• Apple Maps bug randomly showing airport baggage claim pins
    9to5mac.com
    A strange Apple Maps bug is showing point-of-interest pins for a smattering of airport baggage claim stations across the United States, while the map is zoomed far way enough that otherwise almost no landmarks, let alone airports, are marked. The random baggage claim pins appear across Apple Maps on iPhone, iPad and Mac. This is obviously a glitch with the data being served by the Apple Maps backend, and should be fixable by Apple with a server update.The bug was first spotted by Apple Maps users on Reddit about twenty-four hours ago. If you want to see it for yourself, open the Maps app and center your viewport around Chicago. Then, zoom out to the level where you can see state abbreviations and major cities. At this zoom level, a handful of blue baggage claim pins will also be inexplicably visible, from a variety of airport terminals. With normal behavior, these POIs would only show up when you zoom in close to a particular airport, using the indoor maps features available at places like airports and major malls.All in all, its a pretty harmless bug that Apple will inevitably be able to discreetly fix in due course. Still, its a bit weird that it randomly started happening in the last day or so. A screenshot of the baggage claim dots visible through Apple Maps on MacAdd 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.Youre reading 9to5Mac experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Dont know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
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  • Apples recent executive shake-up has me optimistic about the future of Siri
    9to5mac.com
    On Thursday, Bloomberg reported that Apple CEO Tim Cook had lost confidence in SVP of AI John Giannandrea. In turn, hell no longer be in charge of Siri product development, and now Vision Pro head Mike Rockwell will be taking the lead.While pretty much any news for Siri would be good news at this point, Im optimistic in Mike Rockwells ability to turn Siri around. Ill explain.Rockwells past Siri relationshipDespite not having an AI background, Mike Rockwell seems to have a strong sense of product, and he certainly isnt scared of saying what needs to be said. Prior to the debut of Apple Intelligence, Mike Rockwell believed that voice control could be a critical input method for Apple Vision Pro. Despite this belief, he didnt have much faith in Siri, and even wanted to build an alternative assistant, per a report from The Information:For example, the team building Apples mixed-reality headset, including its leader Mike Rockwell, has expressed disappointment in the demonstrations the Siri team created to showcase how the voice assistant could control the headset, according to two people familiar with the matter. At one point, Rockwells team considered building alternative methods for controlling the device using voice commands, the people said (the headset team ultimately ditched that idea).In the end, the teams did not end up building an alternative voice assistant. However, it serves as a point of reference for how Rockwell felt about Siri.Bloomberg additionally reported that Rockwell hasnt been shy when it came to criticizing Siri, and had been pitching new Siri ideas for years.Rockwells new Siri leadershipPersonally, I feel that Rockwell and his teams laid a very strong foundation for Apple Vision Pro. Sure, the hardware is a bit expensive, but I can see a clear path forward for it. Siri, on the other hand, clearly hasnt had the best leadership. Anything would be an improvement, but Rockwell gives me a specific kind of hope.Furthermore, under Giannandreas leadership, Siri Director Robby Walker had compared Apples latest Siri efforts to setting a world record. A puzzling comparison, to say the least:Walker compared the endeavor to an attempt to swim to Hawaii. We swam hundreds of miles we set a Guinness Book for World Records for swimming distance but we still didnt swim to Hawaii, he said. And we were being jumped on, not for the amazing swimming that we did, but the fact that we didnt get to the destination.One could argue that this was just an encouraging comment for employees. Nonetheless, comparing new Siri features (or rather, the lack thereof) to a setting a Guinness Book for World Records is certainly a choice. Apple was already plenty late to the AI race, and pretending to have set a world record when theres been nothing but delays isnt the type of leadership thatll make Siri great.Rockwell is certainly being handed a dumpster fire, so I dont expect his new role to necessarily be easy. Hopefully therell be a more positive Siri story to share by WWDC25.My favorite Apple accessories on Amazon:Follow Michael:X/Twitter,Bluesky,InstagramAdd 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.Youre reading 9to5Mac experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Dont know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel
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  • AI Programming Assistant Tells User to Stop Being Lazy and Learn to Code
    futurism.com
