• WWW.CNBC.COM
    HPE shares rise after activist Elliott Management takes $1.5 billion stake
    Hewlett Packard Enterprise shares jumped after Elliott Investment Management took a more than $1.5 billion stake in the server maker
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  • WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COM
    Bankrupt 23andMe faces scrutiny by U.S. House Committee as government seeks testimony from cofounder
    A U.S. House committee on Tuesday asked 23andMe’s cofounder to testify next month as it launched an investigation into the risk of genetic data being transferred to potential buyers amid the DNA testing company’s bankruptcy. James Comer, a Republican from Kentucky and the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, sent a letter to 23andMe’s Anne Wojcicki, seeking her testimony on May 6 as well as documents and information from the genomics firm. The genomics firm filed for bankruptcy protection last month after struggling with weak demand for its ancestry testing kits. Wojcicki made multiple failed takeover bids for the company and resigned as its CEO in March. She is still a board member of the company. The bankruptcy filing has raised concerns about where the genetic data it collected would go. The company has said the bankruptcy process will not affect how it stores, manages, or protects customer data. 23andMe collects saliva samples to provide insights into ancestry and health risks. There were concerns the data on 23AndMe’s more than 15 million customers, if not protected sufficiently, could be accessed by countries such as China, or used for assessing higher insurance premiums, among other purposes, Comer said. “We need to ensure the safety of Americans’ data,” Comer said in the letter. The company was also the target of a hack in 2023, when personal data of nearly seven million customers was exposed over five months. The company has also made at least 30 deals with pharmaceutical companies such as GSK, giving them access to its database. Most of its agreements remain undisclosed. 23andMe said in March any buyer will be required to comply with applicable laws about how customer data is treated. (This story has been refiled to correct the day of the week from “Monday” to “Tuesday” in paragraph 1) —Siddhi Mahatole, Reuters
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  • WWW.CORE77.COM
    Sisto: A Simple Piece of Furniture with Multiple Configurations
    Doing more with less: This Sisto piece is just six pieces of plywood, butt-jointed and with exposed fasteners. Its simple construction aside, its configurations are manifold: A pair of them lets you do even more: Sisto is by Copenhagen-based furniture designer Edoardo Lietti. It's not clear if he did it as a design exercise or if he's seeking production.
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  • WWW.YANKODESIGN.COM
    Water purifier concept inspired by industrial aesthetics
    When it comes to appliances and furniture that serve specific functions, we more often than not don’t pay much attention to the aesthetics of it. We’re more concerned that they do what they’re supposed to do and if they look nice, then that’s a bonus. But if you’re the type of person who likes to have visually pleasing things at home, design should also be an important part of the product. There are a lot of product designers out there who try to reimagine ordinary things into something that’s a bit more well thought of, design-wise. The challenge eventually is how to turn them into actual, working products. Designer: Seongmin Lim The Stonewell water purifier concept exemplifies a harmonious blend of industrial aesthetics and functional innovation.Drawing inspiration from exposed concrete interiors, the purifier embodies a minimalist design that reflects the purity and clarity of water. It is influenced by natural erosion and weathering processes, evident in its front pattern that resembles surfaces sculpted by flowing water. This approach not only enhances its visual appeal but also reinforces the concept of water’s natural journey. The purifier utilizes film transfer technology and specialized coatings, such as embossing and UV treatments, to replicate the texture of natural materials.This technique ensures durability and maintains the aesthetic quality over time. Equipped with a dual filtration system, it ensures cleaner and more stable water quality.Its intuitive sliding cover design allows for easy filter replacement, making maintenance straightforward for users. The purifier features a unique combination of colors and materials inspired by nature, including concrete, travertine, blue sapphire, and onyx.This selection creates a distinctive ambiance, allowing the purifier to seamlessly integrate into various interior settings. In essence, the Stonewell water purifier transcends its basic function, becoming an object of art within the home. The designer has successfully reimagined a typically utilitarian appliance, infusing it with a sense of natural elegance and thoughtful design. More than just providing clean water, the Stonewell concept offers a visual narrative, a daily reminder of the elemental power and beauty of water itself. It speaks to a growing desire for objects that not only perform flawlessly but also enhance our living spaces with their aesthetic presence, proving that even the most practical of items can contribute to a more beautiful and considered home. Hopefully, this is something that can eventually be turned into an actual water purifier that we can enjoy having in our living spaces. The post Water purifier concept inspired by industrial aesthetics first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • WWW.WIRED.COM
    Stern Pinball’s Brand-New King Kong Game Is Totally Bananas
    Meet the next pinball game coming to an arcade near you.
