• New AI tool for fighting health insurance denials could save hospitals billions, and help patients
    www.cnbc.com
    Waystar announced a new generative AI feature that aims to help hospitals quickly fight insurance denials.
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  • How the Academy Software Foundation works
    beforesandafters.com
    David Morin from the Academy Software Foundation on the VFX software packages the ASWF encompasses.Today on the befores & afters podcast, were chatting to David Morin, who is the Executive Director at the Academy Software Foundation. I wanted to talk to David to do almost a back to basics about the Academy Software Foundation how it started, what its all about, and what software projects it now encompasses.Well, in our conversation, David lays all that out. We also talk about, of course, all the big projects the ASWF now covers, including OpenEXR, OpenVDB and MaterialX for instance, plus new projects that are part of the stable. If youve heard a little about the Foundation, and want to know more, I think this is a great listen.This episode is sponsored by Suite Studios. Ready to accelerate your creative workflow? Suites cloud storage is designed for teams to store, share, and edit media in real-time from anywhere. The best part? With Suite, you can stream your full-resolution files directly from the cloud without the need to download or sync media locally before working. Learn more about why the best creative teams are switching to Suite at suitestudios.ioThe post How the Academy Software Foundation works appeared first on befores & afters.
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  • Disney announces a $15 million pledge for L.A. wildfire relief
    www.fastcompany.com
    The Pacific Palisades wildfires torched the home of This Is Us star Milo Ventimiglia, perhaps most poignantly destroying the father-to-bes newly installed crib.CBS cameras caught the actor walking through his charred house for the first time, standing in what was once his kitchen and looking at a neighborhood in ruin. Your heart just breaks.He and his pregnant wife, Jarah Mariano, evacuated Tuesday with their dog and they watched on security cameras as the flames ripped through the house, destroying everything, including a new crib.Theres a kind of shock moment where youre going, Oh, this is real. This is happening. What good is it to continue watching? And then at a certain point we just turned it off, like What good is it to continue watching?'Firefighters sought to make gains Friday during a respite in the heavy winds that fanned the flames as numerous groups pledged aid to help victims and rebuild, including a $15 million donation pledge from the Walt Disney Co.More stars learn their homes are goneWhile seeing the remains of his home, Ventimiglia was struck by a connection to his This Is Us character, Jack Pearson, who died after inhaling smoke in a house fire. Its not lost on me life imitating art.Mandy Moore, who played Ventimiglias wife on This Is Us, nearly lost her home in the Eaton fire, which scorched large areas of the Altadena neighborhood. She said Thursday that part of her house is standing but is unlivable, and her husband lost his music studio and all his instruments.Mel Gibsons home is completely gone, his publicist Alan Nierob confirmed Friday. The Oscar winner revealed the loss of his home earlier Friday while appearing on Joe Rogans podcast.Numerous stars have confirmed their homes were lost or sustained damage in devastating wildfires burning in and around Los Angeles. At least 10 people have died, thousands of structures and vehicles have been destroyed, and more than 150,000 people remain under evacuation orders.The home that Miles Teller and his wife, Keleigh, shared was a pile of dust and debris, with only the fall shrubbery and a gate surrounding the lot still standing. Keleigh posted photos of the home on Instagram of before the wildfire and after, urging people to get out of the neighborhood and thanks to first responders.We will come back stronger than ever, she wrote. She added that she wished shed taken her wedding dress.Billy Crystal and his wife lost their home of 45 years. Paris Hilton, Jeff Bridges, and Cary Elwes and R&B star Jhen Aiko have also said their homes are gone. Haley Joel Osment says he lost everything in Altadena.I am so sorry for the losses that thousands of people are suffering and Im trying to etch in my mind the unique details of this lovely town that are gone foreverthank you to everyone who has reached out and who has helped as we lose our home, the actor wrote on Instagram.Disney pledges $15 million to fire relief effortsDisney says it will donate $15 million to respond to the fires and help rebuild.The company announced the donations Friday afternoon. It said the money would be spread across several groups, including the American Red Cross, the Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation, and the Los Angeles Regional Food Bank.Walt Disney came to Los Angeles with little more than his limitless imagination, and it was here that he chose to make his home, pursue his dreams, and create extraordinary storytelling that means so much to so many people around the world. We are proud to provide assistance to this resilient and vibrant community in this moment of need, Disney CEO Bob Iger said in a statement.FIREAID benefit concert plannedA concert to aid wildfire victims will be held at Intuit Dome on Jan. 30, organizers announced Friday.No lineup or ticket info has been released yet, but the event is being planned by music heavyweights: Shelli, Irving, and the Azoff family in conjunction with Live Nation and AEG Presents.Organizers say money raised will help those affected by the first and support efforts to prevent future fire disasters.The Intuit Dome is home to the Los Angeles Clippers.
