Tag Archives: Cube

‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem’ Sets Voice Cast Featuring John Cena, Jackie Chan, Ice Cube, Seth Rogen & Others – Deadline

  1. ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem’ Sets Voice Cast Featuring John Cena, Jackie Chan, Ice Cube, Seth Rogen & Others Deadline
  2. Behold, Your Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for the Mutant Mayhem Movie Yahoo News
  3. Seth Rogen’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’ Star-Studded Voice Cast Adds Paul Rudd and More IGN
  4. John Cena cast in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem movie Figure Four Online
  5. ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem’ Unveils Full Voice Cast, Including Jackie Chan as Splinter Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Ice Cube still very mad about that movie he lost because he wouldn’t get the COVID vaccine

Ice Cube
Photo: Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images for BIG3

Ice Cube would like you to know that he’s still very angry about the COVID vaccine (that nobody actually required him to get), venting on a recent podcast interview that his refusal to get “the jab”—that is, a vaccine show to prevent infection from a virus that killed millions of people—cost him $9 million, for which he’s still very, to use not-his-words, miffed.

Per Variety, Cube addressed the topic on a recent episode of the Million Dollaz Worth Of Game podcast, referencing a rescinded offer to co-star in the Jack Black comedy Oh Hell No that would have paid the $9 million, and which was pulled after he refused to get “the jab.” “Those motherfuckers didn’t give it to me because I wouldn’t get the shot,” Cube asserted. “I didn’t turn it down. They just wouldn’t give it to me.”

Displaying the grasp of herd immunity, epidemiology, and causality that we’ve come to expect from one of the key minds behind the Are We There Yet? duology, Cube pointed out that, because he never ended up getting COVID, nobody should have expected him to get the vaccine in the first place. “The covid shot, the jab…I didn’t need it. I didn’t catch that shit at all. Nothing. Fuck them. I didn’t need that shit.”

Cube’s refusal to get vaccinated led to Oh Hell No’s production apparently stalling out; the film was pulled off Sony’s film schedule in February 2022, and there’s been no movement on it since. Cube’s own filmography has been pretty light during the pandemic period, too; he last appeared in Tracee Ellis Ross and Dakota Johnson’s The High Note in 2020, and before that, opposite Charlie Day in Fist Fight in 2017. “I don’t know how Hollywood feel about me right now,” he remarked as part of the vaccine conversation.

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What’s Inside The Squid Cube?

In a containment lab in Wellington, New Zealand, Kat Bolstad considered the squid cube. It was the size of a keg and had been frozen solid since January, when it was hauled up during a research trawl in fishing grounds to the east of the country. The squid cube was not a cube of squids but rather one single cube-shaped squid, whose flaccid body had been folded into a rectangular fish bin and subsequently stored in a freezer. It chilled there until June, when Bolstad, a deep-sea squid biologist at Auckland University of Technology, was ready to unbox it.

“It’s not the first squid cube,” said Bolstad, who has seen many cubes of varying sizes and species in her line of work. But it certainly was a very special squid cube, comprising the carefully pleated body of an entire giant squid, meaning a species of deep-sea squid in the family Architeuthidae. When giant giant squids are caught in research trawls, their bodies are too big to be cubed, i.e. stored whole in a standard 50-liter fish bin. Those true giants are often frozen in pieces or “whole, in a gigantic sort of sausage-shaped, very large package that has to be moved by a forklift,” Bolstad said. But this giant squid, a young female, was just small enough to fit inside the fish bin and become a cube of her own. As Bolstad described the arrangement of the squid’s body: “It was like a cat curled up for a nap inside the fish bin.”

About twice a year, Bolstad’s lab sojourns to Wellington to thaw squid cubes and other squidsicles (frozen squids that bear somewhat less resemblance to regular geometric shapes). The city is home to the marine collection facilities of the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, or NIWA, which slowly accumulates and freezes creatures collected on the institute’s research cruises. Some of the squids are frozen for months before their dead flesh experiences warmth again. And the quality of the carcasses can vary a lot depending on the squid’s journey from the deep to the surface. “Sometimes you get a really beautiful one,” Bolstad said. “Sometimes it looks like somebody sneezed in a tray.”

Credit: Kat Bolstad
This large Chiroteuthis, which has exceptionally long arms, is what would be considered a “beautiful” specimen.

