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WWW.TECHRADAR.COMOpenAI might build its own social network, and we think we know whyA new report claims OpenAI is building its own social network.0 Commentaires 0 Parts 15 Vue
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WWW.CNBC.COMCritical chip firm ASML flags tariff uncertainty after net bookings missASML reported net bookings of 3.94 billion euros ($4.47 billion) for the first quarter, versus a Reuters reported forecast of 4.89 billion euros.0 Commentaires 0 Parts 17 Vue
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VFXEXPRESS.COMVirtual Cinematography for Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes: The Human SiloWhile Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes was largely filmed on real-world locations, some of its most ambitious moments were born from virtual cinematography. One standout is the film’s climactic flood sequence, where every shot was designed and crafted digitally — from the earliest pre-visualization stages to the final rendered frames. This approach gave filmmakers total creative freedom to experiment with camera angles, lighting, and pacing in a fully digital environment, while maintaining the scale and tension demanded by the story. Wētā FX’s virtual production expertise helped blend the epic world of the Apes seamlessly with photorealistic action, proving once again how digital tools can elevate cinematic storytelling. The post Virtual Cinematography for Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes: The Human Silo appeared first on Vfxexpress.0 Commentaires 0 Parts 16 Vue
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WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COMThese 7 universities are facing federal funding cuts from the Trump administrationHarvard University is the latest in a growing list of higher education institutions that had its federal funding targeted by the government in order to comply with the Trump administration’s political agenda. The series of threats—and subsequent pauses in funding—to some of the top U.S. universities have become an unprecedented tool for the administration to exert influence on college campuses. Six of the seven universities impacted are Ivy League schools. President Donald Trump vowed to pursue these federal cuts on the campaign trail last year, saying he would focus on schools that push “critical race theory, transgender insanity, and other inappropriate racial, sexual, or political content.” Public school systems are targets for cuts too. Here’s a look at which universities have been pressured by the administration’s funding cuts so far. Harvard University The administration announced its antisemitism task force would conduct a “comprehensive review” of the Massachusetts university on March 31. The government was set to review nearly $9 billion of federal grants and contracts. Harvard is among universities across the country where pro-Palestinian protests erupted on campus amid the war in Gaza last year. Republican officials have since heavily scrutinized those universities, and several Ivy League presidents testified before Congress to discuss antisemitism allegations. The administration issued its list of demands to Harvard in a letter on April 3. The demands included a ban on face masks, limitations on campus protests and a review of academic departments’ biases. About a week later, those demands were expanded to include leadership reforms, admission policy changes and stopping the university’s recognition of certain student organizations. Then, on Monday, the university’s president, Alan Gerber, refused to comply, saying in a letter that the university “will not surrender its independence or relinquish its constitutional rights.” Hours later, the administration announced it froze more than $2.2 billion in grants and $60 million in contracts to the university. Cornell University The White House announced last week that it froze more than $1 billion of Cornell’s federal funding. The administration said the freeze came as it investigated alleged civil rights violations at the university. The New York university was among a group of more than 60 universities that received a letter from the Education Department on March 10 urging them to take steps to protect Jewish students or else face “potential enforcement actions.” The Defense Department issued more than 75 stop-work orders for research, Cornell said in a statement, but that the federal government hadn’t confirmed if the total funding freeze totaled $1 billion. Northwestern University Like Cornell, Northwestern also saw a halt in some of its federal funding last week. The amount was about $790 million, according to the Trump administration. The Illinois university did not receive an official message from the White House on the freeze despite its cooperation with civil rights investigations, according to Northwestern officials at the time. University spokesperson Jon Yates said Northwestern’s scientific research was “at jeopardy” because of the freeze—a widespread issue for universities facing research cuts from the National Institutes of Health. Brown University The Trump