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  • Industrial Design Case Study: An Experimental Furniture Design Incorporating Rope
    www.core77.com
    This experimental Modern Weave 3.0 chair is by KEM Studio, an industrial design and architecture firm based in Kansas City, Missouri. The idea was to produce a non-molded outdoor chair with a modicum of cushioning, using rope. Modern Weave is a continued exploration of reinterpreting a traditional technique (weaving) in a modern way. The original exploration (1.0), done on an Eames Side Chair, was entered in and won the Eames Good Design Challenge and was then auctioned off to raise money for the Ronald McDonald House Charities. From there we took this concept of modern weaving and refined it, still using an Eames Side Chair, creating a simplified linear pattern that provided tailored comfort in the seat of the chair (2.0). After this second exploration we asked the question, "how do you design an outdoor chair that doesn't require tooling, incorporates elevated ergonomics and can utilize this 'modern weave' as the method of providing extra cushioning?" Modern Weave 3.0 addresses those opportunities. Made out of bent rods that are welded together at points of interaction, each individual segment has a place and a purpose ergonomically. The grid system that is created from these interactions presents a natural canvas to add the weave and explore from a sense of material, comfort and aesthetics. Traditional techniques are highlighted with this chair (bending rod, welding + weaving) creating a robust, comfortable and beautiful chair that can have its place indoors just as well as outdoors. This chair breaks the mold of outdoor chairs legitimately there is no molding required. With this chair, comfort is tunable. It doesn't rely on foam for a pad but instead allows for a human-centered and user-specific comfort as well as encouraging their own creativity and artistry. Any material that can be woven can be used which allows the user to swap out the weave at any time, whether for wear, comfort or aesthetic reasons, change the pattern or even remove the weave material altogether. You can see more of KEM Studio's work here.
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  • Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G Review: Finding Balance in the Old and the New
    www.yankodesign.com
    PROS: Beautiful and bright display Decent mid-range performance Improved durability and reliability Large battery with super-fast 120W chargingCONS: No telephoto camera, disappointing ultra-wide camera No wireless charging Slightly dated designRATINGS:AESTHETICSERGONOMICSPERFORMANCESUSTAINABILITY / REPAIRABILITYVALUE FOR MONEYEDITOR'S QUOTE:The Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G tries to offer a well-rounded set of features wrapped in a sleek design and an affordable price point.The mid-range smartphone market is honestly more exciting than the flagship segment, at least in recent years. With more expensive flagships, you can almost accurately predict where theyre headed, but lower tiers can catch you off-guard with surprising upstarts and unexpected disappointments. There seems to be more wiggle room for experimentation here, giving brands the freedom to test out different combinations of features and designs.Sometimes you get astounding mid-range flagships that make you question why youd even bother with premium models when you can get nearly the same for so much less. Sometimes, however, you also get head-scratching disappointments that make you wonder what went wrong during that decisive board meeting. With the global launch of the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G, we get to revisit those questions to see on which side of the fence Xiaomis mid-range champ falls.Designer: XiaomiAestheticsThey say that beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5Gs design embodies that perfectly. Depending on where you stand, its either a bold and modern upstart or a tried and tired veteran. Compared to previous generations of Redmi Notes, the current flagship is admittedly the most stylish, the most modern, and the most elegant. Its a design that finally catches up with more luxurious and more expensive devices in the market, finally giving Xiaomi a head-turning mid-range phone.The slight problem with that is that the flagship market has also moved on from the sexy curves that once defined that category, curves that the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G flaunt so boldly. Both the back glass panel and the front display curve sharply at the side to meet the very thin mid-frame edge, definitely a classic aesthetic. Then again, there is no shortage of people who denounce the new flatness of todays smartphones, so they might find some recourse in this design.The camera design is just as ambiguous on more than one level. The squircle or porthole shape feels like its caught in the middle of a tug-of-war between square and camera designs. It does give it a bit of distinction, visually separating it from other designs. Despite the four circles in that large bump, the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G only has three cameras in reality, a deception thats really the least of its offenses in this matter.ErgonomicsThere are benefits to this classic flagship design, thankfully. Some people find it more comfortable to hold a slab whose curves gently rest inside their hands. It makes reaching far edges a little easier, though the screen size is still an obstacle. The matte glass back tries to add a bit of grippiness, but only ever so slightly. Those who find the smooth and curved phone slipping frequently from their hands will appreciate the color-matching silicone case included in the box.The large camera design also has an advantage because of how its placed in the middle of the phones back. It distributes the weight evenly across the width, giving it a bit more stability in your hand. It also prevents the phone from wobbling when you place it on a table and tap on the screen. It might seem like a minor annoyance, but it all adds up to a more pleasurable user experience.PerformanceThe Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G is by no means a premium flagship phone, and it shows in the silicon that runs everything. The Snapdragon 7s Gen 3, an incremental upgrade