Don't like ads? Go ad-free with TradeBriefs Premium CEO Picks - The best that international journalism has to offer! S33Suspect Identified In Michigan Splash Pad Shooting: Everything We Know  Police on Sunday identified the man they say shot nine people, putting an 8-year-old boy in critical condition, when he fired more than two dozen bullets at families at a splash pad in the Detroit suburb of Rochester Hills, Michigan, a city that has ranked among the safest in the state and the country in recent years.Victims in the shooting include an 8-year-old boy who is in critical condition after he was shot in the head, CNN reported, as well as his 4-year-old brother who was shot in the leg, 39-year-old mom with wounds to her abdomen and leg and six other victims ranging in age from 30 to 78 who were also shot but in stable condition.
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S8 S9Sensory Deprivation Alters Our Experience, Both of Body and Time  You have probably heard of sensory deprivation tanks. A number of celebrities swear by them for relaxation, and they have steadily grown in popularity over the past few decades. They work by minimizing sensory inputs from the external world: The tank is filled with high salinity water that allows the user to float freely on the surface; the water is body temperature; earplugs are worn to reduce sound; and the tank is usually situated in a dark room or enclosed space.There are a couple reasons for this. First, while these experiences reduce sensory inputs from outside the body, they increase users’ sensitivity to sensory inputs from inside the body, interpreted through the process of interoception, including heart beat and breathing rate. Thus, to label these experiences as ‘sensory deprivation’ isn’t quite right. Second, ‘sensory deprivation’ carries negative connotations, where the user is deprived of something without acquiring something new in return.
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S10The Future of Organ-Chip Technology Is Bright  Biologist and bioengineer Donald E. Ingber doesn’t have time to sleep. As the founding director of The Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, finding time outside of work hasn’t gotten easier with age. At 67, his morning still starts at 5 a.m., running through a pile of emails that seems to grow larger by the day.By lunch, he’s already revised the budget for a crucial government grant and met with postdoctoral fellows regarding work on various research projects. Ingber also deals with unexpected issues, like immigration and political turbulence, that he never dreamed would fall under his purview. Recently, when a scientist he hired from Germany came with his wife and child and was turned away at Logan Airport for having an Iranian passport, Ingber spent the morning wrangling with the Harvard visa office, trying to get him back into the country.
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S11Why giant Antarctic sea spiders are surprisingly good dads  In fact, these animals also have a tiny body and store all their internal organs in their limbs. “They’re all legs,” says Felipe Barreto, an evolutionary biologist at Oregon State University. “They’re kind of their own thing.” (Read how sea spiders “breathe” through their legs.)Instead, they meticulously glue their eggs to a rock or other substrate at the bottom of the ocean. For two days, “the male just kind of walks around the egg mass and seems to be grooming it,” says study leader Amy Moran, a marine physiological ecologist at the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa.
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S12Is becoming a dad good for your health?  A present father can also provide unmatched benefits for the kids they are raising. "Children who grow up with invested fathers have better social, emotional, and academic outcomes than children without such fathers," says Lee Gettler, a biological anthropologist and director of the Hormones, Health, and Human Behavior lab at the University of Notre Dame."I and other researchers have consistently found that caring for and spending time with one’s children is associated with emotional benefits for all parents, and especially for dads," says Katherine Nelson-Coffey, a behavioral scientist, researcher, and the director of the Social Connection & Positive Psychology lab at Arizona State University.
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S13Will Taiwan's Future Be Settled in Washington?  The Boiling Moat: Urgent Steps to Defend Taiwan, edited by former Trump administration Deputy National Security Advisor Matt Pottinger’s aims to exhort the United States and like-minded allies to proactively take steps to protect Taiwan. It’s a double-sided book—one part making the case that there’s an imminent threat, the other part actual proposals for Taiwan’s defense.The Boiling Moat: Urgent Steps to Defend Taiwan, edited by former Trump administration Deputy National Security Advisor Matt Pottinger’s aims to exhort the United States and like-minded allies to proactively take steps to protect Taiwan. It’s a double-sided book—one part making the case that there’s an imminent threat, the other part actual proposals for Taiwan’s defense.