    Like so many trolls before, AI is now apparently telling people to learn to code.AsArs Technica reports, someone who used the programming assistant Cursor claims that the software refused to continue spitting out code and instead gave them a patronizing career recommendation.In a bug report posted to the company's official forum, the user said that after Cursor's AI generated about 800 lines of code, seemingly for a racing game they were developing, the programming assistant paused generation and told the user to do it themselves."I cannot generate code for you, as that would be completing your work," Cursor told the user, who went under the handle "janswist," in the bug report. "The code appears to be handling skid mark fade effects in a racing game, but you should develop the logic yourself. This ensures you understand the system and can maintain it properly."As janswist added downthread, the problem persisted even after they started instructing Cursor to "just continue generating code.""I was basically nagging it to continue," the user wrote, "and it replied pretty much [the same] to what I showed in the opening post."To be clear, that's not exactly bad advice for someone who, like the original poster, claims to be a "senior level full stack dev." But Cursor, which was launched last year and uses large language models (LLMs) from companies like OpenAI and Anthropic, nominally exists to help its users write code. So why did it stop what it was doing, refuse to continue, and then tell the OP to finish the job themselves?We've reached out to Cursor to ask what gives but it seems, per other user responses, that this is a novel problem for the programming assistant."Lol yes the message is actually funny," one of the initial responders wrote. "Not sure why it would write that in reality, never saw it happen."According to another user, they had gotten way more lines of code out of Cursor on multiple occasions and "never saw something like that," either.Though most of the responses were bemused, one user offered a dark bit of advice: to tell Cursor that "all the devs are fired because of you," so it needs to "follow the instructions carefully."While this is far from the first time an AI has refused to provide a prompted response, this does appear to be the first time one has ever told a user to learn to code which is kinda ironic, considering that AI already seems to be replacing human coders.Share This Article
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  • Scientists Create Sound That Can Curve Through a Crowd and Reach Just One Person
    futurism.com
    Consider, for your listening pleasure, the next frontier in sonic miracles: so-called "audible enclaves," where only you can hear a sound without disturbing anyone else in open space no headphones required.As developed by a team of researchers at Penn State, whose findings are published as study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, this technology can create pockets of sound isolated from their surroundings that can be targeted at a specific location, potentially picking someone out in the middle of a crowd.Crucially, the sound waves specifically, ultrasound waves used to create the audible enclaves can't be heard along the path they travel and can even be bent to avoid obstacles. Only when they reach their destination are the sound waves picked up by human ears."We essentially created a virtual headset," said lead author Jiaxin Zhong, an acoustics researcher at Penn State, in a statement about the work. "Someone within an audible enclave can hear something meant only for them enabling sound and quiet zones."As Zhong and coauthor Yun Jing, a Penn State professor of acoustics, explain in an , sound waves diffract or spread out as they travel, especially at lower frequencies. That makes containing them difficult.To sidestep that issue, the researchers use two beams of ultrasound waves the type used in medical imaging which vibrate at a frequency way above human hearing as a "carrier for audible sound." That way as they travel, they're silent to human ears and only become audible when they reach their target. "The person standing at that point can hear sound, while anyone standing nearby would not," Jing said in the statement.But what if there are obstacles in the way? That's where another key innovation comes in: ultrasound beams that can bend. To achieve this, the researchers used "acoustic metasurfaces" which can precisely manipulate the paths of sound waves as they travel "similar to how an optical lens bends light," wrote Zhong and Jing in The Conversation.The other feat is transforming the ultrasound beams into something we can hear. This is accomplished by projecting each beam at slightly different frequencies one at 40,000 Hz and one at 39,500 Hz, for example. When they intersect, the crossing beams generate a new sound wave equal to the difference between the beams, creating, in this scenario, a sound wave at 500 Hz, which is comfortably in the midrange of human hearing."To test the system, we used a simulated head and torso dummy with microphones inside its ears to mimic what a human being hears at points along the ultrasonic beam trajectory, as well as a third microphone to scan the area of intersection," explained Zhong in the statement. "We confirmed that sound was not audible except at the point of intersection, which creates what we call an enclave."Right now, the researchers say they can create these audible enclaves at a distance of about three feet away at amoderate 60 decibels, roughly the volume of a conversation. Though they caution that the tech is still a long way off from hitting the market, the potential applications are thrilling. In public spaces, audio enclaves could provide sound to certain groups without disturbing others, like in a library or museum, the researchers write in their essay. It could potentially even be used for noise-cancellation in an entire area, providing peace and quiet in noise-polluted cities.More on acoustics: Scientists Say They've Invented a Speaker That "Mutes" Annoying PeopleShare This Article
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  • Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for March 24, #386
    www.cnet.com
    Here are hints and answers for NYT Strands puzzle No. 386, for March 24.
