• U.S. budget deficit for Trumps first full month in office hits $307 billion
    www.fastcompany.com
    The U.S. budget deficit totaled $307 billion for President Donald Trumps first full month in office, up 4%, or $11 billion, from a year ago, the Treasury Department said on Wednesday, even as growth in receipts outpaced that of spending.Receipts totaled $296 billion in February, a record for that month. That figure was up 9%, or $25 billion, compared with a year earlier. But outlays in February totaled $603 billion, also a record for that month. That was up 6%, or $36 billion, from the year-earlier period.After calendar adjustments for both receipts and outlays, the adjusted deficit would have been $311 billion, a 3% increase over the figure in February 2024, the Treasury Department said.The deficit for the first five months of fiscal 2025 came to $1.147 trillion, up 38%, or $318 billion, from a year earlier. Fiscal year-to-date receipts rose 2%, or $37 billion, to a record $1.893 trillion, but outlays grew 13%, or $355 billion, to a record $3.039 trillion.Driving the spending growth in February was higher spending on Treasurys interest on the public debt, outlays for Child Tax Credit payments and increased Social Security payments due in part to a 2.5% cost-of-living adjustment for 2025.David Lawder, Reuters
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  • DEI is under attack, but companies are not ditching pay equityyet
    www.fastcompany.com
    It might seem like every company is ditching their commitments to diversity, equity, and inclusion at the moment, or at least strongly reconsidering them. Corporate leaders have said the threat of being targeted by a federal investigationper one of Trumps executive orders on DEIis keeping them up at night. High-profile employers like Meta, Walmart, and McDonalds have made notable changes to their DEI programs in recent months.As Fast Company has reported, however, not every company is taking this opportunity to entirely backtrack on DEI efforts. In fact, plenty of employers still seem confident that DEI is a worthwhile undertaking, according to the latest Compensation Best Practices Report from Payscale.How companies are thinking about DEIOf the nearly 3,600 companies surveyed, 38% said they are planning to make no changes to their diversity programs, while another 28% claimed to be increasing their commitments. Only 11% admitted they were pulling back on DEI (though another 22% said they did not have any such programs in place). Even as some organizations have scrubbed the term equity from their programs, the majority of companies66%believed equity should remain a central pillar of DEI efforts.Some experts have worried that political pressure and mounting anti-DEI sentiment might lead companies to make more expansive changes to their programs, even reevaluating pay equity efforts that have become prevalent in the business world. What we are worried about is people pausing on pay equity work, Syndio chief legal officer Rob Porcarelli recently told Fast Company. Some frame pay equity as a womens issue, and so it gets swept under the umbrella of DEI.Pay equity trends in the workplaceAccording to Payscale data, however, its not likely companies will let their pay equity initiatives fall by the wayside, even amid the shifting tides in corporate DEI. Corporate investment in pay equity has largely increased since 2019, when only 38% of companies engaged in this work; by 2022, the share of employers conducting or planning pay equity analyses had jumped to 66%. While interest has fallen slightly since then, the Payscale report found that the majority of companies57%remain committed to pay equity efforts in 2025. That said, there was variation in what companies analyzed as part of pay equity audits. In 2025, more than half are focused on the gender pay gap, though there was a meaningful drop in the share of companies analyzing pay on the basis of gender, from about 71% in 2024 to 57% this year. There was an even greater drop-off for pay equity analysis on the basis of race and ethnicity, from 64% to 45%. (Most employers72%also believed that research on the gender pay gap was meaningful.)An increase in pay transparencyIn the meantime, however, it seems companies are becoming more candid about pay and compensation, in part because of pay transparency laws that have forced their hand across a number of states. Nearly a third of employers said they were communicating more about their compensation practices, and 56% said they are publishing pay ranges regardless of whether it is mandated by state law (though this figure has dropped from 60% in 2024). Far more companies are also fielding direct inquiries from their workforce, with a third of them reporting that employees were asking questions about payan indication that workers are also taking matters into their own hands, no matter their companys stance on pay transparency.
