News gathered 2024-09-04

(date: 2024-09-04 13:36:40)


cl-forth: Common Lisp implementation of the Forth 2012 Standard

date: 2024-09-04, from: Tilde.news

Comments

https://github.com/gmpalter/cl-forth


The Internet Archive just lost its appeal over ebook lending

date: 2024-09-04, from: Tilde.news

Comments

https://www.theverge.com/2024/9/4/24235958/internet-archive-loses-appeal-ebook-lending


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-04, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Has anyone tried SearchGPT? I’m not well-known enough to have been given access.

https://chatgpt.com/search


Workers Uncover an Underground Chamber Sealed for More Than a Century Near the National Mall

date: 2024-09-04, from: Smithsonian Magazine

The dry cistern was discovered by construction crews working on the Smithsonian Castle’s renovation

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/workers-uncover-an-underground-chamber-sealed-for-more-than-a-century-near-the-national-mall-180985018/


The Marshall Star for September 4, 2024

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Rocket Hardware for Future Artemis Flights Moved to Barge for Delivery to Kennedy NASA is making strides with the Artemis campaign as key components for the SLS (Space Launch System) rocket continue to make their way to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. Teams with NASA and Boeing loaded the core stage boat-tail for Artemis III and the core stage […]

https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/marshall/the-marshall-star-for-september-4-2024/


Welcome to The Fight

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



Welcome to The Fight, I’m your punk rock climate journalist host Jael Holzman. I’ve dedicated my entire career in journalism to understanding how and why people oppose projects crucial to decarbonization. Now, every week, I’ll be delivering must-read exclusive scoops and analysis on the local battles and national trends shaping the future of climate action as part of Heatmap Plus, a new side of the site launching today that will go even deeper into the projects, politics, and people shaping the energy transition.

As part of Heatmap Plus, you’ll get high-level analysis of our proprietary polling and forecasting data, in-depth case studies exploring why projects succeed or fail, exclusive interviews with leading policymakers, developers, and activist groups, and my weekly newsletter — The Fight — that will offer a comprehensive weekly snapshot of the battles being waged over renewable energy projects across the country, plus a lot of original reporting.

A little bit about me: For years, I reported on the transition by writing about mining – one of the dirtiest businesses central to renewable energy, vehicle electrification, and industrial decarbonization. As I covered those topics, it was evident that climate activists, policymakers, and investors alike were all quietly torn up by the reality that building things meant some pretty shocking knock-on effects for the environment and society. I also found the threat of those consequences became a useful tool for shaping public opinion against the energy transition, a practice best described as “trade-off denial.”

Earlier this year, I joined Heatmap after being approached with an opportunity: how would I like to investigate conflicts over individual renewables and battery projects in places where a hollowed-out local media left no reporters available to ask the tough questions? On top of that, I’d get to take a wide-angle lens, sussing out what national policy trends, forces, and industries were driving opposition and the hurdles to projects getting built. I could give Heatmap readers all the information they’d need, project by project, accompanied by exclusive data and regular Q&A sessions with readers.

So after months of investigating various projects and their opponents, I’m excited to debut the first edition of The Fight. I’ve got to tell you, these stories might bother you. In our inaugural send, for example, you’ll hear about how a fight against a California battery storage project might impact permitting nationwide, the ways a few activists can manipulate emotional fears to create real roadblocks to construction, and the wide gulf between what regulators and developers want versus the individuals most likely to sue to stop a project.

This won’t always be fun — in fact, sometimes it might be a bummer. But over the span of this newsletter, by talking to all sides involved and providing an airing of grievances, it’s my hope we’ll use well-intentioned journalism to inform you on how the things we need to ditch fossil fuels can be built faster and get community buy-in.

This newsletter will go out exclusively to subscribers of Heatmap Plus. If you want to get it, you can join Plus here — for a limited time, you can take $50 off by using the code FIGHTLAUNCH at checkout.

But enough small talk. Let’s get started.

https://heatmap.news/politics/the-fight-newsletter-renewable-energy-opposition


📺 TV in movies

date: 2024-09-04, from: Interesting, a blog on writing

“In news you can use tonight, some exposition for our theatrical audience.”

https://inneresting.substack.com/p/tv-in-movies


Git Tower 12

date: 2024-09-04, from: Michael Tsai

Bruno Brito: With Tower Workflows, we aim to provide you with the ability to create and customize your own branching workflows. You can use popular branching workflows as a starting point, tweak them, come up with your own unique solution from scratch, or embrace other popular workflows like the Stacked Pull Requests workflow.For this to […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/04/git-tower-12/


Snow Leopard at 15

date: 2024-09-04, from: Michael Tsai

Joe Rossignol: Today marks the 15th anniversary of Apple releasing Mac OS X Snow Leopard, which became available to purchase for $29 on August 28, 2009.After advertising Mac OS X Leopard as having “over 300 new features” in 2007, Apple previewed Snow Leopard at WWDC 2008. Notably, during that year’s “State of the Union” session, […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/04/snow-leopard-at-15/


Snapchat for iPad

date: 2024-09-04, from: Michael Tsai

Hartley Charlton: After 13 years, Snapchat has finally rolled out an update that brings native app support to the iPad. […] Until now, iPad users who wanted to use Snapchat had to run the iPhone version of the app, which was not optimized for the larger display, leaving it to run at a lower resolution […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/04/snapchat-for-ipad/


Apple’s Magic Sound File Renaming

date: 2024-09-04, from: Michael Tsai

Shamino: For those who are unaware, in macOS 11 (aka “Big Sur”), Apple changed all of the standard system sounds [names]. […] The interesting thing is that if you go to look for the actual sound files (in /System/Library/Sounds), you’ll find that the filenames are the same as the old names. […] There is a […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/04/apples-magic-sound-file-renaming/


Blinken heads to Haiti, Dominican Republic this week

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

state department — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling to Haiti and the Dominican Republic on Thursday, marking his first visits to both Caribbean nations as the top U.S. diplomat.

Blinken’s visit to Port-au-Prince underscores U.S. support for Haiti, with additional humanitarian assistance anticipated as the country grapples with gang violence. His trip to Santo Domingo follows the start of Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader’s second term in mid-August.

A senior State Department official told reporters on Wednesday that the United States is prioritizing efforts with its international partners to set up a structure that ensures “a reliable source of financing and staffing” for a security mission in Haiti.

U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration is reportedly considering the possibility of transitioning a largely U.S.-funded multinational security force into a traditional United Nations peacekeeping operation.

“A formal PKO (peacekeeping operation) is one of the ways that we could accomplish that, but we’re looking at multiple ways to do that,” said Brian Nichols, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs.

With about a month left in the mandate of the U.N.-ratified, Kenya-led Multinational Security Support Mission (MSS) in Haiti, progress has been limited, and many pledges remain unfulfilled.

“The one-year anniversary of the mission is October 2, and we’re going to work to ensure that it’s poised for success and renewal of its mandate in whatever form that takes,” Nichols told VOA on Wednesday.

Multinational security support

Gang-related violence and drug trafficking have fueled political instability and insecurity in Haiti, leading to an unbearable living situation for the Haitian people.

In October 2022, Haiti requested the deployment of an international force to assist the Haitian National Police in combating heavily armed gangs and facilitating humanitarian aid. In October 2023, the United Nations Security Council authorized the MSS.

The United States and Canada are the top funders of the MSS in Haiti. The estimated first-year cost for the mission is $589 million. The U.S. has already provided $309 million — $200 million toward the MSS mission base and $109 million in financial support.

During a visit to Haiti in July, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield announced an additional $60 million in humanitarian assistance for the Haitian people, along with providing armored vehicles for the national police.

While in Haiti, Blinken will review the progress made toward improving security and encourage efforts to appoint the provisional electoral council so Haiti can move toward elections, according to the State Department.

Blinken will hold talks with Edgard Leblanc Fils, president of Haiti’s Transitional Presidential Council, and Haitian Prime Minister Garry Conille. Blinken also will meet with MSS head Godfrey Otunge and Normil Rameau, head of the Haitian National Police.

At least 80% of Port-au-Prince is no longer under the control of the Haitian authorities, with violence spreading to other parts of the country.

In the past year, displacement in Haiti has tripled as gang violence grips the Caribbean nation. The United Nations reports that at least 578,000 people have been displaced due to violence, including murders, kidnappings and rapes.

The situation is further exacerbated by widespread hunger, with nearly half of the 11.7 million population facing acute food insecurity.

Gangs, some aligned with political elites, accumulated their control over territory and illicit markets during the tenure of the deeply unpopular former Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who took office after the assassination of President Jovenel Moise in July 2021, according to a Congressional Research Service report. Henry resigned in April 2024 following the formation of a Transitional Presidential Council.

The Dominican Republic

The Dominican Republic will host the 2025 Summit of the Americas, where Western Hemisphere leaders will address shared challenges and policy issues facing the region.

“In the Dominican Republic, we will reinforce our shared priorities such as promoting democratic governance, supporting free and fair elections in the region, and fighting corruption,” Nichols told reporters.

On August 16, President Luis Abinader was inaugurated for a second four-year term. He has vowed to boost security by training more police over the next four years. His administration has barred migrants from neighboring Haiti.

“We certainly hope to see more normal relations between the Dominican Republic and Haiti,” Nichols said. “The countries are inexorably linked, and we certainly will have those conversations with leaders on both sides of the border.”

The U.S. and the Dominican Republic signed a historic Open Skies agreement on August 2. Once in effect, the agreement will expand opportunities for airlines, travel companies and people-to-people exchanges. More than 4 million U.S. citizens visit the Dominican Republic each year.

The Dominican Republic is a crucial partner for the U.S. in hemispheric affairs, due to its position as the second-largest economy in the Caribbean, after Cuba, and the third-largest country by population, behind Cuba and Haiti. The U.S. is its primary trading partner.

Additionally, the Dominican Republic is home to Pueblo Viejo, one of the world’s largest gold mines, and serves as a major global supplier of ferronickel.

The United States said it will continue robust collaboration with the Dominican Republic to advance inclusive economic growth, bolster democratic institutions, uphold human rights, and enhance governance and security.

The Dominican Republic and the United States, along with five Central American countries, are parties to the Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement, known as CAFTA-DR. This agreement enhances economic opportunities by eliminating tariffs, opening markets, reducing barriers to services and promoting transparency.

The U.S. Agency for International Development is investing more than $9.5 million to strengthen the Dominican Republic’s existing justice system and to reduce crime and violence.

https://www.voanews.com/a/blinken-heads-to-haiti-dominican-republic-this-week/7771462.html


1st International Workshop on Low Carbon Computing

date: 2024-09-04, from: Tilde.news

Comments

https://www.sicsa.ac.uk/loco/loco2024/


Scientists Solve a ‘Murder Mystery’ After a Pregnant, Tagged Shark Got Eaten

date: 2024-09-04, from: Smithsonian Magazine

It’s rare for apex predators to become prey, but researchers suggest they’ve documented the first known case of a porbeagle shark getting consumed by another animal

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/scientists-solve-a-murder-mystery-after-a-pregnant-tagged-shark-got-eaten-180985019/


Atomic clocks are so last epoch, it’s time someone nailed down the nuclear clock

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

‘Giant step’ in research could unlock a bunch of crazy science stuff

An international team of researchers has, for the first time, coupled an atomic nucleus to an atomic clock to compare differences in their timekeeping frequencies.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/giant_step_in_nuclear_clock/


NASA Earth Scientists Take Flight, Set Sail to Verify PACE Satellite Data

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

From sea to sky to orbit, a range of vantage points allow NASA Earth scientists to collect different types of data to better understand our changing planet. Collecting them together, at the same place and the same time, is an important step used to verify the accuracy of satellite data. NASA’s Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean […]

https://www.nasa.gov/earth/nasa-earth-scientists-take-flight-set-sail-to-verify-pace-satellite-data/


US sending Pentagon rep to China’s top security forum this month

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

Pentagon — The United States is planning to send Michael Chase, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for China, Taiwan and Mongolia, to China’s top annual security forum this month, two U.S. defense officials have confirmed to VOA.

One of the officials, who spoke to VOA on condition of anonymity ahead of the forum, called Chase’s upcoming attendance “consistent participation from the U.S.” 

Chase is more senior than the U.S. representative at last year’s Xiangshan Forum, but his rank is on par with historical norms for Pentagon representatives who attend the annual meeting. The Pentagon did not send a representative from 2020-2022 due to the pandemic.

“This engagement is meant to be more of the same” to keep the lines of military communication open and ensure that China has a clear understanding of the United States’ position on global security issues, the defense official told VOA. 

The forum comes on the heels of a face-to-face meeting in Singapore between U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and his Chinese counterpart, Admiral Dong Jun, in late May.

Austin spoke with Dong for the first time in April, marking the first dialogue between the two countries’ defense chiefs in nearly 17 months. The top U.S. military officer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. C.Q. Brown, spoke with his Chinese military counterpart in December.

“Of course talks can make a difference. Having those mil-to-mil communications, those senior channels open, actually allows for the avoidance of a miscalculation,” Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh told reporters earlier this year.

Chinese state media reports say that more than 90 countries and international organizations plan to send delegations to Beijing for the September 12-14 forum.

Reuters was first to report the decision.

Beijing has asserted its desire to control access to the South China Sea and bring democratically ruled Taiwan under its control, by force if necessary. President Joe Biden has said U.S. troops would defend the island from attack.

China’s defense ministry has said the Taiwan issue is the “core of China’s core interests.”

Tensions have risen sharply between China and U.S. ally the Philippines in the South China Sea, with China’s coast guard using water cannons to threaten Filipino fishing ships. China has also used collision and ramming tactics, undersea barriers and a military-grade laser to stop Philippine resupply and patrol missions.

Last year, Austin and his Philippine counterpart established the U.S.-Philippines Bilateral Defense Guidelines, which reaffirmed that an armed attack in the Pacific – including anywhere in the South China Sea – on either of their public vessels, aircraft, or armed forces, would invoke mutual defense commitments outlined in the 1951 U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty.

https://www.voanews.com/a/us-sending-pentagon-rep-to-china-s-top-security-forum-this-month/7771480.html


Qualcomm guns for Intel, AMD with cheaper 8-core X chips

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

It’s set to slice up the AI PC competition at $700-$900

Not to be outshined by Intel’s Lunar Lake launch, Qualcomm on Wednesday rolled out a pair of slimmed-down X chips aimed at cheaper Copilot+ PCs.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/qualcomm_8core_xplus/


NASA Astronaut Don Pettit’s Science of Opportunity on Space Station

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Science ideas are everywhere. Some of the greatest discoveries have come from tinkering and toying with new concepts and ideas. NASA astronaut Don Pettit is no stranger to inventing and discovering. During his previous missions, Pettit has contributed to advancements for human space exploration aboard the International Space Station resulting in several published scientific papers […]

https://www.nasa.gov/missions/station/iss-research/nasa-astronaut-don-pettits-science-of-opportunity-on-space-station/


TowWhee

date: 2024-09-04, from: Chris Coyier blog

I love the product name. Ruby has just learned two-wheel bike riding and is loving it. But we live in a very hilly area. This little tow strap thing is very easy to pop on and off so I can tug her up hills when she needs it, then remove when she doesn’t (it’s kind […]

https://chriscoyier.net/2024/09/04/towwhee/


A Viking-Era Vessel Found in Scotland a Decade Ago Turns Out to Be From Asia

date: 2024-09-04, from: Smithsonian Magazine

Experts used X-ray technology to link the artifact—part of the famous Galloway Hoard—to an Iranian silver mine

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/a-viking-era-vessel-found-in-scotland-a-decade-ago-turns-out-to-be-from-asia-180985021/


Empty capsule to return to Earth soon; 2 astronauts will stay behind

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida — Boeing will attempt to return its problem-plagued capsule from the International Space Station later this week — with empty seats.

NASA said Wednesday that everything is on track for the Starliner capsule to undock from the space station Friday evening. The fully automated capsule will aim for a touchdown in New Mexico’s White Sands Missile Range six hours later.

NASA’s two stuck astronauts, who flew up on Starliner, will remain behind at the orbiting lab. They’ll ride home with SpaceX in February, eight months after launching on what should have been a weeklong test flight. Thruster trouble and helium leaks kept delaying their return until NASA decided that it was too risky for them to accompany Starliner back as originally planned.

“It’s been a journey to get here, and we’re excited to have Starliner return,” said NASA’s commercial crew program manager Steve Stich.

NASA’s Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams will close the hatches between Starliner and the space station on Thursday. They are now considered full-time station crew members along with the seven others on board, helping with experiments and maintenance, and ramping up their exercise to keep their bones and muscles strong during their prolonged exposure to weightlessness.

To make room for them on SpaceX’s next taxi flight, the Dragon capsule will launch with two astronauts instead of the usual four. Two were cut late last week from the six-month expedition, which is due to blast off in late September. Boeing must vacate the parking place for SpaceX’s arrival.

Boeing encountered serious flaws with Starliner long before its June 5 liftoff on the long-delayed astronaut demo.

Starliner’s first test flight went so poorly in 2019 — the capsule never reached the space station because of software errors — that the mission was repeated three years later. More problems surfaced, resulting in even more delays and more than $1 billion in repairs.

The capsule had suffered multiple thruster failures and propulsion-system helium leaks by the time it pulled up at the space station after launch. Boeing conducted extensive thruster tests in space and on the ground, and contended the capsule could safely bring the astronauts back. But NASA disagreed, setting the complex ride swap in motion.

Starliner will make a faster, simpler getaway than planned, using springs to push away from the space station and then short thruster firings to gradually increase the distance. The original plan called for an hour of dallying near the station, mostly for picture-taking; that was cut to 20 or so minutes to reduce the stress on the capsule’s thrusters and keep the station safe.

Additional test firings of Starliner’s 28 thrusters are planned before the all-important descent from orbit. Engineers want to learn as much as they can since the thrusters won’t return to Earth; the section containing them will be ditched before the capsule reenters.

The stuck astronauts — retired Navy captains — have lived on the space station before and settled in just fine, according to NASA officials. Even though their mission focus has changed, “they’re just as dedicated for the success of human spaceflight going forward,” flight director Anthony Vareha said.

Their blue Boeing spacesuits will return with the capsule, along with some old station equipment.

NASA hired Boeing and SpaceX a decade ago to ferry its astronauts to and from the space station after its shuttles retired. SpaceX accomplished the feat in 2020 and has since launched nine crews for NASA and four for private customers.

https://www.voanews.com/a/empty-capsule-to-return-to-earth-soon-2-astronauts-will-stay-behind/7771395.html


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-04, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

What Trump 2.0 Would Mean for Texas.

https://www.texasobserver.org/trump-second-term-texas/


Taking A Mile

date: 2024-09-04, from: Tedium site

The risk of the open internet is that someone will exploit your well-intentioned openness thoughtlessly. That’s how the internet slowly stops being open.

https://feed.tedium.co/link/15204/16793000/open-internet-content-scraping-risks


HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is a $1499 convertible laptop with a 3K OLED display and Intel Lunar Lake

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

After launching an HP OmniBook X 14 laptop with a Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite processor in May and AMD Ryzen AI 300 model called the OmniBook Ultra in July, HP is rounding out its trifecta of premium 14 inch laptops with an Intel Lunar Lake model called the HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 2-in-1. As the […]

The post HP OmniBook Ultra Flip 14 is a $1499 convertible laptop with a 3K OLED display and Intel Lunar Lake appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/hp-omnibook-ultra-flip-14-is-a-1499-convertible-laptop-with-a-3k-oled-display-and-intel-lunar-lake/


Firefox 130 lands with a yawn, but 131 beta teases a long-awaited feature

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: Liam Proven’s articles at the Register

The upcoming version might bring tab previews, cookie banner block, and vertical tabs

  <p>Firefox 130 is landing on users' machines, while version 131 enters beta — with a feature we've all been waiting for.</p> 

https://go.theregister.com/i/cfa/https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/firefox_130_release/


Firefox 130 lands with a yawn, but 131 beta teases a long-awaited feature

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

The upcoming version might bring tab previews, cookie banner block, and vertical tabs

Firefox 130 is landing on users’ machines, while version 131 enters beta — with a feature we’ve all been waiting for.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/firefox_130_release/


Gateway’s Propulsion System Testing Throttles Up

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

The powerhouse of Gateway, NASA’s orbiting outpost around the Moon and a critical piece of infrastructure for Artemis, is in the midst of several electric propulsion system tests. The Power and Propulsion Element (PPE), being manufactured by Maxar Technologies, provides Gateway with power, high-rate communications, and propulsion for maneuvers around the Moon and to transit […]

https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/gateways-propulsion-system-testing-throttles-up/


‘Error’ causes Alexa to endorse Kamala Harris, refuse to discuss Trump

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Bot shouldn’t have political opinions, says Amazon

It would be perfectly reasonable to expect Amazon’s digital assistant Alexa to decline to state opinions about the 2024 presidential race, but up until recently, that assumption would have been incorrect.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/error_amazon_alexa_k/


4 killed, at least 9 hurt in shooting at high school near Atlanta, officials say; 1 suspect in custody

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

WINDER, Georgia — The Georgia Bureau of Investigation said Wednesday that four people were killed and at least nine were injured in a shooting at a high school outside of Atlanta.

Students scrambled for shelter in the football stadium as officers swarmed the campus and parents raced to find out if their children were safe.

One suspect was in custody, authorities said.

“What you see behind us is an evil thing,” Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith said at a brief news conference outside Apalachee High School. He declined to give additional details about those injured in the shooting.

Jacob King, a sophomore football player, said he had dozed off in his world history class after a morning practice when he heard about 10 gunshots.

King said he didn’t believe the shooting was real until he heard an officer yelling at someone to put down their gun. King said when his class was led out, he saw officers shielding what appeared to be an injured student.

Ashley Enoh was at home Wednesday morning when she got a text from her brother, who’s a senior at Apalachee High School:

“Just so you know, I love you,” he texted her.

When she asked in the family group chat what was going on, he said there was a shooter at the school. Enoh’s younger sister, a junior at the school, said that she had heard about the shooter and that everything was on lockdown.

Few details were immediately available from authorities, who said the call came in shortly before 10:30 a.m., when “officers from multiple law enforcement agencies and Fire/EMS personnel were dispatched to the high school in reference to a reported active shooting,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

“Casualties have been reported, however details on the number or their conditions [are] not available at this time,” the statement said.

Helicopter video from WSB-TV showed dozens of law enforcement and emergency vehicles surrounding the school in Barrow County, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of Atlanta.

When Erin Clark, 42, received a text from her son Ethan, a senior at the high school, that there was an active shooter, she rushed from her job at the Amazon warehouse to the school. The two texted “I love you,” and Clark said she prayed for her son as she drove to the high school.

With the main road blocked to the school, Clark parked and ran with other parents. Parents were then directed to the football field. Amid the chaos, Clark found Ethan sitting on the bleachers.

Clark said her son was writing an essay in class when he first heard the gunshots. Her son then worked with his classmates to barricade the door and hide.

“I’m so proud of him for doing that,” she said. “He was so brave.”

Students had started the school year a little over a month ago.

“It makes me scared to send him back,” Clark said. “I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

Traffic going to the school was backed up for more than a mile as parents tried to get to their children there.

“I have directed all available state resources to respond to the incident at Apalachee High School and urge all Georgians to join my family in praying for the safety of those in our classrooms, both in Barrow County and across the state,” Georgia Governor Brian Kemp said in a statement.

“We will continue to work with local, state, and federal partners as we gather information and further respond to this situation,” Kemp said.

In a statement, the FBI’s Atlanta office said: “FBI Atlanta is aware of the current situation at Apalachee High School in Barrow County. Our agents are on scene coordinating with and supporting local law enforcement.”

The White House said that President Joe Biden has been briefed by his Homeland Security adviser, Liz Sherwood-Randall, about the shooting and that the administration will coordinate with federal, state and local officials as it receives more information.

Apalachee High School has about 1,900 students, according to records from Georgia education officials. It became Barrow County’s second-largest public high school when it opened in 2000, according to the Barrow County School System. It’s named after the Apalachee River on the southern edge of Barrow County.

The shooting had reverberations in Atlanta, where patrols of schools in that city were beefed up, authorities said. More patrols of Atlanta schools would be done “for the rest of the day out of an abundance of caution,” Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens said.

https://www.voanews.com/a/police-respond-to-shooter-at-us-high-school-/7771305.html


Asus launches Vivobook S 14 and Vivobook Flip 14 Lunar Lake laptops

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

Asus is expanding its Vivobook line of laptops with two semi-premium models featuring 14 inch OLED displays and Intel Lunar Lake processors. The new Asus Vivobook S 14 (Q423 / S5406SA) is a 2.8 inch notebook that goes up for pre-order at Best Buy tomorrow for $1000 and up, while new Asus Vivobook 14 Flip […]

The post Asus launches Vivobook S 14 and Vivobook Flip 14 Lunar Lake laptops appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/intel-launches-vivobook-s-14-and-vivobook-flip-14-lunar-lake-laptops/


NASA TechRise Student Challenge

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Are you ready for this year’s NASA TechRise Student challenge? From researching Earth’s environment to designing experiments for space exploration, schools are invited to join NASA in its mission to inspire the world through discovery. If you are in sixth to 12th grade at a U.S. public, private, or charter school – including those in […]

https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/stmd/prizes-challenges-crowdsourcing-program/center-of-excellence-for-collaborative-innovation-coeci/nasa-techrise-student-challenge-3/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-04, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

The Big Five publishing houses, John Green sue Florida over book bans.

https://www.cfpublic.org/education/2024-08-30/the-big-five-publishing-houses-john-green-sue-florida-over-book-bans


US judge says X must face class action age bias claims over mass layoff

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

https://www.voanews.com/a/us-judge-says-x-must-face-class-action-age-bias-claims-over-mass-layoff-/7771239.html


Asus NUC 14 Pro AI is a Lunar Lake mini PC with up to Core Ultra 9 288V

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

Intel may no longer be making NUC-branded mini PCs, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t find NUC systems featuring the latest Intel processors. The same day that Intel officially launched its Core Ultra (Series 2) line of processors (code-named “Lunar Lake”), Asus has introduced the first mini PC powered by one of those chips. […]

The post Asus NUC 14 Pro AI is a Lunar Lake mini PC with up to Core Ultra 9 288V appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/asus-nuc-14-pro-ai-is-a-lunar-lake-mini-pc-with-up-to-core-ultra-9-288v/


Asus Zenbook S 14 OLED with Intel Lunar Lake coming soon for $1300

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

The new Asus Zenbook S 14 is a thin and light laptop with an Intel Lunar Lake processor, a high-resolution OLED display, and a premium design that, among other things, includes a lid with the new “Ceraluminum” material that Asus introduced earlier this year. Asus says the new Zenbook S 14 will be available soon with prices […]

The post Asus Zenbook S 14 OLED with Intel Lunar Lake coming soon for $1300 appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/asus-zenbook-s-14-oled-with-intel-lunar-lake-coming-soon-for-1300/


6 Ways Students Can Engage With NASA Glenn

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

School is back in session, and the joy of learning is back on students’ minds. Teachers and parents seeking ways to extend students’ academic excitement outside of the classroom should know NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland offers various opportunities to engage with NASA. NASA educators encourage Ohio students and teachers to take part in […]

https://www.nasa.gov/news-release/back-to-school-6-ways-students-can-engage-with-nasa-glenn/


atNorth plans mega datacenter that will help grow veggies and heat homes

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

It’ll also do computery stuff

Nordic datacenter operator atNorth says its next facility - the biggest to date - is to feature a heat reuse scheme for large-scale greenhouses and local housing.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/atnorth_datacenter_heat_reuse/


Leveraging Teacher Leaders to Share the Joy of NASA Heliophysics

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Many teachers are exceptionally skilled at bridging students’ interests with real-world science. Now for the third year, the American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT) has brought together such a group of highly-motivated secondary and higher education teachers as part of their NASA Heliophysics Education Activation Team (HEAT) Space Physics Ambassador program. In June of 2024, […]

https://science.nasa.gov/learning-resources/science-activation/leveraging-teacher-leaders-to-share-the-joy-of-nasa-heliophysics/


Maui wildfire report shows communities how to avoid similar disasters

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

https://www.voanews.com/a/maui-wildfire-report-shows-communities-how-to-avoid-similar-disasters/7771230.html


GM battery joint venture agrees to recognize UAW at Tennessee plant

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

https://www.voanews.com/a/gm-battery-joint-venture-agrees-to-recognize-uaw-at-tennessee-plant-/7771232.html


Painting the Plane as We Fly It: Designing JSR

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: Deno blog

JSR, created for the JavaScript community, needed a logo and a website to look distinct, friendly, and inclusive. Here’s how we approached this design problem.

https://deno.com/blog/designing-jsr


Bernie Sanders: Kamala Harris Can Beat Trump on the Economy

date: 2024-09-04, from: Capital and Main

The longtime senator tells Capital & Main that backing Medicare expansion, higher taxes on the wealthy and a hike in the minimum wage is a winning agenda.

The post Bernie Sanders: Kamala Harris Can Beat Trump on the Economy appeared first on .

https://capitalandmain.com/bernie-sanders-kamala-harris-can-beat-trump-on-the-economy


Microsoft’s Inflection acquihire is too small to matter, say UK regulators

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Deal can’t lessen competition if AI minnow wasn’t much of a competitor

Microsoft’s “acquihire” of Inflection AI was today cleared by UK authorities on the grounds that the startup isn’t big enough for its absorption by Microsoft to affect competition in the enterprise AI space.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/microsoft_inflection_acquihire_cma/


Why Not Just Build a Bunch of Batteries?

date: 2024-09-04, from: Distilled Earth blog

Can the electricity grid just run on solar and batteries? Probably not.

https://www.distilled.earth/p/why-not-just-build-a-bunch-of-batteries


That’s Sorry, Alright

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: One Foot Tsunami

https://onefoottsunami.com/2024/09/04/thats-sorry-alright/


This IRA Program Spawned 50,000 Solar Projects In Low-Income Communities. Who Benefited?

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



By the numbers, a new federal program designed to give low-income communities access to renewable energy looks like a smashing success. According to data provided exclusively to Heatmap, in its first year, the Low-Income Communities Bonus Credit Program steered nearly 50,000 solar projects to low-income communities and tribal lands, which are together expected to produce more than $270 million in annual energy savings.

But those topline numbers don’t say anything about who will actually see the savings, or how much the projects will benefit households that have historically been left behind. In reality, the majority of the projects — about 98% — were allocated funding simply for being located in low-income communities, with no hard requirement to deliver energy or financial savings to low-income residents.

A closer look at the data reveals a more complicated success story. While the program did make some clear strides in bridging the solar inequality gap, other factors — including the language in the law that created it — are also holding it back.

The Low-Income Communities Bonus Credit Program came out of the Inflation Reduction Act in August 2022. Though the goal is to increase solar access for low-income households, it’s not actually a tax credit for low income households. It’s for small wind and solar developers — and beginning in 2025, developers of other types of clean energy — whose projects meet certain criteria.

The law caps the total amount of energy the program can support at 1.8 gigawatts per year, and developers have to apply and get their project approved in order to claim funds. To be eligible, a project must produce less than 5 megawatts of power and fall under one of four categories: It must be located in a low-income community, be built on Indian land, be part of an affordable housing development, or distribute at least half its power (and guaranteed bill savings) to low-income households. The first two categories qualify for a 10% credit; the second two, which stipulate that at least some financial benefits go to low-income residents, qualify for 20%. In both cases, the credit can be stacked on top of the baseline 30% tax credit for clean energy projects that meet labor standards, meaning it could slash the cost of building a small solar or wind farm in half.

Each of these provisions has the potential to address at least some of the barriers disadvantaged communities face in accessing clean energy. Low-income homeowners may not have the money for a down payment for rooftop solar or the credit to find financing, for instance. But by giving developers a tax credit for projects located in low-income communities, solar leasing programs, in which homeowners lease panels from a third party in exchange for energy bill savings, now have an incentive to expand into these neighborhoods, and potentially offer lower lease rates. The program helped fund nearly 48,000 residential solar projects in the first year.

Tribal lands, meanwhile, account for more than 5% of solar generation potential in the U.S., but are still a largely untapped resource, for reasons including lack of representation in utility regulatory processes, complex land ownership structures, and limited tribal staff capacity. The program gives outside developers additional incentive to work through the challenges, and it also earmarks funds for tribe-owned development. Crucially, the IRA also opened the door for tribes, as well as other tax-exempt entities, to utilize clean energy incentives and receive a direct payment equal to the tax credits. The program supported 96 solar projects on tribal lands in the first year.

The third category attempts to overcome the famous “split incentive” problem for low-income renters whose landlords have little reason to spend money on a solar project that primarily benefits tenants. The program helped finance 805 solar projects on low-income residential buildings, where the developers are required to distribute at least 50% of the energy savings equitably among tenants.

Lastly, while renters in some states can subscribe to community solar projects, which offer utility bill credits in exchange for a small subscription fee, the subscriptions can be scooped up by wealthier customers if there’s no low-income requirement. The program sponsored 319 community solar projects where at least half the capacity had to go to low-income residents and offer at least 20% off their bills.

U.S. Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo declared the program a success. “These investments are already lowering costs, protecting families from energy price spikes, and creating new opportunities in our clean energy future,” he said.

Despite overwhelming demand during the four-month application period, however, the program ended up with capacity to spare. Although applications totaled more than 7 gigawatts, ultimately, the Department approved just over 49,000 projects equal to about 1.4 gigawatts, or roughly enough to power 200,000 average households. All of it was solar.

The gap between applications and awarded projects has to do with the program’s design. The Treasury divided the 1.8 gigawatt cap between the four categories, setting maximum amounts that could be awarded for each one. Within the four categories, the awards were further divided, with half set aside for applicants that met additional ownership or geographic criteria, such as tribal-owned companies, tax-exempt entities, or projects sited in areas with especially high energy costs relative to incomes.

For example, 200 megawatts were earmarked for Indian lands, with half reserved for applicants meeting those additional criteria, but only 40 megawatts were awarded. The fourth category, meanwhile, which was designed to encourage community solar development, was oversubscribed.

Since tax data is confidential, the Treasury Department could not share much detail about these projects, including where, exactly, they were, who developed them, or who will benefit from them. A map overview shows a concentration of awards across the sunbelt, with Illinois, New York, Maine, Massachusetts, and Puerto Rico also seeing a lot of uptake.

Map of energy capacity awarded by state. IRS, RAAS, Statistics of Income, August 2024

I reached out to more than a dozen nonprofits, tribal organizations, and other groups who advocate for or develop clean energy projects benefiting low-income communities to find examples of what the program was actually funding. The first person I was connected with was Richard Best, the director of capital projects and planning for Seattle Public Schools, who got a 10% tax credit for solar arrays on two new schools under construction in low-income neighborhoods. While the school system already planned to put solar on these schools, Best said the tax credits helped offset increased construction costs due to supply chain interruptions, preventing them from having to make compromises on design elements like classroom size.

“It’s not insignificant,” he told me. “The solar array at Rainier Beach High School is in excess of a million dollars — just the rooftop solar array. That’s $400,000 [in tax credits]. So these are significant dollars that we’re receiving, and we’re very appreciative.”

Jody Lincoln, an affordable housing development officer for the nonprofit ACTION-Housing in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, got a 10% tax credit to add solar to a former YMCA that the group recently converted to a 74-unit apartment building. The single room occupancy rental units serve men who are coming out of homelessness or incarceration. Lincoln told me the building operates “in the gray,” and that any cost saving measures they can make, including the energy savings from the solar array, enable it to continue to operate as affordable housing. When I asked if they could have built the solar project without access to the IRA’s tax credits, she didn’t hesitate: “No.”

These two examples show the program has potential to deliver benefits to low-income communities, even in cases where the energy savings aren’t going directly to low-income residents.

