• One of the richest men in the world castigates the billions of dollars spent on buying laptops for US classrooms with no apparent improvements
    www.techradar.com
    Billions spent on school laptops have failed to improve student performance, raising concerns about the effectiveness of widespread digital adoption in classrooms.
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  • Some social media users report trouble deleting their 23andMe DNA data in the bankruptcy scramble
    www.fastcompany.com
    As genetic testing company 23andMe heads to bankruptcy court, there is a lot of data at stake. The company, which analyses DNA through its salvia test kits and offers information about customers ancestry, health traits, and genetic risks, now seeks authorization from the Court to commence a process to sell substantially all of its assets through a chapter 11 plan, according to 23andMes press release.Your DNA data could be part of those assets. A close reading of the bankruptcy docket shows the companys terms of service appear to allow 23andMe to transfer personally identifiable information in the event of bankruptcy, merger, acquisition, reorganization or sale of assets. That could mean millions of customers may have signed away their rights to their own DNA and genetic material without realizing it, paving the way for 23andMe to sell it to whomever buys their assets.The bankruptcy comes after the company rejected previous acquisition offers; saw a steep decline in market value, in part due to a2023 data breachthat impacted millions of customers; and experienced a fair share of company drama, including the resignation of the board.If youre one of the millions of people who shared your DNA with 23andMe, its now a good time to delete your data. Thats as New Yorks Attorney General issued a rare consumer alert on Tuesday urging 23andMe customers to delete their accounts and data, following a similar warning from Californias Attorney General Rob Bonta on Friday, in which Bonta said customers should also ask California-based 23andMe to destroy any samples of genetic material held by the company.23andMe customers take to social media to complain about deleting dataHowever, as many customers scramble to delete their data to protect their privacy, some are finding that it hasnt been as easy or straightforward as they had hoped. And theyre taking to social media to air their complaints.On a Reddit thread, a number of 23andMe customers said they are having trouble actually deleting their data, including Reddit user jacmrose, who complained, tried canceling and never got the email they are supposed to send to confirm. Another user responded, I have tried 3 times over the last few months and NEVER got the email to confirm deletion.Over on X, another social media user reported that people trying to delete their 23andMe DNA data are facing website issues, displaying the proof: a photo of an error message.That same user also shared another observation: [people] who think they deleted it get a confirmation emailbut buried inside is a link they still have to click to complete deletion.Looks like they really dont want us to delete the data, that user wrote.How do I delete my 23andMe data and test sample?According to a press release from the California Attorney Generals office, heres how to delete your data on 23andMe:Log into your 23andMe account on the websiteGo to the Settings section of your profileScroll to a section labeled 23andMe Data at the bottom of the pageClick View next to 23andMe DataDownload your data: If you want a copy of your genetic data for personal storage, choose the option to download it to your device before proceedingScroll to the Delete Data sectionClick Permanently Delete DataConfirm your request:Youll receive an email from 23andMe; follow the link in the email to confirm your deletion requestMake sure to double check your spam box for that confirmation email, or visit 23andMes Help Page with any questions.If you previously opted to have your saliva sample and DNA stored by 23andMe, but want to change that preference to destroy your test sample, you can do so from your account settings page, under Preferences.If you previously consented to 23andMe and third-party researchers using your genetic data and sample for research, you may withdraw consent from the account settings page, under Research and Product Consents.If you live in another state besides California, you can also take these steps as a precaution, but check with your local state consumer protection agency for the laws governing your home state.