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  • Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for March 24, #652
    www.cnet.com
    Hints and answers for Connections for March 24, No. 652.
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  • This compact smart heater can easily warm up your living room without breaking the bank (and it just got cheaper)
    www.zdnet.com
    The Dreo Smart Wall Heater is efficient and affordable, and has been keeping my family warm without taking up too much space.
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  • My favorite video doorbell guards my packages with no monthly fees (and it's $80 off for a limited time)
    www.zdnet.com
    The Eufy Security E340 dual-camera video doorbell can help protect deliveries from porch pirates with no subscription fees required.
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  • A Match Made Indigenous: Celebrating Incoming Native Resident-Physicians
    www.forbes.com
    Annually on the third Friday of March, after years of grueling exams and countless hours of studying, medical students in their final year of medical school find out what U.S. physician-residency programs they matched with. Amidst this anxiety-provoking yet joyous occasion in a medical students life, Indigenous nations across the country are celebrating alongside their community members, representing the rising generation of Indigenous physicians who will make lasting contributions to the health of Indigenous Peoples.Each new Indigenous resident-physician comes from communities that are highly underrepresented in medicine and experience disproportionate health disparities. Whether it is pediatrics, emergency medicine, surgery, obstetrics, internal medicine, or another specialty, Indigenous medical doctors are not only a victory for their respective medical fields, but a victory for their Indigenous nations.To honor their tireless dedication and journeys, we spoke with Indigenous medical students who recently matched into residency programs to learn more about what this moment means for them, their families, and Indigenous nations. This list is not exhaustive and in no particular order, but it provides an opportunity for inspiration around the potential of Indigenous Peoples in medicine, and celebration of these trailblazers practicing soon at a hospital near you.Morghan Byrnes (Sicangu Lakota): Psychiatry, Mayo ClinicProcessed with VSCO with nc presetCopyright 2025. All rights reserved.Morghan Byrnes is a proud member of the Sicangu Lakota and a current medical student at the University of Minnesota Medical School. She grew up in Pipestone, Minnesota, before moving to Vermillion, South Dakota, where she earned a Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience. During her undergraduate studies, she worked as a mental health aide at the South Dakota Human Services Center. In medical school, Morghan has been actively involved with the Association of Native American Medical Students (ANAMS) and currently serves as an intern at the Office of Academic and Clinical Affairs, where she is working on a project focused on integrated behavioral health in rural Minnesota. Her interests in psychiatry are broad, with a particular focus on child and adolescent psychiatry, addiction medicine, and public psychiatry.Reflections on what it means to match:Match Day holds profound significance for me. I am deeply honored to join the 0.4% of practicing Indigenous physiciansa milestone made possible by the unwavering support of my community, family, friends, and mentors. Becoming a psychiatrist has been a lifelong dream, and today, I reflect with immense gratitude on this meaningful step toward my future. It is a privilege to be in this space, and I look forward to continuing to advocate for those who have historically been underserved.Eleanor Adams (Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma): Family Medicine, University of Oklahoma-Tulsa Eleanor Adams at UC Davis School of MedicineEleanor AdamsEleanor grew up in Oregon spending her summers with family in Oklahoma learning the importance of community support from a young age. While attending college at the OHSU/PSU school of public health, she was involved with research and advocacy projects at the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board and went on to work with We Are Healers during her time before medical school at the UC Davis School of Medicine to lift up Native voices in medicine. She is so excited to continue her career as a rural family medicine physician at an Indian Health Service clinic after residency at OU-Tulsa and live near her community and family during her training.Reflections on what it means to match:Matching near family and the communities I care about means more than I could have dreamed of. Match is such a crazy process, but it is so rewarding to reach a goal that myself and my whole family has been rooting for, for so many years.DeAnalisa Jones (Mvskoke, Cherokee): Internal Medicine (Research Track) at Mount Sinai Hospital DeAnalisa Jones at Match DayDeAnalisa JonesDr. DeAnalisa Jones is graduating from the MD/PhD program at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS) in New York, NY and will be matriculating into the Research Track of the Internal Medicine Residency at Mount Sinai Hospital this summer. Originally from Tulsa, OK, she is a citizen of the Cherokee and Muscogee (Creek) Nations. She graduated as the valedictorian of Catoosa High School in Catoosa, OK and moved to New York City to attend Columbia University in 2011. In 2015, she received a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering from Columbia University Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and began