• Realmes making an Ultra smartphone with a massive camera inside
    www.digitaltrends.com
    html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd" Realme is teasing an exciting camera announcement at MWC 2025, and is also jumping on the Ultra naming bandwagon for the phone it will reside in, a space already occupied by Samsung, Xiaomi, Motorola, and likely many others too. The name does have some meaning though, as Realme claims it has an ultra-large sensor.The camera sensor is destined to be part of an unannounced smartphone which likely will not be fully revealed during MWC 2025, merely teased. What we do know already is that in addition to the ultra-large sensor which we expect to be a 1-inch sensor, much like the one inside phones such as the Xiaomi 14 Ultra it will also have a telephoto camera to take optical zoom photos.Recommended VideosRealme says it has been testing the camera and it shows, unprecedented advancements in portrait photography and low-light performance, and will set a new standard for smartphone photography, But then, it would say that. The last tease before the show is an image, where in front of the word Ultra in a bold font is a smartphone shrouded in shadow, notable for a gigantic camera module on one side of it.Realme 14 Pro Plus Andy Boxall / Digital TrendsRealmes plan for its new camera will be one part of the companys MWC 2025 showcase, and the other will be global release details for the Realme 14 series, including the Realme 14 Pro Plus. Announced in 2024, the Realme 14 Pro Plus is notable because the rear panel changes color depending on the temperature. It has an off-white finish with gold flecks when its quite warm, but when the temperature drops, the gold is joined by an icy blue. Its a striking effect, and genuinely changes the look of the phone. But if you live somewhere warm, then you may not see the blue color all that often.Please enable Javascript to view this contentRealme has its event set for March 3 at Mobile World Congress 2025, which takes place in Barcelona Spain between March 3 and March 6.Editors Recommendations
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  • EU Court Backs Italian Antitrust Ruling on Googles Android Auto Platform
    www.wsj.com
    EU Court of Justice judges said that Googles refusal to let Enel host an EV charging app on its platform might break EU competition rules.
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  • When did people start building houses with corners?
    www.newscientist.com
    Rectangular buildings became common from about 10,000 years ago, as seen in this reconstruction of the ancient city of atalhyk in Turkeyselimaksan/iStockphoto/Getty ImagesBuildings with corners have a much deeper history than we thought, adding an unexpected twist to a curious architectural mystery from the dawn of village life.Archaeologists have long been aware of a global trend in early architecture. From south-west Asia to the Americas, the very earliest settlements typically contained buildings with a round or oval-shaped ground plan. Then, usually a few thousand years later, these apparently went out of fashion, becoming
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  • How AI is used to surveil workers
    www.technologyreview.com
    This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To get stories like this in your inbox first,sign up here. Opaque algorithms meant to analyze worker productivity have been rapidly spreading through our workplaces, as detailed in a new must-read piece by Rebecca Ackermann, published Monday in MIT Technology Review. Since the pandemic, lots of companies have adopted software to analyze keystrokes or detect how much time workers are spending at their computers. The trend is driven by a suspicion that remote workers are less productive, though thats not broadly supported by economic research. Still, that belief is behind the efforts of Elon Musk, DOGE, and the Office of Personnel Management to roll back remote work for US federal employees. The focus on remote workers, though, misses another big part of the story: algorithmic decision-making in industries where people dont work at home. Gig workers like ride-share drivers might be kicked off their platforms by an algorithm, with no way to appeal. Productivity systems at Amazon warehouses dictated a pace of work that Amazons internal teams found would lead to more injuries, but the company implemented them anyway, according to a 2024 congressional report. Ackermann posits that these algorithmic tools are less about efficiency and more about control, which workers have less and less of. There are few laws requiring companies to offer transparency about what data is going into their productivity models and how decisions are made. Advocates say that individual eorts to push back against or evade electronic monitoring are not enough, she writes. The technology is too widespread and the stakes too high. Productivity tools dont just track work, Ackermann writes. They reshape the relationship between workers and those in power. Labor groups are pushing back against that shift in power by seeking to make the algorithms that fuel management decisions more transparent. The full piece contains so much that surprised me about the widening scope of productivity tools and the very limited means that workers have to understand what goes into them. As the pursuit of efficiency gains political influence in the US, the attitudes and technologies that transformed the private sector may now be extending to the public sector. Federal workers are already preparing for that shift, according to a new story in Wired. For some clues as to what that might mean, read Rebecca Ackermanns full story. Now read the rest of The Algorithm Deeper Learning Microsoft announced last week that it has made significant progress in its 20-year quest to make topological quantum bits, or qubitsa special approach to building quantum computers that could make them more stable and easier to scale up. Why it matters: Quantum computers promise to crunch computations faster than any conventional computer humans could ever build, which could mean faster discovery of new drugs and scientific breakthroughs. The problem is that qubitsthe unit of information in quantum computing, rather than the typical 1s and 0sare very, very finicky. Microsofts new type of qubit is supposed to make fragile quantum states easier to maintain, but scientists outside the project say theres a long way to go before the technology can be proved to work as intended. And on top of that, some experts are asking whether rapid advances in applying AI to scientific problems could negate any real need for quantum computers at all. Read more from Rachel Courtland. Bits and Bytes Xs