Tag Archives: proves

Reddit Post Seemingly Proves That Samsung’s Galaxy S-Series ‘Moon Photos’ Are Fake, and They’ve Been Blatantly Lying About Them – Daring Fireball

  1. Reddit Post Seemingly Proves That Samsung’s Galaxy S-Series ‘Moon Photos’ Are Fake, and They’ve Been Blatantly Lying About Them Daring Fireball
  2. It looks like Samsung is cheating on ‘space zoom’ moon photos – General Discussion Discussions on AppleInsider Forums AppleInsider
  3. Is Samsung ‘cheating’ on space zoom moon photos? Post by Reddit user sparks row | Mint Mint
  4. Is Samsung Galaxy ‘space zoom’ moon photos fake? Reddit user post sparks row DNA India
  5. It looks like Samsung is cheating on ‘space zoom’ moon photos AppleInsider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Kate Middleton proves she IS a hugger despite Meghan Markle comments – Daily Mail

  1. Kate Middleton proves she IS a hugger despite Meghan Markle comments Daily Mail
  2. Kate Middleton proves she’s a hugger this week despite Harry and Meghan’s claims she’s standoffish Fox News
  3. Is Kate Middleton Pushing Back on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s Claims She’s Not a Hugger? PEOPLE
  4. ‘Oh my goodness’: Kate Middleton may have done this to annoy Meghan Markle Hindustan Times
  5. Kate Middleton Subtly Pushed Back at Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s Suggestions During Reunion With Former Teacher Showbiz Cheat Sheet
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Paris Hilton’s 10th Grade Yearbook Photo Proves That the ’00s Were a Different Time for Beauty

High School yearbook pictures can be a hit or miss, but for Paris Hilton, the material has always been there and her snap of the ’00s Miss Hilton proved just that.

Hilton re-shared a fan post of herself in all her teenage glory. The black and white photo captioned “Paris Hilton, 10th,” denoting that she was in the 10th grade, screamed nothing but “It Girl.” For all of the Simple Life fans, you can obviously tell that the energy is still the same from then to now. In over 20 years, nothing has changed for the OG of reality television. It’s odd to see the star here years before we even know who she was with choppy shoulder-length layered tresses and side-sweeping bangs. From the yearbook capture, It’s clear that a star was being born. It’s also pretty weird to imagine that the Paris Hilton lived a “simple life” before the fame as well. My, how times have changed.

While we won’t dig up our old grade school looks and photos, it’s quite refreshing to take a blast into the past with an icon of our time. Catch more ahead.

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Reviewer buys 16TB portable SSD for $70, proves it’s a sham

Enlarge / Something doesn’t look right here.

Amazon won’t deny that fraudulent reviews on its platform are a problem. And despite years of reports of fake storage products, listed with falsified reviews to cover up fake specs and performance claims, the scams keep coming.

On Monday, Review Geek detailed its purchase of what an Amazon listing claimed was a 16TB portable M.2 SSD for $70. The drive, like similar Amazon listings, had dozens of five-star reviews. Yet, the cheap SSD turned out to just be a 64GB microSD in a circuit board with a USB-C connector.

This is all despite the drive showing as 16TB storage on Windows, which Review Geek suspects is due to deceptive circuit board firmware.

The listing and box weren’t even honest about its connectivity, claiming USB 3.0 Micro B to USB 3.1 Type-C. The device really relies on USB 2.0, Review Geek determined after testing the product with ChipGenius, an app for examining USB devices. Moving 1GB of data with the SSD microSD card reportedly took 20 minutes instead of the expected single minute.

Finally, the box’s claims of compatibility with smart TVs, Android, Windows 7, and Windows 10 remain questionable, and support for “| OS” seems impossible since that’s not a thing.

The good news is Review Geek didn’t find any malware on the device.

The bad news is that this is just one example of the countless that have been reported over the past few years and remain scattered across Amazon.

Cheap “16TB SSDs” abound

After reading Review Geek’s story, I searched Amazon for a “16TB SSD,” and was immediately met with $70-$110 options with unknown brand names, like Generic, SAJIULAS, and WIOTA, the brand of the drive Review Geek purchased. All had at least 3.5 stars, and some had hundreds of reviews.