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  • iPhone 18 Concept Brings A Unique Android Phone Feature Along With The Camera Island
    www.yankodesign.com
    Calm yourselves, this isnt real, but imagine if it was. Imagine a phone that had something more tactile on it apart from 2-3 buttons. Meet the iPhone 18 from NFT Designer, a phone that looks weirdly familiar. If youve seen the CMF Phone from last year, youll remember that a highlight of that device was a tactile threaded knob on the bottom corner of the device, designed to help fix third-party accessories and modules, or even swap out your phones fascia for unique new color combinations.Here, the iPhone 18 gets a suspiciously similar knob, but it isnt for accessories its presumably for rotary input. What do I mean? Well, we just saw phones at MWC debut the ability to attach (and control) camera lenses directly on the phone so what if you ditched the lenses but retained the control? Placed perfectly at fingers reach while holding the phone in landscape mode, this rotary dial could potentially help with focusing and clicking photos more naturally. Look closely and youll see that the Camera Control button on the iPhone 18 is missing, so this rotary knob suddenly makes a LOT of sense.Designer: NFT DesignerWe all know fully well that Apples ditching their iconic camera square for a new island format with the upcoming 17 series. The leaks have pretty much confirmed it, although its uncharacteristic of Apple to bulk their phones up instead of slimming them down. Either way, were yet to see what this new chonky camera island means for the iPhones photographic capabilities. However I believe the Camera Control button on the side was a precursor for whats yet to come. Apples hell bent on building the best camera a smartphone can have, and the Camera Control was a stepping stone towards that eventuality but thats all it is a stepping stone.Although highly unrealistic, actual physical hardware sounds like a MUCH better idea for camera interfacing than a haptic button. My first thought was that this was a volume knob, but then again, the iPhone 18 concept still has volume buttons on the side. It only makes sense that this new tactile input is made to power the most important part of the iPhone the camera. Scrolling between lenses, scrolling to zoom, scrolling to focus, potentially even pressing to click it all makes sense. The knob is located perfectly within reach of your index finger while you hold the phone in landscape, not so much while in portrait mode, but then again, the Camera Control button is partial to landscape photography too.Were expected to get more information on the actual iPhone 18 towards the end of this year, once the iPhone 17 materializes fully. A few things were fairly certain of is that Apples also working on an iPhone Air, which is a slimmer version of its flagship phone, as well as potentially a folding iPhone to be launched around 2026-27.The post iPhone 18 Concept Brings A Unique Android Phone Feature Along With The Camera Island first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • The Violent Rise of No Lives Matter
    www.wired.com
    No Lives Matter has emerged in recent months as a particularly violent splinter group within the extremist crime network known as Com and 764, and experts are at a loss for how to stop its spread.
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  • Donald Trump Bought a $90,000 Tesla With 37 Recall Notices Against It
    www.wired.com
    Heres hoping Elon Musk wont have to personally fix President Trumps new EV anytime soon.
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  • NordVPN review: An extensive VPN privacy package
    appleinsider.com
    NordVPN is a top-tier VPN service, offering a lot of features and usability in a well-rounded and protective service to help most iPhone and Mac VPN users.NordVPN's macOS interface is clean and straightforwardA VPN is an important part of a modern day computing setup. With the continuing threats to personal security online, as well as a need to ensure as much privacy as possible, it's become an invaluable tool.While there are free VPN services available that can seem basic or dodgy, users concerned about their privacy and security tend to go for paid options. Services that can also offer more features to consumers do well in the overall VPN marketplace. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • Sonos abandons its streaming Apple TV rival even as it was in testing
    appleinsider.com
    Troubled audio company Sonos has reportedly told its staff that work on its promised streaming video player is now canceled.The updated Sonos app for iOS that led to the cancellation of the Pinewood projectThe player, codenamed Pinewood, was first reported on in 2023, when together with an AirPods Max-style rival, it was thought to be Sonos directly taking on Apple. Then, however, an update to its existing iPhone Sonos app was so faulty and so poorly received in early 2024, that the company ultimately saw its CEO resign.Now according to The Verge, interim CEO Tom Conrad and his management team has held an all-staff call. In it, Conrad announced the cancellation of the Pinewood project and the redeployment of staff to other projects within the company. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • Tiantian Xu wins the 2025 Wolf Prize, Yasmeen Lari declines citing Gazas destruction
    archinect.com
    The annual announcement of the prestigious Wolf Prize from the Israeli Wolf Foundation has been marred by controversy after one of the two selected 2025 Architecture laureates Pakistani architect and 2023 RIBA Royal Gold Medal winner Yasmeen Lari turned down the honor in protest.Lari would have joined Tiantian Xu, the well-known University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee professor, as the only other Architecture laureate this year. The decision to decline was confirmed Wednesday as her name did not appear on the foundations official online announcement.Citing concerns over human rights violations in the prosecution of the Gaza War, Lari has apparently decided to turn down the $100,000 prize. In a statement posted to Instagram, Lari said the following:"While I am immensely grateful for this honour, alas, in view of the unfortunate continuing genocide in Gaza, I am not able to accept the award and the prize money even from an organization that is private from the government. All viol...