AI model appears to have briefly censored unflattering mentions of Trump and Musk Elon Musk has long alleged that AI models suppress conservative speech. In response, he promised that his company xAIs AI model, Grok, would be maximally truth-seeking" (though, as weve pointed out previously, making things up is just what AI does). Over last weekend, users noticed that if you asked Grok about who is the biggest spreader of misinformation, the model reported it was explicitly instructed not to mention Donald Trump or Elon Musk. An engineering lead at xAI said an unnamed employee had made this change, but its now been reversed. (TechCrunch) Figure demoed humanoid robots that can work together to put your groceries away Humanoid robots arent typically very good at working with one another. But the robotics company Figure showed off two humanoids helping each other put groceries away, another sign that general AI models for robotics are helping them learn faster than ever before. However, weve written about how videos featuring humanoid robots can be misleading, so take these developments with a grain of salt. (The Robot Report) OpenAI is shifting its allegiance from Microsoft to Softbank In calls with its investors, OpenAI has signaled that its weakening its ties to Microsoftits largest investorand partnering more closely with Softbank. The latter is now working on the Stargate project, a $500 billion effort to build data centers that will support the bulk of the computing power needed for OpenAIs ambitious AI plans. (The Information) Humane is shutting down the AI Pin and selling its remnants to HP One big debate in AI is whether the technology will require its own piece of hardware. Rather than just conversing with AI on our phones, will we need some sort of dedicated device to talk to? Humane got investments from Sam Altman and others to build just that, in the form of a badge worn on your chest. But after poor reviews and sluggish sales, last week the company announced it would shut down. (The Verge) Schools are replacing counselors with chatbots School districts, dealing with a shortage of counselors, are rolling out AI-powered well-being companions for students to text with. But experts have pointed out the dangers of relying on these tools and say the companies that make them often misrepresent their capabilities and effectiveness. (The Wall Street Journal) What dismantling Americas leadership in scientific research will mean Federal workers spoke to MIT Technology Review about the efforts by DOGE and others to slash funding for scientific research. They say it could lead to long-lasting, perhaps irreparable damage to everything from the quality of health care to the publics access to next-generation consumer technologies. (MIT Technology Review) Your most important customer may be AI People are relying more and more on AI models like ChatGPT for recommendations, which means brands are realizing they have to figure out how to rank higher, much as they do with traditional search results. Doing so is a challenge, since AI model makers offer few insights into how they form recommendations. (MIT Technology Review)
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  • Verizon to rival AT&T employees: Come work here if you don't like 5 days in office
    www.businessinsider.com
    Verizon is seemingly looking to capitalize on rival AT&T's full-time RTO mandate.In a recruiting email, Verizon mentions remote and hybrid openings amid "changing RTO policies across the industry."AT&T told BI that its workers "always have a choice" about what company to work for.The rivalry between two of telecom's biggest players has taken a decidedly modern twist.Verizon is seemingly looking to capitalize on rival AT&T's full-time RTO mandate by reaching out to AT&T employees who may not be keen on working five days a week in the office.In an email sent to multiple AT&T employees obtained by Business Insider, Verizon's talent team encouraged recipients to explore the company's hybrid and remote job opportunities."Following the news of changing RTO policies across the industry, we're reaching out to share helpful resources and potential hybrid/remote job opportunities across Verizon," the email said."If you have been personally affected by organizational policy changes or know anyone who has, we're looking to add top talent to the V Team," the email continued. Verizon declined to comment.While it's common for companies to recruit from their competitors, Verizon's outreach highlights how 5-day office mandates have become a sticking point for some workers in recent months.AT&T told BI that its workers "always have a choice to pick the type of company and work environment they wish to be part of.""We desire individuals who wish to work in a dynamic and challenging team environment with strong relationships and collaboration fostered by in-office constructs," AT&T added.The recruiting message comes as AT&T has had to navigate a rocky return to office this year, with some employees describing to BI a lack of desk space, parking shortages, and shifting guidance about the policy.As of Monday afternoon, Verizon's job listings website showed openings for more than 1,200 roles across the US, of which 10 were remote. Listings for several full-time positions require eight days in the office per month, as determined by a manager.The Verizon email also references the company's support of DEI at a time when other large employers are backing away from the phrase."If you're looking for a culture of learning that fosters diversity, equity, and inclusion with room to grow, our V Team may be the place for you," the email said.Verizon job perks include up to $8,000 of annual tuition assistance, up to 5 weeks of paid time off, paid parental leave, as well as medical, dental, and vision coverage, the email said.While AT&T traces its origins to 1885, Verizon was formed in 2000 when one of the so-called Baby Bells spun off from AT&T in the 1980s merged with GTE.More recently, the two have been in a race to build out the nation's fiber optic network and extend 5G and satellite coverage.And although AT&T is now based in Dallas, its former New Jersey headquarters is now a major corporate campus for Verizon not to be confused with Bell Labs in Holmdel, which features in Apple TV's "Severance."If you are an AT&T worker who wants to share your perspective, please contact Dominick via email or text/call/Signal at 646.768.4750. Responses will be kept confidential, and Business Insider strongly recommends using a personal email and a non-work device when reaching out
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  • I booked 2 overnight Amtrak rides in roomettes 4 years apart. One difference made the second ride far more relaxing.
