• WWW.DIGITALTRENDS.COM
    Everything on Amazons new Haul store costs less than $20
    AmazonAmazon has just launched a new store full of stuff costing no more than $20. Its the tech behemoths way of taking on the likes of Chinese retailers Temu and Shein, whose own bargains are becoming increasingly popular with online shoppers in the U.S.Currently in beta, Amazons new store, called Haul, is a mobile-only offering and will appear as a new tab on the companys shopping app after you next update it. Alternatively, visit www.amazon.com/haul on your phones web browser.Recommended VideosAnnouncing the store on Wednesday, Amazon said the new platform offers affordable items in categories that include fashion, home, lifestyle, and electronics, though the delivery time of one to two weeks means that impatient shoppers might want to steer clear of Haul.RelatedAll items are priced $20 or less with the majority priced $10 and under, and some items as low as $1, Amazon explained in a post on its website. Customers can enjoy even more savings when they add more items to a single order, with 5% off orders $50 and over, and 10% off orders $75 or more.Amazon cites a few examples of what you can find, including a three-piece trimmer razor set for $2.99; colorful table runners to help decorate for the holidays for $2.99; an iPhone 16 case for $1.79; a womens elastic stretch cinch belt for $1.99; and a pair of touchscreen winter gloves for $3.21.At those prices, the quality is going to be far from top-notch anyone whos already shopped on places like Temu and Shein will have a reasonable idea of what to expect. To try to build trust, Amazon says it screens Haul products to ensure that theyre safe, authentic, and compliant with applicable regulations.If you really dont like what you get, Amazon is offering free returns on all purchases over $3 within 15 days of delivery, and is also providing hassle-free returns at more than 8,000 drop-off locations across the U.S., including at Amazon Lockers, Amazon Fresh, Whole Foods Markets, UPS, and Staples.As customers search for more affordable options amid rising living costs, places like Temu and Shein have thrived in recent years, with their success now prompting Amazon to make moves in the same sector.In another effort to boost shopping activity on its site, Amazon recently debuted a new AI-powered Shopping Guide feature designed to reduce the time a customer spends researching a potential purchase by summarizing key points and important information for product listings that have been filtered for your specific needs.Editors Recommendations
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    NYT Mini Crossword today: puzzle answers for Wednesday, November 13
    Sam Hill / Digital TrendsLove crossword puzzles but dont have all day to sit and solve a full-sized puzzle in your daily newspaper? Thats what The Mini is for!A bite-sized version of the New York Times well-known crossword puzzle, The Mini is a quick and easy way to test your crossword skills daily in a lot less time (the average puzzle takes most players just over a minute to solve). While The Mini is smaller and simpler than a normal crossword, it isnt always easy. Tripping up on one clue can be the difference between a personal best completion time and an embarrassing solve attempt.Recommended VideosJust like ourWordle hints and Connections hints, were here to help with The Mini today if youre stuck and need a little help.RelatedBelow are the answers for the NYT Mini crossword today.New York TimesAcrossFolded layer of a McGriddle EGGHost of the 2024 Summer Olympics PARISPlant thats a source for tequila or mescal AGAVEThe clue number SEVENRomantic getaway? TRYSTDownRarin to go EAGERTurkey Day topping GRAVYWhat ___? (Can you explain this mess?) GIVESDestination fora time machine PASTThe document should be in your inbox now SENTEditors Recommendations
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  • WWW.WSJ.COM
    Foxconn Posts Better-Than-Expected Profit on AI Server Sales
    The contract electronics maker reported better-than-expected profit for the third quarter as the artificial-intelligence boom drove demand for AI servers.
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  • WWW.WSJ.COM
    ASML Sticks to Long-Term Growth Targets Amid AI Frenzy
    ASML said it would maintain its 2030 sales and margin targets, betting that booming demand for artificial intelligence will drive orders for equipment that chip makers need to make increasingly powerful semiconductors.
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  • WWW.WSJ.COM
    The Highest Calling Review: Inside the Oval Office
    Historians rank presidents one way, the public another. A few presidents surprise skeptics and rise to distinction.
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  • WWW.WSJ.COM
    Bad Sisters Season Two: What Happens After Regular Women Plot Murder
    The show about five Irish sisters with a deep bond, co-created by Sharon Horgan, returns Wednesday.