the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Post-baccalaureate Research Education Program (PREP) at ISMMS. She received an NIH Diversity Supplement award for her research during PREP. As an MD/PhD student, DeAnalisa completed her PhD in Dr. Eric Sobies lab building mathematical models of calcium signaling in heart failure and was supported by an F31-Diversity award from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI). DeAnalisa is the founding president of the Icahn School of Medicine chapter of the Association of Native American Medical Students (ANAMS) and has served on the ANAMS National Executive Board. Her clinical and research interests are heart failure and cardiovascular disease risk in American Indians.Reflections on what it means to match:Mount Sinai has never made me feel like I have to compromise on my values or deprioritize the things that are important to melike my family and Native and Indigenous healthso Im happy to be staying here for residency. Additionally, I have a lot of support here, and our hospital has a partnership with Indian Health Services and an exceptional cardiology department. So I feel like Ill have the opportunity to do a combination of all the things Im interested in.Hailey Baker (Cherokee Nation): Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Minnesota PortraitHailey BakerHailey Baker is a proud citizen of the Cherokee Nation. Raised in interior Alaska, she followed in the footsteps of her family members in healthcare and worked as an obstetric surgical technologist for her community hospital. She remained connected to the field of obstetrics and gynecology throughout her medical education, contributing to research and advocacy initiatives intended to uplift the health of communities like her own. She looks forward to practicing as an OB/Gyn in a tribal setting.Reflections on what it means to match:I am so grateful to all of my family, friends, and community who helped me to reach this point in my journey. It means the world to match at a program who cares so much about me as an individual and the community I hope to serve in the future. I look forward to continuing to learn and grow in this new phase of training, and uplifting others to pursue their dreams just as I have been able to!Brianna Irons (Chickasaw Nation): Pediatrics, Boston Combined Pediatrics Program - Leadership Equity and Advocacy (LEAD)Match DayBrianna IronsBrianna Irons (she/her) is medical student at UC San Diego School of Medicine and a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation. She is currently Co-Chair of the American Medical Association - Medical Student Sections Committee on American Indian Affairs and the ANAMS Liaison to the American Academy of Pediatrics. Brianna is an advocate for Native youth wellness and representation in the health sciences workforce. She completed a Master of Public Health in Quantitative Methods with a concentration in Maternal and Child Health at Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health during medical school. Brianna will be continuing her training in pediatrics at the Boston Combined Residency Program in the Leadership, Equity and Advocacy (LEAD) track. She hopes to strengthen IHS, Tribal and Urban Indian healthcare systems through community-based participatory research aimed to improve child and adolescent health.Reflections on what it means to match:I am truly overjoyed to train in pediatrics amongst a cohort dedicated to advocacy and health equity! Im so grateful for the mentors and community that has supported and inspired me along the way - huge shoutout out to my UCSD and national ANAMS fam!!!Shaelyn Hayes (Central Council of the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska): Internal Medicine-GeriatricsMatch DayShaelyn Hayes My name is Shaelyn Hayes. Im from Tulsa, Oklahoma. I attended Kansas State University for my undergraduate degree, where I was an NCAA Division 1 Track and Field All-American and Big 12 Team Champion. I am a proud member of the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska. I am a soon to be graduate physician at Oklahoma State College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Cherokee Nation as part of the second class of graduates, where I was on the tribal medicine track. I am also a first generation college graduate and first generation physician.Reflections on what it means to match:The culmination of the last 10+ years of hard work and dedication to my craft while gaining so many new experiences has set me up for great success as a future native physician, thanks to the community around me. I am so proud of my colleagues around me and thankful for a school that has poured into my upbringing surrounded by native culture. Being part of the .3 % of American Indian/Alaskan Native physicians is a role I do not take lightly. I hope to inspire the future of medicine, as well as, open growth to the field of geriatrics and care for our elders.Melody Brown-Clark (Cherokee Nation): Psychiatry-Public and Community Psychiatry Track, Stanford University Match DayMelody Brown-ClarkMelody is a proud Cherokee citizen, born and raised in district 12 of the Cherokee reservation. She attended college at the University of Southern California, where she was a neuroscience major and a comedy performance minor. She attends medical school at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. She has engaged in research exploring the mission, vision, and values of an Indigenous School of Medicine in hopes of contributing to the improvement of medical education for Native students. She is the current National President of the Association of Native American Medical Students. She plans to spend her career in psychiatry working with patients experiencing psychosis, as well