However, reading some of these reviews made me question if we’ve been using SSDs wrong all this time. A review on one of the remarkably cheap portable SSD listings declared the product to be “a very colorful throw, but thinner” than expected. Another reported that the drive proved “very soft and perfect” for their 6-year-old. One review pointed to the SSD being a “beautiful portrait” that looks great in the kitchen, while another 5-star review pointed to the high microphone and video quality.

I even saw a review hinting at one of the portable SSD’s true nature, stating that it’s an “affordable 64GB” option, despite the review appearing under a 16TB SSD.

As pointed out by Review Geek, scammers have been editing existing listings (including new pictures, titles, and descriptions) for a product until they are selling a completely different item. That way, sellers can maintain the high reviews, and make the new product look highly rated. This also explains how portable storage could get five stars for being great to look at while eating dinner.

Whether you call it review merging, review reuse, or review hijacking, it’s a practice scammers have used to mislead PC component shoppers for years and one Amazon has yet to eradicate.

History repeats itself

Unfortunately, tales of basic microSD cards posing as high-speed, high-capacity portable SSDs have been picking up steam lately. ZDNet reported on buying a $20 example in May, and TechRadar discussed the issue in September, noting the takedown of some Amazon listings after its article. In August, we reported on a scammer selling a 30TB portable SSD on Walmart for $39.

Regarding PC storage in general, there are countless reports of people getting products different from what’s advertised on Amazon. And it’s not only limited to SSD storage. People have reported duplicitous postings for cheap hard disk drives and USB flash drives.

Review Geek’s story is a reminder of how careful shoppers must be when buying suspiciously cheap tech from websites. Despite reports and subsequent removals of fraudulent storage devices, they keep popping up.

According to Review Geek, the product it purchased disappeared and was immediately replaced by another listing before Review Geek reported the fraud to Amazon. It’s unclear if Amazon removed the original posting or if the seller did it independently before it could be penalized.

As Review Geek put it, it’s like a game of whack-a-mole for Amazon. Amazon’s review process has led to scrutiny from customers, the media, and UK’s competition regulator, The Competition and Markets Authority. Amazon has turned to the courts to combat companies and Facebook groups that it alleges sell fake reviews. Amazon has been suing over fake reviews since 2015. but they still run rampant on the site.

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Inspiring new study that proves you CAN conquer Type 2 diabetes

After living with type 2 diabetes for a decade, Ann Geoghegan was used to feeling exhausted all the time, struggling with her weight and failing to control her blood sugar levels.

‘My vision was also becoming blurry, which was worrying, but I didn’t think things would ever change,’ says Ann, 70, from Southport, Merseyside.

Yet within just three months, she has reduced her blood sugar levels by a third, is the lightest she’s been for 20 years (dropping 1st 4lb) and feels more clear-headed, energetic and positive.

What may surprise many people is that this is not down to any new drug but to simple changes to her eating regimen — in particular, losing weight by following a low-carb diet. And the benefits for Ann go way beyond just feeling slimmer and mentally sharper.

After living with type 2 diabetes for a decade, Ann Geoghegan was used to feeling exhausted all the time, struggling with her weight and failing to control her blood sugar levels

Her GP, Dr David Unwin, who has been pioneering the low-carb approach to treating type 2 diabetes at his practice in Southport since 2013, says: ‘Losing weight by adopting a low-carb regimen can not only improve your diabetes control but also your life expectancy.’

He estimates that Ann has added at least five years to hers, thanks to her success on the low-carb plan.

Ann’s remarkable story is not an isolated one. Groundbreaking research, published today in the journal BMJ Nutrition and reproduced exclusively in the Mail, shows that patients with type 2 diabetes who switch to a low-carb diet can dramatically improve their blood sugar levels, quality of life and life expectancy — in the space of a few months (see Dave Rowat’s story, below).

But most significantly, this was possible for people such as Ann, who have long-term type 2 diabetes — the kind of patients that many health professionals had assumed would be beyond improvement either through medication (which would only control the disease) or lifestyle changes.