I also spoke with Alexandra Wyatt, the managing policy director and counsel at the nonprofit solar company Grid Alternatives. She told me Grid partnered with for-profit solar developers, such as the national solar company SunRun, who were approved for the tax credit bonus for rooftop solar lease projects on low-income single-family homes. In these cases, Grid helped pull together other sources of funding like state incentives for projects in disadvantaged communities to pre-pay the leases so that the homeowners could more fully benefit from the energy bill savings.

It’s unlikely that all of the nearly 48,000 residential rooftop solar projects in low-income communities that were approved for the credit in the first year had such virtuous outcomes. It’s also possible that projects installed on wealthier homeowners’ roofs in gentrifying neighborhoods were subsidized. In an email to me, a Treasury spokesperson said the Department recognizes that “simply being in a low-income community does not mean low-income households are being served,” and that it was required by statute to include this category. It was still the agency’s decision, however, to allocate such a large portion of the awards, 700 megawatts, to this category — a decision that some public comments on the program disagreed with.

Wyatt applauded the Treasury and the Department of Energy, which oversees the application process, for doing “an admirable job on a tight timeframe with a challenging program design handed to them by Congress.” She’s especially frustrated by the 1.8 gigawatt cap, which none of the other renewable energy tax credits have, and which changes it into a competitive grant that’s more burdensome both for developers and for the agencies. It adds an element of uncertainty to project finance, she said, since developers have to wait to see if their application for the credit was approved.

Wendolyn Holland, the senior advisor for policy, tax and government relations at the Alliance for Tribal Clean Energy told me there was tons of interest among indigenous communities and tribal clean energy developers in taking advantage of the IRA programs, but it wasn’t really happening. Holland cited challenges for tribes reaching the stage of “commercial readiness” required to apply for federal funding. Tribal developers have also said they are limited by the lack of transmission on tribal lands. When I asked the Treasury about the paltry number of projects on Indian Lands, a spokesperson said it was not for lack of trying. The Department and other federal agencies have conducted webinars and other forms of outreach, they said, through which they’ve heard that many tribes are struggling to access capital for energy projects, and that development on Indian lands has “unique challenges due to the history of allotment of Indian lands and status of some land as federal trust land.”

Holland is optimistic that things will change — in December, Biden issued an executive order committing to making it easier for tribes to access federal funding. The Alliance also recently petitioned the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to address barriers for tribal energy development in its new rules that are supposed to get more transmission built.

The unallocated capacity from 2023 was carried over to the next year’s round of funding, so it wasn’t lost. But a dashboard tracking the second year of the program looks like it’s following a similar pattern. While the community solar-oriented category, which was increased to allow for 900 megawatts, is nearly filled up, the tribal Lands category, which kept its 200 megawatt cap, has received applications to develop less than a sixth of that.

Wyatt said that so far, she does think the bonus credit has been successful in spurring good projects that might not otherwise have happened. Still, it will probably take a few years before it will be possible to assess how well it’s working. The good news is, as long as it doesn’t get repealed, the program could run for up to eight more years, leaving plenty of time to improve things. It’s already set to change in one key way. Beginning in 2025, it becomes tech-neutral, meaning that developers of small hydroelectric, geothermal heating or power, or nuclear projects, will be able to apply. (When asked why no wind projects were approved to date, a spokesperson for the Treasury said taxpayer privacy rules meant it couldn’t comment on applications, but they added that wind projects tend to be larger than 5 megawatts and take longer to develop.)

One thing is for sure, despite the heavy administrative burden of screening tens of thousands of applications, the agencies involved are clearly committed to implementing the program.

“I’m definitely pleased that they managed to get the program up and running as quickly as they did,” Wyatt told me. “I mean, it’s kind of lightning speed for the IRS.”

https://heatmap.news/economy/low-income-ira-solar


Fairphone launches a cheaper version of the Fairphone 5 with less memory and storage

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

Dutch company Fairphone has made a small name for itself by offering a line of smartphones that are made from ethically sourced materials, feature a modular and repairable design, and receive software updates for longer than most phones from bigger phone companies. But the company’s phones aren’t exactly cheap: the Fairphone 5 has sold for […]

The post Fairphone launches a cheaper version of the Fairphone 5 with less memory and storage appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/fairphone-launches-a-cheaper-version-of-the-fairphone-5-with-less-memory-and-storage/


A frank conversation about the subminimum wage

date: 2024-09-04, from: Marketplace Morning Report

A new Washington Post investigation examines a program in which workers with disabilities are employed for much less than minimum wage — sometimes less than a dollar an hour. It’s legally sanctioned and aimed at training people with disabilities to work and eventually go on to higher-paying jobs. But it doesn’t always work out that way. Plus, entrepreneurs are getting their turn in the political spotlight, and markets respond to a weak manufacturing report.

https://www.marketplace.org/shows/marketplace-morning-report/a-frank-conversation-about-the-subminimum-wage


Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Plus is made for cheap(er) laptops in the $700 to $900 price range

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

Windows laptops with Qualcomm’s ARM-based processors have been shipping for years, but for most of that time they were powered by souped-up versions of Qualcomm’s smartphone processors. This year the chip maker shook things up with its new Snapdragon X line of processors that offer CPUs that are powerful enough to compete with the latest […]

The post Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Plus is made for cheap(er) laptops in the $700 to $900 price range appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/qualcomms-snapdragon-x-plus-is-made-for-cheaper-laptops-in-the-700-to-900-price-range/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-04, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

This is the kind of debate-bomb Trump is getting ready for the debate.

https://www.threads.net/@kamalahq/post/C_f5DCuqbGL


A Battery Backlash Goes to Washington

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



One hour north of Los Angeles, the small town of Acton is experiencing a battery energy storage buildout — and quickly becoming the must-watch frontline in the backlash against lithium-ion energy storage systems. The flashpoint: wildfires.

Like many parts of California, Acton has hot summers with heavy winds, putting it at elevated risk of the kind blaze that makes national headlines. Battery storage fires, while rare, are a unique threat, with relatively little data available about them to help regulators or the public understand the risk. People in Acton wondered: Would they really be safe if a wildfire engulfed a battery storage site, or if a battery failure sparked a new conflagration?

When L.A. County blessed the first battery energy storage system project in Acton last year, developers and local fire officials said they were doing everything in their power to ensure the batteries would meet safety standards. Residents were far from convinced.

“This will turn our community into industrial hell and it’ll erase us from the face of the Earth,” Jacqueline Ayer, a member of Acton’s town council, told me. Ayer is helping lead the local fight against the projects.

I’ve now spent more than a month researching the fight in Acton. In the process, I’ve learned how much — or little — we know about when battery energy storage and wildfires mix. We’ll get to that later in this story. To be honest, debunking battery fire risk wasn’t why I spent a month on Acton. It was what happened when the fears took hold.

Feeling they’d been failed by both the regulatory approval process and the court system, the Acton project’s opponents turned to their representative in Washington, House Republican Mike Garcia. Though Garcia can’t do anything to stop this particular project, he can severely hinder future ones: As Heatmap can exclusively report, after lobbying from Acton, Garcia inserted language into the annual funding bill for the Department of Energy that would block it from implementing a new rule designed to expedite permits for federally funded battery projects.

“What we’re hoping is that [with Garcia] being at the federal level, he’ll shed some light to the people at the top,” said Ruthie Brock of the activist group Acton Takes Action, “because if the top becomes informed, it’ll trickle down to local governments.”

This is why the Acton fight is so important — it demonstrates the risk of failing to obtain community buy-in, which can ricochet in ways no one intended. The political and media environments are quick to sensationalize the downsides of renewable energy, creating a tinderbox atmosphere in which small local fights can quickly become national ones.

Fearing a known unknown

On some level, a fight over battery fires going national was inevitable. Across the country, from New York to Washington state, communities are revolting against battery energy storage sites coming to their backyards. Often, those opposed cite the feared threat of fires or explosions.

Fires in battery energy storage systems, a.k.a. BESS, are quite rare. According to what data is available, the number of fires has stayed relatively flat even as deployment has grown drastically. There were fewer than 10 failure events in the U.S. in 2023, and there have been even fewer so far this year.

But when a fire does happen, experts say it can be quite difficult to put out. In some cases, there’s nothing a community can do other than let the blaze run.

“There’s a lack of consensus. There’s a lot of experts out there providing guidance, and that’s something we’re trying to work on with training throughout the country,” Victoria Hutchinson, an engineer with the Fire Protection Research Foundation, told me. “[It’ll] instill some fear in the meantime we figure out the best approach.”

Information on BESS and wildfires is even less available. Guillermo Rein, a professor of fire science and the editor-in-chief of the journal Fire Technology, told me the matter has not really been studied.

“When I say [BESS are] new, I mean really new,” Rein said. “We hardly know how it works when it gets [on] fire and we don’t have many technologies that are proven to work. We have technologies that we wish will work, but proven technologies that work are very rare. That means we have a new hazard we are struggling to understand and in the meantime, we don’t know how to protect against it.”

Parsing what happened in Acton

Los Angeles County approved Acton’s first battery storage system — Humidor, a 300 megawatt project by Hecate Energy — last summer through an expedited “ministerial” process, the local equivalent of a “categorical exclusion” under the National Environmental Policy Act. Ministerial reviews and categorical exclusions are used by regulators to skip the drawn out process of an environmental review because they can reasonably predict a lack of significant impact. Joseph Horvath, a spokesperson for L.A. County Planning, gave me a statement defending the approval and stating BESS projects must meet all local and state zoning and fire codes to receive a ministerial approval.

California had identified the Acton community back in 2021 as a potential site for energy storage to protect against future power shut offs. Acton made sense because it’s close to the SoCal Edison Vincent substation, making it well positioned to connect to the grid. There was also a real sense of urgency: To achieve its goal of 100% carbon-free electricity by 2045, the state estimates it will need to install a projected 52,000 megawatts or more of battery storage. Humidor is the first of what appears to be multiple projects being planned for the area, including two more Hecate facilities according to materials on the company’s website.

Convinced that a battery boom could mix poorly with extreme fire risk, and that the county moved far too fast to approve Humidor, Acton residents sued. The county, they argued, had little reason to conclude the facility would have an insignificant impact on the environment — so few BESS projects have been approved that the county used the standards from a different kind of project — an electrical substation — to draw that conclusion. L.A. County Planning told me they chose this comparison for reasons including the “purpose of BESS and its connection to the larger network for distributive purposes.”

Rein told me that at least when it comes to the fire risk, this isn’t an accurate comparison, and that there’s not actually enough data to claim such a facility would have an insignificant impact. “I would put great efforts into making sure this facility is safe,” he said. “They can’t just say, I met the regulation, I did enough. Because it’s a new hazard.”

Many of those in Acton opposed to the project believe the approval was rushed, and claim that little information was made available to the public as it was going through the county’s process. Furious residents have told county planners that the Acton town council was not notified in advance that an approval was on its way. They testified before the county board of supervisors that Hecate held only a single public meeting to discuss what it intended to build, with little notice given to potentially concerned citizens.

Obtaining a social license

In my experience as a journalist reporting on large energy projects with serious community impacts, transparency is key to getting local buy-in to build a project. For years I covered the mining industry, where innumerable decades of toxic waste spills and labor scandals have forced companies to really innovate and spend serious dough on obtaining “social license to operate,” a term developers and investors use to describe acceptance to a company’s business practices.

This, of course, differs from the YIMBY school of thought that companies and governments should eschew frustrated municipalities to pursue the overriding net good of climate action. There are certainly merits to this argument, especially when it comes to communities that won’t take yes for an answer, and we’ll be exploring case studies supporting that view in future editions of The Fight.

I’m on the fence about whether Acton is one of those cases, though. Ayer, an environmental engineer by trade, told me she supports decarbonization and wants to see climate action happen. She just wants to feel assured the technology is safe.

If it wasn’t a lithium-ion battery storage facility “I would feel comfortable,” she said. “We will shoulder some of the weight. But it isn’t right that we shoulder all of the weight.”

When I tried to talk to Hecate about Acton’s wildfire concerns and how the company had engaged with the community, a company spokesperson, Bobby Howard, declined to make anyone available for an interview citing “ongoing litigation related to the subject.” Howard provided a factbook that said only that Humidor would “meet or exceed” local and state fire codes — without specifying which codes — and detailed some of the outreach the company did, including the public meeting as well as mailers to “thousands of individuals throughout the greater Los Angeles area, including civically engaged individuals throughout Acton.”

Howard declined to answer questions requesting more information about the company’s public outreach and wildfire planning. He did tell the Los Angeles Times earlier this year that Humidor would have “seismic bracing, safety zones around the perimeter, substantial setbacks from parcel boundaries, gravel breaks and a masonry wall around the facility.”

Stanford University senior research scholar and legal energy expert Michael Wara explained to me that in cases like these, having buy-in from the community is important to avoiding litigation and social blowback. “That is losing,” Wara said. “You have not served your client if you end up in litigation.”

“Having a process by which people are informed about a project and have an opportunity to provide input is important for buy-in for all kinds of projects related to the energy transition if you want to build in a democratic society,” he said. “Is it really the fire risk the community is concerned about?”

Fire is the new whales

When it comes to the Acton battery fight, it’s the fears of fire that scare me the most, not the fire itself.

I sought reasons to be optimistic about putting battery energy storage in areas like Acton that are prone to wildfire because, well, California is essentially one big fire risk zone. James Campbell, a wildfire policy expert at the Federation of American Sciences, told me that battery energy storage decreases net wildfire risk compared to gas storage tanks and pipelines. “If we consider the whole-climate trade-offs, battery systems are much safer,” he said.

On its end, Hecate claimed in a letter to the L.A. County Board of Supervisors that a BESS fire has never traveled off-site, and that because the fires are fueled by flammable gasses, there is minimal risk of embers traveling elsewhere and igniting grass or bushes. The company pointed me to this letter when I reached out for comment.

“Nothing about fire risk mitigation is about certainty. It’s more, risk mitigation and fire is kind of like wearing a seatbelt,” Wara told me. “If you’re going 120 miles an hour down the highway and you get in a high-speed collision, your seatbelt will not save you. [But] there’s rapid advances in how these systems work.”

In the end, he added, meeting California’s carbon emissions targets will “probably mean building somewhere that there is non-trivial wildfire risk.”

What’s happening to offshore wind should be a cautionary tale for developers considering whether sinking time and money into community relations is really worth it: Last year, coastal fishermen and beach town mayors in New Jersey joined forces with fossil fuel funding and right-wing agitators to foment a conspiracy-infused campaign against offshore wind that has truly rattled the future of the industry.

Part of that offshore wind backlash grew out of New Jersey Republicans in Congress using the pulpit of their offices and filing amendments to legislation. As Garcia takes up Acton’s cause, I do wonder whether battery energy storage might be next. November’s election makes it less likely his language hindering expedited approvals for BESS projects will make it into the final funding bill, and Garcia’s office did not respond to requests to discuss its prospects.

But regardless, it’s an ember that could become a fire of its own.

https://heatmap.news/plus/the-fight/spotlight/hecate-energy-acton-mike-garcia


What I’m Watching in Washington

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



China, China, China – Republicans in Congress are trying to pressure the U.S. into an even more hawkish stance against Chinese battery supply chains ahead of the November election.

BLM’s solar plan The Bureau of Land Management last week released its long-awaited programmatic environmental impact statement for solar development across the Southwest, opening 31 million acres to potential projects across almost a dozen states.

Trump’s energy whisperer The Trump campaign told Reuters last week the former president would ax the EPA’s climate-minded power plant rules if elected… but that’s not what caught my eye.

Other policy moves worth watching…

Nevada’s new plan Joe Lombardo, the Republican governor of Nevada, released a new statewide climate plan after the one put forward by his Democratic predecessor vanished. It’s getting panned.

‘Greenwashing’ push — The Agriculture Department launched an initiative aimed at combating misleading climate claims in the meat and poultry industries.

https://heatmap.news/plus/the-fight/policy-watch/marco-rubio-catl-china


The Center for Biological Diversity’s Patrick Donnelly Responds to Critics

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



Welcome to The Fight’s Q&A section where we’ll speak with the movers and shakers shaping every side of the debate over renewable energy deployment.

Today our subject is Patrick Donnelly, Great Basin director for the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmentalist organization at times on the plaintiff end of lawsuits against projects. I decided to speak with him about how his organization’s opposition to some projects squares with its support for rapid climate action.

The following is an abridged version of our conversation.

What would you say to someone who says the work you do is delaying climate action?

There’s a huge amount of projects in the pipeline, and it’s not likely that our level of intervention is going to materially affect the overall rollout of clean energy.

We [the U.S.] aren’t picking the right projects to pursue. No plan exists in the federal government for where that energy is going to come from, where we’re going to pick which projects to permit. And we have no filtering criteria for which to say, well, this is a good project and there’s so many problems with this project that it’s a really bad project and we shouldn’t permit.

Why do you think the government isn’t engaging organizations like CBD about which projects to pursue?

It’s not a legal obligation. It’s probably a moral obligation. If you’re going to go to 50% EVs or whatever, you better have a plan for where all the lithium is going to come from! There’s places with lower tribal conflicts, these are knowable things. We can do it next week. We also need to consolidate solar projects. There are millions of acres that don’t have tortoises on them. We have more than enough land. I could just pencil that out right now – it’s not that hard to find the least conflicts. The data exists.

But again, industry’s been in the driver’s seat. Industry’s said, we have this application and it needs to be processed because we brought it in.

So what you’re saying is, you’d sit with Jigar Shah and just plan it out?

If he asked me to come, I’d be in D.C. tomorrow. Absolutely. That’s what we want — let’s plan it out, and then I can go work on other things, y’know? I’d be happy to sue over that [other] stuff.

Absent this planning, which sounds nice but has not happened, proponents of permitting reform often cite CBD’s repeated opposition as a reason to pass legislation that could limit your ability to challenge projects. What do you think about how your actions now could impact your capacity to act in the future?

I think some level of permitting reform was inevitable. I don’t think anything in the permitting bill will cease our efforts. It will make it harder for sure. I think the biggest thing it will do is eliminate the ability for frontline communities to engage, so we’re looking at an undemocratic clean energy transition where you have technocrats making decisions for how people’s lives will play out. People in these rural communities feel like they’re under assault. Low income desert folks feel like their whole life is going to be turned upside down.

https://heatmap.news/plus/the-fight/qa/patrick-donnelly-center-for-biological-diversity


US trade deficit widens to two-year high on imports

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

WASHINGTON — The U.S. trade deficit widened to the highest level in more than two years in July as businesses likely front-loaded imports in anticipation of higher tariffs on goods, suggesting trade could remain a drag on economic growth in the third quarter.

While the surge in imports reported by the Commerce Department on Wednesday would subtract from gross domestic product, it was an indication of strong domestic demand and inconsistent with financial market fears of a recession.

“The July trade data suggest that net trade will weigh on third-quarter GDP growth, but that is hardly cause for concern when it reflects the continued strength of imports, painting a better picture of domestic demand than renewed recession fears would suggest,” said Thomas Ryan, North America economist at Capital Economics.

The trade gap increased 7.9% to $78.8 billion, the widest since May 2022, the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis said.

The government revised the trade data from January through June 2024 to incorporate more comprehensive and updated quarterly and monthly figures.

Imports increased 2.1% to $345.4 billion. Goods imports rose 2.3% to $278.2 billion, the highest since June 2022. They were boosted by an increase in capital goods, which increased $3.3 billion to a record high, mostly reflecting computer accessories.

Imports of industrial supplies and materials, which include petroleum, increased $2.8 billion. There were also rises in imports of nonmonetary gold-finished metal shapes.

President Joe Biden’s administration has announced plans to impose steeper tariffs on imports of Chinese electric vehicles, batteries, solar products and other goods.

The government said last week a final determination will be made public in the “coming days.” There are also fears of even higher tariffs on Chinese imports should former President Donald Trump return to the White House after the November 5 election.

The politically sensitive goods trade deficit with China increased $4.9 billion to $27.2 billion. Exports to China fell $1.0 billion while imports advanced $3.9 billion.

“Imports of goods from China increased, which shows how difficult it will be to direct U.S. manufacturers away from their dependence on lower-cost goods originating from China if that is what Congress and political candidates wish to do,” said Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBONDS.

Exports gained 0.5% to $266.6 billion. Goods exports climbed 0.4% to $175.1 billion. Exports of motor vehicles, parts and engines decreased $1.7 billion to the lowest since June 2022. Consumer goods exports fell $800 million.

Exports of capital goods surged $1.8 billion to a record $56.1 billion, boosted by semiconductors.

The goods trade deficit increased 6.9% to $97.6 billion after adjusting for inflation.

https://www.voanews.com/a/us-trade-deficit-widens-to-two-year-high-on-imports/7771073.html


Cicada ransomware may be a BlackCat/ALPHV rebrand and upgrade

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Researchers find many similarities, and nasty new customizations such as embedded compromised user credentials

The Cicada3301 ransomware, which has claimed at least 20 victims since it was spotted in June, shares “striking similarities” with the notorious BlackCat ransomware, according to security researchers at Israeli outfit endpoint security outfit Morphisec.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/cicada_ransomware_blackcat_links/


Apple helped nix part of a child safety bill. More fights are expected.

date: 2024-09-04, from: OS News

Kim Carver, a legislator in the US state of Louisiana, added a provision to a child safety bill forcing Apple and Google to enforce age restrictions on downloads in their application stores. In other words, it would force Apple to make sure minors could not download gambling and casino applications – i.e., 99% of mobile games – that make up the vast majority of Apple’s services revenue. It would also make application stores play a role in enforcing age restrictions on social media applications, which makes sense because Apple and Google know the age of every one of their users. Well, it turns out Apple was not happy. They sent out an absolute army of lobbyists – including a guy known for lobbying on behalf of truck-stop casinos, in case you were wondering about the type of people Apple uses for lobbying – to kill this specific provision. Carver’s provision would have breezed through the Louisiana senate, but it needed a key committee approval before being put up for a vote. And it’s this committee that Apple started heavily influencing and pressuring. Carver began hearing rumblings that Apple was making inroads with the committee—his amended bill might be in trouble. Uncertain on how to proceed, he approached the chairwoman of the committee, Sen. Beth Mizell, for advice. He declined to describe the substance of the conversation to The Wall Street Journal, but in the end, he promised not to object if she removed the app store provisions or support restoring them on the Senate floor. “I made the choice to take the win that we could get,” Carver said. ↫ Jeff Horwitz and Aaron Tilley at The Wall Street Journal This is not the first time Apple has pressured legislatures to drop bills it didn’t like. A famous case is the state if Georgia, which intended to pass a number of application store bills to open up the App Store in much the same way the European Union did with the DMA. Apple went absolutely mental in Georgia, including threatening to cancel “a $25 million investment in a historically Black college in Atlanta”. Apple won. The way these sleazebag companies get away with such blatant corruption is by using third-party lobbyists, which technically are not employed by the companies in question, so no matter how low and sleazy these lobbyists go, the companies they lobby for can wash their hands in innocence and absolve themselves from any responsibility for the various financial and legal threats levied at underfunded, understaffed local legislatures. Spending a few millions on a local development project or whatever is peanuts for Apple, but a massive boon for a small community somewhere, so Apple pulling out means nothing to Apple, but would massively affect such a community. It’s not surprising local legislatures fold. Circling back to the age restriction provision itself – telling stores what they can and cannot sell is an entirely normal thing to do, and happens all the time all over the world. It’s why in, say, The Netherlands, supermarkets are only allowed to sell “light” alcohol like beer and wine, with hard alcohol moved to separate liquor stores that have to be separate from the supermarket, so age restrictions are easier to enforce. There’s also just an infinite number of things you’re just not allowed to sell, period. As always, Silicon Valley believes it’s a very special snowflake to whom regular, normal, widely accepted rules do not apply. Why shouldn’t a store selling gambling applications and similarly addictive and damaging applications have to do the absolute bare minimum to protect minors? Imagine the massive outcry if a Costco or Walmart was found to sell massive amounts of hard liquor to children – why should Silicon Valley companies be treated any differently?

https://www.osnews.com/story/140664/apple-helped-nix-part-of-a-child-safety-bill-more-fights-are-expected/


Missing for Four Decades, This Unusual Double Portrait of Rubens and van Dyck Has Finally Resurfaced

date: 2024-09-04, from: Smithsonian Magazine

The 17th-century painting, stolen in a 1979 heist, turned up at an auction in France in 2020. It recently returned home to Chatsworth House in England

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/missing-for-four-decades-this-unusual-double-portrait-of-rubens-and-van-dyck-has-finally-resurfaced-180985015/


David Attenborough on Cybertruck behavior. “Here we see the Cybertruck has formed…

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045223-david-attenborough-on-cyb


Acer Iconia X12 is a 12.6 inch Android tablet with a 2.5K AMOLED display

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

Acer’s been selling inexpensive Android tablets for more than a decade, but it’s been a while since the company released a model with the kind of specs that might attract folks looking for something other than a budget device. The new Acer Iconia X12 is part-way there. It’s a 12.6 inch Android tablet with a mix of […]

The post Acer Iconia X12 is a 12.6 inch Android tablet with a 2.5K AMOLED display appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/acer-iconia-x12-tablet/


NASA’s Webb Reveals Distorted Galaxy Forming Cosmic Question Mark

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

It’s 7 billion years ago, and the universe’s heyday of star formation is beginning to slow. What might our Milky Way galaxy have looked like at that time? Astronomers using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have found clues in the form of a cosmic question mark, the result of a rare alignment across light-years of […]

https://science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-reveals-distorted-galaxy-forming-cosmic-question-mark/


Podcast: Is Criticizing AI Ableist?

date: 2024-09-04, from: 404 Media Group

On the podcast this week: generative AI Doom, drama in NaNoWriMo, and Apple’s face swap problem.

https://www.404media.co/podcast-is-criticizing-ai-ableist/


‘Right to Repair for Your Body’: The Rise of DIY, Pirated Medicine

date: 2024-09-04, from: 404 Media Group

Four Thieves Vinegar Collective has made DIY medicine cheaper and more accessible to the masses.

https://www.404media.co/right-to-repair-for-your-body-the-rise-of-diy-pirated-medicine/


FCC finally gets around to banning Kaspersky from telecoms kit

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Communications agency now passing on the order to operators

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has woken up and issued a ban on Kaspersky software being used in telecoms kit, months after Washington deemed it a national security risk and blockaded future sales.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/fcc_kaspersky_ban/


Space Station AMS-02 Instrument Works on the Mystery of Dark Matter

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Visible matter in the form of stars and planets adds up to about five percent of the total known mass of the Universe. The rest is either dark matter, antimatter, or dark energy. The exact nature of these substances is unknown, but the International Space Station’s Alpha-Magnetic Spectrometer or AMS-02 is helping to solve the […]

https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/space-station-ams-02-instrument-works-on-the-mystery-of-dark-matter/


The 100 Best TV Episodes of All Time

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/the-100-best-tv-episodes-of-all-time


Lagniappe for September 2024

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Explore Lagniappe for September 2024 featuring: Gator Speaks NASA’s Stennis Space Center keeps writing new history, and the front office announcement in August delights this ’ol Gator! The news delights me because the south Mississippi NASA center will continue to be in good hands with Christine Powell serving as the new deputy director. And talk […]

https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/stennis/lagniappe-for-september-2024/


@Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed (date: 2024-09-04, from: Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed)

This is me in multiple layers.
mastodon.social/@appleinsider/

https://mastodon.social/@Migueldeicaza/113079504000712474


Key Moments Lead to Fulfilling NASA Stennis Career

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Joseph Ladner’s experiences working at NASA’s Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, motivate him to “pay it forward” so more people can be a part of something great. “It is exciting to be at a place like NASA Stennis that continues to reinvent itself to stay relevant,” Ladner said. “You can do just […]

https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/key-moments-in-joseph-ladner-career/


Acer’s Project DualPlay gaming laptop concept has detachable controllers for 2-player gaming

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

The Acer Project DualPlay is a concept gaming laptop designed for multiplayer gaming. Designed to be part of the Acer Predator line of premium gaming notebooks, the laptop has a modular design that allows the computer’s large touchpad to be detached and used as a wireless controller… or separated into two joysticks that allow two […]

The post Acer’s Project DualPlay gaming laptop concept has detachable controllers for 2-player gaming appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/acers-project-dualplay-gaming-laptop-concept-has-detachable-controllers-for-2-player-gaming/


Acer’s new Swift 14 laptops come with a choice of Intel, AMD, or Qualcomm chips

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

Acer is debuting three new laptops with 14 inch displays and support for Microsoft Copilot+ features at IFA this week. What’s a little unusual is that customers have a choice of three different processors. The Acer Swift 14 AI (SF14-51) comes with Intel Lunar Lake processor options, while the Swift 14 AI (SF14-61) is powered by an AMD […]

The post Acer’s new Swift 14 laptops come with a choice of Intel, AMD, or Qualcomm chips appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/acers-new-swift-14-laptops-come-with-a-choice-of-intel-amd-or-qualcomm-chips/


GenAI spending bubble? Definitely ‘maybe’ says ServiceNow

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

It won’t generate hundreds of million of dollars for customers tomorrow, and there’s a ‘lot of noise’ from tech industry

ServiceNow is trying to assure investors that payback for enterprise GenAI investment is coming, but it may not be soon and biz customers shouldn’t expect to get huge returns “tomorrow”.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/servicenow_remains_bullish_on_gen_ai/


Acer’s first handheld gaming PC is the Nitro Blaze 7 with a Ryzen 8845HS chip and 144 Hz display

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

Acer is making a play for the ever-expanding handheld gaming PC space. The new Acer Nitro Blaze 7 (GN771) is the company’s first handheld and one of the first from any company to feature a 35+ watt AMD Ryzen 8040HS series processor. The handheld also features a 7 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel IPS LCD touchscreen […]

The post Acer’s first handheld gaming PC is the Nitro Blaze 7 with a Ryzen 8845HS chip and 144 Hz display appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/acers-first-handheld-gaming-pc-is-the-nitro-blaze-7-with-a-ryzen-8845hs-chip-and-144-hz-display/


Phoenix Just Hit Another Grim Heat Record

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



Current conditions: Ruins of the sunken village of Kallio have emerged from a dried up lake in drought-stricken Greece • AccuWeather reduced its 2024 forecast for the number of named Atlantic storms • It will be hot, humid, and rainy in Beijing today where U.S. climate envoy John Podesta will meet for climate talks with his Chinese counterpart.

THE TOP FIVE

  1. Harris campaign reportedly hires a ‘climate engagement director’

Climate activists are pushing Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris to be more vocal about climate change on the campaign trail. E&E News reported that Michael Greenberg, founder of Climate Defiance, had a virtual meeting yesterday with a senior Harris advisor. “We want her to oppose fossil-fuel subsidies,” Greenberg told E&E. “We need to rapidly phase out fossil-fuel infrastructure, fossil-fuel use, fossil-fuel exports.” Harris has so far been relatively quiet about the climate crisis, but that might change with the rumored hiring of Camila Thorndike as campaign “climate engagement director.” Thorndike comes from Rewiring America where she was senior director of public engagement, and she also worked on the Inflation Reduction Act as a legislative assistant to Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

  1. Phoenix hits 100 degrees for 100 days straight

Phoenix, Arizona, recorded its 100th straight day of temperatures over 100 degrees Fahrenheit yesterday. The hot streak started in late May and is expected to go on for another two weeks. Temperatures this week are forecast to hit 113 by Thursday. At least 150 heat deaths have been recorded this year in the county that encompasses Phoenix, and 440 additional deaths are under investigation, The Washington Post reported. States up and down the West Coast are facing an intense heat wave, with some 26 million under heat warnings. In Oregon, where temperatures usually start to dip this time of year, temperature records could shatter as the mercury reaches 105 degrees in Portland.

Weather.gov

  1. Competition from data centers causes trouble for Wyoming DAC project

In case you missed it: Project Bison, a large direct air capture facility proposed for Wyoming, has been put on pause because the company behind it can’t compete with data centers for renewable energy to power its operations. “We’ve seen growing competition for clean power amongst industries that are emerging much faster than anybody would have ever predicted,” CarbonCapture Inc.’s CEO Adrian Corless said in a statement posted on the company’s website. As a result, CarbonCapture is looking for a new home for Project Bison. The company was aiming to reach 5 million metric tons of carbon removal annually by 2030. Last year it was awarded $12.5 million from the Department of Energy to develop the Wyoming Regional DAC Hub. It is looking into whether the DOE will allow it to transfer its application to a new state.

Relatedly, Morgan Stanley released research yesterday that found the data center boom is expected to produce 2.5 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions through 2030. Altogether, the pollution produced to power data centers will amount to about 40% of annual U.S. emissions. “This creates a large market for decarbonization solutions,” the report said.

  1. Report: Drought in Sicily and Sardinia fueled by climate change

New analysis from the World Weather Attribution found human-caused climate change made the devastating droughts taking place across Sicily and Sardinia twice as likely. Both of the Italian islands are under a state of emergency after a year of low rainfall and persistent heat triggered some of the worst droughts on record. Due to water shortages, the region’s farmers have been forced to sell or slaughter their livestock, and harvests of wheat and olive crops are expected to fall by half. While the region is used to hot and dry conditions, the WWA said this drought is worsened by evapotranspiration, or the evaporation of water from soil and plants. “Sardinia and Sicily are becoming increasingly arid with climate change,” said Mariam Zachariah, a climate and environment researcher at Imperial College London’s Grantham Institute. “Searing, long lasting heat is hitting the islands more frequently, evaporating water from soils, plants, and reservoirs.” WWA has linked other recent extreme weather events to climate change, including Typhoon Gaemi, Mexico’s May-June heat wave, and Brazil’s historic floods.

  1. Study finds U.S. beef industry could cut emissions by 30% with mitigation practices

New research published in the journal Nature Food investigates how America’s beef producers can reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The study produced some interesting insights. For example:

THE KICKER

The U.S. now has 192,611 public DC Fast and Level 2 EV charging ports, up from about 95,000 in 2021.

https://heatmap.news/climate/phoenix-heat-100-degrees-record


California Companies Wrote Their Own Gig Worker Law. Now No One Is Enforcing It

date: 2024-09-04, from: The Markup blog

Prop. 22 promised improved pay and benefits for California gig workers. But when companies fail to deliver, the state isn’t doing much to help push back

https://themarkup.org/working-for-an-algorithm/2024/09/04/california-companies-wrote-their-own-gig-worker-law-now-no-one-is-enforcing-it


date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Musk fought the law and the law won… for now

The sound of a screeching rubber on road was heard in South America last night as Elon Musk’s satellite broadband operation, Starlink, agreed to comply with an order in Brazil to block the billionaire’s social media mouthpiece, X.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/starlink_performs_a_180_and/


date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

ReMarkable has been shipping purpose-built E Ink writing tablets since 2017, and the company has earned a reputation for continuing to push software updates so that it’s existing tablets get better over time rather than cranking out new models every single year. Now the company is launching its third model in seven years, and the […]

The post ReMarkable Paper Pro brings a splash of color to the popular E Ink writing tablet appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/remarkable-paper-pro-brings-a-splash-of-color-to-the-popular-e-ink-writing-tablet/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-04, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Why Lyft's CEO says 'it would be insane' not to go all in on bikeshare.

https://techcrunch.com/2024/09/04/lyft-is-going-all-in-on-docked-bikeshare/


@Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed (date: 2024-09-04, from: Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed)

First day of school and we passed a fresh storrowing!

https://mastodon.social/@Migueldeicaza/113079125006342667


The bigger they are, the harder they fall

date: 2024-09-04, from: Marketplace Morning Report

AI chipmaking company Nvidia lost $279 billion in market value yesterday, and its shares kept falling in after-hours trading overnight. Despite reports of an escalating Department of Justice antitrust probe, the stock’s decline centers more on questions around the future of artificial intelligence. We hear more. We also explore the shifting geography of U.S. oil production and learn how gaps in USDA food programs are being filled by tribal governments.

https://www.marketplace.org/shows/marketplace-morning-report/the-bigger-they-are-the-harder-they-fall


The Corporation Stealing Your Kid’s Lunch Money

date: 2024-09-04, from: The Lever News

As students head back to school, one of the largest payment processors in the world is fighting to protect the millions it makes upcharging parents on school meals.

https://www.levernews.com/the-corporation-stealing-your-kids-lunch-money/


US voices impatience with Taliban over morality law targeting Afghan women

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

Islamabad — An American diplomat has condemned the Taliban’s new morality law in Afghanistan, warning that it “aims to complete the erasure of women from public life.” 

