• Trumps attacks on higher ed could provide a chance to reimagine the university
    www.vox.com
    On Monday, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) posted on X that it would terminate over 400 grants, adding up to some $250 million in funding, to Columbia University over its response to pro-Palestinian protests. The following day, the Trump administration pulled $800 million in USAID-related grants from Johns Hopkins University, academias biggest research and development spender.These cuts come on top of last months announcement of major rollbacks to what are known as indirect costs money the NIH gives research institutions on top of project-specific grants to cover necessary expenses like building maintenance, utilities, and administrative staff salaries. Many universities both large and small, public and private rely on the NIH to sustain a lot of their day-to-day operations. Any threat to that funding poses an existential threat to higher education. Without the jobs, medical research, and technological developments made possible by these institutions, people outside of academia could miss out on breakthrough treatments for diseases like cancer, and will be more vulnerable to public health crises. As a result, the US will likely lose its technological competitiveness on a global scale, which could damage the economy in the long run.The indirect cost cuts have been temporarily blocked by a federal judge, but the chaos still compelled many universities to preemptively tighten their belts. Some institutions are paring back on graduate programs: freezing new faculty hires and PhD student applications, accepting fewer students than usual, or even rescinding existing offer letters. The UMass Chan Medical School pulled back on all of its admissions offers for the fall 2025 term, blaming funding uncertainty for biomedical research. Why exactly has the Trump administration seemingly declared war on academic biomedical research? In theory, depriving future researchers of places in academia could push them toward the private sector, which potentially aligns with a conservative pro-business approach. But the antipathy goes deeper than that.Vice President JD Vance has said that the universities are the enemy. Attacking science and higher education, whether under the guise of reducing taxpayer waste or punishing antisemitism, was always part of this administrations plan. But its haphazard destabilization of the scientific enterprise wont automatically funnel would-be biomedical PhDs into pharmaceutical or biotech companies, especially when there already arent enough jobs in those industries now to absorb the flood of highly educated people applying for them. If turned away from grad school, its more likely that young scientists will take their talents to other countries, or leave the field altogether. While the headlines have been about STEM funding, academic departments that fall far outside the NIHs purview like history, or comparative literature are also being affected. Thats because research groups in STEM departments bring in the big federal grants universities depend on, while arts and humanities research largely rely on money the university pulls from endowments, tuition, and state funding. Without the NIHs money, universities may be forced to divert funds from humanities to STEM departments, where research facilities and equipment are way more expensive. As a result, when well-resourced STEM departments fall, they take humanities down with them. And when graduate programs downsize, universities lose the PhD students that keep research and undergraduate education afloat. And without grad student labor, the whole academic system crumbles.Academics are terrified, and they should be. Theres only so much instability that young scholars can stomach to chase careers that the government is actively destroying. We risk losing an entire generation of future experts, and the potential harm that could cause is incalculable. And yet, even academias stoutest defenders would acknowledge there were serious problems with STEM graduate education even before Trump took office again. If done intentionally, downsizing PhD training programs could be a good thing. While the way these sudden funding cuts are being carried out cause far more chaos than positive change, universities do need fewer PhD students and to take better care of those they admit. For most of American history, higher education was limited to the privileged few. That changed after World War II, when the GI Bill made universities dramatically more accessible. Cold War-era investments, many of them motivated by post-Sputnik competition with the Soviet Union, subsidized the growth of PhD programs in STEM fields, all aiming to advance the nations strategic interests in science and military readiness. And those fields kept growing.Today, the pool of potential PhD candidates across all disciplines is much larger than it was during the Cold War. Roughly 40 percent of Americans over 25 are college graduates, and over 8.5 million of them have a doctorate or professional degree. Earning a medical, law, or business administration degree often equips students for high-earning careers (and, in many cases, hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt). But the academic job market is bleak for newly minted PhDs, and it has been for decades. In STEM fields, its not uncommon for PhD grads to spend at least five years in postdoctoral positions, earning under $60,000 annually, all with no guarantee of ever landing a faculty job. And while STEM grads who cant find a home in academia can often turn to jobs in biopharma or engineering, humanities graduates are much more dependent on academic employment and those jobs are increasingly scarce. In 2020, fewer than half of new humanities PhDs had a job lined up at graduation.When much of what youre producing cant find a market, its a good sign youre oversupplying. But while the glut of PhDs is bad for recent graduates, it is convenient for universities that use grad students as a cheap, talented, and highly motivated workforce. Because they are often defined as trainees, universities often get away with treating early-career academics like apprentices, rather than workers. More grad students means more research and teaching for a fraction of the cost of hiring full-time professors to do the same. (Perhaps unsurprisingly, unionization efforts among grad students are generally met with hostility from administration and faculty, who fear stalled scientific progress and undergraduate education.)Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty ImagesAs universities are forced to pare down on graduate admissions in light of Trumps attacks on science and higher education, theyll have to reckon with the consequences of losing the people who do the bulk of academias dirty work. With fewer junior scientists, research groups will produce less data and publish fewer papers, potentially jeopardizing the careers of young professors who rely on trainees and publications to earn tenure. Fewer graduate student instructors will also mean inflated class sizes for undergraduates. Its easy to dismiss cuts to PhD programs as problems confined to ivory towers. I spent six years earning a neuroscience PhD, and its difficult to garner sympathy for someone who voluntarily sacrificed the bulk of her twenties studying the intricacies of the orbitofrontal cortex. But the truth is that academic research lays the groundwork for virtually every innovation and advancement that comes from private corporations. Fundamental research even that which doesnt have any obvious market value drives progress. When universities lose part of their academic workforce, the costs extend far beyond campus.The question isnt whether we need researchers we do. Its how we can sustainably support knowledge production while treating academic workers with the dignity they deserve. PhD programs have no choice but to focus on quality, not quantityAs long as Ive been in the profession, science has run on a series of strange cultural practices that rely on uncompensated labor, C. Brandon Ogbunu, an assistant professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Yale, wrote in Undark last week.Generations of researchers have accepted these conditions as part of the job, but theyre not. Exploitative systems can and should be dismantled and rebuilt. Not through the chaos and confusion of Trumps cuts, but through gradual admissions reductions and strategic cuts to brand-boosting money pits (like sports).There is an opportunity to envision a better academia one that values, adequately trains, and fairly compensates young scholars. When researchers arent scrambling to make ends meet or anxious about their career prospects, they can devote more mental energy to their work. Properly supported scholars take bigger intellectual risks, and are more likely to pursue ambitious, potentially groundbreaking work. And, quite simply, all workers deserve a living wage. Ranking systems, which are used to recruit students and establish a reputation, often include ratios of doctoral students to total students or faculty in their calculations. NIH grants also require applicants to prove theyve trained and retained PhD students, incentivizing universities to produce more PhDs whether those graduates have job prospects or not. One potential fix: admit fewer grad students, pay each student more, and measure success in terms of individual job placements, mentorship quality, and research impact. Long-term positions for senior scientists and lecturers can pick up the slack, and maintain institutional memory better than a transient workforce-in-training ever could. Without these incentives, departments wont be punished by funders for reducing graduate program admissions or for supporting students in leaving if grad school ends up being a poor fit. With fewer students to support, universities could afford to increase PhD stipends, many of which currently fall well below the cost of living, especially in humanities departments. (PhD stipends usually range between $20,000 and $45,000 per year, with many universities paying humanities and social science students thousands less than that.)As the foreign aid community comes to terms with the fact that it needs to be ruthless about prioritizing what it can do with fewer resources, academia may need to do the same. As devastating as these cuts to higher education are, it may be the shock the system needs to make much-needed changes. Pulling the rug out from under hopeful PhD applicants was not the way to downsize academia but we do have too many PhDs. On the other side of this chaos, if theres anything left at all, could be a pared-down system that prioritizes quality over quantity. The Economist published a cynical take on grad school back in 2010: Many of those who embark on a PhD are the smartest in their class and will have been the best at everything they have done, they write. Few will be willing to accept that the system they are entering could be designed for the benefit of others, that even hard work and brilliance may well not be enough to succeed, and that they would be better off doing something else.But producing specialized knowledge creators and expert researchers is a good deal for any country trying to solve big societal problems, and devaluing it risks driving smart people out of the US, where their work is under attack. While PhD programs often fail to teach students how to teach, communicate with regular people, or navigate corporate politics, they do train people to read deeply, plan challenging projects, and execute them with discipline. We need that now more than ever.Youve read 1 article in the last monthHere at Vox, we're unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.We rely on readers like you join us.Swati SharmaVox Editor-in-ChiefSee More:
