Reuters: Technology Roundup

“European airports struggle to fix check-in glitch after cyberattack.”

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Smithsonian Magazine-The Weekender

“Metal barrels dumped off the coast of Los Angeles are encircled by mysterious white halos….”

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Metal Barrels Dumped Off the Coast of Los Angeles Are Encircled by Mysterious White Halos—and Scientists Think They Finally Know Why image
Some of the barrels off the coast of Los Angeles are surrounded by mysterious white halos in the sediment. (Schmidt Ocean Institute)

Metal Barrels Dumped Off the Coast of Los Angeles Are Encircled by Mysterious White Halos—and Scientists Think They Finally Know Why

At least some of the barrels contain caustic alkaline waste, which has made the surrounding ecosystems inhospitable to most life forms, a new study suggests
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Live Science Newsletter

“The world’s oldest mummy, xenoparity with ants, ancestors of ostriches and emus arrived at six landmasses via flight.”

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Science news this week

This week’s science news is stuffed with a menagerie of weird and wonderful animal discoveries. Topping the list are Iberian harvester ants (Messor ibericus), which mate with the male ants of a distantly related species (Messor structor) to procreate.

That’s odd enough on its own, but now scientists have discovered that the harvester ants don’t even need nearby M. structor colonies to achieve this — in a bizarre first, they simply clone the males when they need them.

It’s a “science fiction” feat that has led to the naming of an entirely new reproductive method. With this system, called “xenoparity,” the ants blur the lines between species in a completely unprecedented way.

And that’s far from the only fascinating news from the animal world this week. We also learned that the ancestors of ostriches and emus arrived on the six landmasses they call home today via flight.

Meanwhile, a jaguar was recorded smashing the record for the species’ longest documented swim; scientists got insight into how pachycephalosaurs grew their built-for-smashing heads; and an adorable, never-before-seen bearded snailfish was snapped swimming in the depths off California’s coast. The iconically grumpy-looking Pallas’s cat has also been found in a new range, having tripped a camera trap (and posed just in time) for a photo in the eastern Himalayas.

Fresh findings

‘The sun is slowly waking up’: NASA warns that there may be more extreme space weather for decades to come
Live Science
If the above stories didn’t rock your world, this one will certainly set off geomagnetic storms in the sky above it: This week, NASA scientists announced that the sun’s activity is set to rise in the coming decades, likely sending more dangerous space weather our way.

That comes as a big surprise, as sunwatchers mostly expected our star to cycle through a period of low activity in the years ahead. But observations of an unusually hyperactive sunspot cycle have upended those predictions. The upshot is that more powerful X-class solar flares and coronal mass ejections will be hurled at Earth. That could prove problematic, given our increasing reliance on satellites and the growing “second space race” to colonize the skies, the moon and even Mars.

Read more
Life’s Little Mysteries

Why do AI chatbots use so much energy?
Live Science
Chatbots are infamous energy guzzlers, with their rapid rollout and adoption in the past few years leading them to suck up increasingly large shares of electricity from power grids. With their energy consumption expected to skyrocket even higher, we looked into why the greedy bots require so much power and what can be done about it.

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Strange science

World’s oldest mummies were smoke-dried 10,000 years ago in China and Southeast Asia, researchers find
Live Science
When you think of mummies, your mind will likely travel to Egypt and the roughly 4,500-year-old preserved bodies sealed inside its elaborate tombs. But the discovery of some 10,000-year-old dried human remains deposited in dozens of ancient graves in Southeast Asia and China shows that the world’s oldest known mummies were from a different part of the world.

The remains were smoke-dried over a fire before burial. The ancient practice, which is still performed today, went beyond mere preservation and was likely freighted with spiritual and cultural significance. The scientists who found the mummies also believe they could support a “two-layer model” of migration across Southeast Asia, since the funeral ritual of ancient hunter-gatherers who arrived in the region 65,000 years ago was distinct from the burial rites of Neolithic farmers who arrived 4,000 years ago.

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Also in the news this week

Science Spotlight

‘Like trying to see fog in the dark’: How strange pulses of energy are helping scientists build the ultimate map of the universe
Live Science
They arrive as brief flashes in the cosmic dark, powerful jolts of energy that discharge more energy in a few milliseconds than the sun does over an entire year. Yet as much as scientists have puzzled over what processes could be causing these fast radio bursts (FRBs), they still do not fully know what the pulses are.