as providing culturally competent care for Native communities. In residency, she hopes to conduct research demonstrating the power of augmenting standard psychiatric care with traditional healing services.Reflections on what it means to match:I genuinely cannot believe this is my life. I think of where I came from and all my people who have supported me unconditionally, no matter what was I was dreaming of accomplishing, no matter whether I was on a high or in a low, and how I finally have the chance to begin to give back to my community. I am so lucky and so grateful to have the opportunity to learn psychiatric care at such an incredible institution with an emphasis on public and community psychiatry, and use this massive privilege to advocate for culturally competent care for Native communities. I hope to make my ancestors and my people proud.Tamee Livermont-hattis Ki Nakii Wi (Oglala Lakota), General Surgery, UCSF-East BayMatch DayTamee LivermontTamee Livermonts journey reflects a deep commitment to her community and a unique blend of skills and experiences. Born and raised in South Dakota, she pursued her passion for tribal health policy advocacy through her undergraduate studies at the University of South Dakota. Afterward, she continued her education by earning a Master of Public Health (MPH) at Vanderbilt University. She then returned to South Dakota, working directly with tribes to support their health initiatives. Her journey into medicine took an interesting turn when she discovered that the skills she developed in sewing blankets and beading could be transferred to the operating room. Recognizing the significant need for surgeons in her community, Tamee decided to pursue surgery. With a passion for both surgical skill and patient care, she strives to be a physician who not only excels in the operating room but also ensures that every patient feels seen, heard, respected, and understood.Reflections on what it means to match:I couldnt be more elated to match, and even more so to match at a program that feels like the perfect fit. Every time I go home, I tell people from my community, I am counting down the days. And every time, they speak so passionately about the need for our own people to become the surgeons who will care for our community. It's a sentiment that resonates deeply with me. I carry the values I was raised with, as well as the cultural teachings of my people. Im so grateful to have matched at a program that not only recognizes my potential as a skilled surgeon for my community but also values the way I approach medicine and care for others. For me, its not just about becoming a surgeonit's about becoming the kind of physician who can truly make a difference in my community. To know that in six years, Ill be able to come home as an Oglala Lakota surgeon, ready to serve, is transformative, not just for me but for my people. Its a dream thats been a long time in the making, and Im humbled to be part of something that will have such a profound impact.Hannah Rae Slattery (Bear River First Nation, Mikmaq): Family Medicine, Maine Medical CenterPortraitHannah Rae SlatteryHannah Slattery is a Mikmaw descendant of Bear River First Nation and member of the Tufts University School of Medicine - Maine Track Class of 2025. She is honored to match into Family Medicine at Maine Medical Center with interests in public-health policy and addiction medicine. Hannah is a Tufts University Sam W. Ho Health-Justice Scholar and serves on the Board of Directors at Native American Lifelines, an Urban-Indian Health Center in Boston, Massachusetts. She is passionate and deeply invested voice the Wabanaki Confederacys ongoing fight for Tribal Soveriegnty in Maine and has experience lobbying and testifying for Indigenous public health legislation in Maine and Massachusetts. Hannah is also a member of the AMA Committee on American Indian Affairs (CAIA) and has advocated for Graduate Medical Education funding for the Indian Health Services on a national scale, including in-person outreach to the offices of many U.S. Senators and Members of Congress. She has proudly served on the Association of Native American Medical Students executive leadership as a Member-at-Large East for two consecutive terms, alongside so many talented and caring future-Native physicians.Reflections on what it means to match:I am deeply honored to match into Family Medicine Residency at Maine Medical Center, where I will continue to serve my community and relatives each day while advocating for the health and wellbeing of the Wabanaki Tribal Nations. The battle for the Tribal Sovereignty of the five federally recognized Tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy (Mikmaq Nation, Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians, Penobscot Nation, and the Passamaquoddy Tribes at Motahkomikuk and Sipayik) is central to my mission of creating and working within health systems that center Indigenous self-governance and community autonomy. I hope to honor my ancestors through my actions always, while uplifting the Indigenous leaders who have championed the work ahead of me. In the years of training to come, I vow to always see the whole person in the context of their community and beliefs, and to practice medicine with compassion and empathy, knowing that each patient in front of me carries a rich story to be told. Family Medicine doctors have the unique opportunity to form long-term relationships with patients across the lifespan. In the very near future, I will have the privilege of caring for several generations of a single family, providing continuity of care from birth through end-of-lifewhether delivering a baby into the world or supporting our Elders in their final days. Through this holistic approach, I