Tag Archives: adds

Remedy Adds Teeth To Already-Horrifying Control Monster

Screenshot: Remedy Entertainment / 505 Games

Control developer Remedy Entertainment, caught up in the Lady Dimitrescu hype, has done something terrible. It made the Former, which is already horrifying, even more distressing by giving the monster a full set of teeth. And it’s smiling.

Listen, I know we’re all having fun with the tall Resident Evil lady. I even wrote something about her last night after privately telling my coworkers how tired I was of the whole thing. But this is beyond the pale. Remedy used an opportunity to get in on the hot new internet joke to assault us with a skin-crawling nightmare.

I don’t know what it is about teeth that makes them so fascinating to game developers, but they need to chill.

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Enormous Dark Souls Mod Adds Halo’s Blood Gulch, Completely Changes Multiplayer

Screenshot: Dark Souls: Remastest

Modder InfernoPlus, the same guy who turned Mario into a battle royale game, has done wonders with Dark Souls, releasing an ambitious mod that transforms the game’s multiplayer and turns the map into something decidedly less horrific.

Dark Souls: Remastest is “a multiplayer focused mod for Dark Souls: Prepare To Die Edition that adds a variety of new PvP related content to the game, and removes most of the coop restrictions from the game.”

Though really that’s selling it very short. It adds a new matchmaking system, hugely increases the player count, introduces tons of balance changes and even brings a capture the flag mode to Dark Souls.

Oh, and it also includes a version of Halo’s famous Blood Gulch map.

That is just…so much stuff. So much, in fact, that InfernoPlus’ video explaining everything goes for 35 minutes.

If you want to download the mod, you can get it here.

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Dallas County adds 20 COVID-19 deaths; 183 deaths in 7 days shatters record set only a week ago

Updated 6:15 p.m.: Revised to include data from Dallas County.

Dallas County on Saturday reported 1,407 new coronavirus cases and 20 more deaths from COVID-19.

This marked the deadliest week of the pandemic so far, with 183 deaths, County Judge Clay Jenkins said. That shatters the previous high of 138 set only the week before.

The latest victims — mostly in their 60s or older — included 10 people from Dallas, two each from Farmers Branch, Garland and Irving, and one each from Cedar Hill, DeSoto, Duncanville and Richardson. Nearly all had been hospitalized, and all but one had underlying health conditions.

Jenkins said while COVID-19 hospitalizations have fallen slightly over the last few weeks, county health officials are concerned about the most recent projections from UT Southwestern. Their forecast model predicts between 910 and 1,390 people will be hospitalized in Dallas County by Feb. 9.

That’s lower than past projections but will still be an “immense strain” on health care systems, the county said in a news release.

Of the new cases reported Saturday, 1,170 were confirmed and 237 were probable.

The county has reported 256,900 cases overall, including 226,452 confirmed and 30,448 probable. The death toll is 2,179.

Health officials use hospitalizations, intensive-care admissions and emergency room visits as key metrics to track the real-time impact of COVID-19 in the county. In the 24-hour period that ended Friday, 989 COVID-19 patients were in acute care in hospitals in the county. During the same period, 512 ER visits were for symptoms of the disease.

According to the state’s data, 136,028 people in Dallas County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 30,650 are fully vaccinated.

Texas

Across the state, 19,569 more COVID-19 cases were reported Saturday, including 18,109 new cases and 1,460 older cases that were recently reported by labs.

The state also reported 332 COVID-19 deaths, raising its toll to 36,320.

Of the new cases, 14,969 were confirmed and 3,140 were probable. Of the older cases, 1,068 were confirmed and 392 were probable.

The state has now reported 2,349,262 cases overall, including 2,049,055 confirmed and 300,207 probable. (The state also removed 335 cases from the total confirmed cases due to a data audit in Hays County.)

There are 11,473 COVID-19 patients in Texas hospitals, including 3,173 in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. On Friday, 19% of patients in the hospital region covering the Dallas-Fort Worth area were COVID-19 patients — above the 15% threshold the state has used to define high hospitalizations.

