Wednesday, April 5, 2023

How to Make Workplaces More Inclusive For People with Invisible Disabilities

S13
How to Make Workplaces More Inclusive For People with Invisible Disabilities

Globally, one billion people live with a disability. To put that into perspective, that’s one person out of every seven. While some disabilities are visible, others — including chronic illnesses, food (or other) allergies, eating disorders, and mental health issues, among other conditions — are not obvious to onlookers. In the U.S., at least 10% of the country has a medical condition that could be considered an invisible disability.

Continued here

S40
Marcos Salazar: 5 steps to building a personal brand you feel good about

Whether you realize it or not, you have a personal brand, says social entrepreneur Marcos Salazar -- and you have the power to shape what it is. Here's how you can create a brand that captures who you are, who you'd like to be and how you want to make an impact on the world.

Continued here



Learn more about RevenueStripe...


S39
The Missing Link Between ESG and Corporate Innovation

Experts from Wharton and Penn Engineering outline a framework for transforming ESG from a corporate obligation to an innovation engine for growth that can benefit all stakeholders.The following article was written by Scott A. Snyder, a senior fellow at Wharton, adjunct professor at Penn Engineering, and chief digital officer at EVERSANA; and Sanjay Macwan, adjunct professor at Penn Engineering and chief information officer at Vonage.

Continued here

S28
Did the dinosaurs reach their maximum possible size?

In 2001, paleontologists Kristina Curry Rogers and Catherine Forster found a single rib bone in Madagascar that was nearly 3m (9.84 ft) long, roughly the length of a ping pong table. They had discovered a new species of titanosaur – a kind of colossal, plant-eating dinosaur – that was later named Rapetosaurus krausei. "One of the great things about working with titanosaurs is their 'titanic ' proportions," says Rogers, a DeWitt Wallace professor of biology and geology at Macalester College in Minnesota, USA. "[But] this makes titanosaurs tough to excavate – a single skeleton can take an entire field season or more to extract from the rocks." 

Continued here



You Might Like
Learn more about RevenueStripe...


S21
How Athletes and Leaders Drive Success

No matter the obstacles, if we persist in our goals, know when to ask for help, and build that support through reciprocity, we can achieve anything.

Continued here

S30
Science Has New Ideas about 'Oumuamua's Weirdness

Our first known interstellar visitor is now long gone, but new research has some ideas about why it moved the way it did while it was in our cosmic neighborhood.Lee Billings: Hey there and welcome to Cosmos, Quickly, this is Lee Billings. Today we’re talking about the curious case of ‘Oumuamua, which became the first known interstellar visitor to our solar system when it swooped by Earth and around the Sun back in October of 2017. 

Continued here















S3
What Do Your Customers Want in 2023?

The New Year is often a time of optimism, hope, and change. But how do consumers’ shifting priorities affect businesses? The authors share findings from a recent survey exploring how U.S. consumers are thinking about their New Year’s Resolutions this year and offer seven strategies to help businesses attract and retain customers in this critical time: Help your customers build healthy habits, reach out to new customers, introduce new products, foster consumer loyalty, help customers meet their financial goals, prioritize value, and help your customers do good. Ultimately, the authors argue that retailers must understand how the New Year’s mindset may impact their business — and make their own resolution to anticipate customers’ evolving needs and provide the value that today’s buyers are looking for.

Continued here

S41
This Student Is Taking On 'Biased' Exam Software

Robin Pocornie brought a lamp with her to court. It's nothing special, just a basic Ikea floor lamp. But for the masters student, the lamp was a useful prop to help explain how she believes her university's exam supervision software discriminated against her based on the color of her skin.Pocornie and her lamp stood in front of the Netherlands Institute of Human Rights, a court focused on discrimination claims, in October 2022. But the first time she encountered remote-monitoring software was two years earlier, during the pandemic, when her course at Dutch university VU Amsterdam was holding mandatory online exams. To prevent students from cheating, the university had bought software from the tech firm Proctorio, which uses face detection to verify the identity of the person taking the exam. But when Pocornie, who is Black, tried to scan her face, the software kept saying it couldn't recognize her: stating "no face found." That's where the Ikea lamp came in. 