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  • WWW.NYTIMES.COM
    Trump Tariffs Could Raise iPhone Prices, But Affordable Options Remain
    Even if gadget prices surge, we have plenty of cheaper options, like buying last year’s phone model instead of the latest and greatest.
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  • WWW.MACWORLD.COM
    The gorgeous Apple Watch Ultra 2 in black is cheaper than ever today
    Macworld If you’re going to get an Apple Watch, it may as well be the best of the best. The Apple Watch Ultra 2 easily fits that description for three reasons: It has the largest screen, the longest battery life, and an absolute ton of features. And today it’s on sale to boot: The Apple Watch Ultra 2 is on sale for $839 at Amazon, a savings of $60 and the best price we’ve ever seen for this model. We gave this model a four-star rating and loved everything about it, from the gorgeous design to its fantastic performance for tracking sports and workouts. In our review, we note the Ultra 2 did a fantastic job in tracking steps, distance, calories burned and flights climbed. It also did great when hiking and cycling, but we really found it extremely useful when monitoring the heart rate and sleep quality. The watch’s battery lasted for about 36 hours and doubled that in low-power mode, which is superb news, especially if you enjoy camping trips and off-grid traveling. The model that’s on sale right now comes with a black titanium case and a gorgeous black titanium Milanese loop band, which sells separately for $199 (and is on sale for $173). If you want a cheaper version, the model with the black titanium case and a dark green alpine loop band is down to $739 (also a $60 discount). Don’t miss out on the chance to own the very best Apple Watch Ultra 2 on sale over at Amazon for $839. Save $60 on your Apple Watch Ultra 2Buy now at Amazon
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  • WWW.COMPUTERWORLD.COM
    How to keep SMBs open for business – even when the power goes out
    Internet outages are bad news for small- to medium-sized businesses. Point-of-sale systems won’t work when connections fail, meaning transactions can’t go through and revenue is lost until service is restored. And, as we know from the news, the situation is only getting worse with the increasing frequency of intense storms that tear down lines. SMBs know they can ill afford downtime because their tight operating margins limit their tolerance for lost revenue. Those same restrictions place it beyond their means to hire in-house technical know-how and build infrastructure that could keep them up and running. It’s a serious financial issue that needs to be confronted. Internet downtime that freezes retail businesses exacts a hefty toll. A store with annual revenue of $250,000 that’s open eight hours a day, six days a week, suffers an average loss of about $100 every hour it can’t process in-store and online purchases. That’s not counting the cost of recovery and paying employees for idle time. In addition to hurting revenue, these outages frustrate customers and damage reputation, to say nothing of the stress they bring. Wireless backup offers a solution Fortunately for shops and restaurants that don’t want these interruptions to stop them from serving customers, there is a good remedy: wireless backup. The obvious advantage is wireless access doesn’t rely on a cable attached to the building. Wireless networks operate over separate, cellular infrastructure that can survive when wired connections don’t. While electrical service faces a similar risk from downed power lines, providers can deal with by installing backup equipment outfitted with its own battery-based power supply. The backup gear inside the building kicks in automatically when primary services go out and shuts down again when they return, so shop owners need not intervene. And for cost-conscious SMBs, the price of these services can be quite small when compared to the potential losses. One such service, Business Connection Backup from Optimum, includes a failover router at customer sites with an integrated power supply that supports eight hours of battery-powered uptime. The router connects to multiple cellular providers and automatically chooses the strongest signal. It can maintain an internet link for up to six wired or Wi-Fi devices that are deemed most important, such as telecommunication and point-of-sale equipment. So, while a café may not be able to provide Wi-Fi service to all its customers, it could still handle credit card payments and mobile orders. At about a dollar a day, it’s relatively inexpensive versus the hourly cost of an inability to process online and in-store purchases. Wireless internet backup can be an effective and reliable service that relieves the burdens of downtime when internet connections fail, helping owners run their businesses efficiently and keep their customers happy. Given the daunting hourly cost of business-wide outages, wireless backup is a practical insurance policy. And like any good insurance policy, it can bring peace of mind.  To learn more about how to protect your business from power or internet disruptions, visit the Optimum Business Connection Backup page. 