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  • ARSTECHNICA.COM
    Trump says Elon Musk will lead DOGE, a new Department of Government Efficiency
    Trump's DOGE man Trump says Elon Musk will lead DOGE, a new Department of Government Efficiency Musk's Department of Government Efficiency to target "massive waste and fraud." Jon Brodkin Nov 13, 2024 3:07 pm | 265 An image posted by Elon Musk after President-elect Donald Trump announced he will lead a new Department of Government Efficiencyor "DOGE." Credit: Elon Musk An image posted by Elon Musk after President-elect Donald Trump announced he will lead a new Department of Government Efficiencyor "DOGE." Credit: Elon Musk Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn morePresident-elect Donald Trump today announced that a new Department of Government Efficiencyor "DOGE"will be led by Elon Musk and former Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy. Musk and Ramaswamy, who founded pharma company Roivant Sciences, "will pave the way for my Administration to dismantle Government Bureaucracy, slash excess regulations, cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure Federal Agencies," according to the Trump statement on Truth Social.DOGE apparently will not be an official federal agency, as Trump said it will provide advice "from outside" of government. But Musk, who has frequently criticized government subsidies despite seeking public money and obtaining various subsidies for his own companies, will apparently have significant influence over spending in the Trump administration. Musk has also had numerous legal disputes with regulators at agencies that regulate his companies."Republican politicians have dreamed about the objectives of 'DOGE' for a very long time," Trump said. "To drive this kind of drastic change, the Department of Government Efficiency will provide advice and guidance from outside of Government, and will partner with the White House and Office of Management & Budget to drive large scale structural reform, and create an entrepreneurial approach to Government never seen before."Muskthe CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, and owner of X (formerly Twitter)was quoted in Trump's announcement as saying that DOGE "will send shockwaves through the system, and anyone involved in Government waste, which is a lot of people!"Trumps perfect gift to AmericaTrump's statement said the department, whose name is a reference to the Doge meme, "will drive out the massive waste and fraud which exists throughout our annual $6.5 Trillion Dollars of Government Spending." Trump said DOGE will "liberate our Economy" and that its "work will conclude no later than July 4, 2026" because "a smaller Government, with more efficiency and less bureaucracy, will be the perfect gift to America on the 250th Anniversary of The Declaration of Independence.""I look forward to Elon and Vivek making changes to the Federal Bureaucracy with an eye on efficiency and, at the same time, making life better for all Americans," Trump said. Today, Musk wrote that the "world is suffering slow strangulation by overregulation," and that "we finally have a mandate to delete the mountain of choking regulations that do not serve the greater good."Musk has been expected to have influence in Trump's second term after campaigning for him. Trump previously vowed to have Musk head a government efficiency commission."That would essentially give the world's richest man and a major government contractor the power to regulate the regulators who hold sway over his companies, amounting to a potentially enormous conflict of interest," said a New York Times article last month.The Wall Street Journal wrote today that "Musk isn't expected to become an official government employee, meaning he likely wouldn't be required to divest from his business empire."Jon BrodkinSenior IT ReporterJon BrodkinSenior IT Reporter Jon is a Senior IT Reporter for Ars Technica. He covers the telecom industry, Federal Communications Commission rulemakings, broadband consumer affairs, court cases, and government regulation of the tech industry. 265 Comments
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  • ARSTECHNICA.COM
    What did the snowball Earth look like?