from the previous-gen Qualcomm mid-range chip, performs quite well for many everyday tasks, including some light mobile gaming. It isnt, however, going to give great results in more graphics-extensive applications and more resource-hungry processes like photo manipulation or on-device video editing. To put it into context, the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 would be on par with a Snapdragon 870 or 888 from 2021.A bit ironically, the bottleneck isnt exactly the CPU but Xiaomis odd choice for memory and storage, LPDDR4X and UFS2.2, respectively. These are many generations behind the latest technologies, and even if you were considering cost-cutting reasons, its still too steep a performance drop to make, at least on paper. Thankfully, the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G does remain responsive under moderate load, despite the somewhat bloated design of its custom Android skin.Fortunately, content looks gorgeous on the phones 6.67-inch 1.5K AMOLED screen with a maximum 120Hz resolution. Not only does it support 100% of the industry-standard DCI-P3 color gamut, it also has an incredible 3000 nits of peak brightness, making short work of sunny days. Paired with impressively decent audio, this makes the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ a great device for watching videos and playing games. The latter, however, might sometimes prove to be a bit tricky at times because of how content and controls could get a little distorted at the edges because of the curvature.Another thing that makes this mid-range phone a great content consumption machine is the generous, 5110mAh battery, enough to last you a full day before plugging it in. When it comes time to do so, the 120W HyperCharge technology zooms from zero to full in less than forty minutes, presuming youre using the included 120W charger. This story would have had a good ending if Xiaomi finally gave its mid-range flagship wireless charging support, but alas, that is still not the case.Next to raw performance and battery life, cameras are the most critical features of a smartphone these days. One would presume that this is true across all market tiers, and for the most part, it is. Thats why its rather surprising and puzzling that Xiaomi seems to be shooting itself in the foot with the Redmi Note 14 Pro+, or at least its global version.Make no mistake, the 200MP f/1.65 main camera is quite formidable, especially when theres enough light around. Whatever it lacks at night or in dim environments, post-processing and a bit of AI are enough to compensate, leading to rather good shots with plenty of sharpness and details. That, however, is where the good news stops, and things take a sharp nosedive.An 8MP ultra-wide camera in this day and age is more than disappointing. Its almost unforgivable. The photos it takes are borderline decent, at least until you try taking shots in darker situations. Instead of a telephoto camera that its Chinese sibling has, the global Redmi Note 14 Pro+ only has a 2MP macro shooter that doesnt even properly do what its supposed to.Perhaps adding insult to injury is how this trio of sensors is the exact same group that Xiaomi has been using since the Redmi Note 12 Pro+ in late 2022. Sure, you can still squeeze out some more performance with software and AI tricks, but the flaws start to show quite easily. Even the 20MP front-facing camera seems to be stuck in the past, unable to record in the 4K resolution it should technically be capable of.SustainabilityWhen compared to its predecessors, the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ design is a well-deserved upgrade, both in looks as well as durability. Not only does it look more stylish, it also boasts an upgrade to Gorilla Victus 2 for the screen and Gorilla Glass 7i for the back. Throw in the IP68 rating, and youve got a formula for a phone that should, at least in theory, last you years.The same cant be said for software support, though, with Xiaomis old bad behavior rearing its ugly head again. The phone is promised three years of Android version upgrades, which is the bare minimum, but with a rather big caveat. The Xiaomi HyperOS custom experience it ships with is based on Android 14, which launched in 2023. In reality, the first upgrade owners will get will be last years Android 15, so its practically good for only two major software updates until 2027.ValueThe mid-tier smartphone market is a land thriving in innumerable choices, some of which can be surprisingly delightful, while others are downright disappointing. Theres a rich variety of designs and features, but that also makes choosing even more difficult. The Redmi Note 14 Pro+ makes that decision even harder because it stands too close to its own past.For around $450, you are getting the latest mid-range Qualcomm Snapdragon processor and a fast-charging battery paired with specs from two years ago. The design might seem fresh for the Redmi Note line, but it is a style that is growing less popular among the upper echelons of the smartphone industry. The cameras, while serviceable, dont pack quite the same punch as its contemporaries, making the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ a hard sell unless youre upgrading from an even older or lower Redmi model.VerdictThe Redmi Note continues to be Xiaomis mid-range king, and the current-gen model definitely shows it. Its a well-balanced smartphone with plenty of features to satisfy most users, with a price tag that wont make them sweat too much. And it looks good to boot, finally worthy of the flagship moniker.In the grander scheme of things, however, this king might be found a bit lacking. The use of older memory technologies and the reuse of older camera sensors wont sit well with many people, at least those who like to dig deep into specs and comparisons. Truth be told, the average buyer might not care so much and only see a sleek smartphone with decent chops, and in that regard, the Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G definitely doesnt disappoint.The post Redmi Note 14 Pro+ 5G Review: Finding Balance in the Old and the New first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • Why CES is getting predictable, and the 3 products that managed to stand out
    www.creativebloq.com
    With a focus on AI, the narrative felt all too familiar this year.