What is apparent is that FRBs are produced through completely unexpected processes, and far more often than expected. And that makes them very useful to astronomers. In this week’s Science Spotlight, we investigated how scientists are using FRBs to create the ultimate map of our universe.

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Something for the weekend

Photo of the week

James Webb telescope’s ‘starlit mountaintop’ could be the observatory’s best image yet — Space photo of the week
Live Science
The James Webb Space Telescope has gifted us with a deluge of stunning space images since it first came online in 2022, and this week we covered the release of one of its best yet.

Soaring like a rocky mountain against a starry blue sky, the image spotlights Pismis 24, a stellar nursery at the core of the Lobster Nebula. The craggy spires of gas and dust in the foreground span multiple light-years in height, and are being actively sculpted by the radiation of nearby baby stars. “It’s a breathtakingly gorgeous scene,” and contains two of the brightest stars in our entire Milky Way, measuring 74 and 66 times the size of our sun.

See more

This week’s newsletter was written by Ben Turner
This week's newsletter was written by Ben Turner
Ben Turner is a U.K. based staff writer at Live Science. He covers physics and astronomy, among other topics like tech and climate change. He graduated from University College London with a degree in particle physics before training as a journalist. When he’s not writing, Ben enjoys reading literature, playing the guitar and embarrassing himself with chess.
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News from Science (AAAS)

“Under Trump, NSF faces worst crisis in its 75-year history.”

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Scientific American-Latest Stories

“Writing in your books is good for your brain–Here’s why.”

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Latest Stories

A traditional Italian spaghetti cacio e pepe dish, featuring al dente pasta coated in a creamy blend of Pecorino Romano cheese and freshly ground black pepper
CultureSeptember 19, 2025

Tipsy Bats and Perfect Pasta Win Ig Nobel Prizes for Weird Science Research

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NeuroscienceSeptember 19, 2025

Writing in Your Books Is Good for Your Brain—Here’s Why

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ExoplanetsSeptember 19, 2025

Astronomers’ Exoplanet Haul Tops 6,000 Alien Worlds

A jagged rainbowlike spectrum produced by Hubble Space Telescope observations of the core of the galaxy M84. Blue coloration (left) and red coloration (right) indicates where motions of stars and gas were towards and away from our solar system, respectively. These features can collectively be used to weigh the hidden supermassive black hole at M84's heart.
The UniverseSeptember 19, 2025

How Do You Weigh a Black Hole?

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Social SciencesSeptember 19, 2025

The Linguistic Science behind Viral Social Media Slang

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GeologySeptember 18, 2025

Strong Earthquake Hits Kamchatka. Tsunami Risk Waning

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Artificial IntelligenceSeptember 18, 2025

New AI Tool Predicts Which of 1,000 Diseases Someone May Develop in 20 Years

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LanguageSeptember 18, 2025

Genetics Can Track How Languages Mixed in the Past

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The World’s Largest Treasure Hunt Turns 25

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Artificial IntelligenceSeptember 17, 2025

Secrets of DeepSeek AI Model Revealed in Landmark Paper

 

News from Science (AAAS)

“How the yellow fever mosquito conquered the world.”

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Science X Newsletter

“Study finds people with conservative political leanings more likely to believe in health disinformation.”

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Here is your customized Science X Newsletter for September 18, 2025:

Spotlight Stories Headlines

Universal scheme efficiently generates arbitrary two-qubit gates in superconducting quantum processors

Spider-inspired magnetic soft robots could perform minimally invasive gastrointestinal tract procedures

MicroBooNE detector excludes electron neutrino cause of MiniBooNE anomaly

Astronomers detect a new black-widow pulsar

New light-powered gears fit inside a strand of hair

People with conservative political leanings more likely to believe in health disinformation, study finds

The AI model that teaches itself to think through problems, no humans required

Jaguar swims over a kilometer, showing dams are not absolute barriers to large carnivores

Carbon credits have little to no effect on making companies greener, study reveals

Primordial black hole’s final burst may solve neutrino mystery

Dogs can extend word meanings to new objects based on function, not appearance

ChatGPT appears to improvise when put through ancient Greek math puzzle

Flexible optical touch sensor simultaneously pinpoints pressure strength and location

Discovery of insects trapped in amber sheds light on ancient Amazon rainforest

Oil rig study reveals vital role of tiny hoverflies

Earth news

U.S. faces rising death toll from wildfire smoke, study finds

Wildfires burning across Canada and the Western United States are spewing smoke over millions of Americans—the latest examples of ashy haze becoming a regular experience, with health impacts far greater than scientists previously estimated.