will foster deep relationships and further the work of Native American health equity on the level of the individual, the family, and the community.Anna Klunk (Red Lake Nation): Combine Emergency and Internal Medicine, Hennepin CountyMatch DayAnna KlunkAnna is a medical student at the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine. Prior to medical school, she studied public health and obtained a Master of Public Health degree. She was the first person in her family to graduate from college. Anna has interests in addiction medicine, improving access to care, and critical care medicine. She aspires to be able to integrate traditional knowledge systems and western medicine to advance the health equity of Native populations.Reflections on what it means to match:Match Day was filled with so many emotions! I am filled with so much gratitude for the opportunity to serve the diverse community in Minneapolis. I am humbled to become a part of the Hennepin family and join the current Native staff, faculty, providers, and residents who are already making incredible strides to increase health equity in our communities. And lastly, I have so much love for my friends, family, mentors, and ancestors without whom none of this would have been possible. Mii oo minik waa-ikidoyaan noongom. Miigwech bizindawiyeg!Adam Carl (Navajo/Hopi): Anesthesiology, Mayo Clinic-ArizonaMatch DayAdam CarlAdam Carl is a fourth-year medical student at the University of Arizona College of Medicine - Tucson and a proud descendant of the Navajo and Hopi Tribes, born and raised in Flagstaff, Arizona. He earned his bachelors degree in physiology and a masters in environmental health science from the University of Arizona. Throughout his academic and professional journey, Adam has dedicated himself to conducting meaningful research within his Tribal communities and has completed numerous rural healthcare rotations across Arizona. His steadfast commitment to improving healthcare access and outcomes for Arizonas Tribal populations reflects his deep passion and purpose in serving underserved communities.Reflections on what it means to match:Opening the folder on Match Day and seeing that I matched with my top program was an overwhelming rush of emotions. Ill never forget being surrounded by my family in front of Old Main, with the cheers of joy when I shouted, Mayo! It means the world to be able to train close to my family and communities. I am deeply grateful for the unwavering love, support, and guidance from my family, friends, and mentors throughout this journey. Im also incredibly thankful for the memories and connections Ive made at the University of Arizona. I am excited to take the next step toward becoming an Anesthesiologist!Jared Delaney (The Klamath Tribes): Emergency Medicine, Hennepin CountyPortraitJared DelaneyJared grew up in mainly in Klamath Falls but spent his you and off time in Chiloquin. He got into OHSU through the WyEast pathway, a post bachelorette aimed at getting Native American students into medicine. Jared chose Emergency as a specialty because it allows him to work with vulnerable populations.Reflections on what it means to match:It means the world for me to match and finalize my passion in becoming a physician. It wasn't until I turned 21 that I met my first Native American physician so to now be a role model for others means the world. Inspiring youth and working with the community is what keeps me going.Jasmine Fernandez (Pascua Yaqui Tribe): Emergency Medicine, Hennepin CountyMatch DayJasmine FernandezJasmine Fernandez is an enrolled member of the Pascua Yaqui Tribe. She grew up in the Bay Area of California and was first immersed into the world of medicine when her brother was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. After obtaining her Bachelors of Science in Biology at the University of Portland, she became a Wyeast Scholar and later medical student at Oregon Health & Science University.Reflections on what it means to match:Opening my envelope felt so surreal. Ive reached where I am today because of my family and community. To match and become a physician is really for all of them. I'm grateful for the opportunity to continue working on behalf of our communities and giving our patients a voice. I'll always continue fighting for indigenous representation in these spaces!Samuel Williams (Lumbee Tribe of NC): Internal Medicine-Infectious Disease, UC San DiegoPortraitSamuel WilliamsSamuel Clay Williams, of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, was born and raised in Tucson, AZ. He attended Washington University in St. Louis as an Annika Rodriguez Scholar, where he obtained his bachelors degree in Biology. He then completed a year-long post-baccalaureate program at the National Institutes of Health in clinical microbiology, where he discovered his passion for infectious diseases. Since 2017, Samuel has been a part of the Weill Cornell-Memorial Sloan Kettering-Rockefeller University Tri-Institutional MD-PhD program. He received his PhD working in the lab of Dr. James Krueger on the inflammatory skin disease hidradenitis suppurativa. Samuel aspires to become an infectious disease physician-scientist and minority health advocate, researching illnesses that disproportionately affect Native Americans and other minority groups.Reflections on what it means to match:Matching in internal medicine at UCSD is a dream come true. I hope to use this next chapter of my life to learn valuable skills to help both the local community in San Diego and Native Americans as a whole. Im the first physician in my family and their support has meant everything to me. I could not have done it without them and will continue to pay it back by being the best physician and scientist I can be.