Continued here



You Might Like
Learn more about RevenueStripe...


S37
This Part of the U.S. Will Suffer Most from Climate Change

A new index that rates 70,000 U.S. communities on their climate vulnerability finds that parts of the Gulf Coast subject to flooding and economic and racial inequities are most under threatCLIMATEWIRE | Industrialized communities in the Deep South are the most vulnerable in the U.S. to climate change, according to a new index created by the Environmental Defense Fund and Texas A&M University that analyzes climate impacts and neighborhood conditions such as poverty and health.

Continued here

S31
Personality Can Change from One Hour to the Next

Studies show that people may experience enormous variability in personality traits throughout the course of the dayPsychologists use personality traits such as extroversion, neuroticism or anxiety as a means of characterizing typical patterns of thought, emotion and behavior that differ from one person to the next. From this perspective, the constituents of personality consist of a collection of relatively stable traits that are hard to change.

Continued here



Learn more about RevenueStripe...


S38
What’s Wrong with the Private Equity Market -- and How to Fix It

Wharton’s David Erickson explains the current challenges facing the private equity market and potential ways to overcome them.The following opinion piece was written by Wharton senior fellow and finance lecturer David Erickson. Erickson is also co-director of the Stevens Center for Innovation in Finance. Prior to teaching at Wharton, he worked on Wall Street for more than 25 years, helping private and public companies strategically raise equity.

Continued here

S25
Research: How People Feel About Paying for Social Media

Social media services such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat have implemented pay-for-subscription services (Twitter Blue, Snapchat Plus, and Meta’s bundled Facebook and Instagram Blue Badges). The buzz from users, long inundated with a large number of advertisements but now also facing subscription fees, is passionate and increasing. We asked a nationwide sample of 1,056 users for their opinions of these subscriptions (with a sampling margin of error of less than 3 percent). We analyzed 1) what users expect, 2) the quality of features, 3) prices given the quality, 4) ideal social media services, and 5) how likely the users are to subscribe.

Continued here



Learn more about RevenueStripe...


S11
What Managers Need to Do When a Team Member Quits

Research shows that counteroffers are less effective than we think — 50% of employees who accept one end up quitting a year later. By the time a valued team member announces their intent to leave, they’ve usually made up their mind. As manager, new or seasoned, what can you do in this situation?

Continued here

S70
This Is Actually Quite Bad

The Manhattan district attorney’s charges underscore how profoundly unsuited Trump is for the office he is now again seeking.The crimes Donald Trump is charged with are a strange fit for the drama and solemnity that ought to accompany the first-ever criminal charges to be filed against a former president. They concern payments allegedly coordinated by Trump to silence women who, in advance of the 2016 election, otherwise might have spoken publicly about their past sexual relationships with him. One of the women paid off is Karen McDougal, a former Playboy model; the other, Stormy Daniels, is an adult-film star. Also involved is a former Trump Tower doorman who allegedly received $30,000 to stop talking about his claim—for which years of reporting have failed to produce any evidence—that Trump had fathered an illegitimate child. The whole business is pure New York–tabloid absurdity.

Continued here



Learn more about RevenueStripe...


S6
Case Study: Should a Dollar Store Raise Prices to Keep Up with Inflation?

Discount retailer Dollar Bill’s has been struggling to maintain its margins over the past two years because of inflationary pressures, delays on imported goods, and decreased foot traffic. Now the board has asked CEO William Fisher Jr. to develop a strategy for raising prices. William worries that raising prices will hurt the company’s reputation and alienate customers, but he recognizes that something has to change.

Continued here

S32
NASA's Perseverance Rover May Already Have Evidence of Ancient Martian Life

A half-kilogram’s worth of samples gathered by NASA’s Perseverance rover for eventual return to Earth holds weighty implications for life on MarsIf life ever existed on Mars, we may already have the answer at hand. In January NASA’s Perseverance rover deposited 10 tubes on the surface of Mars. Each contains a sample of Martian rock that was carefully selected for its potential to clarify chapters of the planet’s still-murky history. Those tubes “are capable of telling us whether Mars was habitable,” says Mitch Schulte, Perseverance’s program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. “We see evidence of particular minerals that tell us there was water. Some of these minerals indicate there was organic material.”