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  • The Los Angeles Wildfires Have Created Another ProblemUnsafe Drinking Water
    www.wired.com
    Melted plastic pipes and drastic water-pressure drops are potentially leaching toxic chemicals and contaminants into local supplies. Multiple water authorities in north Los Angeles have issued Do Not Drink notices.
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  • Apple is looking to snatch back the limelight with a huge year for the iPhone
    www.macworld.com
    MacworldNot that customers have stopped buying the declining iPhone, by any means, but Apple would love to correct the perception that its stopped innovating in the smartphone space. As if stung by Mark Zuckerbergs dubious criticisms, Apple will make a big push in 2025 to restore the iPhones momentum.The focus of 2025 will of course be the flagship iPhone launches in September, where (as usual) we will get four new models, but (as not usual) one of them will be super-thin and probably branded as the iPhone Air. In the latest edition of his Power On newsletter, Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman acknowledges that the slim model may not sell more units than its chunkier siblings, but insists it will get people talking. And thats the point.The key comparison for the iPhone 17 Air is against the mini models from the iPhone 12 and 13 series, and the Plus models from 14, 15, and 16. Apple knows how to sell the standard iPhone (gets the job done), iPhone Pro (connoisseurs choice), and iPhone Pro Max (the Rolls-Royce of the line), but the fourth model in the set has historically been a market challenge.The iPhone 12 and 13 mini sold so poorly that category was dropped. The Plus models must have done at least somewhat better, given that theyve lasted one whole generation longer (and some of us think theyre neat), but Apple will want more from the Air. More sales, ideally, but above all more hype. By creating the thinnest iPhone everabout 2mm thinner than the existing models, according to Gurmans sources, which is roughly a 25 percent reductionit wants customers to remember why they got excited about their first iPhone, rather than looking dutifully at the specs and trying to decide if they should upgrade their handset in 2025 or wait another year.Interestingly, however, Apple has a product to get out the door long before the iPhone 17 Air that is in many ways the polar opposite. The 4th-gen iPhone SE is expected to arrive in the spring and while it wont get as much interest from the media or marketing spend from Apple, it holds the key, as a comparatively affordable smartphone with an A18 processor, to taking Apple Intelligence into the mainstream.If pundits including Gurman are correct, it will also complicate matters slightly regarding the iPhone 17s sales pitch. Apples first in-house modem, codenamed Sinope, makes its first appearance this year not in the iPhone 17, but in the iPhone SE. That probably means improved battery performance, but you wont need to pay the big bucks to get it. Unusually generous or short-sighted? Thats debatable.But Gurman definitely thinks Apple has one eye on the future. The use of proprietary componentsboth Sinope and a new Wi-Fi/Bluetooth chip called Proximawill pay off in future products, while the iPhone Air specifically could hold the key to finally tackling the foldables market. To fold, iPhones and iPads will need to have bodies and displays that are as thin as possible, Gurman writes, and the Air is a step toward that.This is a big year for the iPhone, then. But Apple will hope its the first of many.
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  • New hack breaks open Apple's USB-C security
    appleinsider.com
    A security researcher has worked out how to hack a proprietary USB-C controller used by Apple, an issue that could eventually lead to new iPhone jailbreaks and other security problems.USB-C on an iPhone 15As one of the more privacy and security-focused companies, Apple has become a prized target for hackers to beat. In one instance, it seems the iPhone's USB-C controller has become a risk factor.Revealed at the 38th Chaos Communication Congress in December, with information only being revealed to the public in January, researcher Thomas Roth presented a demonstration of attacking the ACE3 USB-C controller. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • Allied Works selected to design new art museum for Middlebury College
    archinect.com
    Allied Works has shared details of a new college art museum project on the campus of Middlebury College in Vermont. The design, which follows their superlative effort on thePalmer Museum of Art at Pennsylvania State University with Reed Hilderbrand, forms a pivotal component of the reconfiguration of the north side of the school's campus and will become part of a new 'arts agora' in unison with four other existing adjacent buildings.Allied Works' founder Brad Cloepfilsays: "Our goal is to create a place of wonder, where the architecture amplifies the place it occupies and the work it holds and inspiresa place of imagination and exploration for Middlebury and the world."Its announcement follows two similar projects for Dartmouth and Williams College. Middlebury reports this is an estimated $50 million construction that will be completed in 2028.
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