• Smart, light, cheaper than ever: DJIs new gimbal is a steal
    dronedj.com
    Smartphone filmmaking just got an upgrade. DJI, the industry leader in drones and camera stabilization technology, has launched the Osmo Mobile 7 (OM 7) series, bringing its most advanced tracking technology, intuitive gesture controls, and the lowest-ever price for a DJI gimbal.The Osmo Mobile 7 Series consists of two models: the Osmo Mobile 7P and the Osmo Mobile 7. Both offer DJIs seventh-generation stabilization, the newly enhanced ActiveTrack 7.0, and an array of intelligent features designed to make smartphone videography easier and more creative than ever before.The Osmo Mobile 7P, the premium model, introduces an exciting Multifunctional Module that adds gesture controls, built-in light control, and a microphone receiver for even more hands-free shooting possibilities.Even more impressive? The Osmo Mobile 7 starts at just $89, making it the most affordable DJI gimbal ever $50 cheaper than the Osmo Mobile 6, which retails at $139. Lets break down what makes the OM 7 series a game-changer.Smarter tracking and hands-free filmingAt the core of DJIs latest gimbals is ActiveTrack 7.0, the companys most advanced subject-tracking technology yet. Using upgraded AI algorithms, this feature allows the gimbal to lock onto subjects with pinpoint accuracy, even in busy or fast-moving environments. The system is so intelligent that it can:Detect multiple subjects in a frame and allow users to switch between them effortlessly.Maintain tracking even when a subject leaves and re-enters the frame.Predict motion patterns, ensuring smooth tracking even if someone moves erratically.For vloggers, content creators, and anyone who films dynamic footage, ActiveTrack 7.0 removes the hassle of constant refocusing, letting users concentrate on their storytelling.Meanwhile, a key standout feature of the OM 7P is its Multifunctional Module, which enables gesture-based controls that revolutionize solo filming. Whether youre filming yourself or capturing content on the go, these simple hand gestures allow for complete control without touching your phone or gimbal.Heres how it works:Raise your palm to start or stop tracking.Flash a V sign to take a photo or begin/stop recording.Use a Double L gesture with both hands to adjust framing.This hands-free approach makes filming effortless, especially for vloggers, fitness instructors, and anyone who needs to move freely while recording. Its like having a personal camera operator in your pocket.Moreover, using the DJI Mimo app, creators can use their Apple Watch as a smart remote for the gimbal, remotely controlling their shoot and camera feed.Other essential tools that the Multifunctional Module brings, include:Integrated light control: Adjust brightness and color temperature for perfect lighting in any environment.Microphone receiver: Capture high-quality audio while filming, perfect for interviews and live streaming.USB-C power delivery: Keep your smartphone charged while shooting, extending your recording time.This all-in-one module enhances professional and casual filming alike, allowing users to travel lighter while still capturing high-quality footage.But DJI has always focused on portability, hasnt it? This is why the OM 7 series is the most lightweight yet. More precisely, OM 7 weighs only 10 ounces (300g), making it the lightest smartphone gimbal in its class. Both models fold down instantly for easy storage in a small bag or even a pocket. And the built-in tripod makes it easy to set up a stable shot anywhere.Regardless, for many buyers, the biggest surprise isnt just the new features its the unbeatable pricing.Osmo Mobile 7 starts at just $89 a full $70 cheaper than Osmo Mobile 6s launch price of $159.Osmo Mobile 7P, which includes the Multifunctional Module, is priced at $149 marginally higher than OM 6s current retail price of $139.The Multifunctional Module is also available as a separate add-on for Osmo Mobile 7 users, allowing them to upgrade later.All in all, with such an affordable entry price, this is the best time ever to invest in a DJI gimbal whether youre a first-time buyer or looking to upgrade.More: Mini 4 Pro or Flip? Picking the best DJI drone for youAdd DroneDJ to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.Youre reading DroneDJ experts who break news about DJI and the wider drone ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow DroneDJ on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Dont know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel.