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  • LACMA to preview new public spaces beginning this June
    archinect.com
    The under-construction David Geffen Galleries at LACMA, now set to open in April of 2026, will be part of the display taking place this summer as the institution opens one of its new plaza areas to the public for the first time. Photo: Museum Associates/LACMAArtist Mariana Castillo Deballs 75,000-square-footsite-specific piece will inaugurate the plaza. This covers the entire ground plane of the space, connecting the museum site to its geological memory and Indigenous past while referencing the form of the new building. The LA Times said in its preview that the installation "acts as the ground below the building and suggests various routes around the campus." Photo: Museum Associates/LACMAThis is part of a 3.5-acre total mosaic of public spaces in the redevelopment plan and precedes the installation of artworks from the permanent collection in the Peter Zumthor-designed new galleries. The new 110,000-square-foot wing is now 90% constructed. Photo: Museum Associates/LACMAO...
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  • FragPunk Review Heart of the Cards
    gamingbolt.com
    When Riot Games first announced Valorant, the hero shooter genre was already well past showing its age. And yet, it managed to stand out with its focus on tactical shooting, realistic weapon behavior, and competitive-focused gameplay. What does that say about Bad Guitar Studios FragPunk, arriving several years after Valorant with its own twist on this specific hero shooter sub-genre? Just that a deck of cards cant always revitalize an experience, even if the overall fundamentals are worth checking out.FragPunk occurs in a sleek futuristic setting where a mysterious reality-altering material called Glunite has been discovered and harnessed into Shard Cards. Activating cards can result in all kinds of effects, from flipping reality to changing the behavior of guns. As such, various mercenaries known as Lancers want to get their hands on this material to make more cards. To what end? The cinematic trailer does shine some light on this, but good luck trying to learn any of that in-game."At its core, FragPunk is more or less akin to Valorant. Its 5v5, each player controlling a unique Agent er, Lancer. You have the Buy phase, where you acquire primary, secondary and melee weapons."And thats fine. It provides enough reason to fight other Lancers, though I question the practice of using Shard Cards to obtain more material to make more Shard Cards. Perhaps theres something about the endless cycle of battle for potentially limited resources.At its core, FragPunk is more or less akin to Valorant. Its 5v5, each player controlling a unique Agent er, Lancer. You have the Buy phase, where you acquire primary, secondary and melee weapons. Each of your abilities has specific charges that wont replenish mid-combat. The main mode is Shard Clash, where one team is in charge of planting a Shard Convertor while the other must defend. Play enough rounds, and both sides eventually switch roles.The cards are at the heart of the experience. Before a round, each side can invest Shard Points into a card of choice, adding a modifier to tip the scales. Activating Big Head Mode for enemies, increasing the size of their head hitbox and allowing for easier headshots; deactivating healing for the enemy team; enhancing a random weapon in your arsenal; and one of my favorites, putting all of your reserve ammo into a single magazine and unleashing it all in one burst are some of the highlights.Depending on the effect, players must invest more Shard Points into a card to activate it, and you can field multiple cards at once (or refresh a current option). Its also possible to strengthen a cards effect with more Shard Points, thus turning a relatively normal option into something far more potent."Otherwise, adding cards to this kind of competitive shooter format isfine. Theyre only active for that specific round and not the entire match which is understandable to prevent things from falling into complete anarchy."Shard Points are obtained from dealing damage, assists, kills, and whatnot. Thus, even if your team is curb-stomped in the first round or two, its possible to make a comeback using more potent Shard Cards from the points accumulated thus far. However, a more complex economy is notable only in longer Shard Clash matches.For the regular Standard format, where its four rounds to victory, snowballs feel way more likely with little chance to turn things