Continued here



Learn more about RevenueStripe...


S7
Why Diverse Teams Are Smarter

Striving to increase workplace diversity is not an empty slogan — it is a good business decision. A 2015 McKinsey report on 366 public companies found that those in the top quartile for ethnic and racial diversity in management were 35% more likely to have financial returns above their industry mean, and those in the top quartile for gender diversity were 15% more likely to have returns above the industry mean.

Continued here

S29
TikTok creators are being arrested for violating religious laws in Nigeria

Over the past two years, Nazifi Isa Muhammad and his friend, Mubarak Muhammad, had collectively built a TikTok following of nearly 1 million. The duo was known for popular videos that often satirized and questioned influential figures.They told Rest of World that because of the nature of their videos, they sometimes received threats of arrest. But they had never considered their content political or controversial — and never imagined it would land them in jail for 11 days. “We thought what we were doing was apolitical,” Nazifi said. “We’ve called out dignitaries and leaders from different political parties.”

Continued here

S48
What happens to a person's sense of self after a face transplant?

Faces are crucial for social interaction and our sense of individuality. We recognize others primarily by their faces, and the ability to recognize one’s own face in the mirror is used as a test of self-awareness in children and animals.   Faces are so special that the brain contains areas and networks that are believed to be specialized for processing them. Viewing other people’s faces activates a small region of the visual pathway known as the fusiform face area, whereas self-face recognition activates a much wider distributed network.

Continued here

S16
How Briogeo's Nancy Twine Chooses Vendors

The founder and CEO talks about thinking about what her customers would want

Continued here

S20
Briogeo's Nancy Twine Talks About What She Sees Holding Businesses Back

The founder and CEO shares how important it is to develop resiliency

Continued here

S27
Why the Alps are a haven for rare butterflies

In summer 2021, Bernhard Auckenthaler was preparing an evening aperitif at his organic herb farm in the northern Italian Alps, when he spotted a mysterious woman with a net walking through a nearby meadow. She turned out to be a biologist monitoring butterflies in the area, and had just made an exciting discovery among the wildflowers next to his farm: a species called the 'large blue', an endangered butterfly.The European Alps have been described as a "butterfly diversity hotspot", with more than 250 species including threatened ones such as the apollo (Parnassius apollo), the hermit (Chazara briseis) and the damon blue (Polyommatus damon). Some, such as the zephyr blue (Plebejus trappi), are endemic to the Alps.

Continued here

S26
Why Business Leaders Must Resist the Anti-ESG Movement

U.S. business leaders are increasingly being exposed to the culture wars, with company decisions around issues like DEI, LGBTQ+ rights, abortion and even ESG investing being attacked by right-leaning politicians and pundits. Instead of retreating to the sidelines, this article argues that leaders can’t avoid these topics and that they have a business and moral obligation to address them head-on with courage.

Continued here

S22
Want to Boost Email ROI?

Three things you should know about your email list.

Continued here

S8
ChatGPT and How AI Disrupts Industries

ChatGPT, from OpenAI, shows the power of AI to take on tasks traditionally associated with “knowledge work.” But the future won’t just involve tasks shifting from humans to machines. When technology enables more people to complete a task, with help from a machine, the result is typically entirely new systems with new business models and jobs and workflows. AI will be no different: To truly unlock the potential of ChatGPT, the world will need new and different kinds of organizations.

Continued here

S46
A Mug Shot Could Play Right Into Trump's Hands

Much discussion around the Trump indictment has focused on whether the former president's mug shot will be taken and released to the public. Such attention to a relatively routine part of criminal procedures reflects how much Americans value the mug shot, a contemporary digital artifact that causes intense public shame for most but for Trump could serve to further his agenda. What often renders other people powerless in an ecosystem of digital punishment could actually help Trump regain control over his indictment. We love mug shots. The images are symbols of the guilty people in society who break the rules, pique our voyeuristic tendencies by offering a look into the often opaque workings of the criminal legal system, and once released are routinely used to generate profits through extortion and clickbait. 

