• We’re nowhere near done with Framework Laptop 16 says Framework CEO
    www.theverge.com
    Two years ago, the last time Framework had an event in San Francisco, California, the highlight was the Framework Laptop 16 a laptop promising the holy grail of upgradable graphics cards, and easily one of the most ambitious laptops ever made.But today, the Framework Laptop 16 got little mention at its new event, which focused on the new, similarly gamer-oriented Framework Desktop instead. While the Desktop and Frameworks original 13-inch laptop both got the latest AMD processors today, we dont yet know if or when the Framework Laptop 16 might leap forward too.The only mention of Frameworks flagship laptop was a new One Key Module that will experimentally be available for the Framework community to build their own electromechanical keyboards, should they choose to, that would be thin enough to fit in the Laptop 16s extremely thin Input Module bay. (You can see how the Input Modules work in my video here.)While Framework did finally ship its promised M.2 adapter bay in December, which will let you stick extra SSDs or other peripherals into a Framework Laptop 16 instead of a discrete graphics card, my big question is: is the promising but somewhat problematic laptop a dead end, or will it get new mainboards and new chips in the future? I tracked down Framework CEO Nirav Patel at the event today, and he wouldnt say much, but he was clear on one thing: Were nowhere near done with Framework Laptop 16. I pushed my luck, asking: Is today the day he can assure us that the Laptop 16 will eventually see at least one GPU upgrade or snap-on secondary battery? Today is not that day, he told me. I want to see Framework succeed, and perhaps its too early to begin to wonder otherwise it was still shipping preordered batches of the Laptop 16 to buyers through the middle of last year. But weve pushed the company pretty hard on the GPU in the past specifically because its a thing rivals have tried and failed at before Dell/Alienware even got sued over the failed promise of the Alienware Area-51m, which never bothered to ship a second generation of its supposedly upgradable GPUs. Framework has resisted our pushes so far, stopping short of confirming it in our 2023 story: heres his exact language at the time. Itd be nice if Framework could assure buyers that the upgrades are absolutely coming. But personally, theres more than a few things about that laptop Id like to change, and I wouldnt be surprised if Framework was doing a bit of a rethink even if it does deliver.
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  • Razers new Blade 18 offers Nvidia RTX 50-series GPUs and a dual mode display
    www.theverge.com
    Razer is adding a fresh gaming laptop to the pile of new models up for preorder today: the Blade 18. Like its smaller (but far from small) Blade 16 cousin, the new Razer Blade 18 will come with Nvidias RTX 50-series GPUs and Intel Arrow Lake CPUs. But one major way it differs is its large 18-inch display, which has dual modes allowing it to run at either 3840 x 2400 at 240Hz or 1920 x 1200 at 440Hz.The Blade 18 will start at $3,199.99 with an RTX 5070 Ti and climb to $4,499.99 with an RTX 5090. But if either the Blade 18 or the already announced $2,799.99 Blade 16 are the right pricey option for you, youll have to wait until late-April for them to actually ship.Image: AsusRazer isnt the only PC manufacturer offering new gaming laptops for preorder today. As Nvidia already teased, a variety of new notebooks sporting RTX 50-series GPUs now have finalized pricing, and there are fresh offerings from the likes of Asus ROG, MSI, and HP. Back when many of these laptops were first announced at CES in January, they mostly had estimated prices or no pricing at all.Asuss flagship ROG Strix Scar 16, with its new wraparound RGB lighting, starts at $3,299.99 with an RTX 5080 GPU and $4,299.99 with a top-of-the-line RTX 5090. The sleeker Zephyrus G14, which is a Verge favorite for balancing gaming performance with everyday usability, starts at $2,499.99 with an RTX 5070 Ti. And the larger Zephyrus G16 starts with the same GPU at $2,699.99. The G14 can go up to the RTX 5080, but the G16 will go all the way to an RTX 5090 once those higher-end configurations come a little later.MSI has its RTX 5090-equipped Titan 18 HX AI is up for preorder for an astounding $5,999.99. (Thats not even MSIs ridiculous Dragon Edition Norse Myth, which is still listed as coming soon.) The company has some of its slightly more down-to-Earth gaming laptops up for preorder as well, like the Stealth 18 HX AI with an RTX 5070 Ti starting at $2,999.99.Lots of these gaming laptops are sitting at the high end with high prices, and some are more expensive than their last-gen versions with 40-series GPUs. Like, previous generations we may have to wait until cheaper mobile GPUs are announced and brought to market to get something not priced into the stratosphere. Hopefully the mobile versions of Nvidias new cards wont be saddled some of the problems that have hit its latest desktop class, like mediocre improvements over their last-gen counterparts, power issues, or manufacturing missteps.See More:
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  • AU Deals: Save a Heap on Must Have Horror Games, Indiana Jones, RoboCop, Harry Potter, and More!