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  • Nintendo Switch 2 launch games leak as fans all say the same thing
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    Nintendo Switch 2 is likely to have a big presence from one publisher as a new leak reveals a series of epic launch titles for Nintendo's console here's all we've learnedTech10:13, 17 Mar 2025Updated 10:32, 17 Mar 2025Elden Ring is an easy contender for one of PS5's best games(Image: FromSoftware)Nintendo's Switch 2 is getting a full reveal on April 2. At a special Nintendo Direct, we're hoping to find out the system's release date and pricing.We'll also hear more about the launch lineup, but one leaker appears to have jumped the gun somewhat and not only revealed one game, but multiple projects in development for the latest Nintendo hardware.Article continues belowAs fans have pointed out, however, there's something curious all the games revealed are from the same publisher, with Bandai Namco seemingly leading the third-party charge for the new console.Elden Ring is one of the greatest games of all time(Image: Steam)The leak once again comes from eXtas1S, who has a relatively solid track record with revealing gaming news.According to his latest video, the Switch 2 is planned to launch in June 2025 (which we've heard before), and bandi Namco is throwing three of its biggest games at the system.eXtas1S has suggested Dragon Ball: Sparking! Zero could be among the launch window titles, while Elden Ring and Tekken 8 are also tipped to appear. That trio are some of the publisher's best work, with Elden Ring likely to be a big hit for gamers that missed out on it in 2022.I can say that Dragon Ball: Sparking! Zero is expected to be one of the very first Bandai Namco games to arrive on the Nintendo Switch 2 at launch. From what Ive been told, the console will launch in late June 2025, and this game will be one of the launch titles," the leaker explained (thanks, Game Post).It's an exciting array of titles for the new console if the rumour is true, but given the Switch 2 could cost more than anticipated, Nintendo will want to make it an enticing prospect.With analysts suggesting we'll see a new 3D Mario, and Nintendo already showing off a new Mario Kart, it could be the most impressive launch lineup in history.Article continues belowFor more on the Nintendo Switch 2, check out reports that the console's chat functionality will be miles ahead of Switch 1, as well as a series of details revealed by the US Government.For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.
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  • Expert reveals GTA 6 features are in Rockstar game you can play right now
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    GTA 6's lighting features might be available right now in GTA 5 Enhanced Edition on PC, as one expert digs into the new free update to Rockstar's classic adventureTech10:01, 17 Mar 2025Updated 10:34, 17 Mar 2025GTA 5's Enhanced Edition only launched this month(Image: Rockstar Games)Grand Theft Auto 6 is coming this this year, with a supercomputer predicting the game will finally launch on October 25, 2025 but Rockstar remains silent.While the Enhanced Edition of GTA 5 has ended up getting a 'Mixed' review score on Steam, gaming technical experts Digital Foundry have been looking into the updated PC release and have found some exciting hints for what GTA 6 could learn from it.Article continues belowFrom ray-traced lighting to 30 FPS, here's what Alex Battaglia had to say about the potential features Rockstar could carry across.We've previously heard that GTA 6 would be targeting 30 FPS on console, and Battaglia has reached a similar conclusion."We still don't think GTA 6 will be a 60fps game on consoles, however, and again, GTA 5 on PC indicates that the set-up costs for RT are too much for 60fps on console-equivalent CPUs. So while RTGI is relatively light on the GPU, it is far heavier on the CPU side and is more limiting as a result."Battaglia is referring to the RTGI (ray-traced global illumination) in the video above, which suggests that as good as the new lighting effects in GTA 5's Enhanced Edition look, they're likely too much for your PS5 or Xbox Series X to handle at any higher than 30 FPS.Given the sheer amount of detail in GTA 6's trailer alone, there's a good chance of that 30FPS limit but there's good news, too.Battaglia posits that the amount of work that went into GTA 5's improved ray-tracing, which he dubs a "comprehensive beast", there's every chance Rockstar is laying the groundwork for GTA 6's lighting.In fact, he even suggests that some of the GTA 5 Enhanced Edition lighting are actually from GTA 6 suggesting this could be the closest we get for a while.Article continues belowFor more on GTA 6, check out why the Xbox may get a big boost from its launch, as well as everything we know about the game so far.For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.
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  • Kengo Kuma and Studio Gang Among Shortlist for Nelson-Atkins Museum Expansion in Kansas City, United States
    www.archdaily.com
    The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, United States, has reached a critical moment in its expansion project, revealing six finalist designs that propose new ways to engage visitors, integrate the museum with its surroundings, and create an open and inviting cultural space. The shortlisted teams - Kengo Kuma & Associates, Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Selldorf Architects, Studio Gang, Weiss/Manfredi, and WHY Architecture - bring a range of approaches, each responding to the museum's architectural legacy and evolving role within Kansas City.