Droughts sync up across India’s major rivers as the climate changes, 800 years of streamflow records suggest

Streamflow drought—when substantially less water than usual moves through rivers—can seriously disrupt the welfare of nearby communities, agriculture, and economies. Synchronous drought, in which multiple river basins experience drought simultaneously, can be even more severe and far-reaching.

A major shift in the US landscape: ‘Wild’ disturbances are overtaking human-directed changes

If it feels like headlines reporting 100 or 1,000-year floods and megafires seem more frequent these days, it’s not your imagination.

Meet the microbes: What a warming wetland reveals about Earth’s carbon future

Between a third and half of all soil carbon on Earth is stored in peatlands, says Tom and Marie Patton Distinguished Professor Joel Kostka. These wetlands—formed from layers and layers of decaying plant matter—span from the Arctic to the tropics, supporting biodiversity and regulating global climate.

Warming climate—not overgrazing—is biggest threat to rangelands, study suggests

More than half of Earth’s terrestrial surface is rangeland—vast open areas of native vegetation, suitable for grazing. These areas feed 50% of the world’s livestock and support the livelihoods of more than 2 billion people. The continental U.S. is about one-third rangeland.

Europe, Mediterranean coast saw record drought in August: EU data

Europe and the Mediterranean basin saw record drought in August, with more than half of the land affected, according to AFP analysis of EU data.

Climate change linked to landslide that buried Swiss village

In May, a landslide above Blatten in the canton of Valais buried most of the village under a mass of ice, mud and rock, an event that has prompted in-depth research. At a recent conference in Innsbruck, UZH researcher Christian Huggel presented his findings on the link between the landslide and climate change.

Arctic sea ice reaches annual low

With the end of summer approaching in the Northern Hemisphere, the extent of sea ice in the Arctic shrank to its annual minimum on Sept. 10, according to NASA and the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The total sea ice coverage was tied with 2008 for the 10th-lowest on record at 1.78 million square miles (4.60 million square kilometers). In the Southern Hemisphere, where winter is ending, Antarctic ice is still accumulating but remains relatively low compared to ice levels recorded before 2016.

Cut emissions 70% by 2035? There’s only one policy that can get us there

Australia’s new emission reduction target of 62–70% by 2035 is meant to demonstrate we are doing our part to hold climate change well below 2°C.

Climate inequity in natural flood management solutions

A new study co-authored by the University of Lincoln, U.K., reveals that competitive funding schemes designed to support nature-based solutions (NbS) for flood management may be unintentionally deepening inequalities—with deprived communities at greater flood risk missing out on crucial protection.

Either too little or too much: Report finds world’s water cycles are getting more erratic

The water cycle has become increasingly erratic and extreme, swinging between deluge and drought, according to a new report from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). It highlights the cascading impacts of too much or too little water on economies and society.

A walk across Alaska’s Arctic sea ice brings to life the losses that appear in climate data

As I walked out onto the frozen Arctic water off Utqiagvik, Alaska, for the first time, I was mesmerized by the icescape.

Quantifying the economic cost of climate change for Europe’s forests

Wildfires, storms, and bark beetles are putting increasing pressure on Europe’s forests. Beyond their ecological toll, these events also carry major economic consequences. Researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) have now quantified the potential financial losses climate change could cause for European forestry. Their findings reveal significant regional differences: while Northern Europe may even benefit, Central and Southern Europe will need to adapt quickly.

New flood maps and data aim to protect Texas communities

The catastrophic floods that hit the Texas Hill Country in July left residents and officials scrambling for answers. In response, the Hydrology & Hydroinformatics Innovation (H2I) Lab at The University of Texas at Arlington, led by civil engineering assistant professor Adnan Rajib, developed real-time, time-stamped flood maps showing how quickly the Guadalupe River rose. The visual data, later featured by CBS News Texas, helped residents and local and state officials better understand how the disaster unfolded.