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  • How Hawaii residents are becoming Firewise after the Maui fires
    www.fastcompany.com
    The car tires, propane tanks, gas generators and rusty appliances heaped on the side of a dirt road waiting to be hauled away filled Desiree Graham with relief.That means all that stuff is not in peoples yards, she said on a blustery July day in Kahikinui, a remote Native Hawaiian homestead community in southeast Maui where wildfire is a top concern.In June, neighbors and volunteers spent four weekends clearing rubbish from their properties in a community-wide effort tocreate defensible space,or areas around homes free of ignitable vegetation and debris. They purged 12 tons of waste.Its ugly, but its pretty beautiful to me, said Graham, a member of Kahikinuis Firewise committee, part of a rapidly growing program from the nonprofit National Fire Protection Association that helps residents assess their communities fire risk and create plans to mitigate it.Kahikinui is one of dozens of Hawaii communities seeking ways to protect themselves as decades ofclimate change, urban development, and detrimental land use policiesculminate to cause more destructive fires.The state has 250,000 acres of unmanaged fallow agricultural land, nearly all of its buildings sit within the wildland-urban interface, and two-thirds of communities have only one road in and out.But experts say that even with so many factors out of communities control, they can vastly improve their resilience by transforming their own neighborhoods.Fire is not like other natural hazards, it can only move where there is fuel, and we have a lot of say in that, said Nani Barretto, co-executive director of the Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization (HWMO), a 25-year-old nonprofit at the forefront of the states fire-risk mitigation.Neighborhoods all over the United States are wrestling with the same challenge, some in places that never worried about fire before. A recentHeadwaters Economics analysisfound 1,100 communities in 32 states shared similar risk profiles to places recently devastated by urban wildfires.A Firewise movementHWMO helps communities like Kahikinui become Firewise. In the 10 years preceding theAugust 2023 Maui fires that destroyed Lahaina, 15 Hawaii communities joined Firewise USA. Since then, the number has more than doubled to 31, with a dozen more in the process of joining.Everyone was like, My God, what can we do? said Shelly Aina, former chair of the Firewise committee for Waikoloa Village, an 8,000-resident community on the west side of the Big Island, recalling the months after the Maui fires.The development heavily wind exposed, surrounded by dry invasive grasses and with just one main road in and out had already experienced severalclose callsin the last two decades. It was first recognized as Firewise in 2016.As HWMO-trained home assessors, Shelly and her husband Dana Aina have done over 60 free assessments for neighbors since 2022, evaluating their properties for ignition vulnerabilities. Volunteers removed kiawe trees last year along a fuel break bordering houses. Residents approved an extra HOA fee for vegetation removal on interior lots.Measures like these can have outsized impact as people in fire-prone states adapt to more extreme wildfires, according to Dr. Jack Cohen, a retired U.S. Forest Service scientist.The solution is in the community, not out there with the fire breaks, because those dont stop the fire in extreme conditions, said Cohen.Direct flames from a wildfire arent what typically initiate an urban conflagration, he said. Wind-blown embers can travel miles away from a fire, landing on combustible material like dry vegetation, or accumulating in corners like where a deck meets siding.Theyre urban fires, not wildfires, said Cohen.The solutions dont always require expensive retrofits like a whole new roof, but targeting the specific places within 100 feet of the house where embers could ignite material. In dense neighborhoods, that requires residents work together, making community-wide efforts like Firewise important. The house is only as ignition resistant as its neighbors, said Cohen.Communities cant transform aloneEven with renewed interest in fire resilience, community leaders face challenges in mobilizing their neighbors. Mitigation can take money, time and sacrifice. Its not enough to cut the grass once, for example, vegetation has to be regularly maintained. Complacency sets in. Measures like removing hazardous trees can cost thousands of dollars.I dont know how we deal with that, because those who have them cant afford to take them down, said Shelly Aina. The Ainas try offering low-cost measures, like installing metal screening behind vents and crawl spaces to keep out embers.HWMO helps with costs where it can. It gave Kahikinui a $5,000 grant for a dumpster service to haul out its waste, and helped Waikoloa Village rent a chipper for the trees it removed. Its been hard to keep up with the need, said Barretto, but even just a little bit of financial assistance can have an exponential impact.You give them money, they rally, she said. We can give them $1,000 and it turns into 1,000 man hours of doing the clearing. HWMO was able to expand its grant program after the Maui fires with donations from organizations like the Bezos Earth Fund and the American Red Cross.At a time whenfederal funding for climate mitigation is uncertain, communities need far more financial support to transform their neighborhoods, said Headwaters Economics Kimi Barrett, who studies the costs of increasing fire risk. If what were trying to do is save people and communities, then we must significantly invest in people and communities, said Barrett.Those investments arejust a fraction of the billions of dollars in losses sustained after megafires, said Barrett. A recent study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Allstate found that $1 in resilience and preparation investmentcan save $13 in economic and property lossesafter a disaster.Another hurdle is asking residents to do work and make sacrifices as they watch others neglect their role. The neighbors will ask, What about the county land? Theres no routine maintenance, said Shelly Aina.Her husband Dana Aina said he reminds people that it is everyones kuleana, or responsibility, to take care of land and people. An island is a canoe, a canoe is an island, he said, quoting a Hawaiian proverb. We all have to paddle together.Bigger stakeholders are starting to make changes. Among them, Hawaii passed legislation tocreate a state fire marshal post, and its main utility,Hawaiian Electric, is undergrounding some power lines and installing AI-enabled cameras to detect ignitions earlier.Meanwhile, Firewise communities have found that doing their own mitigation gives them more clout when asking for funding or for others to do their part.After the 66-residence community of Kawaihae Village on Hawaii Island joined Firewise, they were finally able to get a neighboring private landowner and the state to create fuel breaks and clear grasses.Without that we wouldnt have been on anyones radar, said Brenda DuFresne, committee member of Kawaihae Firewise. I think Firewise is a way to show people that youre willing to help yourself.Gabriela Aoun Angueira, Associated PressAssociated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the APs collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of APs philanthropy coverage, visithttps://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.