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  • New FrigidStealer Malware Targets macOS Users via Fake Browser Updates
    thehackernews.com
    Feb 18, 2025Ravie LakshmananThreat Intelligence / MalwareCybersecurity researchers are alerting to a new campaign that leverages web injects to deliver a new Apple macOS malware known as FrigidStealer.The activity has been attributed to a previously undocumented threat actor known as TA2727, with the information stealers for other platforms such as Windows (Lumma Stealer or DeerStealer) and Android (Marcher).TA2727 is a "threat actor that uses fake update themed lures to distribute a variety of malware payloads," the Proofpoint Threat Research Team said in a report shared with The Hacker News. It's one of the newly identified threat activity clusters alongside TA2726, which is assessed to be a malicious traffic distribution system (TDS) operator that facilitates traffic distribution for other threat actors to deliver malware. The financially motivated threat actor is believed to be active since at least September 2022.TA2726, per the enterprise security firm, acts as a TDS for TA2727 and another threat actor called TA569, which is responsible for the distribution of a JavaScript-based loader malware referred to as SocGholish (aka FakeUpdates) that often masquerades as a browser update on legitimate-but-compromised sites."TA2726 is financially motivated and works with other financially motivated actors such as TA569 and TA2727," the company noted. "That is, this actor is most likely responsible for the web server or website compromises that lead to injects operated by other threat actors."Both TA569 and TA2727 share some similarities in that they are distributed via websites compromised with malicious JavaScript website injects that mimic browser updates for web browsers like Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge. Where TA2727 differs is the use of attack chains that serve different payloads based on recipients' geography or device.Should a user visit an infected website in France or the U.K. on a Windows computer, they are prompted to download an MSI installer file that launches Hijack Loader (aka DOILoader), which, in turn, loads Lumma Stealer.On the other hand, the same fake update redirect when visited from an Android device leads to the deployment of a banking trojan dubbed Marcher that has been detected in the wild for over a decade.That's not all. As of January 2025, the campaign has been updated to target macOS users residing outside of North America to a fake update page that downloaded a new information stealer codenamed FrigidStealer.The FrigidStealer installer, like other macOS malware, requires users to explicitly launch the unsigned app to bypass Gatekeeper protections, following which an embedded Mach-O executable is run to install the malware."The executable was written in Go, and was ad-hoc signed," Proofpoint said. "The executable was built with the WailsIO project, which renders content in the user's browser. This adds to the social engineering of the victim, implying that the Chrome or Safari installer was legitimate."FrigidStealer is no different from various stealer families aimed at macOS systems. It leverages AppleScript to prompt the user to enter their system password, thereby giving it elevated privileges to harvest files and all kinds of sensitive information from web browsers, Apple Notes, and cryptocurrency related apps."Actors are using web compromises to deliver malware targeting both enterprise and consumer users," the company said. "It is reasonable that such web injects will deliver malware customized to the recipient, including Mac users, which are still less common in enterprise environments than Windows."The development comes as Denwp Research's Tonmoy Jitu disclosed details of another fully undetectable macOS backdoor named Tiny FUD that leverages name manipulation, dynamic link daemon (DYLD) injection, and command-and-control (C2) based command execution.It also follows the emergence of new information stealer malware like Astral Stealer and Flesh Stealer, both of which are designed to collect sensitive information, evade detection, and maintain persistence on compromised systems."Flesh Stealer is particularly effective in detecting virtual machine (VM) environments," Flashpoint said in a recent report. "It will avoid executing on VMs to prevent any potential forensics analysis, showcasing an understanding of security research practices."Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.SHARE
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  • Winnti APT41 Targets Japanese Firms in RevivalStone Cyber Espionage Campaign
    thehackernews.com
    Feb 18, 2025Ravie LakshmananMalware / Network SecurityThe China-linked threat actor known as Winnti has been attributed to a new campaign dubbed RevivalStone that targeted Japanese companies in the manufacturing, materials, and energy sectors in March 2024.The activity, detailed by Japanese cybersecurity company LAC, overlaps with a threat cluster tracked by Trend Micro as Earth Freybug, which has been assessed to be a subset within the APT41 cyber espionage group, by Cybereason under the name Operation CuckooBees, and by Symantec as Blackfly.APT41 has been described as a highly skilled and methodical actor with the ability to mount espionage attacks as well as poison the supply chain. Its campaigns are often designed with stealth in mind, leveraging a bevy of tactics to achieve its goals by using a custom toolset that not only bypasses security software installed in the environment, but also harvests critical information and establishes covert channels for persistent remote access."The group's espionage activities, many of which are aligned with the nation's strategic objectives, have targeted a wide range of public and private industry sectors around the world," LAC said."The attacks of this threat group are characterized by the use of Winnti malware, which has a unique rootkit that allows for the hiding and manipulation of communications, as well as the use of stolen, legitimate digital certificates in the malware."Winnti, active since at least 2012, has primarily singled out manufacturing and materials-related organizations in Asia as of 2022, with recent campaigns between November 2023 and October 2024 targeting the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region exploiting weaknesses in public-facing applications like IBM Lotus Domino to deploy malware as follows -DEATHLOTUS - A passive CGI backdoor that supports file creation and command executionUNAPIMON - A defense evasion utility written in C++PRIVATELOG - A loader that's used to drop Winnti RAT (aka DEPLOYLOG) which, in turn, delivers a kernel-level rootkit named WINNKIT by means of a rootkit installerCUNNINGPIGEON - A backdoor that uses Microsoft Graph API to fetch commands file and process management, and custom proxy from mail messagesWINDJAMMER - A rootkit with capabilities to intercept TCPIP Network Interface, as well as create covert channels with infected endpoints within intranetSHADOWGAZE - A passive backdoor reusing listening port from IIS web serverThe latest attack chain documented by LAC has been found to exploit an SQL injection vulnerability in an unspecified enterprise resource planning (ERP) system to drop web shells such as China Chopper and Behinder (aka Bingxia and IceScorpion) on the compromised server, using the access to perform reconnaissance, collect credentials for lateral movement, and deliver an improved version of the Winnti malware.The intrusion's reach is said to have been expanded further to breach a managed service provider (MSP) by leveraging a shared account, followed by weaponizing the company's infrastructure to propagate the malware further to three other organizations.LAC said it also found references to TreadStone and StoneV5 in the RevivalStone campaign, with the former being a controller that's designed to work with the Winnti malware and which was also included in the I-Soon (aka Anxun) leak of last year in connection with a Linux malware control panel."If TreadStone has the same meaning as the Winnti malware, it is only speculation, but StoneV5 could also mean Version 5, and it is possible that the malware used in this attack is Winnti v5.0," researchers Takuma Matsumoto and Yoshihiro Ishikawa said."The new Winnti malware has been implemented with features such as obfuscation, updated encryption algorithms, and evasion by security products, and it is likely that this attacker group will continue to update the functions of the Winnti malware and use it in attacks."The disclosure comes as Fortinet FortiGuard Labs detailed a Linux-based attack suite dubbed SSHDInjector that's equipped to hijack the SSH daemon on network appliances by injecting malware into the process for persistent access and covert actions since November 2024.The malware suite, associated with another Chinese nation-state hacking group known as Daggerfly (aka Bronze Highland and Evasive Panda), is engineered for data exfiltration, listening for incoming instructions from a remote server to enumerate running processes and services, perform file operations, launch terminal, and execute terminal commands.Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.SHARE
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  • The Cost of AI: How Can We Adopt and Deliver AI Efficiently?