    www.businessinsider.com
    For my first overnight Amtrak ride in 2021, I booked a roomette on a Viewliner train.Then, in 2025, I booked a roomette on a newly upgraded Superliner train.The rooms had similar layouts, but modern upgrades made the second ride much cozier.I'll never forget my first overnight train trip in October 2021.I took an Amtrak Viewliner train from my home in New York City to Miami and spent the 30-hour ride in a roomette a 20-square-foot private cabin for $500. The reporter's overnight train arrives in Miami. Joey Hadden/Business Insider After spending the next three years sampling sleeper trains in Europe, I took another long-haul Amtrak journey from Denver to Salt Lake City in January. This ride was on a Superliner train, and it was only 15 hours.I booked the same accommodation a roomette for $400 which had the same basic layout with a couple of differences.Overall, the second roomette had modern updates, making my train ride more comfortable.Amtrak sleeper trains from east to west An Amtrak Superliner in Denver. Joey Hadden/Business Insider Amtrak's Viewliner fleet takes overnight riders through the eastern and southern US, and the train line's Superliner fleet carries passengers west of Chicago and New Orleans.The main difference between the two fleets is size. The Viewliner is a one-story train, while the Superliner is two stories and includes an additional communal car on the top floor for sightseeing. The second story of an Amtrak Superliner. Joey Hadden/Business Insider Amtrak is updating the roughly 30-to-50-year-old Superliner cars, and about 76% of the fleet has already been refreshed, including the train I took, Amtrak spokesman Marc Magliari told Business Insider.The Viewliners are a bit newer than the Superliner cars the first Viewliner train was delivered in the late '90s, according to Magliari. Still, he said many of the one-story trains would also get an interior update in 2026.Viewliner vs. Superliner roomettes A peek inside a roomette on a Viewliner train. Joey Hadden/Business Insider Before we get into the upgrades, there is a notable difference between the roomettes on these two trains.Both roomettes sleep up to two people, with two chairs forming a lower bunk and another pulling down from the ceiling. They both also have mirrors, small closets, and pullout tables. The toilet and sink inside the Viewliner roomette. Joey Hadden/Business Insider Some Viewliner roomettes also squeeze in a toilet, and they all include a sink, so travelers don't have to use the shared bathrooms in the car.The Superliner roomettes don't have plumbing, so guests must use the shared bathrooms. A shared bathroom in the Superliner sleeping car. Joey Hadden/Business Insider Fresh seat cushionsThe most important upgrade to me was the seats.When I stepped inside the Superliner roomette, I immediately noticed the seats looked like they'd never been used.I'm sure that's not true, but I didn't find one sign of wear or crust of dirt on either seat. Sitting in one for the first time felt like sampling a recliner at a furniture store. The reporter's seat in the Superliner roomette. Joey Hadden/Business Insider Magliari told BI that the old blue cloth seats had been replaced with soft vinyl."The seats have the same frame, but the cushions are new. And there's more lumbar support in this current seat cushion design than the old seat cushion design," he said. "If you see gray, vinyl seating, then you know that you are in a fresh room."A comfy seat makes a cozy bedMy upper bunk on the Viewliner felt like a cot, and my lower bunk on the Superliner felt more like a mattress. The reporter wakes up in the top bunk of her roomette on the Viewliner train. Joey Hadden/Business Insider I selected the upper bunk in the Viewliner roomette because I'd never been on an overnight train before, and sleeping up top felt more adventurous.It kind of was but not in a good way. The suspended bunk shook throughout the night from the turbulence of the train. I couldn't find a comfortable position on the stiff mattress and tossed and turned through the night.I haven't slept on a train's top bunk since, but being on the ground wasn't the only thing that made the Superliner bunk feel more like a bed. The reclined seat cushions had a bit more give to them, and the soft vinyl felt smoother on my skin. The reporter's lower bunk on the Amtrak Superliner. Joey Hadden/Business Insider Seeing the difference in comfort after four years got me stoked about the future of overnight Amtrak travel.In the future, you'll catch me on an upgraded Viewliner.