Australia unveils ‘anti-climactic’ new emissions cuts

Australia pledged on Thursday to slash planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions by up to 70% from 2005 levels over the next decade, a target activists warned was not ambitious enough.

Only 40% of countries have booked lodging for Amazon climate meet

Less than two months before the COP30 UN climate conference in Brazil, only 40% of nations have booked accommodation in the Amazon city of Belem, where prices have soared, organizers said Wednesday.

EU seeks ‘face-saving’ deal on UN climate target

EU countries sought Thursday to settle on an emissions-cutting plan to bring to a key UN conference in Brazil, as divisions on the bloc’s green agenda threaten its global leadership on climate.

The climate policies that EU citizens like (and those they don’t)

A new survey—implemented within the research project CAPABLE—finds that several climate change mitigation policies are supported by a majority of the respondents across the European Union. For instance, 70% of the European population would support the creation of an EU Rail Fund, while 55% would support both household insulation mandates and banning private planes.

 

Discover Magazine-The Sciences

“Bronze and Iron Age people focused on olive and grape crops, making wine and olive oil a priority.”

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Ars Technica-All Content

“After child’s trauma, chatbot maker allegedly forced mom to arbitration for $100 payout.”

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Deeply troubled parents spoke to senators Tuesday, sounding alarms about chatbot harms after kids became addicted to companion bots that encouraged self-harm, suicide, and violence. While the hearing was focused on documenting the most urgent child-safety concerns with chatbots, parents’ testimony serves as perhaps the most thorough guidance yet on warning signs for other families, as many popula
The Trump administration yesterday issued a lengthier denial of a whistleblower’s allegation that DOGE officials at the Social Security Administration (SSA) copied the agency’s database to an insecure cloud system. The allegation centers on the Numerical Identification System (NUMIDENT) database containing Americans’ personally identifiable information. The cloud location described by the whistle
Health secretary and anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to roll back access to lifesaving vaccines for children, and has refused to even speak with staff scientists and subject-matter experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about evidence-based recommendations. That’s according to former CDC officials who testified before the Senate on Wednesday. The Senate Commit

Today

Evolution has adapted the digits of mammals for an enormous range of uses, from our opposable thumbs to the spindly digits that support bat wings to the robust bones that support the hoofs of horses. But how we got digits in the first place hasn’t been entirely clear. The fish that limbed vertebrates evolved from don’t have obvious digit equivalents, and the most common types of fish just have a
Anthropic’s AI models could potentially help spies analyze classified documents, but the company draws the line at domestic surveillance. That restriction is reportedly making the Trump administration angry. On Tuesday, Semafor reported that Anthropic faces growing hostility from the Trump administration over the AI company’s restrictions on law enforcement uses of its Claude models. Two senior W
When I was a child, SimCity 2000 felt like a fun, animated set of urban-themed Lego blocks to tinker with. Revisiting the game roughly three decades later, though, I’ve found the weight of my adult responsibilities tempering my role as god-mayor of a tiny metropolis. The tough economics of establishing a thriving city barely concerned me as a child. Rather than building up a durable tax base from
Like the rest of its Big Tech cadre, Google has spent lavishly on developing generative AI models. Google’s AI can clean up your text messages and summarize the web, but the company is constantly looking to prove that its generative AI has true intelligence. The International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) helps make the point. Google says Gemini 2.5 participated in the 2025 ICPC World Fin
Sony Pictures has dropped a trailer for its upcoming horror comedy, Anaconda , a meta-reboot of the 1997 campy cult classic —and frankly, it looks like a lot of fun. Starring Paul Rudd and Jack Black, the film will arrive in theaters on Christmas Day. (Spoilers for the 1997 film below.) The original Anaconda was your basic B-movie creature feature, only with an all-star cast and better production
When Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency began wielding its ax at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration earlier this year, many believed this was done to weaken the agency’s oversight over Tesla. But despite the Tesla CEO’s sometimes-close relationship with the Trump administration, it appears there is still some independence left within NHTSA: earlier this week, the agen
At multiple points over many years, Apple executives have taken great pains to point out that they think touchscreen Macs are a silly idea . But it remains one of those persistent Mac rumors that crops up over and over again every couple of years, from sources that are reliable enough that they shouldn’t be dismissed out of hand. Today’s contribution comes from supply chain analyst Ming Chi-Kuo,
China’s Internet regulator has banned the country’s biggest technology companies from buying Nvidia’s artificial intelligence chips, as Beijing steps up efforts to boost its domestic industry and compete with the US. The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) told companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, this week to end their testing and orders of the RTX Pro 6000D, Nvidia’s tailor-made pro
Famed aviator Amelia Earhart has captured our imaginations for nearly a century, particularly her disappearance in 1937 during an attempt to become the first female pilot to circumnavigate the globe. Earhart was a complicated woman, highly skilled as a pilot yet with a tendency toward carelessness. And her marriage to a flamboyant publisher with a flair for marketing may have encouraged that care
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Yesterday