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S14Why Is Russia's Economy Still Growing?  The United States and G-7 announced a slate of new economic punishments against Russia, adding to existing imposed sanctions in response to the invasion of Ukraine. Yet despite it all, the Russian economy is expected to grow this year at a rate of 3.2 percent, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF)—compared to the 2.7 percent growth forecast for the United States. Russia’s relative economic success comes seemingly as the result of a decision to orient the Russian economy toward supporting the military—an intertwining that could intensify under Russia’s new defense minister, and economic intellectual, Andrei Belousov.
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S15The Paranoid Movies That Captured Post-Watergate America  The proverbial tinfoil hat was once associated with the American left, but a lot can change in 50 years. Should you find yourself at a barbecue this summer cornered by someone frothing at the mouth about microchips in vaccines, pedophilia havens posing as pizza parlors, or machinations of the deep state predicted by supposed insiders on questionable online forums, you know you are speaking to a far-right conspiracy nut. (This is also your Q—excuse me, cue—to make a play for the bean dip and get the heck out of the conversation.)The proverbial tinfoil hat was once associated with the American left, but a lot can change in 50 years. Should you find yourself at a barbecue this summer cornered by someone frothing at the mouth about microchips in vaccines, pedophilia havens posing as pizza parlors, or machinations of the deep state predicted by supposed insiders on questionable online forums, you know you are speaking to a far-right conspiracy nut. (This is also your Q—excuse me, cue—to make a play for the bean dip and get the heck out of the conversation.)
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S16 S17I cried tears of loss and rage at the World Hepatitis Summit  At this year’s World Hepatitis Summit in Lisbon, Portugal, the World Hepatitis Alliance presented me with an award that recognized my leadership as the organization’s president and my advocacy efforts to “improve the lives of people living with viral hepatitis.” As the citation was read aloud, tears started to flow — not tears of joy and pride but of loss and rage.As I stood on the stage I thought of my mother, Helen, who was a passionate Red Cross champion in Nigeria, where we lived, ever ready to help and support women’s and children’s causes. She was a top member of the National Council for Women Societies, the largest women’s association in Nigeria. She was my first mentor in the humanitarian space, as well as my best friend and confidant, and helped me through some of the most difficult moments of my life.
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S18Inside Anthony Fauci's 'On Call': 9 health and science takeaways from the memoir of America's most famous doctor  To read the forthcoming memoir by the country’s former top infectious disease expert, “On Call: A Doctor’s Journey in Public Service,” a copy of which was obtained by STAT, is to get a sense of his finesse while advising seven presidents. He strove, he writes, to speak with complete candor and stay out of politics, while remaining strategic in pushing for policies he considered vital to public health.He maneuvered for more HIV funding in the Reagan administration; pushed George H.W. Bush to expand access to experimental AIDS medicines; worked with Bill Clinton to set up the National Institutes of Health’s Vaccine Research Center; and teamed up with George W. Bush, on whom he lavishes particularly effusive praise, to set up the global HIV medicine initiative PEPFAR and several biodefense efforts.
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S19 S20 S21 S22The Mental Challenge of Winning the N.B.A. Finals  As the Boston Celtics have romped through the N.B.A. regular season and playoffs, Jaylen Brown, one the team’s two young star forwards, has been asked, many times, to expound on the team’s success. He has usually given a variation of the same answer. It’s a matter of “mind-set,” he said. He had told his teammates to “harness the mind.” During Game Two of the Finals, against the Dallas Mavericks, he wore a microphone, and the television broadcast showed clips of him offering encouragement to his teammates between plays. “Embrace the moment,” he said. “Breathe into it. Accept it. Don’t run from it.” After the Celtics won the game, taking a two-games-to-nothing lead in the series, Brown said he would try to “trick your mind” into thinking that Boston was down 2–0, not up. “The mind is a powerful thing,” he said, more than once, during an interview on ESPN.George Orwell once decried the “invasion of one’s mind by ready-made phrases.” Then again, Orwell was never named as the N.B.A. Eastern Conference Finals M.V.P. Brown has an intellectual bent—he famously took a graduate-level classe as a freshman at the University of California, Berkeley, and during his time on the Celtics he has also held a fellowship at M.I.T. Still, the language he uses to describe the mental side of the game is probably more common in locker rooms than in the halls of academia. He talks about focus and confidence and harnessing one’s competitive drive. Pain is mental. Experience is the best teacher. Champions move on quickly, from their successes and their defeats.
