• Round Up: The First Impressions Of The Minecraft Movie Are In
    www.nintendolife.com
    "An AWFUL.. lot of fun!".It's a massive week for Nintendo but there are still plenty of other things going on in the video game universe - like the release of the Minecraft movie led by Jack Black and Jason Momoa.The first impressions are now beginning to roll in on social media and elsewhere online, and if you were bracing yourself for the worst, it sounds like you might actually walk out of the cinema pleasantly surprised. While it doesn't sound like a complete cinematic masterpiece, it does appear to be quite a fun watch.Read the full article on nintendolife.com
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  • UFC Reveals New Kansas City Main Event That Has Fans Buzzing
    www.forbes.com
    UFC Kansas City has a new headliner in Ian Machado Garry vs. Carlos Prates. Jamahal Hill vs. Khalil Rountree is off due to injury.
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  • Dana White Announces UFC 316 Main And Co-Main Title Fights
    www.forbes.com
    UFC 316 is set for Newark, New Jersey on June 7. Here are the title fights and four other additional matchups reportedly on the card.
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  • Meta AI glasses leak tips one-eyed screen, Android soul, and high ask
    www.digitaltrends.com
    Meta has tasted some unprecedented success with its Stories smart glasses, created in collaboration with Ray-Ban. The premise of a wearable device with onboard cameras, ready to take social media videos, coupled with an onboard AI assistant, has proved hot enough that Meta has even made high-fashion variants for the upscale market.What they have sorely missed so far, is an interactive screen. The next avenue for Meta is apparently putting a display on its fashionable smart glasses and taking their functional appeal to the next level. But that convenience will apparently come at a steep ask. According to Bloomberg, customers are in for a sticker shock worth a thousand dollars at the very least.Recommended VideosMeta employees estimate pricing for the device, which is code named Hypernova, will come in at over $1,000 and as high as $1,300 to $1,400, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing unannounced products, says the report. Notably, the smart glasses could hit the shelves by the end of 2025.Meta Aria Gen 2 smart glasses. MetaFor comparison, a typical VR-ready pair of smart glasses in the market usually falls within the $500 range. The Viture Pro, Xreal One, and Rokid Max are some of the most popular products in the category, offering a high-resolution screen with plenty of connected spatial computing chops and stylish looks to go with it. The current trend with VR smart glasses is offering a display unit for each eye, mounted behind the lens. Some even offer a focus correction facility for people who wear prescription glasses. Metas upcoming smart glasses could take a less-immersive (or minimally distracting) approach to embracing a display.As per Bloomberg, the company is eyeing a monocular approach, which means the wearable device will only offer a display unit for the right eye, one that is positioned in the lower right corner behind the lens.Meta Aria Gen 2 smart glasses. MetaThat means information will only be displayed in front of the wearers right eye and will appear most clearly when they are looking downward, says the report. The most obvious reason for it? The person wearing it is not entirely cut off from the world, retaining a clear pass-through vision through the left lens.The Hypernova smart glasses will let users take pictures, view media, access map navigation, and check notifications from connected apps like WhatsApp. UI controls will be handled by touch gestures on the stem, using a mix of swipes and taps.Interestingly, Meta also plans to offer a wristband that will allow users to control the UI using hand gestures such pinch-to-zoom and wrist rotation. This accessory, currently in development under the codename Ceres, will reportedly come bundled in the retail package.Powered by Qualcomm silicon, these glasses will reportedly run a heavily customized version of Android. Notably, Samsung is also eyeing an Android-based smart glasses product for a 2025 launch. Meta, on the other hand, is working on the ambitious Orion holographic glasses and already offers research-focused Aria Gen 2 AR glasses, as well.Editors Recommendations
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  • SpaceX shares first views of polar regions from Crew Dragon
    www.digitaltrends.com