The seven-day average positivity rate statewide for molecular tests, based on the date of test specimen collection, was 14.77% as of Friday. For antigen tests, the positivity rate for the same period was 7.93%. A molecular test is considered more accurate and is sometimes also called a PCR test; an antigen test is also called a rapid test. Gov. Greg Abbott has said a positivity rate above 10% is cause for concern.

State expects big influx of vaccine

Texas is set to receive a significantly higher number of COVID-19 vaccines in the coming week, the state health department said. Providers will receive 520,425 first doses of the vaccine and 188,225 second doses for people vaccinated a few weeks ago.

The additional doses are largely due to a 30% increase in the number of Moderna vaccines being provided by the federal government, the state said.

The increase is also due to an additional 126,750 doses of the Pfizer vaccine, which were initially set aside for the federal Pharmacy Partnership for Long-Term Care Program, being returned to the state. The program overestimated how many doses it would need, the state health department said.

The state said it is working with providers to ensure they have enough second doses for patients vaccinated a few weeks ago. People should be able to return to the provider that gave them their first dose, the state said.

According to the state’s data, 1,842,287 people in Texas have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 448,649 are fully vaccinated.

Tarrant County

Tarrant County reported 1,862 coronavirus cases and 16 deaths Saturday.

The latest victims — mostly in their 60s or older — included seven people from Fort Worth, two from North Richland Hills and one each from Arlington, Euless, Haltom City, Hurst, Mansfield, Saginaw and Watauga. All had underlying health conditions, the county said.

Of the new cases, 1,560 were confirmed and 302 were probable.

The county has now reported 216,910 cases overall, including 187,038 confirmed and 29,872 probable. The death toll is 2,176.

According to the county, 1,177 people were hospitalized with the virus as of Friday.

According to the state, 104,775 people in Tarrant County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 17,729 are fully vaccinated.

Collin County

The state added 505 coronavirus cases and seven deaths to Collin County’s totals Saturday.

No details about the latest victims were available.

Of the new cases, 331 were confirmed and 174 were probable.

The county has reported 72,370 cases total, including 61,854 confirmed and 10,516 probable. The death toll is 573.

According to the county, 496 people are hospitalized with the virus.

According to the state, 51,046 people in Collin County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 13,339 are fully vaccinated.

Denton County

Denton County reported 306 coronavirus cases and no deaths Saturday.

The county has reported 53,554 cases overall, including 42,349 confirmed and 11,205 probable. The death toll is 318.

According to the county, 171 people are hospitalized with the virus.

According to the state, 28,383 people in Denton County have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine, while 7,953 are fully vaccinated.

Other counties

The Texas Department of State Health Services has taken over reporting for these other North Texas counties. In some counties, new data may not be reported every day.

The latest numbers are:

  • Rockwall County: 9,337 cases (7,762 confirmed and 1,575 probable), 100 deaths.
  • Kaufman County: 13,005 cases (11,281 confirmed and 1,724 probable), 182 deaths.
  • Ellis County: 18,561 cases (16,240 confirmed and 2,321 probable), 232 deaths.
  • Johnson County: 16,483 cases (14,503 confirmed and 1,980 probable), 263 deaths.

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J&J vaccine adds to COVID-19 armoury, includes South African variant

(Reuters) – Johnson & Johnson said on Friday that its single-dose vaccine was 66% effective in preventing COVID-19 in a large global trial against multiple variants, giving health officials another weapon to tackle the pandemic.

In the trial of nearly 44,000 volunteers, the level of protection against moderate and severe COVID-19 varied from 72% in the United States, to 66% in Latin America and just 57% in South Africa, from where a worrying variant has spread.

The data showed that the vaccine’s effect on the South Africa variant was diminished compared to the unaltered virus, but infectious disease and public health experts said it can still help contain the virus spread and prevent deaths.

Midstage trial data from Novavax on Thursday also documented lower effectiveness in South Africa.

Rival shots from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna were both around 95% effective in preventing symptomatic illness in pivotal trials when given in two doses.

Those trials were conducted mainly in the United States and before the emergence of new variants. These mean that the world is racing against time and with limited supplies to vaccinate as many people as possible, and quickly, to prevent virus surges.

