• Framework Desktop debuted as portable and powerful DIY PC for all enthusiasts
    www.digitaltrends.com
    The modular computing company, Framework, deviated from its usual hardware lineup, showcasing its first desktop PC at a launch event in San Francisco, California on Tuesday.The new product, called Framework Desktop was developed around the AMD Ryzen AI Max- a new processor with impressive specifications, including CPU support up to 16 cores, graphics support up to Radeon 8060, and memory up to 128GB. Framework founder, Nirav Patel said at the launch that the brand shifted its entire pipeline to create a product around this component.Recommended VideosInspired by the legacy DIY culture of desktop building, Patel added that Framework Desktop is intended to be highly accessible and was designed to be the easiest PC youll ever build. Describing the PC as portable, small, quiet, and powerful. The AMD Ryzen AI Max as a laptop processor being used in a desktop, the PC benefits from this set up. Patel also noted you can use it to play games, write CAD, as a network server, and as a workstation. In typical Framework fashion, the Desktop maintains open PC standards, with the AMD Ryzen AI Max having a mini ITX form factor. The device also includes x4 PCle 4.0 slots, 2x M.2 SSD, and a standard ATX power supply. Output and connectivity include two USB-A ports, two Display Ports, one HDMI port, two USB-C ports, one 3.5 audio jack, Wi-Fi 7, and 5G ethernet.The Framework Desktop was designed to stay as quiet as possible, with a giant 120mm fan and heatsink developed by Cooler Master, which can run at 120 watts continuously while still keeping quiet. The only aspect of the desktop that isnt readily customizable is the memory, which had to be soldered to the main frame.The AMD Ryzen AI Max chip provides many of the common gaming experiences known for the brands chips, including Zen 5, RDNA 3.5, AMD software, and AMD FSR, with hundreds of games supported out of the box.Framework also detailed that the desktop can run state-of-the-art models like Llama 3.370B in real time on device. Comparing prices of other high-compute desktops, such as Apples Mac Studio, which sells for $4,800 and Nvidias Digits desktop, which remains unpriced, the Framework Desktop will sell for $1,999 in its high-end 128GB configuration.As for software, the laptop supports Windows 11 and Linux, with Framework especially supporting gaming on Linux in 2025.Aesthetics aspects include black and translucent side panel options, and a color customizable front panel with seven panels that can be swapped for different tiles and logos. Framework notes that in open-source style, developers have experimented with 3D printing unique designs. The desktop also comes with a carrying panel for increased portability.The Framework Desktop is available in a mainboard version and DIY edition. The latter allows you to bring your own fan, board, and operating system. The device takes less than five minutes to put together with the included screwdriver.In addition to the high-end model, the desktop is available in a 64GB configuration starting at $1,599, and a 32GB configuration starting at $1099.Preorders begin today and the Framework Desktop will ship in the early third quarter. Editors Recommendations
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  • The AI Data-Center Boom Is a Job-Creation Bust
    www.wsj.com
    Tech and political leaders tout them as an employment bonanza, but data centers need very few workers in very large spaces.
