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Technology News

Meta Tries to Bury a Tell-All Book

Wired TechBiz - Fri, 2025-03-14 07:00
Mark Zuckerberg might be in his post-fact-checking-era. But that hasn’t stopped Meta from going after the author of Careless People.
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Meta Tries to Bury a Tell-All Book

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 07:00
Mark Zuckerberg might be in his post-fact-checking-era. But that hasn’t stopped Meta from going after the author of Careless People.
Categories: Technology News

Best iPad to Buy (and Some to Avoid) in 2025

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 06:32
We break down the current iPad lineup to help you figure out which one of Apple’s tablets is best for you.
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The Beef Tallow Skin Care Trend Smells Like a Scam

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 06:02
What happens when you swap your Vanicream for rendered cow fat? I tried it so you don’t have to.
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Panasonic Arc 5 Palm Shaver Review: Japanese Steel

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 05:32
The compact palm-sized travel shaver is elegant and waterproof, and it feels like a river-washed stone. But it won’t shave the unkempt.
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Rocket Report: ULA confirms cause of booster anomaly; Crew-10 launch on tap

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-03-14 05:09

Welcome to Edition 7.35 of the Rocket Report! SpaceX's steamroller is still rolling, but for the first time in many years, it doesn't seem like it's rolling downhill. After a three-year run of perfect performance—with no launch failures or any other serious malfunctions—SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket has suffered a handful of issues in recent months. Meanwhile, SpaceX's next-generation Starship rocket is having problems, too. Kiko Dontchev, SpaceX's vice president of launch, addressed some (but not all) of these concerns in a post on X this week. Despite the issues with the Falcon 9, SpaceX has maintained a remarkable launch cadence. As of Thursday, SpaceX has launched 28 Falcon 9 flights since January 1, ahead of last year's pace.

As always, we welcome reader submissions. If you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Alpha rocket preps for weekend launch. While Firefly Aerospace is making headlines for landing on the Moon, its Alpha rocket is set to launch again as soon as Saturday morning from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California. The two-stage, kerosene-fueled rocket will launch a self-funded technology demonstration satellite for Lockheed Martin. It's the first of up to 25 launches Lockheed Martin has booked with Firefly over the next five years. This launch will be the sixth flight of an Alpha rocket, which has become a leader in the US commercial launch industry for dedicated missions with 1 ton-class satellites.

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Best Heated Blankets, Tested and Reviewed (2025)

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 05:03
Stay toasty warm with our favorite electric heated blankets.
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Take a bite out of these Pi Day Search trends.Take a bite out of these Pi Day Search trends.Keyword contributor

Google official blog - Fri, 2025-03-14 04:26
Every March 14 (or 3/14), we pay tribute to the infinite, non-repeating Pi (π) on Pi Day. And what better way to celebrate than digging into 3.14159 (or more) slices of …
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Outbreak turns 30

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-03-14 04:15

Back in 2020, when the COVID pandemic was still new, everyone was "sheltering in place" and bingeing films and television. Pandemic-related fare proved especially popular, including the 1995 medical disaster-thriller Outbreak, starring Dustin Hoffman. Chalk it up to morbid curiosity, which some researchers have suggested is an evolved response mechanism for dealing with threats by learning from imagined experiences. Outbreak turned 30 this week, making this the perfect time to revisit the film.

(Spoilers for Outbreak abound below.) 

Outbreak deals with the re-emergence of a deadly virus called Motaba, 28 years after it first appeared in an African jungle, infecting US soldiers and many others. The US military secretly destroyed the camp to conceal evidence of the virus, a project overseen by Major General Donald McClintock (Donald Sutherland) and Brigadier General William Ford (Morgan Freeman). When it re-emerges in Zaire decades later, a military doctor, Colonel Sam Daniels (Hoffman), takes a team to the afflicted village to investigate, only to find the entire town has died.

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Can’t Wrap Your Head Around Pi? Here’s a Cool Visual to Help

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 04:00
Pi is an irrational number, and like some irrational people it just goes on and on. What is it with this crazy, crucial number?
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Apple’s $349 iPad 11 is missing a lot, but it’s still all the iPad most people need

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-03-14 03:30

Apple released a new version of the basic $349 iPad this week, though you could be forgiven for not noticing. The new 11th-generation iPad (also known as the "iPad (A16)" or just plain-old "iPad") looks identical to the previous version, it was introduced in a single paragraph buried in the middle of an iPad Air announcement, and the company didn't offer to send any to reviewers. The one I have I bought myself for our 5-year-old, whose hand-me-down 2019 iPad Air 3 is slightly older than he is and a little worse for wear.

There's nothing exciting or even particularly interesting about this tablet. The design is recycled from 2022's 10th-generation iPad, which was itself a lower-rent version of the 2020 iPad Air design. It's powered by a variant of the Apple A16, originally an iPhone chip from 2022. It still doesn't support the regular Apple Pencil or Pencil Pro or the same keyboard accessories as other iPads. It still doesn't have an anti-reflective screen coating, and the screen doesn't feel as nice to use as an iPad Air's or Pro's.