COVID-19 is rising in 37 countries and infections have surpassed 101 million globally.

Top U.S. infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci said the world needs to vaccinate quickly to try to get ahead of these changes in the virus.

“It’s really a wake up call for us to be nimble and to be able to adjust as this virus will continue for certain to evolve,” Fauci said.

J&J’s main goal was the prevention of moderate to severe COVID-19, and the vaccine was 85% effective in stopping severe disease and preventing hospitalization across all geographies and against multiple variants 28 days after immunization.

That “will potentially protect hundreds of millions of people from serious and fatal outcomes of COVID-19,” Paul Stoffels, J&J’s chief scientific officer, said.

J&J shares were down 4% at $162.7 at 1700 GMT, with some Wall Street analysts saying its vaccine’s effectiveness was below those of rivals. Moderna’s stock gained 8% to $172.80.

SEEKING APPROVAL

J&J plans to seek emergency use authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration next week and will soon follow up with the European Union and the rest of the world.

It has said it plans to deliver 1 billion doses of the vaccine, which it will make in the United States, Europe, South Africa and India, in 2021.

Public health officials are counting on it to increase much-needed supply and simplify immunization in the United States, which has a deal to buy 100 million doses of J&J’s vaccine and an option for an additional 200 million.

J&J said the vaccine would be ready immediately upon emergency approval, but Stoffels declined to say how many doses.

“The key is not only overall efficacy but specifically efficacy against severe disease, hospitalization, and death,” said Walid Gellad, a health policy associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh.

J&J’s vaccine uses a common cold virus to introduce coronavirus proteins into cells and trigger an immune response, whereas the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines employ a new technology called messenger RNA.

Unlike these vaccines, J&J’s does not require a second shot weeks after the first or need to be kept frozen, making it a strong candidate for use in parts of the world where transportation and cold storage present problems.

“Most countries are still desperate to get their hands on doses, regardless of whether or not the vaccine is considered highly effective. Moderately effective will do just fine for now,” Michael Breen, Director of Infectious Diseases and Ophthalmology at research firm GlobalData, said.

‘OVERWHELMED’

Several studies have emerged this month showing that a South African variant has mutated in areas of the virus that are key targets of vaccines, reducing their efficacy.

“What we are learning is there is different efficacy in different parts of the world,” Stoffels told Reuters.

In a sub-study of 6,000 volunteers in South Africa, Stoffels said, the J&J vaccine was 89% effective at preventing severe disease. In the South Africa portion of the trial, 95% of cases were infections with the South African variant.

“I am overwhelmed by the fact that this vaccine protected against severe disease even in South Africa,” said Glenda Gray, the joint lead investigator of the South African vaccine trial.

In the J&J trial, which was conducted in eight countries, 44% of participants were from the United States, 41% from Central and South America and 15% from South Africa. Just over a third of the volunteers were over 60.

Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Additional reporting by Manas Mishra, Dania Nadeem and Manojna Maddipatla in Bengalaru, Rebecca Spalding and Michael Erman in New York and Promit Mukherjee in Johannesburg; Writing by Alexander Smith; Editing by Peter Henderson, Edwina Gibbs, Keith Weir and Caroline Humer

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Signal adds mainstream chat features to lure wider audience

The latest version of Signal for both iOS (5.3.1) and Android (5.3.7) brings a number of new additions to the increasingly popular encrypted messaging app. These include mainstream features like chat wallpapers, animated stickers, and an “About” section in your profile. The iOS app now handles data more efficiently, too, bringing it closer to feature parity with the Android app.

Messaging apps like Signal and Telegram have seen a surge in growth in recent weeks. Signal was helped by a recommendation from Tesla CEO Elon Musk, while both benefited from the backlash to Facebook’s confusing new privacy policy for WhatsApp.

The new features were first announced on January 11th, and Android Police reported on them rolling out in the beta version of Signal for Android last week Friday. With chat wallpapers, you can pick from a number of presets or select a photo of your own, and you can also set a wallpaper for a specific conversation or all of them. The beta had 24 animated stickers, according to Android Police.

