than they were a year ago, according to a March Gallup poll, which found that just 44 percent of American adults say they'd consider buying an EV in the future, down from 55 percent last year. High prices and charging worries consistently rank as the biggest roadblocks for electric vehicles," they write, noting the concerns coincide with a slowdown in electric car and truck sales, while hybrids are increasing
  • World's First Bioprocessor Uses 16 Human Brain Organoids, Consumes Less Power

    World's First Bioprocessor Uses 16 Human Brain Organoids, Consumes Less Power
    "A Swiss biocomputing startup has launched an online platform that provides remote access to 16 human brain organoids," reports Tom's Hardware:
    FinalSpark claims its Neuroplatform is the world's first online platform delivering access to biological neurons in vitro. Moreover, bioprocessors like this "consume a million times less power than traditional digital processors," the company says. FinalSpark says its Neuroplatform is capable of learning and processing information, and due to its low pow
  • How an Apple AirTag Helped Police Recover 15,000 Stolen Power Tools

    How an Apple AirTag Helped Police Recover 15,000 Stolen Power Tools
    An anonymous reader shared this report from the Washington Post:
    Twice before, this Virginia carpenter had awoken in the predawn to start his work day only to find one of his vans broken into. Tools he depends on for a living had been stolen, and there was little hope of retrieving them. Determined to shut down thieves, he said, he bought a bunch of Apple AirTags and hid the locator devices in some of his larger tools that hadn't been pilfered. Next time, he figured, he would track them.
    It work
  • HP's MicroLED Monitors Stack Together Like Legos

    HP's MicroLED Monitors Stack Together Like Legos
    An anonymous reader quotes a report from Digital Trends: HP researchers have published a paper detailing a new modular monitor design they call "composable microLED monitors." Using advancing microLED tech to make smaller screens with no bezels, they imagine a Lego-like system that allows customers to buy different monitor modules and slot them together at home. In the paper, diagrams show "core units" with a direct connection to the host computer being expanded both horizontally and vertically
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  • Journalists 'Deeply Troubled' By OpenAI's Content Deals With Vox, The Atlantic

    Journalists 'Deeply Troubled' By OpenAI's Content Deals With Vox, The Atlantic
    Benj Edwards and Ashley Belanger reports via Ars Technica: On Wednesday, Axios broke the news that OpenAI had signed deals with The Atlantic and Vox Media that will allow the ChatGPT maker to license their editorial content to further train its language models. But some of the publications' writers -- and the unions that represent them -- were surprised by the announcements and aren't happy about it. Already, two unions have released statements expressing "alarm" and "concern." "The unionized me
  • 'Planetary Parade' Will See Six Planets Line Up In the Morning Sky

    'Planetary Parade' Will See Six Planets Line Up In the Morning Sky
    On June 3, a "planet parade" of six planets -- Jupiter, Mercury, Uranus, Mars, Neptune and Saturn -- will form a straight line through the pre-dawn sky. Astronomy.com reports: Some 20 minutes before sunrise, all six planets should be visible, though note that Uranus (magnitude 5.9) and Neptune (magnitude 7.8) will be too faint for naked-eye observing and, although they're present in the lineup, will need binoculars or a telescope to spot. But Jupiter (magnitude -2), Mercury (magnitude -1), Mars
  • Scientists Find the Largest Known Genome Inside a Small Plant

    Scientists Find the Largest Known Genome Inside a Small Plant
    An anonymous reader quotes a report from the New York Times: Last year, Jaume Pellicer led a team of fellow scientists into a forest on Grande Terre, an island east of Australia. They were in search of a fern called Tmesipteris oblanceolata. Standing just a few inches tall, it was not easy to find on the forest floor. "It doesn't catch the eye," said Dr. Pellicer, who works at the Botanical Institute of Barcelona in Spain. "You would probably step on it and not even realize it." The scientists e
  • London's Evening Standard To End Daily Newspaper After Almost 200 Years

    London's Evening Standard To End Daily Newspaper After Almost 200 Years
    London's famed Evening Standard newspaper has announced plans to end its daily outlet, "bringing an end to almost 200 years of publication in the capital," reports The Guardian. Going forward, the company plans to launch "a brand new weekly newspaper later this year and consider options for retaining ES Magazine with reduced frequency," while also working to increase traffic to its website. "In its 197-year history the Evening Standard has altered its format, price, content and distribution mode
  • Windows 11's New Recall Feature Has Been Cracked To Run On Unsupported Hardware