administration was anticipated to pause federal grants and contracts at Brown University because of the Rhode Island school’s response to alleged antisemitism on campus, according to a White House official on April 3. The total was expected to be about $510 million in funding, according to the official. Princeton University Dozens of research grants were suspended at Princeton University without a clear rationale, according to an April 1 campus message from university president Christopher Eisgruber. The grants came from federal agencies such as the Department of Energy, NASA, and the Defense Department. Before the funding pause, Eisgruber had expressed his opposition to Trump’s threatened cuts at Columbia University in an essay in The Atlantic magazine. He called the administration’s move a “radical threat to scholarly excellence and to America’s leadership in research.” University of Pennsylvania Unlike the other targeted universities, the University of Pennsylvania saw funding cuts because of a transgender athlete who competed in Penn’s swimming program, according to the Trump administration. After a February 5 executive order barring transgender athletes from participating in women’s and girls’ sports, the Education Department launched an investigation a day later into athletics programs at Penn and San Jose State University. The Penn investigation centered on Lia Thomas, who is the first openly transgender athlete to win an NCAA Division I title and graduated from the university in 2022. More than a month later, the White House announced the suspension of about $175 million in federal funding from the Defense Department and the Department of Health and Human Services. The administration said the halt in funding on March 19 came after a separate discretionary federal money review. The university said at the time that it wasn’t directly notified of the action. Columbia University Columbia University was the first major institution that had its funding singled out by the Trump administration. At first, federal agencies declared they were considering stop-work orders for about $51 million of contracts with Columbia on March 3. Trump had also said on social media that schools that allow “illegal protests” would see funding cuts. Last year, Columbia student protesters started a wave of campus demonstrations against Israel’s military campaign in Gaza. The protests led to tense face-offs with police at the New York City university and the arrests of more than 100 demonstrators. University leadership faced scathing condemnations from Republicans on the protests’ proliferation, leading former president Minouche Shafik to step down. Columbia also began investigating pro-Palestinian student activists, such as Mahmoud Khalil, who was later arrested and is at threat of deportation. On March 7, the Trump administration canceled about $400 million of Columbia’s federal funding. Columbia took some action afterward, such as expelling and suspending some student protesters who occupied a campus building during demonstrations. The university announced March 21 that it had agreed to make even more sweeping policy changes that the Trump administration had demanded. The changes included placing the Middle East studies department under supervision, hiring new safety personnel who can make arrests, and banning face masks “for the purposes of concealing one’s identity.” The university also agreed to appoint a senior provost tasked with reviewing several international studies departments’ leadership and curriculum. Columbia’s interim president, Katrina Armstrong, resigned from her post the following week. The decision was met with dissatisfaction among some faculty members and a lawsuit against the cuts. But following Harvard’s defiance of the Trump administration’s demands, Columbia’s acting president, Claire Shipman, had a new message Monday. She said that while she agrees with some of the administration’s requests, the university would reject “heavy-handed orchestration” that would “require us to relinquish our independence and autonomy as an educational institution.” Discussions were still ongoing between the federal government and Columbia as of Monday, according to Shipman’s campus letter. —By Makiya Seminera, Associated Press0 Commentaires 0 Parts 14 Vue
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WWW.YANKODESIGN.COMYou’ll Either Absolutely Hate These Thing-Inspired Boots or Totally Obsess Over ThemThe only thing these will clobber is your chances of impressing a woman. I’ve seen my fair share of wacky footwear in my time – from those hideous Balenciaga platform Crocs to whatever Ye’s latest Yeezy abomination is – but these “Yancy Street Stompers” from Bull Airs might just take the cake for the most gloriously ridiculous functional footwear I’ve ever laid eyes on. For the uninitiated (do such people exist?), these high-tops are designed to mimic the rocky, craggy feet of Benjamin Grimm, better known as The Thing from Marvel’s Fantastic Four. And when I say “mimic,” I mean these sneakers look like someone took a cast of The Thing’s feet and turned them into wearable footwear. The attention to detail is both