 

Rina Amiri, the United States special envoy for Afghan women, girls, and human rights, posted on social media late Tuesday that she raised concerns about the law during her recent meetings with counterparts in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. 

 

“My message was clear:  Our support for the Afghan people remains steadfast, but patience with the Taliban is running out,” Amiri wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. “The way to legitimacy domestically & internationally is respecting the rights of the Afghan people.” 

 

The U.S. warning comes days after the Taliban’s supreme leader, Hibatullah Akhundzada, enacted the contentious decree that orders Afghan women not to speak aloud in public and cover their bodies and faces entirely when outdoors.  

 

The 114-page, 35-article law also outlines various actions and specific conduct that the Taliban government, called the Islamic Emirate, considers mandatory or prohibited for Afghan men and women in line with its strict interpretation of Islam.  

 

The legal document empowers the Ministry for Promoting Virtue and Preventing Vice, which the Taliban revived after coming back to power in August 2021, to enforce it strictly.  

 

Enforcers are empowered to discipline offenders, and penalties may include anything from a verbal warning to fines to imprisonment. The law requires them to prevent “evils” such as adultery, extramarital sex, lesbianism, taking pictures of living objects and befriending non-Muslims. 

 

Official Taliban media quoted Akhundzada this week as ordering authorities to “rigorously enforce” the new vice and virtue decree across Afghanistan “to bring the people closer to the Islamic system.” 

 

The law was enacted amid extensive restrictions on Afghan women’s education and employment opportunities. 

 

Since regaining power three years ago, the Taliban have prohibited girls ages 12 and older from continuing their education beyond the sixth grade and restricted women from seeking employment, except in certain sectors such as health.  

 

Afghan females are not allowed to visit parks and other public places, and a male guardian must accompany them on road trips or air travel. 

 

The United Nations promptly responded to the new law last month, condemning it as a “distressing vision” for the impoverished country’s future and urging de facto authorities to reverse it. 

 

The Taliban government, which is officially not recognized by any country, has dismissed U.N.-led foreign criticism as offensive.  

 Zabihullah Mujahid, the chief Taliban spokesperson, asserted that “non-Muslims should first educate themselves about Islamic laws and respect Islamic values” before expressing concerns or rejecting the law. “We find it blasphemous to our Islamic Sharia when objections are raised without understanding it,” he said.

https://www.voanews.com/a/us-voices-impatience-with-taliban-over-morality-law-targeting-afghan-women-/7770847.html


Double Debian update: 11.11 and 12.7 arrive at once

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: Liam Proven’s articles at the Register

But Bullseye’s days are numbered and it’s time to think about upgrading

  <p>The latest update to Debian "Bookworm" arrives at the same time as the last ever update to "Bullseye," and there's trouble ahead for Nvidia legacy users.</p> 

https://go.theregister.com/i/cfa/https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/double_debian_update/


Double Debian update: 11.11 and 12.7 arrive at once

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

But Bullseye’s days are numbered and it’s time to think about upgrading

The latest update to Debian “Bookworm” arrives at the same time as the last ever update to “Bullseye,” and there’s trouble ahead for Nvidia legacy users.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/double_debian_update/


Global markets take a tumble

date: 2024-09-04, from: Marketplace Morning Report

From the BBC World Service: Financial markets in Asia and the U.S. have tumbled with investor concerns that the U.S. economy could be headed toward recession. Then, in Mexico, Congress is expected to pass judicial reforms that have prompted judges and court staff protests. And in an attempt to address a falling birth rate, the government in South Korea plans to bring in domestic workers from the Philippines to support families.

https://www.marketplace.org/shows/marketplace-morning-report/global-markets-take-a-tumble


Dell’s Inspiron 14 with Snapdragon X Plus for $900

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

When the Dell Inspiron 14 Plus (7441) with a Snapdragon X processor launched earlier this year for $1099 and up, it was one of the most affordable Microsoft CoPilot+ PCs available. Now Dell is introducing a cheaper model. The new Dell Inspiron 14 (5441) with Snapdragon X Plus will be available later this month for $899 […]

The post Dell’s Inspiron 14 with Snapdragon X Plus for $900 appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/dells-inspiron-14-with-snapdragon-x-plus-for-900/


Asus launches ProArt PZ13 2-in-1 tablet with Snapdragon X Plus for $1100 and up

date: 2024-09-04, from: Liliputing

The Asus ProArt PZ13 is a 13.3 inch Windows 11 tablet with a 2880 x 1800 pixel touchscreen OLED display, support for pressure-sensitive pen input and a detachable keyboard, and a Qualcomm Snapdragon X Plus processor. First unveiled in June, the ProArt PZ13 is set to go on sale soon, with a model sporting 16GB of […]

The post Asus launches ProArt PZ13 2-in-1 tablet with Snapdragon X Plus for $1100 and up appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/asus-launches-proart-pz13-2-in-1-tablet-with-snapdragon-x-plus-for-1100-and-up/


Do look up! NASA unfurls massive shiny solar sail in orbit

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

60 years after Arthur C Clarke wrote Sunjammer, space agency catches up

NASA has successfully extended into orbit an 80 m2 (860 square foot) sail that is designed to catch emissions from the Sun and convert them into propulsion for space exploration.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/nasa_acs3_solar_sail/


Admins wonder if the cloud was such a good idea after all

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

As AWS, Microsoft, and Google hike some prices, it’s time to open up the ROI calculator

After an initial euphoric rush to the cloud, administrators are questioning the value and promise of the tech giant’s services.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/cloud_buyers_regret/


Research Plane Dons New Colors for NASA Hybrid Electric Flight Tests

date: 2024-09-04, from: NASA breaking news

Parked under the lights inside a hangar in Seattle, a hybrid electric research aircraft from electric motor manufacturer magniX showed off a new look symbolizing its journey toward helping NASA make sustainable aviation a reality.   During a special unveiling ceremony hosted by magniX on Aug. 22, leaders from the company and NASA revealed the aircraft, […]

https://www.nasa.gov/aeronautics/hybrid-electric-aircrafts-new-colors/


The amber glow of bork illuminates Brighton Station

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

The train on platform 4 is destined for networking hell

BORK!BORK!BORK!  Strange things are afoot at Brighton Station as football fans keen to make the journey to London to see their team take on England’s finest instead found themselves destined for Addr = 67 (43h).…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/bork/


What 2024 Will Mean for Clean Energy — in Megatons

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



You don’t need us to say it: The 2024 election will have enormous stakes for America’s climate policy and the planet’s climate. But how well can we quantify those stakes? What would a Trump presidency — or a Harris presidency, for that matter — really mean for the country’s emissions trajectory?

On this week’s episode of Shift Key, Jesse and Rob speak with Sonia Aggarwal, the chief executive officer of Energy Innovation, a climate policy think tank that operates across North America, Europe, and Asia. She was previously special assistant to the president for climate policy, innovation, and deployment under President Joe Biden, and she co-chaired the Biden administration’s Climate Innovation Working Group. She and Jesse — another top-notch modeler — dive into what the data can and can’t tell us about the election and how to think about energy system models in the first place. Shift Key is hosted by Robinson Meyer, the founding executive editor of Heatmap, and Jesse Jenkins, a professor of energy systems engineering at Princeton University.

Subscribe to “Shift Key” and find this episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon, or wherever you get your podcasts.

You can also add the show’s RSS feed to your podcast app to follow us directly.

Here is an excerpt from our conversation:

Sonia Aggarwal: It is very clear in the modeling that there are certain policies that take us in the direction of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and other policies that take us in the direction of increasing greenhouse gas emissions compared to where we would be going otherwise.

Now, as Jesse said, there can be all kinds of things that happen that might change the specific numbers, but we certainly can tell in the models that if you look at a policy — that is, for example, a clean electricity standard — you’re going to see a reduction of greenhouse gas emissions when you adopt that standard. And that will happen against the background of lots of other things in the economy, but we know that the effect of that particular policy is to bring emissions down, and that’s very clear. So that’s one thing that we can definitely tell with the models.

Jesse Jenkins: Yeah. Maybe just one other point on this is that, what we had in our mind when we started the REPEAT Project was a role similar to what the Congressional Budget Office does to try to estimate the financial and budgetary impacts of congressional decisions, right? You know, Congress is making decisions all the time that affect revenues. They’re going to spend more money. They’re going to raise more money here and there. They’re going to lower taxes. They’re going to raise taxes. They’re going to expand this program. And Congress legitimately wants to have a sense of whether that’s going to increase or decrease the deficit and, you know, whether that’s going to raise more money than it spends or vice versa, and which programs have the biggest budgetary cost.

And so every bill is scored on this budgetary front, over a 10-year period in particular. And then, because they know it’s less certain beyond that, they put less weight on the period beyond 10 years. And I would bet every single one of those numbers is wrong, right? The Congressional Budget Office probably misses every single one of those numbers. But, they’re directionally correct, and they’re not wrong by orders of magnitude.

What they give Congress is the best information they have at the time — during the fog of war and enactment — to make a more informed decision about the financial implications of their policies. And I think that’s how we should think about the aggregate ensemble of models that have emerged to help us understand the climate implications of these decisions, as well.

Aggarwal: Be careful when you ask modelers questions about models, because you will …

Robinson Meyer: No, but this is, I think, the key question. Because I think there’s some degree to which these models kind of do act in a way that’s very authoritative and very useful to policymakers, right? I think that understanding them — just to be clear, in line with how you presented them, but I think still really important — as tools for decision-making under uncertainty and authoritative, you know, biblical accounts of exactly what a policy will do is the right way to understand, right?

This is a tool for thinking. It is a tool to bring into the rest of the thinking that you would do about, in this case, what the climate impacts of the 2024 election are. But it doesn’t mean that you should use it to throw out every other tool you have and every other piece of evidence we have, however, given that all the pieces of evidence are pointing in the right direction. I think it’s useful, in that regard, to get a sense of just how catastrophic for the climate a Project 2025 could be.

This episode of Shift Key is sponsored by …

Watershed’s climate data engine helps companies measure and reduce their emissions, turning the data they already have into an audit-ready carbon footprint backed by the latest climate science. Get the sustainability data you need in weeks, not months. Learn more at watershed.com.

As a global leader in PV and ESS solutions, Sungrow invests heavily in research and development, constantly pushing the boundaries of solar and battery inverter technology. Discover why Sungrow is the essential component of the clean energy transition by visiting sungrowpower.com.

Antenna Group helps you connect with customers, policymakers, investors, and strategic partners to influence markets and accelerate adoption. Visit antennagroup.com to learn more.

Music for Shift Key is by Adam Kromelow.

https://heatmap.news/podcast/shift-key-s2-e4-sonia-aggarwal


What is this computing industry anyway? The dawning era of 32-bit micros

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: Liam Proven’s articles at the Register

Part 3 And you may ask yourself, ‘How do I work this?’ And you may ask yourself, ‘Where is that large computer?’

  <p>This is the third part of The Register FOSS desk's roundup of some of the more memorable missteps and could-have-beens from the beginnings of the microcomputer industry until today.</p> 

https://go.theregister.com/i/cfa/https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/where_computing_went_wrong_feature_part_3/


What is this computing industry anyway? The dawning era of 32-bit micros

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

And you may ask yourself, ‘How do I work this?’ And you may ask yourself, ‘Where is that large computer?’

Part 3  This is the third part of The Register FOSS desk’s roundup of some of the more memorable missteps and could-have-beens from the beginnings of the microcomputer industry until today.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/where_computing_went_wrong_feature_part_3/


WHO-backed meta-study finds no evidence that cellphone radiation causes brain cancer

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

The signal may not rot your mind, we can’t say the same for the content

Time to take off the tin foil hat: A review of 28 years of research into the health effects of radio wave exposure from cellphones has found no evidence to link the handhelds to brain cancer, or negative effects on health more generally. …

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/who_study_cellphone_cancer/


European chip lobby seeks more government cash and policy clout

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Last year’s €43B was a nice snack. Now for a feast of regulatory capture

Sixteen months after the European Union signed off on its €43 billion Chips Act in the hope it would stimulate semiconductor manufacturing in the bloc, semiconductor trade group the European Semiconductor Industry Association (ESIA) has asked for more public money – and more say over policy decisions impacting local chipmakers.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/esia_eu_semiconductor_wishlist/


Programming the Convergent WorkSlate’s spreadsheet microcassette future

date: 2024-09-04, from: Old Vintage Computer Research

In this particular future, we will all use handheld spreadsheets stored on microcassettes, talking to each other via speakerphone, and probably listening to Devo and New Order a lot. (Though that part isn’t too different from my actual present.)

It’s been awhile since we’ve had an entry for reasons I’ll talk about later, and this entry is a doozy. Since we recently just spent a couple articles on a computer whose manufacturer insisted it was mostly a word processor, it only seems fitting to spend some time with a computer whose very designer insisted it was mostly a spreadsheet.

That’s the 1983 Convergent WorkSlate, a one-of-a-kind handheld system from some misty alternate history where VisiCalc ruled the earth. Indeed, even the “software” packages Convergent shipped for it — on microcassette, which could store voice memos and data — were nothing more than cells and formulas in a worksheet. The built-in modem let you exchange data with other Workslates (or even speak over the phone to their users), and it came with a calculator desk accessory and a rudimentary terminal program, but apart from those creature comforts its built-in spreadsheet was the sole centre of your universe. And, unlike IAI and the Canon Cat, I’ve yet to find any backdoor (secret or otherwise) to enable anything else.

That means anything you want to program has to be somehow encoded in a spreadsheet too. Unfortunately, when it comes to actually programming the device it turns out the worst thing a spreadsheet on an 8-bit CPU can be is Turing-complete (so it’s not), and it has several obnoxious bugs to boot. But that doesn’t mean we can’t make it do more than balance an expense account. Along the way we’ll examine the hardware, wire into its peripheral bus, figure out how to exchange data with today’s future, create a simple game, draw rudimentary graphics and (with some help) even put it on the Internet with its very own Gopher client — after we tell of the WorkSlate’s brief and sorrowful commercial existence, as this blog always must.

Convergent Technologies was founded in 1979 in Santa Clara, California by former employees of Intel and Xerox PARC, led by the flamboyant cigar-chomping Allen H. Michels as president and co-founder. Unusually for the time, Convergent’s plan was to be a behind-the-scenes designer and manufacturer, at least initially selling little under its own brand. Instead, Convergent focused its efforts on large corporate vendors like Burroughs, NCR, Prime and Bull by developing machines for distributed processing arranged around those vendors’ large systems. This gave partner vendors a complete product line for their customers, drove purchases and service contracts for their more profitable big iron, and helped to insulate Convergent from the instability of retail.

To make this work, Convergent had to constantly drive the cutting edge to stay ahead of the market, which gained them the nickname of the “Marine Corps of Silicon Valley.” Management candidates were told up front to expect sixty-hour-plus work weeks or be disqualified, and some designers reportedly worked close to 100 during crunch times. Within one year it had its first product ready, the 1980 IWS “Integrated Workstation” based on a 5MHz 8086 with up to 640K of RAM running CTOS (“Convergent Technologies Operating System”), a multiprocess microkernel operating system with support for IPC, networking and netbooting (over RS-422). Among other companies, Burroughs rebadged the IWS as the B22 and called the OS “BTOS” (for Burroughs). Convergent followed the IWS in 1981 with the AWS “Application Workstation,” a cut-down diskless IWS with less sophisticated graphics that Burroughs sold as the B21, and the more powerful Intel 80186-based NGEN in 1983 that could also boot MS-DOS. This was sold by many companies, Burroughs most notably as the B25, but also Prime as the Producer 200 and NCR as the Worksaver 300. In its MS-DOS form Microdata/McDonnell-Douglas sold it with their Pick-based Reality database as the M1000 and Datapoint as the Vista-PC. These systems were notable not only for their power but also their unmistakable boxy modular expansion scheme developed by designer Mike Nuttall. By 1982 Convergent had 800 employees and sales of $96 million (about $313 million in 2024 dollars).

Convergent also produced midrange systems for their clients. The biggest at that time was the appropriately-named MegaFrame in 1983, consisting of up to ten Motorola 68010-based processor boards (“application processors,” in Convergent jargon) wired to as many as 28 (!) 80186-based I/O boards. Every board was an independent node with its own operating system and its own memory: the 68Ks ran at 10MHz with up to 4MB of RAM for Convergent’s UNIX System III derivative CTIX, while the ’186s ran at 8MHz with up to 768K of RAM and custom versions of CTOS depending on their task (filesystem, storage, cluster management or terminal services). A fully-configured system took six enclosures of six cards each and could handle as many as 128 simultaneous users, but the system was perfectly capable of running just on the ’186 cards, and Burroughs renamed CTIX to “CENTIX” and sold it both ways as the XE500, XE520 and high-end XE550. Motorola, of course, preferred to sell the ’010-based variety, offering it under the recently acquired Four-Phase Systems as the System 6600. In 1984 Convergent updated CTIX to System V and made a single-68K eight-user version dubbed the MiniFrame using custom I/O and supporting up to 2MB of RAM. In typical fashion it was ready after just eight months of nearly round-the-clock development. It was rebadged by both NCR and Burroughs, as well as Motorola, who sold it as the System 6300; subsequently, the MiniFrame was further refined into a workstation and sold by AT&T as the 7300 UNIX PC in 1985.

In their continued efforts to anticipate market trends, Convergent started evaluating the portables market in 1982 through its new Advanced Information Products division, then based out of the Great American Technology Center in Santa Clara (their former building at 2441 Mission College Blvd is now occupied by Sutter Health). At that time portables were seen as premium products (compare with the Data General/One) and handheld units even more so due to their novelty. AIP noted in particular the 1982 Epson HX-20’s small totable form factor, long battery life and light weight, as well as built-in microcassette storage, but also its cramped screen and lack of application software. AIP management determined that a purpose-specific series of portable systems with built-in applications could do better and carve out its own unique higher-end market. This strategy seemed to be vindicated by the early 1983 introduction of the Kyotronic 85, a portable Intel 80C85 system with a nearly full-size keyboard, 40-column screen (the same as many home computers and portable PCs), BASIC, simple text editor, and built-in modem and terminal program. Although a slow seller for Kyocera in its native Japan, it was immediately licensed by the Tandy Corporation as the iconic TRS-80 Model 100 in April (as well as, among others, NEC as the NEC PC-8201A, which I once used as my sole computer for a month on Penang Island in Malaysia) and went on to sell strongly in Tandy’s Radio Shack stores. Codenamed “Ultra,” AIP’s proposed handheld line used high-end but largely off-the-shelf technology on a common hardware platform, differing primarily in on-board software, RAM and built-in peripherals.

To Convergent’s dismay, their usual partners were unenthusiastic about the entire concept. Even a high-end model would clearly sell for much less than their workstation systems, necessarily with lower margins and possibly requiring entry into lower-end markets where those companies then had little or no presence. There were also questions about how much money such a system could truly make given its high manufacturing costs and the need to sell in volume, something new for Convergent who had so far produced only smaller quantities of relatively niche hardware. In an abrupt deviation from their usual business model, marketing manager Karen Toland convinced Convergent leadership that consumer sales could still be profitable — that is, if they chose the right consumers. Should they make a splash in the market, she reasoned, the Ultra line could be further expanded, and proposals existed to make a writer-oriented version or a low-end cheaper unit for students.

For launching the line, AIP decided to initially concentrate on a single high-end model. They convened focus groups in New York City, Chicago and locally in San Francisco where sixty management, consultant and executive volunteers talked about their daily tasks and what features they felt would improve them. From these groups the idea emerged of using spreadsheets as the interface for executives who would be unfamiliar with or uninterested in doing their own programming. Although this high-end variant also had a keyboard and could be used for text entry (though not its strong suit), the volunteers also suggested the internal microcassette drive for voice dictation using a built-in microphone (“executives don’t type,” Toland observed), and the device’s built-in 300bps modem could additionally autodial telephone numbers and serve as a speakerphone. The ROM even provided functions to exchange spreadsheet data with another device or a connected mainframe, which we’ll explore. The logic board and accessory PCBs were produced in Japan by Oki Semiconductor using Oki and Hitachi chips, with final assembly States-side. The focus group members got free units off the assembly line in appreciation.

In August 1983 Convergent officially unveiled the WorkSlate at $895 (in 2024 about $2800), initially only through the premium American Express Christmas catalogue, alongside an optional battery-powered “MicroPrinter” for $295 ($910). Nevertheless, Convergent hadn’t long to wait for market partners. New York securities firm EF Hutton had recently announced their Huttonline service providing investment information, account data and E-mail on their IBM mainframe and quickly added the WorkSlate to the pre-configured computers they provided to subscribers, along with their porkier IBM PCs and Wang systems. For $1194 (about $3750) Hutton would send you a WorkSlate and MicroPrinter with Portfolio Analysis software on microcassette and, of course, a monthly bill. By November 1983 the WorkSlate was already in ComputerLand and Businessland retail stores, two months ahead of Convergent’s originally scheduled rollout.

And here’s what you could have bought: the WorkSlate package came out of the box with two audio tutorial microcassette tapes, a bonus blank microcassette for your own stuff, the five-hour NiCad rechargeable battery pack (which needs to be re-celled, but AA batteries will do just fine and last at least twice as long), WK-102 AC adapter (which can charge the battery pack), a full set of manuals, RJ-11 phone cord and soft leatherette carrying case. The case is durable and stylish with a front pocket and a nice crisp Velcro closure. The entire unit minus batteries weighs a svelte two pounds nine-and-a-half ounces (1175g), and measures the same as a 8.5x11” standard piece of letter-sized paper, though it’s about an inch thick. This package is not quite complete as it is missing the advertising material for Dow Jones, Official Airline Guide and CompuServe, all of which were billed as “compatible,” plus the phone keyboard overlay for the numeric keypad, both of which appear to have been lost. Next to it is the MicroPrinter and its own carrying case and peripheral cable, and on top is my only “Taskware” software package, Loan Analysis.

I own two WorkSlates, though neither are in completely working order, and my second unit is in worse physical condition than this one. Both have non-functional microcassette decks, apparently a common problem with this machine, and this “display” unit also seems to have a bad speaker. The other unit has a working speaker but a very dim LCD that needs to “warm up” before use. You’ll meet this second unit soon enough because we’ll be doing some hardware experimentation on it.

The WorkSlate’s striking industrial design now looks thoroughly like a product of its era, but in 1983 it must have seemed like it fell out of a future timewarp. Here I show it with the battery pack, AC adapter and phone cord — pretty much everything you would need on the road, though the charger/adapter won’t fit in the case. The AC adapter is negative-tip and supposedly 6 volts, but this one measured 9 volts, so I’m not using it just in case (my trusty Radio Shack multivoltage adapter powered it for this article instead; the Texas Instruments AC 9201 adapter should also work). It uses a typical 5.5mm barrel jack for the power connector.

The keyboard on the unit is quite unusual, consisting of hard plastic mostly circular keytops that are all but impossible to touchtype on, though this wouldn’t have necessarily been considered a grave fault by an intended audience unlikely to type much anyway. Other than being a QWERTY keyboard, the layout is otherwise totally unique. It has no Enter or Return key, replaced instead by the functionally equivalent Do It; while there is a conventional alphabetic Shift, there is no number row (moved instead to the side numeric keypad), requiring a green Special key for most symbols acting like symbol Shift, Control, Alt and Command all rolled into one. These symbols are silkscreened on the keyboard in green, with other special keys printed in yellow.

Function keys at the top select or enable menus, along with special dedicated keys for Cancel (Escape), Options and selecting a Worksheet on the left of the keyboard, and a cursor diamond pad in the centre (reminds me a bit of the Commodore 116). The numeric keypad is more or less conventional, but has extra mathematical operations, and is also used for more symbols with Special. Finally, there are separate On/Off and Eject buttons, though the Eject button is actually mechanical and not part of the keyboard matrix.

Even the box itself screams 1980s. While hardly Memphis Group, Nuttall’s textured slab motif with its perpendicular contours and distinctive keytops was designed to attract the eye of the Reagan-era executive as something fashionable and trendy instead of staid and nerdy. Yes, this is the kind of computer murderous yuppies like Patrick Bateman might have used to make Dorsia reservations and schedule ordering their business cards. While to my great disappointment it didn’t turn up in that particular movie, it did make several appearances in Airwolf as part of the eponymous hi-tech superchopper’s navigation system:

Now, when’s the last time you saw a spreadsheet do that?

The most important ports on the WorkSlate are on top: two RJ-11 phone jacks (one for the phone line and one for an optional handset, if you choose to connect one; both jacks will work for either purpose), the barrel jack power connector, and the GPIO port, which is marked “Peripherals.” We’re going to spend quite a bit of time with the GPIO port later on.

Other controls are a potentiometer dial on the left side of the unit for adjusting LCD contrast and another one on the right for speaker volume, plus 1/8” jacks for connecting a monoaural earphone or external microphone. These route to the tape deck and can only be used for voice recording and playback.

The underside of the machine has the backplate, battery doors and the flip-up stand. Don’t remove that stand unless you absolutely have to: putting it back in will almost certainly break one tab or the other due to the age of the plastic, and both of my units’ stands were already broken and had to be repaired with high-strength cyanoacrylate (I like JB Weld’s light-cured type; cheap superglues aren’t sufficiently strong). The large battery door slides off to accommodate either the NiCad pack or four AA batteries, while the smaller door is pried up to hold two 186 (LR43) 1.5V button cells used as backup. The button cells last about a week even if there are no main batteries at all, but you don’t need either set of batteries to power it with the AC adapter, and you don’t need to remove the stand to access the main battery door (just flip the stand up).

Both of my machines call themselves model WK-100 with the same FCC ID and their serial numbers differ by nearly 2,000, so it seems unlikely there are other variations given the WorkSlate’s short seven-month production run. (However, see my footnote about this when we disassemble one.) Because of a lawsuit that was filed at its cancellation, we know there could have been at most 67,000 WorkSlates that ever existed, and sales data suggests that Convergent sold no more than a few thousand. Only a small number of working systems persist today, of course. More about that at the end.

A tour of the WorkSlate

Let’s take a little tour of the machine. I apologize for the variability of these photographs since it was very hard to get a good straight shot of the screen with no reflections. In particular they don’t do the LCD much justice, which is in reality quite sharp and contrasty for a 1983 panel even though it lacks a backlight.

When you power it on for the first time, it asks you for your name for occasional use in prompts and warning messages, and the clock defaults to September 26, 1983 at 8:00am. I don’t know the significance of this date other than the Oko nuclear false alarm incident, in which Soviet Union lieutenant colonel Stanislav Petrov correctly determined the Oko early warning system had erred in claiming a total of five U.S. nuclear ICBMs were inbound. No missiles ever arrived and a later investigation concluded Oko had indeed malfunctioned. By disobeying Soviet protocol, Petrov prevented sending a mistaken retaliatory strike and possibly triggering nuclear war. He was not punished, but he was not rewarded either and retired early the following year. The incident was never publicly acknowledged until 1998 — which makes it impossible for Convergent’s programmers to have known. Most likely this was just the particular date when its firmware was finalized. Sorry to wind you up but I never miss a chance to tell one of my favourite Cold War stories.

The display is in the unusual dimensions of 46 characters wide by 16 rows high using 6x8 glyphs. Although the panel is theoretically dot-addressible with a resolution of 276x128, the firmware doesn’t allow for bitmapped graphics. The 46-character width may have been chosen to allow a typical 40 columns in the cell region of the spreadsheet (using the left six columns for the row number, cursor and padding).

The spreadsheet layout is the standard lettered columns and numbered rows format first popularized by VisiCalc. However, the WorkSlate probably came by this layout via Microsoft Multiplan, which Microsoft had licensed to Convergent in 1982 to port to CTOS for the AWS and IWS. Although Lotus 1-2-3 had come out in January 1983 to nearly immediate success, the WorkSlate’s development was well underway by then and it likely had little or no influence on the firmware. Each sheet supports up to 128 rows and 128 columns (labeled A-Z and AA-DX), though how many can be simultaneously populated depends on available memory, of course. A cell can hold no more than 128 characters.

The top row of the LCD is reserved as a status line and divided into multiple fields. The leftmost field is the sheet name, which defaults to “ empty ” (spaces are part of the name), and can be no longer than eight characters. The second field shows the contents of the cell, which is naturally blank on a cold start. Following the contents field is the available memory, given as a percentage, which does double duty for the tape counter (where appropriate) and the machine’s progress when doing calculations. The blank field after that is where status icons for the phone appear when enabled, such as ringing, off-hook or on-hold, and the rightmost fields are of course the date and time. If the timer is enabled, a little clock icon appears after the time.

The status line is periodically replaced by flashing announcements, most often “Replace backup batteries” on my units since I don’t have the backup lithium batteries installed. Alarms and error messages appear here as well.

Basic numeric, string and formula types are supported, as you would expect. Strings are limited only by the size of the cell and appear left justified by default. Numbers are right justified by default and internally stored as floating point, even integral values. There is no way to know the exact internal representation but we’ll be able later to determine each number consumes seven bytes of memory, suggesting something like double precision arithmetic. However, the WorkSlate predates IEEE 754 and the internal format obviously differs. For example, entering a value like 99999999999999999 comes out as 99999999990000000, while both a Microsoft Binary Format 40-bit float (as tested on a Commodore 64) and an IEEE 754 double would represent that number slightly rounded up as 1x1017. The WorkSlate doesn’t display exponents, and there is no way to enter a purely numeric quantity as a string.

WorkSlate formulas are a curious mix. The general format also descends more or less from Microsoft Multiplan, which to the best of my knowledge was one of the earliest spreadsheets (if not the first) to indicate formulae with an equals sign, and does not mark built-in functions with an @ as VisiCalc did. However, unlike Multiplan which uses R1C1 relative notation for cell references, the WorkSlate uses VisiCalc A1 absolute notation, and also uses VisiCalc’s three-dot operator for ranges ().

That said, the most notable difference about WorkSlate formulas is that they use “proper” mathematical symbols: division is entered as ÷, not /, and multiplication as ×, not *. There is also a true inequality operator (≠).

Entry of strings and numbers is fairly straightforward, and they can be edited with the cursor diamond and backspace, though entering many common typographical characters requires awkward Special combinations. But editing a newly entered formula can be even more irritating because on initial entry the cursor diamond is used to indicate the cell you want, not to edit the line.

The WorkSlate has a very unique set of built-in functions and we’ll be exploring these in great detail. Here’s one: bar graphs. The WorkSlate has a primitive charting capability using the Line() function which takes a character and a quantity, and emits that number of characters. The quantity can be another expression, including a Total() over a range as we’ve done here. Since they’re formulas, change the underlying value and the generated bar changes too.

The lines and boxes on the display are generated using the WorkSlate’s simple palette of graphics characters, many of which are accessible from the DRAW option (but it’s possible to access the entire character set — more soon). However, you can’t enter these in the formula the first time around because the available menus aren’t orthogonal; you have to enter a placeholder character and then change it. Some indicator characters cannot be entered directly at all which was likely on purpose to avoid confusion.

There are no other chart types built-in, but we’ll fix that in the second example program.

Date and time arithmetic are also possible, with some limits, and as they are treated as numbers internally can be used in formulas too. Here, I’ve added 365 to various dates to advance the year (in cells A2, A6 and A8) and 12 to the time in B1 to advance it by twelve hours (B2). The 1983 default date and time does not appear to be an epoch: the WorkSlate will accurately almost represent any four-digit year from 1 to 9999, though you may need to explicitly indicate the century — two-digit years are treated as 19XX, which is why A2 shows the year 2000 — and all dates seem to be treated as Gregorian. Although I didn’t exhaustively test its leap year logic (I know, right?), 2/28/1899 plus 366 is 3/1/1900, but 2/28/1999 plus 366 is 2/29/2000, both of which are correct.

I said almost because there is a curious bug in that years ending in 00 (2000, 1900, 1800, etc.) cannot be entered as such; they come out as 20, 19, 18, and so forth. Calculations on those dates are similarly affected because the year in memory really is 20, 19, 18, etc. (e.g., x/x/20 + 365 is x/x/21), but if you add 365 to a correctly accepted year like 1899 you still get 1900, so it seems to be a problem with parsing the year on entry rather than the internal representation. This glitch would have become very obvious as the millenium approached but was likely never noticed during the short window in which the WorkSlate was commercially sold and used. More serious bugs are yet to come.

In a (presently) less obnoxious vein, I should note for completeness that the firmware also has a Y9999 problem in that 1/1/9999 plus 365 days ends up 1/1/9900 as shown in A8. If you are reading this document from the year 10,000, may I be the first to congratulate you on keeping your unit running that long and suggest that you simply take years mod 10K for date storage.

The Options key at the lower left brings up the set of main options applicable to most any instance, three pages’ worth cycled through by repeatedly pressing it. You select the desired option with the function keys under the screen or you can just press Cancel. The most important of these options is probably CHANGE, which is actually necessary to do some types of editing versus just changing cells directly on the sheet itself. In this mode the cursor diamond is used for motion and not indicating cells.

These Options, among others, are also where you can do things like change the alignment and format of cells, such as whether they can overlap, their justification and their width. Again, by default numbers are right justified (including dates and times) and strings are left justified, but you can change that here. The decimal and whole formats are of arguably lower utility, since they enforce a fixed two decimal place and no decimal place display format (rounded), mostly of use for financials where you might only work in integral cents or dollars.

Edit operations like cutting, copying and pasting are also done from Options, as is system setup. If you copy a formula to another cell, unless you make the reference absolute with an @, cell references are treated as relative and automatically adjusted for you. Oddly, you can only cut and paste within the sheet you’re in.

The WorkSlate can handle up to five simultaneous worksheets, which exactly maps to one side of a microcassette which can hold up to five worksheets as well. Computer history lore holds that Boeing Calc (yes, that Boeing) was the first spreadsheet to implement tabbed sheets in 1985, but I think this gives Convergent a credible claim to having implemented something like it earlier, even if it wasn’t recognised as such. Only the first two are “standard” (i.e., can represent any sort of spreadsheet). However, each sheet is otherwise independent and the other three by default are reserved for each of the WorkSlate’s “derived types,” the memo pad, phone list and calendar. These are globally available but to conserve space are not actually constructed in memory until the first time you use them. It is possible to overwrite them and recover the sheet slot and any memory they were using, but they will not be available to you again in their default form until you cold-start the unit.

The Memo Pad allows you to dictate to microcassette or type text strings directly into large cells. By default the Memo Pad displays a set of tape control options accessible with the function keys, replacing the available memory percentage with a tape counter. The WorkSlate has full software control of the tape motor and automatically rewinds and stops as appropriate. However, the designers didn’t think the Memo Pad feature through fully because you can’t write both voice and binary data to the same side of a microcassette, even though the Memo Pad will let you record and type simultaneously. As part of the recording process, the WorkSlate writes a small binary header at the beginning of a cassette saying if the tape is voice or data and the firmware will prevent you from mixing the two. Instead, you dictate on one side, then save the text on the other. You can play back the audio through the WorkSlate’s internal speaker or using the side earphone/mic ports.

The Phone List is a simple three-column phone book of which only the first 14 rows are constructed automatically; more can be added by copying empty rows or creating the cells by hand.

Analogously with the Memo Pad, by default the Phone List maps phone options to the function keys such as answering incoming calls on the connected phone line or putting the call on hold, turning on the speakerphone, or opening a terminal connection. The feature that makes the Phone List a “phone list” is the ability to autodial the number in the current cell using the modem. Strictly speaking the dial feature would work from any cell with digits in any worksheet, because the Phone List is “just a spreadsheet” like everything else (see also the Dial() built-in function, which will dial a number), but the Phone List at least made the concept explicit. If you wanted to dial a number manually, it was possible to put the numeric keypad into a “phone” configuration (that’s what that missing overlay was for, since it moves the numbers around).