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  • Hunter-gatherers get less sleep than people in industrial societies
    www.newscientist.com
    Members of the Himba community in Namibia get just 5.5 hours of sleep a night on averageNick Fox / AlamyMuch has been written about how modern lifestyles mean we are no longer getting enough sleep, unlike our ancestors who lived in less technologically advanced times. But an analysis of 54 sleep studies conducted around the world has found that people in small, non-industrialised societies actually get less sleep than those in more industrialised regions.Everyone I talk to in Canada and the US talks about how awful their sleep is, says Leela McKinnon at the University of Toronto Mississauga in Canada. The numbers arent showing that. AdvertisementIt is often assumed that the rise of gadgets like big-screen TVs and smartphones mean that people today are sleeping less than in the recent past the so-called sleep-loss epidemic.But many studies that report a decrease in sleep in the past few decades are based on asking people how long they sleep, which is an unreliable measure. Even using this method, the results are mixed, with many studies finding no change or even an increase in sleep duration.Research based on more reliable measures, such as physical activity monitors or using electrodes to monitor brainwaves, hasnt found a decrease over recent decades. For instance, a 2016 review of 168 studies found no decline in sleep duration over the past 50 years. Get the most essential health and fitness news in your inbox every Saturday.Sign up to newsletterBut these studies were done in industrialised countries, leaving open the question of whether people got a lot more sleep prior to industrialisation. With the availability of wrist-based activity monitors, it has become easier to study sleep in non-industrialised societies.Such studies have revealed surprising short sleep durations. For instance, among hunter-gatherers, the San sleep for 6.7 hours a night on average, the Hadza for 6.2 hours and the Bayaka for 5.9 hours. The shortest duration found so far is the 5.5-hour sleep of the Himba community in Namibia, who are nomadic livestock herders.McKinnon and her colleague David Samson, also at the University of Toronto Mississauga, have been involved in several such studies. They have now compared sleeping habits in industrialised societies, including the US, Australia and Sri Lanka, with those in smaller, non-industrialised communities, including Indigenous peoples in the Amazon, Madagascar and Tanna Island in the Pacific.Altogether, the analysis is based on 54 studies that involved direct measurements of sleep in people aged over 18 who had no serious health conditions. While these studies involve only 866 people in total, the dataset is the most comprehensive to date, says Samson. Its the best there is right now.Overall, these individuals slept for 6.8 hours on average, but in non-industrialised societies, the average was 6.4 hours, compared with 7.1 hours in industrial societies.The pair also found that people in non-industrialised societies were asleep for 74 per cent of the time they were in bed, compared with 88 per cent in industrial societies, a measure known as sleep efficiency.McKinnon and Samson also assessed the regularity of peoples circadian rhythms using a measure called the circadian function index, where a score of 1 is perfect. In non-industrialised communities, the average was 0.7, compared with 0.63 in industrial societies.Samson attributes the higher sleep duration and greater sleep efficiency in industrialised societies to conditions more conducive to sleep. We see that weve made some real gains in the safety and security of our sleep sites, he says. We dont have to fend with rival human groups at night or predators.On the flip side, people in industrial regions are less exposed to the cues that help maintain circadian rhythms, such as lower temperatures at night and bright light exposure during the day. While they didnt assess this, McKinnon and Samson both suspect that having less regular circadian rhythms could have adverse effects that explain why many people perceive their sleep to be poor.What isnt clear from the paper is how representative the individuals in these 54 studies are of their overall populations, says Nathaniel Marshall at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. In order to make statements about prevalence in epidemiology, you need to have representative sampling, he says.Samson says he did look at whether having larger sample sizes could change the results, and they concluded that it wouldnt make a large difference.Journal reference:Proceedings of the Royal Society B DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2024.2319Topics:sleep
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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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  • Mira Murati's new AI startup is set to be valued at $9 billion, sources say
    www.businessinsider.com