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  • Samsungs Award-Winning Dual-Kickstand Folio Turns Your Tablet Into An Interactive Table
    www.yankodesign.com
    How do you design your tech for a culture that prioritizes floor seating? Your entire approach to stands, accessories, angles, and usage need to go through a dramatic phase-shift. Thats what happened prior to designing The Folio, when Samsung Design Delhi conducted their research to realize that most middle-class families in the global south resorted to low-height seating (carpets, mattresses, floors, etc.) something traditional laptops and tablets never considered.The Folio is an Android-based tablet with a simple design upgrade. Instead of featuring a stand that angles the tablet upwards (the way you would with most tablets), the Folio sports a dual-kickstand design that lifts the entire tablet up by around half a foot, enabling floor-seated usage. The kickstands can be used regularly too, propping your tablet up in the default manner but this hovering table-like stand design uniquely benefits The Folios target audience, who can use the tablet to play, read, learn, etc.Designer: Samsung Design Delhi (SDD), Samsung India Electronics Pvt. Ltd.The Folio is the first ever Floor Table Display with [an] iconic Dual Kickstand allowing various lockable angles of viewing in both landscape and portrait formats while placed on the floor, says the Samsung Design Delhi team, who won the iF Design Award for their concept. It combines the richness of larger screen displays with the essence of portability from the smaller screens.The Folio takes on a unique challenge but comes up with a fairly simple and clever solution. The tablet doesnt have to be dramatically different just its kickstand does. The accessory attaches to the tablet with dual kickstands and the ability to rotate your tablet freely. This unlocks a whole myriad of docking angles and styles, the most important of which is the hovering-type dock that gives people the ability to use the tablet while seated on the floor without hunching over.The Folios design magic shouldnt just be limited to Samsungs tablets I can totally see this being an accessory that works with all sorts of budget tablets, making tech-fueled learning more accessible in the global south without really having to change cultural practices. Who knows, maybe it could serve additional roles too, like having storage for styluses, working as a multiport hub, or just being an extended battery pack for a power boost!The post Samsungs Award-Winning Dual-Kickstand Folio Turns Your Tablet Into An Interactive Table first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • Vivos New Headset Basically Feels Like the Apple Vision Pros Android Doppelganger
    www.yankodesign.com
    The Apple I remember was a very litigious company, suing Samsung for every single thing from the radii of their phone corners to the shape of icons on the home screen. Cut to 2024, and we dont have one but have TWO Apple Vision Pro-inspired gadgets. Samsung unveiled the Moohan headset at their keynote in January, and now vivos lifted the lid on its new MR device, the vivo Vision an MR device that feels a little heavily inspired by Apples own headset from WWDC in 2023.From the moment you lay eyes on it, the resemblance is uncanny. Theres the same sweeping glass front, wrapping around the face like a cyberpunk visor. The headband mimics the Apple solo loop with a ridged, adjustable design. Even the external battery puck, tethered by a cable to the left temple, echoes Apples approach almost to the millimeter. The only think I hope vivo doesnt copy here is Apples eye-watering $3,400 price tag.Designer: vivoOf course, a convergence of hardware design isnt new. The smartphone industry practically runs on it. But theres something oddly direct about the vivo Vision. Even the name feels liftedVision. Its not bad branding, just familiar. And in a product category trying to define a future beyond the screen, its hard not to notice when that future looks a lot like something we already saw last year.Apples Vision Pro set a high bar last year, and if youre entering the MR arena in 2025, you may as well study the playbook that got the most applause. What vivo seems to be doing here is anchoring its device in something familiar before it defines what makes its own vision different. Thats not a bad move, especially when the MR category is still waiting for its iPhone momentthe point where things shift from intriguing to essential.So far, vivos headset is still playing the mystery card. There are no confirmed specs yetno word on resolution, field of view, processor, or refresh rate. What we do have is a glimpse of its hardware choices: a visor-style front shielded in glass, several front-facing and downward-pointing cameras (likely for passthrough and gesture tracking), and a two-button interface on the right temple. Theres also a crown-style dial, which may control volume, zoom, or spatial navigation, depending on the software.And that brings us to the real question: what software, exactly? If vivos planning to run Android XRthe platform Googles been quietly building as the backbone for spatial computingit would slot the Vision right into the growing Android MR ecosystem. With Samsungs Project Moohan headset expected later this year, the timing here gets interesting. vivo could be positioning itself as an early Android XR player, or it may be building something more proprietary. Weve seen OEMs go both routes, and neither