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Not all iPhones will get iOS 17. Is yours compatible?
Not all iPhones will get iOS 17. Is yours compatible?
Apple revealed iOS 17 at its 2023 Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday, detailing updates such
2023-06-06 11:57
Standalone Bumble for Friends app launches
Standalone Bumble for Friends app launches
Following news last month that Bumble was testing a standalone app for Bumble BFF, the
2023-07-26 21:24
The Best Portable Printers for 2023
The Best Portable Printers for 2023
At first blush, the thought of a fully portable printer, designed to run on battery
2023-06-29 04:23
Cisco beefs up cybersecurity play with $28 billion Splunk deal
Cisco beefs up cybersecurity play with $28 billion Splunk deal
(Reuters) -Cisco Systems has agreed buy cybersecurity firm Splunk for about $28 billion in its biggest-ever deal to beef up
2023-09-21 20:29
Global Dining Chain is Knightscope’s Newest Autonomous Security Robot Client
Global Dining Chain is Knightscope’s Newest Autonomous Security Robot Client
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 21, 2023--
2023-07-21 21:50
Scientists solve 5-year mystery of tiny unidentified 'sea creature'
Scientists solve 5-year mystery of tiny unidentified 'sea creature'
Scientists have got to the bottom of a 5-year mystery after finally identifying a tiny sea creature captured on camera in 2018. It is the latest in a series of oceanic discoveries and experts recently observed “zombie worms” devour an alligator in an incredible experiment. For the tiny creature, the baffling question of its identity took a team of zoologists and parasitic worm specialists to solve after the small creature was pictured by an underwater photographer in 2018 off the coast of Okinawa in Japan. After photographer Ryo Minemizu captured the image, he shared it on social media asking the hive mind if they knew what the creature was, but everyone was left stumped. Minemizu was determined not to give up and instead went back to the area and was able to capture another ladybird-sized creature that was the same, or very similar, to the original one he had come across. The research team that was interested in identifying the sea creature approached him and Minemizu sent them the sample to research. Your browser does not support the video tag. Current Biology (2023) The team’s results were published in the Current Biology journal putting an end to the 5-year long mystery baffling experts. In a fascinating twist, the team found that the sample was not one, but two creatures that were clinging tightly to one another. Both were identified as types of cercariae parasitic larvae worms, with experts dubbing one as the “sailor” and the other as a “passenger” thanks to how they behave when they are connected. Passengers were much smaller than the sailors and when they were bonded together, they formed a flat-topped hemisphere shape. They squeeze their bodies together with heads facing the inside of the sphere, meanwhile, their tails latch onto one another. Experts believe the two individual creatures have created a colonial organism that suits both of their needs and according to the study's authors, “represents the first case of labor division in digenean larvae”. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-10-05 23:24
US Treasuries Blacklisted by German State as ESG Law Takes Hold
US Treasuries Blacklisted by German State as ESG Law Takes Hold
For an illustration of how wildly different the debate around ESG is in Europe and the US, look
2023-06-06 12:26
AST SpaceMobile Confirms 4G Capabilities to Everyday Smartphones Directly From Space
AST SpaceMobile Confirms 4G Capabilities to Everyday Smartphones Directly From Space
MIDLAND, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 21, 2023--
2023-06-21 20:22
Meta could finally launch Threads feature users are waiting for
Meta could finally launch Threads feature users are waiting for
Meta could soon launch a web version of Threads, as users grow frustrated with the lack of features on the platform. Threads was launched early in July, and quickly became the fastest growing app ever. It appeared to have been launched early to capitalise on the problems that have engulfed Twitter since Elon Musk bought it and renamed it X, and quickly gathered users as a result. That speed of launch does however appear to have left the app without a variety of basic features. In the weeks since, the company has been rushing to add new ways of using the app that have been missing since its launch. In recent days, for example, Threads has added the option to share threads posts on Instagram DMs, see a list of liked posts, and sort the accounts that are being followed. But it is still lacking perhaps the most basic feature of any social network: the ability to use it outside of an app. While many rival networks such as Twitter began as web versions, Threads still does not have a version that can be used on desktop computers or outside of the app. In a recent post, head of Instagram Adam Mosseri said the company is “working on it”. “We’ve been using an early version internally for a week or two,” he wrote on Threads. “Still needs some work before we can open it up to everyone though…” Mark Zuckerberg also said two weeks ago that the company was looking to build a “vibrant long term app” and that it had “lots of work ahead”. That includes the addition of “search and web”, which he said would arrive “in the next few weeks”. Now the Wall Street Journal has reported that the web version of the app could come as early as this week. But it noted that the “launch plans aren’t final and could change”. Threads does offer some features on the web. Users can click on links to Threads and see individual posts and replies, for instance, but there is no way to get back to a feed of accounts that a user is following. Instagram has always been relatively resistant to adding new platforms to its social network. The main Instagram app has only a relatively scaled-down version as its web offering, and it still does not offer a version of its app for iPad. Read More Mark Zuckerberg hits out at Elon Musk for wasting time over cage fight Japanese scientists hoping for a message from alien life imminently iPhone 15 could bring two major changes to fix battery life
2023-08-22 00:18
Scientists make 'shocking' discovery that life could be hiding on Saturn's moon
Scientists make 'shocking' discovery that life could be hiding on Saturn's moon
Dramatic explosions on the surface of one of Saturn's moons have been observed, and it could change the way scientists approach the search for life in the universe. Saturn's ice-covered moon Enceladus has been the subject of attention from astronomers for decades after plumes of water vapor were observed erupting from its surface 20 years ago by the Cassini spacecraft. Now, the biggest plume yet has been spotted by the James Webb Space Telescope and it measures a massive 10,000 kilometers in length. Incredibly, the plume emitting from the geyser on the surface measures 20 times the size of the moon itself, and it indicates that there’s more to Enceladus than previously thought. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Planetary scientist Geronimo Villanueva of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said: "When I was looking at the data, at first, I was thinking I had to be wrong, it was just so shocking to map a plume more than 20 times the diameter of the moon. "The plume extends far beyond what we could have imagined." Instead of solid ice, the size of the plume shows us that there’s a liquid ocean under the surface. It’s kept warm enough to avoid freezing due to the movement that results from the gravitational pull of Saturn. As ever, the existence of liquid water suggests that there’s the possibility of life existing there, and it's encouraging news for authors of the study accepted in Nature Astronomy. "The orbit of Enceladus around Saturn is relatively quick, just 33 hours. As it whips around Saturn, the moon and its jets are basically spitting off water, leaving a halo, almost like a donut, in its wake," Villanueva said. "In the Webb observations, not only was the plume huge, but there was just water absolutely everywhere." It remains one of the most interesting bodies being studied in the solar system, as geochemist Christopher Glein of the Southwest Research Institute. “Enceladus is one of the most dynamic objects in the Solar System and is a prime target in humanity's search for life beyond Earth," geochemist Christopher Glein of the Southwest Research Institute said. "In the years since NASA's Cassini spacecraft first looked at Enceladus, we never cease to be amazed by what we find is happening on this extraordinary moon." Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-06-02 18:26
Apple is reportedly spending 'millions of dollars a day' on AI
Apple is reportedly spending 'millions of dollars a day' on AI
Beneath the surface, Apple is churning away on AI development, just like every other tech
2023-09-07 11:46
Robocall company behind 'billions' of illegal calls sued by FTC
Robocall company behind 'billions' of illegal calls sued by FTC
WASHINGTON XCast Labs, a company accused of helping make billions of illegal robocalls, was sued on Friday by
2023-05-13 04:19