A problem with the main engine on Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus XL spacecraft will keep it from delivering 11,000 pounds of supplies and experiments to the International Space Station as scheduled on Wednesday. In a statement released Tuesday afternoon, NASA said ground teams are evaluating backup plans that might still allow the Cygnus spacecraft to reach the space station, just not on schedule. The
TikTok will not shut down on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump inches nearer to closing a deal with China that will most likely see the app’s majority ownership shift to US owners and US-based users shift to a new app. On Tuesday, Trump confirmed that he has extended the deadline to December 16 for TikTok owner ByteDance to divest ownership to comply with a law designed to block China from spy
Congressional lawmakers are skeptical that the Boar’s Head deli meat plant at the center of a deadly Listeria outbreak last year will be fit to reopen after recent inspections at three other Boar’s Head facilities turned up similarly alarming sanitation problems—including mold, condensation on ceilings, overflowing trash, meat residue caked onto equipment and walls, and employees failing to wash
Although cars are much safer—for their occupants at least—than they used to be, that has come at a cost: added weight. The problem is exacerbated in electric vehicles and their heavy battery packs; rare is the EV we’ve driven that weighs less than 5,000 lbs (2,267 kg). Hence my interest in the Altair Enlighten award, an annual prize for advances in lightweighting and sustainability given out by t
Under new rules rolling out over the coming months, a small number of users will be required to leave some of their moderator posts so that they aren’t moderating more than five subreddits with 100,000 monthly visitors. Reddit said the change only affects “0.1 percent of our active mods” and will help enable “diverse perspectives and experiences.” But mods whom Ars Technica spoke with have differ
On Tuesday, OpenAI announced plans to develop an automated age-prediction system that will determine whether ChatGPT users are over or under 18, automatically directing younger users to a restricted version of the AI chatbot. The company also confirmed that parental controls will launch by the end of September. In a companion blog post, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman acknowledged the company is explicitly
Verizon agreed to offer $20-per-month broadband service to people with low incomes in California in exchange for a merger approval. In a bid to complete its $9.6 billion purchase of Frontier Communications, Verizon committed to offering $20 fiber-to-the-home service with symmetrical speeds of 300Mbps. Verizon also committed to offering a $20 fixed wireless service with download speeds of 100Mbps
Google has so many products that it can be near-impossible to keep track. And yet, the company has rarely created desktop apps to go with those services. There are a handful, like Drive and Quick Share, but the company’s flagship product is only now coming to the desktop. The new Google app for Windows is available now, allowing you to search the web, Google Drive, and even your local files. The
As Jonathan Roll neared completion of a master’s degree in science and technology policy at Arizona State University three years ago, he did some research into recent developments by China’s ascendant space program. He came away impressed by the country’s growing ambitions. Now a full-time research analyst at the university, Roll was recently asked to take a deeper dive into Chinese space plans.
I recently learned of a rather interesting pilot study undertaken by Nissan together with the Contra Costa Transportation Authority and UC Berkeley that leverages the automaker’s partially automated driving system, ProPilot Assist, to ease traffic congestion. The idea is called “Cooperative Congestion Management,” which works by letting a car in traffic inform vehicles behind it. Researchers from
Jaguar Land Rover’s dealers and suppliers fear the British carmaker’s operations will take another few months to normalize after a cyber attack that experts estimate could wipe more than £3.5 billion off its revenue. JLR, which is owned by India’s Tata Motors, had been forced to shut down its systems and halt production across its UK factories since August 31, wreaking havoc across the country’s
On Sunday, The New York Times reported that tens of millions of people are confessing secrets to AI chatbots trained on religious texts, with apps like Bible Chat reaching over 30 million downloads and Catholic app Hallow briefly topping Netflix, Instagram, and TikTok in Apple’s App Store. In China, people are using DeepSeek to try to decode their fortunes. In her report, Lauren Jackson examined

