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  • Struggling with slow Google Messages photo transfers? Google says new update will make 'noticeable difference'
    www.techradar.com
    Google Messages users have noticed a media performance issue that makes it difficult to receive photos and videos.
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  • Why planes flying at hundreds of miles an hour is really tough to pull off in VFX
    beforesandafters.com
    Making a dogfight.Today on the befores & afters podcast, were chatting to Digital Domain about Marvels new film Captain America: Brave New World with visual effects supervisor Hanzhi Tang and digital effects supervisor Ryan Duhaime. Digital Domain were principally responsible for the Celestial Island encounter, which includes a very dynamic dogfight featuring Captain America and Falcon.In the podcast we talk about how DD took in the original asset of Tiamut from Eternals and actually shrunk that down a little. We also talk about building digital ocean and sky assets, plus a new cloud shader, for the sequence. And going from previs which DD handled through to the final VFX of the dogfight and flying scenes. All while dealing with planes that very quickly move away from the point of origin in Maya scenes, making it a tricky task to light and render.Check out the previous coverage of Brave New World here at befores & afters, too.The post Why planes flying at hundreds of miles an hour is really tough to pull off in VFX appeared first on befores & afters.
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  • MrBeasts chocolate empire is making more money than his YouTube channel
    www.fastcompany.com
    MrBeast is currently the most-subscribed YouTuber in the worldbut his biggest moneymaker isnt content. Its chocolate.The 26-year-old creator, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, owns the snack brand Feastables, which generated $251 million in sales and more than $20 million in profit last year, according to investor documents obtained by Bloomberg. By contrast, his main media businessincluding his blockbuster YouTube channel and the Amazon Prime reality competition show, Beast Gamesbrought in similar revenue but lost nearly $80 million over the same period.With 372 million subscribers at the time of writing, MrBeasts videos range from spending 100 hours inside the pyramids to helping 2,000 people walk again. As you might imagine, content of that sort doesnt come cheap. The average video for MrBeasts main channel now costs between $3 million and $4 million, according to Bloomberg.Recouping such extravagant production budgets is no easy task, especially with only a few videos released per month. Little surprise, then, that the YouTube star has spent the past few years leveraging his fame to build businesses that have nothing to do with the social media platforms he started out on.Now, the most profitable arm of Beast Industries is its commerce division, led by the chocolate brand Feastables. According to Bloomberg, the company forecasts that Feastables will triple in size over the next couple of years, while media revenue will only account for one-fifth of its total sales by 2026. (MrBeast did not respond to Fast Companys request for comment.)As well as Feastables, Beast Industries is also a shareholder in the snack brand Lunchly and owns Viewstats, a software firm that sells digital tools to fellow content creators. As reported by Bloomberg, Beast Industries has secured more than $450 million in funding over the past four years to fuel its businesses. In recent months, MrBeast has been in talks with investors to raise an additional $200 million, which would push the companys valuation past $5 billion, The Verge reported last week.Investors backing Beast Industriess $5 billion valuation are betting on a future driven by consumer products rather than viral videos. Beyond Feastables, MrBeast is gearing up to launch a range of new products in the coming years, including beverages, a snack brand, and a cereal line. Hes also set to expand into mobile gaming, with a division expected to debut next year.This reflects a broader monetization shift in the creator economy, where major social media stars are pivoting from content to consumer products. Last year, popular podcast host Alex Cooper launched her drink brand, Unwell, while YouTuber-turned-podcaster Emma Chamberlain opened her first ever caf in Los Angeles for her coffee brand, Chamberlain Coffee. Logan Paul, another early YouTube star, cofounded Prime energy drink and teamed up with MrBeast on Lunchly. Turns out, selling your brand as a chocolate bar or a beverage might be the real jackpot.