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S23After the European Elections, President Macron Makes a Gamble  The just-concluded elections for the European Parliament have some of the character of lion’s-mouth communication on a continental scale. The European Parliament is, like the Venetian Senate, mostly a pro-forma talking shop with limited power: actual political power still resides in the national governments, while the power to initiate and implement all those European rules and decrees with which “Brussels” supposedly encumbers its members—such as classifying bananas according to how bendy they are—remains largely in the hands of the bureaucrats and technocrats of the European Commission.Yet the election results have meaning, and they have been cast, rather too narrowly but understandably, as another victory for the extreme right—a victory particularly noxious in France and Germany, where more or less openly neo-fascist parties won startlingly large shares of the vote. In France, the R.N., or Rassemblement National (formerly the Front National), won the most seats, under the guidance of Marine Le Pen, the daughter of the movement’s notorious antisemitic founder, Jean-Marie Le Pen. That outcome, though not entirely unanticipated, led President Emmanuel Macron to dissolve the National Assembly and call for new parliamentary elections, which will be held in two rounds, later this month and then in July.
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S24The Overlooked (But Real) Possibility of a Big Democratic Win  Democrats have spent the past year talking much more about the prospect of a Donald Trump victory than about their own. The relentless focus on Trump is understandable, but it has obscured a central reality of the 2024 election: Democrats have a real chance to sweep the presidency, House, and Senate. And if they do, their congressional majority would likely be more cohesive and progressive than during President Joe Biden’s first two years in office.Biden’s deficit in the polls is much smaller than the party’s panic suggests and has narrowed since Trump’s felony convictions. Democrats need to flip only a few seats to recapture the House. Holding the Senate won’t be easy, but thanks to the retirements of a pair of maverick Democrats, even a small majority could open a path to substantial legislative achievements such as the passage of a comprehensive voting-rights bill, a federal guarantee for abortion rights, lower drug prices, and an expanded social safety net.
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S25A Billionaire Has a Plan to Save the InternetâBuying TikTok Is the Next Step  That's why McCourtâthe former owner of the LA Dodgers who acquired most of his wealth through real estateâannounced last month that he would be mounting a bid to purchase the app from its embattled Chinese owner Bytedance. Soon after President Joe Biden signed a law forcing the company to divest or face a nationwide ban, McCourt voiced his interest. Through his Project Liberty initiative, McCourt has begun assembling what he calls a "people's bid" bringing together foundations, investors, and others who share his vision of a more fair and open web.That vision centers around the idea that closed platforms like Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) hold too much power over what we see online. When Project Liberty was formed in 2021, it started creating an open protocol called the Decentralized Social Networking Protocol, or DSNP, as a remedy.
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S26McLarenâs Artura Spider Hybrid Is All Performance, and All Party  McLaren doesn’t even rate fully electric steering as pure enough, and the Artura’s precision feel is undoubtedly helped by an old-school hydraulic setup. Apparently, it’s almost identical to the steering configuration in the 600 LT, which is nothing less than one of the greatest-handling cars ever made.Improvements in the engine mapping have increased the overall power output to 690 brake horsepower, a rise of 20 bhp over Artura v1.0. Rather than a 90-degree V, the cylinders sit at a 120-degree angle, which reduces pressure losses in the exhaust. The twin turbos sit within in a “hot vee” configuration, which means they can spin faster with helpful consequences for throttle response.
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S27Why Employees Who Work Across Silos Get Burned Out  When employees collaborate across silos, there are numerous benefits for organizations. But the employees who do this critical work — also known as boundary spanners or network brokers — may end up overwhelmed, burned out, and can even develop abusive behavior toward their fellow employees. Research shows why this can happen, and suggests three key strategies companies can use to mitigate any negative effects: strategically integrating cross-silo collaboration into formal roles, providing adequate resources, and developing check-in mechanisms and opportunities to disengage.