Indeed, a new NHS soup and shakes programme being rolled out this year will only be available to patients who have been diagnosed with type 2 within six years.

Cutting carbs put my diabetes in remission 

Dave Rowat, 61, a private hire driver, lives with his wife Michele, 56, a cleaner, in Southport. He says:

I was shocked when I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes early last year after a routine blood test for my enlarged prostate.

When I mentioned I was always thirsty, the nurse recognised this as a symptom of type 2 and a test confirmed this. My blood sugar reading was 108mmol/mol, so it was quite severe.

My GP prescribed metformin and a statin for high cholesterol — and said I’d have to be on medication all my life. I was keen to try another option, but I was told I couldn’t reverse it.

My wife was being seen by Dr David Unwin — and I swapped to his practice.

At that time I couldn’t lift the shopping or walk more than 100 feet without being out of breath. I weighed 18st 10lb and my tops were XXXL.

Dr Unwin told me I had a great chance to turn my life around but that I needed to lose weight.

I had to cut out bread, cereals, pasta, rice, potatoes — and eat mostly protein, green veg and full-fat dairy. I used to be known as ‘Two Cakes Dave’ because of my sweet tooth, but I cannot believe how easy it’s been. I am genuinely not hungry.

Just 16 weeks later, my blood sugar reading was 40 — putting my diabetes into remission — my weight was 15st 11lb and I was a size XL.

I just wish that I’d done this 30 years ago. I feel reborn.

 

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Yet in the new study, more than 60 per cent of the 186 participants had long-term type 2 diabetes — i.e. for six years or more — and 97 per cent improved their condition by following the low-carb diet, with many able to reduce their medication because their blood sugar levels were under better control (improved blood sugar levels are beneficial for long-term health).

Two people in the study, who had been struggling with type 2 diabetes for 15 years, even managed to put themselves into drug-free remission.

Dr Unwin, one of the authors of the research, says: ‘This study shows there is great hope for nearly everyone with type 2 diabetes, whether they have been more recently diagnosed or, like Ann, have long-term diabetes.’

His co-author, Roy Taylor, a professor of medicine and metabolism at Newcastle University, who has pioneered short-term, strict, low-calorie programmes for type 2 and was awarded an MBE in this year’s New Year’s Honours list for services to diabetes research, hailed the results of the study as ‘impressive — because of the sheer amount of weight that was lost and kept off’.

Type 2 diabetes is on the rise, largely due to poor diet and obesity. It is estimated that more than 4.8 million people in the UK have it — that’s one in 14 of us.

The most efficient way to check blood sugar levels is via a blood test to calculate the HbA1c (an average measure of the sugariness of blood over two to three months). Anything below 42 mmol/mol is healthy, while 42 to 48 mmol/mol is ‘pre-diabetic’ (where you’re heading towards type 2). Above 48 mmol/mol is in the diabetes range.

Dr Unwin’s goal was to improve HbA1C levels as much as possible because each year your HbA1c reading is over 58 can shorten your lifespan by around 100 days, according to estimates by the National Diabetes Audit office and the Office for National Statistics.

Dave Rowat, 61, a private hire driver, lives with his wife Michele, 56, a cleaner, in Southport. He says: I was shocked when I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes early last year after a routine blood test for my enlarged prostate. When I mentioned I was always thirsty, the nurse recognised this as a symptom of type 2 and a test confirmed this

This is because, over time, high blood sugar harms blood vessels, potentially causing complications including nerve damage, chronic wounds that lead to amputations, heart disease, blindness, stroke and breast and colorectal cancer. In early pioneering research, Professor Taylor found that people with type 2 have excess fat in the liver and pancreas. This is because our body responds to a sugary meal by producing insulin, the hormone that normally pushes sugar into the cells for energy (or stores it as fat if there is too much).

Professor Taylor has previously shown that losing significant amounts of weight — on soup and shake regimens of 800 calories a day — can trigger changes that strip fat from the liver and pancreas and restore blood sugar control.

The principle behind low carb is that eating fewer carbs — less than 130g a day — can help blood sugar levels stabilise, so the body needs to produce less insulin and, in search of energy, the body is instead encouraged to burn fat.