    www.informationweek.com
    TechTarget and Informa Techs Digital Business Combine.TechTarget and InformaTechTarget and Informa Techs Digital Business Combine.Together, we power an unparalleled network of 220+ online properties covering 10,000+ granular topics, serving an audience of 50+ million professionals with original, objective content from trusted sources. We help you gain critical insights and make more informed decisions across your business priorities.The Cost of AI: How Can We Adopt and Deliver AI Efficiently?The Cost of AI: How Can We Adopt and Deliver AI Efficiently?What mindset do enterprises need to adopt in order to make AI happen without breaking the bank and see tangible results?Joao-Pierre S. Ruth, Senior EditorFebruary 18, 2025Which should come first, the plan to adopt AI or an assessment of the available resources an enterprise has to support AI? Is it better to develop AI in-house or turn to third parties? What third-party resources should enterprises look to in order to deliver on their AI plans?In the final week of "The Cost of AI" series, the focus shifts to practical ideas to advance plans for AI.Organizations might feel compelled to acquire top-tier AI resources or search for only the most elite AI professionals to enact their strategies for AI, but that might not make efficient use of an enterprises actual resources. It might not even be realistic.How should companies structure their AI strategies in order to deliver positive ROI? How should short- and long-term plans be mapped out?What can companies do to stay on budget when pursuing AI? How can they determine a rational budget for the scope of their plans? What happens if they realize they cannot achieve their goals within that budget?In this episode of DOS Won't Hunt, Fred Sala, chief scientist at Snorkel AI; Becky Carroll, partner, IBM Consulting Global - AWS strategic partnership lead for data and AI; Charles Xie, CEO and founder of Zilliz; Srujan Akula, CEO of The Modern Data Company; and Deepak Singh, vice president of developer experience at AWS, discussed these and other questions to bring some clarity and efficiency to AI strategies.Read more about:Cost of AIAbout the AuthorJoao-Pierre S. RuthSenior EditorJoao-Pierre S. Ruth covers tech policy, including ethics, privacy, legislation, and risk; fintech; code strategy; and cloud & edge computing for InformationWeek. He has been a journalist for more than 25 years, reporting on business and technology first in New Jersey, then covering the New York tech startup community, and later as a freelancer for such outlets as TheStreet, Investopedia, and Street Fight.See more from Joao-Pierre S. RuthNever Miss a Beat: Get a snapshot of the issues affecting the IT industry straight to your inbox.SIGN-UPYou May Also LikeWebinarsMore WebinarsReportsMore Reports
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  • The Download: 4G on the moon, and parenting in the digital age
    www.technologyreview.com
    This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. Nokia is putting the first cellular network on the moon Later this month, Intuitive Machines, the private company behind the first commercial lander that touched down on the moon, will launch a second lunar mission. The plan is to deploy a lander, a rover, and hopper to explore a site near the lunar south pole that could harbor water ice, and to put a communications satellite on lunar orbit. But the mission will also bring something thats never been installed on the moon or anywhere else in space beforea fully functional 4G cellular network. Read our story to learn why. Jacek Krywko How to have a child in the digital age Before journalist and culture critic Amanda Hess even got pregnant with her first child, in 2020, the internet knew she was trying. She saw pregnancy ads way before a doctor. Hesss experience is pretty typical these days, but still raises some big questions. How do we retain control over our bodies when corporations and the medical establishment have access to our most personal information? What happens when people stop relying on friends and family for advice on having a kid and instead go online, where theres a constant onslaught of information? In her new book, Second Life: Having a Child in the Digital Age, Hess explores these questions while delving into her firsthand experiences with apps, products, algorithms, online forums, advertisers, and moreeach promising an easier, healthier, better path to parenthood. Hess asks: Is that really what theyre delivering? Read our interview with her. Alison Arieff This subscriber-only story is from the next edition of our print magazine, which is all about relationships. Subscribe now to get a copy when it lands on February 26! Inside Chinas electric-vehicle-to-humanoid-robot pivot James ODonnell While DOGEs efforts to shutter federal agencies dominate news from Washington, the Trump administration is also making global moves. Many of these center on China, which is leading the world in electric vehicles, robotaxis, drones, and with the launch of DeepSeek, perhaps AI soon too. Now a new trend is unfolding within Chinas tech scene: Companies that were dominant in electric vehicles are betting big on translating that success into developing humanoid robots. I spoke with China reporter Caiwei Chen about what it might mean for Trumps policies. This story is from The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter all about the latest in the world of AI. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Monday. How will generative AI change search? Generative AI search, one of MIT Technology Review's 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2025, is ushering in a new era of the internet. Despite fewer clicks, copyright fights, and sometimes iffy answers, AI could unlock new ways to summon all the worlds knowledge. Join editor in chief Mat Honan and executive editor Niall Firth at 1.30pm ET today for a subscriber-only Roundtable conversation exploring how AI will alter search. Sign up here to attend, and if you havent already, read Mats feature about it too. The must-reads Ive combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 DOGE is on the cusp of accessing US taxpayer data What theyre planning to do with it is anyones guess. (CNN)+ FDA staff reviewing Musks company Neuralink were fired by DOGE last weekend. (Reuters $)+ A top official at the Social Security Administration just left after refusing DOGEs request to access sensitive records. (NBC)+ Can AI help DOGE slash government budgets? Its complex. (MIT Technology Review)2 DeepSeek may be shifting towards monetizing its AI modelsRight now, theyre open source and