Successfully unboxing frozen squids can be a race against time: Bolstad’s lab and NIWA staff members have to complete their work before the flesh starts to rot. Although a single, finger-sized squid might defrost in a half-hour, larger squids can take an entire day. And a squid compacted into a cube also does not defrost evenly, running the risk that the outside of the cube could rot while the inside is still frozen solid. A few years ago, Bolstad had to thaw a squid cube of a colossal squid—a different species altogether, and the largest invertebrate on the planet—weighing more than a thousand pounds. Colossal squid tissue is more delicate than giant squid tissue, so Bolstad’s team defrosted that colossal cube in a bath of sea ice to keep the dead squid in relatively pristine condition.

This June’s squid cube was less fussy, defrosting in air overnight until the researchers returned to unfold the half-thawed cube and run water over its body to help it along. “We did have visions of it, like, unfolding and then slithering to the floor and just having a horrible disaster in the morning,” Bolstad said. But the squid cube cooperated, and the next day could be fully unrolled and restored to its tentacled, 21-foot-long glory.

The formerly cube-shaped giant squid, fully unboxed.

Scientists do not often have the chance to examine giant squids. The animals are very large and live in waters thousands of feet deep, making it fairly unpredictable when one might turn up. For a long time, scientists could only study Architeuthis from squids that were discovered dead on the shore, dead in the water, or were digested or regurgitated by sperm whales, according to a 2013 paper in the American Malacological Bulletin. Recent advances in deep-sea trawling and underwater camera systems have given scientists a little more access to the elusive giants.

Still, it’s rare to come across a giant squid that has yet to reach full size, Bolstad said. Scientists are still sleuthing out the life cycle of giant squids, a cephalopod whose babyhood is somewhat of a black box. “There’s a size below which specimens are basically unknown,” Bolstad said, adding that there are records of “fairly small” mature males. But female giant squids get much larger: Whereas a mature male might top out at around 32 feet, a mature female can grow as long as 42 feet. Mature male giant squids produce packages of sperm called spermatophores and implant them into the skin of a female giant squid. But the researchers found only tiny hints of eggs in this particular cubed squid, meaning she was an immature female who had not mated.

Curious to learn what she ate, Bolstad’s team gently slid out the squid’s nearly gallon-sized innards. This week, the researchers plan to defrost the squid’s guts—which are sadly not cube-shaped but roughly oblong—and examine what half-digested creatures and undigested microplastics might lurk inside. With any luck, they’ll find a few parasites. Many parasites in the ocean have to move through different unique hosts throughout their life cycle: After being pooped out by a fish, they might have to penetrate a snail and then perhaps a clam before being eaten by another fish. Finding a parasitic worm in a giant squid could help scientists more fully understand where the worm journeys in its weird little life.

Credit: Kat Bolstad
Another mysterious squidsicle thawed into the head and tentacles of a giant squid.

Bolstad also wanted to retrieve a tiny calcium carbonate bone called a statolith from within the squid’s head that could hold a clue to the giant squid’s lifespan—one of the many creature’s many mysteries. “The squid has this little crystal floating around inside a fluid filled chamber,” Bolstad said. “The motion of the crystals in there tells the squid about its motion and momentum and position.” Squid statoliths function like our ear canals, helping the squid balance in the water. They also have growth rings, which could theoretically help estimate the age of the squid. But even though scientists can count the growth rings, they don’t yet know how often they accumulate, Bolstad said.

But a giant squid statolith is about the third of a size of a grain of rice, making removal from a larger squid rather tricky. “It’s very difficult to cut into a frozen giant squid head,” Bolstad said. “You need it to be like in this sweet spot of partially defrosted but not too defrosted.” The crystals always occur in a fluid-filled chamber in the same general region of the squid’s head, so scientists have to take a scalpel to the area without crushing or breaking the fragile crystals. “It’s a little bit of a lottery,” she said, adding that she successfully scooped out one of the squid’s two statoliths.

Although the squid cube was perhaps the grandest squid of the frozen bunch, Bolstad’s lab thawed another significantly-sized squidsicle that turned out to be the head and arms of a truly big giant squid. Even though the partial specimen was missing the bulk of its body, the head and arms alone weighed more than the small giant squid.

While Bolstad was in the lab, NIWA asked if she could identify a tiny specimen that was collected separately. The squid, which resembled an itty-bitty burrito, was the elusive and iconic ram’s horn squid, Spirula spirula. The species gets its common name from a delicately whorled shell inside its body, which could be seen poking out from the mantle.