    www.ign.com
    Once again, its time for me to level up your library without breaking your bank account. Today is all about bringing legendary adventures, pulse-pounding action, and some deep cuts into game prices. Personally, Im all about a sub-15-buck Ghostbusters: The Video Game Remastered, as its basically the Ghostbusters 3 we should have been on a movie screen. I will also extol the brilliance of Ghost of Tsushima: Director's Cut to anyone who will listen (especially when its price has been katana sliced in half).This Day in Gaming In retro news, I'm celebrating the dual 16 year birthdays of Halo Wars and Killzone 2. The former was a gateway RTS that deftly dodged between the hardcore micromanagement of real-time strategy and the instant gratification expected by Halo fans. (I also played the crotch out of its two-player online/system link co-op.) Meanwhile, on PS3, the retail launch of Killzone 2 resulted in a critically acclaimed sequel, despite the E3 2005 trailer debacle that shadowed it. Long story short, a what if pre-rendered target video was somehow put forth as a running in real-time on PS3" affair. Strange times.Aussie bdays for notable games- Halo Wars (X360) 2009. Get- Killzone 2 (PS3) 2009. eBay- Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon (DS) 2009. eBay- Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance (PS3,X360) 2013. GetContentsNintendoPCXboxPlayStationLEGOSnacksNice Savings for Nintendo SwitchLego Marvel Super Heroes 2 (-90%) - A$8.99Persona 5 Royal (-29%) - A$71.34Rune Factory 5 (-26%) - A$55.46Persona 5 Tactica (-44%) - A$52.78Maneater (-25%) - A$45.19Expiring Recent DealsOutward Definitive Edition (-35%) - A$39.00Inside (-90%) - A$2.99Batman: Arkham Trilogy (-60%) - A$35.98Torchlight III (-88%) - A$7.50Moving Out (-80%) - A$7.50Turnip Boy Commits Tax Evasion (-80%) - A$4.50Or gift a Nintendo eShop Card.Switch Console PricesHow much to Switch it up?Back to topPurchase Cheap for PCKingdoms of Amalur: Re-Reckoning (-75%) - A$17.48The Pathless (-75%) - A$14.98Soma (-80%) - A$8.79Outlast (-80%) - A$4.59Amnesia: Dark Descent (-70%) - A$8.89Little Nightmares (-75%) - A$6.79Expiring Recent DealsMonster Hunter Wilds (-18%) - A$86.05What Remains of Edith Finch (-75%) - A$7.48Moss & Moss: Book II (-45%) - A$22.71Braid (-75%) - A$7.37Inside (-90%) - A$2.99Orcs Must Die! 2 (-76%) - A$5.16Rock of Ages 3 (-92%) - A$3.43Or just get a Steam Wallet CardPC Hardware PricesSlay your pile of shame.Back to topExciting Bargains for XboxHarry Potter: Quidditch Del. (-60%) - A$24.00No More Heroes 3 (-24%) - A$57.13Lego Harry Potter Col. (-43%) - A$34.00Wild Hearts (-74%) - A$29.00Xbox OneTiny Tina's Wonderlands (-76%) - A$23.92MotoGP 23 (-38%) - A$43.60TopSpin 2K25 (-80%) - A$24.00Expiring Recent DealsMonster Hunter Wilds - A$99NBA 2K25 (-68%) - A$38.00Disney Epic Mickey: Rebrushed (-41%) - A$59.00Tekken 8 (-39%) - A$73.55Kingdom Come: Deliverance II (-31%) - A$79.00Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl (-73%) - A$19.00Grand Theft Auto V: Premium Edition (-50%) - A$24.00Riders Republic (-23%) - A$46.06F1 24 (-36%) - A$69.99Or just invest in an Xbox Card.Xbox Console PricesHow many bucks for a 'Box?Back to topPure Scores for PlayStationGhost of Tsushima Dir. (-50%) - A$62.47Final Fantasy VII Rebirth (-31%) - A$79.00Granblue Fantasy: Relink (-29%) - A$59.95Lego Harry Potter Col. (-43%) - A$34.00PowerWash Simulator (-30%) - A$21.80Stranger of Paradise Final Fantasy Origin (-58%) - A$42.02PS4Castlevania Anniversary Col. (-80%) - A$5.99Hogwarts Legacy: Del. (-67%) - A$39.95Grand Theft Auto Tril. (-76%) - A$24.00The Last of Us Part II (-21%) - A$47.09Jurassic World Evolution 2 (-29%) - A$59.95Expiring Recent DealsTales of Arise (-67%) - A$33.18Dragon Age: The Veilguard (-40%) - A$65.72Hitman World of Assassination (-34%) - A$70.14RoboCop: Rogue City (-30%) - A$59.85EA Sports FC 25 (-25%) - A$81.98Sakura Wars (-75%) - A$25.40Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown (-74%) - A$26.46Digimon World: Next Order (-54%) - A$38.89Super Monkey Ball: Banana Blitz HD (-56%) - A$17.64PS+ Monthly FreebiesYours to keep from Feb 4 with this subscriptionPayday 3 [PS5]High on Life [PS4/5]Pac-Man World Re-Pac [PS4/5]Or purchase a PS Store Card.What you'll pay to 'Station.Back to topLegit LEGO DealsCreator: Red Dragon (-33%) - A$10Wicked: Emerald City (-30%) - A$119Expiring Recent DealsTechnic Porsche GT4 (-30%) - A$175Botanicals Daffodils (-48%) - A$12Classic Creative Food (-33%) - A$10Mario Yoshi's Forest (-33%) - A$10Back to topSuperb Snacks DealsBecause you need fuel. Delicious and discounted.Bundaberg Diet Ginger Beer, 12 x 375 ml (-28%)Red Bull 24 x 250ml (41%)Powerade Berry Ice 12 x 600ml (-31%)Back to top Adam Mathew is our Aussie deals wrangler. He plays practically everything, often on YouTube.