free. How long can that last? (South China Morning Post $)+ How DeepSeek ripped up the AI playbookand why everyones going to follow its lead. (MIT Technology Review)3 Were inching closer to a norovirus vaccinePlenty of people might welcome this, especially after this winters nasty rash of infections. (Scientific American $)4 The war on diversity and inclusion initiatives is a smokescreenAnd the people waging it will go much further, if we let them. (The Verge)5 Some states claim zero abortionsWhich is impossible, and hints at something worrying: official statistics are being politicized in the US. (Undark)6 China is looking for its own ways to protect data from quantum computersIts spurning algorithms created in the US in case they contain secret back doors. (New Scientist $)+ Chinese President Xi Jinping met some of the countrys top tech execs yesterday. (The Information $)7 Reddit moderators are fighting to keep AI slop off the platformIts an important battle to manybut its only going to get harder and harder. (Ars Technica)8 Meta has wasted $70 billion on the metaverse. This advert shows why.This must presumably be the best they could do, and yet its just embarrassingly bad. (Forbes)9 Working from home has turned us into office weirdosBut hey, maybe this is our chance to carve out some better, kinder office etiquette. (Business Insider $)+ To be fair, we still dont know how to behave on Slack or Zoom either. (NYT $)10 Are noise cancelling headphones causing hearing problems? Audiologists say excessive use may interfere with the way teens learn to process speech and noise. (BBC)Quote of the day People do not feel safe speaking out in this country against the government. Ryan Calo, a law professor at the University of Washington, tells the Washington Post that Elon Musk and President Trumps keenness to take vengeance on people who criticize them is having a chilling effect. The big story What is AI? JUN IONEDA What is AI?July 2024 Artificial intelligence is the hottest technology of our time. But what is it? It sounds like a stupid question, but its one thats never been more urgent. If youre willing to buckle up and come for a ride, I can tell you why nobody really knows, why everybody seems to disagree, and why youre right to care about it. Read the full story. Will Douglas Heaven We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or skeet 'em at me.)+ Love these glitzy, cheerful photos taken behind the scenes of last nights BAFTAs. + Meet Victorian Londons cats meat men.+ Led Zeppelin fans rejoice: the bands first official documentary is out.+ Want to feel happier? Let Dr Laurie Santos from Yale explain what you need to do.
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  • How to have a child in the digital age
    www.technologyreview.com
    When the journalist and culture critic Amanda Hess got pregnant with her first child, in 2020, the internet was among the first to know. More brands knew about my pregnancy than people did, she writes of the torrent of targeted ads that came her way. They all called me mama. The internet held the promise of limitless information about becoming the perfect parent. But at seven months, Hess went in for an ultrasound appointment and everything shifted. The sonogram looked atypical. As she waited in an exam room for a doctor to go over the results, she felt the urge to reach for her phone. Though it was ludicrous, she writes, in my panic, it felt incontrovertible: If I searched it smart and fast enough, the internet would save us. I had constructed my life through its screens, mapped the world along its circuits. Now I would make a second life there too. Her doctor informed her of the condition he suspected her baby might have and told her, Dont google it. Unsurprisingly, that didnt stop her. In fact, she writes, the more medical information that doctors producedafter weeks of escalating tests, her son was ultimately diagnosed with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndromethe more digitally dependent she became: I found I was turning to the internet, as opposed to myfriends or my doctors, to resolve my feelings and emotions about what was happening to me and to exert a sense of external control over my body. But how do we retain control over our bodies when corporations and the medical establishment have access to our most personal information? What happens when humans stop relying on their village, or even their family, for advice on having a kid and instead go online, where theres a constant onslaught of information? How do we make sense of the contradictions of the internetthe tension between whats inherently artificial and the natural methods its denizens are so eager to promote? In her new book, Second Life: Having a Child in the Digital Age In your book, you write, I imagined my [pregnancy] tests pink dye spreading across Instagram, Facebook, Amazon. All around me, a techno-corporate infrastructure was locking into place. I could sense the advertising algorithms recalibrating and the branded newsletters assembling in their queues. I knew that I was supposed to think of targeted advertising as evil, but I had never experienced it that way. Can you unpack this a bit? Before my pregnancy, I never felt like advertising technology was particularly smart or specific. So when my Instagram ads immediately clocked my pregnancy, it came as a bit of a surprise, and I realized that I was unaware of exactly how ad tech worked and how vast its reach was. It felt particularly eerie in this case because in the beginning my pregnancy was a secret that I kept from everyone except my spouse, so the internet was the only thing that was talking to me about it. Advertising became so personalized that it started to feel intimate, even though it was the opposite of thatit represented the corporate obliteration of my privacy. The pregnancy ads reached me before a doctor would even agree to see me. Though your book was written before generative AI became so ubiquitous, I imagine youve thought about how it changes things. You write, As soon as I got pregnant, I typed what to do when you get pregnant in my phone, and now advertisers were supplying their own answers. What do the rise of AI and the dramatic changes in search mean for someone who gets pregnant today and goes online for answers? I just googled what to do when you get pregnant to see what Googles generative AI widget tells me now, and its largely spitting out commonsensical recommendations: Make an appointment to see a doctor. Stop smoking cigarettes. That is followed by sponsored content from Babylist, an online baby registry company that is deeply enmeshed in the ad-tech system, and Perelel, a