The iOS app, meanwhile, is also more efficient with data. iPhone users will see a new setting to lower data usage during calls, an option to automatically pause attachment downloads during calls, and improved image compression among other enhancements.

Signal has long been a popular messaging option for those focused on the security of their communications — the European Commission told staff to switch to Signal in February 2020, for example — and Signal is still focused on releasing new security-focused features, such as encrypted group video calls. But more consumer-focused features like wallpapers and stickers could make Signal feel more approachable for users coming to the app from WhatsApp or Facebook Messenger, and, ideally, keep them on Signal over the long term.



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Unstable helium adds a limit on the ongoing saga of the proton’s size

Enlarge / The small particle accelerator in Switzerland where, surrounded by farms, the work took place.

Physicists, who dedicate their lives to studying the topic, don’t actually seem to like physics very much since they’re always hoping it’s broken. But we’ll have to forgive them; finding out that a bit of theory can’t possibly explain experimental results is a sign that we probably need a new theory, which is something that would excite any physicist.

In recent years, one of the things that has looked the most broken is a seemingly simple measurement: the charge radius of the proton, which is a measure of its physical size. Measurements made with hydrogen atoms, which have a single electron orbiting a proton, gave us one answer. Measurements in which the electron was replaced by a heavier particle, called a muon, gave us a different answer—and the two results were incompatible. A lot of effort has gone into eliminating this discrepancy, and it has gotten smaller, but it hasn’t gone away.

That has theorists salivating. The Standard Model has no space for these kind of differences between electrons and muons, so could this be a sign that the Standard Model is wrong? The team behind some of the earlier measurements is now back with a new one, this one tracking the behavior of a muon orbiting a helium nucleus. The results are consistent with other measurements of helium’s charge radius, suggesting there’s nothing funny about the muon. So the Standard Model can breathe a sigh of relief.

Measuring muons?

The measurement involved is, to put it simply, pretty insane. Muons are essentially heavy versions of electrons, so substituting one for another in an atom is relatively simple. And a muon’s mass provides some advantages for these sorts of measurements. The mass ensures that the muon’s orbitals end up so compact that its wave function overlaps with the wave function of the nucleus. As a result, the muon’s behavior when it is orbiting a nucleus is very sensitive to the nucleus’ charge radius.

All of this would be great if it weren’t for the fact that muons are unstable and typically decay in under two microseconds. Putting one in orbit around a helium nucleus adds to the complications, since helium typically has two electrons in orbit, and they can interact with each other. The expected three-way interactions of a nucleus-muon-electron are currently beyond our ability to calculate, meaning we would have no idea if the actual behavior differed from theory.

So the researchers solved this problem by creating a positively charged ion composed of a helium nucleus and a single muon orbiting it. Making one of these—or, more correctly, making hundreds of them—is where the insanity starts.

The researchers had access to a beam of muons created by a particle collider, and they decided to direct the beam into some helium gas. In this process, as the muons enter, they have too much energy to stay in orbit around a helium nucleus, so they bounce around, losing energy with each collision. Once the muons slow down enough, they can enter into a high-energy orbit in a helium atom, bumping out one of its electrons in the process. But the second electron is still around, messing up any potential measurements.

But the muon has a lot of momentum because of its mass, and energy transfers within an atom are faster than losing the energy to the environment. So as the muon transfers some of its energy to the electron, the electron’s smaller mass ensures that this is enough to boot the electron out of the atom, and we’re left with a muonic helium ion. Fortunately, all of this happens quickly enough that the muon hasn’t had a chance to decay.

Let the insanity begin

By this point, the muon is typically in an orbital that is lower energy but has more energy than the ground state. The researchers set up a trigger sensitive to the appearance of muons in the experiment. After a delay to allow the muons to boot out the two electrons, the trigger causes a laser to hit the sample with the right amount of energy to boost the muon from the 2S orbital to the 2P orbital. From there, it will decay into the ground state, releasing an X-ray in the process.

Many of the muons won’t be in a 2S orbital, and the laser will have no effect on them. The researchers were willing to sacrifice much of the muonic helium they made in order to get precision measurements of the ones that were in the right state. Their presence was signaled by the detection of an X-ray with the right energy. To further ensure they were looking at the right thing, the researchers only took data that was associated with a high-energy electron produced by the decay of the muon.