Low carb doesn’t mean just cutting out the obvious sweet foods such as biscuits; it also rules out starchy foods including bread, potatoes, rice and root veg. This is because all such foods are broken down into sugar and can raise blood sugar levels significantly.

Meanwhile, the foods recommended on a low-carb regimen, such as protein-rich meat and eggs, abundant quantities of green vegetables and full-fat dairy, can help you feel satiated.

‘Patients I treat with a low-carb diet are amazed not to feel hungry,’ says Dr Unwin.

‘But if you eat 500 calories of ice cream, you’ll still feel hungry afterwards. However, if you eat the same calorie value of steak and broccoli, you won’t feel hungry because they’re higher in nutrients that fill you up,’ Dr Unwin explains.

Professor Taylor and Dr Unwin have been at the forefront of the drive to make dietary changes a central part of the NHS approach to type 2 diabetes.

Type 2 diabetes is on the rise, largely due to poor diet and obesity. It is estimated that more than 4.8 million people in the UK have it — that’s one in 14 of us

Professor Taylor was one of the first in the world to demonstrate that type 2 diabetes could be reversed with weight loss.

His approach, which cuts food intake short-term to 800 calories a day, using nutritionally balanced soup and shakes, has been proven in a number of studies — and the NHS is now set to roll it out this year to people with type 2.

Professor Taylor says that the key to his and Dr Unwin’s approaches is that they share the principle of emphasising the importance of shedding excess weight — and that this is what makes the difference for patients’ health. Other methods can also be successful.

However, the low-carb approach has fast been gathering momentum among doctors and patients.

The Royal College of GPs says 1,100 GPs (there are 36,000 in total in England) have so far completed its online low-carb course, designed by Dr Unwin.

The hope is the latest findings will make mainstream medicine sit up and take more notice of this drug-free approach and GPs will offer it to more patients.

To better understand which patients could be helped by a low-carb regimen, the latest study involved analysing Dr Unwin’s database of 186 patients with type 2 diabetes who had followed a low-carb diet for almost three years.

The average patient lost 10kg (1st 8lb) in 33 months. Those diagnosed within the previous three years were most likely to go into remission (with a 50 per cent chance of success). Remission is where blood sugar levels are healthy without the help of drugs.

But the big surprise was that those with longer-term type 2, who did not reverse their diabetes, still experienced great improvements in their blood sugar levels — in fact, even more than those who had achieved remission.

Dr Unwin says: ‘Initially, this may seem odd but it makes sense if you consider that the non-remission group started off with far worse diabetes control. Yet there were two individuals who put their diabetes into remission despite having had type 2 for more than 15 years.

‘I feel our results mean that more doctors should be encouraged to help more of their patients cut the carbs.’

Yet another positive from the research was the significantly reduced cardiovascular risk after adopting a low-carb diet. An initial concern had been that replacing carbs with more red meat, eggs, cream and cheese would have a negative effect on cholesterol levels in particular — but in fact the opposite was true.

All the measures of cardiovascular risk that were tracked (cholesterol levels, blood pressure and weight) improved significantly for the entire group.

Levels of one blood fat in particular, triglyceride (considered key to assessing cardiovascular risk), declined by an average of a third.

This echoed findings in 2018 from a larger study in Liverpool, published in the journal Nutrition Reviews, on 1,633 patients with type 2 diabetes, whose authors concluded: ‘Large randomised controlled trials of at least six months with carbohydrate restriction appear superior in improving lipid [naturally occurring blood fats] markers when compared with low-fat diets.’

Moreover, the Government’s Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition said in 2021 that lower carbohydrate diets appeared to have no adverse effects on the cardiovascular health of overweight people with type 2 diabetes, the British Journal of Nutrition reported.

Ann, a factory worker who lives with her husband Terry, 77, and their son Paul, 35, was diagnosed with type 2 after a routine blood test.

She’d struggled with her weight and her blood sugar levels despite, she says, ‘not eating cakes, biscuits or sweets’. She followed NHS advice to base her meals around carbohydrates such as pasta and baked potatoes (as advised on the NHS Eatwell Plate.)