Continued here

S24
Engaged Employees Create Better Customer Experiences

It’s time for leaders to double down on the idea that the employee experience (EX) is now the key driver of the customer experience (CX) and find smarter, strategic ways of connecting the two. According to PwC, companies that invest in and deliver superior experiences to both consumers and employees are able to charge a premium of as much as 16% for their products and services. So how do leaders design EX to better align with CX? First, identify where the biggest gaps exist. Second, find creative ways to directly connect employees and customers regardless of whether “customer service” is in their job description. Third, integrate customer and employee journey maps to identify and diagnose customer problems. And finally, provide visibility into CX and EX performance together, putting measurements of success in a single view.

Continued here

S10
Ask an Expert: What Skills Do I Need to Become a Great Manager?

What do great managers do differently? Though we each have unique qualities, there are a few key traits that all good managers focus on: clarity, trust, and openness. As you make your first foray into management, here are some actions you can adopt that will help you work towards these qualities.

Continued here

S2
Expand Your Pricing Paradigm

With inflation high, a global recession possible, and consumers spending carefully, many companies are concerned about preserving profit margins. In this article, pricing consultant Rafi Mohammed argues that instead of simply adjusting prices, firms should consider adding new ways to charge customers. He outlines 18 different pricing tactics that can be used for various purposes: to accommodate buyers with different usage needs, to appeal to people on a tight budget, to spur purchases by customers who love a good deal, to achieve favorable prices when the value of an offering is uncertain, and to increase business efficiency.

Continued here

S12
3 Ways to Make Friends Remotely

The Covid-19 crisis has forced masses of people into work-from-home scenarios and just about every university student into a study-from-home experiment. Six months into the pandemic, it’s clear that virtual offices and classrooms have become the “new normal” for many of us — at least for the foreseeable future.

Continued here

S42
The 'Little Bang' Helping Physicists Study the Infant Universe

Our universe started with a bang that blasted everything into existence. But what happened next is a mystery. Scientists think that before atoms formed—or even the protons and neutrons they're made of—there was probably a hot, soupy mix of two elementary particles called quarks and gluons, churning through space as a plasma. And because no one was around to observe the first moments of the cosmos, a coalition of researchers is trying to re-run history.Using the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory, they have essentially created a "Little Bang" and are using it to probe the properties of that quark-gluon plasma. The findings will help cosmologists refine their still-fuzzy picture of the early universe, and how the oozy, blistering state of infant matter cooled and coalesced into the planets, stars, and galaxies of today. 

Continued here

S69
Don’t Indict Trump With This

The defeated president of the United States incited an attack on Congress in hopes of preventing a transfer of power. Hundreds of his supporters were prosecuted and sentenced for joining a violent mob. Yet the first indictment in U.S. history of an ex-president arose from his scheme to pay two alleged sexual partners and one witness for their silence about Donald Trump’s sordid personal life.From the moment rumors swirled that the Manhattan district attorney would move against Trump, many of us felt an inward worry: Did Alvin Bragg have a case that would justify his actions? The early reports were not encouraging. Many Trump-unfriendly commentators published their qualms. Over a week of speculation, though, it seemed wise to withhold judgment until the actual indictment was available to read. Now the document has been published. The worriers were right.

Continued here

S34
We Need an Operation Warp Speed for Long COVID

With millions of people affected and at least $1 trillion of economic value at stake, long COVID is our next national health emergencyLong COVID is a multifaceted condition that can follow SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) infection and affects the neurologic, cardiovascular, pulmonary, hematologic and endocrine systems, leading to anything from mild to debilitating disease. From a public health perspective, the effects of long COVID are massive; a recent review published in Nature estimated that at least 65 million people worldwide have already experienced it.

Continued here

S15
She Quit a Job at Goldman Sachs to Follow Her Bliss. Then Sephora and the Wella Company Came Calling

Nancy Twine of Briogeo Hair Care, in conversation with Beatrice Dixon, shares how she got her fledging beauty brand off the ground -- and in front of all the right people.

Continued here

S19
The Crypto Hype Cycle Explained

Why is it that some days financial analysts say crypto is the next big thing and other days they advise you to invest elsewhere?