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S28The Art of Asking Smarter Questions  With organizations of all sorts facing increased urgency and unpredictability, being able to ask smart questions has become key. But unlike lawyers, doctors, and psychologists, business professionals are not formally trained on what kinds of questions to ask when approaching a problem. They must learn as they go. In their research and consulting, the authors have seen that certain kinds of questions have gained resonance across the business world. In a three-year project they asked executives to brainstorm about the decisions they’ve faced and the kinds of inquiry they’ve pursued. In this article they share what they’ve learned and offer a practical framework for the five types of questions to ask during strategic decision-making: investigative, speculative, productive, interpretive, and subjective. By attending to each, leaders and teams can become more likely to cover all the areas that need to be explored, and they’ll surface information and options they might otherwise have missed.
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S29This First-Time Founder's Small Business Runs on Standup Comedy and ... Seltzer  Zelnick had started doing stand-up on the side years earlier while working in corporate strategy at Viacom, but he enrolled in a Stanford MBA program when the pandemic shut down live entertainment. Now, in the break between his first and second years of business school, he wanted to dive back in.He and a friend thought producing stand-up shows would be the best way to do comedy while remaining solvent. But their first effort, hosted in a barber shop, left them paying the property owner half the revenue. So over the summer they leased a space on Manhattan's Lower East Side and named their new club after a hard seltzer brand Zelnick's cousin had started--in exchange for the beverage startup covering most of the rent. Thus was born Sesh Comedy.
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S30How Artificial Intelligence Is Impacting Immigration & How We Travel  The surge in travel is evidenced by the fact that passport applications in the United States have increased by almost 10 percent YOY in 2023. Last year, more than 24 million people applied for U.S passports - an all-time high increasing by 77.5 percent over the last decade - but the process remains slow and complex. The chaotic and restrictive state of the industry is being addressed by the creative introduction of AI to simplify the processes and cut our biases. Boalt, alongside his co-founder Steven Fox, built HelloGov as an AI-powered solution. HelloGov utilizes its proprietary AI tech to vet every application, ensuring it is poised for first-time approval. It also gives users access to a marketplace of vetted, verified, and registered couriers, offering them the freedom to choose their own courier. The AI also helps couriers get registered with passport agencies across the country while educating them on the ins and outs of the courier business.
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S31Bill Gates says he's ready to plow billions into a next-gen nuclear plant being built by his startup  TerraPower LLC, a startup founded by Gates, broke ground for construction of its first commercial reactor last week in Wyoming, where a coal plant is shutting down, the billionaire co-founder of Microsoft Corp. said on CBS’s Face the Nation. TerraPower has explored simpler, cheaper reactors since 2008 and expects to complete the new reactor in 2030.© 2024 Fortune Media IP Limited. All Rights Reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy | CA Notice at Collection and Privacy Notice | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal InformationFORTUNE is a trademark of Fortune Media IP Limited, registered in the U.S. and other countries. FORTUNE may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.
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S32High home prices are 'feudalizing' California as unaffordable housing markets pose existential threat to middle class, study says  The housing crisis represents an obstacle to upward mobility, and the Golden State risks suffering from especially acute stratification, according to the annual Demographia International Housing Affordability report, which was produced by Chapman University in California and the Frontier Center for Public Policy in Canada.“High housing prices, relative to incomes, are having a distinctly feudalizing impact on our home state of California, where the primary victims are young people, minorities, and immigrants,” wrote Chapman’s Joel Kotkin. “Restrictive housing policies may be packaged as progressive, but in social terms their impact could be better characterized as regressive.”
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S34Arrest Of Kansas Cityâs Isaiah BuggsâOn Burglary And Domestic Violence ChargesâAdds To Troubled Chiefsâ Offseason  Kansas City Chiefs defensive lineman Isaiah Buggs has reportedly been arrested in Alabama and charged with domestic violence and burglary, weeks after being charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty, the latest trouble for the Super Bowl championship team that has been plagued with troublesome off-season headlines.The Tuscaloosa Police Department told NBC News that Buggs was arrested on a domestic violence/burglary charge—which applies when the victim of the crime is the parent, child, current or former romantic partner or roommate of the alleged assailant—and was released on a $5,000 bond (the department did not immediately respond to Forbes’ request for comment Sunday).