‘I didn’t realise that these foods [carbohydrates] would break down to so much sugar in my bloodstream until I was referred by my GP to Dr Unwin in August and he explained it to me,’ she says.

‘Bread was my big downfall, but I also used to eat a lot of starchy root vegetables such as potatoes, carrots and parsnips — which I now know also break down quickly into sugar.’

Within three months of starting a low-carb diet, Ann, who is 5ft 5in, had lost 1st 4lb (going from 11st 2lb to 9st 12lb) and went from a dress size 18 to a 14. Crucially, her blood sugar readings had plummeted from a sky-high 113 mmol/mol to 74.

Ann remains on a low-carb diet and is optimistic she can eventually put her diabetes into remission. For now, she still takes the same dose of the drug metformin to control her blood sugar levels, but feels infinitely more healthy.

‘I used to be in a complete fog, but now I have my energy and enthusiasm back,’ she says. ‘Now I get up and take the dog for a walk and we stride out together.’ Her eyesight, too, only rarely blurs now.

Professor Taylor says of the low-carb study participants: ‘The weight loss took place largely at the beginning, but they maintained it over time and avoided excessive regain (which can be a problem for some who lose a lot of weight).’

Dr Unwin says the key to avoiding excessive weight regain is to provide close support for patients.

‘It is possible that for some people, food, much like nicotine or alcohol, may be addictive,’ he says. ‘Highly processed foods (such as white bread or sugary breakfast cereals) can be difficult to give up permanently.’

Food addiction is a controversial subject, but one of those working in this

field is Dr Unwin’s wife, Dr Jen Unwin, a clinical psychologist, who says that rates of food addiction are higher in people with diabetes, obesity, eating disorders and depression.

She was recently part of a team that published research in the journal Frontiers in Psychiatry last year on treating food addiction: teams in the UK, U.S. and Sweden were able to show that online group treatments focusing on educating people to understand the effects of sugar on the brain and offering support could successfully help people to change their eating behaviour.

‘Quitting sugar and processed foods might be hard but it is possible with the right information and support,’ she says. ‘For many people moderation doesn’t work.’

But if low-carb doesn’t suit you, there are other ways to shed excess weight and put diabetes into remission, including intermittent fasting (limiting food consumption to certain ‘windows’ of eating), short-term very low-calorie diets (600-800 calories a day) and bariatric operations (where making surgical changes to the digestive system physically prevents overeating).

As Dr Duane Mellor, a dietitian and lecturer at Aston University, explains: ‘There is no one best dietary approach to manage type 2 diabetes — the best diet is the diet that is most suitable for each individual.’

But Dr Unwin remains convinced that low-carb will be the right choice for many. ‘Only last week, I took a patient off her diabetes medication and she gave me the most massive hug! She’d previously been told she’d have to take it for life.’

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Douglas Adams was Right. Science Journal Proves 42 Is the Address of the Universe

Slashdot reader Informativity writes: First published in Jan. ’21, a new publication entitled Measurement Quantization affirms the #42 is the address of our universe (Appx. AC), a distinguishing feature of our construct that ultimately answers the question to life, the universe and everything – from a physicist’s point-of-view. Importantly, the International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics – is a top-tier journal indexed to NASA’s Astronomical Data System (ADS), the after peer review version of arXiv.org.

With just over 500 equations, the paper resolves a comprehensive physical description of dark energy, dark matter, discrete gravity, and unification. Resolving over 30 outstanding problems in modern physics, the paper derives the physical constants from first principles, demonstrates the physical significance of Planck’s units, resolves discrete versions of SR and GR, derives the equivalence principle, presents a parameter free description of early universe events, discovers a new form of length contraction not related to Einstein’s relativity and identifies the discrete state of our universe – 42. Forty-two is what defines our universe from any other version of a universe. It also determines the rate of expansion and the ground state orbital of an atom, thus reducing the number of stable universes as we understand them to just a few.

So, while Douglas Adams may have just been randomly picking numbers when writing Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, perhaps we also live in a universe that likes to humor itself.