Continued here

S59
Operation Cookie Monster: Feds seize "notorious hacker marketplace"

An international law enforcement operation shut down a "notorious hacker marketplace" that sold access to infected devices and stolen account credentials, the US Department of Justice and Europol announced today. The operation targeting Genesis Market involved 17 countries, seized the platform's infrastructure, and resulted in "119 arrests, 208 property searches, and 97 knock-and-talk measures," Europol said.

Continued here

S4
Research: How Price Changes Influence Consumers' Buying Decisions

Whether on retailers’ own platforms or through third-party price tracking services, today’s consumers often have access to detailed information regarding changes in a product’s price over time. But how does this visibility influence their purchasing decisions? Through a series of studies, the authors found that buyers are more likely to buy now if they see a single large price decrease or a series of smaller price increases, because they’ll assume that the price will go up if they wait. Conversely, they’re more likely to hold off on buying if they see a single large price increase or a series of smaller decreases, because they’ll assume the price will fall. As such, they argue that sellers should consider this effect when pricing their products, while buyers should recognize and question this natural tendency — to expect price streaks to continue and single large changes to reverse — before acting on it.

Continued here

S14
How Marc Lore Spun Wonder's $100 Million Loss Into a Path Toward Profitability

After switching to a brick-and-mortar model earlier in 2023, Marc Lore's food delivery startup Wonder noted a $100 million loss. He says it's for the best.

Continued here

S17
What Importers Should Know About Section 321

Leveraging this U.S. Customs law could save you money and time.

Continued here

S36
Conspiracy Theories Can Be Undermined with These Strategies, New Analysis Shows

A new review finds that only some methods to counteract conspiracy beliefs are effective. Here’s what works and what doesn’tWhen someone falls down a conspiracy rabbit hole, there are very few proved ways to pull them out, according to a new analysis.

Continued here

S5
How to Seed Organic Marketing in a Video-First World

Early direct-to-consumer companies relied on plentiful capital and low-cost digital marketing to power growth. But as this sector has matured, capital is more constrained, social media is more cluttered, and customer acquisition costs are rising. DTC companies need new marketing techniques to find customers today, and the 4Cs — content, consumers, creators, and celebrities — can help.

Continued here

S23
3 Ways to Recession-Proof Your Business

Find out how these mobility trends could help you lower costs.

Continued here

S33
Wealthy Countries Have Blown Through Their Carbon Budgets

Some countries have used up far more of the world’s carbon budget—the amount we can emit and still avoid more extreme climate disruption—than othersMore than a century of burning fossil fuels has unleashed fiercer heat waves and droughts, heavier downpours that cause massive floods and other extreme climate disruptions. If we want to avoid even worse effects of climate change in the future, humans need to keep the rise in global temperatures as far below two degrees Celsius as possible. To meet that target, we can only emit a certain amount of additional carbon dioxide. This is called the world’s “carbon budget.”

Continued here

S68
The Humiliation of Donald Trump

This article was featured in One Story to Read Today, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a single must-read from The Atlantic, Monday through Friday. Sign up for it here.      He shuffled quietly into the courtroom and took his seat at the defense table. He looked strangely small sitting there flanked by lawyers—his shoulders slumped, his hands in his lap, his 6-foot-3-inch frame seeming to retreat into itself. When he spoke—“Not guilty”—it came out hoarse, almost a whisper. Pundits and reporters had spent weeks trying to imagine what this moment would look like. How would a former president—especially one who prided himself on showmanship—behave while under arrest? Would he act smug? Defiant? Righteously indignant?

Continued here

S18
How Briogeo's Nancy Twine Approaches Paying Herself

The founder and CEO warns not to expect it to happen overnight

Continued here

S50
Why leadership training fails — and how to fix it

Last year, the value of the global corporate leadership training market was estimated to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 9.5%. The potential benefits an organization stands to gain from leadership development explain why — it can impact the bottom line in terms of retention, productivity, risk management, and more. Having strong leaders also inspires employees to live out their organization’s vision, mission, and values. But many organizations aren’t getting as much out of leadership training as expected. 