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  • 10 Harry Potter Jigsaw Puzzles Worthy of Potter Fans in 2025
    www.ign.com
    Harry Potter is one of those franchises that has now infiltrated pretty much every medium. There are endless Harry Potter gifts for every type of fan out there, but if your specific interest is in puzzles, there's some serious variety available to you. Just a quick search for "Harry Potter puzzles" will drown you in options from various brands that can take a while to sort through.TL;DR These Are the Best Harry Potter Puzzles1000 PiecesMarauder's Map PuzzleSee it at Amazon1000 PiecesHogwart's Express PuzzleSee it at Amazon1000 PiecesHerbology PuzzleSee it at Amazon201 PiecesHogwarts Crest Wooden PuzzleSee it at Amazon3000 PiecesHogwarts Castle PuzzleSee it at Amazon181 PiecesHogwarts Express 3D Puzzle Model KitSee it at Amazon1500 PiecesHogwarts MapSee it at Amazon100 PiecesThe Enchanted Car Mini PuzzleSee it at Amazon500 PiecesGryffindor Crest PuzzleSee it at Amazon100 PiecesHarrty Potter Puzzle for KidsSee it at AmazonAs a fan of both Harry Potter and puzzles, I have taken it upon myself to help you find the right Potter puzzle for you. Below I've gathered some of my favorite adult jigsaw puzzles with a Harry Potter theme, as well as some great options for kids. I've also included an awesome model kit that makes for an exciting 3D puzzling experience.Marauder's Map Puzzle1000 PiecesMarauder's Map PuzzleSee it at AmazonThe Marauder's Map is one of the most recognizable items from Harry Potter lore. From Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot, and Prongs, this puzzle looks like the full map from the movie once it's been assembled. The puzzle itself is from The Noble Collection, which is known for making some of the highest quality officially licensed wand and Harry Potter prop replicas. You can see what the fully assembled puzzle looks like below:Hogwart's Express Puzzle1000 PiecesHogwart's Express PuzzleSee it at AmazonThis Hogwarts Express puzzle from Buffalo games depicts Harry, Ron, Hermione, and Hagrid as they were at the end of The Sorcerer's Stone. The train is set against a beautiful sunset backdrop, and we also see Malfoy sitting on a bench with Goyle at his side. It's a great-looking jigsaw puzzle from one of the most iconic scenes from the first film of the Harry Potter movie series.Herbology Puzzle1000 PiecesHerbology PuzzleSee it at AmazonThis herbology puzzle is my favorite option on this list. It depicts various ingredients students would find and grow in herbology class. At the center of it all is a mandrake in all its weird root baby glory. The design of this puzzle is reminiscent of the classic drawings you'd find in a vintage botanical identification diagram and makes for a great display piece.Hogwarts Crest Wooden Puzzle201 PiecesHogwarts Crest Wooden PuzzleSee it at AmazonThis Hogwarts Crest puzzle is made up of 201 laser-cut wooden pieces. It depicts the Hogwarts crest, including all four houses, and a vibrant floral design. What makes this puzzle interesting is that it comes with many unique pieces you'll recognize from the books and movies. These pieces include a witch's hat, the Goblet of Fire, and the Deathly Hallows symbol. It's a great puzzle for both kids and adults to put together.Hogwarts Castle Puzzle3000 PiecesHogwarts Castle PuzzleSee it at AmazonThis 3,000-piece Hogwarts Castle puzzle is an excellent option for anyone looking for something more challenging. The image depicts the majority of Hogwarts Castle and grounds, including Hagrid's hut. There are also owls, a phoenix, a hippogriff, and various other small details that make this larger puzzle really fun to piece together. It's made by Ravensburger, which is our overall favorite puzzle brand on the market right now.Hogwarts Express 3D Puzzle Model Kit181 PiecesHogwarts Express 3D Puzzle Model KitSee it at AmazonWhile not a traditional puzzle, this 3D model kit of the Hogwarts Express belongs on this list because of how cool it is. The kit comes with eight sheets of 181 pieces that you'll need to put togehter. No glue or tools are required to assemble the train, but it may be difficult for young children to piece together. Overall, this is a really different kind of puzzle and excellent alternative to the LEGO Hogwarts express that is extremely pricey.Hogwarts Map1500 PiecesHogwarts MapSee it at AmazonThe second Ravensburger puzzle I'm featuring on this list also depicts Hogwarts castle and grounds, but in map form. The map itself has a rather whimsical design and features a variety of notable locations including Hogsmeade and the Forbidden forest. The puzzle also includes a border featuring small images of various other locations from the story. At 1,500 pieces, it is a bit more challenging that some of the other puzzles on this list, but the end result is worthy of displaying.The Enchanted Car Mini Puzzle100 PiecesThe Enchanted Car Mini PuzzleSee it at AmazonIf you're looking for a good Harry Potter puzzle for kids, this 100-piece mini puzzle from The New York Puzzle Company is a great option. The image shows Ron and Harry flying in the enchanted car with Hogwarts in the background. This is an iconic point of the story in The Chamber of Secrets, and the design of this image looks like the original cover artwork from the Harry Potter books.Gryffindor Crest Puzzle500 PiecesGryffindor Crest PuzzleSee it at AmazonEvery true fan knows which house they belong to. Whether you're in Gryffindor, Slytherin, Ravenclaw, or Hufflepuff, there is a crest puzzle available from Aquarius. I've featured the Gryffindor design here, but each house is has its own crest and background color. At just 500 pieces, these smaller puzzles are great if you want to spend an afternoon finishing a single image.Harry Potter Puzzle for Kids100 PiecesHarrty Potter Puzzle for KidsSee it at AmazonThe final Ravensburger puzzle I have on this list is specifically meant for kids. Not only is it just 100 extra-large pieces, it features bright colors and recognizable characters that make it fairly easy to put together. The box says it is meant for ages 6 and older, so it should be simple enough for younger kids to handle.Jacob Kienlen is a Senior SEO Strategist and Writer for IGN. Born and raised in Portland, Oregon, he has considered the Northwest his home for his entire life. With a bachelor's degree in communication and over 7 years of professional writing experience, his expertise is spread across a variety of different topics -- from TV series to indie games and popular book series.
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  • These are my favorite Find My accessories
    9to5mac.com
    Theres a robust ecosystem of Find My accessories on the market nowadays. All of these accessories would make great additions to your life. After all, whats a better investment than a way to keep track of their most important possessions? As a refresher, Find My accessories broadcast a low-energy Bluetooth signal picked up by nearby Apple devices. They do not rely on GPS technology. Instead, that location is transmitted securely and privately to the Find My network. This means that your Find My-enabled item is locatable even if you are miles away, so long as someone with an Apple device happens to be nearby.iOS 18.2, released in December, further upgraded the Find My network with a new system for sharing item locations.AirTagYou cant have a list of the best Find My accessories without including Apples AirTags. Packed with a U1 chip for Precision Finding support, a built-in speaker, and more, AirTags are a must-have for attaching to your luggage, backpack, keys, and other accessories.AirTags have also improved significantly since they were first released in April 2021. Apple has added new anti-stalking features, upgraded notification alerts, and more.AirTags are not without their faults as they only come in one form factor, lack a built-in attachment mechanism, and are nearly four years old. Still, they represent the best way to start with the Find My ecosystem.Buy AirTags:Best AirTags accessories:Chipolos Find My ecosystemWhile Apples AirTag is available in a single form factor, Chipolo makes two different trackers that are fully compatible with Apples Find My ecosystem. This means you can add them to the Find My app and track them alongside your Apple products. They can also tap into the Find My ecosystem of Apple devices and AirTags to share the most up-to-date location information.Chipolo Card Spot: A credit card-shaped tracker with Find My integration. Perfect for sliding into your wallet so you never lose it.Buy on AmazonChipolo One Spot: An AirTag-shaped tracker with Find My integration, but