    Windows 11's New Recall Feature Has Been Cracked To Run On Unsupported Hardware
    Last than two weeks after it was announced, "Windows enthusiasts have managed to crack Microsoft's flagship AI-powered Recall feature to run on unsupported hardware," reports The Verge. From the report: Recall leverages local AI models on new Copilot Plus PCs to run in the background and take snapshots of anything you've done or seen on your PC. You then get a timeline you can scrub through and the ability to search for photos, documents, conversations, or anything else on your PC. Microsoft pos
  • Battery-Powered California Faces Lower Blackout Risk This Summer

    Battery-Powered California Faces Lower Blackout Risk This Summer
    An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: California expects to avoid rolling blackouts this summer as new solar plants and large batteries plug into the state's grid at a rapid clip. The state's electricity system has been strained by years of drought, wildfires that knock out transmission lines and record-setting heat waves. But officials forecast Wednesday new resources added to the grid in the last four years would give California ample supplies for typical summer weather.Since 202
  • Wordle In Legal Row With Geography Spinoff, Wordle

    Wordle In Legal Row With Geography Spinoff, Wordle
    The New York Times, owner of the once-viral, word game Wordle, is suing a geography-based spinoff called Worldle, accusing its similar name of "creating confusion" and attempting to capitalize on "the enormous goodwill" associated with its own brand. Worldle's creator, Kory McDonald, vows to fight back. The BBC reports: "There's a whole industry of [dot]LE games," he told the BBC. "Wordle is about words, Worldle is about the world, Flaggle is about flags," he pointed out. The New York Times disa
  • FCC Ends Affordable Internet Program Due To Lack of Funds

    FCC Ends Affordable Internet Program Due To Lack of Funds
    The Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), which provided monthly internet bill credits for low-income Americans, will officially end on June 1 due to a lack of additional funding from Congress. This termination threatens nearly 60 million Americans with increased financial hardship, as the program's lapse leaves them without the subsidies that made internet access affordable. CNN reports: The 2.5-year-old ACP provided eligible low-income Americans with a monthly credit off their internet bills,
  • All Santander Staff and 30 Million Customers In Spain, Chile and Uruguay Hacked

    All Santander Staff and 30 Million Customers In Spain, Chile and Uruguay Hacked
    An anonymous reader quotes a report from the BBC: Hackers are attempting to sell what they say is confidential information belonging to millions of Santander staff and customers. They belong to the same gang which this week claimed to have hacked Ticketmaster. The bank -- which employs 200,000 people worldwide, including around 20,000 in the UK -- has confirmed data has been stolen. Santander has apologized for what it says is "the concern this will understandably cause" adding it is "proactivel
  • Hackers Steal $305 Million From DMM Bitcoin Crypto Exchange

    Hackers Steal $305 Million From DMM Bitcoin Crypto Exchange
    Japanese crypto exchange DMM Bitcoin confirmed on Friday that it had been the victim of a hack resulting in the theft of 4,502.9 bitcoin, or about $305 million. From a report: According to crypto security firm Elliptic, this is the eighth largest crypto theft in history. DMM Bitcoin said it detected "an unauthorized leak of Bitcoin (BTC) from our wallet" on Friday and that it was still investigating and had taken measures to stop further thefts. The crypto exchange said it also "implemented rest
  • Biomedical Paper Retractions Have Quadrupled in 20 Years

    Biomedical Paper Retractions Have Quadrupled in 20 Years
    The retraction rate for European biomedical-science papers increased fourfold between 2000 and 2021, a study of thousands of retractions has found. Nature: Two-thirds of these papers were withdrawn for reasons relating to research misconduct, such as data and image manipulation or authorship fraud. These factors accounted for an increasing proportion of retractions over the roughly 20-year period, the analysis suggests. "Our findings indicate that research misconduct has become more prevalent in
  • Fax Machines Permeate Germany's Business Culture. But Parliament is Ditching Them

    Fax Machines Permeate Germany's Business Culture. But Parliament is Ditching Them
    An anonymous reader shares a report: The sound of the 1990s still resonates in the German capital. Like techno music, the fax machine remains on trend. According to the latest figures from Germany's digital industry association, four out of five companies in Europe's largest economy continue to use fax machines and a third do so frequently or very frequently. Much as Germany's reputation for efficiency is regularly undermined by slow internet connections and a reliance on paper and rubber stamps
  • Vermont Becomes 1st State To Enact Law Requiring Oil Companies Pay For Damage From Climate Change

    Vermont Becomes 1st State To Enact Law Requiring Oil Companies Pay For Damage From Climate Change
    Vermont has become the first state to enact a law requiring fossil fuel companies to pay a share of the damage caused by climate change after the state suffered catastrophic summer flooding and damage from other extreme weather. From a report: Republican Gov. Phil Scott allowed the bill to become law without his signature late Thursday, saying he is very concerned about the costs and outcome of the small state taking on "Big Oil" alone in what will likely be a grueling legal fight. But he acknow
  • Japan's Push To Make All Research Open Access is Taking Shape