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  • Floridas iconic corals arent having babies anymore. Scientists are alarmed.
    www.vox.com
    Once a year, typically after sunset in the late summer, the coral baby-making process begins.Large colonies of coral spawn, spewing out sperm and eggs, often in pea-size bundles, that drift around until they encounter the spawn of other corals. Fertilized eggs turn into coral larvae tiny and squishy free-swimming organisms which eventually settle on the seafloor. There they metamorphose, like a caterpillar to a butterfly, into a coral polyp. Those polyps clone themselves over and over again, eventually forming larger coral colonies that build reefs.Thats how typical reef-building corals, like the iconic elkhorn and staghorn species, with their antler-like appearance, produce offspring. Thats how theyve been doing it for millions of years.But in Florida, this process is broken.Most species of hard corals that form the reefs complex structure and help safeguard coastal communities from storm surge are not having babies in the wild anymore, top marine ecologists told me. For at least a decade, and likely longer, researchers have barely found any new coral babies or juveniles of most hard corals during surveys in South Florida and the Florida Keys, home to the largest coral reef in the continental US. Were just not seeing new babies, said Scott Winters, CEO of Coral Restoration Foundation, a conservation group.While many of these corals are still spawning in the wild the part where they release sperm and eggs something is preventing that spawn from eventually growing into polyps, or babies, Winters, and other experts said.This is a serious problem for a long embattled reef.Floridas reef ecosystem has been facing a near-constant barrage of disturbances, from marine heatwaves and hurricanes to disease and pollution. These threats have killed off most of the live hard coral in the Florida Keys. And should the reefs reproductive woes persist, it may never recover or even survive on its own. While corals can reproduce asexually by cloning themselves sexual reproduction is incredibly important because it introduces new genetic diversity that helps corals adapt to the increasingly hostile ocean conditions.Now, to keep Floridas reef alive, scientists have to breed corals almost entirely in labs on land, where the water is clean and comfortably warm. Margaret Miller, a coral reproductive biologist, says its a sign that reef conservation is in a new era one in which saving corals requires managing them under human care.Why arent corals making babies?We just dont know, Winters said.Theres no one explanation for the baby bust, marine scientists told me. Rather, each step of the reproductive process has likely been compromised to some degree.Over the last few decades, coral reefs in Florida and across much of the Caribbean have lost an enormous amount of their large, adult coral colonies that can spawn. Around 2014, a nasty affliction called Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease began spreading in Florida, killing tens of millions of colonies and nearly exterminating the local population of some species. A marine heatwave in 2023, the worst on record, dealt another powerful blow, causing many more colonies to bleach and die.That means there simply arent many corals left to reproduce. And even those that have survived might not spawn because theyve been stressed out by bleaching, disease, or other threats. Instead, they just put energy towards staying alive.Corals that do spawn run into another problem: With so few colonies left, corals are often too far away from each other for their spawn to meet and produce fertilized eggs. Theyre like a bunch of sexually active singles that dont live close enough to hook up. For many species, we suspect that theyre probably too far apart to successfully fertilize, said Nick Jones, a research scientist at Nova Southeastern University. Theyre just not meeting.New research suggests that corals need to be within roughly 30 feet of each other in order for the sperm of one to fertilize the eggs of another. (This is a problem impacting other sea creatures in Florida, as well: Individuals are too isolated to find each other and mate.)But even if coral eggs do become fertilized and grow into larvae, they face additional challenges.In the first few days of their lives, coral larvae need to attach themselves to a bare patch of seafloor, in a process called settling. And once they find a place to settle, they metamorphose into a baby coral. In Florida and much of the Caribbean, however, theres hardly any free space. Its all covered in seaweed, or macroalgae. In recent decades, seaweed has grown out of control thanks to a die-off of algae-eating animals, such as large sea urchins, and pollution.Even if you have adequate larval supply, the habitat where you want them to settle and grow up is not particularly healthy, said Miller, research director at