    SpaceX has just shared a video from the Fram2 mission, which has become the first-ever crewed flight to take a polar orbit.The footage (below), captured by a camera attached to the opened nose cone of the Crew Dragon spacecraft about 265 miles up, features stunning scenery from the iciest regions on the planet. It also shows the Crew Dragons cupola window that offers the crew dramatic panoramic views of Earth and beyond.The Fram2 mission, which launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Monday, is funded by Chinese-born Chun Wang. Traveling alongside Wang is Norwegian cinematographer Jannicke Mikkelsen, Australian polar explorer Eric Philips, and German robotics engineer Rabea Rogge.Recommended VideosThe Fram2s polar orbit has a 90-degree inclination, meaning that its perpendicular to the equator. Unlike most crewed spaceflights, which follow orbits that avoid the poles, Fram2s trajectory takes it directly over the polar regions, enabling unique observations rarely seen by space crews. In other words, their views out of the Crew Dragons cupola will be remarkably different to those enjoyed by the crew aboard the International Space Station (ISS).RelatedThe mission is expected to last until the end of this week. While in orbit, the crew will conduct 22 research studies aimed at enhancing astrontaut capabilities for long-duration space missions, while also gathering data to see how space travel impacts human health. Theyll also spend much of their time bobbing about the Crew Dragon capsule in microgravity conditions.Notably, following splashdown, the crew is planning to exit from the spacecraft without additional medical and operational assistance, an exercise that will enable researchers to assess the ability of astronauts to perform tasks unassisted at the end of a space mission.This is the third SpaceX mission thats not involved a visit to the ISS. The first was Inspiration4 in 2021, followed by Polaris Dawn last year. Both were funded by American entrepreneur Jared Isaacman, who was recently nominated by President Trump to become the next NASA chief.Editors Recommendations
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  • Starliners flight to the space station was far wilder than most of us thought
    arstechnica.com
    The real story Starliners flight to the space station was far wilder than most of us thought "Hey, this is a very precarious situation we're in." Eric Berger Apr 1, 2025 1:26 pm | 10 NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore receives a warm welcome at Johnson Space Center's Ellington Field in Houston from NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman and Woody Hoburg after completing a long-duration science mission aboard the International Space Station. Credit: NASA/Robert Markowitz NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore receives a warm welcome at Johnson Space Center's Ellington Field in Houston from NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman and Woody Hoburg after completing a long-duration science mission aboard the International Space Station. Credit: NASA/Robert Markowitz Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreAs it flew up toward the International Space Station last summer, the Starliner spacecraft lost four thrusters. A NASA astronaut, Butch Wilmore, had to take manual control of the vehicle. But as its thrusters failed, Wilmore lost the ability to move Starliner in the direction he wanted to go.He and his fellow astronaut, Suni Williams, knew where they wanted to go. Starliner had flown to within a stone's throw of the space station, a safe harbor if only they could reach it. But already, the failure of so many thrusters violated the mission's flight rules. In such an instance, they were supposed to turn around and come back to Earth. Approaching the station was deemed too risky for Wilmore and Williams, aboard Starliner, as well as the astronauts on the $100 billion space station.But what if it was not safe to come home, either?"I don't know that we can come back to Earth at that point," Wilmore said in an interview. "I don't know if we can. And matter of fact, I'm thinking we probably can't."Starliner astronauts meet with the mediaOn Monday, for the first time since they returned to Earth on a Crew Dragon vehicle two weeks ago, Wilmore and Williams participated in a news conference at Johnson Space Center in Houston. Afterward, they spent hours conducting short, 10-minute interviews with reporters from around the world, describing their mission. I spoke with both.A lot of the questions concerned the politically messy end of the mission, in which the Trump White House claimed it had rescued the astronauts after they were stranded by the Biden administration. This was not true, but it is also not a question that active astronauts are going to answer. They have too much respect for the agency and the White House that appoints its leadership. They are trained not to speak out of school. As Wilmore said repeatedly on Monday, "I can't speak to any of that. Nor would I."And so when Ars met with Wilmore at the end of the dayit was his final interview, scheduled for 4:55 to 5:05 pm in a small studio at Johnson Space Centerpolitics was not on the menu. Instead, I wanted to know the real story, the heretofore untold story of what it was really like to fly Starliner. After all, the problems with the spacecraft's propulsion system precipitated all the other eventsthe decision to fly Starliner home without crew, the reshuffling of the Crew-9 mission, and their recent return in March after nine months in space.I have known Wilmore a little bit for more than a decade. I was privileged to see his launch on a Soyuz rocket, from Kazakhstan in 2014, alongside his family. We both are about to become empty nesters, with daughters who are seniors in high school, soon to go off to college. Perhaps because of this, Wilmore felt comfortable sharing his experiences and anxieties from the flight. We blew through the 10-minute interview slot and ended up talking for nearly half an hour.It's a hell