    Under ice What did the snowball Earth look like? Entire continents, even in the tropics, seems to have been under sheets of ice. John Timmer Nov 13, 2024 12:25 pm | 25 Artist's impression of what a snowball Earth would look like with our continents in their current configuration. Credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Artist's impression of what a snowball Earth would look like with our continents in their current configuration. Credit: MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreBy now, it has been firmly established that the Earth went through a series of global glaciations around 600 million to 700 million years ago, shortly before complex animal life exploded in the Cambrian. Climate models have confirmed that, once enough of a dark ocean is covered by reflective ice, it sets off a cooling feedback that turns the entire planet into an icehouse. And we've found glacial material that was deposited off the coasts in the tropics.We have an extremely incomplete picture of what these snowball periods looked like, and Antarctic terrain provides different models for what an icehouse continent might look like. But now, researchers have found deposits that they argue were formed beneath a massive ice sheet that was being melted from below by volcanic activity. And, although the deposits are currently in Colorado's Front Range, at the time they resided much closer to the equator.In the icehouseGlacial deposits can be difficult to identify in deep time. Massive sheets of ice will scour the terrain down to bare rock, leaving behind loosely consolidated bits of rubble that can easily be swept away after the ice is gone. We can spot when that rubble shows up in ocean deposits to confirm there were glaciers along the coast, but rubble can be difficult to find on land.That's made studying the snowball Earth periods a challenge. We've got the offshore deposits to confirm coastal ice, and we've got climate models that say the continents should be covered in massive ice sheets, but we've got very little direct evidence. Antarctica gives off mixed messages, too. While there are clearly massive ice sheets, there are also dry valleys, where there's barely any precipitation and there's so little moisture in the air that any ice that makes its way into the valleys sublimates away into water vapor.All of which raises questions about what the snowball Earth might have looked like in the continental interiors. A team of US-based geologists think they've found some glacial deposits in the form of what are called the Tavakaiv sandstones in Colorado. These sandstones are found along the Front Range of the Rockies, including areas just west of Colorado Springs. And, if the authors' interpretations are correct, they formed underneath a massive sheet of glacial ice.There are lots of ways to form sandstone deposits, and they can be difficult to date because they're aggregates of the remains of much older rocks. But in this case, the Tavakaiv sandstone is interrupted by intrusions of dark colored rock that contains quartz and large amounts of hematite, a form of iron oxide.These intrusions tell us a remarkable number of things. For one, some process must have exerted enough force to drive material into small faults in the sandstone. Hematite only gets deposited under fairly specific conditions, which tells us a bit more. And, most critically, hematite can trap uranium and the lead it decays into, providing a way of dating when the deposits formed.Under the snowballDepending on which site was being sampled, the hematite produced a range of dates, from as recent as 660 million years ago to as old as 700 million years. That means all of them were formed during what's termed the Sturtian glaciation, which ran from 715 million to 660 million years ago. At the time, the core of what is now North America was in the equatorial region. So, the Tavakaiv sandstones can provide a window into what at least one continent experienced during the most severe global glaciation of the Cryogenian Period.Obviously, a sandstone could be formed from the fine powder that glaciers grind off rock as they flow. The authors argue that the intrusions that led to the hematite are the product of the massive pressure of the ice sheet acting on some liquid water at its base. That, they argue, would be enough to force the water into minor cracks in the deposit, producing the vertical bands of material that interrupt the sandstone.There are plenty of ways for there to be liquid water at the base of the ice sheet, including local heating due to friction, the draining of surface melts to the base of the glacier (we're seeing a lot of the latter in Greenland at present), or simply hitting the right combination of pressure and temperature. But hematite deposits are typically formed at elevated temperatures (in the area of 220 C), which isn't consistent with either of these processes.Instead, the researchers argue that the hematite comes from geothermal fluids. There are signs of volcanic activity in Idaho that dates from this same period, and the researchers suggest that there may have been sporadic volcanism in Colorado related to this. This would create fluids warm enough to carry the iron oxides that ended up deposited as hematite in these sandstones.While this provides some evidence that at least one part of the continental interior was covered in ice during the snowball Earth period, that doesn't necessarily apply to all areas of all continents. As Antarctica indicates, dry valleys and massive ice sheets can coexist in close proximity when the conditions are right. But the discovery does provide a window into a key period in the Earth's history that has otherwise been quite difficult to study.PNAS, 2024. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2410759121 (About DOIs).John TimmerSenior Science EditorJohn TimmerSenior Science Editor John is Ars Technica's science editor. He has a Bachelor of Arts in Biochemistry from Columbia University, and a Ph.D. in Molecular and Cell Biology from the University of California, Berkeley. When physically separated from his keyboard, he tends to seek out a bicycle, or a scenic location for communing with his hiking boots. 25 Comments Prev story
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  • WWW.NEWSCIENTIST.COM
    12,000-year-old stones may be oldest example of wheel-like tools