SECORE International, a coral restoration organization.Making things worse, coral larvae that come from stressed out parents are likely weak and may run out of energy before they can find a suitable place to settle, said Nicole Fogarty, a marine biologist at University of North Carolina Wilmington. Even the larvae that do settle and transform into baby corals have to deal with the same disturbances that threaten adults, including pollution, heatwaves, and disease.Together, these challenges have upended coral sexual reproduction for most hard, reef-building corals in Florida. Thats why when researchers go looking for babies, they hardly find any. For one study, published in 2023, scientists, including Fogarty, put out more than 5,000 terracotta tiles across the Florida Keys, on which baby corals are known to grow. Over three years, they didnt detect a single baby coral from the genus Orbicella, a key reef-building variety that produces large, lumpy mounds. They found just one baby from the genus Acropora, which includes staghorn and elkhorn corals. Recent research in Southeast Florida found a similarly small number of reef-building babies.There are exceptions: A handful of hard corals are still producing offspring, including a reef-building species called the massive starlet coral. Yet most of them, besides the starlet, are considered weedy meaning, theyre common and more resistant to threats like warming and disease. And while the starlet coral is making babies, those youngins are still struggling to grow due to the sheer frequency of disturbances, Jones said.A new era for reef conservationCoral reefs can, to an extent, survive without making babies. Polyps can clone themselves. If you break off a small piece of coral containing a polyp or more from a colony, it will continue to grow and build its own colony. This is similar to how a houseplant cutting can eventually turn into a full-size plant.But this reproductive strategy has limitations. Different pieces of the same coral colony are, for the most part, genetically identical. And that can leave them vulnerable to threats like warming and disease. A corals ability to tolerate stress is, to an extent, determined by its genetics. The more genetic variety you have, the better chance that some individuals will survive. Resilience is rooted in diversity.Coupled with rising temperatures, a lack of sexual reproduction threatens the survival of Floridas coral reef. Reef-building species simply cant make it on their own. To keep coral populations alive, scientists have to intervene on an enormous scale. They bring coral populations out of the ocean and plop them into tanks on land, where they can ensure that water conditions are stable and survival is more certain. And there, they manually breed the colonies triggering them to spawn with water temperature and light, and mixing the sperm and eggs together to produce larvae.Contemporary coral conservation in Florida has become similar to efforts to save giant pandas, black-footed ferrets, and other incredibly rare species, Miller said: There are so few coral colonies left that scientists must bring them into captivity and carefully manage breeding, to avoid inbreeding and a loss of diversity. Gone are the days where simply protecting coral in the wild with a marine park was sufficient. Now conservation must happen in labs.Thats where the Florida corals are now, Miller said. Its literally a Noahs Ark approach.Its not just Florida. Reef-building corals throughout much of the Caribbean are heading in the same direction, Miller said, especially after the 2023 bleaching event. Caribbean corals, too, are struggling to produce babies.I think Florida is a harbinger of things to come, Winters told me.The good news is that lab-based coral breeding has been incredibly successful. Scientists can get corals to produce babies in tanks, and those babies tend to have a high survival rate. In captivity on land, ironically coral is healthy. Whats more is that researchers can, to an extent, breed corals that are more tolerant to heat or other stresses and then out-plant them, or adhere them to the seafloor to help restore the reef.But this isnt enough. The wild ocean is increasingly unfriendly to reef-building corals, as waters warm and storms become more powerful. Unless climate change is slowed, by limiting the carbon we release into the atmosphere, even the best coral breeding programs wont hold off extinction.Were raising corals in nice conditions on land, but when we out-plant them they dont tend to live particularly well because we havent addressed any of the causes that have led them to get to this position, Jones said. It is pretty depressing.The restoration that most of us have been doing in Florida has not suddenly led to a thriving reef system, Jones said. It cant be just conservation without government action.
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  • Floridas iconic corals arent having babies anymore. Scientists are alarmed.