startup that sells expensive prenatal supplements. So whether or not the search engine is using AI, the information its providing to the newly pregnant is not particularly helpful or meaningful. The Clue period-tracking appAMIE CHUNG/TRUNK ARCHIVE The internet made me feel like I had some kind of relationship with my phone, when all it was really doing was staging a scene of information that it could monetize. For me, the oddly tantalizing thing was that I had asked the internet a question and it gave me something in response, as if we had a reciprocal relationship. So even before AI was embedded in these systems, they were fulfilling the same role for meas a kind of synthetic conversation partner. It made me feel like I had some kind of relationship with my phone, when all it was really doing was staging a scene of information that it could monetize. As I wrote the book, I did put some pregnancy-related questions to ChatGPT to try to get a sense of the values and assumptions that are encoded in its knowledge base. I asked for an image of a fetus, and it provided this garishly cartoonish, big-eyed cherub in response. But when I asked for a realistic image of a postpartum body, it refused to generate one for me! It was really an extension of something I write about in the book, which is that the image of the fetus is fetishized in a lot of these tech products while the pregnant or postpartum body is largely erased. You have this greatbut quite sadquote from a woman on TikTok who said, I keep hearing it takes a village to raise a child. Do they just show up, or is there a number to call? I really identified with that sentiment, while at the same time being suspicious of this idea that can we just call a hotline to conjure this village? I am really interested that so many parent-focused technologies sell themselves this way. [The pediatrician] Harvey Karp says that the Snoo, this robotic crib he created, is the new village. The parenting site Big Little Feelings describes its podcast listeners as a village. The maternity clothing brand Bumpsuit produces a podcast thats actually called The Village. By using that phrase, these companies are evoking an idealized past that may never have existed, to sell consumer solutions. A society that provides communal support for children and parents is pitched as this ancient and irretrievable idea, as opposed to something that we could build in the future if we wanted to. It will take more than just, like, ordering something. And the benefit of many of those robotic or smart products seems a bit nebulous. You share, for example, that the Nanit baby monitor told you your son was sleeping more efficiently than 96% of babies, a solid A. Im skeptical of this idea that a piece of consumer technology will really solve a serious problem families or children have. And if it does solve that problem, it only solves it for people who can afford it, which is reprehensible on some level. These products might create a positive difference for how long your baby is sleeping or how easy the diaper is to put on or whatever, but they are Band-Aids on a larger problem. I often found when I was testing out some of these products that the data [provided] was completely useless. My friend who uses the Nanit texted me the other day because she had found a new feature on its camera that showed you a heat map of where your baby had slept in the crib the night before. There is no use for that information, but when you see the heat map, you can try to interpret it to get some useless clues to your babys personality. Its like a BuzzFeed quiz for your baby, where you can say, Oh, hes such, like, a right-side king, or Hes a down-the-middle guy, or whatever. The Snoo Smart Sleeper BassinetCOURTESY OF HAPPIEST BABY [Companies are] marketing a cure for the parents anxiety, but the product itself is attached to the body of a newborn child. These products encourage you to see your child themselves as an extension of the technology; Karp even talks about there being an on switch and an off switch in your baby for soothing. So if you do the right set of movements to activate the right switch, you can make the baby acquire some desirable trait, which I think is just an extension of this idea that your child can be under your complete control. which is very much the fantasy when youre a parent. These devices are often marketed as quasi-medical devices. Theres a converging of consumer and medical categories in baby consumer tech, where the products are marketed as useful to any potential baby, including one who has a serious medical diagnosis or one who is completely healthy. These companies still want you to put a pulse oximeter on a healthy baby, just in case. Theyre marketing a cure for the parents anxiety, but the product itself is attached to the body of a newborn child. After spending so much time in hospital settings with my child hooked up to monitors, I was really excited to end that. So Im interested in this opposite reaction, where theres this urge to extend that experience, to take personal control of something that feels medical. Even though I would search out any medical treatment that would help keep my kids healthy, childhood medical experiences can cause a lot of confusion and trauma for kids and their families, even when the results are positive. When you take that medical experience and turn it into something thats very sleek and fits in your color scheme and is totally under your control, I think it can feel like you are seizing authority over that scary space. Another thing you write about is how images define idealized versions of pregnancy and motherhood. I became interested in a famous photograph that a Swedish photographer named Lennart Nilsson took in the 1960s that was published on the cover of Life magazine. Its an image of a 20-week-old fetus, and its advertised as the worlds first glimpse of life inside the womb. I bought a copy of the issue off eBay and opened the issue to find a little editors note saying that the cover fetus was actually a fetus that had been removed from its mothers body through surgery. It wasnt a picture of lifeit was a picture of an abortion. I was interested in how Nilsson staged this fetal body to make it look celestial, like it was floating in space, and I recognized a lot of the elements of his work being incorporated in the tech products that I was using, like the CGI fetus generated by my pregnancy app, Flo. You also write about the images being provided at nonmedical sonogram clinics. I was trying to google the address of a medical imaging center during my pregnancy when I came across a commercial sonogram clinic. There are hundreds of