And remember, all of this had to take place fast enough to happen within the millisecond time window before the muon decayed.

The first step involved tuning the laser used to the right frequency to boost the muon into the 2P orbit, since this is the value that we need to measure. This was done by adjusting a tunable laser across a frequency range until the helium started producing X-rays. Once the frequency was identified, the researchers took data for 10 days, which was enough for precision measurements of the frequency. During this time, the researchers observed 582 muonic helium ions.

Based on calculations using the laser frequency, the researchers found that the helium nucleus’ charge radius is 1.6782 femtometers. Measurements made by bouncing electrons off the nucleus indicate it is 1.681. These two values are within experimental errors, so they’re in strong agreement.

We’re sorry, it’s not broken

On the simplest level, the fact that the muon measurements agree with measurements made independently indicates that there’s nothing special about muons. Consequently, the Standard Model, which says the same thing, is intact down to fairly small limits allowed by the experimental errors here. (That is not to say it’s not broken in some other way, of course.) So theorists everywhere will be disappointed.

As an amusing aside, the researchers compared their value to one generated decades ago in the particle accelerators at CERN. It turns out this value is similar, but only by accident, since the earlier work had two offsetting errors. “Their quoted charge radius is not very far from our value,” the researchers note, “but this can be traced back to an awkward coincidence of a wrong experiment combined with an incomplete 2P–2S theory prediction, by chance yielding a not-so-wrong value.” So in this case, two wrongs did make an almost-right.

In any case, this work will focus researchers’ attention back onto trying to figure out why different experiments with protons keep producing results that don’t quite agree, since we can’t blame things on the muon being weird. In the meantime, we can all appreciate how amazing it is that we can manage to do so much with muons within the tiny fraction of a second in which they exist.

Nature, 2021. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03183-1  (About DOIs).

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Aaron Rodgers adds another twist to sudden Packers drama

Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers tried to clarify his postgame comments from Sunday, in which he said his future in Green Bay was “uncertain.”

Appearing on SiriusXM’s “Pat McAfee Show,” Rodgers was asked Tuesday about the widespread speculation regarding where he stands with the Packers based on what he said following his team’s 31-26 NFC Championship loss to the Buccaneers.

“I don’t think I said anything that I haven’t said before,” Rodgers said. “Ultimately my future is not in my control. I was thinking about Aaron Jones and Corey Linsley [both pending free agents]. I don’t see a reason why I shouldn’t be back.”

Rodgers added that it’s still early in Green Bay’s offseason and alluded that he’ll be around the team this week.

“I am not like jetting out of town and ‘sayonara Green Bay,’” Rodgers said. “There’s conversations to be had. I’m going to have them with the right people but it’s the same convo every year.

“There’s no big I’m going to come to the table I need this and this… We have honest convos about where were at every single year.”

Aaron Rodgers
Getty Images

Green Bay CEO Mark Murphy said Monday on WNFL’s “The 5th Quarter Show” that the organization is not “idiots,” referring to the notion that they would let go of their franchise quarterback. He later asserted that Rodgers would be back and added that “he’s our leader.”

Rodgers, who has three years left on a four-year, $134 million deal, reportedly wants a new contract.

The 37-year-old Rodgers is the favorite to win MVP after posting a career-high 70.7 completion percentage and 48 touchdowns this season and leading Green Bay to the No. 1 seed in the NFC.

The speculation surrounding Rodgers’ future in Green Bay initially took off at the 2020 NFL Draft, when the Packers traded up in the first round to select Utah State quarterback Jordan Love 26th overall. Many thought then the writing was on the wall for Rodgers, who admitted he wasn’t “thrilled” with the Packers’ draft choice.



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SpaceX adds laser links to Starlink satellites to serve Earth’s polar areas

Enlarge / Starlink logo imposed on stylized image of the Earth.

SpaceX has begun launching Starlink satellites with laser links that will help provide broadband coverage in polar regions. As SpaceX CEO Elon Musk wrote on Twitter on Sunday, these satellites “have laser links between the satellites, so no ground stations are needed over the poles.”