Continued here

S49
4 steps to take control of your own destiny at work

Some people just seem to have this work thing figured out, don’t they? They go to a job that they love and love doing. It allows them to express themselves, be creative, or do something that they are good at doing. It’s like they were destined to do this job, and they enjoy the privilege of doing it.Others, not so much. They go to work but have little say over what, how, and when they do their jobs. The work doesn’t align with who they feel they are or their values, and the path forward doesn’t build to anything that excites them. They feel like an imposter waiting for their destiny to arrive so they can finally do what they were always meant to. 

Continued here

S61
After the death of Stadia, VP Phil Harrison has left Google

Google Stadia and all its associated projects are dead, and that means it's finally time for the division's leader, Phil Harrison, to move on. Business Insider reports Harrison has left Google. The report claims he left in January, but Harrison's Linkedin was only updated in the last few days to say he left Google in April. Harrison spent five years working on Stadia.

Continued here

S35
Dark Matter Hunters Need Fresh Answers

The hunt for dark matter is in crisis, and it’s time for radical new ideas to explain our universeDecades ago, astrophysicists brimmed with hope of discovering dark matter, the unseen mass that lets galaxies spin far faster than their stars’ gravity would allow by itself. But underground traps set on Earth to capture supposed dark particles have now spent years measuring nothing but subterranean silence.

Continued here

S60
How Pink Floyd inspired research into medieval monks and volcanology

Sébastien Guillet, an environmental scientist at the University of Geneva in Switzerland, was rocking out to Pink Floyd's classic Dark Side of the Moon album one day when he made a prescient connection. The darkest lunar eclipses all occurred within a year or so of major volcanic eruptions. And astronomers know the exact days of those eclipses. So medieval historical accounts of lunar eclipse sightings should be able to help scientists narrow down the time frame in which major eruptions occurred during the High Medieval period spanning 1100 to 1300 CE. Guillet collaborated with several other scientists to conduct such a study, combining textual analysis with tree ring and ice core data. They described their findings in a new paper published in the journal Nature.

Continued here

S67
America Is Missing Out on the Biggest EV Boom of All

Sign up for The Weekly Planet, The Atlantic’s newsletter about living through climate change, here.Across Asia, many daily trips are made on three wheels. The auto rickshaw is more or less a motorcycle in the front and a party in the back in the form of benches, seats, or cargo space. Rickshaws—derived from hand-pulled carts via a bicycle-based version—come in a range of styles, from fully enclosed boxes to more open options topped with a simple shade canopy. Made for low speeds and urban settings, they are typically run like taxis, operated by drivers who take people and things from place to place for a fee. They can weave in and out traffic in cities where a car would make little headway.

Continued here

S51
The priest who proved Einstein wrong

This is the fifth article in a series on modern cosmology. We encourage you to read installments one, two, three, and four.In 1929, Edwin Hubble confirmed that the Universe is expanding. With that question settled, a far older one came back to haunt scientists: Did the Universe have a beginning? If so, what was going on before? Was there space, and was there time? 

Continued here

S43
There's No Such Thing as a One-Size-Fits-All Web

Of the many passages in Ellen Ullman's 1997 memoir Close to the Machine that stuck with me, one of the most memorable is about spreadsheets. Ullman, a programmer, was describing her experiences working with end users in the early days of the web. "When I watch the users try the Internet," she writes. "It slowly becomes clear to me that the Net represents the ultimate dumbing-down of the computer." She describes the way users would click around, struggling to retrieve the information they needed—and when they failed to find it, rather than blame the tools, they blamed themselves.  

Continued here

S1
How to Market in a Downturn

Because no two recessions are exactly alike, marketers find themselves in poorly charted waters every time one occurs. But guidance is available, say Quelch and Jocz, who have studied marketing successes (by Smucker, Procter & Gamble, Anheuser-Busch, and others) as well as failures throughout past recessions and identified patterns in consumer and company behavior that strongly affect performance. Understanding consumers’ changing psychology and habits, the authors argue, will enable firms to hone their strategies so they can both survive the current downturn and prosper afterward.