    www.vox.com
    Once a year, typically after sunset in the late summer, the coral baby-making process begins.Large colonies of coral spawn, spewing out sperm and eggs, often in pea-size bundles, that drift around until they encounter the spawn of other corals. Fertilized eggs turn into coral larvae tiny and squishy free-swimming organisms which eventually settle on the seafloor. There they metamorphose, like a caterpillar to a butterfly, into a coral polyp. Those polyps clone themselves over and over again, eventually forming larger coral colonies that build reefs.Thats how typical reef-building corals, like the iconic elkhorn and staghorn species, with their antler-like appearance, produce offspring. Thats how theyve been doing it for millions of years.But in Florida, this process is broken.Most species of hard corals that form the reefs complex structure and help safeguard coastal communities from storm surge are not having babies in the wild anymore, top marine ecologists told me. For at least a decade, and likely longer, researchers have barely found any new coral babies or juveniles of most hard corals during surveys in South Florida and the Florida Keys, home to the largest coral reef in the continental US. Were just not seeing new babies, said Scott Winters, CEO of Coral Restoration Foundation, a conservation group.While many of these corals are still spawning in the wild the part where they release sperm and eggs something is preventing that spawn from eventually growing into polyps, or babies, Winters, and other experts said.An elkhorn coral in the Florida Keys that bleached during the 2023 marine heat wave. Jennifer AdlerThis is a serious problem for a long embattled reef. Floridas reef ecosystem has been facing a near-constant barrage of disturbances, from marine heatwaves and hurricanes to disease and pollution. These threats have killed off most of the live hard coral in the Florida Keys. And should the reefs reproductive woes persist, it may never recover or even survive on its own. While corals can reproduce asexually by cloning themselves sexual reproduction is incredibly important because it introduces new genetic diversity that helps corals adapt to the increasingly hostile ocean conditions.Now, to keep Floridas reef alive, scientists have to breed corals almost entirely in labs on land, where the water is clean and comfortably warm. Margaret Miller, a coral reproductive biologist, says its a sign that reef conservation is in a new era one in which saving corals requires managing them under human care.Why arent corals making babies?We just dont know, Winters said.Theres no one explanation for the baby bust, marine scientists told me. Rather, each step of the reproductive process has likely been compromised to some degree.Over the last few decades, coral reefs in Florida and across much of the Caribbean have lost an enormous amount of their large, adult coral colonies that can spawn. Around 2014, a nasty affliction called Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease began spreading in Florida, killing tens of millions of colonies and nearly exterminating the local population of some species. A marine heatwave in 2023, the worst on record, dealt another powerful blow, causing many more colonies to bleach and die.That means there simply arent many corals left to reproduce. And even those that have survived might not spawn because theyve been stressed out by bleaching, disease, or other threats. Instead, they just put energy towards staying alive.Corals that do spawn run into another problem: With so few colonies left, corals are often too far away from each other for their spawn to meet and produce fertilized eggs. Theyre like a bunch of sexually active singles that dont live close enough to hook up.For many species, we suspect that theyre probably too far apart to successfully fertilize, said Nick Jones, a research scientist at Nova Southeastern University. Theyre just not meeting.New research suggests that corals need to be within roughly 30 feet of each other in order for the sperm of one to fertilize the eggs of another. (This is a problem impacting other sea creatures in Florida, as well: Individuals are too isolated to find each other and mate.)But even if coral eggs do become fertilized and grow into larvae, they face additional challenges.In the first few days of their lives, coral larvae need to attach themselves to a bare patch of seafloor, in a process called settling. And once they find a place to settle, they metamorphose into a baby coral. In Florida and much of the Caribbean, however, theres hardly any free space. Its all covered in seaweed, or macroalgae. In recent decades, seaweed has grown out of control thanks to a die-off of algae-eating animals, such as large sea urchins, and pollution.Even if you have adequate larval supply, the habitat where you want them to settle and grow up is not particularly healthy, said Miller, research director at SECORE International, a coral restoration organization.Babies of the great star coral in a tank in the Florida Keys. Jennifer AdlerMaking things worse, coral larvae that come from stressed out parents are likely weak and may run out of energy before they can find a suitable place to settle, said Nicole Fogarty, a marine biologist at University of North Carolina Wilmington. Even the larvae that do settle and transform into baby corals have to deal with the same disturbances that threaten adults, including pollution, heatwaves, and disease.Together, these challenges have upended coral sexual reproduction for most hard, reef-building corals in Florida. Thats why when researchers go looking for babies, they hardly find any. For one study, published in 2023, scientists, including Fogarty, put out more than 5,000 terracotta tiles across the Florida Keys, on which baby corals are known to grow. Over three years, they didnt detect a single baby coral from the genus Orbicella, a key reef-building variety that produces large, lumpy mounds. They found just one baby from the genus Acropora, which includes staghorn and elkhorn corals. Recent