of a story.Launch and a cold nightBoeing's Starliner spacecraft faced multiple delays before the vehicle's first crewed mission, carrying NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams launched on June 5, 2024. These included a faulty valve on the Atlas V rocket's upper stage, and then a helium leak inside Boeing's Starliner spacecraft.The valve issue, in early May, stood the mission down long enough that Wilmore asked to fly back to Houston for additional time in a flight simulator, to keep his skills fresh. Finally, with fine weather, the Starliner Crew Flight Test took off from Cape Canaveral, Florida. It marked the first human launch on the Atlas V rocket, which had a new Centaur upper stage with two engines. Suni Williams' first night on Starliner was quite cold. Credit: NASA/Helen Arase Vargas Suni Williams' first night on Starliner was quite cold. Credit: NASA/Helen Arase Vargas Sunita "Suni" Williams: "Oh man, the launch was awesome. Both of us looked at each other like, 'Wow, this is going just perfectly.' So, the ride to space and the orbit insertion burn, all perfect."Barry "Butch" Wilmore: "In simulations, there's always a deviation. Little deviations in your trajectory. And during the launch on Shuttle STS-129 many years ago, and Soyuz, there's the similar type of deviations that you see in this trajectory. I mean, it's always correcting back. But this ULA Atlas was dead on the center. I mean, it was exactly in the crosshairs, all the way. It was much different than what I'd expected or experienced in the past. It was exhilarating. It was fantastic. Yeah, it really was. The dual-engine Centaur did have a surge. I'm not sure ULA knew about it, but it was obvious to us. We were the first to ride it. Initially we asked, 'Should that be doing that? This surging?' But after a while it was kind of soothing. And again, we were flying right down the middle."After Starliner separated from the Atlas V rocket, Williams and Wilmore performed several maneuvering tests, and put the vehicle through its paces. Starliner performed exceptionally well during these initial tests on day one.Wilmore: "The precision, the ability to control to the exact point that I wanted, was great. There was very little, almost imperceptible cross-control. I've never given a handling qualities rating of "one," which was part of a measurement system. To take a qualitative test and make a quantitative assessment. I've never given a one, ever, in any test I've ever done, because nothing's ever deserved a one. Boy, I was tempted in some of the tests we did. I didn't give a one, but it was pretty amazing."Following these tests, the crew attempted to sleep for several hours ahead of their all-important approach and docking with the International Space Station on the flight's second day. More so even than launch or landing, the most challenging part of this mission, which would stress Starliner's handling capabilities as well as its navigation system, would come as it approached the orbiting laboratory.Williams: "The night that we spent there in the spacecraft, it was a little chilly. We had traded off some of our clothes to bring up some equipment up to the space station. So, I had this small T-shirt thing, long-sleeve T-shirt, and I was like, 'Oh my gosh, I'm cold.' Butch is like, 'I'm cold, too.' So, we ended up actually putting our boots on, and then I put my spacesuit on. And then he's like, maybe I want mine too. So, we both actually got in our spacesuits. It might just be because there were two people in there."Starliner was designed to fly four people to the International Space Station for six-month stays in orbit. But for this initial test flight, there were just two people, which meant less body heat. Wilmore estimated that it was about 50 Fahrenheit in the cabin.Wilmore: "It was definitely low 50s, if not cooler. When you're hustling and bustling, and doing things, all the tests we were doing after launch, we didn't notice it until we slowed down. We purposely didn't take sleeping bags. I was just going to bungee myself to the bulkhead. I had a sweatshirt and some sweatpants, and I thought, I'm going to be fine. No, it was frigid. And I even got inside my space suit, put the boots on and everything, gloves, the whole thing. And it was still cold."Time to dock with the space stationAfter a few hours of fitful sleep, Wilmore decided to get up and start working to get his blood pumping. He reviewed the flight plan and knew this was going to be a big day. Wilmore had been concerned about the performance of the vehicle's reaction control system thrusters. There are 28 of them. Around the perimeter of Starliner's service module, at the aft of the vehicle, there are four "doghouses" equally spaced around the vehicle. Each of these doghouses contains seven small thrusters for maneuvering. In each doghouse, two thrusters are aft-facing, two are forward-facing, and three are in different radial directions (see an image of a doghouse, with the cover removed, here). For docking, these thrusters are essential. There had been some problems with their performance during an uncrewed flight test to the space station in May 2022, and Wilmore had been concerned those issues might crop up again. Boeing's Starliner spacecraft is pictured docked to the International Space Station. One of the four doghouses