them around the country, with cutesy names like Cherished Memories and You Kiss We Tell. In the book I explore how technologies like ultrasound are used as essentially narrative devices, shaping the way that people think about their bodies and their pregnancies. Ultrasound is odd because its a medical technology thats used to diagnose dangerous and scary conditions, but prospective parents are encouraged to view it as a kind of entertainment service while its happening. These commercial sonogram clinics interest me because they promise to completely banish the medical associations of the technology and elevate it into a pure consumer experience. The Nanit Pro baby monitor with Flex StandCOURTESY OF NANIT You write about natural childbirth, which, on the face of it, would seem counter to the digital age. As you note, the movement has always been about storytelling, and the story that its telling is really about pain. When I was pregnant, I became really fascinated with people who discuss freebirth online, which is a practice on the very extreme end of natural childbirth ritualswhere people give birth at home unassisted, with no obstetrician, midwife, or doula present. Sometimes they also refuse ultrasounds, vaccinations, or all prenatal care. I was interested in how this refusal of medical technology was being technologically promoted, through podcasts, YouTube videos, and Facebook groups. It struck me that a lot of the freebirth influencers I saw were interested in exerting supreme control over their pregnancies and children, leaving nothing under the power of medical experts or government regulators. And they were also interested in controlling the narratives of their birthsmaking sure that the moment their children came into the world was staged with compelling imagery that centered them as the protagonist of the event. Video evidence of the most extreme exampleslike the woman who freebirthed into the oceancould go viral and launch the freebirthers personal brand as a digital wellness guru in her own right. The phrase natural childbirth was coined by a British doctor, Grantly Dick-Read, in the 1920s. Theres a very funny section in his book for prospective mothers where he complains that women keep telling each other that childbirth hurts, and he claimed that the very idea that childbirth hurts was what created the pain, because birthing women were acting too tense. Dick-Read, like many of his contemporaries, had a racist theory that women he called primitive experienced no pain in childbirth because they hadnt been exposed to white middle-class education and technologies. When I read his work, I was fascinated by the fact that he also described birth as a kind of performance, even back then. He claimed that undisturbed childbirths were totally painless, and he coached women through labor in an attempt to achieve them. Painless childbirth was pitched as a reward for reaching this peak state of natural femininity. He was really into eugenics, by the way! I see a lot of him in the current presentation of natural childbirth online[proponents] are still invested in a kind of denial, or suppression, of a womans actual experience in the pursuit of some unattainable ideal. Recently, I saw one Instagram post from a woman who claimed to have had a supernaturally pain-free childbirth, and she looks so pained and miserable in the photos, its absurd. I wanted to ask you about Clue and Flo, two very different period-tracking apps. Their contrasting origin stories are striking. I downloaded Flo as my period-tracking app many years ago for one reason: It was the first app that came up when I searched in the app store. Later, when I looked into its origins, I found that Flo was created by two brothers, cisgender men who do not menstruate, and that it had quickly outperformed and outearned an existing period-tracking app, Clue, which was created by a woman, Ida Tin, a few years earlier. The elements that make an app profitable and successful are not the same as the ones that users may actually want or need. My experience with Flo, especially after I became pregnant, was that it seemed designed to get me to open the app as frequently as possible, even if it didnt have any new information to provide me about my pregnancy. Flo pitches itself as a kind of artificial nurse, even though it cant actually examine you or your baby, but this kind of digital substitute has also become increasingly powerful as inequities in maternity care widen and decent care becomes less accessible. Doctors and nurses test pregnant women for drugs without their explicit consent or tip off authorities to pregnant people they suspect of mishandling their pregnancies in some way. One of the features of Flo I spent a lot of time with was its Secret Chats area, where anonymous users come together to go off about pregnancy. It was actually really fun, and it kept me coming back to Flo again and again, especially when I wasnt discussing my pregnancy with people in real life. But it was also the place where I learned that digital connections are not nearly as helpful as physical connections; you cant come over and help the anonymous secret chat friend soothe her baby. Id asked Ida Tin if she considered adding a social or chat element to Clue, and she told me that she decided against it because its impossible to stem the misinformation that surfaces in a space like that. You write that Flo made it seem like I was making the empowered choice by surveilling myself. After Roe was overturned, many women publicly opted out of that sort of surveillance by deleting their period-tracking apps. But you mention that its not just the apps that are sharing information. When I spoke to attorneys who defend women in pregnancy criminalization cases, I found that they had not yet seen a case in which the government actually relied on data from those apps. In some cases, they have relied on users Google searches and Facebook messages, but far and away the central surveillance source that governments use is the medical system itself. Doctors and nurses test pregnant women for drugs without their explicit consent or tip off authorities to pregnant people they suspect of mishandling their pregnancies in some way. Im interested in the fact that media coverage has focused so much on the potential danger of period apps and less on the real, established threat. I think its because it provides a deceptively simple solution: Just delete your period app to protect yourself. Its much harder to dismantle the surveillance systems that are actually in place. You cant just delete your doctor. This interview, which was conducted by phone and email, has been condensed and edited.