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  • How you can help save declining butterflies
    www.fastcompany.com
    If the joy of seeing butterflies seems increasingly rare these days, it isnt your imagination.From 2000 to 2020, the number of butterflies fell by 22% across the continental United States. Thats 1 in 5 butterflies lost. The findings are from an analysis just published in the journal Science by the U.S. Geological Surveys Powell Center Status of Butterflies of the United States Working Group, which I am involved in.The endangered Karner blue butterfly has struggled with habitat loss. [Photo: USFWS/Flickr]We found declines in just about every region of the continental U.S. and across almost all butterfly species.Overall, nearly one-third of the 342 butterfly species we were able to study declined by more than half. Twenty-two species fell by more than 90%. Only nine actually increased in numbers.West Coast lady butterflies range across the Western U.S., but their numbers have dropped by 80% in two decades. [Photo: Renee Las Vegas/Wiki Commons]Some species numbers are dropping faster than others. The West Coast lady, a fairly widespread species across the western U.S., dropped by 80% in 20 years. Given everything we know about its biology, it should be doing fine it has a wide range and feeds on a variety of plants. Yet, its numbers are absolutely tanking across its range.Why care about butterflies?Butterflies are beautiful. They inspire people, from art to literature and poetry. They deserve to exist simply for the sake of existing. They are also important for ecosystem function.Butterflies are pollinators, picking up pollen on their legs and bodies as they feed on nectar from one flower and carrying it to the next. In their caterpillar stage, they also play an important role as herbivores, keeping plant growth in check.A pipevine swallowtail caterpillar munches on leaves at Brookside Gardens in Wheaton, Md. Herbivores help keep plant growth in check. [Photo: Judy Gallagher/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY]Butterflies can also serve as an indicator species that can warn of threats and trends in other insects. Because humans are fond of butterflies, its easy to get volunteers to participate in surveys to count them.The annual North American Butterfly Association Fourth of July Count is an example and one we used in the analysis. The same kind of nationwide monitoring by amateur naturalists doesnt exist for less charismatic insects such as walking sticks.Whats causing butterflies to decline?Butterfly populations can decline for a number of reasons. Habitat loss, insecticides, rising temperatures and drying landscapes can all harm these fragile insects.A study published in 2024 found that a change in insecticide use was a major factor in driving butterfly declines in the Midwest over 17 years. The authors, many of whom were also part of the current study, noted that the drop coincided with a shift to using seeds with prophylactic insecticides, rather than only spraying crops after an infestation.The Southwest saw the greatest drops in butterfly abundance of any region. As that region heats up and dries out, the changing climate may be driving some of the butterfly decline there. Butterflies have a high surface-to-volume ratio they dont hold much moisture so they can easily become desiccated in dry conditions. Drought can also harm the plants that butterflies rely on.Only the Pacific Northwest didnt lose butterfly population on average. This trend was largely driven by an irruptive species, meaning one with extremely high abundance in some years the California tortoiseshell. When this species was excluded from the analyses, trends in the Pacific Northwest were similar to other regions.The California tortoiseshell butterfly can look like wood when its wings are closed, but theyre a soft orange on the other side. [Photo: Walter Siegmund/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA]When we looked at each species by its historical range, we found something else interesting.Many species suffered their highest losses at the southern ends of their ranges, while the northern losses generally werent as severe. While we could not link drivers to trends directly, the reason for this pattern might involve climate change, or greater exposure to agriculture with insecticides in southern areas, or it may be a combination of many stressors.There is hope for populations to recoverSome butterfly species can have multiple generations per year, and depending on the environmental conditions, the number of generations can vary between years.This gives me a bit of hope when it comes to butterfly conservation. Because they have such short generation times, even small conservation steps can make a big difference and we can see populations bounce back.The Karner blue is an example. Its a small, endangered butterfly that depends on oak savannas and pine barren ecosystems. These habitats are uncommon and require management, especially prescribed burning, to maintain. With restoration efforts, one Karner blue population in the Albany Pine Bush Preserve in New York rebounded from a few hundred individuals in the early 