Continued here


S63
When the Royals Showed Their Human Side

During the Blitz, George VI and Elizabeth abandoned protocol in favor of solidarity—and helped Britain get through Hitler’s onslaught.Claiming that a single royal couple saved the centuries-old British monarchy might be going a bit far. But King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, by an accident of history and through personal qualities that earned the admiration and support of the British public, may have done just that during some of the most challenging times the country had ever seen. George VI had been crowned King just three years before the outbreak of World War II, and his and Elizabeth’s nerves, perseverance, and courage would be severely tested during the conflict—especially when Britain itself became a battlefield. Nowhere is this more obvious than during the Blitz, when the monarchs broke with protocol and mingled directly with the people. Their actions during those days set the pattern for their leadership during the most critical year of the war.

Continued here

S47
The 3 key steps to overthrowing a scientific theory

Science, like many things in life, is always a work-in-progress. While a successful scientific theory has questions it can answer, natural phenomena it can accurately describe, and robust predictions it can make, it’s also fundamentally limited at any point in time. Any theory, no matter how successful, has a finite range of validity. Stay within that range and your theory works very well to describe reality; go outside of it, and its predictions no longer match observations or experiments. This is true for any theory you pick. Newtonian mechanics breaks down at small (quantum) scales and high (relativistic) speeds; Einstein’s General Relativity breaks down at a singularity; Darwin’s evolution breaks down at the origin of life.But the models we have today are known to only be our best approximations of reality. Somewhere, if we look hard enough, we’ll find where the limits of even our best theories lie, and find evidence that contradicts the prevailing theory’s best predictions. When we come upon a better theory that gets it right, where we can hold that new theory up against our old theory and can compare their predictions, one against the other, and the new theory scores an overwhelming victory, that’s usually the precipitating event for a scientific revolution. It’s happened before, and we can be certain it’ll happen again.

Continued here

S52
Genetic tricks of the longest-lived animals

Life, for most of us, ends far too soon — hence the effort by biomedical researchers to find ways to delay the aging process and extend our stay on Earth. But there’s a paradox at the heart of the science of aging: The vast majority of research focuses on fruit flies, nematode worms and laboratory mice, because they’re easy to work with and lots of genetic tools are available. And yet, a major reason that geneticists chose these species in the first place is because they have short lifespans. In effect, we’ve been learning about longevity from organisms that are the least successful at the game.Today, a small number of researchers are taking a different approach and studying unusually long-lived creatures — ones that, for whatever evolutionary reasons, have been imbued with lifespans far longer than other creatures they’re closely related to. The hope is that by exploring and understanding the genes and biochemical pathways that impart long life, researchers may ultimately uncover tricks that can extend our own lifespans, too.

Continued here

S66
Angel Reese Can Shine as Brightly as She Wants

Even after Louisiana State University won its first national championship in women’s basketball on Sunday by crushing the University of Iowa, many people seemed to be conspiring to tell the Tigers’ standout forward, Angel Reese, that her light doesn’t deserve to shine as brightly as other stars’.First Lady Jill Biden said she wanted LSU to come to the White House but suggested that Iowa should also be invited. She clumsily backpedaled yesterday—her press secretary declared that Biden had wanted to applaud “all women athletes”—but not before Reese, on Twitter, mocked Biden’s initial comment as “A JOKE.”

Continued here

S57
Kobo's $400 Elipsa 2E jumps into the "big e-readers with a pen" fight

Rakuten is updating its pen-compatible Elipsa e-reader to make it more competitive with e-reader-turned-notepads like the reMarkable 2 and the Kindle Scribe. The new Kobo Elipsa 2E is a 10.3-inch e-reader with a pen that can be used to take notes, annotate documents, and make notes in books you're reading. The device can be preordered now and will start shipping on April 19.

Continued here

S56
Dealmaster: New low on Mac mini, Samsung 980 Pro, and Amazon Fire Kids; plus AirPods and iPad

Today's best deals feature a $100 price cut on the 2023 entry-level Mac mini, a new record low. Samsung's high-performance 980 Pro internal SSD and Amazon's Fire 7 Kids tablet are also seeing the lowest prices we've tracked. Elsewhere on the web, we have deals on AirPods Pro, regular AirPods, and the latest iPad Air that all match their previous record-low prices. As always, we use tracking sites like CamelCamelCamel and Keepa to compare current sale prices to the typical street price to ensure the sales we find are good deals, too.