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  • AGE360 tower features a structural gridded faade that proposes "raw simplicity" in Brazil
    worldarchitecture.org
    html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd"French-Brazilian firm Triptyque and Architects Office have built a skyscraper that features a structural gridded faade that proposes "raw simplicity inspired by brutalism" in Curitiba, Brazil.Named AGE360, the 18,000-square-metre tower suggests an innovative living space design that blends individual flats with communal spaces devoted to well-being and body.Image Manuel SThis idea, which draws inspiration from historic gymnasiums, reimagines housing through the integration of sports facilities, meditation areas, and care centers.This creates a healthy ecosystem between the body, mind, and community, all within an architectural framework that prioritizes sustainability and wellness.Image Manuel S"Adding the collective function of sports to a residential building is about much more than enhancing the living space: it is about redefining housing as a place of holistic growth," explained Olivier Raffaelli, co-founder of the agency."Housing is no longer just a shelter, but becomes a framework that supports and questions the body, especially in an era marked by the acceleration of the worlds virtualization," Raffaelli added.Image Manuel SThe tower's load-bearing faade allows for comprehensive plan reversibility and liberates the interior spaces from structural restrictions. Its lightweight, totally glass faade connects the occupants to the outside world by providing panoramic views of Curitiba, while the structural grid is broken up to create communal areas devoted to sports and well-being.Image Manuel S"One of the major urban challenges is to rethink the envelopes of high-rise buildings and design them according to the principle of thick faades that are both sun-protected and inhabited," added Guillaume Sibaud, also a co-founder."The constant relationship with outdoor spaces makes this type of living environment desirable. We sought to reduce architecture to its essentials: structure, light, sky, and the quality of the spaces.""This raw simplicity, inspired by brutalism, refocuses the architectural experience on what truly matters," Sibaud added.Image Manuel SThe location at the base of the tower creates two interactions: a ground-level direct connection to the city and the restoration of an area covered in dense native plant that combines nature with urbanity. Curitiba's skyline is determined by its unique and graceful silhouette, which was created in accordance with urban planning setbacks.Image Gustav LiliequistThis project, the first in Brazil to be named a Wellness Building, exemplifies the concepts of psychological well-being. Additionally, it received the 2022 Rethinking the Future award and was certified by the Green Building Council and Fitwel."Every decision was guided by functionality, but resulted in something poetically integrated into the urban and natural context," concluded Greg Bousquet, founder of Architects Office.Image Manuel SImage Gustav LiliequistImage Manuel SPreviously, Triptyque Architecture together with Philippe Starck designed a mixed-use building, including a hotel by Paris Society, a co-working, and a dynamic healthcare-focused center in Paris, France.The French-Brazilian architectural and urban design firm Triptyque is renowned for its rationalist and naturalism approaches. It is led by founding partners Guillaume Sibaud and Olivier Raffalli, who received their training at the Paris Institute of Urbanism and the Paris La Seine School of Architecture.After 21 years of a career that included projects and accolades all over the world as one of the founders of Triptyque architectural, Greg Bousquet launched Architects Office, a worldwide architectural, urbanism, and interior design firm.Project factsProject name:AGE360Architects: Triptyque + Architects OfficeLocation:Curitiba, BrazilDate:2017 2024Client:AG7 RealtyArea:18.000m2Interior Design: Suite ArquiteturaLandscape:Renata Tilli PaisagismoLighting design: Studio Carlos FortesHealth and Wellness:Lapinha SpaTop image in the article Manuel S.All images Triptyque, Gustav Liliequist, Manuel S.> via Triptyque + Architects Office
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  • Fewer than one in four high-rise resi projects have received gateway 3 final safety stage sign-off
    www.bdonline.co.uk
    Just seven schemes out of 40 applications received last year get green light from regulatorLess than a quarter of finished high-rise housing projects that have applied for completion certificates from the new safety regulator have so far received a decision, Building Design can reveal.Amid continuing industry concern over the operation of the Building Safety Regulator (BSR), the organisation said just seven out the 40 projects which applied in 2024 for the final building control approval necessary to allow residents to move in have so far received it.Under the new post-Grenfell system for regulating construction work on housing schemes taller than 18 metres (HRBs), developers or firms carrying out remediation work must seek approval at three distinct gateway points.Source: ShutterstockUnder new safety rules, residential schemes above 18m have to pass a series of gateway points to get get built and occupiedFirms have already raised concernsabout the length of time it has been taking the new Building Safety Regulator to respond to gateway 2 applications, approvals for which are needed to allow construction to start on site.However, buyers and developers are also starting to express fears about delays at the post-construction gateway 3 stage, where a completion certificate must be issued before the building can be occupied.One buyer of a flat in a new-build HRB told Building Design his developer has told him it has been waiting since October for gateway 3 sign-off for the completed homes from the regulator, and that the developer last week said the regulator was still not able to give them a timeline for the buyers to complete on their