Credit: Kat Bolstad
The ram’s horn squid, Spirula spirula, looking quite regal in death.

This year’s squid unboxing unearthed at least 30 species that have yet to be described and named, Bolstad said. “It’s the chance to potentially open a box and really make a discovery,” she said. “To experience taking something out of a box that one or two people have seen before,” she added.

Bolstad’s lab preserved around 20 specimens to be held in the collections at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. Her lab will return to Wellington next year or even sooner to do it all over again, unwrapping bags and unboxing cubes of small giant squids, giant giant squids, and many more squids of all sizes, observing all they can before the rot sets in.

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Remember That Weird ‘Cube’ on The Moon? Yutu-2 Finally Took Closer Pictures

China’s mysterious “Moon cube” is a mystery no longer. The big reveal: It’s a rock that’s not even shaped like a cube.

The nation’s Yutu-2 rover discovered the object – which appeared to be a gray cube looming on the lunar horizon – in early December. The China National Space Administration (CNSA) dubbed it ‘mysterious hut’, playfully speculating that the cube might be an alien house or spacecraft.

 

News reports called it the ‘Moon cube’.

The CNSA estimated the object was about 80 meters (262 feet) away, according to the blog ‘Our Space’, which is affiliated with the agency, and prepared to drive the rover toward it. The blog said it would take two or three months to reach the cube.

After several weeks of preparations and driving, the rover is close enough to see that the ‘mysterious hut’ is just a rock. Its sharp-lined geometric appearance on the horizon was a simple trick of perspective, light, and shadow.

In an updated posted on Friday, Our Space published the rover’s latest photo of its target, below.

Yutu-2 image of the closer rock. (CNSA/CLEP/Our Space)

One of the rover’s ground controllers noted in the blog that the rock is shaped like a rabbit, with smaller rocks in front of it that resemble a carrot. The rover’s name, Yutu, means “Jade Rabbit” – which is now the name of the rock, too.

Yutu-2 reached the Moon in January 2019, when the Chang’e-4 lander touched down on the lunar surface and rolled out a ramp for the rover to descend. It was the first mission to land on the far side of the Moon.

In the three years since, Yutu-2 has driven over 1,000 meters (3,200 feet), used ground-penetrating radar to reveal a surprisingly deep layer of lunar soil, and identified rocks from the lunar mantle, below the crust, which were pushed to the surface when an asteroid crashed into the Moon billions of years ago.

A closer look at the rock. (CNSA/CLEP/Our Space)

The rover has survived long past its initial three-month mission, meaning Yutu-2 had plenty free time for a wild cube chase.

This article was originally published by Business Insider.

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‘Moon Cube’ Discovered by Chinese Rover Turns Out to Be a Rock

  • China’s Yutu-2 rover, on the far side of the moon, spotted a distant cube-shaped object last month.
  • China’s space agency dubbed the object “mysterious hut.” Others called it “moon cube.”
  • The rover got closer and snapped a better photo, revealing the “cube” is a rabbit-shaped rock.

China’s mysterious “moon cube” is a mystery no longer. The big reveal: It’s a rock that’s not even shaped like a cube.

The nation’s Yutu-2 rover discovered the object — which appeared to be a gray cube looming on the lunar horizon — in early December. The China National Space Administration (CNSA) dubbed it “mysterious hut,” playfully speculating that the cube might be an alien house or spacecraft.

News reports called it the “moon cube.”

China published this Yutu-2 image of the “mysterious hut” on the lunar horizon on December 3, 2021.

CNSA/CLEP/Our space



The CNSA estimated the object was about 80 meters (262 feet) away, according to the blog “Our space,” which is affiliated with the agency, and prepared to drive the rover toward it. The blog said it would take two or three months to reach the cube.

After several weeks of preparations and driving, the rover is close enough to see that the “mysterious hut” is just a rock. Its sharp-lined geometric appearance on the horizon was a simple trick of perspective, light, and shadow.

In an updated posted on Friday, “Our space” published the rover’s latest photo of its target, below.



China published this Yutu-2 image of the “mysterious hut,” now named “Jade Rabbit,” on January 7, 2021.

CNSA/CLEP/Our space



One of the rover’s ground controllers noted in the blog that the rock is shaped like a rabbit, with smaller rocks in front of it that resemble a carrot. The rover’s name, Yutu, means “Jade Rabbit” — which is now the name of the rock, too.