    A perforated pebble from the Nahal Ein Gev II archaeological site, which may be an ancient spindle whorlLaurent DavinA set of 12,000-year-old pierced pebbles excavated in northern Israel may be the oldest known hand-spinning whorls a textile technology that may have ultimately helped inspire the invention of the wheel.Serving as a flywheel at the bottom of a spindle, whorls allowed people to efficiently spin natural fibres into yarns and thread to create clothing and other textiles. The newly discovered stone tools represent early axle-based rotation technology thousands of years before the first carts, says Talia Yashuv at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. AdvertisementWhen you look back to find the first vehicle wheels 6000 years ago, its not like it just came out of nowhere, she says. Its important to look at the functional evolution of how transportation and the wheel evolved.Yashuv and her colleague Leore Grosman, also at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, studied 113 partially or fully perforated stones at the Nahal Ein Gev II site, an ancient village just east of the Sea of Galilee. Archaeologists have been uncovering these chalky, predominantly limestone artefacts probably made from raw pebbles along the nearby seashore since 1972.3D scanning revealed that the holes had been drilled halfway through from each side using a flint hand drill, which unlike modern drills leaves a narrow and twisting cone-like shape, says Yashuv. Measuring 3 to 4 centimetres in diameter, the holes generally ran through the pebbles centre of gravity. Keep up with advances in archaeology and evolution with our monthly newsletter.Sign up to newsletterDrilling from both sides would have helped balance the stone for more stable spinning, says Yashuv. Several of the partially perforated stones had holes that were off-centre, suggesting they might have been errors and thrown out.The team suspected that the stones, weighing 9 grams on average, were too heavy and ugly to have been beads and too light and fragile to be used as fishing weights, says Yashuv. Their size, shape and balance around the holes convinced the researchers that the artefacts were spindle whorls.To test their hypothesis, the researchers created replicat whorls using nearby pebbles and a flint drill. Then they asked Yonit Kristal, a traditional craftsperson, to try spinning flax with them.She was really surprised that they worked, because they werent perfectly round, says Yashuv. But really you just need the perforation to be located at the centre of mass, and then its balanced and it works.If the stones are indeed whorls, that could make them the oldest known spinning whorls, she says. A 1991 study on bone and antler artefacts uncovered what may be 20,000-year-old whorls, she adds, but the researchers who examined them suggested the pieces were probably decorative clothing accents. Even so, it is possible that people were using whorls even earlier, using wood or other biological materials that would have since deteriorated.The finding suggests that people were experimenting with rotation technology thousands of years before inventing the pottery wheel and the cart wheel about 5500 years ago and that the whorls probably helped lead to those inventions, says Yashuv.Carole Cheval at Cte dAzur University in Nice, France, is less convinced, however. Whorls work more like a top than a wheel, she explains.And while the artefacts might very well be whorls, the study lacks microscopic data that would reveal traces of use as yarns would have marked the stones over time, Cheval says.Trace analysis was beyond the scope of the current study, says Yashuv.Ideally, researchers studying ancient whorls would be skilled in spinning themselves which the study authors were not, says Cheval. It really changes the way you think about your archaeological finds, she says.Journal reference:PLOS One DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0312007 Topics:archaeology
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  • WWW.NEWSCIENTIST.COM
    We must use genetic technologies now to avert the coming food crisis
    Leader and EnvironmentFood production is responsible for more than a third of greenhouse gas emissions. To get everyone the food they need in a warming world, governments worldwide must invest in securing our food systems 13 November 2024 Shutterstock/KzenonThere are two monumental problems with the worlds food system. Firstly, hundreds of millions of people cant afford to buy enough nutritious food to stay healthy. Secondly, it is incredibly destructive. We are still razing rainforests to make way for ranches, and both conventional and organic farms produce all kinds of pollutants, with food systems generating more than a third of greenhouse gases.As the world soars past a 1.5C rise in temperature (see 2024 is set to be the first year that breaches the 1.5C warming limit), things could get much worse. But there is plenty we can do, from eating less meat to reducing food waste (see Is the climate change food crisis even worse than we imagined?). With the amazing advances in genetic technologies in recent years, there is also huge scope to improve the plants and animals that provide our food. We can make them more nutritious, healthier, better able to cope with changing conditions and less susceptible to diseases that are thriving as the world warms. We should also be able to create plants that need less fertiliser and capture more of the suns energy.It is astounding that most countries arent investing heavily in improving cropsAdvertisementThe benefits from all this would be enormous: more food from less land, lower prices, reduced greenhouse gas emissions and less chance of viruses such as H5N1 bird flu causing another pandemic.So it is astounding that most countries arent investing heavily in improving crops. There is some private investment, but those companies are unlikely to make their technologies freely available, slowing their adoption.We are also restricted by the notion that more natural means of farming are better, with opposition to genetically modified (GM) crops making it difficult and expensive to get them approved.This is starting to change, with many countries making it easier for gene-edited crops and animals to get to market, but we need more action and fast.The idea that organic food is better for the planet and GM foods are worse for it is a false narrative that hides a much more unpalatable reality: that continuing as we are will lead to even more destruction and increased hunger.Topics:
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