    Japan's Push To Make All Research Open Access is Taking Shape
    The Japanese government is pushing ahead with a plan to make Japan's publicly funded research output free to read. From a report: In June, the science ministry will assign funding to universities to build the infrastructure needed to make research papers free to read on a national scale. The move follows the ministry's announcement in February that researchers who receive government funding will be required to make their papers freely available to read on the institutional repositories from Janu
  • 'Why You Should Use Your TV's Filmmaker Mode'

    'Why You Should Use Your TV's Filmmaker Mode'
    An anonymous reader shares a CR report: Based on the name, you'd think Filmmaker Mode is strictly for watching movies. But in our labs, we find that it can get you pretty close to what we consider to be the ideal settings for all types of programming. Filmmaker Mode is the product of a joint effort by the Hollywood film community, TV manufacturers, and the UHD Alliance to help consumers easily set up their TVs and watch shows and films as they were meant to be displayed. The preset has been wide
  • Alzheimer's Takes a Financial Toll Long Before Diagnosis, Study Finds

    Alzheimer's Takes a Financial Toll Long Before Diagnosis, Study Finds
    Long before people develop dementia, they often begin falling behind on mortgage payments, credit card bills and other financial obligations, new research shows. The New York Times: A team of economists and medical experts at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Georgetown University combined Medicare records with data from Equifax, the credit bureau, to study how people's borrowing behavior changed [PDF] in the years before and after a diagnosis of Alzheimer's or a similar disorder. What th
  • Google Will Disable Classic Extensions in Chrome in the Coming Months

    Google Will Disable Classic Extensions in Chrome in the Coming Months
    Google has published an update on the deprecation timeline of so-called Manifest V2 extensions in the Chrome web browser. Starting this June, Chrome will inform users with classic extensions about the deprecation. From a report: Manifests are rulesets for extensions. They define the capabilities of extensions. When Google published the initial Manifest V3 draft, it was criticized heavily for it. This initial draft had significant impact on content blockers, privacy extensions, and many other ext
  • You Can Thank Private Equity for That Enormous Doctor's Bill

    You Can Thank Private Equity for That Enormous Doctor's Bill
    Private-equity investors have poured billions into healthcare but often game the system, hurting both doctors and patients. From a report: Consolidation is as American as apple pie. When a business gets bigger, it forces mom-and-pop players out of the market, but it can boost profits and bring down costs, too. Think about the pros and cons of Walmart and "Every Day Low Prices." In a complex, multitrillion-dollar system like America's healthcare market, though, that principle has turned into a ha
  • Vista Equity Writes Off IT Education Platform PluralSight Value, After $3.5 Billion Buyout

    Vista Equity Writes Off IT Education Platform PluralSight Value, After $3.5 Billion Buyout
    Vista Equity Partners has written off the entire equity value of its investment in tech learning platform Pluralsight, three years after taking it private for $3.5 billion, Axios reported Friday. From the report: One source says that the Utah-based company's financials have improved, with around 26% EBITDA growth in 2023, but not enough to service nearly $1.3 billion of debt that was issued when interest rates were lower. It's also a company whose future could be dimmed by advances in artificial
  • Recycling Old Copper Wires Could Be Worth Billions For Telcos

    Recycling Old Copper Wires Could Be Worth Billions For Telcos
    Increasingly redundant copper wires may be worth over $7 billion to telecommunications firms, should they take the trouble to recycle them. From a report: The estimate comes from British engineering company TXO, which claims there's up to 800,000 metric tons of copper wiring that could be harvested in the next ten years. TXO claims over a dozen telcos are investigating extracting copper wires from old networks to sell on the open market. The need for copper wiring is declining as carriers adopt
  • Google is Putting More Restrictions On AI Overviews

    Google is Putting More Restrictions On AI Overviews
    An anonymous reader shares a report: Liz Reid, the Head of Google Search, has admitted that the company's search engine has returned some "odd, inaccurate or unhelpful AI Overviews" after they rolled out to everyone in the US. The executive published an explanation for Google's more peculiar AI-generated responses in a blog post, where it also announced that the company has implemented safeguards that will help the new feature return more accurate and less meme-worthy results. Reid defended Goog
  • Best Buy Set For Tenth Straight Quarter of Sales Drop

    Best Buy Set For Tenth Straight Quarter of Sales Drop
    An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Best Buy is set to post its tenth consecutive quarter of sales decline on Thursday when the U.S. electronics retailer reports quarterly results, as spending on big-ticket electronics remains pressured despite easing inflation. Although results from big-box retailers Walmart and Target indicate that consumers have resumed spending on less-expensive discretionary items such as apparel and accessories, they are still hesitant to go for TVs and washi

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