it features a built-in keyring hole so you dont need an additional case or attachment mechanism.Buy on AmazonSwitchBot Wallet FinderMy colleague Benjamin Mayo just reviewed the SwitchBot Wallet Finder and described it as an incredibly useful accessory to track your wallet using your iPhone and the Find My ecosystem. In addition to being shaped like a credit card to slide into your wallet, it all features a built-in keyring holder. This makes it easy to attach to something like a lanyard or backpack.Buy the SwitchBot Wallet Finder:Read more in Benjamins full review.Pebblebees Find My EcosystemAnother card-shaped option for the Find My network is the Pebblebee Tracker Card. The key differentiator with this one is that the battery is rechargeable. The aforementioned options from Chipolo and SwitchBot do not feature rechargeable or replaceable batteries. The Pebblebee Tracker Card offers up to 18 months of battery life and can then be recharged with a USB-C cable.In addition to the Tracker Card, Pebblebee also sells two other Find My-enabled accessories. The Pebblebee Clip is a small tracker that is similar to the AirTag form factor but with a built-in keyring holder. It features up to 12 months of battery life and can then be recharged using a USB-C cable.Finally, theres the Pebblebee Tracker Universal Tag with Find My integration. This offers an ultra-small form factor with up to 8 months of battery life and a USB-C port for charging.Backpacks with Find My While I generally recommend buying a standalone Find My tracker, there are backpacks on the market that directly integrate Find My. Both Swissdigital and Hyper offer backpacks with Find My integration.Twelve South PlugBugIf youre a traveler, Twelve South has one of the more interesting implementations of Find My that Ive seen. The Twelve South PlugBug is a USB-C fast-charging brick that integrates with Find My. This means youll never lose your charger again. The Twelve South PlugBug is available in two different versions and can be ordered on Amazon. More Find My accessoriesWhile accessories from Apple, Chipolo, Pebblebee, and SwitchBot are my top picks, there are other Find My-enabled options on the market.Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.Youre reading 9to5Mac experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac 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 Disease Spreading Rapidly, Killing Dozens, After Children Ate a Bat
    futurism.com
    Don't Eat the BatsFeb 25, 2:22 PM EST/byVictor TangermannNew Disease Spreading Rapidly, Killing Dozens, After Children Ate a BatThey died within just 48 hours after blood poured from their noses and mouths.Feb 25, 2:22 PM EST/Victor TangermannImage by GLODY MURHABAZI/AFP via Getty ImagesDevelopmentsA mysterious illness is spreading in the northwest of the Democratic Republic of Congo.As the Associated Press reports, World Health Organization doctors say that the illness has already led to 419 cases, including 53 deaths, since the latest outbreak began on January 21.A particularly harrowing detail: in the majority of cases, doctors say, death occurs within just 48 hours of the onset of symptoms.While researchers are still trying to get a grasp on the situation, the WHO's Africa office has traced back the first outbreak in the town of Boloko after three children ate a bat carcass and died within two days, according to the AP. The children died after bleeding from the nose and vomiting blood.The outbreak is frightening on its own, but also echoes the origins of the deadly COVID-19 pandemic, which is believed to have jumped from bats to humans in China before spreading worldwide and causing millions of deaths.According to the WHO, the still-unnamed illness poses a "significant public health threat" with a fatality rate of 12.3 percent. Lab tests of samples confirmed the illness was unrelated to other common hemorrhagic fever diseases such as Ebola and Marburg.It's an unfortunate new development for the Central African nation. In December, a previous outbreak in the southwest of the DRC was later traced back to "acute respiratory infections complicated by malaria," according to the WHO.The nation has also been battling a major outbreak of Mpox, formerly known as monkeypox. Officials are worried that current political instability in the country's east could lead to an undercount of cases.Mpox is a virus that can cause painful blisters and prove fatal in some cases. Following a global outbreak in 2022 and 2023, much of the African continent, including the DRC, is still fighting the virus.Following the latest outbreak of the unknown illness, officials are trying to reassure the public that it's extremely unlikely that the latest illness will trigger the next global pandemic."A genuinely new illness, as we saw with COVID-19, of course can happen but is very rare," University of Southampton senior research fellow Michael Head told the Washington Post. "Usually, its a bug... that we know about but havent yet diagnosed in that particular outbreak.""Typically, such outbreaks are brought under control relatively quickly," he added. "However, here, it is concerning that we have hundreds of cases and over 50 deaths, with hemorrhagic-fever like symptoms widely reported among those cases."More on mysterious illnesses: Mysterious Disease Outbreak Has Already Killed DozensShare This ArticleImage by GLODY MURHABAZI/AFP via Getty ImagesRead This Next
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  • The poetry of data
    www.technologyreview.com
    Jane Muschenetzs poems dont look like the sonnets you remember studying in high school English. If anything, theyre more likely to call to mind your statistics class.Flip through the pages of her poetry chapbook Power Point and youll see charts, graphs, and citations galore. One poem visually documents maternal mortality rates and womens unpaid domestic labor in such a way that the bar and pie graphs spell out the word MOM. Another tracks deaths from gun violence across the globe and is presented as a gun-shaped graph. Still others are written in more standard poetic form but include citations that reference documents put out by the US government, the United Nations, and news organizations.These poems are just a few of the many in Muschenetzs latest book that wrestle with contemporary social issues using a combination of data-driven insights and the poetic form. The format is a unique one: The first time Hayley Mitchell Haugen, founding editor in chief of Muschenetzs publisher Sheila-Na-Gig, saw the poems, she thought to herself, Ive never seen anything like this before.Point Blank13. Incidents of firearm mortality per 100K population for high income global economies with populations over 10M, Institute for Health Metrics Evaluation, United Nations. Graphics treatment by Ingo Muschenetz. 14. Child and Teen Firearm Mortality in the US and Peer Countries, per 100K population, KFF.org, July 2023; CDC. Detailed citations at technologyreview.com/Muschenetz.ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED BY WRITERS RESIST, WINTER 2023While cold, hard numbers and poetry might seem antithetical at first blush, from Muschenetzs perspective, the two couldnt be a better fit. A former business consultant at Bain & Company who received her MBA at the Sloan School of Management, she released her first poetry book in her 40s, and shes enjoyed uncovering what the artistic and scientific approaches to understanding the world have in common.Even though it maybe feels unintuitive that poetry and science are interrelated, they both make connections that are not immediately obvious, she says. They test out theories; they take risks. Theres a lot of nonlinear thinking that happens in both.Many of the poems in Power Point were inspired by watershed moments in global politics and culture, particularly ones that would shape the lives of women. From the partisan political theater on display at the confirmation hearing of US Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson to the passage of laws restricting womens freedoms in Iran and Afghanistan, these events often left Muschenetz overwhelmed with frustration at the state of womens rights today.But knowing that womens emotions are so often dismissed, she looked for a way to turn those feelings into something that she hoped would be harder to write off than standard poetry while still evoking the openheartedness with which people tend to approach art.I wanted something that listed just facts but expressed how angry I am, she says. I really wanted it to be fact-based. I wanted my sources to be publicly available and almost unassailable. Her hope was that by repackaging these facts in the form of