Continued here

S45
One City's Escape Plan From Rising Seas

Think of Charleston as sitting in a basin of water. A bathtub. As long as the bathtub has 7 feet or less of water in it, life in the Holy City continues peacefully along. Tourists fly in and out and enjoy ample desserts and cocktails. Retirees flock to the area—33 new residents move there every day—and pay top dollar for homes that still cost less than those in Westchester County. All is superficially just fine, at least for a white person with means to buy a place to live, if you don’t mind sitting in traffic and you shut your eyes to the city’s ongoing racism. If you are Black and live in Charleston, the legacy of the city’s past lingers on in a hundred small ways, day after day, whatever the water level is.If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more.

Continued here

S44
The Latest 'Overwatch 2' Hero Is Going to Start a Class War

"There's no way this doesn't get removed," my resident tank main told me. He was getting his first glimpse of Overwatch 2's latest hero, Lifeweaver. The floral-themed character is the latest in the Support class, and his kit looks like it could be one of the most transformative the game has seen in a while. But one ability made my tank nervous.Like a lot of new heroes, most of Lifeweaver's abilities are variations of mechanics that are already in Overwatch 2. Petal Platform lets him create a pad that lifts allies and enemies into the air. A dash moves him out of the way and heals himself a bit. Interestingly, when he dies, he drops a consumable that can heal allies or enemies, which could make his death even more consequential than that of most healers.

Continued here

S53
Motorola still makes flagship phones: Meet the Edge 40 Pro

These days Motorola is mostly known as a mid- to low-end smartphone manufacturer thanks to product lines like the Moto G, but the Lenovo division still makes flagship smartphones. The latest is the Motorola Edge 40 Pro, which the company says is headed to Europe in a few days and Latin America in a few weeks. The US is left out of the party, but Motorola's latest blog post promises to "expand the edge family in North America this year." (Presumably, Lenovo's flagship US phone is supposed to be excitingly branded "ThinkPhone," but that still hasn't launched yet despite being announced three months ago.)

Continued here

S58
Meta introduces AI model that can isolate and mask objects within images

On Wednesday, Meta announced an AI model called the Segment Anything Model (SAM) that can identify individual objects in images and videos, even those not encountered during training, reports Reuters.

Continued here

S62
Review: The Super Mario Bros. Movie is a madcap love letter to fans

I've been waiting three decades for Hollywood to make a film that could wash away my disappointing memories of seeing the 1993 Super Mario Bros. movie in theaters on opening weekend.

Continued here

S64
Can Humanism Save Us?

In her new book, Sarah Bakewell champions an intellectual tradition that might be just what we need today—if only we could properly define it.One of the quirks of book publishing is that a finished manuscript can sit around for nearly a year before it finally appears in hardcover. For most authors, this long liminal existence is a source of agitation, but substantively meaningless. And it would be perfectly reasonable to assume that a book exploring seven centuries of humanistic thinking wouldn’t go stale during its prepublication wait.

Continued here

S55
Outrage over white-only job ad drives tech firm to delete website

After Redditors called out a Virginia-based tech firm for posting an “illegal and nauseating” job ad—which specified that only white US-born citizens would be considered—Arthur Grand Technologies has deleted the ad and shut down its website and social media presence entirely.

Continued here

S65
Did Media Learn Nothing From 2016?

The wall-to-wall coverage of Trump’s arraignment shows how quickly the lessons of his election have been forgotten.The Trump Show is back. The former president’s arrest on felony charges of falsifying business records related to a hush-money payment to the adult-film actor Stormy Daniels inspired cable-news networks to return to wall-to-wall Trump coverage, once a staple of their programming.

Continued here

S54
Huge battery gives Ram 1500 REV 500 miles of range between charges

Ram was the last of the big three automakers to show off an electric pickup truck, finally doing so during this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The Ram 1500 Revolution concept was boldly styled, with dramatically raked A-pillars, that same angle repeated between cab and bed, and wheel arches so swollen you might think they were having an anaphylactic reaction.

Continued here

No comments:

Post a Comment