is visible on the service module. Credit: NASA Boeing's Starliner spacecraft is pictured docked to the International Space Station. One of the four doghouses is visible on the service module. Credit: NASA Wilmore: "Before the flight we had a meeting with a lot of the senior Boeing executives, including the chief engineer. (This was Naveed Hussain, chief engineer for Boeing's Defense, Space, and Security division). Naveed asked me what is my biggest concern? And I said the thrusters and the valves because we'd had failures on the OFT missions. You don't get the hardware back. (Starliner's service module is jettisoned before the crew capsule returns from orbit). So you're just looking at data and engineering judgment to say, 'Okay, it must've been FOD,' (foreign object debris) or whatever the various issues they had. And I said that's what concerns me the most. Because, in my mind I'm thinking, if we lost thrusters, we could be in a situation where we're in space and can't control it. That's what I was thinking. And oh my, what happened? We lost the first thruster."When vehicles approach the space station, they use two imaginary lines to help guide their approach. These are the R-bar, which is a line connecting the space station to the center of Earth. The "R" stands for radius. Then there is the V-bar, which is the velocity vector of the space station. Due to thruster issues, as Starliner neared the V-bar about 260 meters (850 feet) from the space station, Wilmore had to take manual control of the vehicle.Wilmore: "As we get closer to the V-bar, we lose our second thruster. So now we're single fault tolerance for the loss of 6DOF control. You understand that?"Here things get a little more complicated if you've never piloted anything. When Wilmore refers to 6DOF control he means six degrees or freedom, that is the six different movements possible in three-dimensional space: forward/back, up/down, left/right, yaw, pitch, and roll. With Starliner's four doghouses and their various thrusters, a pilot is able to control the spacecraft's movement across these six degrees of freedom. But as Starliner got to within a few hundred meters of the station, a second thruster failed. The condition of being "single fault" tolerant means that the vehicle could sustain just one more thruster failure before being at risk of losing full control of Starliner's movement. This would necessitate a mandatory abort of the docking attempt.Wilmore: "We're single fault tolerant, and I'm thinking, 'Wow, we're supposed to leave the space station.' Because I know the flight rules. I did not know that the flight directors were already in discussions about waiving the flight rule, because we've lost two thrusters. We didn't know why. They just dropped."The heroes in Mission ControlAs part of the Commercial Crew program, the two companies providing transportation services for NASA, SpaceX and Boeing, got to decide who would fly their spacecraft. SpaceX chose to operate its Dragon vehicles out of a control center at the company's headquarters in Hawthorne, California. Boeing chose to contract with NASA's Mission Control, at Johnson Space Center in Houston, to fly Starliner. So at this point the vehicle is under the purview of a Flight Director named Ed Van Cise. This was the capstone mission of his 15-year career as a NASA flight director.Wilmore: "Thankfully, these folks are heroes. And please print this. What do heroes look like? Well, heroes put their tank on and they run into a fiery building and pull people out of it. That's a hero. Heroes also sit in their cubicle for decades studying their systems, and knowing their systems front and back. And when there is no time to assess a situation and go and talk to people and ask, 'What do you think?' they know their system so well they come up with a plan on the fly. That is a hero. And there are several of them in Mission Control."From the outside, as Starliner approached the space station last June, we knew little of this. By following NASA's webcast of the docking, it was clear there were some thruster issues, and that Wilmore had to take manual control. But we did not know that in the final minutes before docking, NASA waived the flight rules about loss of thrusters. According to Wilmore and Williams, the drama was only beginning at this point.Wilmore: "We acquired the V-bar, and I took over manual control. And then we lose the third thruster. Now, again, they're all in the same direction. And I'm picturing these thrusters that we're losing. We lost two bottom thrusters. You can lose four thrusters, if they're top and bottom, but you still got the two on this side, you can still maneuver. But if you lose thrusters in off-orthogonal, the bottom and the port, and you've only got starboard and top, you can't control that. It's off-axis. So I'm parsing all this out in my mind, because I understand the system. And we lose two of the bottom thrusters. We've lost a port thruster. And now we're zero-fault tolerant. We're already past the point where we were supposed to leave, and now we're zero-fault tolerant and I'm manual control. And, oh my, the control is sluggish. Compared to the first day, it is not the same spacecraft. Am I able to maintain control? I am. But it is not the same."At this point in the interview, Wilmore went into some wonderful detail.Wilmore: "And this is the part I'm sure you haven't heard. We lost the fourth thruster. Now we've lost 6DOF control. We can't maneuver forward. I still have control, supposedly, on all the other axes. But I'm thinking, the F-18 is a fly-by-wire. You put control into the stick, and the throttle, and it sends the signal to the computer. The computer goes, 'Okay, he wants to do that, let's throw that out aileron a bit. Let's throw that stabilizer a bit. Let's pull the rudder there.' And it's going to maintain balanced flight. I have not even had a reason to think, how does Starliner do this, to maintain a balance?"This is a very precarious situation were inEssentially, Wilmore cannot fully control Starliner any longer. But simply abandoning the docking attempt is not a palatable solution. Just as the thrusters are needed to control the vehicle during the docking process, they're also necessary to position Starliner for its deorbit burn and reentry to Earth's atmosphere. So in Wilmore's mind, he is contemplating whether it is riskier to to approach the space station, or to try to fly back to Earth. Williams was worrying the same thing.Williams: "There was a lot of unsaid communication like, 'Hey, this is a very precarious situation we're in.' I think both of us overwhelmingly felt like it would be really nice to dock to that space station that's right in front of us. We knew that they (Mission Control) were working really hard to be able to keep communication with us, and then be able to send commands. We were both thinking, what if we lose communication with the ground? So, NORDO Con Ops (this means flying a vehicle without a radio), and we didn't talk about it too much, but we already had synced in our mind that we should go to the space station. This is our place that we need to probably go to, to have a conversation because we don't know exactly what is happening, and why the thrusters are falling off, and what the solution would be."Wilmore: "I don't know that we can come back to Earth at that point. I don't know if we can. And matter of fact, I'm thinking we probably can't. So there we are, loss of 6DOF control, four aft thrusters down, and I'm visualizing orbital mechanics. The space station is nose down. So we're not exactly level with the station, but below it. If you're below the station, you're moving faster. That's orbital mechanics. It's going to make you move away from the station. So I'm doing all of this in my mind. I don't know what control I have. What if I lose another thruster? What if we lose comm? What am I going to do?"One of the other challenges at this point, in addition to holding his position relative to the space station, was keeping Starliner's nose pointed directly at the orbital laboratory.Williams: "Starliner is based on a vision system that looks at the space station and uses the space station as a frame of reference. So, if we had started to fall off and lose that, which there's a plus or minus that we can have; we didn't lose the station ever, but we did start to deviate a little bit. I think both of us were getting a little bit nervous then, because the system would've automatically aborted us."After Starliner lost four of its 28 reaction control system thrusters, Van Cise and this team in Houston decided the best chance for success was resetting the failed thrusters. This is, effectively, a fancy way of turning off your computer and rebooting it to try to fix the problem. But it meant Wilmore had to go hands-off from Starliner's controls. Imagine that. You're drifting away from the space station, trying to maintain your position. The station is your only real lifeline, because if you lose the ability to dock, the chance of coming back in one piece is quite low. And now you're being told to take your hands off the controls.Wilmore: "That was not easy to do. I have lived rendezvous orbital dynamics going back decades. (Wilmore is one of only two active NASA astronauts who has experience piloting the space shuttle). Ray Bigonesse is our rendezvous officer. What a motivated individual. Primarily him, but me as well, we worked to develop this manual rendezvous capability over the years. He's a volunteer fireman, and he said, 'Hey, I'm coming off shift at 5:30 Saturday morning, will you meet me in the sim?' So we'd meet on Saturdays. We never got to the point of saying lose four thrusters. Who would've thought that, in the same direction? But we're in there training, doing things, playing around. That was the preparation."All of this training meant Wilmore felt like he was in the best position to fly Starliner, and did not relish the thought of giving up control. But finally, when he thought the spacecraft was temporarily stable enough, Wilmore called down to Mission Control, "Hands off." Almost immediately, flight controllers sent a signal to override Starliner's flight computer, and to fire the thrusters that had been turned off. Two of the four thrusters came back online.Wilmore: "Now we're back to single-fault tolerant. But then we lose a fifth jet. What if we'd have lost that fifth jet while those other four were still down? I have no idea what would've happened. I attribute to the providence of Lord getting those two jets back before that fifth one failed. So we're down to zero-fault tolerant again. I can still maintain control. Again, sluggish. Not