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S35The Supreme Court will soon decide the future of social media  Do Facebook and YouTube have the legal right to block or remove users or posts from their websites because of what the users or posts are saying? Or, should the law compel Facebook and YouTube to feature users or posts that the platforms do not want to be associated with?Those questions are at the heart of a pair of potentially blockbuster cases that the US Supreme Court is currently deciding. The stakes are high not only for the future of social media, but for the future of First Amendment law as well.
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S36 S37In 6 Words, Kansas City Chiefs Tight End--and Taylor Swift Boyfriend--Travis Kelce Taught a Lesson in How to Reach a Big Goal  Do you want to reach an ambitious goal, one that seems impossibly out of reach? Take some wise advice from Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. Forget that great big audacious goal, at least temporarily. Instead, focus your full attention on the task immediately in front of you, the first step toward getting there. "You can't get too far down the road," he said.Kelce has been traveling the world this off-season, sometimes with his significant other, Taylor Swift. This week, he was back in Kansas City for some workouts and a press conference. At 34, he was asked about his retirement plans (none for now) and what he and Swift like to cook. ("Taylor makes a great Pop Tart and cinammon roll," he said.)
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S385 Qualities That Must Distinguish Your Next Business Initiative  Every business founder wishes that he could predict whether his idea could be the "next big thing," before he spent his life savings and years of energy on it. Investors, on the other hand, typically don't even look very hard at the product or service but prefer to evaluate first the business owner, and secondly the business plan, before really looking at the solution.I define these products and services as "solutions" (customers buy solutions to a problem), but Guy Kawasaki more generically calls them causes, meaning any new idea, company, or service. Yet we can all agree that the quality of the solution or cause is very important, and there are attributes that reduce the business risk and make it more likely a success in the marketplace.
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S39Why Imperfect Is Better Than Perfect  The greatest stories start with imperfection. Something goes wrong -- usually in a dramatic fashion -- followed by a roller coaster of ups and downs until the recovery and eventual happy or hilarious ending. Perfect stories, where everything goes smoothly, aren't stories at all. They're a lecture.Imperfection, in the dictionary, means a flaw, and words related to imperfection are weakness, inadequacy, defect, and deform. Perfection in the dictionary means completeness, supreme excellence. It's not hard to see which one prefers to strive for.
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S40United Airlines Just Announced a Big Change, and It's the Start of a Brand New Era  But it does mean that if you're not paying for the privilege of using something, it's a bit harder to complain with a straight face if the company behind it tries to make money from you in other ways.The last time I checked, it's pretty hard to fly on United Airlines without paying -- at least if you're not an airline employee. You might pay with miles, but that's something you've bought in other ways (maybe flying with the airline previously, or using a particular credit card.)
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S41An Exclusive Look Inside the Lego Group's Super Secret Lab Dreaming Up the Future of Play  The Lego brick might be the most popular and beloved toy in the world. It's hard to imagine that when the Lego Group, founded by Ole Kirk Kristiansen, first started making toys in 1932, there were no plastic bricks. Kristiansen, a carpenter by trade, started making wooden toys with the pieces left over from the houses he would build. Eventually, the toys proved to be a much better business than the houses, and Kristiansen changed the name of his company to Lego, a combination of the Danish words "Leg Got," which means "play well." It wasn't until 1958 that the company patented and introduced what we now know as the Lego brick. Even today, the brick remains the essential building block of what the company calls the Lego System of Play. That, however, doesn't mean the company isn't busy thinking of what comes next. There is an entire secret lab dedicated to doing just that.