    OpenAI's former CTO, Mira Murati, debuted her new startup, Thinking Machine Labs, last week.The startup is aiming to raise $1 billion at a roughly $9 billion valuation, according to sources familiar with the matter.A spokesperson for Murati declined to comment. Mira Murati's new startup, Thinking Machine Labs, is aiming to raise a $1 billion funding round at a roughly $9 billion valuation, sources familiar with the matter told Business Insider.The round is still in progress, and details could change. A spokesperson for Murati declined to comment.A $9 billion valuation is unusually high for a startup less than a year old, but investors have been eager to back AI startups, especially those founded by former OpenAI employees. Murati previously spent six and a half years at OpenAI, where she served as CTO, working on the development of ChatGPT and other AI research initiatives. She was briefly appointed interim CEO in November 2023 after OpenAI's board abruptly fired Sam Altman, a move that sparked turmoil within the company. After Altman's reinstatement as CEO, Murati resumed her role as CTO.vWhat exactly Murati would do after leaving OpenAI last year has been a favorite Silicon Valley parlor game in recent months, with few details until the company emerged from stealth last week.In a blog post, Murati positioned the startup as an artificial intelligence research and product lab focused on making AI more accessible."To bridge the gaps, we're building Thinking Machines Lab to make AI systems more widely understood, customizable and generally capable," Murati wrote.Murati has recruited a long list of engineers and AI researchers from her former employer, OpenAI, and Meta and Anthropic. Several of Murati's former coworkers, including John Schulman, who co-led the creation of ChatGPT; Jonathan Lachman, formerly the head of special projects at OpenAI; Barret Zoph, co-creator of ChatGPT; and Alexander Kirillov, who worked closely with Murati on ChatGPT's voice mode, are also working at Thinking Machines Lab.Murati is one of a handful of former OpenAI executives who have gone on to launch their own companies. Former OpenAI chief scientist and cofounder Ilya Sutskever left the company in May 2024 and started Safe Superintelligence Inc. soon after leaving. Dario and Daniela Amodei also worked at OpenAI and founded Anthropic in 2021.
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  • Amazon is hammering out deals with news publishers ahead of its AI-enhanced Alexa upgrade
    www.businessinsider.com
    Amazon is set to unveil an AI-enhanced Alexa upgrade that could boost publisher exposure.Amazon is negotiating licensing deals with publishers for the new feature, people familiar told BI.Some publishers are banking on exposure via Alexa as traffic from other tech platforms has declined.Amazon is expected to unveil an AI-enhanced upgrade to itsAlexa voice techat an event in New York on Wednesday, and some publishers hope it will lead to broader exposure for their outlets.As part of the work behind the scenes, Amazon is hammering out licensing deals with publishers to showcase their news and information in the feature, two people familiar with the talks told Business Insider. They asked for anonymity to discuss private deals; their identities are known to BI. Axios previously reported that Amazon had been reaching out to publishers.Amazon has also held talks with companies such as Uber, Instacart, and Ticketmaster for the feature, BI previously reported.Under the proposed terms of these new media deals, users of Amazon devices could hear content from a publisher read aloud when they ask Alexa for information on an Echo smart speaker, or see publisher citations with links on the Echo Show, the version with a screen.Some publishers told BI they hoped the upgrade would be a big improvement over their earlier experience with Amazon's voice assistant. Alexa, which launched in 2014, hasn't lived up to expectations in recent years, as BI has previously reported. Publishers and other companies were encouraged to create Alexa skills, or shortcuts that let users perform tasks like shopping or getting news, but engagement with them was generally poor.Publishers see an opportunity here, even if smart speakers have underwhelmed as a category. Facebook and Google search have deprioritized news, and publishers are looking for traffic anywhere they can get it. According to Amazon, Alexa is installed on more than 100 million devices, a sizable audience for publishers to get in front of.One publishing exec told BI that Amazon was paying "good" but not significant money to feature publisher content, but stressed that the biggest benefit was the ability to up their exposure in Amazon's sprawling ecosystem.AI deals have been a way for publishers to offset declines in audience and advertising while letting AI companies use their content to answer queries and train their tech. OpenAI, for example, has signed deals with companies like News Corp. and Business Insider parent Axel Springer.
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  • PS Plus March 2025 Essential games reveal time: When will we know free games?