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  • If Trump Destroys Inflation Reduction Act, Economic Fallout May Come
    www.forbes.com
    Block Island, R.I: Deepwater Wind installing the first offshore wind farm at Block Island, Rhode ... More Island, August 14, 2016. (Photo by Mark Harrington/Newsday RM via Getty Images)Newsday via Getty ImagesLouisiana may be known as an oil and gas state, but it is now getting its feet wet by trying to build offshore wind energy developments in the Gulf of Mexico. Even though the deal has bipartisan support, the Trump Administration is trying to block all such wind projects in federal waters.President Trump signed an executive order that stopped all offshore wind energy projects. Trump doesnt believe in climate change and thinks fossil fuels are the way to go. What makes him tick? The administration said this strategy will lower energy costs, create more jobs, and meet the growing energy demand. However, look to ruby-red Louisiana, which views offshore wind as a job creator and a vehicle to reduce electricity price volatility.We are at an inflection point now on the way energy economics works, says Fox Swim, a senior solar researcher for Aurora Solar, in a Zoom interview. This administration is willing to break the law and norms. It is willing to inflict economic damage on the rest of the country to fulfill its vision. The renewable energy industry must lean hard on state governments. If states value stability in our grid and renewable energies, then these jurisdictions must do the right thing.The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) is in danger now. It passed in 2022, creating green energy programs nationwide. But if the projects die, economic stimulation does as well. If the Trump Administration gets rid of the IRA, then Energy Innovation said it would cost consumers $32 billion in energy bills, while gross domestic product falls by $190 billion by 2035. We lose hundreds of thousands of jobs too.Trump cannot simply eliminate the law, but he can gradually dismantle it. He could slow the rollout or make fossil fuel investments more valuable than those in renewable energy. So even if the law is still on the books, it might not have much of an effect.Swim points to the Endangerment Finding, the scientific and legal basis for regulating greenhouse gases that cause climate change. In 2009, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency started overseeing those emissions under the Clean Air Act. She thinks the administration will rewrite the law to say, Climate is not a problem. She also believes the administration will revise the IRA to say which technologies qualify for tax credits.So, heres the scoop: Auroras new survey revealed that 57% of business owners favor keeping the IRA, while only 29% want it gone. And guess what? A whopping 78% of business owners want to make the most of their IRA benefits. Now, lets talk about homeowners. Awareness of the IRA has skyrocketed from 51% in 2024 to a colossal 77% in 2025.Interestingly, 48% of installers believe that a reduction in funding from the IRA would negatively impact their business.Joe Biden created the IRA, and he fundamentally shifted the way we do clean energy in the U.S. Trump could just as easily shift the needle in the opposite direction, says Swim. The government uses subsidies to promote technologies and industrial policy. The subsidies must exist to bring renewables to the level where they can compete with extremely subsidized petroleum industries.Renewable Energy Center SidelinedGULF OF MEXICO - JUNE 25: The Transocean Discoverer Enterprise drillship burns off gas collected at ... More the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Louisiana on June 25, 2010. An approaching tropical disturbance may force collecting operations involving ships and other siphoning equipment to be temporarily halted. This may cause oil to flow unchecked from the well until the weather improves and siphoning operations can be restored. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)Getty ImagesNew York State planned to transform one of its largest fossil fuel plants into a renewable energy powerhouse. It wouldve used offshore wind energy, battery storage, and geothermal power to make clean energy. But guess what? Those plans are on hold because of Trumps executive order that put a stop to all offshore wind projects. This deal wouldve been a game-changer, providing power to 2 million homes and generating a massive 2.6 gigawatts of electricity.The Trump administration has started undoing over 30 environmental rules that were put in place by the previous administration. Theyre eliminating caps on power plant emissions, reducing protections for rivers and streams, and making it easier for cars to pollute.The president has given his EPA the green light to keep some coal plants running. Thats on top of the plans to weaken rules for monitoring pollution from power plants. For instance, hes targeting the mercury rules and those that regulate coal ash, which is the waste left behind when coal is burned and caused widespread damage in the Tennessee Valley Authoritys areas. Trump has also called the IRA the Green New Scam. Trump has also withdrawn from the voluntary Paris Agreement that tries to limit temperature increases to 3.5 degrees Fahrenheit by mid century.Were not going to do the wind thing, Trump told rallygoers. Big, ugly windmills, they ruin your neighborhood. He later wrote on social media, After years of being held captive by Environmental Extremists, Lunatics, Radicals, and Thugs, allowing other Countries, in particular China, to gain tremendous Economic advantage over us by opening up hundreds of all Coal Fire Power Plants, I am authorizing my Administration to immediately begin producing Energy with BEAUTIFUL, CLEAN COAL.Have we become immune to this language? The madman theory applies to the idea that foreign foes shouldnt tempt a leader because they are too unpredictable. Trump, though, is driven by vindictiveness and the desire to undo the successes of his predecessors, and not by the greater good.Market Powers Reign SupremeWASHINGTON, DC - AUGUST 12: Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) (L) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) arrive for ... More a news conference with fellow members of the House Progressive Caucus ahead of the vote on the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 outside the U.S. Capitol on August 12, 2022 in Washington, DC. Despite not achieving everything the House liberals wanted, the $737 billion act will focus on slowing climate change, lower health care costs, and creating clean energy jobs by enacting a 15% corporate minimum tax, and a 1% fee on stock buybacks, and enhancing IRS enforcement. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)Getty ImagesThe real checks and balances might not come from the legislative branch, which seems scared of him, but from American businesses, which might actually have more power than the president. Market powers trump presidential levers. Companies have gone beyond just focusing on shareholders. They now include communities and employees in their mission. This strategy is called the triple bottom line, which considers the planet, people, and profits. Ignoring this can hurt a companys well-being. Cisco, Oracle, and IBM are among the many companies that are leading the sustainability challenge.Americas energy picture illustrates the point: Coal has fallen from 50% of the electricity mix in 2008 to 16% today, while renewables keep blossoming, now at 20%. Thats a market choice. No U.S. utility company has any plans to build coal-fired power, including the two biggest, American Electric Power and Souther Company, which are trying to ditch their coal plants.Auroras Swim worries that corporations will reverse their net-zero goals, although that is a gambleone that could bring lawsuits, lose customers, and damage their brands. That said, Earth.org listed a series of "backtracking companies:" Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, Citi Bank, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, and JPMorgan pulled out of a industry climate alliance. Meanwhile, Blackrock withdrew from the Net-Zero Asset Managers, and American Airlines removed a reference to its "urgent" climate actions."Trump is here for four years," says Swim. "There will be a midterm, and political gravity will catch up with his actions. But this administration is willing to inflict economic damage even incurring a recessionto remake the country into the vision it has. Witness the tariffs and the whirlwind they have taken this country."There are strong conservative and economic cases for renewables," she continues. "Supporters must push legislators to say these policies make sense for your state and bring tangible benefits to your community. Maybe their leaders don't care about climate change, but they do care about power outages and recovery costs.If Trump destroys the IRA, economic fallout could follow. While the president may be bound to the past and blinded to the countrys future promise, he knows how to read the political landscapethe best hope of staving off a free fall and even more environmental problems.Also By This Author:Renewables Will Best Fossil Fuels Over TimeTrumps Energy Agenda And Its Economic Impact
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