Finally, the Calendar, which displays date and time options beneath a constructed datebook. Similar to the Phone List, this only builds two weeks of entries starting with the current date and only for 8am to 5pm (oh, how I wish I only had to work 8-5), though you can change the first date in B1 and the others will update, and you can change the hour numbers manually as you like. Simplistically, you could just enter appointments right into the cells and use it as an organizer; the layout as constructed gives you half-hour slots.

But the WorkSlate also has an alarm feature. Let’s say you want to meet Patrick Bateman for, uh, lunch. He doesn’t like it when you’re late. I mean, he’ll kill you for that. Here, your WorkSlate can save your life by reminding you five minutes before. Our lunch is set for 3pm, so we’ll set the reminder for 2:55pm.

You can then add text to the reminder which will appear when the alarm goes off. The WorkSlate will put the text into the current cell, overwriting any previous entry (so you can just set alarms to enter schedule entries if you like; theoretically the number of alarms is limited only by available memory).

What this has actually done is create an unusual formula in that cell. We see our alarm text as a string, but then followed by a function Alarm() with a date and time parameter which is the real trigger. Notice that the alarm time, or date for that matter, doesn’t have to have anything to do with the actual “time cell” you’re using: the Calendar is also all “just a spreadsheet,” so Alarm() works in any cell in any spreadsheet in exactly the same fashion too. Conceivably you could even put an alarm in your phone book, say. The idiom of “adding” (with a plus sign) the string to the alarm function is how the cell’s text contents are set simultaneously with the alarm, which in turn are used as the alarm’s label.

And indeed, true to form, the alarm goes off at 2:55pm (audio beeping and in the status bar), and so we hurry to our lunch at Dorsia and listen to him rant on about Huey Lewis, after which we walk back to our condo safely. Another life saved by the WorkSlate. Bret Easton Ellis missed a literary opportunity here.

The Memo, Phone and Time buttons also pop up those functions apart from their dedicated worksheets, letting you use them in a standard spreadsheet as well. The Finance button affords quick access to simple wizards for things like various methods of depreciation, loan value and payments, and Net Present Value on future receipts given a discount rate. These options are all implemented based on a set of built-in functions and the wizard generates the formulas for you.

The Calc button, however, pops up one of the WorkSlate’s two “desk accessories.” These tools can run simultaneously with a worksheet. The Calculator lets you do basic arithmetic but also can load and store values to the current cell, or directly add and subtract with it. A running history is displayed; with a MicroPrinter attached and the print feature turned on (Special-Print), a ticker feed like a desktop calculator is generated with negative numbers in red. After any arithmetic operator, you can also enter arbitrary text to annotate the entry which will also be printed.

What makes these two subprograms (the second to come presently) true desk accessories is that the spreadsheet remains live. While the keyboard is primarily occupied by the Calculator, you can still move around in the spreadsheet with the cursor diamond, and you can still enter and modify cell values by using the CHANGE option (i.e., via the Options key) while the accessory is running.

It is also possible to divide up the screen between two worksheets and link them together. This is of sometimes questionable value with wide cells and this small of a screen, but you can do it, and you can do it horizontally or vertically. Here, we have our phone book at our fingertips as well as our test spreadsheet.

Okay, you want to see the hardware now. Let’s switch to the “beater” unit, turn it over and crack it open.

Removing the visible screws and taking the back off, the first thing that greets us is a laminated non-conductive copper sheet held on by clips and remnants of battery crud in the main compartment. We can also see the back of the tape motor, the reset pushbutton, and at the bottom the microphone.

We can also see the back of the GPIO port next to the battery compartment, with one of its lines going to the cathode (serving as ground) and two to the anode. This will be important later. No, I don’t know why there’s Scotch tape on the board either except possibly to hold that tiny surface mount component on, so I did not disturb it. The nicer of the two doesn’t have it.

To actually turn the board over and see the electronics requires lifting the mic out of its little hidey-hole (it can stay connected), removing a couple more screws and then carefully worming the cassette door out (eject it first).

The main logic board then can flip over like a book page. The three main PCBs are the LCD, keyboard and logic board, all connected by two relatively robust ribbon cables which you can leave connected for this purpose. We aren’t going to open up the keyboard since I’ve always hated fishing for keycaps.

The LCD display board (“Rev 2”) is all Oki chips. Although each line of the TN LCD pancel is 276 pixels wide, each group of seven MSM5839GS chips at the top and bottom can drive a line of 280 dots (40 dots per chip), four of which are simply not displayed. These chips act as column drivers. The row drivers are the two M5238GS chips in the centre, both being 32-dot common drivers that using both groups of column drivers can each refresh 64 rows of the screen (i.e., 32 times two). With two such chips, one for the top half and one for the bottom half, we have all 128 rows for our observed panel resolution of 276x128. The refresh rate, according to the partial service manual on Bitsavers, is a very stable 69Hz.

The logic board contains everything else including the speaker, ports, microphone, pots, microcassette mechanism and primary electronics. However, its most noticeable feature is the surprising number of bodge wires, which is rather unexpected in a high-end device. There may well have been PCB yield problems — or possibly late-breaking hardware bugs — that required manual rework but it’s notable that the rework itself is so extensive. It’s not clear whether Oki did this at the factory or if it was done on final assembly in the United States. Jeff Birt, who has done a particularly detailed disassembly of the WorkSlate (YouTube video) and looked at several units, told me that no two were alike with different boards and correspondingly different bodges, though both of mine are the C-60-00124-01 version with similar board work.

Most of the action is at the top of the board (rotated 90 degrees clockwise in this view). The CPU is at U20, an 8-bit Hitachi HD63B03RF, and my original WorkSlate is in fact the first Motorola 6800-based system I ever owned. The Hitachi 6303 (here in the bug-fixed “R” variant) is an enhanced clone of the Motorola 6803, itself a ROM-less variant of the Motorola 6801 microcontroller. The 6801 started with the 6802 CPU, a Motorola 6800 with an on-chip oscillator and 128 bytes of RAM, but then also reduced the cycle time of several key instructions, added ten additional instructions including 16-bit addition, subtraction and (further enhanced in the 6303) multiplication, and implemented a 16-bit timer, TTL serial port and 31 parallel GPIO lines. However, the 6803 only supports 29 parallel lines, and on the 6303 many of those pins are marked n/c, exposing only 13 which are divided into an 8-bit port and a 5-bit port. These GPIO lines are additionally multiplexed with part of the address bus and part of the address bus is multiplexed with the data bus, or a standard 6800 bus configuration can be selected using the 8-bit port as the LSB of the address.

The primary CPU clock comes from the crystal at X1, a 4.9152MHz oscillator. This is internally divided down by four to yield a nominal internal clock speed of 1.2288MHz, but for power savings reasons the CPU is rarely running full-tilt: besides additional memory-to-memory operations and a register-swap instruction, the 6303 also adds a SLP “sleep” instruction different from the existing 6803 WAI “wait for interrupt.” In sleep mode, the 6303 actually powers down its bus and runs no instructions but keeps the contents of the internal RAM and its registers active and maintains the serial port and timer, running on about one-sixth the wattage, until it is awakened by an interrupt or reset. When otherwise idle the WorkSlate firmware sleeps the CPU between its 10ms keyscan timer interrupts, effectively reducing the average system speed to as low as roughly 125kHz. On top of that, the 6303 can also enter a standby mode where the registers and CPU state are dumped to internal RAM and then the chip halts completely, powering only the internal RAM (the WorkSlate maintains power to the rest of memory and critical components like the gate arrays and real-time clock). When you press On/Off, this runs a ROM routine that saves the CPU state along with a ROM checksum, then signals the tape gate array at U29 (not visible here) to assert the CPU’s standby line and power down. Pressing On/Off to resume will cause the tape gate array to deassert standby and send a reset to the CPU instead. The CPU powers back on and enters its normal reset vector, which looks at the internal RAM to see if the ROM checksum still matches. If it does, then power must have been maintained, and the CPU duly restores the rest of the processor state to resume operation. Otherwise, a cold start occurs. This detail will become relevant when we talk about a particular critical bug in the WorkSlate firmware.

Serial data from the GPIO port, microcassette deck and modem data lines are fed to the on-chip 5-line serial port; the on-chip 8-line parallel port is wired to the modem control and ROM banking lines. Otherwise, except for the on-chip peripheral registers at $0000 and the internal RAM at $0080, all other memory and memory-mapped I/O in its address range is manipulated via the decoder gate array at U13 (with the blue sticker on it). Like most 8-bit CPUs, the 6800 family can access a total address space of 64K. Main memory consists of eight Hitachi HM6116LFP-2 static RAMs in U1 through U8, each containing 2K for a total of 16K. The RAM at U1, however, has a special purpose: 736 bytes of it provide the screen memory as ASCII characters which are then turned into dot data by the LCD controller at U11, a Hitachi HD61830. The HD61830 has built-in character glyphs, but these are only 5x7, so to implement 6x8 glyphs to paint the LCD with no gaps, external character data is provided by a small ROM at U12 next to it. A special decoder gate array mode lets the CPU manipulate the HD61830’s registers directly with its address bus lines. Once initialized, the LCD controller then regularly fetches characters from U1 and uses its external character ROM to generate the pixel stream for the row drivers. All the CPU has to do is change characters in the screen memory as needed and the LCD is automatically refreshed. In addition to the LCD controller, the decoder array can also select RAM, ROM, keyboard, tape gate array functions, DTMF dialer, or the real-time clock.

There is mention in the service manual of a 32K RAM option, though it describes it as “four 16K-bit by eight bit static CMOS RAMs” which would actually be 64K. I’m not aware of any production WorkSlates with more than 16K of RAM, 32K or otherwise.

Other major chips visible here are the HD146818FP real-time clock at U21 that handles the clock, calendar and upcoming alarm based on a 32.768kHz crystal at X2, the Mostek MK5089N DTMF touch-tone dialer at U22 with its 3.579545MHz crystal at X3 (using the NatSemi MM74C374N octal latch at U23), and the 300bps modem-on-a-chip Motorola MC14412 at U24 with its own 4.0MHz crystal at X4.

The lower left corner of the board (here rotated 180 degrees to put the ROM markings right-side up) is where the ROMs and the tape gate array live. The tape gate array is the large IC at U29, though it handles more than just the microcassette deck: it has lines for the tape motor control and data (with special circuitry for decoding tape signals to serial data), system power (both from the On/Off button and the alarm), battery voltages, audio input and output routing, and selecting the data source for the 6303’s serial port. The decoder array treats it as a device that the CPU can select and manipulate.

The two system ROMs are at U16 and U15, both 32K Hitachi 23256 equivalents. Their date codes indicate second week 1984, which was well into the WorkSlate’s brief commercial lifespan and makes them likely the last, if not only, production ROM revision that exists. The decoder array banks the appropriate ROM into $8000-$ffff as specified by lines on the CPU parallel port (so as currently configured the machine can support no more than 32K of RAM, even if more were physically present). Pads for a third ROM are at U14 nearby which would likely have been used in one of the other Ultra models, and the decoder array already has support for banking this ROM in too should one be installed. If one of my units quits completely, my next task will be to desolder and dump these ROMs, since I’m not aware of any copy of any version of them anywhere.

The cassette mechanism is a miracle of early 1980s miniaturization which also makes it a nightmare to work on, especially since tape drive issues appear to be the most common defect in surviving WorkSlates and the microcassette failures on my two systems are different. The “nice” unit has a stuck tape head that will neither reliably retract nor extend, making reading tapes vary between unreliable and impossible. Jeff’s video series I linked previously examines a similarly failed unit which he determined was due to a small pin that fractured and prevented the actuator from moving the head properly. This failure has the side effect of preventing you from pressing the eject button and locking the cassette door closed unless you can pry it up or push down the head. Unfortunately his repair required rebuilding this tiny pin in his shop, something non-trivial for an idiot like me who has to make sure he doesn’t solder his own fool fingers together. This “beater” unit, on the other hand, simply won’t spin the reels at all. It’s possible that both its motor and head are bad.

The tutorial tapes included with the WorkSlate are “just” audio (with a data header telling the WorkSlate that the cassette is “just audio”). They will play back with any standard microcassette recorder at the faster 2.4cm/s speed and I have archived them in their entirety, though the audio quality is merely adequate as I suspect they were recorded on a prototype WorkSlate as well.

However, the Loan Analysis tape is all data, with an effective baud rate (as with all WorkSlate data tapes) at a fixed 2400bps, 8N1 — exactly like serial data, complete with start and stop bits. The trick is converting it from its frequency modulation encoding (yes, the same as the early floppy format, unlike other cassettes that use another digital format or analogue encodings like FSK) to regular bits; FM is designed to allow clock recovery despite jitter, but there seems to be more of it on a tape than there is on floppy media, and the real unit has a voltage-controlled oscillator at U19 to compensate which locks the speed of the tape gate array’s decoder to the true speed of the tape. It should still be possible to decode this and other Taskware cassettes from an audio recording with some manual work, though that by itself doesn’t help us with actually getting data in and out. Some people have figured out tricks like whistling into the speakerphone with a modem but that limits you to 300 baud.

The MicroPrinter and the GPIO port

Fortunately there’s an even better way of exchanging data with the unit or this whole article might not have been possible. Interestingly enough, that way starts with the MicroPrinter.

The MicroPrinter was the first of two peripherals produced for the WorkSlate and the only one available at launch; the second, the $195 ($600 in 2024 dollars) CommPort, was a combination serial-parallel port device that was not available until January 1984, and is comparatively rare. The CommPort was the only supported means for using a conventional parallel printer. That said, even though this entry will use serial access heavily, we don’t actually need the CommPort to communicate with the WorkSlate — or even the modem to do so, for that matter, though I’m getting ahead of myself.

The MicroPrinter is in fact a small portable plotter that uses four coloured pens to draw on a 4.5” (11.5cm) paper roll. (Plotter dweebs will have already guessed what’s under the hood just from that description but please don’t spoil the disassembly for everyone else.) It defaults to a 40 column width line, exactly what the WorkSlate would display in the content area, but can also draw text in a “compressed” form for a full 80 characters or render spreadsheets sideways with up to 24 or 48 rows. The colour settings in the WorkSlate only apply to the MicroPrinter; the margin and paper settings only apply to a connected parallel printer.

A coiled 8P8C cable connects the MicroPrinter to the WorkSlate via the GPIO “Peripherals” port. This cable carries both data and power: while the MicroPrinter can be powered by the same AC adapter, AA batteries or NiCad battery pack that the WorkSlate uses, you can power both units from the other (the AC adaptor here could have been connected to either device, and they can also share battery power, though running the printer off the WorkSlate will probably kill its batteries rather quickly). While there is a hollow in the MicroPrinter case that the cable can snuggle into, the cable’s degenerating plasticizer has made it so grotty that I keep it in a Ziploc bag in the leatherette case instead.

Only one peripheral can be attached to the port at a time, likely because of the limited power budget. That makes our task simpler because we don’t have to worry about daisy-chaining. One thing I noticed with the WorkSlate propped up is that the profile of the main unit and the printer both match, another nice Nuttall touch.

I only have one example of the printer. It identifies itself as a model WP-100.

As before a laminated copper sheet covers the rear of the main circuit board, but the plotter mechanism is instantly recognizeable as an Alps DPG-1302. This was used in a huge number of contemporary printer-plotters and is best known in the Atari 1020 and Commodore 1520, but also appeared in the Texas Instruments HX-1000, Tandy Radio Shack CGP-115, Mattel Aquarius 4615 and Astor MCP-40, rebadged by Oric and (though unreleased) Tomy, among many others. The factory nylon gears in this mech are notorious for stripping (replacements existjj) and the pens are long dried out, though we’re not here to print on it today.

When we flip up the board we see its main CPU, a Hitachi HD63A01V1F. If this sounds like another 6800-family CPU, you’re right: the Hitachi 6301 is a clone of the 6801 microcontroller, and like the 6801 has its own built-in ROM (4K) and RAM (128 bytes), though it only has 29 GPIO lines like the 6803 divided into three eight-bit ports and one five-bit. It has the same additional instructions as the 6303 including a “sleep” mode which is also used for power-saving when the printer is idle. The crystal at X1 is rather illegible but photographing it at the right angle shows it to be a 4.9152MHz oscillator as well, which is also divided down by four internally to yield the nominal clock speed of 1.2288MHz, same as the WorkSlate.

However, there is a second processor in the MicroPrinter, arguably making it more powerful than the computer it’s connected to. The HD44860 next to it is a little 4-bit microcontroller with its own 128 bytes (as 256 nybbles) of RAM and 4 kiloword ROM using 10-bit instructions (hello, decle!), plus a timer/counter, on-chip oscillator, 44 lines of GPIO and two interrupts. Unlike the 6800, the 44860 is a strict Harvard architecture CPU. All but one instruction run in a single 5 microsecond machine cycle for an effective clock speed of 200kHz. Not unlike other 4-bit CPUs we’ve seen, the program counter treats the ROM as two banks of 32 pages each containing 64 words, and program execution stays in the same page until changed with a long jump. To make it wackier, though, the lowest six bits of the program counter are actually an infinitely repeating polynomial sequence, so subsequent instructions are not contiguous in ROM (and you thought COMP-X was weird).

After following some of the traces, my guess is the 44860 is responsible for directly driving the mechanism. The 6301 acts as the master, receiving instructions and data from the WorkSlate on the peripheral bus and sending commands to the 44860, which controls putting pen(s) to paper. (Jeff Birt disassembled a CommPort and showed that it actually has two 6301s in it, so it’s even more powerful than the printer. They both run at 1.2288MHz also. Convergent’s hardware designers must have found a special on 4.9152MHz crystals.)

But all this would be academic if it weren’t for a unique feature of the MicroPrinter: the WorkSlate supports using it as a typewriter, where you can simply type characters to be printed immediately. That brings us to the second WorkSlate “desk accessory,” the Terminal. Ordinarily the Terminal is for the modem, where you can dial into a bigger system and set it up to interchange data. As well as acting as a simple dummy terminal, it offers the ability to send and receive whole sheets.

However, if the MicroPrinter is connected to the GPIO peripheral port, the Terminal instead ignores the modem and sends data directly to the printer. That gives us an opportunity: if we can act like a MicroPrinter and do whatever dance it does with the WorkSlate, we can trigger the Terminal through the GPIO peripheral port and send and receive data directly — without a CommPort. Encouragingly, the partial technical description describes the data as serial 9600bps TTL, 8N1. That’s just a UART. Anything can talk to that!

There’s one problem, though:

It’s that rotten coiled cable. It’s 8P8C, but in the same dimensions as a 6P4C RJ-11 telephone jack.

That means something like a regular Ethernet or RJ-45 type cable is too fat: it physically won’t fit in the port.

I dithered over shaving down an Ethernet cable to make it fit, and actually tried doing that with some files for a couple hours, though I eventually abandoned the idea because I was worried the two sides wouldn’t come out even (and my arms were tired). A tip of the hat here to Lamar Owen on classiccmp who suggested one of the narrow “universal modular” connectors sold by Sandman (not affiliated, just satisfied). I made an order with them and we’ll talk more about that in a second.

In the meantime, we’ll need to figure out how the GPIO port is even wired — something else that’s also not in the partial service manual. Additionally, since the MicroPrinter’s ROMs are all internal to its microcontrollers, we will only be able to determine its behaviour by snooping the serial lines.

Connecting the coiled cable to a tester showed that it was wired straight-thru except for pins 4 and 5, which are swapped. This sounded suspiciously like a null modem swapping receive and transmit lines. We saw by the board traces where the GPIO port receives power and ground, so on the back end of the “beater” GPIO port connector I soldered jumpers to ground and pins 4 and 5, and a couple of the others that weren’t obviously connected to the power rails. (Spoiler: at the end of this section we’ll have an easier way of hooking up devices without having to modify the unit, so don’t worry — you won’t have to crack your WorkSlate open to use the example programs.)

However, we also know that the GPIO port is not always connected to the 6303’s 5-pin serial port because the tape gate array can hook up other sources. Walking the traces with the 6303 data sheet, we can see some processor lines get brought out to a header at the top of the board. I soldered a couple more jumpers to the data lines for the 5-line serial port just to see what those were doing.

After fiddling with various permutations I was able to monitor serial data going back and forth, and those demonstrate the WorkSlate can ask an external device to identify itself in a completely old-school standard way. With picocom in partial hex mode (picocom -b9600 –imap tabhex,crhex,spchex /path/to/your/serial/port), upon starting the Terminal the WorkSlate sends an XON (ASCII 17, ^Q) followed by an ENQ (ASCII 5, ^E) out the GPIO port, which is the standard transmission control character to command a remote station to send its answerback string. The 6301 in the MicroPrinter responds with

1 MicroPrinter.

followed by a CR-LF. This is an interesting string to receive because the number suggests multiple printers could have been connected, either giving a total number of devices or saying what their “device numbers” were.

I don’t have a CommPort to figure out how that would have acted, but after some experimentation I determined all the WorkSlate is looking for is a single line feed character — if you send that in response, and quickly since it only seems to wait about three seconds before reporting an error message, the Terminal opens. Likewise, if you were wondering if a connected device can command the WorkSlate to identify itself, it can, and the WorkSlate responds even if the Terminal isn’t running. Send an ENQ character yourself to the WorkSlate (Control-E) and it will answer with

Workslate

plus a CR-LF. Very logical. In fact, this is exactly how you can connect two WorkSlates together directly with the GPIO port, since they will both respond to the other’s ENQuiry, and they will even share power. It doesn’t seem like any of the other GPIO lines are used (other than power), so everything is in-band signaling with all the advantages and disadvantages that implies.

Here’s what I bought from Sandman: a banjo with the “universal modular” cable, part #TOO6G. For those unfamiliar with telco work, banjos connect to phone jacks and break out the individual lines so you can connect a lineman’s handset (“butt-set”) to a pair with just the handset’s alligator clips. The name comes from older banjos which were in fact circular and had a permanently affixed cable somewhat resembling the musical instrument. Getting the banjo kit seemed convenient because I’d need to break out the wiring anyway, so I could just use alligator clips of my own to wire up the USB-TTL adapter instead of having to crimp a cable and peel off the lines.

Parenthetically, the design of this particular banjo is such that it can be connected in series and used to tap the connection between two devices on either end. We’ve already found out what we needed to know without doing that, but this trick could be useful to you for something else.

The universal modular cable was the right width but it still didn’t fit. The reason is that there’s also a little key divot we have to carve out. (The outcropping next to it is there to prevent the coiled cable from being put in anything but a WorkSlate-family device, but it isn’t needed to get the banjo’s cable to mate.)

I put the cable in the vise in the workshop and, carefully with a Dremel rotary tool at medium RPM, took a couple swipes off that side of the modular connector. Now it fits!

We can demonstrate that the connection is good by looking for the 6 volt line we know is present from what we saw with the logic board. Six volts is not TTL, so a line with 6V on it can only be the power rail. It didn’t take me long to find ground on pin 1 and a strong 6V on pin 2. To ensure we don’t fry anything we’ll leave that completely unconnected. Pin 8 also appears to be connected to the power rail (more than 5V), though at a lower voltage.

With alligator clip jumpers on and consulting my notes from the test connections, I ran pin 1 to ground, pin 4 to receive (RXD) and pin 5 to transmit (TXD) on my 5V USB-TTL adapter.

Ta-daaaaa. We now have serial communications with the WorkSlate directly through the GPIO port with our own cable. It’s time to program this sucker.

Spreadsheet storage and operations, or, Turing completeness is overrated

I commented in the introduction that the worst thing a spreadsheet on a 8-bit CPU could be is Turing-complete, because being Turing-complete implies the possibility of unbounded loops. (We’re going to ignore macro facilities for this discussion and most 8-bit spreadsheets didn’t have them anyway.) Even if your software were properly coded with a means to halt a potentially infinite cascade of computations, it could make your hard work all but unusable especially if the spreadsheet formulas were highly complex.

The most common way this happens in a spreadsheet is with circular references, where one cell’s calculated result depends on the calculated result of another cell which depends on the result of the first one. VisiCalc infamously had a strict left to right and top to bottom evaluation order which could cause aggravating errors if there were interdependent references. For at least a couple years the only spreadsheet that could correctly resolve them was Sorcim’s CP/M VisiCalc clone SuperCalc. Former product manager Wally Feigenson posits this example which also did not compute correctly in contemporary versions of Lotus 1-2-3: given a particular dollar amount of gross sales (he used $100 as an example), calculate your cost of sales as a percentage (example, 60%) and calculate your gross profit (gross sales minus cost of sales), and then calculate your profit sharing as a percentage of net profits (example, 10%) and your net profits as your gross profit minus the profit sharing.

That last part is an obvious circular reference but is nevertheless a plausible business calculation. On paper you’d end up doing the numbers twice to resolve the problem, and that’s what SuperCalc did. Though Feigenson cites this example to show off the new “iterative calculation” feature in SuperCalc 3, his example works just fine in SuperCalc2 for MS-DOS:

The correct answer for the example values is actually a net profit of $36.36 and profit sharing of $3.64, but this is only due to the default displayed precision and the answer is accurate internally. Unless you came up with a macro to force another round of recalculation, however, Lotus 1-2-3 would show zero.

Microsoft Multiplan had its own solution to this problem. Its evaluation scheme builds a chain of dependencies and works down the list (“compute-until-done”). If the process started hitting the same cells again, it would conclude a loop was present and abort with an error message. However, it could optionally run in an “iterative” mode where effectively the loop limit was removed and it ran until the values “stabilized” (defined as an absolute sum of changes between runs of less than 0.001). You could even create a custom test condition for termination, which could include a different delta value of its own or a cap on the total number of iterations. This mode was very useful for mathematical operations in particular (Newton-Raphson comes to mind) but also allowed the possibility that a run could go infinitely. Likely because of the pitfalls this could pose to an incautious user Microsoft chose to remove iterative calculations for Excel and did not reimplement it for almost a decade.

As the WorkSlate’s strongest influence was Multiplan, it adopts the same “compute-until-done” strategy, but with a twist. It will detect and report a circular reference after the first run, yet it will allow processing to continue for a fixed three iterations before terminating. Consider this spreadsheet with A1 being =B1+1 and B1 being =A1+1:

On the first run B1 is evaluated as zero, so A1 becomes 1 and B1 becomes 2. This demands a second iteration, so A1 becomes 3 and B1 becomes 4. This demands a third iteration, so A1 becomes 5 and B1 becomes 6, at which point the WorkSlate cuts off further evaluation and chides you by name in the status row. You can manually press Recalc (Special-N) to kick off another three iterations, yielding 9 and 10 and so forth, but it never does more than that per run.

Regardless, this means that Feigenson’s example will also work on Multiplan (if iterative calculation is enabled), and by extension on the WorkSlate:

The point of all this is to say that our WorkSlate programming endeavours can’t depend on any computation where the number of necessary iterations is unknown (and therefore potentially unlimited). On the WorkSlate, this is a good thing. If you’ve ever worked for a clueless executive, you know they will ask the impossible of you, and they will ask the impossible of their toys too (but I repeat myself). It is entirely plausible that someone got themselves in trouble during testing with this and it would have had obvious impacts on battery life and responsiveness. Because the WorkSlate was never meant to run arbitrary programs, even though it makes this article more complicated and there will be many computational operations we simply can’t express in its spreadsheet’s terms, these limits are absolutely okay.

With that introduction, next we should figure out how worksheets are sent and received so we can start writing our own in a more efficient manner. Along with hanging up, pausing a transfer and the irrelevant-to-us option for talking over the phone line we’re not using, the Terminal has options for exchanging data (Send and Receive). Let’s take the silly little spreadsheet we have onscreen and send it to the computer I’m typing this on.

We press Send and select the sheet we want, and the WorkSlate will transmit it over the serial port via the connected banjo. Marking control characters and trailing spaces, it comes out like this (all lines are separated by CR-LF):

^R^R^Q\S C2 A1 A3  A E c[space]
\M 202
\N " empty  "
\W 13 9+2[space]
A1-"Allen"
B1-"Loves"
C1-"Cigars"
A2-1
B2-2
C2-3
^C^Q

The control sequences are two DC2 (ASCII 18, ^R) characters, which on TTYs would turn on the tape punch to start receiving data (again, very logical), followed by an XON (ASCII 17, ^Q), and then the spreadsheet data. At the end it sends an End-of-Text ETX (ASCII 3, ^C) character — and here you thought ^C just meant “break” — and another XON, ending the transmission. Sheet data always consists of the first four lines in order (), followed by rows and columns going left to right and top to bottom, though it will accept them unsorted. After some fuzzing and experiments, here’s what I think everything means.

The line is quite obviously the name of the sheet, demarcated by quote marks. It is always eight characters and padded with spaces.

The line describes the maximal dimensions of the sheet (here going from A1 to C2) with the cursor to be placed in A3. Notice that the cursor position does not need to be within the bounding coordinates. In fact, other than the cursor position itself, the WorkSlate doesn’t appear to make use of these values on receiveback and will freely put subsequent cell data outside of the stated dimensions. Similarly, the last three characters (we’ll call them “flags”) don’t appear to do anything either. For a typical generic sheet they are usually rendered A E c, in that order and with that capitalization. However, the Memo Pad and Phone List, should you send those, are marked with a e c, and the Calendar is marked with a E c. The only pattern I’ve found is that sheets where events may be present are tagged with a capital E, and sheets with alternate cell alignments are tagged with a lowercase a. Likely these were hints about what types of features the sheet uses, maybe as a way to reduce power further by turning off unneeded interrupts or chips, but since you can use pretty much any built-in formula feature in any sheet, they don’t appear to actually gate any particular attribute. If you alter the flags in a sheet and send it back to the WorkSlate, it will preserve their values but the sheet still apparently acts the same. For our code we will still set the bounding box correctly and use the most common A E c flags on the off chance they’re salient, somewhere.

The line describes column width, out to the maximum column given by . The default layout, used here, makes column A 13 characters wide and everything else 9. (This default is also used for any cell outside the bounding box where the width isn’t specified, by the way.) As a little bit of compression repeated values are designated with +d, so 13 9+2 indicates the sheet consists of one column of 13 characters (A) followed by two columns of 9 characters (B, C).

Special attributes like overlap and justification are not part of the header lines; since they’re specific to an individual cell, they’re appended to each cell entry after a space. The codes are, sensibly, “D”ecimal, “L”eft, “R”ight, “W”hole and “O”verlap. An interesting thing about overlap is that while the large cell is emitted with “O”, the cells it overlaps are emitted also, just blank and empty.

Finally, the line is how many bytes the spreadsheet is expected to take in memory. Interestingly, the only use the firmware seems to make of this value is deciding whether to even attempt to load the sheet — if it’s bigger than available memory, then the WorkSlate will immediately abort. Even if you make this value zero, which surprisingly it will accept, it will still abort reception if the sheet ends up exceeding available memory or the 128x128 maximum anyway, so you can’t use such a trick to stomp on anything interesting (darn). This behaviour is nevertheless useful to us because it means we don’t really need to sweat getting the value exactly right as long as we provide an acceptable one, though as a practical measure we’ll still try to provide a proper estimate in our examples. Interestingly, you might think that you could have a value up to 16384 here (i.e., 16 kilobytes) and you would be wrong: remember that 736 bytes are required for the screen memory minus various work areas minus table attributes minus the 128 bytes built into the 6303. Experimentally I determined the largest value you can have for is 12868 bytes, and that only for a completely clean, empty system.

Memory usage for strings and numbers (and date and time values, which are emitted in their display form but stored as numbers) is straightforward to estimate. Every sheet starts at 144 bytes in size, plus 2 bytes for every cell in the bounding box. The bounding box here is 2 rows by 3 columns for six cells, so 12 bytes. Each number value takes up eight bytes (presumably a tag byte followed by the floating point value, see below for why the value itself appears to be seven bytes), and each string value is two bytes plus one byte for each character. If we tally this all up for the example, we get 144 + 12 + (2 + 5) + (2 + 5) + (2 + 6) + 8 + 8 + 8 = 202 bytes, the reported value.

Incidentally, if you put a quote mark inside a quoted string, it just gets sent inside the quoted string unescaped. The WorkSlate will figure it out.

Formulas are a little trickier. Let’s look again at the WorkSlate version of Wally Feigenson’s 1-2-3 torture test. I’ve removed the control characters and terminal spaces for didactic purposes but they are still present in the same positions.

\S B5 A1 B4  A E c 
\M 299
\N " empty  "
\W 15 9 
A1-"Sales"
B1-100
A2-"Cost of Sales"
B2=.6~$~B1
A3-"Gross Profit"
B3=B1-B2
A4-"Profit Sharing"
B4=.1~$~B5
A5-"Net Profits"
B5=B3-B4

What’s with the tildes? They’re how the WorkSlate’s extended character set is implemented: paired tildes act like escape/de-escape sequences, where characters between them are interpreted as symbols. Consider this constructed sheet (I’ll get to how I actually got it in the system in a second), where we escape all seven-bit printable ASCII characters in turn:

\S A3 A1 A1  A E c 
\M 0
\N "CharSet "
\W 40 
A1-"~ !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?~"
A2-"~@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_~"
A3-"~`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~~"

Uploaded to the WorkSlate, it renders like this:

Most of the second and third row are not defined as anything except for the very last character (RUBOUT isn’t printable), where a tilde immediately followed by a tilde is treated as a real tilde. Instead, almost all of the special symbols appear in the first row, where we see little icons, some control character representations and line drawing and graphics characters. Some of these characters can’t be entered into a spreadsheet any other way than by sneaking them in here. If you trace along the list, you’ll see that $ is how we render a WorkSlate × on a system that may or may not have that character.

I haven’t worked out all the pieces yet for formulas, but we can get close. This is a 10-cell spreadsheet (A1 to B5), so we start out with 144 + 20 = 164 bytes baseline usage. We add (2 + 5) + 8 + (2 + 13) + (2 + 12) + (2 + 14) + (2 + 10) = 236 bytes for all the strings and the single number in B1. To save memory and speed execution time, formulas are stored tokenized. My current theory is that each formula appears to have a minimum usage of 8 bytes, plus 7 bytes for every number and 2 bytes for every cell reference, and then one additional byte for every token (built-in functions, parentheses, operators, etc.). That means B3 and B5 are 8 + 2 + 1 + 2 = 13 bytes each and B2 and B4 are 8 + 7 + 1 + 2 = 18 bytes each. 236 + 18 + 13 + 18 + 13 = … uh, 298 bytes. I’m not sure where the extra byte went. Fortunately the exact memory value doesn’t really matter for what we’re doing here as long as we give the machine something it can parse as a positive integer, with a sufficient fudge factor so it doesn’t waste time loading something obviously too big.

We can use picocom to directly receive to a file by adding something like –receive-cmd “ascii-xfr -rnv”, which will show progress, prevent line feeds from being mucked with and capture all the control characters for faithful transmission back. However, to get the receive operation to terminate, you’ll need to manually send a ^Z from the Terminal which you can do by pressing Special-C, releasing them, then Z. Doing so doesn’t cause any problems because ^Z will never be part of a spreadsheet transmission. Special-C works the same for all other control characters.

This format is completely different from Microsoft Multiplan’s, by the way, which is pretty clear evidence that while the WorkSlate was (strongly, in some cases) influenced by Multiplan it is definitely not descended from it. In particular, it bears almost no similarity to Multiplan’s SYLK format, and cannot read a sheet rendered as such.

Now, how about sending something back to the WorkSlate? You can overwrite any of the spreadsheets in memory, even the generated ones, but actually transmitting data properly turned out to be trickier than I thought. The problem here is flow control. I said that all the signalling was in-band, and I could find no activity on the other lines, so XON/XOFF software flow-control is all you have. If you’re connected with the 300bps modem, this is no problem, because the 6303 is more than fast enough to receive and process every byte as it comes. The CommPort was a rare accessory, so it’s reasonable to assume most of its contemporary users were doing this sort of thing over a phone line, and that’s the speed they’d be at.