Yutu-2 reached the moon in January 2019, when the Chang’e-4 lander touched down on the lunar surface and rolled out a ramp for the rover to descend. It was the first mission to land on the far side of the moon.

In the three years since, Yutu-2 has driven over 1,000 meters (0.6 miles), used ground-penetrating radar to reveal a surprisingly deep layer of lunar soil, and identified rocks from the lunar mantle, below the crust, which were pushed to the surface when an asteroid crashed into the moon billions of years ago.



China’s Yutu-2 rover rolls away from the Chang’e-4 lander on the far side of the moon, January 2019.

China National Space Administration


The rover has survived long past its initial three-month mission, meaning Yutu-2 had plenty free time for a wild cube chase.

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Chinese Rover Finds Moon Cube Is Just Rabbit-Like Rock

Last November, China’s Yutu-2 lunar rover spotted something curious on the far side of the moon. The image was blurry, but it was unmistakable: The object looked like a cube sitting on the moon’s surface. Its shape looked too precise to be just a moon rock — perhaps something left by visiting aliens like the monolith in Arthur C. Clarke’s “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

China’s space authorities called it the “mystery hut.” Others called it the “moon cube.” Yutu-2 was sent for a closer look, and at the leisurely speed the rover is capable of traveling, it took weeks to get up close.

On Friday, Our Space, a Chinese language science channel affiliated with China National Space Administration, posted an update. There is no monolith, no secret base on the rim of a lunar crater. Close up, it turns out to be just a rock. The seemingly perfect geometric shape was just a trick of angle, light and shadow.

Although the mystery hut was not a hut at all, one of the rover’s remote drivers on Earth pointed out that the rock sort of resembled a rabbit and one of the stones in front of it looked a bit like a carrot. That’s fitting as the rover’s name means “Jade Rabbit.”

The rover has now driven just over 1,000 meters since it arrived three years ago on the moon’s far side, in Von Kármán crater, as part of the Chang’e-4 mission. It is the first mission to land on the far side.

Visual illusions are common in the history of space exploration, whether seen by astronomers peering through telescopes on Earth or robotic explorers on other worlds capturing images with cameras. In a parallel with the rabbit-like rock found by China’s rover, a NASA rover on Mars, Opportunity, spotted something that looked like bunny ears in 2004. Further analysis by engineers on Earth suggested it was insulation or other soft material that fell off the rover itself.

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Ice Cube says Chris Tucker wasn’t in Friday sequels because he didn’t want to ‘smoke weed on camera’

Ice Cube shut down rumors that his Friday costar Chris Tucker didn’t reprise his role in the cult classic’s sequels due to low pay on Wednesday.

The 52-year-old rapper-turned-actor claimed on Twitter that it was his 50-year-old costar’s status as a born-again Christian that led him to turn down a chance to appear in Friday’s popular sequels.

Ice Cube cleared up Tucker’s reasons for not continuing with the franchise after previously explaining that another Friday actor, Faizon Love, had been offered a small industry-scale payment for the film because of it’s extremely small budget.

Clearing it up: Ice Cube, 52, explained that his Friday costar Chris Tucker, 50, didn’t appear in the 1995 cult classic’s sequels because he didn’t want to ‘cuss or smoke weed on camera anymore’; still from Friday

The NWA rapper, born O’Shea Jackson, explained why Tucker didn’t return after a fan on Twitter voiced the widely held belief that Tucker didn’t return for the sequels because of inadequate salaries.

‘We were ready to pay Chris Tucker $10-12m to do Next Friday but he turned us down for religious reasons,’ the songwriter explained. ‘He didn’t want to cuss or smoke weed on camera anymore.’

Tucker’s comedic relief position in the sequels Next Friday (2000) and Friday After Next (2002) was eventually filled by comedian Mike Epps, though he was playing a different character. 

In an interview from November with All Urban Central, the Fifth Element actor explained that his faith was one of the reasons he opted not to return to the franchise.

‘Back then, I gotta tell you, one of the reasons why I didn’t do the second one was because of the weed,’ he explained. 