statistics-driven poetry, she might allow readers to receive the information in a new wayand get them thinking.From Ukraine to CaliforniaMuschenetzs childhood primed her to understand how global currents can shape an individual life from an early age. Born Yevgenia Leonidovna Veitzman to a Jewish family in the Ukrainian city of Lviv, Muschenetz says her family began trying to leave the country before she was born, hoping to escape the discrimination they faced under the Soviet government. But it wasnt until she was 10 years old that the family was finally able to emigrate. When they were at last cleared to cross the border, they headed for San Diego, where she decided that Jane would be easier for Americans to pronounce than her given first name. (Ultimately, she would change her last name, too, when she married.)Muschenetz often felt out of place in her new home, even though she was surrounded by other immigrant kids whose parents had moved to California in search of a better life. In one way she was like many American teenage girls, though: She had a lot of feelings, especially about romantic relationships, whether real or imagined, and she often wrote poems about them. At age 16, she began submitting her poetry to magazines and publishers, which brought her first taste of writerly rejection. I was like, Oh, well, I tried. Clearly this isnt for me. Even though in my heart, since I was like four years old, I knew I was a writer and I loved literature, she says.Her parents were completely horrified about the prospect of her pursuing a career in writing, but they werent much more excited about what she eventually landed on instead: a degree in political science at UC San Diego. The response was always Poets get shot. Politicians get shot, she says.She might not have been able to articulate it at age 18, but looking back, Muschenetz makes sense of the decision to study political science as driven by her desire to understand the global forces that caused her family to emigrate. I wanted to know: How do we structure policy? Who makes these choices, and how can we change them and make them better? she says.STACY KECKBut the dream of writing was hard to let go of. By the time Muschenetz was a few years out of college, shed applied for two different programs: an MFA in writing and the MBA program at Sloan. And though she didnt get accepted to the MFA program, her time at Sloan ended up profoundly shaping the poetry she would write two decades later, giving her the statistical analysis and data interpretation skills that formed the backdrop for Power Point. Those were skills she sharpened even further in the years she spent working as a business consultant at Bain right after earning her MBA.I dont think the average joe could pull off [what she does in that book], because she knows how to present statistics well, says Haugen. She knows how to look at them analytically and offer them up in a way that a layperson can understand.Muschenetz left the business world after four years at Bain to focus on parenting her two children, as well as serving in various volunteer capacities at their schools and with local community organizations. It wasnt until the world shut down in 2020 with the onset of the covid-19 pandemic that she found herself getting back in touch with the creative impulses that had animated her previously. Those impulses manifested in part as visual art: Muschenetz began painting a menagerie of animals on the bases of palm fronds she would find on the ground after a big storm in San Diego. It just felt good, even though it made no sense, she says. At the same time, it was keeping me sane.Being willing to dip her toe into a creative endeavor that she knew she didnt have to be good at also helped open Muschenetz to the idea of getting back to the poetry writing that had made her heart sing as a girl.Through my high school and early college years, every margin of every notebook was covered with poems or rhymes, she says. And then it was just gone. It was scary for me to realize that I had cut that part out of myself, and how bad that was for me.Coming home to poetryWhen Muschenetz did start writing again, she thought she might write a collection of poems rooted in domesticity and home life. She was surprised to find that what started flowing out of her instead were poems about her immigrant experience, which had never been the subject of her poetry while she was living it as a teenager. I thought, Well, shouldnt I have gotten this out of my system? But here I was writing about this aspect of my identity that I never actually had written about before.She eventually had enough poems to pull together what became her first collection, titled All the Bad Girls Wear Russian Accents. The book reveals her propensity for weaving together dark and light, humor and tragedy, in a range of poems that cover everything from the war in Ukraine to the experience of being stereotyped for her ability to speak Russian, the language of many American movie villains.Muschenetz initially thought that writing a book of poetry might be a onetime thing, the kind of undertaking that would allow her to check a box and move on. But as she was promoting her first book, she found herself fixating on a poem she hadnt even written yetone in the form of data that would spell out a word. The idea was eventually realized in 100% MOM.100% MOM: A PowerPoint Poem about Women and LaborData sources include: Life Stages and Populations by Sex,CDC, NCHS; Most pregnancy-related deaths are preventable, Hear Her Campaign, CDC, 2022; The U.S. Maternal Mortality Crisis Continues to Worsen: An International Comparison, Commonwealth Fund, 2022; The Worlds Women 2020 Trends and Statistics, United Nations; Oxfam International Inequality Reports: 2020, 2021; Hard Work Is Not Enough: Women in Low-Paid Jobs, National Womens Law Center, July 2023. Detailed citations at technologyreview.com/Muschenetz.ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN WHALE ROAD REVIEW, SPRING 2023That poem was the seed that grew into Power Point, and Muschenetz, whose poetry has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize three times, hasnt looked back since. In addition to releasing that second volume of poetry, the product of what she calls the analytic and overachieving brain that helped her get through (and enjoy) business school, Muschenetz has used those same skills to help the poetry community in San Diego with some of the more practical needs, like grant writing, that are often lacking in communities of artists, says Katie Manning, a local poet and professor emeritus of poetry.Muschenetz is mostly just happy to have found a way to use poetry to keep integrating and honoring the many different parts of her identity, from immigrant to business consultant.It is a huge disservice to all humanity when we ask our scientists or mathematicians or poets to only be that one thing, as opposed to being their whole selves, she says.You Are 600% Hotter than the SunBy Jane MuschenetzA cup of the Suns core produces ~60 milliwattsof thermal energy. By volume less than that ofa human [350 mW]. In a sense, you are hotter thanthe Suntheres just not as much of you.Henry Reich, Minute PhysicsSpeaking roughly, in terms of heatgenerated per every human inch, you giveoff more milliwattssurge/energy. Onlythe Sun is bigger it matters.We are all blindedby love, the expanding/contractinguniverse is just another metaphorfor longing, and lifeits own purpose.How dazzling, this science!Consider falling for a physicistthe painstakingly slow way they undressmathematical mysteries,talk about bodies in motiongets me every timespacecontinuum, part, particleAtomic. Incandescent! Youare, pound-for-pound, more Life-Source,more Bomb, more Season-Spinning Searing CenterHeart/Engine/Radiating Nuclear Dynamicthan the Sun. Cant look directlyin the mirror? Small Wonder! Imaginenone of us powerless.Originally published by Cathexis Northwest Press, May 2024For Those of Us Forced to FleeBy Jane MuschenetzFor those of us forced to fleethe world is forever shrinking down to a single question:What can you carry?The suitcase of your heart closed tighton all the things there was no room to bringyour memories of home, the snowflake momentsof your youth, the blooming Lilac treeoutside your bedroom window a heavy burdensaps your strength on the long journey, bringonly what you need.Homes can be built again,a new tree can be rooted.Survive.When you have nothing left to plant, become the seed.Originally published in Issue 8, The Good Life Review, 2022. It received the 2022 Honeybee Poetry Prize and was nominated for a Pushcart Prize.Find more poetry by Jane Muschenetz at www.palmfrondzoo.com/janewriting.