Enlarge / Starlink satellites prior to launch. The black circles in the middle are laser links.

The laser links are included in 10 Starlink satellites just launched into polar orbits. The launch came two weeks after SpaceX received Federal Communications Commission approval to launch the 10 satellites into polar orbits at an altitude of 560km.

“All sats launched next year will have laser links,” Musk wrote in another tweet yesterday, indicating that the laser systems will become standard on Starlink satellites in 2022. For now, SpaceX is only including laser links on polar satellites. “Only our polar sats have lasers this year & are v0.9,” Musk wrote.

Alaskan residents will benefit from the polar satellites, SpaceX told the FCC in an application to change the orbit of some of its satellites in April 2020. The plan is to “ensure that all of the satellites in SpaceX’s system will provide the same low-latency services to all Americans, including those in places like Alaska that are served by satellites in polar orbits,” SpaceX said at the time. The satellites can serve both residential and US-government users “in otherwise impossible-to-reach polar areas,” SpaceX said.

Starlink satellites communicate with ground stations, of which about 20 are deployed in the United States so far. A SpaceNews article today described how the laser links reduce the need for ground stations and provide other benefits:

Inter-satellite links allow satellites to transfer communications from one satellite to another, either in the same orbital plane or an adjacent plane. Such links allow operators to minimize the number of ground stations, since a ground station no longer needs to be in the same satellite footprint as user terminals, and extend coverage to remote areas where ground stations are not available. They can also decrease latency, since the number of hops between satellites and ground stations are reduced.

The 10 satellites were originally authorized by the FCC for altitudes in the 1,100-1,300km range. The FCC approval allowing SpaceX to cut the altitude in half will help reduce latency.

With polar orbits, also known as Sun-synchronous orbits, satellites “travel past Earth from north to south rather than from west to east, passing roughly over Earth’s poles,” as the European Space Agency explains.

“Space lasers have exciting potential”

In December, during an interview with Ars’ Senior Space Editor Eric Berger, SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell said demonstrating laser communications in space was among the company’s most significant achievements in 2020.

SpaceX had revealed a few months earlier that it was testing space lasers for transferring data between satellites. Starlink engineers provided more detail in a Reddit AMA in November; here’s an excerpt from our coverage at the time:

“The speed of light is faster in vacuum than in fiber, so the space lasers have exciting potential for low latency links,” the Starlink team said on Reddit in response to a question about the space-laser testing. “They will also allow us to serve users where the satellites can’t see a terrestrial gateway antenna—for example, over the ocean and in regions badly connected by fiber.”

Space lasers won’t play a major role in Starlink any time soon, though. “We did have an exciting flight test earlier this year with prototype space lasers on two Starlink satellites that managed to transmit gigabytes of data,” the engineering team wrote. “But bringing down the cost of the space lasers and producing a lot of them fast is a really hard problem that the team is still working on.”

SpaceX seeks FCC OK for more polar satellites

In November 2020, SpaceX urged the FCC for an expedited approval “to facilitate deployment of 348 Starlink satellites into Sun-synchronous polar orbits at the lower altitude,” the FCC said in its decision to approve 10 satellites. The FCC approved only those 10 because it is evaluating interference concerns raised by other satellite companies.

“We find that partial grant of ten satellites will facilitate continued development and testing of SpaceX’s broadband service in high latitude geographic areas in the immediate term pending later action to address arguments in the record as to both grant of the modification as a whole and the full subset of polar orbit satellites,” the FCC order said.

Amazon’s Project Kuiper, Viasat, Kepler Communications, and Pacific Dataport urged the FCC to reject even the partial grant of 10 satellites because of the potential for increased interference with other non-geostationary satellite systems. But the FCC order said that SpaceX committed to “operate these satellites on a non-harmful interference basis with respect to other licensed spectrum users until the Commission has ruled on its modification in full.” A battle between SpaceX and Amazon is brewing, with Musk accusing Amazon of trying “to hamstring Starlink today for an Amazon satellite system that is at best several years away from operation.”



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