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    The PlayStation Plus games for March 2025 will be revealed very soon indeed. We've got a full rundown of the details of exactly when you'll find out and be able to play themTech00:01, 26 Feb 2025PlayStation Plus is bringing more new games to Sony console owners(Image: Sony )PS Plus subscribers that are on the Essential Tier will have some fresh games to play this month, and the reveal for the March 2025 titles is coming very soon.As is par for the course, we're expecting three games for all subscribers, while those on the Extra tier got some fresh new games to play this month including Star Wars Jedi Survivor.We've already covered the community's predictions for the lineup, but after the PSN outage of a few weeks ago fans are hoping for a decent slate of titles.The PS Plus Essential Games for March will be revealed on Wednesday, February 26, at 4:30PM UK time. It's usually the last Wednesday of the month, and with it being a shorter month, we'll get to know what we're downloading earlier.Usually, the games go free in the store the first Tuesday of the month, so we expect you'll be able to download them by around 10am on Tuesday, March 4.Content cannot be displayed without consentDon't forget, you won't be able to download last month's games for free after the new games cycle in so grab Payday 3, High on Life and Pac-Man World Re-Pac while you can.As a reminder, here's what the PlayStation Blog had to say about eachPayday 3 - PS5Revel in the thrill of a perfectly planned and executed heist in this high-octane, co-op FPS experience for up to four players online. Step out of retirement back into the life of crime in the shoes of the Payday Gang, the envy of their peers and the nightmare of law-enforcement wherever they go. Several years after the crews reign of terror over Washington DC has ended, they assemble once again to deal with the threat that roused them out of early retirement.High on Life - PS4, PS5Fresh out of high school with no job and no ambition, youve really got nothing going for you until an alien cartel that wants to get high off humanity invades Earth.Now, you and a team of charismatic talking guns must answer the heros call and become the deadliest intergalactic bounty hunter the cosmos has ever seen. Travel to a variety of biomes and locations across the cosmos, go up against the nefarious Garmantuous and his gang of goons, collect loot, meet unique characters, and more, in the latest comedy adventure from Squanch Games.Pac-Man World Re-Pac - PS4, PS5Article continues belowIn this 2004 remake of the original PlayStation platformer, with improved UI, fine-tuned mechanics and updated visuals, Pac-Man arrives home on his birthday to find the Ghosts have kidnapped Pac-Mans family & friends and ruined his party. Off to the rescue, Pac-Man sets out to Ghost Island. Dodge Ghosts, solve environmental puzzles, rescue the Pac-Fam, and more in this platforming adventure. Play a collection of 3D mazes in Maze mode, clear Quest mode to unlock the original Pac-Man game in Original mode.Don't forget, even if you don't download them yet, you should add them to your Library for later!For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.
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  • Games Inbox: Will the Fable reboot be on PS5?
    metro.co.uk
    Was Fable delayed for the PS5? (Xbox Game Studios)The Wednesday letters page is appalled by Warner Bros. closing down Monolith Productions, as one reader celebrates 15 years of Deadly Premonition.To join in with the discussions yourself email gamecentral@metro.co.ukPast decisionsI think its pretty obvious the reason Fable has been delayed is so that Microsoft can release it on PlayStation 5 at the same time. They said that some developers werent set up to do it or hadnt planned to when they first started and Fable definitely wasnt designed for PlayStation 5, given how long ago it began.Its obvious Indiana Jones And The Great Circle wouldve had a bigger impact if itd been multiformat from the start. I dont think it was to give the Xbox a little bit of exclusivity, I just dont think it was ready. And I think the only reason a release date hasnt been announced yet is because its not finished.There are no Xbox exclusives now, theres just games they havent got round to porting across yet. Id be surprised if there was a single game that wasnt released multiformat by the time we get to next year. I think things like South Of Midnight being Xbox only are just putting people off and they dont realise that the change has already happened, theres just a bit of lag on the implementation.Purple RangerEver decreasing circlesJust seen the news about Warner Bros. shutting down multiple developers and I just dont know what to say. If its not buyouts shrinking the size of the games industry its layoffs. How is Warner going to improve its profitability if it doesnt release