But for all that, this is still probably the purest expression of what the iPad is: a cheap Internet-connected screen for reading and watching things. I say this as someone who has tried every new piece of hardware and software that Apple has introduced to try and make the iPad a powerful and versatile laptop replacement—it still feels like trying to make a square peg fit into a round hole. The more expensive iPads are nice, but I don't end up using them much differently from how I use this bare-bones tablet.

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The Silicon Valley Christians Who Want to Build ‘Heaven on Earth’

Wired TechBiz - Fri, 2025-03-14 03:30
Is work religion, or is religion work? Both.
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The Silicon Valley Christians Who Want to Build ‘Heaven on Earth’

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 03:30
Is work religion, or is religion work? Both.
Categories: Technology News

A New Era of Attacks on Encryption Is Starting to Heat Up

Wired Top Stories - Fri, 2025-03-14 03:00
The UK, France, Sweden, and EU have made fresh attacks on end-to-end encryption. Some of the attacks are more “crude” than those in recent years, experts say.
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Shark Promo Codes: 10% Off | March 2025

Wired Top Stories - Thu, 2025-03-13 22:00
Shark makes some seriously powerful vacuums, from handheld vacs to steam mops. Don’t miss 10% off your next vacuum as you dive into spring cleaning.
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These Are the 10 DOGE Operatives Inside the Social Security Administration

Wired Top Stories - Thu, 2025-03-13 16:57
The team working at the Social Security Administration appears to be among the largest DOGE units deployed to any government agency.
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UMass disbands its entering biomed graduate class over Trump funding chaos

Ars Technica - Thu, 2025-03-13 15:39

With federal research funding imperiled by brutal cuts under the Trump administration, biomedical graduate programs nationwide are making tough decisions that will scale back the next generation of scientists.

On Wednesday, news broke that UMass Chan Medical School—a public school in the University of Massachusetts system—has rescinded all offers of admission to biomedical graduate students for the 2025–2026 school year. That means an entire class of future scientists has been wiped out. Those who were initially accepted to the program can try to join again in a future cycle under a priority consideration that won't require them to reapply, according to a letter sent to a previously admitted student that was shared on social media.

In a statement provided to NBC10 Boston, a spokesperson for the school confirmed that several dozen applicants had their acceptance offers rescinded. "With uncertainties related to the funding of biomedical research in this country, this difficult decision was made to ensure that our current students’ progress is not disrupted by the funding cuts and that we avoid matriculating students who may not have robust opportunities for dissertation research," the statement reads.

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AI search engines cite incorrect sources at an alarming 60% rate, study says

Ars Technica - Thu, 2025-03-13 14:16

A new study from Columbia Journalism Review's Tow Center for Digital Journalism finds serious accuracy issues with generative AI models used for news searches. The research tested eight AI-driven search tools equipped with live search functionality and discovered that the AI models incorrectly answered more than 60 percent of queries about news sources.

Researchers Klaudia Jaźwińska and Aisvarya Chandrasekar noted in their report that roughly 1 in 4 Americans now use AI models as alternatives to traditional search engines. This raises serious concerns about reliability, given the substantial error rate uncovered in the study.

Error rates varied notably among the tested platforms. Perplexity provided incorrect information in 37 percent of the queries tested, whereas ChatGPT Search incorrectly identified 67 percent (134 out of 200) of articles queried. Grok 3 demonstrated the highest error rate, at 94 percent.

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Athena landed in a dark crater where the temperature was minus 280° F

Ars Technica - Thu, 2025-03-13 13:55

The Athena spacecraft was not exactly flying blind as it approached the lunar surface one week ago. The software on board did a credible job of recognizing nearby craters, even with elongated shadows over the terrain. However, the lander's altimeter had failed.

So while Athena knew where it was relative to the surface of the Moon, the lander did not know how far it was above the surface.

An important detail, that. As a result, the privately built spacecraft struck the lunar surface on a plateau, toppled over, and began to skid across the surface. As it did so, the lander rotated at least once or twice before coming to a stop in a small, shadowed crater.

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What happens when DEI becomes DOA in the aerospace industry?

Ars Technica - Thu, 2025-03-13 12:20

Last month a nonprofit that recognizes exceptional undergraduate women and gender minorities with space and aviation internships, the Brooke Owens Fellowship, announced its latest class of "Brookies."

This ninth class of 45 students was selected from more than 400 applications, and they will fan out to aerospace companies across the country, from large firms such as SpaceX and Blue Origin to smaller startups like Vast and Stoke. There they will be paired with executive-level mentors who will help launch their careers.

However there was a cloud hanging over this latest group of exceptional students: They may be the last class of Brookies to receive aerospace internships.

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