around other than raw skill. However, the same applies to a team that invests too many Shard Points when things are going well, potentially ending up on the back foot if your opponents turn things around.Otherwise, adding cards to this kind of competitive shooter format isfine. Theyre only active for that specific round and not the entire match which is understandable to prevent things from falling into complete anarchy. I did enjoy swapping out the tried and true SMG for an automatic shotgun once Dragons Breath became active, unleashing a swarm of hail and dealing ignite damage over time to an unlucky enemy. But these instances of drastically altering your overall setup felt few and far between. If anything, theyre fun modifiers which spice up the otherwise overtly familiar gameplay.FragPunk tries other ways to change things, like a knockout system for weapons. If youre defeated in a round, your previously chosen weapon is locked out, so you need to select another (or loot it from an enemy). The visual style is also super colorful, brimming with graffiti and effects that stop just short of feeling too overwhelming at times."Everyone has their quips and voice lines, even the announcer (to an annoying degree at times), but they otherwise come off as strangers to one another."The shooting mechanics and overall weapon feedback feel enjoyable enough, even if theyre leaning away fromyour typical tactical shooter. The Duel is a substitute for overtime and pits teams in 1v1 battles until one side is completely wiped out, which is neat.But they cant hide FragPunks most glaring problem in a nutshell youve seen all this before, albeit in other, more compelling titles. This includes the slower, more methodical movement that encourages corner peaking and not simply rushing in, swapping to your melee weapon to move a bit faster. The maps with multiple sightlines and flanking routes, though they dont feel as naturally integrated at times as Valorants (even if they beat it in terms of sheer visual fidelity).The various Lancer abilities are also nothing too out of the ordinary, ranging from your typical scanning, turrets and remote-controlled allies to detection beacons, camouflage and entering the void to avoid damage (but not being able to see enemy players). It all works well enough, though there are some periods of awkwardness, and very little feels non-derivative, which is a shame because of how cool the Lancers themselves look.Then again, their sleek designs belie the lack of organic interactions between the characters. Everyone has their quips and voice lines, even the announcer (to an annoying degree at times), but they otherwise come off as strangers to one another. I would argue that this kind of approach to character interactions would make more sense in Valorant rather than FragPunks more casual, over-the-top identity, but your mileage may vary.When youre bored of Shard Clash, you could try other modes like Team Deathmatch or Infection. The latter seemed promising but turns out laughable, given the lopsided advantage survivors have over the Infected and how annoyingly long the matches can last. Otherwise, you have the standard challenges and events, the latter focusing on completing additional tasks. Thus we arrive at the sheer amount of currencies and microtransactions inherent in FragPunk."Even without the sheer abundance of monetization, FragPunk is a solid if mostly inspired (in the nicest way possible) competitive shooter."I get it its a free-to-play game, its all cosmetic, Valorant charges plenty of exorbitant prices for their skins, and even Overwatch 2 brought back loot boxes. But even if you can justify all that, theres no denying that FragPunk makes it needlessly difficult to navigate all of this. I still dont know what Weapon Keys do, why soda cans are gacha, or even how we got to this point. Even if you ignore all the cosmetic nonsense, you still have to unlock additional Lancers with Gold or FragPunk Coins (acquired by spending real money). At least all the Shard Cards are free forever.Even without the sheer abundance of monetization, FragPunk is a solid if mostly inspired (in the nicest way possible) competitive shooter. The bombastic style and gunplay can be fun, especially with the unpredictability that the cards add, but the real meat of tactics and depth of weapon mastery feel somewhat wanting. Whether it can evolve further and establish its own niche or fall behind its superior inspirations remains to be seen, but for now, its enjoyable enough.This game was reviewed on PC.
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