At 9600bps, though, it’s a problem. It was a problem for the Canon Cat to receive and reliably process every character into the document as it arrived at that speed, and the Cat is a 5MHz 68000, so a 1.2288MHz 6800 (even an enhanced one) has no chance whatsoever because there’s no ACIA or UART and everything here is bitbanged. On top of that, since there is no hardware flow control in the WorkSlate and XON/XOFF signalling is in-band, the buffering we take for granted with modern serial interfaces is really going to ruin your day. Usually by the time my code saw the XOFF, the WorkSlate was already dropping characters and the receive would fail for all but the most trivial transmissions. (I should note that the CommPort does have hardware flow control, but it does it in “software” — i.e., one of its 6301s is dedicated to the task and bitbangs the flow control lines; there’s no UART or ACIA inside it either. What’s less clear about the CommPort is whether it squeezes everything else into those two GPIO serial lines.)

With the Canon Cat, we solved this with a custom file sender tool that introduces an intercharacter or intercharactergroup (?) delay. We can use that here too and we’ll use a variation of it later on, but ascii-xfr has a similar delay option, so we might as well just use that for consistency with picocom. After lots of fiddling, the fastest reliable transmission rate seems to be with a 3 millisecond intercharacter delay; counting start and stop bits (it’s 8N1), we get about 1.042 milliseconds per character at 9600bps, increasing latency to 4.042 milliseconds per character for an effective speed of 2474bps. Why not just transmit at 2400bps? Because the internal serial port expects 9600bps, and that can’t be changed, so there.

Other than overruns, there are two minor bugs when sending sheets to the WorkSlate. The first is that it doesn’t seem to correctly display the new name of the sheet when receiving it (i.e., the field), even though the new name appears correctly after the transmission successfully completes. The other one, to be relevant to the third program example, is that upon its selection in the Terminal the receive option sends two DC4 characters (ASCII 20, ^T) and then waits for you to select the destination sheet. DC4 historically would signal teletypes to turn on the punch tape reader, so again this is a logical signal byte to send. However, while in theory this should alert the remote system to have a sheet ready to go, in practice you have no idea when the transfer will actually begin because the user could take any amount of time deciding where to put the received data. Even more strangely, if the remote side sends DC2 DC2 like the start of a spreadsheet while the Terminal is active, the Terminal will automatically interpret this as a Receive request and immediately ask you to select the destination sheet, but it will not send DC4 DC4 in response. That oversight seems like a bug, though admittedly another one most people wouldn’t have cared about at the time. I’m just not “most people.”

Nevertheless, with all that in mind, our command line for the next couple examples will be picocom -b9600 /path/to/your/serial/port –send-cmd “ascii-xfr -snv -c3” –receive-cmd “ascii-xfr -rnv” and you can adjust that for your own terminal program such as minicom, etc.

Let’s bring on the programs. Everything here is in this Github project and the WorkSlate WorkSpace.

Hack No. 1: Rock, Paper, Scissors

We did Rock Paper Scissors for COMP-X, the first game I know of written for the Tandy Pocket Computer PC-5/6 Assembler mode, so on this occasion of what I believe to be the first game for WorkSlate we’ll do the same. So that you could potentially play this while the Calculator or Terminal are open, I made it just four rows high and best out of three.

To make our programming tasks a little easier we’re going to write a simple one-pass “cross-assembler” (a pre-processor, really) that will take a soup of cells, organize them and then emit the proper headers and control characters. It will also let us comment and annotate. As usual, the “WorkSlate Spreadsheet Crossassembler” (henceforth WSSC) is written in Perl primarily to annoy people. Pass it an assembler source file as an argument or on standard input and it will emit the ready-to-upload sheet on standard output. It accepts cells written in the same way we’ve seen above, but cell width can be optionally added to any cell with a dot (like B1.13-“hello world”). The cross-assembler will keep track of what cells were what width and emit the proper header (or stop with an error if there are inconsistencies, since width is per column). You can attach attributes like justification or number format to a cell in the same way we saw above (e.g., a space followed by R for right justification). Pseudo-ops manage starting cell, default column widths and worksheet name, and lines can be commented out by starting them with #.

There is no documentation out there anywhere on the WorkSlate’s unusual set of built-in functions other than the infrequently encountered (and maddeningly incomplete) Reference Guide, so I’ve taken it upon myself to create the WorkSlate WorkSpace as a supplemental resource. You can refer to it for more details on some of the functions we’ll use here and in the next two hacks.

This and the next hack will depend, completely in the second hack’s case, on the If() conditional function. This function is almost exactly the same as in Multiplan, and even modern Excel: given three parameters, it returns the second parameter if the first is true, or the third parameter if it’s false. Also like Multiplan, you can combine a list of conditions with And() and Or(), invert them with Not(), and chain If()s together by using another If() as one of the arguments. Note, however, that the WorkSlate uses plain tokens True and False instead of Multiplan’s functions True() and False().

The WorkSlate also has Multiplan’s same limitation on string comparisons: there are none. This is very clear in Multiplan’s documentation but not in the WorkSlate’s. In particular, we can’t do moves in this game by entering Rock, Paper, Scissors, or even the letters R, P, and S, because while If(A1=“P”,“Paper”,“Not Paper”) doesn’t result in an error (and I do consider that a bug), it doesn’t ever evaluate as true. Comparing ASCII values doesn’t work either, for that matter, so the moves you will enter must be numeric.

Since this is a Turing-incomplete spreadsheet, it can’t “wait” for your answer because that would be an unbounded loop, but part of the game is to reveal the computer’s move only after you do and we want (at least to make it look like) it’s doing it one at a time. The IsNA() function tests if the cell is not a number (“NA” is short for “not available for calculation”), which also evaluates to true for blank cells, so if our moves are in column A and the computer’s are in column B, we’ll have B1 be B1=If(IsNA(A1),““,F4) to wait for a valid number in A1 before revealing our computed move from F4.

How do we compute those moves? Ordinarily I would reach for a simple pseudorandom number generator like Xorshift to generate it, but we have no bit math operations at all in the WorkSlate, just basic arithmetic and some statistical functions. In particular, that means we have no exclusive-OR. Off-screen columns F, G and H take a seed value in E1 and compute out really pseudorandom numbers from it. The sucky-pseudo-pseudorandom number function I made up for this demonstration is excruciatingly bad, sufficient to give D. J. Bernstein a really nasty twitch and just enough to basically work for some four digit seeds (provable improvements solicited — be prepared to show distributions). Since the computer’s moves are supposed to be random anyway, we just precompute them upon a change in seed value, and reveal them one by one as the player column cells start having valid digits in them.

Computing the winner ran into another problem. The numbers are set so that higher numbers beat lower numbers, but paper covers rock, so we check for that specifically. On each turn the player gets a score of 1 for winning, 0 for a tie or -1 for losing. Unfortunately, a perfectly reasonable single-cell formula for this like C1=If(IsNA(A1),““,If(And(A1=0,B1=2),1,If(And(A1=2,B1=0),-1,If(A1>B1,1,If(B1>A1,-1,0))))) is too big for the WorkSlate, even though it fits in 128 characters. The limit on formula length, again experimentally determined, seems to be about 108 characters. Instead, we calculate the second set of conditions (which one is greater) in off-screen column I and do the check for paper-rock in column C, using the value in I if not.

To make a somewhat responsive interface, I ended up scattering IsNA() tests all over the place as signals. As long as any one of the three player spaces (A1-A3) are incomplete, then there will be no score in column C for that row, and there will be a blank cell in I4. Once all three moves are made, though, we sum column C to I4 and report a winner, replacing the instruction text, and directing the player to clear column A to play again. For example, D3’s formula is D3=If(IsNA(I4),“0=PAPER”,If(I4>0,“YOU WON”,If(I4=0,“WE TIED”,“I WON”))), which replaces that part of the instructions with the winner.

Nothing prevents you from entering bogus values or playing in the wrong column or playing out of order, because we don’t control the interface. Winners don’t cheat (or do drugs, for that matter). If you don’t want to play nice, then the only person you’re hurting is yourself. You don’t want to hurt yourself, do you?

Here’s a video. The WSSC source is in Github, with a ready-to-upload sheet. We demonstrate a full game from start to finish, ending in clearing column A as a player would. Notice the recalculation progress indicator in the status row when we enter our moves, showing the number of cells yet to be evaluated counting down as computations complete.

Hack No. 2: Pie Charts on the WorkSlate

Remember those bar charts I showed you way, way back at the beginning? Good times, but they aren’t enough. If we’re going to have business cards with watermarks, then by golly we’ll have to have better charts here in the 1980s office or heads will roll. Literally, perhaps. Plus, would Stringfellow Hawke put up with this from his nav computer?

What I really wanted to do here was figure out a means of primitive graphics. The firmware does not support treating the screen as a bitmap, so everything would need to be character cells. If we set up a matrix where every column in the, cough, “frame buffer” is one, gurgle, “pixel” (the rows are already), then by assigning a formula to every single cell we can draw something at the highest, urgh, “resolution” the WorkSlate firmware will permit. That’s not outrageous, or at least not by my standards of outrage.

Still, you should have already guessed the pitfall here: memory usage. My first attempt was to draw a Mandelbrot set off a set of coordinates. The typical algorithm requires you to iterate on each pixel until you can decide if it’s actually in the set or not, or you’ve exceeded an upper bound on number of times through the loop. Pixels that are not part of the set typically get a colour based on how many runs it took to figure that out, but the set itself is black, so it can be drawn in monochrome. Experimentally it took at least six iterations to yield something that looked like the set should look on a screen this blocky, and much below 14x10 (yes, really) it became unrecognizeable, so that was the lower bound on detail.

By also reducing the, er, “colour depth” (i.e., the extent of our graphics character palette) we didn’t need to save the result of every computation and it was possible to collapse the six iterations into a collective double iteration, a test, a triple iteration and then a second test. I modeled this in Perl and got a (barely) credible result:

   ......8..  
  ......88... 
 ......88888..
 ...88888888..
 ..888888888..
888888888888..
 ..888888888..
 ...88888888..
 ......88888..
  ......88... 

So I wrote a script to spit out all the formulas as WSSC source. Unfortunately, this reduction still generated huge formulas for every displayed cell, and since we have limits on formula length, it ended up soaking up nine off-screen cells for each of the 140 on-screen “pixels” (A1, A2, B15 and B16 contain part of the coordinates and some pre-calculated ratios):

D51=A1+(B15~$~2)
D52=A2+(B16~$~5)
D53=((((((D51~$~D51)-(D52~$~D52))+D51)~$~(((D51~$~D51)-(D52~$~D52))+D51))-((2~$~D51~$~D52+D52)~$~(2~$~D51~$~D52+D52)))+D51)
D54=(2~$~(((D51~$~D51)-(D52~$~D52))+D51)~$~(2~$~D51~$~D52+D52)+D52)
D55=((((D51~$~D51)-(D52~$~D52))+D51)~$~(((D51~$~D51)-(D52~$~D52))+D51))+((2~$~D51~$~D52+D52)~$~(2~$~D51~$~D52+D52))
D56=((2~$~D53~$~D54+D52)~$~(2~$~D53~$~D54+D52))+D51
D57=((((D53~$~D53)-(D54~$~D54))+D51)~$~(((D53~$~D53)-(D54~$~D54))+D51))-D56
D58=(2~$~(((D53~$~D53)-(D54~$~D54))+D51)~$~(2~$~D53~$~D54+D52)+D52)
D59=(((((D57~$~D57)-(D58~$~D58))+D51)~$~(((D57~$~D57)-(D58~$~D58))+D51))+((2~$~D57~$~D58+D52)~$~(2~$~D57~$~D58+D52)))

Notice that this doesn’t include actually setting the pixel itself — this is just the computations to determine what the pixel should be. Incredibly some tests with a couple runs of pixel math all parsed but when I tried to load the whole thing the WorkSlate completely ran out of memory about halfway through. Given we were already scraping the bottom in terms of rendering quality, that was the end of that.

But the idea was sound, so I thought about something else we could implement where the necessary math for each pixel could be lighter. And what would be more appropriate for a spreadsheet machine than another graphing option? Enter … the WorkSlate Pie Chart!

For simplicity we will assume a spherical cow simple two-value pie where they sum to 100% (viz., the percentage that is and isn’t Pac-Man), so we can just work with a single value. Here, a percentage will be most convenient. The portion of the pie that should be painted can be made up of a sufficient number of lines emanating from the centre of the circle to touch the given percentage of the circumference. For example, if we provide the value 47%, then we will start at a point on the circumference of the pie chart and travel an arc covering 47% of that circumference, drawing radii to every point we reach and moving along the circumference at intervals sufficient to ensure painting all the pixels in the sector covered by that arc.

I wrote a script that does exactly this for every integer percentage between 1 and 100 with an adjustable radius, plotting a disc with its center at (radius, radius) so that we aren’t dealing with negative coordinates. Arbitrarily we’ll start the walk at (2r, r) and move clockwise. For each percentage value, we use a simple Bresenham’s line algorithm to draw a virtual line and examine each of the cells it would pass through. What we want is to record the lowest percentage value that cell would be painted for. If subsequent lines touch that cell but it would already have been painted by an earlier value, we don’t change it. At the end it spits out WSSC source that we can assemble.

A radius of six turned out to be a nice value and with rounding on cells this large yielded a 13x13 pie with an actual radius of about 6.6667, about as big as could reasonably fit onscreen anyway. Each pixel formula ended up looking like this (WSSC source):

C5.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=55,"~:~","~?~"))
C6.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=52,"~:~","~?~"))
C7.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=49,"~:~","~?~"))
C8.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=46,"~:~","~?~"))
C9.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=44,"~:~","~?~"))
D10.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=41,"~:~","~?~"))
D11.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=39,"~:~","~?~"))
D3.1=If(IsNA(A1),"",If(A1>=60,"~:~","~?~"))

Our percentage value is in A1. If it’s not set, we display no pixel at all. If it is, then if it’s over that cell’s lowest critical value we display a filled cell and a non-filled cell otherwise (using tilde escapes). Because we only emit formulas for cells that could be part of a 100% pie, we don’t waste any memory defining cells outside the disc. There are no other built-in functions involved — it’s all If().

The last step is to pretty it up a bit, so I drew a little half box around the percentage indicator and added a prompt which disappears when a valid number is entered. There is also a field for you to title your fabulously autodrawn pie chart.

I also want to point out that on this totally clean machine with nothing else in RAM but the pie chart sheet, we’re already using 51% of its free memory!

I thought about graphing 51% to make the point, but eh, here’s a quarter.

And here’s a video. The Perl generator is in Github, with ready-to-assemble WSSC source and a ready-to-upload sheet for radius “six” as displayed. We test 1%, 2%, 10%, 47%, 82%, 100%, 9999999999% and -3%.

Every time the pie is recalculated, you’ll notice that the progress indicator always starts at 138. That’s because there are exactly 138 cells in the circle, which is its precise on-screen area after rounding:

% perl -e 'print ((355/113)*((20/3)*(20/3)));print"\n"' # that is, (pi)r^2
139.626352015733
% grep -c -F 'If(' pie6.ws
138

And, indeed, every possible pixel is recomputed every time the percentage value is changed, a very direct measurement of the disc’s area. QED.

Hack No. 3: The WorkSlate Surfs Gopherspace

I promised you bugs, and now you shall have bugs. Bugs you must live with. Bugs that make Naked Lunch look like Snoopy with writer’s block. I’m not kidding, either: the bugs we’ve encountered up to this point were annoying, and some seemed just plain sloppy, but all of them were correctable or could be worked around. The bugs in this section, however, can cause data loss or even make the WorkSlate crash so hard it will think it lost power. The worst part is I can’t find anything exploitable about them, so for the misery they cause they give us nothing in return.

In the slavering bestiary that is the WorkSlate’s built-in functions inventory (again, see the WorkSlate WorkSpace for more detail), we’ve seen unusual functions like primitive bar graphers and phone dialers and alarm setters. But recall that Convergent was unusually sensitive to where the market was going because the products they were developing for their partners had to be relevant when they finally hit retail. The new age of the microcomputer inspired wild feats of fantasy about a pervasively connected future where we might read completely virtual articles on computer screens, transmitted on wires and hosted on distant servers (ha, like that would ever happen). An exec who could afford a WorkSlate probably also had enough dough, or worked for a corporation with enough dough, to have an account on a service like The Source or CompuServe, and these were the very people Convergent was trying to entice.

To that end Convergent added a whole class of built-in functions that handle serial communications. Among other things, you could set up a series of spreadsheet cells that dialed an external computer, sent credentials, waited for a command prompt, sent a command, pulled data and then hung up, jumping from cell to cell automatically. If you set an alarm on the first cell, it would even turn itself on and do it unattended overnight when connect charges for those services were substantially less. This kind of thing was exactly why EF Hutton immediately added it to their supported systems list for Huttonline, for example — out of the box, their subscribers could now use the system in the sci-fi super-connected manner everyone expected the new wave of computers to do.

Well, theoretically, anyway. Here’s an example combining two real sessions from the manuals. Consider a system where you enter a login ID and password, and then at a command prompt, ask for a stock quote. On a typical dumb terminal, that session might look like this (totally plausible, mainframe systems like GEnie worked this way too), with what you would have typed in bold:

ENTER ID: JOE
ENTER PASSWORD: 793AZY702
! STOCK QUOTE

This string of ten cells would pull the results of the stock inquiry down for you into a sheet, assuming the remote system could speak in WorkSlate sheet format. CR is one of the WorkSlate graphic characters intended to visually represent a carriage return (there was also an LF for line feeds).

A1="Wake Up"+Alarm(9/5/2024,1:00am)+GoTo(A2)
A2="LOGIN"+Dial("5551212",Data)+GoTo(A3)
A3=Delay(2)+WaitFor("ENTER ID: ")+GoTo(A4)
A4=Send("JOECR")+GoTo(A5)
A5=WaitFor("ENTER PASSWORD: ")+GoTo(A6)
A6=Send("793AZY702CR")+GoTo(A7)
A7=WaitFor("! ")+GoTo(A8)
A8=Send("STOCK QUOTECR")+GoTo(A9)
A9=Keep(B1...C1,1,1,20)+GoTo(A10)
A10=HangUp(0)

The alarm in A1 would run this for you at 1am on September 5th, but you could run it anytime by starting the sequence from A2. You could even consolidate these into fewer cells; the + conjoins the functions, and then GoTo() jumps to the next. Now, you’re screaming at your screen reading this completely virtual article that this is ludicrous because how could you prevent this script from running automatically every time the spreadsheet gets recalculated? Simple: it doesn’t run automatically every time the spreadsheet gets recalculated.

All of the functions in this class, GoTo() included, display a little key icon next to them. This is another graphics character you can’t enter directly from the keyboard. On those cells, to kick off a sequence, you press Special-Do It and then it goes down its list. Except for GoTo(), if there’s no active connection, it will try to establish one (either with the Terminal or the modem, depending).

(Side note: does that mean you could use GoTo() to implement an infinite loop after all? Yes, but only a completely useless one. While execution of these functions is deferred until you give the start signal with Special-Do It, other calculations are not, which is how the string labels worked in the example above. In particular, something like the trivial circular reference example we had before

A1=GoTo(B1)+B1+1
B1=GoTo(A1)+A1+1

still immediately evaluates to 5 and 6 and gives you an error even before you hit Special-Do It. When you press Special-Do It, it loops, all right, back and forth between A1 and B1, but their values never change.)

I said “theoretically,” and I mentioned bugs, so let’s talk about our first one. The Keep() feature is designed to parse ASCII formatted text into cells. You pass it a range, the first line of data to start parsing, the first character position of data to start parsing, and the maximum length of each line. Go right ahead and try it. Even if you pass it data formatted as instructed in the manual’s example, Keep() will faithfully import it, but then just sits there. I tried sending lots of permutations of every control character I could think of, even the ETX XON at the end of regular sheets, and Keep() just keeps on keepin’ on until it times out (90 seconds), you press Cancel, or you get kicked off. If you’re interactively logged onto a service and able to cancel when the transmission completes, maybe that was enough in the day, but it doesn’t seem to work as described in the manual.

However, that’s more obnoxious than serious. Here’s the bad part: Keep() does terminate properly if you pass it sheet data instead of plain ASCII text. Unfortunately, it then proceeds to ignore the cell range you gave it and overwrite the entire sheet like you did a receive. But not all of it, by golly: it will filter formulas out in some misguided way of protecting you from mal-Taskware, I guess, meaning you can’t even pass it the same formulas back to reinstate them. You’d better hope your beautifully written login script was written to tape because if it gets what looks like a sheet, that script and the rest of the current worksheet are toast.

Well, then, let’s see what alternatives we have, and there’s a really encouraging-looking one in the manual called SheetIn(). This takes a single dummy argument, officially zero. “Theoretically” (that’s called foreshadowing, kids), it should be able to just automatically replace the sheet we’re viewing with the sheet it receives. I wrote up a test program that sends almost the exact same sheet data twice, differing only in the string so that we can see we completed the transmission. The first time, we’ll send it

A1=SheetIn(0)
A2-"Hello World"

and the second time

A1=SheetIn(0)
A2-"Yello Wyrld"

which will both compute out to the same dimensions and same memory usage. We’re replacing nothing but the string and even that is the same length, so if any contrived setup can work, it should be this one. After opening the Terminal, we press Do It, signaling the test program to send the first set of cells after a delay. We then load into the current sheet using the regular Receive option, which works fine. So far so good.

Now we press Do It again in the Terminal to signal the test program to send the second version, again after a delay, and press Special-Do It in A1 to receive it with SheetIn() this time. The receive completes successfully, A2 changes to the new string — and the machine crashes. In fact, it crashes so hard that all data is lost! This is such an explosive bug I just have to show you a video of it:

To make sure this wasn’t a hardware failure, I tried it on both my units, and they both crash in the same way.

What on earth happened? Without knowing the contents of the ROMs I can only theorize, but my best guess is that the action of loading the new sheet clears caches — including whatever internal representation of the formula the CPU was executing, causing it to either hit a bogus instruction directly ($00 is invalid, for example) or a bogus code pointer or token that leads it to a bogus instruction. An alternative theory is that the load process alters the processor stack, causing the CPU to hit a bad instruction returning from whatever routine handles SheetIn(). Like the 6502, the 6800, 6801 and 6803 don’t trap undefined opcodes (something I had to handle manually when virtualizing the 6502), but the 6303 can, and has a specific vector for it.

Recall that during a normal power-down, the CPU checksums the ROM and stores this value in its internal RAM before signalling the tape gate array to put it in standby. Powering down the system would require the CPU to send an explicit signal to the tape gate array, so either the vector was rigged deliberately as a fail-safe on the assumption an illegal instruction could never occur, or it merely ends up doing so erroneously. Either way, because the system got powered down without properly checksumming the ROM to its internal RAM, when we power it on again the CPU sees the checksum is wrong and assumes power was lost. This causes it to execute the cold-start routine and all data is cleared.

This isn’t a “killer POKE” because there’s no (apparent?) harm done to the hardware, but it’s still stupendously catastrophic. I suspect Convergent actually knew about this because while SheetIn() gets a brief mention in the Reference Guide it appears nowhere else in the documentation. Its exact converse SheetOut() does (which works fine), and our not-so-functional friend Keep() appears many places, but SheetIn() goes otherwise completely unacknowledged. Likely the problem was discovered too late in development to rewrite the firmware and they just decided to mostly pretend it didn’t exist.

But we know the regular manual Receive option works and can load entire spreadsheets with formulas just the way we want them. This requires the user to do some manual work when receiving generated data from a remote system, but if we send the two DC2 characters while the Terminal is active, we can immediately put the user into the Receive option and they just have to pick the desired destination sheet from there. We won’t know when they do, but we can warn them in the Terminal and implement a reasonable delay before starting the transmission.

So, to get the WorkSlate on the Internet, we’ll create a proxy that turns Gopher menus into spreadsheets. No, stop laughing and hear me out. Since Gopher is line by line, that corresponds very well to rows, we can use the scrolling display to break up each line into full screen width cells, and we can use the parts of the serial communications package that do work to send commands to the proxy and wait for results. This isn’t as clean as Keep() and SheetIn() would have been, but we’ll get to keep our data, and we won’t crash loading the very first site. To make the most of the WorkSlate’s limited capacity, the proxy will manage history and keep an internal copy of the current menu so that the WorkSlate only has to transmit short codes for selection, and cap menus and documents to 128 lines and the 12,868 byte limit.

Since the Terminal is a critical part of this project (it’s how we signal the user to start the Receive process), we’ll need it to be open the whole time but we still want a decently sized content area to actually see the Gopher site we’re visiting. Unlike the Calculator, the Terminal’s on-screen footprint is adjustable from Options, SET UP, Terminal, Display and then select # Lines. For these screenshots we’ll reduce it to four lines instead of the default seven.

We start the proxy running on the connected computer, and then enter the Terminal. The proxy sees the ENQ from the WorkSlate, sends a linefeed to acknowledge, and then displays a prompt. These prompts are how we synchronize the WorkSlate and the proxy.

When we press Do It, the proxy tells us transmission is imminent, and sends DC2 DC2 to the Terminal. This opens the Receive option automtically and we select the sheet we’ll use. I think most users can handle pressing one button in five seconds. The transmission is sent and the WorkSlate itself indicates success in the status row.

The default menu is built-in to the proxy; you could call it your bookmarks if you like. I just hardcoded Floodgap’s Gopher into it since obviously I use my own stuff mostly. Each row of the returned sheet starts with a single character column where the serial control formula sits (or nothing, for info rows), then a 39-column cell, then 40-column cells up to a 159 character row.

While waiting for a selection, the proxy goes into a loop where it sends a linefeed to the WorkSlate about once a second. This allows you to exit the Terminal and then immediately return to it, like for example if you were dealing in a document where you wanted more screen space to view it.

So that we don’t have to insert a complete request on every single valid row, the proxy sorts the menu into lines and determines what to do for each line. Each active line (i.e., each selectable option) has a formula of the form =Send(“###CRLF”)+WaitFor(““) (the CRLF is represented in tilde notation as ~-~, which the WorkSlate translates to a real $0d $0a), where ### is the line number. We can have no more than 128 lines, so three digits is sufficient.

When we’re ready to pick a menu option, we go to it with the cursor diamond and press Special-Do It. The WorkSlate sends the number command and line ending and waits for an asterisk in response. This is a signal from the proxy that the menu is ready (or there was an error, which is turned into a menu). The proxy backspaces over it, prints a new message to the user to get ready to accept a new sheet, and sends DC2 DC2 to open the Receive option. The new sheet is sent after the usual five-second delay. The “Quit” option is implemented by sending a special line “000” which causes the proxy to gracefully terminate, leaving the Terminal open.

As of this writing the Floodgap root gopher menu turns into 94 lines, the progress of which is shown in the status row.

And here we are. We can navigate around the document with the cursor diamond …

… including to the right for long rows, meaning we can read standard 80-column-formatted documents, no problem!

For item types that the proxy doesn’t yet support, instead of a formula we’ll just emit a × in that column as a marker. For obvious reasons we don’t support images, HTML, PDFs, binaries, etc., but I couldn’t think of a good way to support indexed search servers like Veronica-2 yet even though I really wanted to. I’ll talk about that at the end.

At the top of every menu is a Quit option, and if this isn’t the root, a Back option above that. If I ever make the default menu into a real bookmarks menu, it would make sense to put it in the history as well. The WorkSlate lets you jump to the top of a sheet with Shift-Up and to the bottom with Shift-Down, so I put those options at the top for easy access. Backing up is implemented with a history maintained by the proxy and sending special line number 999.

If you overflow a menu with too many rows, the last row is replaced with a × and an “Out of rows” message (the same applies to “Out of memory” when the proxy calculates the sheet will exceed the maximum bytes available). Again, Shift-Down will easily let you see if the Gopher menu or text file got truncated.

And here we’ll just quit, because I want to show you a video of all this instead. This clip is about five minutes, longer than my usual quick takes (because it takes a bit to transmit all that data), so I had to put it on YouTube.

The Gopher proxy comes in two pieces: the Gopher proxy itself, written in Perl, and a C program that allows you to run the proxy over a given serial port and implements the intercharacter delay. This descends from usb2ppp in BURLAP, so it will work on the same systems and accepts the same arguments (port speed, path, program and arguments) even though the only supported speed connected directly to the GPIO port is 9600bps. You start it with something like ./serport /path/to/your/port 9600 perl ./gopher.pl and then start Terminal on the WorkSlate. A running log for debug purposes is written to standard error on the computer running the proxy. Since the proxy feeds the WorkSlate all the sheet data it needs, there’s no bootstrap you need to load on the device itself.

There’s a couple improvements I was mulling over, but this entry has taken too much time and gone way too long, so I’ll ponder them later. The first is tabbed browsing (I said stop laughing). Since you can select which of the five sheets you want to load Gopher data into, you should be able to run multiple sessions. However, because the proxy maintains what it thinks the state of the current menu is, you can’t load one menu in one sheet and another menu in another sheet because the proxy doesn’t know which one is active. Solving this would require tracking a much larger history and adding more state information to the Send() string, maybe a hash key or something, but that would also make the sheet data bigger and reduce the memory available, though in practice I ended up exceeding the 128 row limit much more often than the 12K memory one.

The second is accepting input from the user, on a first pass to allow things like searching Veronica-2, but also to enter arbitrary hosts and selectors without having to modify the proxy or manually hunt for the right menu item. While SheetIn() exceeds uselessness verging on active harm, SheetOut() works just fine, so we could potentially send a very brief sheet with a form that the user fills out and then runs a formula to ship it back. The problem here is the Terminal: you can’t directly type into cells while it’s open. Either the user would have to modify the cell with Options-CHANGE or exit the Terminal and go back into it, neither catastrophic or particularly onerous, but also making an already clunky experience worse. I suppose the user could just type into the Terminal but the point is to make this work with the WorkSlate’s native interface. It’s a hack already, though, so I might implement input forms anyway just for fun in the future.

Why there wasn’t a WorkSlate on every 1980s executive desk

By now you’re probably wondering why every boardroom denizen didn’t have one of these things back in the day. Certainly for those who did own one, they really seemed to like it. William H. “Bill” Millard, who launched IMS Associates (builders of the WarGames-famous IMSAI 8080) and ComputerLand, one of the earliest retail vendors of the WorkSlate, openly raved about his. In a May 1984 interview with InfoWorld, he said, “The spreadsheet is the most exciting product I have ever seen personally. … Listen, I’m bananas about this WorkSlate. I carry it with me everywhere.” He further elucidated: “It’s no bigger than a three-ring binder, it’s plastic, has a workable keyboard, 128 by 128 spreadsheet, memory, tape cassette, power backup, built-in modem. You can sit on the airplane and be doing spreadsheets. To me this is a blockbuster product.”

Initial demand indeed got so high for the WorkSlate and its manufacturing costs were so sizeable that Convergent management soon started reconsidering the price point. The company announced a “WorkSlate System” package deal in early 1984 for $1495 (in 2024 dollars about $4500) with your choice of a MicroPrinter or CommPort, started selling both peripherals for $395 each ($1200) and increased the base price for the WorkSlate alone from $895 to $1195 ($3600). However, likely due to other more general-purpose portables like the TRS-80 Model 100 and allies, sales had already slowed markedly by then, and the new MSRPs eroded them further. By mid-year, while reviews still gave it solid marks for its portability, internal software and ease of use, the power-limited CPU and 16K RAM started becoming liabilities and the keyboard was never popular. Convergent marketing managed to make the WorkSlate “the official computer of the 1984 Democratic Party Convention” at the Moscone Center in San Francisco and donated 57 units, one for each delegation, but much like voters and Walter Mondale most of them didn’t have any use for it. “The capacity is too limited for our office,” complained the Oregon Democratic Party chair, and some delegations simply raffled theirs off for funds. The Washington state Democratic Party reportedly made $9000 from their own WorkSlate lottery.

Internally the company blamed Karen Toland, the manager who came up with the consumer sales idea in the first place, and she departed the same year. That spelled the end for any expansion of the “Ultra” line and the company pivoted internal development to Unix systems back along their vendor-first model. Convergent “paused” production of the WorkSlate in July 1984 and officially halted it outright by August, provoking a lawsuit from Oki Electronics who said Convergent had contracted to buy 253,000 circuit boards and only purchased 67,000 (making this figure the absolute upper bound on total machines manufactured). Oki further alleged that Convergent never paid for nearly $430,000 ($1.3m) worth of boards that did get shipped and complained they had thousands of custom boards in their warehouses they couldn’t sell to anyone else. Convergent started marking down remainder units with deep discounts and even sold them directly to Comdex attendees from their booth for $399 ($1200). Reports from 1985 found WorkSlates in liquidation selling for $300 or less.

In the end, Convergent and Oki settled out of court and the company eventually took an $8.4 million ($25.2m) write-off on the product. If the estimate of $3 million in WorkSlate sales in the November 5, 1984 InfoWorld is accurate, then Convergent could have sold no more than a few thousand of them. Allen Michels left the company in 1985 and Convergent never sold another direct consumer product again. Disappointing sales of the AT&T 7300 UNIX PC which its Special Projects division developed caused further financial problems for the company: by 1986 AT&T had only sold 10,000 of the 50,000 systems Convergent produced, and the 7300’s incompatibility with existing software ironically made AT&T’s earlier 6300 PC (a rebadged Olivetti M24) a much better buy. While simultaneously upgrading the MegaFrame to the CTIX-based MightyFrame with newer 68020 and 68030 CPUs, Convergent returned to its x86 workstation roots with the 80386 Server PC which could run CTOS, CTIX and MS-DOS. Its most noteworthy technical achievement was being able to run CTIX and MS-DOS applications simultaneously using the 80386’s virtual 8086 mode.

Unfortunately, neither of these products appealed to their traditional vendor base, who largely believed Convergent’s era as a market driver had passed. Convergent tried to get into the networking space by acquiring 3Com in March 1986 for $135 million ($385m), but the deal was scuttled at the last minute by 3Com shareholders who protested that the price undervalued the company. Only Unisys, newly formed in 1986 when Convergent’s old partner Burroughs bought out Sperry Rand, still regarded Convergent’s technologies favourably and bought them out too as part of an expansion strategy in 1988 for $350 million ($930m). All of Convergent’s former intellectual property, including the WorkSlate, remains with Unisys today.

Everything in this entry is on Github, and supplemental technical documentation is in the WorkSlate WorkSpace.

https://oldvcr.blogspot.com/2024/09/programming-convergent-workslates.html


Telegram apologizes to South Korea and takes down smutty deepfakes

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Unclear if this is a sign controversial service is cleaning up its act everywhere

Controversial social network Telegram has co-operated with South Korean authorities and taken down 25 videos depicting sex crimes.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/telegram_south_korea_deepfake_apology/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-04, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Tony Levin: The Iconic Bass Sounds Of Peter Gabriel, King Crimson, Paul Simon and more.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?si=hnalFYalZnXMoT5L&v=fRScUtBc6yU&feature=youtu.be


Washington pushing for deal to end Gaza conflict

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

Peace continues to elude Gaza as the conflict there speeds toward the one-year mark, with public rage over the recent killing of hostages, fears over the spread of polio — and amid all this, ongoing, delicate negotiations helmed by Washington. Anita Powell files from the White House.

https://www.voanews.com/a/washington-pushing-for-deal-to-end-gaza-conflict/7770668.html


OpenAI allegedly wants TSMC 1.6nm for in-house AI chip debut

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Another job for Broadcom, then

OpenAI’s first custom-designed silicon chips allegedly will be manufactured by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the same outfit churning out processors for Nvidia, Apple, AMD, Intel, and others.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/openai_ai_chips_tsmc/


DoJ reportedly advances Nvidia antitrust probe deeper with fresh subpoenas

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Uncle Sam apparently worried GPU giant may be punishing customers who shop around

The US Department of Justice on Tuesday is said to have stepped up its antitrust investigation into Nvidia, issuing subpoenas seeking evidence for its case against the AI chip giant.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/nvidia_doj_subpoena/


Judge rejects Trump’s request to intervene in hush money case

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

new york — A federal judge on Tuesday rejected Donald Trump’s request to intervene in his New York hush money criminal case, thwarting the former president’s latest bid to overturn his felony conviction and delay his sentencing.