research in Southeast Florida found a similarly small number of reef-building babies. There are exceptions: A handful of hard corals are still producing offspring, including a reef-building species called the massive starlet coral. Yet most of them, besides the starlet, are considered weedy meaning, theyre common and more resistant to threats like warming and disease. And while the starlet coral is making babies, those youngins are still struggling to grow due to the sheer frequency of disturbances, Jones said. Baby Acropora corals under UV light. Jennifer AdlerA new era for reef conservationCoral reefs can, to an extent, survive without making babies. Polyps can clone themselves. If you break off a small piece of coral containing a polyp or more from a colony, it will continue to grow and build its own colony. This is similar to how a houseplant cutting can eventually turn into a full-size plant.But this reproductive strategy has limitations. Different pieces of the same coral colony are, for the most part, genetically identical. And that can leave them vulnerable to threats like warming and disease. A corals ability to tolerate stress is, to an extent, determined by its genetics. The more genetic variety you have, the better chance that some individuals will survive. Resilience is rooted in diversity.Coupled with rising temperatures, a lack of sexual reproduction threatens the survival of Floridas coral reef. Reef-building species simply cant make it on their own. To keep coral populations alive, scientists have to intervene on an enormous scale. They bring coral populations out of the ocean and plop them into tanks on land, where they can ensure that water conditions are stable and survival is more certain. And there, they manually breed the colonies triggering them to spawn with water temperature and light, and mixing the sperm and eggs together to produce larvae.Contemporary coral conservation in Florida has become similar to efforts to save giant pandas, black-footed ferrets, and other incredibly rare species, Miller said: There are so few coral colonies left that scientists must bring them into captivity and carefully manage breeding, to avoid inbreeding and a loss of diversity. Gone are the days where simply protecting coral in the wild with a marine park was sufficient. Now conservation must happen in labs.Thats where the Florida corals are now, Miller said. Its literally a Noahs Ark approach.Young fragments of staghorn coral. Jennifer AdlerIts not just Florida. Reef-building corals throughout much of the Caribbean are heading in the same direction, Miller said, especially after the 2023 bleaching event. Caribbean corals, too, are struggling to produce babies.I think Florida is a harbinger of things to come, Winters told me.The good news is that lab-based coral breeding has been incredibly successful. Scientists can get corals to produce babies in tanks, and those babies tend to have a high survival rate. In captivity on land, ironically coral is healthy. Whats more is that researchers can, to an extent, breed corals that are more tolerant to heat or other stresses and then out-plant them, or adhere them to the seafloor to help restore the reef. But this isnt enough. The wild ocean is increasingly unfriendly to reef-building corals, as waters warm and storms become more powerful. Unless climate change is slowed, by limiting the carbon we release into the atmosphere, even the best coral breeding programs wont hold off extinction.Were raising corals in nice conditions on land, but when we out-plant them they dont tend to live particularly well because we havent addressed any of the causes that have led them to get to this position, Jones said. It is pretty depressing.The restoration that most of us have been doing in Florida has not suddenly led to a thriving reef system, Jones said. It cant be just conservation without government action. See More:
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  • PS5 owners get compensation for PSN problem but not the one you think
    metro.co.uk
    Have you been compensated yet? (Sony Interactive Entertainment)Sony has finally got round to compensating PlayStation owners for recent network problems, but not the one that made headlines earlier this month.Three weeks ago, the PlayStation Network went down right before the weekend, preventing people from playing games online and, in many cases, accessing their digital libraries.Although the situation only lasted for a day, it was long enough for Sony to promise compensation to those who had been affected. Other publishers, like Capcom, also offered to extend the special events they were running that weekend, to make up for the time lost.PlayStation owners have recently begun receiving compensation. Not for the network outage though, but instead for a largely forgotten incident that happened over Christmas.On December 24, PlayStation owners were unable to redeem voucher codes through the PlayStation Store. It was Christmas Eve, but even so, the issue wasnt widely reported and certainly wasnt as big of a deal as the network outage.Despite this incident happening two months ago, Sony has only now begun contacting account holders who were affected and gifting them $10 (8) in store credit.One such customer shared the email they were sent to PlayStation Lifestyle, which confirmed it is authentic and that the email has been sent out to other players worldwide.We are aware that on December 24, 2024, a systems error resulted in users being unable to redeem voucher codes on the PlayStation Store, and we have identified your account as one impacted by this error, reads the email.It adds that the customers voucher should now be redeemable if it hasnt been used already, which the customer confirmed is the case. So, Sony is compensating people even if they didnt lose their voucher to the error. Did you experience this issue on Christmas Eve? (PlayStation Lifestyle)While this is obviously good news, its curious that Sony is only now offering this compensation. Perhaps it took Sony this much time to figure out which accounts were affected