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  • WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COM
    How the federal government is tracking changes in the supply of street drugs
    In 2021, the Maryland Department of Health and the state police were confronting a crisis: Fatal drug overdoses in the state were at an all-time high, and authorities didn’t know why. There was a general sense that it had something to do with changes in the supply of illicit drugs—and specifically of the synthetic opioid fentanyl, which has caused overdose deaths in the US to roughly double over the past decade, to more than 100,000 per year.  But Maryland officials were flying blind when it came to understanding these fluctuations in anything close to real time. The US Drug Enforcement Administration reported on the purity of drugs recovered in enforcement operations, but the DEA’s data offered limited detail and typically came back six to nine months after the seizures. By then, the actual drugs on the street had morphed many times over. Part of the investigative challenge was that fentanyl can be some 50 times more potent than heroin, and inhaling even a small amount can be deadly. This made conventional methods of analysis, which required handling the contents of drug packages directly, incredibly risky.  Seeking answers, Maryland officials turned to scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the national metrology institute for the United States, which defines and maintains standards of measurement essential to a wide range of industrial sectors and health and security applications. There, a research chemist named Ed Sisco and his team had developed methods for detecting trace amounts of drugs, explosives, and other dangerous materials—techniques that could protect law enforcement officials and others who had to collect these samples. Essentially, Sisco’s lab had fine-tuned a technology called DART (for “direct analysis in real time”) mass spectrometry—which the US Transportation Security Administration uses to test for explosives by swiping your hand—to enable the detection of even tiny traces of chemicals collected from an investigation site. This meant that nobody had to open a bag or handle unidentified powders; a usable residue sample could be obtained by simply swiping the outside of the bag.   Sisco realized that first responders or volunteers at needle exchange sites could use these same methods to safely collect drug residue from bags, drug paraphernalia, or used test strips—which also meant they would no longer need to wait for law enforcement to seize drugs for testing. They could then safely mail the samples to NIST’s lab in Maryland and get results back in as little as 24 hours, thanks to innovations in Sisco’s lab that shaved the time to generate a complete report from 10 to 30 minutes to just one or two. This was partly enabled by algorithms that allowed them to skip the time-consuming step of separating the compounds in a sample before running an analysis. The Rapid Drug Analysis and Research (RaDAR) program launched as a pilot in October 2021 and uncovered new, critical information almost immediately. Early analysis found xylazine—a veterinary sedative that’s been associated with gruesome wounds in users—in about 80% of opioid samples they collected.  This was a significant finding, Sisco says: “Forensic labs care about things that are illegal, not things that are not illegal but do potentially cause harm. Xylazine is not a scheduled compound, but it leads to wounds that can lead to amputation, and it makes the other drugs more dangerous.” In addition to the compounds that are known to appear in high concentrations in street drugs—xylazine, fentanyl, and the veterinary sedative medetomidine—NIST’s technology can pick out trace amounts of dozens of adulterants that swirl through the street-drug supply and can make it more dangerous, including acetaminophen, rat poison, and local anesthetics like lidocaine. What’s more, the exact chemical formulation of fentanyl on the street is always changing, and differences in molecular structure can make the drugs deadlier. So Sisco’s team has developed new methods for spotting these “analogues”—­compounds that resemble known chemical structures of fentanyl and related drugs. Ed Sisco’s lab at NIST developed a test that gives law enforcement and