U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein denied Trump’s lawyers permission to file paperwork asking the U.S. District Court in Manhattan to take control of the case. He said they had failed to satisfy the burden of proof required for a federal court to seize the case from the state court where Trump was convicted in May.

The ruling leaves Trump’s case in state court, where he is scheduled to be sentenced September 18.

Trump’s lawyers had sought to move the case to federal court so they could then seek to have the verdict overturned and the case dismissed in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling granting ex-presidents immunity from prosecution for official acts.

Hellerstein, who denied Trump’s request last year to move the case to federal court, said nothing about the Supreme Court’s July 1 ruling affected his “previous conclusion that the hush money payments” at issue in Trump’s case “were private, unofficial acts, outside the bounds of executive authority.”

Hellerstein sidestepped a defense argument that Trump had been the victim of “bias, conflicts of interest, and appearances of impropriety” at the hands of the judge who presided over the trial in state court, Juan M. Merchan.

“This Court does not have jurisdiction to hear Mr. Trump’s arguments concerning the propriety of the New York trial,” Hellerstein wrote in a four-page decision.

Instead, Hellerstein noted, Trump can pursue a state appeal or, after exhausting that path, seek review from the U.S. Supreme Court.

“It would be highly improper for this Court to evaluate the issues of bias, unfairness or error in the state trial,” Hellerstein wrote. “Those are issues for the state appellate courts.”

Hellerstein’s ruling came hours after Trump’s lawyers filed paperwork seeking his permission to pursue federal court intervention. Trump’s lawyers had initially asked the federal court to step in last week, but their papers were rejected because they hadn’t first obtained Hellerstein’s permission to file them, as required.

Messages seeking comment were left with Trump’s lawyers and the Manhattan district attorney’s office, which prosecuted the case.

Earlier in the day Tuesday, Manhattan prosecutors raised objections to Trump ’s effort to delay post-trial decisions in the case while he sought to have the federal court step in.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office argued in a letter to the judge presiding over the case in state court that he had no legal obligation to hold off on post-trial decisions and wait for Hellerstein to rule.

Prosecutors urged the trial judge, Juan M. Merchan, not to delay his rulings on two key defense requests: Trump’s call to delay sentencing until after the November election, and his bid to overturn the verdict and dismiss the case in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s presidential immunity ruling.

Merchan has said he will rule September 16 on Trump’s motion to overturn the verdict. His decision on delaying sentencing has been expected in the coming days.

Trump was convicted in May of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records to conceal a $130,000 hush money payment to porn actor Stormy Daniels, whose affair allegations threatened to disrupt his 2016 presidential run. Trump has denied her claim and said he did nothing wrong.

Falsifying business records is punishable by up to four years behind bars. Other potential sentences include probation or a fine.

https://www.voanews.com/a/judge-rejects-trump-s-request-to-intervene-in-hush-money-case-/7770633.html


Trump to plead not guilty to charges in revised election indictment

date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

https://www.voanews.com/a/trump-to-plead-not-guilty-to-charges-in-revised-election-indictment/7770635.html


Ex-senior New York State staffer charged in cash-for-favors scandal with China

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Bagging two posh properties, three luxury cars on a govt salary a bit of a giveaway – allegedly

The US Department of Justice has accused a now-former senior official of the New York State government of illegally advancing the interests of the Chinese government and communist party.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/new_york_aide_china_agent/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-04, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Automattic Welcomes Pedraum Pardehpoosh as VP of Product.

https://automattic.com/2024/09/03/welcome-pedraum-pardehpoosh/


date: 2024-09-04, from: VOA News USA

SAO PAULO, brazil — Elon Musk’s satellite-based internet service provider Starlink backtracked Tuesday and said it will comply with a Brazilian Supreme Court justice’s order to block the billionaire’s social media platform, X. 

In a statement posted on X, Starlink said it will heed Justice Alexandre de Moraes’ order despite him having frozen the company’s assets. Previously, it informally told the telecommunications regulator that it would not comply until de Moraes reversed course. 

“Regardless of the illegal treatment of Starlink in freezing our assets, we are complying with the order to block access to X in Brazil,” the company statement said. “We continue to pursue all legal avenues, as are others who agree that @alexandre’s recent order violate the Brazilian constitution.” 

De Moraes froze the company’s accounts last week as a means to compel it to cover X’s fines, which exceed $3 million, reasoning that the two companies are part of the same economic group. Starlink filed an appeal, its law firm Veirano told The Associated Press on August 3, but has declined to comment further in the days since. 

Days later, the justice ordered the suspension of X for refusing to name a local legal representative, as required in order to receive notifications of court decisions and swiftly take any requisite action — particularly, in X’s case, the taking down of accounts.

A Supreme Court panel unanimously upheld the block on Monday, undermining efforts by Musk and his supporters to cast the justice as an authoritarian renegade intent on censoring political speech in Brazil. 

Had Starlink continued to disobey de Moraes by providing access, telecommunications regulator Anatel could eventually have seized equipment from Starlink’s 23 ground stations that ensure the quality of its internet service, Arthur Coimbra, an Anatel board member, said on a video call from his office in Brasilia. 

The company has said it has more than 250,000 clients in Brazil, and it is particularly popular in the country’s more remote corners where it is the only available option. 

Some legal experts questioned de Moraes’ basis for freezing Starlink’s accounts, given that its parent company SpaceX has no integration with X. Musk noted on X that the two companies have different shareholder structures. 

X has clashed with de Moraes over its reluctance to block users — mostly far-right activists accused of undermining Brazilian democracy and allies of former President Jair Bolsonaro — and has alleged that de Moraes wants an in-country legal representative so that Brazilian authorities can exert leverage over the company by having someone to arrest.

https://www.voanews.com/a/musk-s-starlink-will-comply-with-judge-s-order-to-block-x-in-brazil-/7770271.html


The Week in Renewable Fights

date: 2024-09-04, from: Heatmap News



1. York County, South Carolina Silfab Solar’s efforts to build a solar panel factory in coastal South Carolina have become a nexus of fear politics in recent weeks, even as the community’s Republican congressman tries to assuage residents’ concerns.

2. Knox County, Nebraska North Fork Wind LLC last week joined with landowners to sue Knox County in federal court over expansions to a stepback ordinance that the company says were expressly designed to kill their 600-megawatt wind farm.

3. Madison County, Ohio What could be the largest agri-voltaics project in the U.S. may be poised for a showdown in the Ohio Supreme Court.

4. Nantucket County, Massachusetts If you thought the Vineyard Wind debacle would go away, the fishermen want you to know you’re sadly mistaken.

5. San Luis Obispo County, California I’m monitoring resistance to an ongoing study by Port San Luis and Clean Energy Terminals in central California on whether to become an offshore wind operation and maintenance hub.

Here are a few more hotspots I’m watching…

https://heatmap.news/plus/the-fight/hotspots/silfab-solar-north-fork-oak-run


US govt halts medical study into Havana Syndrome, cites ‘coercion’ of participants

date: 2024-09-04, updated: 2024-09-04, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

What was screwing with minds of US diplomats – wait, is that a black helicopt…

An inquiry by the US government’s National Institutes of Health (NIH) into Havana Syndrome – the seemingly mysterious illness that struck down American and Canadian diplomats in Cuba and then around the world – has been halted after it was found the study’s participants had been coerced into taking part.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/04/us_halts_havana_syndrome/


Bem Vindos ao Bluesky!

date: 2024-09-04, from: Bluesky web news

Que semana! Nos últimos dias mais de 2.6 milhões de usuários se registraram na plataforma, sendo que mais de 85% são Brasileiros. Sejam muito bem vindos, estamos muito contentes por tê-los aqui!

https://bsky.social/about/blog/09-04-2024-bem-vindos


Welcome to Bluesky!

date: 2024-09-04, from: Bluesky web news

What a week! In the last few days, Bluesky has grown by more than 2.6 million users, over 85% of which are Brazilian. Welcome, we are so excited to have you here!

https://bsky.social/about/blog/09-04-2024-welcome


From jobs to food, Houston is most diverse large city in the US

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

When people think about the US state of Texas, they often think of cowboys in big hats and pointy-toed boots. But Texas is more than that. A study found that its biggest city, Houston, is the most diverse large city in the US. This is reflected in the immigrants and the many cuisines and cultures they brought with them to Texas. VOA’s Elizabeth Lee reports.

https://www.voanews.com/a/from-jobs-to-food-houston-is-most-diverse-large-city-in-the-us/7770268.html


Lilbits: Android 15 source code released, Copilot+ PCs with Intel and AMD chips, and an iPhone case that’s also a game controller

date: 2024-09-03, from: Liliputing

The annual IFA show kicks off in Berlin this week, and with Intel and Qualcomm introducing new mobile chips with high-performance NPUs, it’s a safe bet that we’re going to see a whole bunch of new Microsoft Copilot+ PC branded laptops. Dell and Samsung have already announced some, and more are Meanwhile Google has released […]

The post Lilbits: Android 15 source code released, Copilot+ PCs with Intel and AMD chips, and an iPhone case that’s also a game controller appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/lilbits-android-15-source-code-released-copilot-pcs-with-intel-and-amd-chips-and-an-iphone-case-thats-also-a-game-controller/


US charges Hamas leader, senior militants in Oct. 7 attack on Israel

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

washington — The Justice Department announced criminal charges Tuesday against Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and other senior militants in connection with the October 7, 2023, rampage in Israel, marking the first effort by American law enforcement to formally call out the masterminds of the attack. 

The seven-count criminal complaint filed in federal court in New York City includes charges such as conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization resulting in death, conspiracy to murder U.S. nationals, and conspiracy to finance terrorism. It also accuses Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah of providing financial support, weapons, including rockets, and military supplies to Hamas for use in attacks. 

The impact of the case might be mostly symbolic given that Sinwar is believed to be hiding in tunnels in Gaza and the Justice Department says three of the six defendants are believed to be dead. But officials say additional actions are expected as part of a broader effort to target a militant group that the U.S. designated as a foreign terrorist organization in 1997 and that over the decades has been linked to a series of deadly attacks on Israel, including suicide bombings. 

The complaint was originally filed under seal in February to give the U.S. time to try to take into custody then-Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh and other defendants, but it was unsealed Tuesday after Haniyeh’s death in July and other developments in the region lessened the need for secrecy, the Justice Department said. 

“The charges unsealed today are just one part of our effort to target every aspect of Hamas’ operations,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a video statement. “These actions will not be our last.” 

Washington developing new cease-fire plan

The charges come as the White House says it is developing a new cease-fire and hostage deal proposal with its Egyptian and Qatari counterparts to try to bring about an agreement between Israel and Hamas to end the nearly 11-month war in Gaza. 

A U.S. official, who was not authorized to talk publicly about the case and spoke on condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press there was no reason to believe the charges would affect the ongoing negotiations. 

National security spokesman John Kirby said the recent “executions” of six hostages, including one American, Hersh Goldberg-Polin, by Hamas underscore “the sense of urgency” in the talks. 

“We are investigating Hersh’s murder, and each and every one of the brutal murders of Americans, as acts of terrorism,” Garland said in the statement. “We will continue to support the whole of government effort to bring the Americans still being held hostage home.” 

Sinwar was appointed the overall head of Hamas after the killing of Haniyeh in Iran and sits atop Israel’s most-wanted list. He is believed to have spent most of the past 10 months living in tunnels under Gaza, and it is unclear how much contact he has with the outside world. He was a long-serving Palestinian prisoner freed in an exchange of the type that would be part of a cease-fire and hostage release deal. 

Haniyeh was also charged. 

Other Hamas leaders facing charges include Marwan Issa, deputy leader of Hamas’ armed wing in Gaza, who helped plan last year’s attack and who Israel says was killed when its fighter jets struck an underground compound in central Gaza in March; Khaled Mashaal, another Haniyeh deputy and a former leader of the group thought to be based in Qatar; Mohammed Deif, Hamas’ longtime shadowy military leader who was thought to be killed in an Israeli airstrike in southern Gaza in July; and Lebanon-based Ali Baraka, Hamas’ head of external relations. 

Charges serve as ‘tool’

The charges are “yet another tool” for the U.S. to respond to the threat Hamas poses to the U.S. and its ally Israel, said Merissa Khurma, Middle East program director at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington. 

“If Sinwar is found and brought to justice for planning the October 7 attacks, it would be a significant win for the U.S. and for all those who lost loved ones,” she said by email. 

However, with Sinwar in hiding, Khurma doesn’t see the charges adding more pressure on Hamas. She noted that the chief prosecutor of the world’s top war crimes court sought arrest warrants for Hamas leaders like Sinwar and it didn’t change their behavior or weaken them in the cease-fire negotiations. 

She said the case was still important for the U.S. because many of those killed or kidnapped were Americans and because the country doesn’t recognize the International Criminal Court. 

During the October 7 attacks, militants killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 people hostage. Roughly 100 hostages remain, a third of whom are believed to be dead. 

The criminal complaint describes the massacre as the “most violent, large-scale terrorist attack” in Hamas’ history. It details how Hamas operatives — who arrived in southern Israel with “trucks, motorcycles, bulldozers, speedboats, and paragliders” — engaged in a brutal campaign of violence that included rape, genital mutilation and machine-gun shootings at close range. 

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed more than 40,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. Israel has said most of the dead are combatants. Hamas has said most of the dead are women and children.

The war has caused widespread destruction, forced the vast majority of Gaza’s 2.3 million residents to flee their homes, often multiple times, and created a humanitarian catastrophe. 

Hamas has accused Israel of dragging out months of negotiations by issuing new demands, including for lasting Israeli control over the Philadelphi corridor along the border of Egypt and a second corridor running across Gaza. 

Hamas has offered to release all hostages in return for an end to the war, the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces, and the release of a large number of Palestinian prisoners, including high-profile militants — broadly the terms called for under an outline for a deal put forward by President Joe Biden in July. 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pledged “total victory” over Hamas and blames it for the failure of the negotiations.

https://www.voanews.com/a/7770243.html


Trump, Harris campaign on economy, prepare for debate

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

With just over two months to go before Election Day in the United States, presidential nominees Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are campaigning on the economy and preparing for their first debate. VOA correspondent Scott Stearns looks at the race.

https://www.voanews.com/a/trump-harris-campaign-on-economy-prepare-for-debate/7770241.html


Phoenix weathers 100 days of 100-plus degree temps as heat scorches western US

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

https://www.voanews.com/a/phoenix-weathers-100-days-of-100-plus-degree-temps-as-heat-scorches-western-us-/7770263.html


MSI Claw 8 AI+ handheld gaming PC with Intel Lunar Lake is coming in 2025

date: 2024-09-03, from: Liliputing

The MSI Claw was the first handheld gaming PC featuring an Intel Meteor Lake processor with Intel Arc graphics. And by most reports, the 7 inch handheld wasn’t a very good mobile gaming device due to a combination of poor performance and poor battery life when compared with recent AMD-powered models like the Steam Deck […]

The post MSI Claw 8 AI+ handheld gaming PC with Intel Lunar Lake is coming in 2025 appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/msi-claw-8-ai-handheld-gaming-pc-with-intel-lunar-lake-is-coming-in-2025/


White House thinks it’s time to fix the insecure glue of the internet: Yup, BGP

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Better late than never

The White House on Tuesday indicated it hopes to shore up the weak security of internet routing, specifically the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP).…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/white_house_bgp_security/


US seeks to reassure voters that presidential election will be safe

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

washington — Top U.S. election security officials are asking American voters to tune out the noise and reject what they describe as unfounded claims that the coming presidential election will be rigged. 

Instead, in the first of a series of election security briefings planned in the run-up to November’s election, they say U.S. voters should have confidence that when they go to the polls their votes will be counted accurately. 

“Throughout the next few months, you are going to hear a lot of different things from different sources. The most important thing is to recognize the signal through the noise, the facts from the fiction,” said Jen Easterly, director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), which is responsible for election security. 

“Our elections process, election infrastructure has never been more secure, and the election stakeholder community has never been stronger,” Easterly said, briefing reporters Tuesday. “It’s why I have confidence in the integrity of our elections and why the American people should, as well.” 

Easterly’s effort to reassure voters comes a little over a month after the U.S. intelligence community issued its own warning that U.S. adversaries, led by Russia, Iran and China, are seeking to meddle with the November election. 

But those efforts highlighted in the intelligence community warning are spearheaded by influence operations or disinformation campaigns designed to sow doubt about the U.S. election process and to help or hinder certain candidates. 

In contrast, efforts by U.S. adversaries to attack or hack systems used to carry out the election, and tally votes, have so far been nonexistent. 

“We have not seen any intent to interfere in the elections process,” Cait Conley, CISA senior adviser, told reporters.  

And while some of that could be explained by what officials describe as a steady stream of investments in election security infrastructure — including the hiring of more field offices and election security advisers — CISA officials are not taking the lack of malicious activity for granted. 

“That is something that could change at any moment,” Conley said. “When we look at this threat landscape for this election cycle, it truly is arguably the most complex yet.” 

CISA said other efforts to safeguard the upcoming presidential election include a variety of election security exercises, accuracy testing for voting machines, and enhanced security measures to protect election-related computer networks. 

They also emphasize that none of the systems that record votes are connected to the internet and that 97% of U.S. voters will cast ballots in jurisdictions that have paper ballots as back-ups. 

None of that, however, will stop countries such as Russia, Iran and China from trying to convince voters that things are going wrong. 

Easterly said one of the biggest concerns is that U.S adversaries will portray minor hiccups as major scandals. 

“It’s almost inevitable that somewhere across the country someone will forget to bring the keys to unlock the polling location,” she said. “Someone will unplug a printer to plug in a crockpot. A storm may cause a polling site to lose electricity.” 

Cybercriminals might even find a way to temporarily disable what officials describe as election-adjacent systems, including websites for state and local agencies that record and tally votes. 

“We can absolutely expect that our foreign adversaries will remain a persistent threat to attempting to undermine American confidence in our democracy and our institutions and to sow partisan discord,” she said. “It is up to all of us not to let our foreign adversaries be successful.” 

Easterly and Conley said the best way to avoid unnecessary panic is for American voters to rely on state and local election officials for information. 

But if Americans rely on word-of-mouth social media accounts, it could cause trouble. 

“It’s a hard problem for social media companies,” a senior U.S. intelligence official said at a recent briefing, speaking to reporters on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive issues. 

“The PRC [People’s Republic of China] definitely uses influence actors on social media to try to at least stir discord in the United States,” the official said. “So, I would expect that platform to be [used].” 

And there is growing evidence that China may be ramping up its efforts. 

Graphika, a social media analytics firm, issued a report Tuesday warning that a Chinese-linked disinformation operation known as “Spamoflage” has grown increasingly aggressive. 

Graphika said it has identified more than a dozen accounts on platforms including X, formerly known as Twitter, and on TikTok “claiming to be U.S. citizens and/or U.S.-focused peace, human rights, and information integrity advocates frustrated by American politics and the West.” 

“These accounts have seeded and amplified content denigrating Democratic and Republican candidates, sowing doubt in the legitimacy of the U.S. electoral process, and spreading divisive narratives about sensitive social issues,” the Graphika report said, though it added that few of the accounts had managed to gain much traction. 

Graphika’s conclusions seem to be consistent with earlier assessments by Meta, the social media company behind Facebook and Instagram, when it first identified the effort last year. 

“Despite the very large number of accounts and platforms it used, Spamouflage consistently struggled to reach beyond its own [fake] echo chamber,” Meta said at the time. “Only a few instances have been reported when Spamouflage content on Twitter and YouTube was amplified by real-world influencers.”

https://www.voanews.com/a/us-seeks-to-reassure-voters-presidential-election-will-be-safe/7770225.html


Turkey releases 5 of 15 detained in assault of 2 US Marines

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

Washington — Turkey placed 10 people in pretrial detention Tuesday in connection with an assault of two U.S. Marines in Turkey’s western port city of Izmir.

Several members of a Turkish nationalist group, Turkey Youth Union, or TGB, on Monday attacked two U.S. Marines from the amphibious assault ship USS Wasp, which docked in the city’s port on Sunday, according to the Izmir Governorate.

Pentagon press secretary Major General Pat Ryder told reporters Tuesday that the two Marines were not injured and are “safe.” He said they were aided by other Marines in the area during the incident and were subsequently taken to a local hospital for evaluation as a precaution before returning to the Wasp.

“This is clearly a troubling incident. We are grateful for the support of the Turkish authorities who are looking into this,” Ryder said.

He added that no Marines have been detained by authorities, and that those involved in the incident are cooperating with investigators.

Turkish authorities arrested 15 people on Monday over the incident, and a Turkish court released five of them under judicial control on Tuesday. The remaining 10 were ordered held in pretrial detention until they hear charges against them.

According to a video shared by the TGB on social media, TGB members were seen as they put a sack over a U.S. Marine’s head.

“No one will be able to respond to the cries for help from U.S. soldiers. Your hands are stained with the blood of our brave soldiers and thousands of Palestinians. You will leave our lands!” the TGB wrote on X, tagging the X accounts of the U.S. Embassy in Turkey and the U.S. Department of Defense.

“[U.S. soldiers] put a sack over the head of our soldiers in Sulaymaniyah,” a TGB member said in the video, referring to an incident in which U.S. troops arrested at least 11 Turkish soldiers in northern Iraq in 2003.

Turkish media reported that the heads of the arrested Turkish soldiers were covered in sacks, and the arrests stirred a diplomatic crisis between Turkey and the United States. The incident is widely known as the “Hood event” in Turkey.

The video also showed several TGB members chanting, “Yankee, go home,” a historical anti-American slogan associated with 1960s leftist protests in Turkey.

Reports confirmed

In a statement on Monday, the Izmir Governorate announced that two women and 13 men, who are members of the TGB, physically attacked two U.S. military personnel in civilian clothes.

“Five U.S. soldiers in civilian clothes joined the incident after seeing it from a distance, and our security forces quickly intervened,” the governorate said.

The U.S. Embassy in Turkey confirmed reports of the attack on Monday. “We thank Turkish authorities for their rapid response and ongoing investigation,” the embassy said on X.

In a statement to VOA, a White House National Security Council spokesperson also said, “We are troubled by this assault on U.S. service members and are appreciative that Turkish police are taking this matter seriously and holding those responsible accountable.”

On Sunday, Defense Visual Information Distribution Service, or DVIDS, reported that the Wasp was in Turkey “for a regularly scheduled port visit” that “provides an opportunity to further enhance strategic partnership between the U.S. and Turkiye.”

According to the DVIDS, the schedule of the U.S. personnel included “tours organized by the ship’s Morale, Welfare and Recreation team, such as a visit to the Ephesus historical site, snorkeling and scuba diving, and a guided tour of Izmir’s cultural sites.”

U.S. Sixth Fleet spokesperson and Navy Commander Timothy Gorman told VOA the two assaulted Marines were from the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit.

Middle East tensions

The U.S. sent the Wasp to the eastern Mediterranean for deterrence reasons in June amid the increased tensions between Hezbollah and Israel. The USS Bataan and the aircraft carrier USS Gerald Ford were previously deployed to the region after the October 7 attack.

Omer Celik, the spokesperson for Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party, criticized the deployments.

“Every warship, every aircraft carrier sent there by other countries will provide an opportunity that will benefit those who say violence should continue and violence should spread even more to the region,” Celik said.

The Wasp participated in bilateral at-sea training with two Turkish navy ships in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea from August 13 to 17. U.S. Marines shared information about the joint training, but Turkey’s National Defense Ministry did not publicly announce it.

Later in August, Turkish media reported that the Wasp docked in Cyprus as part of the increased U.S. presence in the eastern Mediterranean. Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party criticized the government for not disclosing the joint training.

VOA Turkish Service’s Ogulcan Bakiler from Izmir and Begum Donmez Ersoz from Istanbul contributed to this story. VOA’s Pentagon correspondent Carla Babb also contributed.

https://www.voanews.com/a/turkey-releases-5-of-15-detained-in-assault-of-2-us-marines/7770191.html


Former aide to New York governor charged with acting as ‘undisclosed’ agent for China

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

https://www.voanews.com/a/former-aide-to-new-york-governor-charged-with-acting-as-undisclosed-agent-for-china/7770185.html


UK trio pleads guilty to operating $10M MFA bypass biz

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

The group bragged they could steal one-time passwords from Apply Pay and 30+ sites

A trio of men have pleaded guilty to running a multifactor authentication (MFA) bypass ring in the UK, which authorities estimate has raked in millions in less than two years. …

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/uk_trio_pleads_guilty_mfa_bypass/


La NASA invita a los medios al lanzamiento de Europa Clipper

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

Read this release in English here. La NASA y SpaceX tienen planificado que la ventana para el lanzamiento de la misión Europa Clipper se abra el jueves 10 de octubre. Esta misión ayudará a los científicos a determinar si una de las lunas heladas de Júpiter podría albergar vida. Esta misión de la NASA despegará a […]

https://www.nasa.gov/es/la-nasa-invita-a-los-medios-al-lanzamiento-de-europa-clipper/


A Navajo Weaving of an Intel Pentium Processor

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/a-navajo-weaving-of-an-intel-pentium-processor


El X-59 de la NASA avanza en las pruebas de preparación para volar

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

Read this story in English here. El equipo que prepara el X-59 de la NASA continúa realizando pruebas en preparación para que el avión supersónico y silencioso realice su primer vuelo. Esto incluye un trío de importantes pruebas estructurales e inspecciones críticas en el camino hacia el vuelo. El X-59 es un avión experimental que […]

https://www.nasa.gov/es/el-x-59-de-la-nasa-avanza-en-las-pruebas-de-preparacion-para-volar/


New Photographs Reveal Decay of the Titanic and Collapse of Its Iconic Railing

date: 2024-09-03, from: Smithsonian Magazine

An expedition this summer documented signs of deterioration on the wreck, but it also rediscovered the Diana of Versailles statue, the centerpiece of the ship’s first-class lounge

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/new-photographs-reveal-decay-of-the-titanic-and-collapse-of-its-iconic-railing-180985011/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Oprah’s upcoming AI television special sparks outrage among tech critics.

https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2024/09/oprahs-upcoming-ai-television-special-sparks-outrage-among-tech-critics/


Atul Gawande: Tuberculosis is still the world’s #1 infectious disease killer (1+…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045211-atul-gawande-tuberculosis


AnandTech Farewell

date: 2024-09-03, from: Michael Tsai

Ryan Smith (tweet, Hacker News): For better or worse, we’ve reached the end of a long journey – one that started with a review of an AMD processor, and has ended with the review of an AMD processor. It’s fittingly poetic, but it is also a testament to the fact that we’ve spent the last […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/03/anandtech-farewell/


Kevan Parekh Replaces Luca Maestri

date: 2024-09-03, from: Michael Tsai

Apple (Slashdot, ArsTechnica, MacRumors): Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri will transition from his role on January 1, 2025. Maestri will continue to lead the Corporate Services teams, including information systems and technology, information security, and real estate and development, reporting to Apple CEO Tim Cook. As part of a planned succession, Kevan Parekh, Apple’s Vice […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/03/kevan-parekh-replaces-luca-maestri/


Apple Books Layoffs

date: 2024-09-03, from: Michael Tsai

Dan Moren (Slashdot, ArsTechnica, MacRumors, The Verge): In a report at Bloomberg (paywalled, naturally), Mark Gurman says that the company has laid off about a hundred people, primarily in the team behind Apple Books and the Apple Bookstore.[…]Apple has managed to achieve itself a comfortable, if distant second place in ebooks without really spending much […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/03/apple-books-layoffs/


AppleVis Will Continue Under Be My Eyes

date: 2024-09-03, from: Michael Tsai

Michael Hansen: As many of you already know, David Goodwin founded AppleVis in July 2010. Since that first day, David has worked tirelessly, day in and day out, to develop and maintain the AppleVis website. While myself and the rest of the AppleVis Editorial Team have supported David with the daily operations of the site, […]

https://mjtsai.com/blog/2024/09/03/applevis-will-continue-under-be-my-eyes/


@IIIF Mastodon feed (date: 2024-09-03, from: IIIF Mastodon feed)

The Call for Proposals for the 2024 Online Meeting closes on 15 September.

Read the full CfP and submit a proposal at: iiif.io/event/2024/online-meet

https://glammr.us/@IIIF/113075399592617196


40 Years Ago: STS-41D – First Flight of Space Shuttle Discovery

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

On Aug. 30, 1984, space shuttle Discovery lifted off on the STS-41D mission, joining NASA’s fleet as the third space qualified orbiter. The newest shuttle incorporated newer technologies making it significantly lighter than its two predecessors. Discovery lofted the heaviest payload up to that time in shuttle history. The six-person crew included five NASA astronauts […]

https://www.nasa.gov/history/40-years-ago-sts-41d-first-flight-of-space-shuttle-discovery/


New School Year Drop-Off and Pick-Up Rules. “Approach the White Zone at…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045219-new-school-year-drop-off-


La NASA invita a creadores de las redes sociales al lanzamiento de la misión Europa Clipper

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

Read this article in English here La NASA invita a los creadores de contenido digital a inscribirse para asistir al lanzamiento de la nave espacial Europa Clipper, la cual recopilará datos para ayudar a los científicos a determinar si Europa, la luna helada de Júpiter, podría albergar vida. La NASA y SpaceX planean que la […]

https://www.nasa.gov/es/la-nasa-invita-a-creadores-de-las-redes-sociales-al-lanzamiento-de-la-mision-europa-clipper/


NASA Mission Gets Its First Snapshot of Polar Heat Emissions

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

The PREFIRE mission will help develop a more detailed understanding of how much heat the Arctic and Antarctica radiate into space and how this influences global climate. NASA’s newest climate mission has started collecting data on the amount of heat in the form of far-infrared radiation that the Arctic and Antarctic environments emit to space. […]

https://www.nasa.gov/missions/prefire/nasa-mission-gets-its-first-snapshot-of-polar-heat-emissions/


NASA Invites Media to View Launch of Jupiter Moon Mission

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

NASA and SpaceX are targeting a launch period opening Thursday, Oct. 10, for the agency’s Europa Clipper mission, which will help scientists determine if one of Jupiter’s icy moons could support life. The mission will launch on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Europa Clipper […]

https://www.nasa.gov/news-release/nasa-invites-media-to-view-launch-of-jupiter-moon-mission/


Miners Unearth a Mummified Woolly Rhino in Siberia, With an Intact Horn and Soft Tissue

date: 2024-09-03, from: Smithsonian Magazine

The rare discovery will help scientists find out more about the prehistoric animal’s development, diet and living conditions

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/miners-unearth-a-mummified-woolly-rhino-in-siberia-with-an-intact-horn-and-soft-tissue-180984982/


Archaeologists in Iceland Can’t Agree Which Animal This Mysterious Viking-Era Toy Depicts

date: 2024-09-03, from: Smithsonian Magazine

The tenth-century stone figurine, alternatively identified as a pig, a bear or a dog, sheds light on the lives of long-ago Norse children

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/archaeologists-iceland-cant-agree-which-animal-this-mysterious-viking-era-toy-depicts-180985009/


America Must Free Itself from the Tyranny of the Penny. “Few things…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045217-america-must-free-itself-


Intel’s 120 TOPS Lunar Lake AI PC chips have landed

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

And all it took was some good old fashioned outsourcing to TSMC

Intel’s first chips to exceed Microsoft’s lofty Copilot+ performance target have arrived, promising up to 120 TOPS of AI performance across an improved CPU, GPU and NPU. This development brought to you by the move to jump ship to TSMC.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/intels_lunar_lake_mobile_chips/


K-pop documentary looks at how industry embraces diversity

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

SEOUL, South Korea — An Apple TV+ documentary series, “K-pop Idols,” premiering Friday, offers an intimate look at how the K-pop industry is embracing diversity while grappling with challenges in a field that demands perfection.

The six-part series features Korean American star Jessi and up-and-coming K-pop bands like Cravity and Blackswan, documenting the highs and lows of their careers.

K-pop is known for its blend of vocals with precise choreography.

Blackswan members Fatou and Nvee told The Associated Press they practice up to 10 hours daily, including choreography and vocal sessions before the “comeback” season which refers to a string of events to promote their latest songs.

The grueling practice starts early.

Once under contract, K-pop trainees enter a system that includes classes in manners, language, dance, and choreography. As of 2022, there were 752 K-pop trainees under entertainment labels, according to a Korea Creative Content Agency report.

Despite recent pushback against the perennial “dark side of K-pop” narrative, the documentary shows that some industry problems persist.

Former Blackswan member Youngheun said members had a curfew and were not allowed to drink or date. “We even had to report when we were getting our nails done and going to the convenience store in front of our house,” she shared in the documentary.

Rigid control extends to diet.

Blackswan member Gabi is seen eating a meal of egg, chicken breast and what resembles sweet potato sticks during her trainee period. “I am dieting because Mr. Yoon [the label’s head] told me I need to lose weight,” Gabi said.

The pressure applies to boy bands, too.

Cravity member Wonjin shared that he was given two weeks to lose weight to join the label. “I would eat like one egg a day […] I lost about 7kg,” he said in the documentary.

Bradley Cramp, one of executive producers of the documentary, noted that such restrictions exist in other competitive industries as well.

“I honestly don’t know one idol or elite sports athlete or entertainer that doesn’t deal with the issue of diet and self-image and mental health to some degree or another,” he told The Associated Press.

The documentary also touches on K-pop’s new challenge: embracing diversity.

Following BTS’ international success, K-pop labels have been actively recruiting foreign talents, which sometimes brings unfamiliar challenges.

In the documentary, Yoon Deung Ryong, the founder of Blackswan’s label DR Music, struggles to settle internal conflicts among members, which later escalated to online clashes between fans.

“If the company says, ‘don’t fight,’ they won’t fight,” he said, referring to traditional K-pop groups. He added that he can’t control a “multinational group” the same way because of language and cultural differences. There are currently no Korean members in Blackswan after member changes.

With K-pop’s global expansion, fundamental questions remain about the essence of K-pop.

“In a K-pop group, if there are no Korean members, I feel like it’s just a K-pop cover group, isn’t it?” Blackswan’s former Korean member Youngheun said in the documentary.

However, Cravity’s Hyeongjun disagrees. “If foreigners come to Korea and sing in other languages, I am not sure if I can call that K-pop, but since they [Blackswan members] are active in Korea and use Korean, they are K-pop.”

Cramp said social media has impacted K-pop’s ecosystem in various ways, including creating a “symbiotic relationship” between K-pop stars and fans, and forcing stars to live their lives “under a microscope.”

“There’s a desire to be real. But on the other hand, you have to obviously keep certain things kind of out of the public spotlight,” he told the AP. “You want to be famous, but yet at the same time, you still want your privacy and you want to be able to go and have dinner with your friends and have a good time and not be filmed doing it.”