only was the control different on the visual, what inputs and what it looked like, but we could hear it. The valve opening and closing. When a thruster would fire it was like a machine gun."Were probably not flying home in StarlinerMission Control decides that it wants to try to recover the failed thrusters again. After Wilmore takes his hands off the controls, this process recovers all but one of them. At this point, the vehicle can be flown autonomously, as it was intended to be. When asked to give up control of the vehicle for its final approach to the station, Wilmore said he was apprehensive about doing so. He was concerned that if the system went into automation mode, it may not be possible to get it back in manual mode. After all that had happened, he wanted to make sure he could take control of Starliner again. Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams landed in a Crew Dragon spacecraft in March. Dolphins were among their greeters. Credit: NASA Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams landed in a Crew Dragon spacecraft in March. Dolphins were among their greeters. Credit: NASA Wilmore: "I was very apprehensive. In earlier sims, I had even told the flight directors, 'If we get in a situation where I got to give it back to auto, I may not.' And they understood. Because if I've got a mode that's working, I don't want to give it up. But because we got those jets back, I thought, 'Okay, we're only down one.' All this is going through my mind in real time. And I gave it back. And of course, we docked."Williams: "I was super happy. If you remember from the video, when we came into the space station, I did this little happy dance. One, of course, just because I love being in space and am happy to be on the space station and great friends up there. Two, just really happy that Starliner docked to the space station. My feeling at that point in time was like, 'Oh, phew, let's just take a breather and try to understand what happened.' There's really great people on our team. Our team is huge. The commercial crew program, NASA and Boeing engineers, were all working hard to try and understand, to try to decide what we might need to do to get us to come back in that spacecraft. At that point, we also knew it was going to take a little while. Everything in this business takes a little while, like you know, because you want to cross the T's and dot the I's and make sure. I think the decision at the end of the summer was the right decision. We didn't have all the T's crossed, we didn't have all the I's dotted. So do we take that risk where we don't need to?"Wilmore added that he felt pretty confident, in the aftermath of docking to the space station, that Starliner probably would not be their ride home.Wilmore: "I was thinking, we might not come home in the spacecraft. We might not. And one of the first phone calls I made was to Vincent LaCourt, the ISS flight director, who was one of the ones that made the call about waiving the flight rule. I said, 'Okay, what about this spacecraft, is it our safe haven?'"It was unlikely to happen, but if some catastrophic space station emergency occurred while Wilmore and Williams were in orbit, what were they supposed to do? Should they retreat to Starliner for an emergency departure, or cram into one of the other vehicles on station, for which they did not have seats or spacesuits? LaCourt said they should use Starliner as a safe haven for the time being. Therein followed a long series of meetings and discussions about Starliner's suitability for flying crew back to Earth. Publicly, NASA and Boeing expressed confidence in Starliner's safe return with crew. But Williams and Wilmore, who had just made that harrowing ride, felt differently.Wilmore: "I was very skeptical, just because of what we'd experienced. I just didn't see that we could make it. I was hopeful that we could, but it would've been really tough to get there, to where we could say, 'Yeah, we can come back.'"And so, they did not.Eric BergerSenior Space EditorEric BergerSenior Space Editor Eric Berger is the senior space editor at Ars Technica, covering everything from astronomy to private space to NASA policy, and author of two books: Liftoff, about the rise of SpaceX; and Reentry, on the development of the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon. A certified meteorologist, Eric lives in Houston. 10 Comments
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  • Sam Altman says OpenAI's new releases make him feel like a 'YC founder' building things in public all over again
    www.businessinsider.com