a new game for five or more years?OK, it wont be spending any money on development, but it wont be making any either. You need to actually make a game to be able to sell and earn money off it. I mean, that seems pretty basic logic to me.My sympathies to all those affected by this latest short-sightedness and I really hope youre not all replaced by AI, even though you probably will be. Cant wait for that new Wonder Woman game where shes got six fingers on each hands and the background size and perspective keeps changing every time you turn the camera.GadflyDefinitely deliveredI just wanted to write in and say how brilliant Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 is. A real breath of fresh air compared to many recent games. Its the first game in a long time that I find myself thinking about when Im not playing it. The game world seems so real its a pure joy just to walk around and see what you can find. I havent completed many missions but the ones I have seemed interesting and not just fetch quests.Maybe Ive missed them, but Ive heard very little about this in the Inbox. Hopefully readers are too busy enjoying it to write in. I hope it sold well. It deserves to.Keep up the good work.Manic Miner 100 (gamertag)GC: It sold very well. Better than the original, with 2 million sales in less than two weeks.Email your comments to: gamecentral@metro.co.ukShaolin superheroesIm not really sure what James Gunn knows about making video games. All he seems to do is talk about trivial stuff like whos doing the voiceovers. He did work on Lollipop Chainsaw, so maybe he picked up something, but I really could do without Injustice 3.I think the positive reaction to the Superman movie trailer shows that people are sick of evil Superman and Injustice is very Zack Snyder adjacent. Id be happy for NetherRealm to either reboot the series with more positive portrayals of the characters or do something new. They keep putting off a Shaolin Monks sequels so why not make one but with DC Comics characters? Or something similar at least.Pr0metheusJurassic larksBeen seeing a lot of talk of Dino Crisis talk lately. Nothing major, just things like the fact it actually outsold Onimusha (which is getting a new game) back in the day and GOG advertised it coming to PC in Times Square. Little things but I hope its all leading up to some kind of remake and/or sequel.I know the Inbox likes to joke about dinosaurs in games but with a new trilogy of Jurassic Park films coming out soon surely now is the perfect time for Capcom, and others, to take advantage of the fact that everyone loves dinosaurs and yet almost no games have them.Turning them into movie monsters is one thing but you could have them be friendly too, in a Dino Riders sense. How that hasnt become a thing after all these years, even in just an indie game, I have no idea.SnatcherSlop machineI completely understand peoples revulsion at the thought of Xbox firing lots of talented developers to pump out AI sludge, and while I have no doubt to some extent that will probably happen, I cant help but see some benefit to Microsofts Muse tools and their ilk.If it speeds up developments of assets for games that can be curated by a discerning human hand, especially in this and the next generation where games are getting more and more complex to build, surely thats a net gain? Especially for indie developers.Am I exposing my ignorance here in thinking it couldnt at the very least correct glitches within real-time based on player feedback? My Star Wars Jedi: Survivor playthrough would certainly be a lot smoother.ArmandxUltra (gamertag)GC: We dont know about that specific example, but AI can absolutely be used for lots of useful things, that would be difficult, time consuming, or simply too tedious for people. These are not creative tasks and yet so much AI tech is aimed at wholly replacing artists and developers, who are already underpaid enough its hard to imagine the savings equalling the cost of creating the technology in the first place.15 years of ZachI know how much people love/hate hearing about anniversaries so heres another one for you: Deadly Premonition is 15 years old this week.For me personally its one of those where it feels both too old and not old enough. One things for certain youd never get a weird, half broken game like that released on consoles nowadays. Maybe an indie game but for me part of the appeal of the game was finding this bizarre hidden gem in Tesco that was actually one of the best games of the year. Ill never forget that original IGN review that just did not get it.MackaloAll or nothingJust horrible to see what has happened to Monolith Productions, whose only crime seems to be that they were mismanaged by a clueless exec. Warner Bros. are already one of the few big publishers left and now theyre considerably less big.Once again, we see how the ridiculous length of time it takes to make games nowadays is destroying both