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  • The man who reinvented the hammer
    www.technologyreview.com
    A trip to Walmart. An aging German shepherd. A cheap disposable camera. These are just a few of the seemingly mundane things that have sparked the relentlessly imaginative mind of Kurt Schroder 90, leading to some of his groundbreaking inventions. I just cant stop doing it, he says, with a chuckle and a tiny trace of southern Indiana twang. I invent all the time. It doesnt matter what it is. Im always doing experiments. Schroder grew up on a farm but always knew his future wasnt in agriculture. With his heart set on studying physics, he applied only to MITignorant, he says, of just how academically rigorous it would be. Once enrolled, he watched as his super genius classmates appeared to sail through their classes, while he worked harder than they did but earned only Bs. Everything changed when he made his way through the notorious gauntlet of Course 8 Junior Lab, considered one of the most demanding two-term lab classes at the Institute. While tinkering during that advanced experimental physics class, he found his path. It eliminates a lot of people, but for some reason it was the easiest class for me, he remembers now. I would not only fix the machines and get them working but actually get better measurements than other people did, and figured out ways to use the equipment to do things that no one had noticed. But in his regular classes, he still felt he was treading water. I realized that, okay, I still wanted to be a physicist, but maybe a slightly different kind of physicist, he says. For example, the kind of physicist who manages to improve the everyday hammera tool so ubiquitous and taken for granted that it hadnt been reconceived in hundreds, maybe thousands, of years until Schroder came along. Or the kind who would save an old dog using nanoparticles of silver. Or one who would use a $7 camera to brainstorm his way to a new thermal processing technique that has revolutionized the mass production of electronic circuits. After MIT, Schroder spent two years designing weapons for the US Navy before enrolling in a doctoral program in plasma physics at the University of Texas at Austin. As he was approaching his final year, he and his wife, Lisa, went to Walmart one day to run an errand. Like a stereotypical guy, I walked into the tool section and I started looking at the hammers, Schroder recalls. I realized all the hammers were designed incorrectly. It became almost an obsession for me. I became enamored with the fact that I could work on something that everybody had the opportunity to fix and did not. What Schroder picked up on wasnt the design of the tools, exactly, but the fact that the manufacturers were effectively broadcasting a flaw. The labels of all the hammers said We have a shock-reduction grip or a vibration-reducing grip and I would try it and it didnt work, he says. They were saying: This is not a solved problem. They just gave me the information I needed. Have you ever heard of a tire company that says Our tires are round? At the time, Schroder was taking another exacting class, this one on mechanics. The professor told students he planned to cover 14 weeks of the syllabus in a mere six weeks and focus on special topics in the remaining time. Many students were intimidated and dropped out, but Schroder stuck with it. (It was the type of abuse I was used to at MIT, he jokes, pointing to his brass rat. So it was just fine.) Somewhat fortuitously, one of those special topics was baseball bats. WYATT MCSPADDEN Because Schroder was so consumed by the hammer vibration problemanother activity that involves the mechanics of swinginghe read books about the legendary Boston Red Sox batter Ted Williams to learn more. He interviewed carpenters. He spent a fair amount of time with a hammer in his hand. I got to be pretty good at it myself. I was just hammering all the time, he says. I ended up losing part of my hearing because I was doing all this work on anvils. He developed tests to measure vibrations and crafted a cyberglove that would read them and upload the data into a computer program. After two years of data collection and analysis, he concluded that most attempts to improve hammers involved adding length and therefore weight. That causes fatigue and potentially exacerbates what is known as hammer elbow or lateral epicondylitis, a repetitive stress disorder that can plague construction workers. Schroder determined that there was a little spot in a hammer where theres not much vibrationthe part of the handle most people would naturally grasp. He figured out that if you remove weight from the parts of the handle adjacent to the grip and insert foam there, that insulates the users hand from the shock of impact and resulting vibration. Using foam inserts also made it feasible for him to redesign the hammer head to increase the effective length of the hammerand boost momentum transfer by about 15%without adding weight. In other words, his design not only reduced vibration but made the hammer hit harder with less effort. These modifications also cut manufacturing costs. Today, Schroders design improvements have made their way into the majority of hammers sold in the United States, making hammering much easier on users elbowsand relieving manufacturers from the mounting threat of lawsuits for vibration-related workplace injuries. Its kind of a boring thing, really. Its not something that physicists work on, he says. I became enamored with the fact that I could work on something that everybody had the opportunity to fix and did not. In the course of tackling the hammer problem, Schroder says, he learned that being an inventor is as much about perseverance and grit as it is about science or imagination. His professors told him he was wasting his time and shouldnt bother. Then, after he presented his innovations to hammer companies, they said they didnt think his developments were patentableyet proceeded to incorporate them into their new designs. Two patents were ultimately issued to Schroder, and 16 years later, after suing the hammer companies, he was finally compensated for his innovations. He paid off his house, took his wife and five kids to Italy, and gave the rest of the proceeds to charity, he says. By that time, he had already moved on. In the early 2000s, while working at a company then called Nanotechnologies, Schroder was applying the concept of pulsed power, a subfield of physics and electrical engineering hed studied at MIT, to synthesize nanoparticles. Pulsed power involves extremely brief, intense bursts of electric current that deliver a huge amount of powera ridiculous amount of powerfor a short period of time, Schroder explains. For example, a flash camera might take five seconds to charge, drawing a mere five watts from an AA battery. But when it releases that stored energy in less than a thousandth of a second, the flash is about 20,000 