but it does suggest those waiting to be compensated for the network outage will need to wait even longer.More TrendingAs a reminder, Sonys way of apologising for the outage is to give five free days of PlayStation Plus to anyone who had a subscription at the time the network went down.This already annoyed all the people who were similarly impacted by the outage and didnt have PlayStation Plus (meaning theyre getting no compensation at all), but it seems PlayStation Plus subscribers havent received their extra days yet anyway.A quick glance through X shows several people commenting on their lack of extra days over the past two weeks, directly tagging official PlayStation accounts for an explanation.If the aforementioned Christmas Eve compensation is anything to go by, then Sony may not send out those extra PlayStation Plus days for another couple of months. If your subscription is about to run out, you may want to redeem it yourself rather than wait for the extra five days (Sony)Emailgamecentral@metro.co.uk, leave a comment below,follow us on Twitter, andsign-up to our newsletter.To submit Inbox letters and Readers Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use ourSubmit Stuff page here.For more stories like this,check our Gaming page.GameCentralSign up for exclusive analysis, latest releases, and bonus community content.This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Your information will be used in line with our Privacy Policy
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  • Archaeologist Who Uncovered Pharaohs Tomb May Have Just Made an Even Bigger Find
    gizmodo.com
    By Adam Kovac Published February 25, 2025 | Comments (0) | The tomb of Thutmose II. Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities The stunning discovery of a pharaohs burial spot last week was a bombshell in the archaeology world. Not since Howard Carter located the tomb of the boy king Tutankhamun in 1922 had such a site been found. There was only one problem: the pharaohs body wasnt in the tomb. Now, the archaeologist who made the find believes he may have solved the case of the missing desiccated corpse. On February 18, the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities announced a joint Egyptian and British archaeological project had uncovered the first tomb of Thutmose II. Located near Luxor, just a few kilometers away from the Valley of the Kings, the tomb was found in a highly damaged state, likely due to flooding that occurred within six years of the pharaohs death. Despite the poor preservation, the team, led by British archaeologist Piers Litherland, was able to identify the tomb due to relics such as alabaster jars with the pharaohs name on them, as well as funerary furniture. Details of Thutmose IIs reign are scarce, due to a dearth of archaeological finds detailing his rule. He likely was in power between 1493 and 1479 BCE, though his actual time on the throne may have been as short as three years. The National Museum of Egyptian Civilization pegs his time on top at under five years. What is known is that he was the son of Thutmose I and one of his minor wives. He assumed power by marrying his half-sister Hatshepsut, who was the daughter of his dads principal wife. Families are complicated, amiright? Despite his likely short reign, he was known for several successful military campaigns, including ending several uprisings in Nubia and destroying a tribe in the Sinai. He was succeeded on the throne by his son, Thutmose III.As the first Egyptian royal burial spot uncovered in over 100 years, the tomb was a historic find, but an incomplete one, as Thutmose IIs mummified corpse was nowhere to be found. Less than a week after one career-defining discovery, Litherland now says he has made anotherand he has reason to believe the mummy is inside. You dream about such things, he told The Guardian. But like winning the lottery, you never believe it will happen to you.Inside a pit located in the first tomb, Litherland found an inscription stating that the pharaohs half-sister/wife had the contents moved. Litherland said he had reason to believe the king was interred in another tomb he had actually first discovered in 2022. Since then, he and his colleagues have been looking for a way inside, no easy feat given its buried beneath layers of rock and plaster. There are 23 meters of a pile of man-made layers sitting above a point in the landscape where we believeand we have other confirmatory evidencethere is a monument concealed beneath, Litherland said. The best candidate for what is hidden underneath this enormously expensive, in terms of effort, pile is the second tomb of Thutmose II. The workmen who constructed the tomb safeguarded it by not only paving a layer of mud plaster with ash on top, but by knocking huge boulders onto it, which were then plastered in place. Getting through all this safely has been a time-consuming effort, and Litherland estimated the job is halfway done and could be completed in a months time.There is some controversy over what Litherland might find once he gets inside. In 1881, the mummified body of a 30-year-old man was initially identified as Thutmose II, but Litherland believes its a case of mistaken identity. He said historical records indicate the pharaoh came to power as a young boy. Given that his reign was likely short, he probably died well before reaching 30. Here at Gizmodo, were people of science, so were not going to say this is a bad idea. That Curse of the Pharaohs stuff is almost definitely hokum, even if there were some odd deaths tied to the Tutankhamun discovery. Still, just as a precaution in case Thutmose II is in this tomb, does anyone know what Brendan Fraser has on his itinerary next month?Daily NewsletterYou May Also Like By Adam Kovac Published February 24, 2025 By Isaac Schultz Published February 20, 2025 By Margherita Bassi Published February 20, 2025 By Margherita Bassi Published February 16, 2025 By Margherita Bassi Published February 13, 2025 By Isaac Schultz Published February 6, 2025
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