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S42Neuroscientist Says That Without This Key Element, The 10,000-hour Rule To Master Any Skill Goes To Waste  Last week, I spent three days in Miami as part of a select group of individuals, diving deep into the science of brain plasticity with neuroscientist and Stanford professor David Eagleman. His insights on how the human brain operates, particularly the key element that makes the 10,000-hour rule effective, shed light on how humans master new skills. But before diving into it, let's explore how our brains operate and what makes this information relevant.When discussing the human brain's ability to adapt and how it molds itself based on what we spend most of our time doing, Eagleman introduced a relevant concept--the idea of our brain as dedicated real estate. In short, the tasks we dedicate the most time to will ultimately occupy the largest brain real estate as stronger neural connections are made in those areas.
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S43Using Technology for Time Management: The Tickler System  In today's fast-paced business world, effective time management is crucial for success. One of the most powerful tools I've found to streamline my workflow and ensure I stay on top of important tasks is the tickler system. Leveraging technology to manage time-specific information and appointments has transformed the way I organize my schedule and has significantly enhanced my productivity. In this article, I'll share how you can implement a tickler system using modern technology and maximize its benefits for your business.The tickler system, also known as the 43 folders system, is a time-management tool that helps you organize and track tasks and information based on their due dates. Traditionally, it consists of physical folders labeled for each day of the month and each month of the year. However, with the advent of technology, the tickler system can now be implemented digitally, making it more efficient and accessible.
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S44 S45Let Slip the Robot Dogs of War  The Chinese military recently unveiled a new kind of battle buddy for its soldiers: a "robot dog" with a machine gun strapped to its back.In video distributed by the state-run news agency CCTV, People's Liberation Army personnel are shown operating on a testing range alongside a four-legged robot with what appears to be a variant of the standard-issue 5.8 x 42-mm QBZ-95 assault rifle mounted on it as part of China's recent Golden Dragon 24 joint military exercises with Cambodia in the Gulf of Thailand. In one scenario, Chinese soldiers stand on either side of a doorway while the robot dog enters the building ahead of them; in another, the robot fires off a burst of bullets as it advances on a target.
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S46Light-Based Chips Could Help Slake AI's Ever-Growing Thirst for Energy  Moore's law is already pretty fast. It holds that computer chips pack in twice as many transistors every two years or so, producing major jumps in speed and efficiency. But the computing demands of the deep-learning era are growing even faster than thatâat a pace that is likely not sustainable. The International Energy Agency predicts that artificial intelligence will consume 10 times as much power in 2026 as it did in 2023, and that data centers in that year will use as much energy as Japan. "The amount of [computing power] that AI needs doubles every three months," said Nick Harris, founder and CEO of the computing-hardware company Lightmatterâfar faster than Moore's law predicts. "It's going to break companies and economies."One of the most promising ways forward involves processing information not with trusty electrons, which have dominated computing for over 50 years, but instead using the flow of photons, minuscule packets of light. Recent results suggest that, for certain computational tasks fundamental to modern artificial intelligence, light-based "optical computers" may offer an advantage.
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S47How to Spot a Business Email Compromise Scam  Don't close this tab! I know there are few combinations of words less interesting than business, email, and compromise. I may as well have written an article about fiber, socks, and responsibility. But this isn't a boring article; it's an article about email con artists who, according to the FBI, are pulling in $26 billion a year by scamming people.So yeah, business email compromise (BEC) scams are a big deal. The con artists behind this criminal enterprise will cold-email you, pretending to be someone you work with, in order to gain access to money or information. You might get an email that appears to be from your company's CEO asking you to quickly do something like buy gift cards, or you might get an email that looks like it's from an employee at your company asking you to change their direct deposit information. The scam itself can take a lot of forms, but the end goal is to somehow siphon money away from you or the business you work for.
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S48Sorry, VR: The Meta Ray-Ban Wayfarers Are the Best Face Computer  If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDI am a menace. I walk around, nattering constantly to myself. More accurately, I natter constantly to my sunglasses. "Hey Meta, take a look. What kind of tree is that?" "Hey Meta, take a look. Does this concrete need resurfacing?" I'm listening to podcasts on my run through the built-in speakers. I'm using the camera embedded in the frame to take pictures of my parents' yard so I can send critical texts to the gardener. I'm using the onboard microphone to query the internet, checking to see if the food cart is open.
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