    "Lol I feel like a YC founder in 'build in public' mode again," Sam Altman wrote in an X post on Tuesday. Jung Yeon-Je/AFP via Getty Images 2025-04-02T04:28:17Z SaveSaved Read in app This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? OpenAI rolled out a new image generation feature for ChatGPT and it was a hit with users.Sam Altman, OpenAI's CEO, said the company had to introduce rate limits because "our GPUs are melting."Altman said the experience reminded him of his early days as a Y Combinator-backed founder.OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman said on Tuesday that handling the ChatGPT maker's new product releases are reminding him of his early days as a Y Combinator-backed founder."Lol I feel like a YC founder in 'build in public' mode again," Altman wrote in a post on X.Altman's remark comes after a busy week for OpenAI. The company released a new image generation feature for ChatGPT on March 25.The new feature was a hit with users, who flooded social media with AI-generated images in the style of Japanese animation firm Studio Ghibli's films. Altman said in an X post on Monday that OpenAI saw a record spike in users after the feature was rolled out.But the sudden uptick in users did cause some problems for OpenAI.On Thursday, just two days after the new feature was released, Altman said that OpenAI's "GPUs are melting" from all the image generation requests they were getting from users."It's super fun seeing people love images in ChatGPT. But our GPUs are melting. We are going to temporarily introduce some rate limits while we work on making it more efficient," Altman wrote on X.Then, in a subsequent X post made on Tuesday, Altman said the company was "getting things under control." He added that users "should expect new releases from OpenAI to be delayed, stuff to break, and for service to sometimes be slow as we deal with capacity challenges."Altman may be best known for his work at OpenAI now, but the entrepreneur cut his teeth in the tech world at Y Combinator. The startup accelerator counts organizations like Airbnb, Dropbox, Stripe, and Twitch as alumni companies.Altman's first startup, a social networking application named Loopt was one of the first few companies to be backed by Y Combinator in 2005. Loopt was later acquired by Green Dot, a banking company, in 2012 for over $43 million.In 2014, Y Combinator's founder Paul Graham named Altman as his successor. Altman replaced Graham as Y Combinator's president, and held the role for five years. Altman stepped down as president in March 2019 to focus on OpenAI.On Monday, OpenAI announced it had raised $40 billion at a $300 billion valuation. OpenAI's new valuation is nearly double what it was worth in October, when it raised $6.6 billion at a $157 billion valuation.Representatives for Altman at OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.Recommended video
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  • Tesla sales: Analyst estimates the impact of Elon Musk's DOGE antics
    www.businessinsider.com
    Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, wielded a chainsaw at the Conservative Political Action Conference. Andrew Harnik/Getty Images 2025-04-02T04:12:54Z SaveSaved Read in app This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? Tesla is expected to release first-quarter vehicle production and delivery numbers on April 2.The Wedbush analyst Dan Ives expects deliveries to drop 7% versus the same period a year earlier.Ives said Tesla CEO Elon Musk's DOGE antics were partly to blame for the expected sales woes.Elon Musk has been taking a chainsaw to government spending. Later on Wednesday, we'll get an idea of how much these antics have chopped Tesla sales.The largest US electric vehicle company is expected to release first-quarter vehicle production and delivery numbers on April 2.This is the first time we'll get a full, official look at Tesla sales since Musk went full DOGE when President Donald Trump took office in late January.A well-known Tesla bull just shared his expectations for these numbers and estimated how much Musk's DOGE activity might have hurt sales."Musk leading DOGE has essentially taken on a life of its own as in the process Tesla has unfortunately become a political symbol globally," Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, wrote in a recent note to clients. He pointed to protests, demonstrations at Tesla dealerships, and keyed cars.A 'brand tornado crisis moment'He expects first-quarter Tesla deliveries of 355,000 to 360,000 vehicles, down about 7% from the same period a year earlier.Just a few months ago, Wall Street expected more than 400,000 Teslas to be delivered in the first quarter, so some of the DOGE impact has already been discounted, Ives wrote.Existing data suggests that Tesla's sales numbers in Europe have been under "major pressure," while there's also been "demand softness" in the US and China, the analyst wrote."This continues to be a moment of truth for Musk to navigate this brand tornado crisis moment and get onto the other side of this dark chapter for Tesla with much better days ahead we see for the story," Ives said.How much is Musk's fault?Ives attributed the sales woes to several issues that might be unrelated to Musk's DOGE exploits, such as consumers waiting for an updated Model Y and a lower-cost new car that may come later in 2025.He still conceded that anti-Musk sentiment and "brand issues" were causing problems, calling them "a major factor in this weak 1Q delivery number."He estimated that 30% of next week's expected soft Q1 delivery number would be related to "Musk/brand/DOGE," with the other 70% involving the timing of new or updated products and "non-brand headwind issues."Recommended video
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  • Wisconsin’s Supreme Court election results, briefly explained
    www.vox.com