“K-Pop Idols” is now available on Apple TV+.

https://www.voanews.com/a/k-pop-idols-documentary-looks-at-how-the-k-pop-industry-is-embracing-diversity-/7766336.html


Sextortion Scammers Try to Scare People by Sending Photos of Their Homes

date: 2024-09-03, from: 404 Media Group

If you got an email containing your address and a PDF with a photo of your street, don’t freak out: it’s a fake sextortion scheme.

https://www.404media.co/sextortion-scammers-try-to-scare-people-by-sending-photos-of-their-homes/


Spamouflage trolls pretend to be American patriots on X, TikTok ahead of US presidential election

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

No, Abbey is not really a “pure patriotic girl”

Spamouflage, the Beijing-linked trolls known for spreading fake news about American politics, is back with new accounts on X and TikTok that claim to be frustrated US voters in “more aggressive” attempts to influence the upcoming presidential election.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/spamouflage_trolls_us_elections/


The District Sleeps Alone Tonight (Sylvan Esso Remix)

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/the-district-sleeps-alone-tonight-sylvan-esso-remix


The Gulf of Thailand May Be the Next U.S.-China Flashpoint

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: RAND blog

Geopolitical tensions between China and the United States have escalated in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait, raising fears of war. The Gulf of Thailand has remained relatively calm, but that may change as Beijing undertakes controversial projects that could inflame the region.

https://www.rand.org/pubs/commentary/2024/09/the-gulf-of-thailand-may-be-the-next-us-china-flashpoint.html


@Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed (date: 2024-09-03, from: Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed)

Fighting words.
mastodon.social/@lambdageek/11

https://mastodon.social/@Migueldeicaza/113074914601088673


Scriptnotes, Episode 649: The Comedic Premise with Simon Rich, Transcript

date: 2024-09-03, from: John August blog

The original post for this episode can be found here. John August: Hello and welcome. My name is John August, and you are listening to Episode 649 of Scriptnotes. It’s a podcast about screenwriting and things that are interesting to screenwriters. Today on the show, which ideas are inherently funny? We’ll discuss what makes a […] The post Scriptnotes, Episode 649: The Comedic Premise with Simon Rich, Transcript first appeared on John August.

https://johnaugust.com/2024/scriptnotes-episode-649-the-comedic-premise-with-simon-rich-transcript


Mercury probe BepiColombo thrusters are acting up, but science marches on

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Trajectory tweak means a delay of almost a year, though 165 km flyby should produce eye candy

The BepiColombo spacecraft is to make a closer-than-planned flyby of Mercury this week, whizzing past the planet at approximately 165 km from the surface after the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Flight Dynamics team tweaked the trajectory to compensate for malfunctioning thrusters.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/bepicolombo_trajectory_change/


Scriptnotes, Episode 648: Farewell Scenes, Transcript

date: 2024-09-03, from: John August blog

The original post for this episode can be found here. John August: Hey, this is John. Heads up that today’s episode has just a little bit of swearing in it. Hello and welcome. My name is John August, and you’re listening to Episode 648 of Scriptnotes. It’s a podcast about screenwriting and things that are […] The post Scriptnotes, Episode 648: Farewell Scenes, Transcript first appeared on John August.

https://johnaugust.com/2024/scriptnotes-episode-648-farewell-scenes-transcript


Scriptnotes, Episode 647: Crafting Your Ending, Transcript

date: 2024-09-03, from: John August blog

The original post for this episode can be found here. John August: Hello and welcome. My name is John August and you’re listening to Episode 647 of Scriptnotes, a podcast about screenwriting and things that are interesting to screenwriters. Today I am so lucky to have two Scriptnotes producers in the studio with me. Megana […] The post Scriptnotes, Episode 647: Crafting Your Ending, Transcript first appeared on John August.

https://johnaugust.com/2024/scriptnotes-episode-647-crafting-your-ending-transcript


The 10 Senate Races That Will Decide the Next Few Years of Climate Policy

date: 2024-09-03, from: Heatmap News



The United States Senate sits on a knife-edge. Democrats currently control the chamber by a 51-49 margin, but they are defending more seats than Republicans are in this election. In fact, with the retirement of Joe Manchin and the nearly inevitable passing of that West Virginia seat to a Republican, Democrats need to win almost every contested race in order to keep the chamber at 50-50, which would give them control if Kamala Harris wins the White House and Tim Walz is able to cast tie-breaking votes.

The consequences of a shift in control for climate policy could be enormous, not just in the legislation that will (or won’t) pass, but in the fate of nominees to key agencies. So how are Senate candidates confronting the climate issue? This roundup of the 10 most closely contested races shows that while the contrasts between the candidates are stark, for the most part, climate has been a secondary or even absent issue on the campaign trail.

The contrasts between the candidates are unmistakeable; to take just one example, every Democrat on this list who was in Congress at the time voted for the Inflation Reduction Act, the most significant climate legislation in history, and every Republican opposed it. But with the exception of Pennsylvania, where fracking has been a major issue, and to a lesser extent in Arizona, where Ruben Gallego often brings up the toll of increasing temperatures, in none of these races is climate change anywhere near the forefront of the debate.

That’s mostly because Democrats have chosen not to elevate the issue. Though they might criticize their Republican opponents for opposing the IRA or ignoring climate altogether if you ask them, they haven’t put time and resources behind the criticism. You don’t see them discussing climate in their advertising, and in most cases you won’t even find it mentioned on their websites — or if it’s there, it merits only a brief statement of intentions and nothing more detailed.

Nevertheless, the contrast remains: All of these Democrats can be counted on to support most or all of a Harris administration’s climate initiatives, just as the Republicans will reliably oppose them, or support a second Trump administration’s efforts to roll back the measures the Biden administration has undertaken. Which is why so much depends on where the Senate falls after election day.

Arizona

The candidates: Democrat Ruben Gallego vs. Republican Kari Lake

Gallego has been a particularly forceful advocate on one aspect of climate change: extreme heat. He told The Arizona Republic that “our state will become uninhabitable in the summer if we wait much longer to act,” has introduced multiple bills to address it, and criticized the Biden administration for not going far enough to confront the danger of rising temperatures. Lake, on the other hand, dismisses any such concern. Last summer she accused Gallego and Governor Katie Hobbs of “pushing mass hysteria in an effort to declare a climate emergency.” She told a podcast, “Newsflash, it’s hot in Arizona in the summer,” and said “don’t tell me that we’re in some sort of a weird heating trend … I don’t believe that for a minute.”

Florida

The candidates: Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, the challenger vs. Republican Rick Scott, the incumbent

When he became Florida’s governor in 2011, Scott reportedly issued an informal ban on the use of the terms “climate change” and “global warming” in state communication. He denied the story and in recent years has softened his previous climate denial, but he was regularly criticized for inaction in a state unusually vulnerable to climate impacts and has been a consistent opponent of efforts to address warming. Mucarsel-Powell’s website says she “knows climate change is real and she is ready to take action to address the climate crisis that is impacting Floridians, their lives, and their property,” but she’s been quiet about it on the trail.

Maryland

The candidates: Democrat Angela Alsobrooks vs. Republican Larry Hogan

Former Governor Hogan is the most moderate Republican on this list, and during his tenure in Annapolis he went farther on climate than most Republicans liked, but not as far as state Democrats wanted. He committed the state to reducing emissions, but grappled with Democrats in the legislature over a sweeping climate plan, eventually allowing a scaled-back version to become law without his signature. Alsobrooks calls climate change an “existential threat” and touts her climate efforts as Prince George’s County Executive, including obtaining funding for more electric buses and creating a composting program. She issued an executive order in 2022, setting a goal of making her country carbon-neutral by 2045.

Montana

The candidates: Republican Tim Sheehy, the challenger vs. Democrat Jon Tester, the incumbent

For a red-state Democrat, Tester talks a good deal about climate, not mincing words about the effects of global warming (which he says he witnesses as a working farmer) and regularly touting funding he has secured to mitigate climate effects in Montana; he gets a lifetime score of 89% from the League of Conservation Voters. But he favors carrots over sticks, objecting to some tougher pollution regulations and supporting continued fossil fuel production, including the Keystone XL pipeline. Sheehy is a full-on climate denier who rails against “the radical climate cult agenda” and the “woke crap” of ESG investing. Yet the company that made Sheehy rich markets its wildfire-fighting efforts as a response to climate change’s effects.

Michigan

The candidates: Republican Mike Rogers vs. Democrat Elissa Slotkin

Slotkin, a current member of the House of Representatives, has portrayed herself as something of a climate moderate in Congress, cosponsoring bipartisan emissions legislation but declining to support the Green New Deal. Still, she often brings up her work preparing the Department of Defense to adapt to climate change, and has been supportive of the Biden administration’s climate initiatives. Rogers, on the other hand, was a consistent vote in the House, where he served from the aughts to the mid-2010s, against all kinds of environmental initiatives, and ridiculed DOD climate efforts: “When we dedicate scarce defense funding to global climate change, biofuel initiatives and social engineering experiments with military personnel, you can almost hear the cheers and laughter of our adversaries,” he wrote in 2021. While Slotkin has brought up climate on the campaign trail, neither candidate mentions it on their website.

Nevada

The candidates: Republican Sam Brown, the challenger vs. Democrat Jacky Rosen, the incumbent

Rosen has been more outspoken about climate change than many Democrats on this list, and has been a particularly strong booster of Nevada’s solar industry; she also attended COP26 in 2021. Brown’s website says, “We have been blessed with an abundance of natural resources, but we’ve also been plagued by politicians pushing extreme left energy agendas, like the Green New Deal, that raise prices and destroy jobs”; he has also criticized electric vehicles and incentives to increase EV sales.

Ohio

The candidates: Democrat Sherrod Brown, the incumbent vs. Republican Bernie Moreno, the challenger

Senator Brown has used his chairmanship of the Senate Banking Committee to draw attention to climate issues, including pressing the Federal Reserve to incorporate climate risks into its relationship with the banking industry. He has called climate “one of the greatest moral issues of our time,” and has long advocated clean energy as a vehicle to rebuild the country’s industrial base. But during this campaign, he has become increasingly wary of certain emissions regulations he fears will lead to job loss, saying “I’ve spent most of my career looking at trade or environment through the eyes of employment in my state.” Moreno wants to eliminate EV subsidies and has attacked “Biden’s radical Green New Deal agenda,” arguing that achieving “energy dominance” through fossil fuel production is vital to prosperity.

Pennsylvania

The candidates: Democrat Bob Casey, the incumbent vs. Republican Dave McCormick, the challenger

Though Casey has a strong environmental record, McCormick has succeeded in making fracking a central issue of the campaign, including falsely accusing Casey of supporting a ban on the technique, which is commonly used in Pennsylvania to extract natural gas. McCormick acknowledges that climate change is real, but nevertheless told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette he wants to “unlock oil and gas production here at home.” (The U.S. is already the world’s largest producer of both oil and natural gas.) In the midst of the fracking controversy, Casey seems to have quieted his prior climate advocacy somewhat (his website has no section on climate, but does have one on “Preserving Pennsylvania’s Energy Legacy”), but he hasn’t publicly disavowed any of his prior positions.

Texas

The candidates: Democrat Colin Allred, the challenger vs. Republican Ted Cruz, the incumbent

Cruz has long been one of Congress’ most prominent climate deniers and one of the top recipients of contributions from the fossil fuel industry. He blames the Green New Deal, a piece of legislation that was never voted on, for high electricity prices in Texas, and has attacked federal agencies for “fueling youth climate anxiety.” While Allred has supported climate action in the past, he has trod somewhat carefully on the issue during the campaign (he advocates “an all-of-the-above energy strategy” and has promoted liquified natural gas exports) and hasn’t made an issue of Cruz’s climate denial.

Wisconsin

The candidates: Democrat Tammy Baldwin, the incumbent vs. Republican Eric Hovde, the challenger

Baldwin has been a consistent advocate for climate action, including co-sponsoring a bill to achieve net-zero emissions for the entire country by 2050. Hovde has spent a good deal of the campaign railing against EV subsidies and other green energy spending, calls efforts to phase out fossil fuels “delusional,” and instead promotes increased fossil fuel production.

https://heatmap.news/politics/10-senate-races-climate


US border policy spurred migrant camps hundreds of miles away in Mexico’s capital

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

Mexico City — “That’s it, dude! Done!” exclaimed Eliezer López as he jumped up and down, throwing his arms to the sky and drawing a sign of the cross across his chest. His joy was so contagious, his friends started to emerge from nearby tents to celebrate with him.

López, a 20-year-old Venezuelan migrant in Mexico City, had reason to rejoice: After several frustrating attempts, he was able to secure an appointment to seek asylum in the U.S.

He is one of thousands of migrants whose U.S.-bound journey has landed them in the Mexican capital, the southernmost point until recently from which migrants can register to request an appointment to seek asylum through the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s mobile app known as CBP One.

Since June, when the Biden administration announced significant restrictions on migrants seeking asylum, the app became one of the only ways to request asylum at the Southwest border.

This U.S. asylum policy and its geographic limits are a driving force behind the emergence of migrant encampments throughout the Mexican capital where thousands of migrants wait weeks — even months — in limbo, living in crowded, makeshift camps with poor sanitation and grim living conditions.

From point of transit to temporary destination

Historically, Mexico City has not been a stop for northbound migrants. They try to cross the country quickly to reach the northern border. But the delays in securing an appointment, coupled with the danger that plagues cartel-controlled northern Mexico border cities and the increased crackdown by Mexican authorities on migrants have combined to turn Mexico City from a point of transit to a temporary destination for thousands.

Some migrant camps have been dismantled by immigration authorities or abandoned over time. Others, like the one where López has lived for the past few months, remain.

Like López, many migrants have opted to wait for their appointment in the somewhat safer capital, but Mexico City presents its own challenges.

Shelter capacity is limited, and unlike large U.S. cities like Chicago and New York, which rushed last winter to find housing for arriving migrants, in Mexico City they are mainly left to their own devices.

Andrew Bahena, coordinator of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles, or CHIRLA, said that up until late 2023 many migrants were contained in southern Mexican cities like Tapachula, near the border with Guatemala. Many tried to disguise their location to defeat CBP One’s geographic limits, but when U.S. authorities took notice, more migrants began aiming for Mexico City to make their appointments from there, he said.

As a result, there has been an increase in the migrant population living in the Mexico City camps.

“We talk about this as border externalization and it’s something the United States and Mexico have been jointly implementing for years,” said Bahena. “The CBP One app is probably one of the best examples of that today.

“These folks are asylum seekers, they’re not homeless people living in Mexico,” he added.

A maze of tents and tarps

When López first arrived in Mexico City at the end of April, he thought about renting a room only to realize it was not an option.

He earned $23 a day working three times a week at a market. Rent was $157 per person to share a room with strangers, an arrangement that has become commonplace in Mexican cities with migrant populations.

“The camp is like a refuge,” said López. Migrants can share space with people they know, avoid the curfews and strict rules of shelters and potentially stay longer if necessary.

The camps are a maze of tents and tarps. Some call their space “ranchito,” or small ranch, assembled from wood, cardboard, plastic sheets, blankets and whatever they can find to protect them from the chilly mountain air and intense summer rains that pound the city.

At another camp in La Merced neighborhood, hundreds of blue, yellow and red tents fill a plaza in front of a church. It’s one of the capital’s largest camps and just a 20-minute walk from the city center.

“This is a place where up to 2,000 migrants have been living in the last year,” said Bahena. “About 40% are children.”

Migrants in La Merced have organized themselves, building an impromptu pump that moves water from the public system and distributes it on a fixed schedule, with every tent receiving four buckets of water every day.

“At the beginning there were a lot of problems, lots of trash and people in Mexico didn’t like that,” said Héctor Javier Magallanes, a Venezuelan migrant, who has been waiting nine months for a CBP One appointment. “We made sure to fix those problems little by little.”

As more migrants kept arriving at the camp, he set up a task force of 15 people to oversee security and infrastructure.

Despite efforts to keep the camp clean and organized, residents haven’t been able to avoid outbreaks of illnesses, exacerbated by drastic weather changes.

Keilin Mendoza, a 27-year-old Honduran migrant, said her kids constantly get colds, especially her 1-year-old daughter.

“She’s the one that worries me the most, because she takes the longest to recover,” she said. Mendoza has tried accessing free medical attention from humanitarian organizations at the camp, but resources are limited.

Israel Resendiz, coordinator of Doctors Without Borders’ mobile team, said the uncertainty of life in the camps weighs heavily on migrants’ mental health.

“It’s not the same when a person waiting for their appointment […] can get a hotel, rent a room or have money for food,” Resendiz said. “The majority of people don’t have these resources.”

The secretary of inclusion and social welfare and the secretary of the interior in Mexico City didn’t respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press about the camps. Press representatives of Clara Brugada, the incoming mayor of Mexico City, said the issue must first be discussed at the federal level.

Meanwhile, tensions between camp residents and neighbors have increased, sometimes leading to mass evictions of the camps.

In late April, neighbors from the trendy and central Juárez neighborhood blocked some of the city’s busiest streets, chanting, “The street is not a shelter!”

Eduardo Ramírez, one of the protest organizers, said it’s the government’s job to “help these poor people that come from their countries in search of something better and have the bad luck of traveling through Mexico.”

https://www.voanews.com/a/us-border-policy-spurred-migrant-camps-hundreds-of-miles-away-in-mexico-s-capital-/7769809.html


NASA’s Mini BurstCube Mission Detects Mega Blast

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

The shoebox-sized BurstCube satellite has observed its first gamma-ray burst, the most powerful kind of explosion in the universe, according to a recent analysis of observations collected over the last several months. “We’re excited to collect science data,” said Sean Semper, BurstCube’s lead engineer at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “It’s an important milestone […]

https://science.nasa.gov/burstcube/nasas-mini-burstcube-mission-detects-mega-blast/


Even if autonomous vehicles work perfectly, they will likely not decrease emissions…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045212-even-if-autonomous-vehicl


Deadline looms: Google Workspace mandates OAuth by September 30

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

27 days to get your users’ third-party apps on Google’s sign-in

Google Workspace administrators, consider yourselves on notice: In less than a month, many third-party apps (mail, calendar, etc.) will stop connecting to Workspace accounts. …

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/google_workspace_third_party_apps/


This Decorated Samurai Sword Found in Rubble Beneath Berlin May Have Been a Diplomatic Gift

date: 2024-09-03, from: Smithsonian Magazine

The short blade’s hilt was made in Edo Japan, and its journey to a German cellar destroyed during World War II is a mystery

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/this-decorated-samurai-sword-found-in-rubble-beneath-berlin-may-have-been-a-diplomatic-gift-180985010/


The Worst Form On The Internet?

date: 2024-09-03, from: Tedium site

Oracle’s form to access free cloud server space seems designed to discourage you from taking advantage of the offering. It’ll leave you frustrated.

https://feed.tedium.co/link/15204/16791915/oracle-cloud-frustrating-signup-form


RF safety experiments - Meat & Pickles demonstrate foldback

date: 2024-09-03, from: Jeff Geerling blog

RF safety experiments - Meat & Pickles demonstrate foldback

        <div class="clearfix text-formatted field field--name-body field--type-text-with-summary field--label-hidden field__item"><p>A few months ago, our <a href="https://www.instagram.com/insights/media/3333127873529510767/">AM radio hot dog experiment</a> went mildly viral. That was a result of me asking my Dad 'what would happen if you ground a hot dog to one of your AM radio towers?' He didn't know, so one night on the way to my son's volleyball practice, we tested it. And it was <em>awesome</em>.</p>

There’s a video and some pictures in my hot dog radio blog post from back in March.

  <span class="field field--name-uid field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden"><span>Jeff Geerling</span></span>

https://www.jeffgeerling.com/blog/2024/rf-safety-experiments-meat-pickles-demonstrate-foldback


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Is My Short-Term Los Angeles Rental Legal?

https://www.propublica.org/article/is-my-short-term-los-angeles-rental-legal


Why TV Is Wrong for Tolkien

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/why-tv-is-wrong-for-tolkien


Dow-ward spiral: Intel share price drop could see it delisted from blue-chip index

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

50% dive in market cap during 2024 forcing CEO Pat Gelsinger to revisit strategy

Intel could lose a longstanding seat on the Dow Jones Industrial Average due to the slump in its share price, adding to the chipmaker’s existing troubles.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/intel_share_price_drop/


NASA Earth Science Education Collaborative Member Co-Authors Award-Winning Paper in Insects

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

On August 13, 2024, the publishers of the journal Insects notified authors of three papers selected to receive “Insects 2022 Best Paper Award” for research and review articles published in Insects from January 1 to December 31, 2022. One of the winning papers was co-authored by Russanne Low, PhD, Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES). […]

https://science.nasa.gov/learning-resources/science-activation/nasa-earth-science-education-collaborative-member-co-authors-award-winning-paper-in-insects/


Dell launches XPS 13 laptop with Intel Lunar Lake for $1400 and up

date: 2024-09-03, from: Liliputing

The new Dell XPS 13 (9350) is a 2.6 pound laptop with support for up to a 13.4 inch, 2.8K OLED display and up to an Intel Core Ultra 9 288V Lunar Lake processor. It’s also the third version of the XPS 13 to launch this year. It joins the Intel Meteor Lake-powered XPS 13 (9340) […]

The post Dell launches XPS 13 laptop with Intel Lunar Lake for $1400 and up appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/dell-launches-xps-13-laptop-with-intel-lunar-lake-for-1400-and-up/


Intel’s Core Ultra 200V “Lunar Lake” chips promise big gains in graphics and AI performance

date: 2024-09-03, from: Liliputing

The first PCs powered by Intel’s new Core Ultra 200V series mobile processors are available for pre-order starting today. These chips, formerly known by the code-name “Lunar Lake,” are the company’s second-gen processors to feature an integrated neural processing unit (NPU) for hardware-accelerated AI performance, but the first to offer enough AI horsepower to qualify […]

The post Intel’s Core Ultra 200V “Lunar Lake” chips promise big gains in graphics and AI performance appeared first on Liliputing.

https://liliputing.com/intels-core-ultra-200v-lunar-lake-chips-promise-big-gains-in-graphics-and-ai-performance/


Around the World in 175 Days, 1924: Department of State Contributions to the U.S. Army Flight Around the World: Part IX: An Interlude: Conflict With the Press

date: 2024-09-03, from: National Archives, Text Message blog

This is the ninth in a series of occasional blog posts. Throughout the weeks and months of the Army’s flight around the world, it received a great deal of attention in the press, both domestic and foreign.  Previous posts have provided a peak at the foreign attention.  That notice was almost always positive.  As the … Continue reading Around the World in 175 Days, 1924: Department of State Contributions to the U.S. Army Flight Around the World: Part IX: An Interlude: Conflict With the Press

https://text-message.blogs.archives.gov/2024/09/03/around-the-world-in-175-days-1924-department-of-state-contributions-to-the-u-s-army-flight-around-the-world-part-ix-an-interlude-conflict-with-the-press/


Stranger who offered to pay for sewing classes saved his life

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

New York is one of the fashion capitals of the world, but the industry has made fewer strides in advancing and promoting minorities. In the uptown neighborhood of Harlem, a program is tapping into community talent, led by a local who almost missed out on the industry entirely. Tina Trinh reports. Videographer: Ting-Yi Hsu

https://www.voanews.com/a/stranger-who-offered-to-pay-for-sewing-classes-saved-his-life/7769695.html


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

The growing number of Trump clemency recipients who’ve already committed other crimes.

https://www.emptywheel.net/2024/09/03/all-trumps-recidivists/


Will Summer Ever End?

date: 2024-09-03, from: Heatmap News



Is summer really over? Meteorologists would say one thing, astronomers another, and Americans will just decide to start making things pumpkin-flavored whenever they please. So who’s to say? And after all the record-breaking this summer, does it really matter? So far, 2024 has proven that climate change is as real as ever and bizarre weather is here to stay.

Buckle up for a ride, Midwesterners

The heat in the Midwest last week was no joke. States including Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, and even some farther East, like Pennsylvania, saw temperatures above 90 degrees Fahrenheit. Some cities recorded readings in the low 100s. The intense heat came just as children went back to school, and it was so bad in Philadelphia that 63 schools had to dismiss classes early on both Tuesday and Wednesday. In Chicago, sports practices were canceled and other outdoor activities had to be moved inside.

Fall makes another appearance in the Northeast

Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern states were under several heat alerts last week, as temperatures rose to around 100 degrees. The U.S. Open tennis tournament, held in New York City, was under an “extreme weather policy,” offering more and longer breaks for players.

Texas is not hellish anymore — just very hot

Texas also had its share of back to school chaos last week, which even led to a lawsuit. A video shows children in the Sealy Independent School District pleading with their bus driver to open the windows as temperatures were above 100 degrees, but the driver refuses, saying the kids were sticking their hands out the window; parents are alleging that the children were being unduly punished. The battle to ensure all school buses in the country have air conditioning has been a long one, but state-level legislation on the matter keeps dying due to a lack of funds.

Did it just snow in California? In August?

Last Saturday, those exploring in the mountains around Lake Tahoe got a little surprise: a light dusting of snow in late August. While the winter-like cold front had been forecasted for the region — including the possibility of snow — Pastelok told me the event is still unusual for this time of the year. More snow is certainly possible as we go into September, but before that, California will go back to behaving more normally. And by that, I mean being very, very hot.

Those elsewhere in the West will get their share of above average temperatures this week. The interior Northwest will start this week hot, with highs around the 90s and running 10 degrees to 14 degrees above average. But Northwesterners, please think twice before you start complaining. It seems like Washington and Oregon are the only states which will see fall weather any time soon.

Finally, looking back: Summer 2024, by the numbers

21,058: That’s the number of daily high temperature records broken this year in the U.S. so far this year.

118: The number of all-time high temperature records broken. While scientists haven’t officially called it yet, it seems like 2024 will dethrone last year as the hottest summer on record.

428: number of wildfire incidents in California this summer.

429,603: the number of acres burned by the Park Fire in California. The fire is now 98% contained and could become the third largest wildfire in American history.

62.87: the planet’s average temperature on July 22, 2024, the Earth’s hottest day on record.

130: the highest temperature recorded in the country this summer, in the Death Valley.

160,000,000: the highest number of Americans under excessive heat warnings on the same day. It happened on July 9.

https://heatmap.news/climate/summer-heat-2024-end-of-summer


Data watchdog fines Clearview AI $33M for ‘illegal’ data collection

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Selfie-scraper again claims European law does not apply to it

The Dutch Data Protection Authority (DPA) has fined controversial facial recognition company Clearview AI €30.5 million ($33 million) over the “illegal” collation of images.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/clearview_ai_dutch_fine/


@Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed (date: 2024-09-03, from: Miguel de Icaza Mastondon feed)

<THREAD> I am now hearing this meme that founder mode is not a thing.

Guys. It’s time for some engagement farming theory.

https://mastodon.social/@Migueldeicaza/113074318860602037


I’d missed that Ray Nayler, author of the excellent The Mountain in…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045202-id-missed-that-ray-nayler


Pollinator Initiatives at NASA

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

Pollinators play a crucial role in both human agriculture and ecosystems by supporting thousands of plant species and crops which feed humans and livestock. Unfortunately, habitat loss, disease, and pesticides contribute to the decline in pollinator biodiversity worldwide, which has led to a substantial reduction in native bee species, impacts to honeybees, and the decline […]

https://www.nasa.gov/organizations/osi/emd/pollinator-initiatives-at-nasa/


Deadpool with Ryan Reynolds

date: 2024-09-03, from: John August blog

John and Craig welcome back Ryan Reynolds for an in-depth look at his creative process bringing the character of Deadpool to the screen. As co-writer, producer and star of the Deadpool franchise, Ryan leads us through his first introduction to the character, the rough journey getting to greenlight, and the challenges presented by an often-faceless […] The post Deadpool with Ryan Reynolds first appeared on John August.

https://johnaugust.com/2024/deadpool-with-ryan-reynolds


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

I have a Tesla and Starlink, both bought before Elon Musk bought Twitter and revealed who he really is. I don't know anyone who works for a Musk company. How do they get up every day and try to do your best work for him.

https://www.techmeme.com/240903/p14#a240903p14


Pitch deck gives new details on company’s plan to listen to your devices for ad targeting

date: 2024-09-03, from: OS News

For years now, people believe that their smartphones are listening to their conversations through their microphones, all the time, even when the microphone is clearly not activated. Targeted advertising lies at the root of this conviction; when you just had a conversation with a friend about buying a pink didgeridoo and a flanel ukelele, and you then get ads for pink didgeridoos and flanel ukeleles, it makes intuitive sense to assume your phone was listening to you. How else would Google, Amazon, Facebook, or whatever, know your deepest didgeridoo desires and untapped ukelele urges? The truth is that targeted advertising using cross-site cookies and profile building is far more effective than people think, and on top of that, people often forget what they did on their phone or laptop ten minutes ago, let alone yesterday or last week. Smartphones are not secretly listening to you, and it’s not through covert microphone activation that it knows about your musical interests. But then. Media conglomerate Cox Media Group has been pitching tech companies on a new targeted advertising tool that uses audio recordings culled from smart home devices. The existence of this program was revealed late last year. Now, however, 404 Media has also gotten its hands on additional details about the program through a leaked pitch deck. The contents of the deck are creepy, to say the least. Cox’s tool is creepily called “Active Listening” and the deck claims that it works by using smart devices, which can “capture real-time intent data by listening to our conversations.” After the data is captured, advertisers can “pair this voice-data with behavioral data to target in-market consumers,” the deck says. The vague use of artificial intelligence to collect data about consumers’ online behavior is also mentioned, with the deck noting that consumers “leave a data trail based on their conversations and online behavior” and that the AI-fueled tool can collect and analyze said “behavioral and voice data from 470+ sources.” ↫ Lucas Ropek at Gizmodo Looking at the pitch deck in question, you can argue that it’s not even referring to smartphones, and that it is incredibly vague – probably on purpose – what “active listening” and “conversations” are really referring to. It might as well be simply referring to the various conversations on unencrypted messaging platforms, directly with companies, or stuff like that. “Smart devices” is also intentionally vague, and could be anything from one of those smart fridges to your smartphone. But you could also argue that yes, this seems to be pretty much referring to “listening to our conversations” in the most literal sense, by somehow – we have no idea how – turning on our smartphone microphones, in secret, without iOS or Android, or Apple or Google, knowing about it? It seems far-fetched, but at the same time, a lot of corporate and government programs and efforts seemed far-fetched until some whisteblower spilled the beans. The feeling that your phones are listening to you without your consent, in secret, will never go away. Even if some irrefutable evidence came up that it isn’t possible, it’s just too plausible to be cast aside.

https://www.osnews.com/story/140661/pitch-deck-gives-new-details-on-companys-plan-to-listen-to-your-devices-for-ad-targeting/


You have installed OpenBSD, now for the daily tasks

date: 2024-09-03, from: OS News

Since we’re on the topic of BSD, what about yet another helpful guide on what to do after first installing OpenBSD? We’ve covered a few of these already, but more can never hurt, and OpenBSD is a great platform that would suit a lot more of us than you might think. Despite some persistent rumors, installing OpenBSD is both quick and easy on most not too exotic hardware. But once the thing is installed, what is daily life with the most secure free operating system like? ↫ Peter N. M. Hansteen This guide by Hansteen focuses primarily on the various basic system management tools you’ll be needing to keep OpenBSD up to date after initial installation, and how to install anything else you might need.

https://www.osnews.com/story/140659/you-have-installed-openbsd-now-for-the-daily-tasks/


Make your own CDN with NetBSD

date: 2024-09-03, from: OS News

After covering setting up your own CDN with both FreeBSD and OpenBSD, it’s now time to learn how to set up your own CDN wit NetBSD. This article is a spin-off from a previous post on how to create a self-hosted CDN, but this time we’ll focus on using NetBSD. NetBSD is a lightweight, stable, and secure operating system that supports a wide range of hardware, making it an excellent choice for a caching reverse proxy. Devices that other operating systems may soon abandon, such as early Raspberry Pi models or i386 architecture, are still fully supported by NetBSD and will continue to be so. Additionally, NetBSD is an outstanding platform for virtualization (using Xen or qemu/nvmm) and deserves more attention than it currently receives. ↫ Stefano Marinelli All the same from my previous post still applies, and it’s a great thing that Marinelli covers all three of the major BSDs (so far). If you want to run your own CDN on BSD, you can now make a pretty informed decision on which BSD best suits your needs.

https://www.osnews.com/story/140657/make-your-own-cdn-with-netbsd/


The Dev Tools Performance Monitor Panel

date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Rupert blog

Weeks ago I was looking in to a performance issue for our animated spinner component and stumbled across a tool in DevTools I hadn’t used before: The Performance Monitor Panel. In you open Dev Tools > More Tools > Performance Monitor you’ll see some helpful high-level charts and graphs of the realtime performance data of your UI.

The Figma.com homepage with the performance panel open to the side showing 120 style recalcs per second

The Performance Monitor collects performance data in realtime and puts it on a graph. It’s handy for detecting performance problems at a high-level. If your CPU, memory, DOM node count, or event listeners only go up while clicking around, you probably have a leak in your code. The part I was most interested in were style recalculations per second and layouts per second. Our spinner component was triggering style recalculations and layout calls at a rate of 120 per second. Yikes! That’s a lot of extra work on the CPU.

Next I turned on Dev Tools > More Tools > Rendering > Show Paint Flashes and I could immediately see the tactile feedback of green boxes thrashing around as the browser repainted the component hundreds of times per second. The green paint boxes confirmed that this UI work was happening on the main thread instead of the compositor thread. The Performance Monitor showed my CPU usage at 5-9% of my Mackbook Pro. Double Yikes.

The Performance Monitor panel pairs nicely with the top-level Performance panel. While the Performance Monitor panel is very high-level, the Performance panel is an in-depth debugging tool where you can inspect a snapshot of your app down to each function and render call.

A flame graph inside the Performance Panel in dev tools

Capturing a snapshot in the Performance panel confirmed what I was now seeing. I could see the “red line of death” of dropped frames where I locked the main thread. The remediation steps were pretty simple but I did need to strip down and recode how our animation worked.

  1. Avoid properties that trigger paint or layout
  2. Tamp down layout recalcs with contain
  3. Use overflow: hidden instead of CSS masks

It took a couple of prototypes to shop around a workable solution. The good news is our animation is off-loaded to the compositor instead of the main thread now. CPU use is now at 0.2% (down from 5-9%) and our recalcs and layouts are down to 0 but the animation still chugs along. Truth be told, a loading spinner is a pretty insignificant component and is only temporary, but reducing CPU usage by 10% here makes room for other JavaScript activities… like… y’know… fetching and parsing data.

https://daverupert.com/2024/09/dev-tools-performance-monitor-panel/


Is My Blue Your Blue? A visual perception test that judges what…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045205-is-my-blue-your-blue


GNU screen 5 proves it’s still got game even after 37 years

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

First major version in two decades is worth getting to know

GNU screen is included in most Linux distros, but newer, fancier tools such as tmux often outshine it.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/gnu_screen_5/


GNU screen 5 proves it’s still got game even after 37 years

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Liam Proven’s articles at the Register

First major version in two decades is worth getting to know

  <p>GNU screen is included in most Linux distros, but newer, fancier tools such as tmux often outshine it.</p> 

https://go.theregister.com/i/cfa/https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/gnu_screen_5/


Fortune tellers have crystal balls. Economists have the shipping industry.

date: 2024-09-03, from: Marketplace Morning Report

There are fundamental challenges facing global supply chains today: the rise of protectionism, competition with China and more. Like a crystal ball, we can look to the shipping industry to understand how these are unfolding. Germany-based DHL Group is one of the world’s largest logistics and shipping businesses, and the company’s CEO recently spoke in an exclusive interview to our Marketplace colleague, the BBC’s Leanna Byrne. Also: a lookahead at this week’s economic data.

https://www.marketplace.org/shows/marketplace-morning-report/fortune-tellers-have-crystal-balls-economists-have-the-shipping-industry


Station Science Top News: August 29, 2024

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

Researchers used an interferometer that can precisely measure gravity, magnetic fields, and other forces to study the influence of International Space Station vibrations. Results revealed that matter-wave interference of rubidium gases is robust and repeatable over a period spanning months. Atom interferometry experiments could help create high-precision measurement capabilities for gravitational, Earth, and planetary sciences. Using ultracold rubidium […]

https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/johnson/station-science-top-news-august-29-2024/


Big Tech ‘Clients’ of Jacob Wohl’s Secret AI Lobbying Firm Say They’ve Never Heard of It

date: 2024-09-03, from: 404 Media Group

Pfizer, Microsoft, Palantir, Home Depot, and Lockheed Martin were all shown as “clients” of LobbyMatic. All of them say they haven’t worked with the company.

https://www.404media.co/big-tech-clients-of-jacob-wohls-secret-ai-lobbying-firm-lobbymatic-say-theyve-never-heard-of-it/


New York mayor calls for changes in city’s migrant sanctuary status

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

Migrant-related crime in New York has many residents on edge, with some blaming the influx of undocumented migrants into the city over the past two years. Aron Ranen and Igor Tsikhanenka spoke to law enforcement officials, politicians, activists and migrants about the controversy in this story narrated by Aron Ranen.

https://www.voanews.com/a/new-york-mayor-calls-for-changes-in-city-s-migrant-sanctuary-status/7769560.html


Colossal, one of my all-time favorite sites on these here interwebs, has…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045203-colossal-one-of-my-all-ti


Brace for glitches and GRUB grumbles as Ubuntu 24.04.1 lands

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Now the Numbat has been neatened, you can replace your Jellyfish – if you dare

Ubuntu 24.04.1 is here, which means that users of the previous LTS release, 22.04 “Jammy Jellyfish,” will be offered the update.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/ubuntu_24041/


Brace for glitches and GRUB grumbles as Ubuntu 24.04.1 lands

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Liam Proven’s articles at the Register

Now the Numbat has been neatened, you can replace your Jellyfish – if you dare

  <p>Ubuntu 24.04.1 is here, which means that users of the previous LTS release, 22.04 "Jammy Jellyfish," will be offered the update.</p> 

https://go.theregister.com/i/cfa/https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/ubuntu_24041/


Carbon Nanotubes and the Search for Life on Other Planets

date: 2024-09-03, from: NASA breaking news

A NASA-developed material made of carbon nanotubes will enable our search for exoplanets—some of which might be capable of supporting life. Originally developed in 2007 by a team of researchers led by Innovators of the Year John Hagopian and Stephanie Getty at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, this carbon nanotube technology is being refined for […]

https://science.nasa.gov/science-research/science-enabling-technology/carbon-nanotubes-and-the-search-for-life-on-other-planets/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Today in 2024, AI cannot create art. But a human being can use AI to create art. It's a medium, like paint and canvas except it's not static. It gets new skills all the time. I can't wait to see what it can do in a few months or years.

https://kottke.org/24/09/can-ai-make-art


Decision on major policy shift on marijuana won’t come until after US presidential election

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

Washington — A decision on whether to reclassify marijuana as a less dangerous drug in the U.S. won’t come until after the November presidential election, a timeline that raises the chances it could be a potent political issue in the closely contested race.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration last week set a hearing date to take comment on the proposed historic change in federal drug policy for Dec. 2.