impressive and slightly disturbing. Designer: Bull Airs The orange, rocky texture extends across the entire shoe, with detailed crevices and an uneven surface that perfectly captures the character’s iconic appearance. The shoes even feature The Thing’s four-toed feet design, creating an optical illusion that you’ve undergone some Fantastic Four-style cosmic ray transformation from the ankles down. Named after the fictional Yancy Street in Marvel Comics (The Thing’s childhood stomping grounds), these bizarre creations join the pantheon of superhero-inspired wearables that include Hulk hands and Thor hammers. But unlike those toys, you can actually walk around in these – though I suspect not particularly comfortably. What’s fascinating about these shoes is how they occupy this weird liminal space between costume piece, collectible, and functional footwear. They’re simultaneously ridiculous and awesome, the kind of thing that would make you the talk of any comic convention while also potentially getting you some concerned looks at the grocery store. They’re also waterproof and made from high-quality closed-cell resin foam, a type of EVA foam, so in the most technical sense, they’re a male rubber contraceptive in that you’ll probably never get laid as long as you’re wearing them. Bull Airs, the company behind this rocky footwear, clearly understands their target audience – die-hard Marvel fans who’ve dreamed of becoming The Thing without the downside of, you know, permanently transforming into a rock monster. At $150 for the sliders and $450 for the boots, they’re not cheap, but considering the niche market and the detailed craftsmanship, the price point seems relatively reasonable for what amounts to wearable memorabilia, sort of like the iconic Hulk hands toys that Marvel launched in 2003. The product listing suggests these are limited edition, which makes sense – I can’t imagine there’s a massive market for Thing feet, even among the most devoted Marvel enthusiasts. Still, for those select few who’ve always wanted to stomp around like they’ve just been blasted by cosmic rays, these are a dream come true. Would I personally wear Yancy Street Stompers? Probably not to a business meeting or for a grocery run (I regrettably admit to being more of a clogs person). But for a comic convention or a Marvel movie premiere? It’s clobberin’ time, baby. Just don’t expect to sprint in them – even The Thing himself was more of a lumberer than a runner.The post You’ll Either Absolutely Hate These Thing-Inspired Boots or Totally Obsess Over Them first appeared on Yanko Design.0 Commentaires 0 Parts 15 Vue
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WWW.CREATIVEBLOQ.COMNew Unity tech hits 300,000 multiplayer countQuark Multiplayer is powering past the game engine's player limits.0 Commentaires 0 Parts 14 Vue
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WWW.WIRED.COMPolaroid Flip Review: The Best Polaroid for Most PeopleThe new Polaroid Flip comes loaded with features to help bring some much-needed reliability to instant photography—without making it sterile.0 Commentaires 0 Parts 13 Vue
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APPLEINSIDER.COMAAPL opens market at highest price since Trump tariff bombshellApple opened trading on Monday, April 14, 2025, at its highest price since President Donald Trump first announced tariffs — despite White House officials warning that exemptions are temporary.Apple shares continue to rise on news of a tariff exemptionAfter a rollercoaster week where even rumor continued to cause marked rises and falls in its share price, Apple ended Friday on a comparative high. It was still dramatically lower than the $225.19 they were trading at just before the tariff announcement, but Apple shares were at $198.15.Then in pre-market trading ahead of Monday's opening, the price rose to $210.28. When trading opened, Apple shares rose to $211.44. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Commentaires 0 Parts 11 Vue
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ARCHINECT.COMCoachella debuts 2025 art installations that ‘ripple, bloom, and dissolve’The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival has opened for its 2025 edition, complete with its latest on-site arts program. The event is taking place across two weekends: April 11 to 13 followed by April 18 to 20. The three artistic works are described by the festival as “works that ripple in the wind, bloom with light, and dissolve into shifting color—sculptures that seem to hover between presence and disappearance.” Take Flight by Isabel + Helen Studio. Image credit: Lance GerberTake Flight by Isabel + Helen Studio. Image credit: Lance GerberThe first installation, Take Flight by Isabel + Helen Studio, is inspired by 19th-century flying machines. Featuring large turbines that rotate in the wind, the work references early aviation prototypes and the pursuit of human-powered flight. Accompanying the structure are two skeletal bicycles that move around the surrounding area, reinforcing the theme of experimental flight. At night, lighting transforms the piece into an illuminated scul...0 Commentaires 0 Parts 14 Vue