purchases, although the case is progressing.The regulator told Building Design that it made decisions on 23% of the 40 applications for gateway 3 approval received in 2024, with seven of the 40 approved, and two rejected. Regulations stipulate the BSR is required to respond to gateway 3 applications within eight weeks.Matt Voyce, executive director of construction at high-rise developer Quintain, which has a number of schemes held up by the gateway checks, including at gateway 3, said he wasnt surprised by the figures and that the organisations performance cannot be acceptable as delays were creating a handbrake to residential investment.He said Quintain had a completed 185-home scheme with 104 affordable homes which was sat empty awaiting gateway 3 approval. He said: Residential viability is on a knife edge and the BSR risks are tipping the scales in favour of developer doing nothing, resulting in fewer homes being delivered and governments ambitious housing targets being missed.The delays in approving gateway 3 applications will result in completed buildings sitting empty, affecting income streams and financing covenants for developers.The news comes days after the government promised to put in 2m of funding to support the regulator in approving high rise schemes via a new cladding remediation enforcement unit.It comes two weeks after the body said it accepted that its model of outsourcingthe processing of applications was not working as well as anticipated and had contributed to delays. The regulator has also blamed the poor quality of applications from many firms for the delays seen at gateway 2.A spokesperson for the Health & Safety Executive, in which the regulator is housed, said that the BSR accepted that nine projects inherited from the collapse of private building control firm AIS had experienced delays at Gateway 3, but that others were progressing through their 8-week assessment period.The spokesperson said: Essentially there are no issues at GW3, taking out the transitional [AIS] cases.The spokesperson added that the new funding will help the timescales on progressing compliantEarlier this month, McLaren suggestedprivate developers could help fund an initiative to speed up decisions at the gateway 2 stage while others raising concerns about the issue have included the trade body for piling specialistswhich has warned its members are deferring investment decisions while others are looking at lay-offs.
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  • Seven projects shortlisted for RIBA North West Awards
    www.bdonline.co.uk
    Sheppard Robson, Cullinan Studio and Shedkm all in running for regional gongThe School of Science, Engineering and Environment by Sheppard RobsonSource: Jack HobhouseAviva Studios by OMASource: Marco CappellettiLangdale Chase Hotel by Campbell Driver Partnership LtdSource: Daniel Twaites PLCThe Municipal Hotel & Spa by Falconer Chester HallSource: MGallery Infinite3DThe Catkin Centre and Sunflower House by Cullinan Studio and 10architectSource: Paul RafteryVestige by Smith Young ArchitectsSource: Daniel HopkinsonLighthouse Church by ShedkmSource: Daniel Hopkinson PhotographyThe Municipal Hotel & Spa by Falconer Chester HallSource: MGallery, Louis Sinclair1/8show captionSeven projects have been shortlisted for this years RIBA North West Awards, including a childrens mental health clinic and a grade II*-listed Victorian council office transformed into a hotel.The Catkin Centre and Sunflower House, designed by Cullinan Studio with 10architect, is a pair of buildings in Liverpool designed for Alder Hey Childrens NHS Foundation Trust.Also in Liverpool, Falconer Chester Halls Municipal Hotel and Spa is a refurbishment of a former council office built in the 1860s which has been extended to the rear with a four-storey extension.The two schemes are joined on the shortlist by OMAs Aviva Studios, an arts venue in Manchester built for the local city council and Factory International, and a church in the Wirral designed by Shedkm.Sheppard Robsons School of Science, Engineering and Environment Building for the University of Salford has also made it to the final seven.RIBA North West Jury Chair Dominic Wilkinson, Principal Lecturer Liverpool John Moores University, said this years shortlist demonstrates the regions ongoing ambition to create high quality architecture, with a strong selection of projects across a range of scales.Public buildings are well represented with a commitment to excellence which offers hope for the civic realm.From small houses to large events venues, and from new builds to creative adaptation of historic structures, the shortlisted projects highlight a serious commitment to minimising carbon footprints and reducing the environmental impact of the construction sector, displaying the positive role architecture plays for both clients and the wider community.All projects shortlisted for RIBA Awards will be visited by a regional jury, and the winning projects will be announced later this spring.The winners will then be considered for several RIBA Special Awards, including the RIBA Sustainability Award and RIBA Building of the Year, before being considered for a RIBA National Award, which will be announced in summer.The shortlist for the RIBA Stirling Prize will be drawn from the RIBA National Award-winning projects and announced in September, with a winner to be announced in October.The full 2025 RIBA North West Awards shortlistAviva Studios Factory International by OMALangdale Chase Hotel by Campbell Driver Partnership Ltd.Lighthouse Church by shedkmThe Catkin Centre and Sunflower House by Cullinan Studio with 10architectThe Municipal Hotel & Spa by M:Gallery by Falconer Chester HallThe School of Science, Engineering and Environment (SEE) Building, University of Salford by Sheppard RobsonVestige by Smith Young Architects
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  • I Work From Home. Does That Make My Internet a Tax Write-Off?
    www.cnet.com
    You may be able to get back some of your remote-work internet expenses but don't count on it.
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