The hearing date means a final decision could well come in the next administration. While it’s possible it could precede the end of President Joe Biden’s term, issuing it before Inauguration Day “would be pretty expedited,” said cannabis lawyer Brian Vicente.

That could put a new spotlight on the presidential candidates’ positions on marijuana. Vice President Kamala Harris has backed decriminalizing the drug and said it’s “absurd” to have it in the DEA’s Schedule I category alongside heroin and LSD. The Democratic nominee’s position has shifted over the years; she once oversaw the enforcement of cannabis laws and opposed legalized recreational use for adults in California while running for attorney general in 2010.

Former President Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, signaled support for a Florida legalization measure on Saturday, following earlier comments that he increasingly agrees that people shouldn’t be jailed for the drug now legal in multiple states, “whether that’s a good thing or a bad thing.”

During his run for president in 2016, Trump said that he backed medical marijuana and that pot should be left up to the states. But during his first term, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions lifted an Obama-era policy that kept federal authorities from cracking down on the pot trade in states where the drug is legal.

Trump’s campaign didn’t immediately respond to a query about his position on rescheduling the drug.

The Justice Department proposed reclassifying it in May, saying the change would recognize marijuana’s medical uses and acknowledge it has less potential for abuse than some of the nation’s most dangerous drugs. The proposal, which would not legalize marijuana for recreational use, came after a call for review from Biden, who has called the change “monumental.”

The DEA has said it doesn’t yet have a position on whether to go through with the change, stating in a memo that it would keep weighing the issue as the federal rulemaking process plays out.

The new classification would be the most significant shift in U.S. drug policy in 50 years and could be a potent political issue, especially with younger voters. But it faces opposition from groups such as Smart Approaches to Marijuana.

Its president, Kevin Sabet, argues there isn’t enough data to move cannabis to the less-dangerous Schedule III category, alongside ketamine and some anabolic steroids. The DEA’s move to hold the hearing is “a huge win in our fight to have this decision guided by medical science, not politics,” he said in a statement, adding that 18 states’ attorneys general are backing his opposition.

The hearing sparked some consternation among pot industry players, though little surprise about the DEA decision to hold one.

“While the result ultimately may be better, I think we’re so used to seeing delays that it’s just a little disappointing,” said Stephen Abraham, chief financial officer at The Blinc Group, supplier of cartridges and other hardware used in pot vapes. “Every time you slow down or hold resources from the legal market, it’s to the benefit of the illicit market.”

The proposal, which was signed by Attorney General Merrick Garland rather than DEA Administrator Anne Milgram, followed a recommendation from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Federal drug policy has lagged behind that of many states in recent years, with 38 having already legalized medical marijuana and 24 legalizing its recreational use.

Lawmakers from both major political parties have pushed for the change as marijuana has become increasingly decriminalized and accepted. A Gallup poll last year found 70% of adults support legalization, the highest level yet recorded by the polling firm and more than double the roughly three in 10 who backed it in 2000.

The marijuana industry has also grown quickly, and state-licensed pot companies are keen on rescheduling partly because it could enable them to take federal business-expense tax deductions that aren’t available to enterprises involved in “trafficking” any Schedule I or II drug. For some of Vicente’s clients, the change would effectively reduce the tax rate from 75% to 25%.

Some legalization advocates also hope rescheduling could help persuade Congress to pass legislation aimed at opening banks’ doors to cannabis companies. Currently, the drug’s legal status means many federally regulated banks are reluctant to lend to such businesses, or sometimes even provide checking or other basic services.

Rescheduling could also make it easier to research marijuana, since it’s difficult to conduct authorized clinical studies on Schedule I substances. Some medical marijuana patient advocates fear that the discussion has already become deeply politicized and that the focus on rescheduling’s potential effect on the industry has shifted attention from the people who could benefit.

“It was our hope that we could finally take the next step and create the national medical cannabis program that we need,” said Steph Sherer, founder and president of Americans for Safe Access. The organization advocates for putting cannabis in a drug category all its own and for creating a medical cannabis office within DHS.

The immediate effect of rescheduling on the nation’s criminal justice system, though, would likely be more muted, since federal prosecutions for simple possession have been fairly rare in recent years.

https://www.voanews.com/a/decision-on-major-policy-shift-on-marijuana-won-t-come-until-after-us-presidential-election/7769530.html


Party of one: US restaurants cater to growing number of solo diners

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

NEW YORK — Parisa Imanirad, a scientist and cancer researcher from San Francisco, is married and has a wide circle of friends. But once or twice a week, she goes to a restaurant by herself.

Imanirad said dining alone gives her time to think or read. She tries not to touch her phone and relishes the silence. “It’s like a spa, but a different type,” Imanirad said during a recent solo lunch at Spruce, an upscale restaurant in San Francisco.

Imanirad isn’t alone in her desire to be alone. In the United States, solo dining reservations have risen 29% over the last two years, according to OpenTable, the restaurant reservation site. They’re up 18% this year in Germany and 14% in the United Kingdom.

Japan even has a special term for solo dining: “ohitorisama,” which means “alone” but with honorifics spoken before and after the word to make parties of one feel less hesitant. In a recent survey, Japan’s Hot Pepper Gourmet Eating Out Research Institute found that 23% of Japanese people eat out alone, up from 18% in 2018.

As a result, many restaurants in Japan and elsewhere are redoing their seating, changing their menus and adding other special touches to appeal to solo diners.

“Even so-called family restaurants are increasing counter seats for solitary diners, and restaurants are offering courses with smaller servings so a person eating alone gets a variety of dishes,” said Masahiro Inagaki, a senior researcher at the institute.

OpenTable CEO Debby Soo thinks remote work is one reason for the increase, with diners seeking respites from their home offices. But she thinks there are deeper reasons, too.

“I think there’s a broader movement of self-love and self-care and really … enjoying your own company,” Soo said.

The pandemic also made social interactions less feasible and therefore less important while eating out, said Anna Mattila, a professor of lodging management at Penn State University who has studied solo dining. And smartphones help some restaurant patrons feel connected to others even when they’re by themselves, she said.

“The social norms have changed. People don’t look at solo diners anymore and think, ‘You must be a loner,’” Mattila said.

More people live and travel solo

The growth comes as more people are living alone. In 2019, the Pew Research Center found that 38% of U.S. adults ages 25 to 54 were living without a partner, up from 29% in 1990. In Japan, single households now make up one-third of the total; that’s expected to climb to 40% by 2040, according to government data.

Increasing interest in solo travel — particularly among travelers ages 55 and over — is also leading to more meals alone.

On a recent solo trip to Lucerne, Switzerland, Carolyn Ray was stunned when the hostess led her to a beautiful lake-view table set for one, complete with a small vase of flowers. Ray, the CEO and editor of JourneyWoman, a website for solo women travelers over 50, said other restaurants have tried to seat her toward the back or pointedly asked if someone will be joining her.

Ray counsels women planning to dine alone to go somewhere else if they’re treated rudely or given a bad table.

“It’s almost like the world hasn’t caught up with this idea that we are on our own because we want to be on our own and we’re independent and empowered,” she said. “We can go into any restaurant we want and have a table for one and feel good about it.”

Shawn Singh, a Houston-based content creator and restaurant reviewer, said he eats alone about 70% of the time. If the idea of venturing out for a solitary meal is intimidating, he suggests going to lunch instead of dinner — when tables are usually more crowded with groups — or going early on a weekday.

“The best way to see a restaurant you’ve been wanting to see for a long time is definitely going solo,” Singh said. “If I go at 5 p.m. and alone, I haven’t been denied at one place ever.”

Restaurants aren’t always thrilled to seat a single diner at a table that could fit more. A Michelin-starred London restaurant, Alex Dilling at Hotel Cafe Royal, caused a stir last year when it started charging solo patrons the same price as two customers. Its eight-course dinner tasting menu, which includes caviar and Cornish squid, costs 215 pounds ($280) per person.

The restaurant, which has only 34 seats, didn’t respond to a request for comment. But its website doesn’t allow reservations for fewer than two people.

‘Playing the long game’

Other restaurants say it’s worth seating one person at a table made for two because solo diners tend to be loyal, repeat customers.

“While there may be a short-term loss there, I think we’re kind of playing the long game and establishing ourselves as a place that’s truly special,” said Drew Brady, chief operating officer at Overthrow Hospitality, which operates 11 vegan restaurants in New York.

Brady has seen an increase in solo diners since the pandemic, and says they’re evenly split between men and women. At the company’s flagship restaurant, Avant Garden, they make up as much as 8% of patrons.

In response, the restaurant teamed up with Lightspeed, a restaurant tech and consulting company, to develop a solo dining program. Avant Garden now has a spacious table designed for solo diners, with a $65 four-course menu fashioned like a passport to enhance the sense of adventure. If solo diners order a cocktail, a bartender mixes it tableside.

Mattila, at Penn State, said restaurants might want to consider additional changes. Her research has found that solo diners prefer angular shapes — in lights, tables or plates, for example — to round ones, which are more associated with the connectedness of groups. They also prefer slow-tempo music.

Jill Weber, the founder of Sojourn Philly, a Philadelphia company that owns two restaurants and a wine bar, said she adds a communal table at special events such as wine tastings so individuals have a place to gather. She also doesn’t offer specials designed for two.

Weber, who is also an archaeologist, loves dining alone when she’s traveling.

“There’s something about not having to agree on where to go and everything that goes with that. You have the freedom to stay as long as you want, order what you want and sit with those things,” she said. “It also feels brave sometimes.”

https://www.voanews.com/a/party-of-one-restaurants-cater-to-growing-number-of-solo-diners/7769527.html


China outspending US, Taiwan, and South Korea combined on chipmaking kit

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

$25B semiconductor shopping spree leaves rivals in the dust

China spent more in the first half of this year on chipmaking equipment to expand its semiconductor capacity than the US, Taiwan, and South Korea combined, indicating how serious the country is about self-reliance in silicon and building its own industry.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/china_spending_big_on_chipmaking/


What are we going to do with abundant, free, renewable energy? “[By…

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Jason Kottke blog

https://kottke.org/24/09/0045201-what-are-we-going-to


date: 2024-09-03, from: Authors Union blogs

Over the past year, two dozen AI-related lawsuits and their myriad infringement claims have been winding their way through the court system. None have yet reached a jury trial. While we all anxiously await court rulings that can inform our future interaction with generative AI models, in the past few weeks, we are suddenly flooded […]

https://www.authorsalliance.org/2024/09/03/the-ai-copyright-hype-legal-claims-that-didnt-hold-up/


A Brewer Named “Brewer”

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: One Foot Tsunami

https://onefoottsunami.com/2024/09/03/a-brewer-named-brewer/


US Fed welcomes ‘soft landing’ even if many Americans don’t feel like cheering

date: 2024-09-03, from: VOA News USA

Washington — When Jerome Powell delivered a high-profile speech last month, the Federal Reserve chair came the closest he ever had to declaring that the inflation surge that gripped the nation for three painful years was now essentially defeated.

And not only that. The Fed’s high interest rates, Powell said, had managed to achieve that goal without causing a widely predicted recession and high unemployment.

Yet most Americans are not in the same celebratory mood about the plummeting of inflation in the face of the high borrowing rates the Fed engineered. Though consumer sentiment is slowly rising, a majority of Americans in some surveys still complain about elevated prices, given that the costs of such necessities as food, gas and housing remain far above where they were before the pandemic erupted in 2020.

The relatively sour mood of the public is creating challenges for Vice President Kamala Harris as she seeks to succeed President Joe Biden. Despite the fall of inflation and strong job growth, many voters say they’re dissatisfied with the Biden-Harris administration’s economic record — and especially frustrated by high prices.

That disparity points to a striking gap between how economists and policymakers assess the past several years of the economy and how many ordinary Americans do.

In his remarks last month, given at an annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Powell underscored how the Fed’s sharp rate hikes succeeded much more than most economists had predicted in taming inflation without hammering the economy — a notoriously difficult feat known as a “soft landing.”

“Some argued that getting inflation under control would require a recession and a lengthy period of high unemployment,” Powell said.

Ultimately, though, he noted, “the 4-1/2 percentage point decline in inflation from its peak two years ago has occurred in a context of low unemployment — a welcome and historically unusual result.”

With high inflation now essentially conquered, Powell and other central bank officials are preparing to cut their key interest rate in mid-September for the first time in more than four years. The Fed is becoming more focused on sustaining the job market with the help of lower interest rates than on continuing to fight inflation.

Many Americans ‘have taken a big hit’

Many consumers, by contrast, are still preoccupied most by today’s price levels.

“From the viewpoint of economists, central bankers, how we think about inflation, it really has been a remarkable success, how inflation went up, has come back, and is around the target,” said Kristin Forbes, an economist at MIT and a former official at the United Kingdom’s central bank, the Bank of England.

“But from the viewpoint of households, it has not been so successful,” she added. “Many have taken a big hit to their wages. Many of them feel like the basket of goods they buy is now much more expensive.”

Two years ago, economists feared that the Fed’s ongoing rate hikes — it ultimately raised its benchmark rate more than 5 percentage points to a 23-year high in the fastest pace in four decades — would hammer the economy and cause millions of job losses. After all, that’s what happened when the Fed under Chair Paul Volcker sent its benchmark rate to nearly 20% in the early 1980s, ultimately throttling a brutal inflationary spell.

In fact, at Jackson Hole two years ago, Powell himself warned that using high interest rates to defeat the inflation spike “would bring some pain to households and businesses.”

Yet now, according to the Fed’s preferred measure, inflation is 2.5%, not far above its 2% target. And while a weaker pace of hiring has caused some concerns, the unemployment rate is at a still-low 4.3%, and the economy expanded at a solid 3% annual rate last quarter.

While no Fed official will outright declare victory, some take satisfaction in defying the predictions of doom and gloom.

“2023 was a historic year for inflation falling,” said Austan Goolsbee, president of the Chicago Fed. “And there wasn’t a recession, and that’s unprecedented. And so we will be studying the mechanics of how that happened for a long time.”

Measures of consumer sentiment, though, indicate that three years of hurtful inflation have dimmed many Americans’ outlook. In addition, high loan rates, along with elevated housing prices, have led many young workers to fear that homeownership is increasingly out of reach.

‘Inflation overhang’

Last month, the consulting firm McKinsey said that 53% of consumers in its most recent survey “still say that rising prices and inflation are among their concerns.” McKinsey’s analysts attributed the escalated figure to “an ’inflation overhang.” That’s the belief among analysts that it can take months, if not years, for consumers to adjust emotionally to a much higher level of prices even if their pay is keeping pace.

Economists point to several reasons for the wide gap in perceptions between economists and policymakers on the one hand and everyday consumers and workers on the other.

The first is that the Fed tailors its interest rate policies to manage inflation — the rate of price changes — rather than price levels themselves. So when inflation spikes, the central bank’s goal is to return it to a sustainable level, currently defined as 2%, rather than to reverse the price increases. The Fed’s policymakers expect average wages to catch up and eventually to allow consumers to afford the higher prices.

“Central bankers think even if inflation gets away from 2% for a period, as long as it comes back, that’s fine,” Forbes said. “Victory, mission accomplished. But the amount of time inflation is away from 2% can have a major cost.”

Research by Stefanie Stantcheva, a Harvard economist, and two colleagues found that most people’s views of inflation are very different from those of economists. Economists in general are more likely to regard inflation as a consequence of strong growth. They often describe inflation as a result of an “overheating” economy: Low unemployment, strong job growth and rising wages lead businesses to sharply increase prices without necessarily losing sales.

By contrast, a survey by Stantcheva found, ordinary Americans “view inflation as an unambiguously bad thing and very rarely as a sign of a good economy or as a byproduct of positive developments.”

Her survey respondents also said they believed that inflation stems from excessive government spending or greedy businesses. They “do not believe that (central bank) policymakers face trade-offs, such as having to reduce economic activity or increase unemployment to control inflation.”

Perceived recession

As a result, few consumers probably worried about the potential for a downturn as a result of the Fed’s rate hikes. One opinion survey, in fact, found that many consumers believed, incorrectly, that the economy was in a recession because inflation was so high.

At the Jackson Hole conference, Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, argued that central banks cannot guarantee that high inflation will never appear — only that they will try to drive it back down when it does.

“I get this question quite often in Parliament,” Bailey said. “People say, ‘Well you failed to control inflation.’ I said no.”

The test of a central bank, he continued, “is not that we will never have inflation. The test of the regime is how well, once you get hit by these shocks, you bring it back to target.”

Still, Forbes suggested that there are lessons to be learned from the post-COVID inflation spike, including whether inflation was allowed to stay too high for too long, both in the U.S. and the U.K. The Fed has long been criticized for having taken too long to start raising its benchmark rate. Inflation first spiked in the spring of 2021. Yet the Fed, under the mistaken impression that high inflation would prove “transitory,” didn’t begin raising rates until nearly a year later.

“Maybe should we rethink … where we seem to be now: ‘As long as it comes back four to five years later, that’s fine,’” she said. “Maybe four to five years is too long.

“How much unemployment or slowdown in growth should we be willing to accept to shorten the length of time that inflation is too high?”

https://www.voanews.com/a/us-fed-welcomes-soft-landing-even-if-many-americans-don-t-feel-like-cheering/7769461.html


The Reviews Are In for Volvo’s New EX90 SUV

date: 2024-09-03, from: Heatmap News



Current conditions: Japan recorded its hottest summer ever • Tropical Storm Yagi killed at least 14 people in the Philippines and is forecast to strengthen as it heads toward China • Cooling centers are open in L.A. as another powerful heat wave bakes California.

THE TOP FIVE

  1. U.S. and China to hold more climate talks

U.S. climate envoy John Podesta will head to Beijing this week for a second round of formal climate talks with his Chinese counterpart Liu Zhenmin. From Wednesday through Friday the two men will discuss their countries’ respective 2035 emissions targets and climate finance ahead of November’s COP29 climate summit. The U.S. is trying to encourage China to commit to more ambitious emissions cuts, and contribute funds to the New Collective Quantified Goal to help developing countries build climate resilience. According to Reuters, “few analysts expect this week’s talks to deliver much progress.” The U.S. and China are the world’s top greenhouse gas emitters.

  1. Eerily calm Atlantic baffles storm watchers

The Atlantic Ocean has been strangely quiet over the last few weeks, and meteorologists are baffled. “Despite several disturbances peppering the Atlantic from the Gulf of Mexico to Africa this Labor Day – a traditionally active turn in the hurricane season – none show any immediate signs of development,” wrote Michael Lowry in his Eye on the Tropics newsletter. Indeed the National Hurricane Center currently shows two areas of interest, both with very little chance of forming into a storm system to be worried about. “The quiet is eerie but no one is complaining,” said research meteorologist Ryan Maue. Hurricane season peaks one week from today.

National Hurricane Center/NOAA

  1. Grand Canyon deaths rise as extreme weather intensifies

With four months left in 2024, the number of deaths reported in Grand Canyon National Park this year has reached 14, just shy of the annual average of 15, according to The Hill. There are a number of factors at play but the rise in fatalities comes as climate change brings more dangerous weather to the popular park, including extreme heat and flash floods. Just in the last 10 days, three people have been found dead. A recent study from the National Park Service concluded that more extreme heat is significantly increasing the risk of heat-related illness for visitors. Temperatures at the bottom of the canyon regularly reach 120 degrees Fahrenheit and can go higher as the dark stones absorb heat. But flash floods are common, too, and can catch hikers off guard. “The arid, sparsely vegetated environment here means that rainfall quickly generates runoff because the ground doesn’t absorb it well,” National Park Service spokesperson Rebecca Roland said. A flash flood tore through the canyon on August 22 and killed a 33-year-old woman.

  1. Study: The ‘neighborhood effect’ accelerates solar panel uptake

If you’re thinking of installing solar panels but still on the fence, maybe consider that taking the plunge could turn you into an influencer who inspires your neighbors to install their own solar panels, too. A recent study published in the journal Energy Research & Social Science looked at solar installations in Australia and specifically the so-called neighborhood effect that’s observed when a technology becomes more visible and subsequently more popular. The researchers found that “once a few houses in a neighborhood had solar, solar got installed faster – translating on average to 15-20 extra solar installations per postal area per year.” They estimate that in 2018, the neighborhood effect was responsible for about 18% of the annual number of installations in Australia. “We do care what our peers are doing,” the researchers wrote. “This is nothing to be ashamed of. As we work to secure a liveable climate, the neighborhood effect can play an important role.” While this study focused on uptake in Australia, the neighborhood effect has been observed in relation to solar installations in the U.S., too.

  1. The first-drive reviews of Volvo’s EX90 SUV are in

Today seems to be the day everyone is publishing their first-drive reviews of the Volvo EX90, the company’s new flagship all-electric SUV. The long-delayed, three-row vehicle starts at a base price of $82,290, and has a range between 296 and 308 miles. It’s being manufactured in South Carolina and U.S. deliveries are expected toward the end of 2024. Here’s a distilled version of what everyone is saying:

The good: The SUV is comfortable, cushy, and beautifully designed. “The cabin has a nice ambience and a cool, premium feel.” It has a very smooth ride and incredible torque considering its hefty weight. And the sound system is “genuinely astonishing.

The bad: Software glitches (no Apple CarPlay or Android Auto at launch, non-functional lidar), buggy connectivity (the phone-as-key feature seems particularly confused), battery drain when parked, and a cramped back row.

The bottom lines:

THE KICKER

“It’s getting so hot that the pieces that hold the concrete and steel, those bridges can literally fall apart like Tinkertoys.” –Paul Chinowsky, a professor of civil engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder, explains how extreme heat affects infrastructure.

https://heatmap.news/electric-vehicles/volvo-ex90-ev-suv-reviews


Cloud computing hits the nuclear button amid energy crisis

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Other options considered too as the power draw on electricity grids continues unabated

Analysis  Cloud computing is one of the few areas of the tech industry to show continual growth, even during the pandemic and the subsequent inflation-driven curb on spending. Yet one thing that might hinder cloud’s inexorable expansion is finding the power for the infrastructure it depends on.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/cloud_growth_energy_challenges/


Equity and Social Policy: Q&A with Jessica Welburn Paige

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: RAND blog

Jessica Welburn Paige, a behavioral and social scientist, focuses on questions of race and inequality. In this interview, she discusses how AI programs being used to monitor students for suicide risk could compromise student privacy and harm vulnerable students.

https://www.rand.org/pubs/commentary/2024/09/equity-and-social-policy-qa-with-jessica-welburn-paige.html


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Trump's first term is a warning. (Every NYT story or op-ed that presents Trump as warm and fuzzy should be linked to this piece.)

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/07/18/opinion/trump-presidency-record.html?unlocked_article_code=1.H04.B-Yt.wlI939ae2rBL&smid=url-share


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

For some reason I love this Sprint commercial from 2014. Best line: "let's go honey those tacos ain't gonna eat themselves over there."

https://www.ispot.tv/ad/7Shu/sprint-framily-plan-gordon-ft-judy-greer


Even as rent growth cools, sticker shock lingers

date: 2024-09-03, from: Marketplace Morning Report

Lots of folks had Labor Day barbecues this past weekend, but plenty spent it moving too. It was a big move-in weekend for renters. And while rent prices have been moderating, they’re still way higher than they were a few years ago. We’ll hear more. But first: why so many hotel workers are going on strike and how the FAA is looking to curb a shortage of air traffic controllers.

https://www.marketplace.org/shows/marketplace-morning-report/even-as-rent-growth-cools-sticker-shock-lingers


Former VW boss faces “dieselgate” trial

date: 2024-09-03, from: Marketplace Morning Report

From the BBC World Service: The trial of the former chief executive of Volkswagen, Martin Winterkorn, is getting under way in Germany over his role in a major diesel emissions scandal. We’ll rehash the controversy and hear the latest. And in an exclusive interview, the chief executive of logistics group DHL warns about the challenges facing global trade and the German economy, which is the largest in Europe.

https://www.marketplace.org/shows/marketplace-morning-report/former-vw-boss-faces-dieselgate-trial


MASTER PLAN, Ep 4: The Task Force That Took Over America

date: 2024-09-03, from: The Lever News

How a radical secret memo went from idea to reality.

https://www.levernews.com/master-plan-ep-4-the-task-force-that-took-over-america-2/


SAP CTO bows out over ‘incident’ at company shindig

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Board member offers apology for ‘inappropriate’ behavior

SAP CTO and executive board member Jürgen Müller is set to depart the German software corporation over an “incident” at a company event.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/sap_cto_departs/


The First Continental Congress Convenes

date: 2024-09-03, from: National Archives, Pieces of History blog

In celebration of the upcoming 250th anniversary of the United States, we’re focusing on key events in the history of independence. Today’s post looks at the First Continental Congress, which met from September 5 to October 26, 1774, in Carpenters’ Hall, Philadelphia. Following the Seven Years’ War (1756–63), a cash-strapped Britain wanted to raise funds … Continue reading The First Continental Congress Convenes

https://prologue.blogs.archives.gov/2024/09/03/the-first-continental-congress-convenes/


Experts Discover 1,700 Ancient Viruses in a Tibetan Glacier

date: 2024-09-03, from: Smithsonian Magazine

Studying how the viruses, which do not infect humans, adapted to previous major temperature shifts could hold clues to how modern viruses will react to the current climate change

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/experts-discover-1700-ancient-viruses-in-a-tibetan-glacier-180985005/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

The latest shows from my favorite podcast feeds.

https://news.scripting.com/?tab=podcasts


AI firms propose ‘personhood credentials’ … to fight AI

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

It’s going to take more than CAPTCHA to prove you’re real

Researchers at Microsoft and OpenAI, among others, have proposed “personhood credentials” to counter the online deception enabled by the AI models sold by Microsoft and OpenAI, among others.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/ai_personhood_credentials/


@Dave Winer’s linkblog (date: 2024-09-03, from: Dave Winer’s linkblog)

Young male voters are flocking to Trump – but he doesn’t have their interests at heart.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/sep/03/young-male-voters-trump-harris


date: 2024-09-03, from: O’Reilly Radar

This month, we’ll give AI a rest. Alex Russell has finished an excellent series of posts titled “Reckoning.” It’s a must-read for web developers. If you want to understand why our networks and laptops are much faster than they were 15 or 20 years ago, but the web is slower, it comes down to one […]

https://www.oreilly.com/radar/radar-trends-to-watch-september-2024/


Is the Election Already Hurting Clean Energy?

date: 2024-09-03, from: Heatmap News



Climate has not exactly been the focus in this election cycle that it was in 2020 — but the political climate could still be polarizing public opinion on clean energy.

For the latest Heatmap News poll, Embold Research surveyed more than 5,000 registered voters over two weeks in early August. When asked whether they were in favor clean energy projects in either their state, their local area, or near their own property, a majority of respondents said they were at least somewhat supportive, with declining levels of enthusiasm as the projects got closer to their homes. The responses also followed a predictable partisan gradient: 81% of Democrats supported clean energy projects “on a property near yours” compared to 28% of Republicans. But this level of support was also slightly lower than what it was in April, when Embold fielded a similar Heatmap survey.

Support went up among members of both major parties as the hypothetical projects got further away from their homes, but across the board, the numbers were lower in August than they were in April. “We have seen a slight dip in voters’ support for various types of clean energy,” Embold analyst Ben Greenfield told me. As with any poll gyration, the dip could be a “statistical blip,” Greenfield said. But it’s also “possible that this is an election year phenomenon.”

“This is something we do occasionally see — that support for various types of policies and policy-related things can change in the heat of the an election year, even if they don’t seem on their face directly related to the election,” Greenfield added. While the opinions may be transitory, however, they can have long-lasting consequences.

Opposition to clean energy projects can manifest — and matter — at both the local and national level. A Republican congressional majority, for instance, if convinced that its constituents don’t see much value in wind and solar projects, may be more aggressive in unwinding parts of the Inflation Reduction Act. Likewise, a great deal of the clean energy development activity supported by tax policy that was beefed up and extended in the Inflation Reduction Act has occurred in Republican-controlled districts and states. To the extent that local communities turn against clean energy because of its association with Democrats, it could mean a slower and dirtier transition away from fossil fuels.

Other differences between Republicans’ and Democrats’ survey answers appear to reflect not just attitudes toward clean energy in general, but also the respondents’ own values and preferences for energy projects. Even when Republicans support clean energy projects, Greenfield noted, their reasons for doing so are different from what Democrats cite.

When asked what would be a “strong” benefit of a clean energy project, the most popular answer for Republicans, garnering 47% support, was the claim that it “reduces our dependence on foreign sources of oil and gas.” Among Democrats, meanwhile, 76% picked out “combats climate change” as a benefit of clean energy, compared to 39% of independents and only 13% of Republicans. “On that question, Democrats are kind of equally interested in the economic benefits and environmental benefits, whereas Republicans are almost entirely focused on economic benefits,” Greenfield said. Donald Trump has made a point of attacking clean energy policies on economic grounds, especially wind, electric boats, and depending on the day, electric cars.

“We see lower support for wind than solar — at least rooftop solar,” Greenfield said. That could be because rooftop solar is seen as a way to save money and increase one’s own personal resilience, as opposed to a more purely environmental choice like wind power.

“We found that there’s more support for incentives for clean power plants, home renovations, building of factories in the U.S.,” Greenfield also noted, suggesting that clean energy policies with a more obvious economic nexus may be more popular than ones that are seen as more purely to do with climate change.

While Trump modulates his views on EVs seemingly depending on how he feels about Elon Musk that day, there’s good evidence that one reason he attacked them in the past is that he knew his supporters would like to hear it. When asked whether they thought installing a variety of clean energy technologies in their home would improve or diminish their quality of life, more than half of Republicans said an electric car would make their quality of life “much worse,” compared to just 5% of Democrats; over 50% of Democrats said an electric car would make their quality of life better.

“Any time we talk about EVs, we see lower levels of support and stronger opposition among Republicans than you might expect people to have about a type of car,” Greenfield told me. “The big difference is the partisan difference on the environmental benefit and whether that is important. Clean energy tends to be a Democratic coded issue. That is clearly driving a lot of the partisan difference.”

The Heatmap poll of 5,202 American adults was conducted by Embold Research via online responses from August 3 to 16, 2024. The survey included interviews with Americans in all 50 states and Washington, D.C. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 1.4 percentage points.

https://heatmap.news/politics/clean-energy-polarization-election


Transport for London confirms cyberattack, assures us all is well

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Government body claims there is no evidence of customer data being compromised

Transport for London (TfL) – responsible for much of the public network carrying people around England’s capital – is battling to stay on top of an unfolding “cyber security incident.”…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/tfl_cyberattack/


How L.A.’s Illegal Short-Term Rentals Hide in Plain Sight on Booking Sites

date: 2024-09-03, from: Capital and Main

Los Angeles officials are struggling to crack down on illegal rentals during a housing crisis. Here’s how to make sure you’re a responsible vacationer.

The post How L.A.’s Illegal Short-Term Rentals Hide in Plain Sight on Booking Sites appeared first on .

https://capitalandmain.com/how-l-a-s-illegal-short-term-rentals-hide-in-plain-sight-on-booking-sites


Magnetic personalities at Tokamak Energy form separate division

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Fusion biz wants to break superconducting tech into other sectors

Brit nuclear fusion firm Tokamak Energy has formed a separate division to commercialize the superconducting magnet tech it developed for reactors in other markets including renewable energy or transport.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/tokamak_energy_magnet_spinoff/


date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Appeal panel upholds ban as Musk Xeets up a rage-storm

Brazil’s Supreme Court has backed an earlier decision to force local carriers to block Elon Musk’s social network, X, as the dispute between the billionaire and the South American nation widens.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/brazil_vs_x_update/


Big Tech got its ‘next billion’ – but there’s three billion people still offline

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

The GSMA and its friends are looking for ways to bring those within mobile range onto the ’net

In 2015 Google gave itself a mission: connect the “next billion” people to the internet. That plan more-than-succeeded, but also left three billion people offline – a situation that other orgs are trying to address.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/three_billion_people_offline/


Alibaba Cloud boosts failure prediction with logfile timestamps

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Machine learning helps, but more data catches more faults - so Chinese champ has shared its data

Alibaba Cloud has revealed homebrew tech it used to improve server fault prediction and detection, which it claims saw its ability to detect problems beat comparable tech by ten percent.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/aliaba_cloud_taat_fault_detection/


AI Snake Oil

date: 2024-09-03, from: Ed Summers blog, Inkdroid

I pre-ordered this one a few months ago, and here it is!

https://inkdroid.org/2024/09/03/ai-snake-oil/


One of China’s best GPU prospects admits it’s failing, lays off workers

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: The Register (UK I.T. News)

Needs new investors to get beyond current modest products

Chinese GPU-maker Xiangdixian Computing Technology has admitted it has not met its development targets and let go of some staff as part of a restructuring plan.…

https://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.com/2024/09/03/xiangdixian_computing_technology_layoffs_restructure/


Telemetry in Go 1.23 and beyond

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Go language blog

Go 1.23 includes opt-in telemetry for the Go toolchain.

https://go.dev/blog/gotelemetry


Simplifying components for .NET/C# developers with componentize-dotnet

date: 2024-09-03, updated: 2024-09-03, from: Bytecode Alliance News

If you’re a .NET/C# developer, componentize-dotnet makes it easy to compile your code to WebAssembly components using a single tool. This Bytecode Alliance project is a NuGet package that can be used to create a fully AOT-compiled component from a .NET application—giving .NET developers a component experience comparable to those in Rust and TinyGo.

https://bytecodealliance.org/articles/simplifying-components-for-dotnet-developers-with-componentize-dotnet


Welcome Riley Marsh, Metadata Manager

date: 2024-09-03, from: ROR Research ID Blog

We are thrilled to introduce a new member of the ROR pride: Riley Marsh joined the ROR team in August as our new Metadata Manager.

https://ror.org/blog/2024-09-03-welcome-riley-marsh/