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  • OPEN CALL FOR EXHIBITIONS Design Doha 2026
    www.archdaily.com
    Save this picture!Curators, designers, and architectsjoin Design Doha 2026! Showcase your vision on a global stage. Submit your proposal now. Visit our website for details!Design Doha Biennale returns for its second edition from April 16 June 30, 2026, expanding its presence across Doha and reinforcing the citys position as a global hub for design, creativity, and cultural exchange. As we embark on this next chapter, Design Doha invites curators to submit exhibition proposals that spotlight the regions rich cultural heritage and pioneering design talent. Selected exhibitions will be presented across various venues in Doha, contributing to a dynamic and inclusive dialogue on contemporary design in the region and beyond.ABOUT THE OPEN CALL Through this open call, Design Doha offers a platform for mid-career and established curators to present innovative, thought-provoking exhibitions that challenge conventions, explore new narratives, and engage with the regions evolving design landscape.WHO CAN APPLY? The Open Call for Exhibitions is open to:Curators, cultural institutions, architecture and design colleges and universities, designers & design studios based in or from MENA region (GCC, Levant, North Africa) Curators from across the world working with MENA region designersCollectives and collaborative teamsMid-career and established curatorsProposals across multiple disciplines, including:Architecture & Urban DesignFurniture & Product DesignGraphic & Digital DesignSustainable & Regenerative DesignExperimental & Conceptual PracticesKEY DATESOpen Call Launch: March 13, 2025Submission Deadline: May 12, 2025 12:00 PM Doha TimeDesign Doha 2026 Biennale: April 16 June 30, 2026WHAT WE OFFERDesign Doha provides:A dedicated exhibition venue Marketing & PR supportInclusion in the official Biennale calendarExhibitors are responsible for all costs related to production, logistics, shipping, installation, and intellectual property rights.WHY APPLY?Showcase your curatorial vision at a leading international biennaleEngage with regional and global audiences in an expanding design networkPresent your exhibition across key cultural venues in DohaReceive exhibition and curatorial support from Design DohaHOW TO APPLYTo submit your proposal, complete the application form and provide the required documents on this link: https://www.jotform.com/form/250692883325464TitleOPEN CALL FOR EXHIBITIONS Design Doha 2026TypeCall for SubmissionsOrganizersDesign Doha BiennialSubmission DeadlineMay 12, 2025 12:00 AMVenueVenue to be determinedPriceFreeCountry RestrictionsAlgeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, Trkiye, United Arab Emirates, Yemen
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  • A radical manifesto for truth
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 17 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00794-wIs a revolution of standards in public life the key to tackling our intertwined environmental crises? A compelling book argues it is.
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  • Dont wait out four hard years: speak truth to power
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 17 March 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00791-zThe importance of diversity in science is an unshakeable reality that the scientific community must stand by.
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  • I made a flipdot display tutorial
    v.redd.it
    submitted by /u/TriqlideStudios [link] [comments]
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  • Horizon Forbidden West Actress Ashly Burch Talks about Controversial AI Aloy Demo A week ago, we saw Horizon Forbidden West's protagonist Aloy control...
    x.com
    Horizon Forbidden West Actress Ashly Burch Talks about Controversial AI Aloy DemoA week ago, we saw Horizon Forbidden West's protagonist Aloy controlled by AI, and players were less than impressed, calling the stiff text-to-speech model "creepy" and "cursed."She wasn't voiced by her usual actress Ashly Burch, but the precedent itself is naturally alarming, so Burch posted a video on Instagram, where she addresses the controversy. After the demo's leak, Guerrilla got in touch, reassuring her that the video "didn't reflect anything that was actively in development," and the studio didn't use her performance nor facial or voice data.Burch says she isn't scared for her career in particular, but "I feel worried about this art form. Game performance as an art form."The actress has joined SAG-AFTRA's strike, which stands to protect actors from unauthorized use of their performance for AI training. "What we're fighting for is that you have to get our consent before you make an AI version of us in any form," Burch says. "You have to compensate us fairly, and you have to tell us how you're using this AI double."Alas, the latest proposal from the bargaining group was "filled with alarming loopholes that will leave our members vulnerable to AI abuse," so the strike continues."I feel worried not because the technology exists, [and] not even because game companies want to use it, because of course they do they always want to use technological advancements," Burch explains. "I just imagine a video like this coming out that does have someone's performance attached to it that does have someone's voice or face or movement and the possibility that if we lose this fight, that person would have no recourse. They wouldn't have any protections, any way to fight back. That possibility, it makes me so sad."
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