guarantees a smooth experience. The difference lies in how well the ecosystem supports itand who shows up to build for it.Design-wise, the vivo Vision does a lot to suggest its more than a prototype, even if its not quite ready for shelves yet. The overall finish looks polished, and the blue colorway adds a bit of personality to an otherwise familiar silhouette. Whether its intended for mass market release or more of a flagship concept to generate buzz, its clear vivo wants to be part of the larger MR conversation. And with big names like Meta, Apple, Google, and Samsung all in the room, the more voices in that conversation, the better.Of course, styling alone wont carry the Vision. Apples Vision Pro wasnt just a headsetit was a platform wrapped in silicon muscle, running an M2 chip, backed by 16GB of RAM, and packing dual micro-OLED displays with eye-tracking and spatial audio. If vivo wants to stand toe-to-toe, itll need comparable specs and a frictionless experience to match. Thats the hard partthe part we havent seen yet.Still, theres something refreshingly direct about vivos approach. Instead of reinventing the headset form, theyve leaned into what works. Now the question is whether theyll bring enough under the hood to move the category forward. Hardware is the handshake; software is the conversation. And right now, were still waiting for vivo to say more than hello.So no, the vivo Vision isnt pretending to be radically differentand thats fine. Sometimes, evolution starts by borrowing familiar shapes before carving out new ones. If the final product delivers a great experience and opens up the space for more accessible mixed reality, then who really minds if the crown looks a little familiar?The post Vivos New Headset Basically Feels Like the Apple Vision Pros Android Doppelganger first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • Latest iOS 19 redesign rumor hinges on sketchy iMessage mockup
    appleinsider.com
    A mockup shared by a leaker with a poor track record allegedly depicts iMessage in iOS 19 with a redesigned keyboard and circular buttons, but not much else.iMessage could see small changes for iOS 19Jon Prosser has had a rough couple of years after some incredibly wrong leaks, but he's attempting a comeback. It seems he's willing to stake what's left of his reputation as a leaker on two 2025 releases iOS 19 and iPhone 17.The iMessage mockup was shared by Prosser during a Genius Bar podcast. In the episode, Prosser also says that a video featuring iOS 19 leaks was inbound in the coming days, so stay tuned for that. Rumor Score: Possible Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • Amazon Big Spring Sale: Samsung monitors, Thunderbolt docks are up to $300 off
    appleinsider.com
    Accessories to enhance your Apple setup are on sale today during the Amazon Big Spring Sale, and we've rounded up the top picks to save you both time and money.Grab limited-time deals at Amazon on monitors & docks for Macs.From monitors that are hundreds off to high-end Thunderbolt 4 docking stations that are eligible for limited-time savings, there are new markdowns in place at Amazon that are worth checking out.Shop the Big Spring Sale Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • Van Alen Institute names Hayley Eber as new Executive Director
    archinect.com
    Hayley Eber has been named as the next Executive Director of the Van Alen Institute in New York City. The current Acting Dean of The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture at The Cooper Union, Eber, will take over the reins in June as the Institute celebrates its 131st birthday. Eber is also the founder of New Yorks Studio Eber (formerly known as EFGH), which was founded in 2007 and has participated in the Venice Biennale, Tallinn Architecture Biennale, and Shanghai SUSAS.In a statement announcing her appointment, Eber said: "Community-building, interdisciplinary collaboration, and a commitment to just and sustainable urban futures have been central to my leadership at The Cooper Union principles that resonate deeply with Van Alen Institutes core mission. I am thrilled to build upon Van Alens rich history in shaping architectural and urban dialogue, and to advance its critical work empowering communities to create transformative public spaces in New York City and beyond."...
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  • Frick Collection shares first post-renovation images ahead of April reopening
    archinect.com
    The Frick Collection in New York City has shared the first photos following its Selldorf Architects-led renovation ahead of a public reopening on April 17th.View from 70th Street Garden. Photo: Nicholas VeneziaLauded recently by critic Michael Kimmelman as a "sensitive and deft" intervention that, at times, reaches poetic heights while resolving the previous spatial challenges that were inherent in the Beaux-Arts from the time of its transition to a museum in the 1930s.Reception Hall. Photo: Nicholas VeneziaA new education center, bookstore (the museum's first), new gallery rooms, a paper conservation studio, and cafe are among the new additions included in the 87,000-square-foot design, which is clad in Indiana limestone.Library Gallery. Photo: Joseph Coscia, Jr.West Gallery. Photo: Joseph Coscia, Jr.Overall, it adds 27,000 square feet of new space, while another 60,000 that has been repurposed. The Fifth Avenue Gardenat one time the focus of a disputed, Davis Brody Bond-desig...
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