    After a long, expensive, and closely watched race, Wisconsin went to the polls on Tuesday, and voted in a new state Supreme Court justice.Susan Crawford, a liberal county judge backed by Democrats across the US, defeated the conservative candidate, Brad Schimel, who was backed by the national GOP.In a conversation for Voxs daily newsletter Today, Explained, I asked politics reporter Christian Paz to break down the big race and its impact. Heres what he had to say. (Our conversation was edited for length and clarity.)So, tell me about what happened in Wisconsin.Wisconsins Supreme Court has a seat thats opening up because one of the Democrats is retiring. (The states Supreme Court is technically nonpartisan, but there are liberals whom Democrats support and conservatives whom Republicans support.)Right now, Democrats currently have a one-seat ideological majority on the court, and Tuesdays race was about which party would have the majority for the foreseeable future. Tuesday night, it quickly became clear that would be the Democrats. For people living in Wisconsin, the chance to decide the ideological makeup of the court was a big deal. Nationally, though, the race became important for a few other reasons.One, this was the first major statewide race happening in a swing state, or really any state, since Trumps inauguration. Democrats did poorly in swing states in the 2024 election, so this race is seen as a test of whether Democrats can still win races.Two, were about 10 weeks into Trumps second term, so this race was viewed as a referendum on the Trump administration so far.Three, this race was also a referendum on Elon Musks power and influence. He managed to make the race in Wisconsin about himself, by spending tens of millions of dollars in support of Schimel, and by testing the limits of campaign finance rules, finding as many ways as possible to offer people money to pay attention to the race, including by giving away a million dollars to voters. Hes poured millions of dollars into canvassing, and even went to Wisconsin to hold a rally on Schimels behalf.Finally, this election gives us a new data point to try to answer a question political scientists have wrestled with for a long time: Are there two electorates? Conventional wisdom suggests the answer to that question is yes, that there are lower propensity voters who only turn out in presidential elections, and then there are higher propensity voters who are very tuned into politics who turn out in every election, be it presidential, midterm, or special. However, political polarization and the level of loyalty Donald Trump inspires has some wondering whether that still holds. Tuesdays result helps suggest that it might.This is an off-cycle race, and because of that, some political commentators saw this contest as favoring Democrats a little. Last year, Kamala Harris performed particularly well with voters who said that they followed news closely, the classic high propensity voter. Again, high propensity voters tend to reliably vote in non-presidential elections, and the thinking was, those same Harris voters might help Crawford. And it seems like they did.There are other races coming up this year, and midterms next year. Does Wisconsin tell us anything about those?We shouldnt put too much stock in one race.That said, you could argue Susan Crawfords win makes some kind of blue wave next year appear a little more likely.There are a few factors that made this a somewhat unique case for Democrats, which makes it a little difficult to draw broad conclusions. As I mentioned, the fact that this was an off-cycle election probably helped Democrats, and theres another unique factor that may have helped too. Elon Musk wasnt the only person pouring in money; wealthy Democrats did too, as did grassroots donors. Thats in part because this was the only big race going on; if youre a liberal donor or a fundraiser, where else can you send your money? That wont be the case in the midterms next year.That said, Crawfords win does buttress conventional wisdom. Political science would tell us that you cant be an unpopular president with an unpopular agenda, leading an unpopular party, and flip a seat in a statewide race like this. And Republicans did fail to flip this seat.That failure could have some implication for next years midterms. Those elections tend to favor the party out of power, with voters trying to use them to put a check on the incumbent administration. If the other races coming up this year like Virginias gubernatorial race shake out like the race in Wisconsin, Democrats may decide their best bet is to just try to ride an anti-Trump, anti-Musk, anti-status quo anger to midterm victory.The result is also a huge warning sign about the power of Elon Musk. Last year, a lot of people ridiculed his canvassing efforts on behalf of the Republicans, and his funding of external groups outside of the political party system to turn out voters. Then Trump won, and his strategy suddenly looked good. Wisconsin suggests there are limits to the idea that the worlds richest man can pour money into politics to influence minds, making voting essentially a financial transaction, and it will pay off.See More:
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  • RIP Val Kilmer, Our Batman, Huckleberry, and Plenty More
    gizmodo.com
    Batman Forever, Willow and Heat helped turn Val Kilmer into a beloved film presence and one of the leading men of his generation.
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