watts. Inventing is a skill, not a talent. Everyone can be an inventor. For one of its many projects, the company had been developing an electro-thermal gun, originally intended for military purposes, that Schroder says had a very intense arc dischargea spark, but 100,000 amps. He describes the 50-megawatt prototypes they produced as a little bit scary and calls it a failed device that never got out of the laboratory. But his predecessors at the company realized that if they pulled the trigger after removing the projectile from the barrel, the high heat of the pulsed arc discharge would erode the silver electrodes inside the barrel, generating plasma that shot out of the device. When the plasma rapidly cooled, these eroded, or ablated, electrodes reacted with gases to form nanoparticles. An inert gas, like helium, would generate silver nanoparticles. A reactive gas would form nanoparticles of a compound, like silver oxide. Abandoning the idea of an electrothermal gun altogether, Schroder and his colleagues drew on his expertise in pulsed power and focused on applying it to rods of, say, silver or aluminum to produce nanoparticles of those materials. Then they determined that if they tweaked the length of the pulse, from one millisecond to two or more, they could change the average particle size to suit a broader range of applications. The discovery was really exciting, Schroder says now, but it proved difficult to capitalize on given the lack of commercial demand for nanoparticles at the time. The company was on the verge of bankruptcy. Around this time, in 2001, Schroder inherited an ailing 12-year-old German shepherd named Heidi. She had these pus-y wounds that were a half-inch in diameter and a half-inch deep in her knees and elbows, Schroder recalls. The infection was so bad she couldnt get up. He began to treat Heidi with a salve made for dogs and horses, but after a couple of weeks she was not improving. I thought, darn it, I dont want to put her down, Schroder remembers. But then he thought of the silver nanoparticles that his company had developed. I had heard that some of the stuff might be antimicrobial, he says. So he mixed the nanoparticles into the salve and applied it to Heidis wounds. Within two weeks, they had healed, and Heidi could stand and even run. Now the nanoparticle-infused salve is an FDA-approved product that hospitals use to treat burn victims. We referred to her, lovingly, as Heidi the Nano Dog, Schroder says. Today, Schroder is best known for his second nanoparticle invention, which he dreamed up when he became fascinated with the idea of printed electronics. I thought, wouldnt it be kind of cool if you could take an inkjet printer cartridge, jailbreak it, and [add metallic] nanoparticles and make a dispersion, make an ink? he says. You could print wires on a piece of paper and make the cheapest circuit in the world. Schroders belief that everything can be made better has motivated all his work, from rethinking hammers to developing low-cost printable circuits.COURTESY OF KURT SCHRODER 90 The problem is that cheaper substrates, including paper and plastic, will ignite at the high temperatures necessary to sinter, or cure, the nanoparticles into wires. (Melting silver requires a temperature of 962 C, but paper ignites at 233 C, or the novelistically famous Fahrenheit 451.) Equally problematic, the ovens in which this sintering takes place are often very large and slow, and they require a lot of energy. This is where a disposable camera enters the picture. The first one I got from Walgreens. It cost me seven bucks, but I jailbroke it so I could keep on flashing it, he recalls. Schroder says he figured that he could use the intense flash of light to heat only the nanoparticles (which are black and readily absorb light), sintering them together into wires so fast that the paper or plastic substrate on which hed printed them did not have a chance to melt or warp. The idea, Schroder explains, was to harness the intensity of the flash (the pulsed power) to generate millisecond bursts of high power using minimal energy. It was one of those rare times in technological development in which faster, better, and cheaper all happened simultaneously, he says. He and his colleagues ultimately scaled up the flash concept into an industrial system known as PulseForge, which can generate bursts of heat hot enough to cure nanoparticles into conductive tracesand do it so quickly that their substrates survive the heat. With this flash lamp technologyphotonic curing, thats what I called itwe can go up to about 400 C. But we can do in one millisecond what normally would take 10 minutes or longer, Schroder says. This replaces an oven, which can be hundreds of meters long and take up an entire building and use tons and tons of energy. Today, he is CTO of the company, which is now known as PulseForge. It offers digital thermal processing systems that make manufacturing more sustainable and more affordable. Though he cant be specific about what the companys clients manufacture, Schroder says PulseForges technology is used to make consumer electronics that most people own today. After 30 years of experimentation in many fieldsincluding mechanical engineering, chemistry, pulsed power, nanotechnology, and printed electronicsSchroder holds 41 US patents and more than 70 international ones. Hes won the prestigious R&D 100 Award twice. In 2012, the Texas State Bar named him Inventor of the Year, and in 2023, the Austin Intellectual Property Law Association did the same. Schroder says he wont live long enough to explore all the ideas bouncing around in his head. But one thing hed like to do is provide some guidance to fledgling inventorsa kind of practical and personal road map to success. Hes already started writing a book, called simply How to Invent. The book was partially inspired by a gathering he organized a few years ago for his oldest daughter, who was then 11, and 40 or so of her friends from a scouting group. Schroder called it an invention fair. I told them: I want you to identify problems in the world, he says. Youre going to try to solve them. He was so impressed with the girls ideas, including his daughtersa backpack that dispenses M&Msthat something struck him. Inventing is a skill, not a talent, he says. Everyone can be an inventor, and seeing these 40 little girls come up with some pretty darn good inventionsI realized theres a process for this. One of his hard-won pieces of advice is to find joy in that processto be happy simply because an experiment works. Dont focus too much [on] if youre going to make a zillion dollars or be in charge of it, he says. Because guess what? There are a hundred more inventions after that. There is, however, one intangible trait that every inventor should have: the outlook that a glass is neither half full nor half empty. The inventor says: I can make a better glass, he says. An inventor always sees a future in which everything is better.