Setting the record straight: Ice Cube also responded to a tweet that speculated that Chris Tucker, who had played Smokey, had not appeared in the sequel over financial reasons

Moving on: Tucker explained to All Urban Central in November that he didn’t like the weed smoking and also wanted to focus on new projects instead of sequels; still from Friday

‘Because I said, man, that movie became a phenomenon. I don’t want everybody smoking weed — and I never really told people this because I kind of forgot about it, but it was one of the reasons why I didn’t do it. Because I said, “I don’t wanna represent everybody smoking weed.”‘

But Tucker also revealed that he preferred to focus on new projects in general rather than getting bogged down with sequels.

However, he would appear in two sequels to his popular Jackie Chan collaboration Rush Hour, but they came with impressive paydays, as he earned $20 million for the second film and $25 million for the third. 

Earlier on Wednesday, Ice Cube defended himself over production of Friday, after people on social media reacted to actor Faizon Love saying he took only a $2,500 scale payday for the initial film. 

Clarification: Ice Cube also defended himself over production of Friday after people on social media reacted when Faizon Love, 53, said he took a $2,500 payday for the initial film

The rapper, who recently departed a film with Jack Black because of his refusal to get the coronavirus vaccine, took to Twitter on Wednesday to note that the film had a limited budget and that was understood when the performers signed up for the motion picture.

‘I didn’t rob no f***in body,’ he wrote, in response to a Twitter user’s remarks on a piece by Atlanta Black Star summarizing Love’s appearance on the YouTube show Comedy Hype.

The Los Angeles native continued: ‘The 1995 Friday movie cost $2.3m to make. Shot it in 20 days. Fazion worked 1 day, maybe 2. All the actors got paid scale to do the movie. They could’ve simple said “No” but they didn’t. So miss me with that s***…’

In the interview with Comedy Hype earlier this month, Love, 53, said that he was offered double-scale to reprise the role of Big Worm (which amounted to $5,000) to appear in the 2000 sequel Next Friday. He said declined the offer to make the 2000 film The Replacements for a $100,000 payday instead.

Speaking out: Ice Cube reacted after a Twitter user accused him of ‘robbing his own people’ in reaction to a story about Love’s payday for the first film 

Love told Comedy Hype he would work on a Friday sequel for lower pay on general principle because of the positive impact the original movie had on his career.

Love took to Instagram on Wednesday to clarify his stance in the controversy, saying he considers Ice Cube both a ‘comrade’ and his ‘brother,’ while sharing a selfie of the pair.

‘I guess it’s a slow news week so let me say what I got paid is a moot point, it was the price of admission to a game,’ he said. ‘I have zero regrets.’

Love also thanked Ice Cube, DJ Pooh and Felix Gary Grey ‘for letting me be apart of such an iconic picture,’ adding, ‘I truly have nothing but love For these brothers.’

No beef: Love took to Instagram on Wednesday to clarify his stance on the controversy

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Chinese sighting of ‘cube’ on moon rouses speculation, inspires memes

An image provided by Our Space, a science website affiliated with China National Space Administration, and, according to the website, was captured by Chinese rover Yutu-2 on the far side of the moon, shows a cube-like object in this image provided to Reuters December 8, 2021. Our Space/Handout via REUTERS

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BEIJING, Dec 8 (Reuters) – A photograph of a cube-like object captured by a Chinese rover on the far side of the moon has fanned speculation over what it could be and inspired a host of memes by Chinese internet users.

The Yutu-2 caught an image of what seems like a large cubic object on the horizon about 80 metres (87 yards) from its location, said Our Space, a Chinese government science website, citing the rover’s last log on Dec. 3.

Under the hashtag “Yutu’s latest discovery”, a series of internet memes showed the rover rolling over the lunar plain towards a pair of obelisks, a tall monolith, and even a giant hammer and sickle – the symbol of the Communist Party.

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“It’s space junk left behind by the U.S.,” one Chinese internet user wrote in a social media post.

“Get a bit closer, and you’d see it’s a nucleic acid test site for COVID-19,” another quipped.

“It’s the home of aliens!” a third said in mock horror.

Others suggested a more mundane possibility – it’s just a boulder.

The solar-powered Yutu, or “Jade Rabbit” in Chinese, will cover the distance of 80 metres in two to three lunar days, according to Our Space, or two to three Earth months.

The robotic rover has been operating in the Von Karman Crater in the South Pole-Aitken Basin since its deployment in January 2019.

The mission was a historic first, with no other nation having landed on the far side of the moon until then.

With the moon tidally locked to Earth – rotating at the same speed as it orbits our planet – most of its “dark side” is never visible to those on Earth.