1990s to thousands of butterflies.Similar management and restoration efforts could help other rare and declining butterflies to recover.What you can do to help butterflies recoverThe magnitude and rate of biodiversity loss in the world right now can make one feel helpless. But while national and international efforts are needed to address the crisis, you can also take small actions that can have quick benefits, starting in your own backyard.Butterflies love wildflowers, and planting native wildflowers can benefit many butterfly species. The Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation has guides recommending which native species are best to plant in which parts of the country. Letting grass grow can help, even if its just a strip of grass and wildflowers a couple of feet wide at the back of the yard.A patch of wildflowers and grasses can become a butterfly garden, like this one in Townsend, Tenn. [Photo: Chris Light, CC BY-SA]Supporting policies that benefit conservation can also help. In some states, insects arent considered wildlife, so state wildlife agencies have their hands tied when it comes to working on butterfly conservation. But those laws could be changed.The federal Endangered Species Act can also help. The law mandates that the government maintain habitat for listed species. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in December 2024 recommended listing the monarch butterfly as a threatened species. With the new study, we now have population trends for more than half of all U.S. butterfly species, including many that likely should be considered for listing.With so many species needing help, it can be difficult to know where to start. But the new data can help concentrate conservation efforts on those species at the highest risk.I believe this study should be a wake-up call about the need to better protect butterflies and other insects the little things that run the world.Eliza Grames is an assistant professor of biological sciences at Binghamton University, State University of New York.This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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  • Covid Vaccines Have Paved the Way for Cancer Vaccines
    www.wired.com
    The mRNA technology behind coronavirus vaccines is now being used to create bespoke vaccines for cancer patients.
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  • Level up your IT career for just $49.99 with this insane CompTIA training bundle
    www.macworld.com
    MacworldSo, you want to break into IT, get certified, or finally understand what your companys IT guy keeps mumbling about? Great newsyou dont need a fortune, years of schooling, or a secret decoder ring.For a limited time, the Complete 2025 CompTIA Certification Training Super Bundle is just $49.99 (down from $493!). It gives you access to 17 expert-led courses and over 310 hours of learning content.This isnt just a bunch of random IT jargon. Its a structured, hands-on way to master key IT skills, from networking and cybersecurity to hardware troubleshooting and cloud computing. Whether youre a total beginner or an IT pro looking to stack certifications, this bundle has everything you need to boost your career, resume, and maybe even your paycheck.The CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ (FC0-U61) course acts as your gateway to the world of IT, covering hardware, software, security, and cloud computing in a way that makes sense. If youre the type who gets nervous when your Wi-Fi goes down, this course will turn you into the person who fixes it instead.Explore all 310+ hours when you get this 17-course bundle for just $49.99 for a limited time.The Complete 2025 CompTIA Certification Training Super Bundle by IDUNOVA $49.99Get It HereStackSocial prices subject to change.
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  • Macworld Podcast: iPhone 16e review
    www.macworld.com
    MacworldApples newest iPhone is in the house, and on this episode of the Macworld Podcast, we talk about the iPhone 16e. Is it a good phone, whos it for and most importantly, should you buy one?This is episode 925 with Jason Cross, Michael Simon, and Roman Loyola.Watch episode 925 on YouTubeListen to episode 925 on Apple PodcastsListen to episode 925 on SpotifyGet infoFor more information about the topics discussed on the show, click on the links below.iPhone 16e review: A study in contrastsApple C1 modem real-world tests: Good enough, but a step slowThe iPhone 16e DOES work with MagSafe chargers kind ofiPhone 16e vs iPhone SE: Is it finally time to upgrade?iPhone 16e vs iPhone 16: Are the compromises worth $200?Apple iPhone 16eRead our reviewBest Prices Today:0.01 at idealo | 699 at Alternate | 699 at ComputeruniverseSubscribe to the Macworld PodcastYou can subscribe to the Macworld Podcastor leave us a review!right here in the Podcasts app. The Macworld Podcast is also available on Spotify and on the Macworld Podcast YouTube channel. Or you can point your favorite podcast-savvy RSS reader at: https://feeds.megaphone.fm/macworldTo find previous episodes, visit Macworlds podcast page or our home on MegaPhone.Apple
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