developers and publishers. Unless Warner Bros. is suddenly very good at keeping secrets theyre going to have nothing new out until 2030 at the best, by which point well likely be halfway through the PlayStation 6 generation.This problem has been going on for years now and Ive not seen anyone make any attempt to solve it. Even when there are very obvious things they can do in terms of cutting budgets and play times, especially when so many people are complaining that games are too long anyway.It feels like the games industry doesnt want to help itself. If it cant make infinite money, instantly itd rather just crash and burn. The people in charge of these companies are deranged.GooberInbox also-ransGood for Bloober Team getting more work from Konami but can I have my new Castlevania game now, please? I really hope the talk of a reveal during the Switch 2 becomes true because thats the only thing that would even slightly explain the lack of news.AustinSo are Sony actually going to give any compensation for the PSN blackout? I know I havent received anything.LobarGC: They are if you have PS Plus, but not if you havent. But they dont seem to have done it yet anyway.More TrendingEmail your comments to: gamecentral@metro.co.ukThe small printNew Inbox updates appear every weekday morning, with special Hot Topic Inboxes at the weekend. Readers letters are used on merit and may be edited for length and content.You can also submit your own 500 to 600-word Readers Feature at any time via email or our Submit Stuff page, which if used will be shown in the next available weekend slot.You can also leave your comments below and dont forget to follow us on Twitter.ArrowMORE: Games Inbox: Is Mario better than Astro Bot?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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  • Unblock the World of Streaming with This Powerful VPN!
    gizmodo.com
    The internet is full of region-locked content, mostly notorious in the streaming world. Famous streaming services in the US and abroad often block some of their shows and movies in specific regions.However, a VPN, such as NordVPN can promptly resolve the issue.Namely, when you switch your IP to another country, you can effectively sidestep the restriction and access anything you want. This applies to streaming platforms, booking sites, and even VoIP services.Today, well educate you on how NordVPN makes this possible and touch on its promotion, which lets you save 72% whilst enjoying this, and other benefits.See At NordVPNEnjoy your streaming platforms from anywhereNordVPN packs over 7,300 servers in 118 countries. A huge server park allows you to avoid geo-blocks and access your favorite content anywhere. This provider also uses 10 Gbps server speeds and the NordLynx protocol to maximize the speed.In addition to unlimited bandwidth, NordVPN has IP-changing abilities.Each connection to the server renders you somewhere else. Thus, you can get a US IP address to access different streaming libraries of prevalent services.The same goes for other streaming services or TV channels.NordVPN is equipped with SmartPlay, a feature that enhances unblocking prowess. Moreover, the provider comes with a simple-to-use browser extension, which unlocks Location Spoofing for better results.This feature fakes your GPS coordinates and makes you look like youre physically in another location. As a result, NordVPN is a great option for streaming enthusiasts who live off the binge-sleep-repeat mantra!Some other advantages of a service like NordVPNStreaming is just a cog in the system. VPNs generally offer more.NordVPN, for example, includes P2P servers, a Double VPN, and Onion Over VPN servers for safe dark web access. Above everything, youll find it available on all devices, such as:Windows, macOS, LinuxAndroid and iOSStreaming devices (Firestick, Apple TV, Android TV, )Gaming consolesRouters, and moreThe VPN offers 10 simultaneous connections to protect all devices. Plus, theres a no-log policy, which guarantees no data collection on the companys side. This also renders NordVPN the best privacy-focused VPN.NordVPN birthday promotion (get up to 1 year free)However, we also want to reflect on its current promotion.NordVPN celebrates its 13th birthday with a deal that lets you get up to a year of VPN subscription for free. The promotion applies to its 2-year plans:Plus, which is now $4.39/mo with 6 free monthsComplete, which is now $5.49/mo with 6 free monthsPrime, which is now $8.39/mo with 12 free monthsEach plan comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee, so its refundable if things dont go your way. Keep in mind this is one of NordVPNs better promotions so far.The Prime plan is the strongest one, as you can virtually pay for 2 years and snatch 3 years of NordVPNs full package, which includes NordPass, NordLocker, and NordProtect.See at NordVPN
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