Sep 15, 2025

What happens when you use a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket to launch Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus supply ship? A record-setting resupply mission to the International Space Station. The first flight of Northrop’s upgraded Cygnus spacecraft, called Cygnus XL, is on its way to the international research lab after launching Sunday evening from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida. This mission, known as
Health secretary and anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has appointed five more people to the federal advisory committee that sets national vaccination recommendations. Like the existing members, the new appointees have questionable qualifications for being on the panel, and many have expressed anti-vaccine views. In June, Kennedy purged all 17 highly qualified and thoroughly vetted memb
The companies seeking to build larger AI models have been increasingly stymied by a lack of high-quality training data. As tech firms scour the web for more data to feed their models, they could increasingly rely on potentially sensitive user data. A team at Google Research is exploring new techniques to make the resulting large language models (LLMs) less likely to “memorize” any of that content
A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit where music publishers sued the Internet Archive over the Great 78 Project, an effort to preserve early music recordings that only exist on brittle shellac records. No details of the settlement have so far been released, but a court filing on Monday confirmed that the Internet Archive and UMG Recordings, Capitol Records, Sony Music Entertainment, and oth
As someone who writes about the AI industry relatively frequently for this site, there is one question that I find myself constantly asking and being asked in turn, in some form or another: What do you actually use large language models for? Today, OpenAI’s Economic Research Team went a long way toward answering that question, on a population level, releasing a first-of-its-kind National Bureau o
Earlier this month, Ars spoke with the Consumer Technology Association’s vice president of international trade, Ed Brzytwa, to check in and see how tech firms have navigated Donald Trump’s unpredictable tariff regimes so far. Brzytwa has led CTA’s research helping tech firms prepare for Trump’s trade war, but during our talk, he confirmed that “the reality has been a lot more difficult and far wo
The Federal Aviation Administration on Friday proposed fines of $3.1 million against Boeing for various safety violations related to the January 2024 door plug blowout and what the FAA called “interference with safety officials’ independence.” An FAA statement said the proposed fine covers “safety violations that occurred from September 2023 through February 2024,” and is the “maximum statutory c
The last time Apple gave macOS a fresh design was in 2020’s macOS 11 Big Sur . That release was relatively light on new features and heavy on symbolism. Big Sur is also when Apple finally jettisoned the “10” in Mac OS X after two decades. More importantly, it was the first release installed on then-new Apple Silicon Macs, the culmination of a decade-plus of in-house chip design that began with si
The blockbuster success of the 1986 film Top Gun —chronicling the paths of young naval aviators as they go through the grueling US Navy’s Fighter Weapons School (aka the titular Top Gun)—spawned more than just a successful multimedia franchise. It has also been credited with inspiring future generations of fighter pilots. National Geographic takes viewers behind the scenes to see the process play
Once again, the Trump administration is hyping a deal that could see TikTok finally sold to US owners to avoid a nationwide ban that Congress successfully argued was otherwise necessary to protect national security. On Monday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed that the US and China had ironed out a “framework” for the deal, but ultimately, Donald Trump will be responsible for closing the
General Motors will temporarily lay off workers at its Wentzville assembly plant in Missouri. According to a letter sent to employees by the head of the plant and the head of the local union, a shortage of parts is the culprit, and as a result, the factory will see “a temporary layoff from September 29–October 19.” The plant is about 45 minutes west of St. Louis and employs more than 4,000 people
NASA is changing the way that its employees come in contact with, and remember, one of its worst tragedies. In the wake of the 2003 loss of the space shuttle Columbia and its STS-107 crew, NASA created a program to use the orbiter’s debris for research and education at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Agency employees were invited to see what remained of the space shuttle as a powerful reminder a
A Chinese regulator has found Nvidia violated the country’s antitrust law, in a preliminary finding against the world’s most valuable chipmaker. Nvidia had failed to fully comply with provisions outlined when it acquired Mellanox Technologies, an Israeli-US supplier of networking products, China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) said on Monday. Beijing conditionally approved the

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