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Reporting by Ryan Woo and Liangping Gao; Editing by Lincoln Feast.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Fortnite brings back Kevin the cube, then shuts down after Operation: Sky Fire event

Season 8 can’t come soon enough.


Epic Games

Fortnite‘s Season 7 ending event, Operation: Sky Fire, had players go through a wild space ride with an exciting cliffhanger. To add to the tension, publisher Epic Games has shut down the game until the start of season 8 on Monday. 

Operation: Sky Fire put players in the role of infiltrators sent to an alien mothership to take it down with bombs strapped to their backs. While the ship did come down, so did a lot of other strange objects that players won’t understand until the start of Fortnite season 8. 

The screen players see when trying to play Fortnite.


Epic Games

Here’s everything you need to know to prepare for Operation: Sky Fire.

Why can’t I play Fortnite?

Following Operation: Sky Fire, Epic shut down Fortnite for the next 13 hours. Players will have to wait until Monday, 2 a.m. PT (5 a.m. ET) to play the game again. 

When did Fortnite’s Operation: Sky Fire event start?

Operation: Sky Fire started at 1 p.m. Pacific Time / 4 p.m. Eastern Time on Sunday, Sept. 12. It lasted for approximately 12 minutes.

What is Operation: Sky Fire?

According to Epic, players “join a strike team and sneak aboard the Mothership to deliver IO’s final message to the invading aliens,” wrapping up the story threads that’ve been running through the entire season. 

When the event started, players were teleported to the mothership wearing special backpacks. Inside, they found parts of the island were being sucked into the ship. As players were locked into the ship, out from the floor game the giant pink cube referred to as “Kevin” by the Fortnite community. The mystery cube was a plot point for multiple seasons in the first chapter of Fortnite. 

Energy began firing out of “Kevin” killing other players, but it seemingly ran out of juice and laid dormant. This is when players realized they were merely pawns as their backpacks turned into bombs. However, one by one they began rebooting “Kevin” turning it blue. Before the bomb exploded, players then saw other cubes had been rebooted as well. After a flash, the mothership was a floating wreck and multiple “Kevins” began falling to the island. One piece of wreckage slams into the player and up comes the “To Be Continued…” screen.

When does season 8 start?

Fortnite season 8 will start Monday, 2 p.m. PT (5 p.m. ET). What will change after the this event is still a mystery. 



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2 PH-made cube satellites to be launched to ISS

From the DOST Facebook page

MANILA— Two cube satellites, Maya 3 and Maya 4, will be launched to the International Space Station (ISS) on Saturday afternoon, the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) has said. 

The DOST said this is the first time that two Philippine-made cube satellites would be lofted together. The satellites, which will gather ground data, among others, will be launched at 3:37 p.m., Manila time.

The launch is part of the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) SpaceX commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station (ISS), according to information on NASA’s and DOST’s platforms.

“The CubeSats will leave Earth aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket’s Dragon C208 as part of the SpaceX Commercial Resupply Mission-23 (SpX-23),” the science department said in a Facebook post. 

 

The resupply services are part of the “scientific research and technology demonstrations” which aimed to aid experiments aboard ISS, a separate explanation from NASA read. 

“Experiments aboard include an investigation into protecting bone health with botanical byproducts, testing a way to monitor crew eye health, demonstrating improved dexterity of robots, exposing construction materials to the harsh environment of space, mitigating stress in plants, and more,” NASA added. 

MAYA 3 AND MAYA 4

Maya 3 and Maya 4 were developed under the STAMINA4Space program through the support of DOST, the University of the Philippines Diliman, the Kyushu Institute of Technology, and the Philippine Space Agency.

Among the missions of the two cube satellites is to demonstrate image and video capture of an RGB camera and a near-infrared camera, as well as to exhibit ground data acquisition allowing for collection of data from remote ground sensors such as temperature and humidity. 

The satellites are also expected to demonstrate a commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) global positioning system (GPS) module and magnetic field measurement in space, among other things.

Young Filipino scholars helped develop Maya 3 and Maya 4 together with other scholars from other countries. 

Maya 1 was launched in 2018, while Maya 2 was launched earlier this year. 

You can register here to book your online ticket for the event and get more information and updates from NASA’s SpX-23 mission, according to DOST. 

— Reports from Jekki Pascual and Job Manahan, ABS-CBN News

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