public health officials vital information about what substances are present in street drugs.B. HAYES/NIST The RaDAR program has expanded to work with partners in public health, city and state law enforcement, forensic science, and customs agencies at about 65 sites in 14 states. Sisco’s lab processes 700 to 1,000 samples a month. About 85% come from public health organizations that focus on harm reduction (an approach to minimizing negative impacts of drug use for people who are not ready to quit). Results are shared at these collection points, which also collect survey data about the effects of the drugs. Jason Bienert, a wound-care nurse at Johns Hopkins who formerly volunteered with a nonprofit harm reduction organization in rural northern Maryland, started participating in the RaDAR program in spring 2024. “Xylazine hit like a storm here,” he says. “Everyone I took care of wanted to know what was in their drugs because they wanted to know if there was xylazine in it.” When the data started coming back, he says, “it almost became a race to see how many samples we could collect.” Bienert sent in about 14 samples weekly and created a chart on a dry-erase board, with drugs identified by the logos on their bags, sorted into columns according to the compounds found in them: ­heroin, fentanyl, xylazine, and everything else. “It was a super useful tool,” Bienert says. “Everyone accepted the validity of it.” As people came back to check on the results of testing, he was able to build rapport and offer additional support, including providing wound care for about 50 people a week. The breadth and depth of testing under the RaDAR program allow an eagle’s-eye view of the national street-drug landscape—and insights about drug trafficking. “We’re seeing distinct fingerprints from different states,” says Sisco. NIST’s analysis shows that fentanyl has taken over the opioid market—except for pockets in the Southwest, there is very little heroin on the streets anymore. But the fentanyl supply varies dramatically as you cross the US. “If you drill down in the states,” says Sisco, “you also see different fingerprints in different areas.” Maryland, for example, has two distinct fentanyl supplies—one with xylazine and one without. In summer 2024, RaDAR analysis detected something really unusual: the sudden appearance of an industrial-grade chemical called BTMPS, which is used to preserve plastic, in drug samples nationwide. In the human body, BTMPS acts as a calcium channel blocker, which lowers blood pressure, and mixed with xylazine or medetomidine, can make overdoses harder to treat. Exactly why and how BTMPS showed up in the drug supply isn’t clear, but it continues to be found in fentanyl samples at a sustained level since it was initially detected. “This was an example of a compound we would have never thought to look for,” says Sisco.  To Sisco, Bienert, and others working on the public health front of the drug crisis, the ever-shifting chemical composition of the street-drug supply speaks to the futility of the “war on drugs.” They point out that a crackdown on heroin smuggling is what gave rise to fentanyl. And NIST’s data shows how in June 2024—the month after Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro signed a bill to make possession of xylazine illegal in his state—it was almost entirely replaced on the East Coast by the next veterinary drug, medetomidine.  Over the past year, for reasons that are not fully understood, drug overdose deaths nationally have been falling for the first time in decades. One theory is that xylazine has longer-lasting effects than fentanyl, which means people using drugs are taking them less often. Or it could be that more and better information about the drugs themselves is helping people make safer decisions. “It’s difficult to say the program prevents overdoses and saves lives,” says Sisco. “But it increases the likelihood of people coming in to needle exchange centers and getting more linkages to wound care, other services, other education.” Working with public health partners “has humanized this entire area for me,” he says. “There’s a lot more gray than you think—it’s not black and white. And it’s a matter of life or death for some of these people.”  Adam Bluestein writes about innovation in business, science, and technology.
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