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  • Activision Confirms 'Call of Duty' Features AI-Generated Visuals
    www.cnet.com
    Game maker Activision Blizzard confirmed that some of the visuals inside some of its most popular titles are generated by AI. The disclosure, which is listed on Call of Duty: Black Ops 6's game page on Steam, follows the online gaming platform's recent introduction of new AI transparency policies.It comes at a time when gaming developers and publishers continue to determine AI's role in design and innovation while grappling with concerns over transparency, quality and job displacement. "Our team uses generative AI tools to help develop some in-game assets," Activision said in the disclosure sectionof the game's page. Zombie Santa's scary AI handThe confirmation also follows months of speculation after fans spotted irregularities in Call of Duty, including a zombie Santa with extra fingers and other distorted elements that seemed off. (AI-generated imagery notoriously struggles with generating appendages).Fans criticized the discovery and urged the company to be more transparent about its use of AI. Activision faced backlash in the past for selling AI-generated cosmetic bundles for virtual currency purchased with real money without disclosing the usage of AI.Read more:Call of Duty Just Launched Its Thinnest Multiplayer Map in Season 2 ReloadedIn January 2025, Steam's parent company, Valve, introduced AI disclosure policies requiring developers to clarify how AI contributes to game development and execution. "It's taken us some time to figure this out, and we're sorry that has made it harder for some developers to make decisions around their games," Valve said on its website."But we don't feel like we serve our players or developer partners by rushing into decisions that have this much complexity. We'll continue to learn from the games being submitted to Steam, and the legal progress around AI, and will revisit this decision when necessary," it added.In 2023, Activision was acquiredby Microsoft for $69 billion. A year later, Microsoft cut nearly 2,000 jobs in its gaming division as part of a report effort to pivot more toward AI.Pros and cons of AI in gamesDespite the concerns, some experts believe AI usage in game development could bring about more innovation if properly regulated."While I understand some of the concerns over the training of AI models we can and should do better in their development one thing I've maintained is that AI is a new tool that will help to streamline aspects of game development," said James Casey, associate professor at George Mason University's computer game design program. "But like other tools that have been adopted over time, we need to monitor and manage their usage."Casey cited the rise of game engines like Unity and Unreal that streamlined the game-creation process and shifted the types of jobs required to develop modern games. "Technologies like AI will do likewise," he said.Read more:The New AI Buzzword Is 'Slop,' and It's Messing With You. What to Watch Out For"In the case of the Activision content, the usage of AI was readily apparent which indicates a lack of creative oversight. Regardless of where or how art is generated, whether it's an internal artist, an outsourcer or generative AI, there still needs to be accountability for the results," he added.Will McKeon-White, an analyst at Forrester, told CNET that Valve's push for AI transparency could set a broader precedent, potentially by shaping industry standards and influencing consumer expectations."Some marketplaces, like Steam/Valve, have taken a firm stance that if you use AI you need to flag that, but this is going to be complicated if other marketplaces don't follow suit," he said.
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  • Never Step on a Lego in the Dark Again With This Simple Trick
    www.cnet.com
    Many dangers lurk in the dark, even in your own home: sharp furniture corners, hairballs, hairball makers and abandoned toys. Stubbed toes and sore soles are painful but preventable with just a little illumination. Dedicated night lights exist solely for this task, but they're bulky, often ugly and some of us need total and complete darkness to succumb to sleep. Plus, they require either an outlet or batteries -- neither of which may be available where you need them.Home automation with sensors and smart lights offer a more subdued and sophisticated solution to your twilight trips to the toilet. Smart lights come in a myriad of styles and sizes, and you might already have them installed, in which case, you're already halfway there. Heres everything to know about using smart lights at night.Use a contact sensor on the door Placing a contact sensor on doors, windows, drawers, and more allows you to automate smart devices when opened. Chris Wedel/CNETContact sensors consist of two pieces that attach to a door and its frame and are triggered when the two pieces separate. You can then connect your sensor to a smart light and program it to turn on when triggered.There are many types of sensors, including this Aeotec SmartThings Multipurpose Sensor, which offers detection features such as temperature, motion, light and vibrations. However, to avoid kicking furniture during the night, a simple contact sensor like this one from ThirdReality will do the trick.If you are unsure how to set up your smart home, our guide for beginners will ease you in. Smart lights allow you to get the best of the big bright light and a dimly lit warm glow. Chris Wedel/CNETI like using contact sensors to turn on lights during nighttime hours because they are less likely to be triggered accidentally, as a motion sensor could be if a pet walks by.To use a contact sensor for your nighttime excursions, youll create a routine in your smart home platform of choice. Whether that is Amazon Alexa, Google Home, Apple HomeKit or another platform, your situation may not mirror mine. My smart light turns on in my bathroom to 2% brightness at a warm hue when my contact sensor recognizes I opened the bathroom door. The light will stay on for 10 minutes and then turn off automatically.Motion sensors Motion sensors are great for automating lights to power on when you walk into a room and off when you leave. Chris Wedel/CNETWhile I prefer contact sensors for automating lights in many situations, depending on the location, sometimes that isnt the best solution, like in a hallway. As with contact sensors, motion sensors can activate automations when triggered. But in this case, it is, as you may have guessed, motion that creates the automation rather than the opening of a door.I use these devices at night by connecting the two motion sensors at each end of my hallway and one in the kitchen to turn on the lights in those areas. As with the contact sensor automation, Im only powering the lights up to 2% brightness and a warm hue when the sensor detects motion. But instead of only setting the lights to power off after a certain amount of time has passed, I use motion as the indicator of when the lights are to be shut off.The lights will shut off only after the sensors have not detected motion for five minutes. I use the same process for normal daytime lighting when connected to motion sensors.Save your soles! Ikea's smart lighting offerings include various light strips like the Silverglans. John Carlsen/CNETThese smart sensors and lights have kept me from hurting my feet and waking my family more times than I can count. I like using devices I already have in my home to solve problems like this. While I could get a motion-sensing light strip or light bar to install, that would be another device to manage when I already have several useful solutions on hand.Plus, smart lights can be helpful in various other ways throughout the home, from helping save you money on energy costs to helping you wake up naturally. Adding these handy devices to your home brings flexibility and customization in lighting that regular light bulbs cant including helping prevent injuries during the night.
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