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The 2023 BMW i7 proves a luxury car doesn’t need internal combustion

Enlarge / BMW is now confident enough in its EV powertrains that it’s made a fully electric 7 Series alongside the gasoline-powered versions.

Jonathan Gitlin

PALMS SPRINGS, Calif.—For decades, automakers like BMW and Mercedes-Benz have fought each other in group tests for the title of “world’s best car,” an honor awarded by various magazines. The battle has usually been between the 7 Series and the S-Class, with occasional challenges from Lexus. Jaguar and Cadillac often trail behind.

Today, there’s a serious new contender for the crown as BMW’s newest generation 7 Series goes on sale.

I got hooked on cars-as-technology during the early ’90s, and what a way the cars have come since, as powertrains have pushed new limits and energy sources, and interiors have become more cosseting and protective of their occupants.

The Bavarian OEM made the decision a few years ago to invest in a powertrain-agnostic vehicle architecture, so the new 7 Series will be available with an internal combustion engine, as a plug-in hybrid (which will come to the US in time), and as a fully battery-electric version called the i7. BMW brought both gasoline and BEVs to Palm Springs for the international first drive, and you can read about the 760i xDrive elsewhere on these pages today.

But the star of the show is the i7, which yet again proves that if you want to make a luxury car even better, give it electric motors.

Enlarge / Electron-power really does make for a better luxury car.

Jonathan Gitlin

The electric version has full feature parity with its petrol-powered partner, including a new advanced driver assistance system that lets you cruise hands-free on premapped divided-lane highways and a huge curved theater display for lucky rear seat passengers. BMW has even managed to make the car fun to drive.

The electric powertrain tech in the i7 is now relatively familiar. It’s BMW’s 5th-generation EV powertrain, and it debuted in last year’s i4 sedan and iX SUV. It uses the same family of electrically excited synchronous motors for both axles, fed by a lithium-ion battery pack that uses prismatic cells. (BMW is switching to cylindrical cells for its sixth-gen EV platform, which we’ll see in 2025’s Neue Klasse.)

There’s just a single i7 on sale for now, the $119,300 i7 xDrive60. The vehicle uses a 255 hp (190 kW), 296 lb-ft (401 Nm) front motor and a 308 hp (230 kW), 280 lb-ft (380 Nm) rear motor with a combined total output of 536 hp (400 kW) and 549 lb-ft (745 Nm). The battery pack has a usable 101.7 kWh out of a total capacity of 105.7 kWh.

Enlarge / This is the second BMW 7 series launch held in Palm Springs that Ars has attended; someone must like mid-century architecture as much as I do.

BMW

The i7 has an official EPA range estimate of 318 miles (512 km) on the smaller 19-inch wheels and 308 miles (496 km) when clad with 21-inch wheels, as was our test car. Over the course of a 2.5-hour drive that featured a lot of elevation change and very little urban driving, I averaged 2.7 miles/kWh (23 kWh/100 km), slightly better than the 2.6 miles/kWh (23.9 kWh/100km) EPA rating.

Charging ups and downs

DC fast-charging takes 34 minutes to return the battery to 80 percent state of charge (SoC), or 80 miles (129 km) for every 10 minutes, and i7 owners will get three years of unlimited charging sessions at Electrify America. I attempted to charge my test i7, but my fast-charging attempt ended in partial success. I arrived at the charger with 56 percent SoC remaining, but the session was terminated due to a fault or error after just a few minutes and 9.5 kWh, which took the battery to 67 percent SoC.

If I had actually needed to top the battery up to 80 percent, I’d have unplugged the car and plugged it back in to try to troubleshoot, but I didn’t need 80 percent and didn’t feel like wasting half an hour on the phone to be told that no one else knows why it happens, either.

Upon my return, I let the BMW engineers know about the issue, and when they learned I was using an EVgo charger, they gave a knowing nod and said yes, they had been experiencing problems with that bank all month. (BMW brought in waves of international media over several weeks to drive the i7; Ars and the other US and Canadian outlets were the last of those.) Beyond that, they didn’t know what the problem was, which just reinforces my argument about fast-charger reliability from earlier this summer.

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Fetterman debate fiasco proves journalists ‘lied’ to cement Democratic power in the Senate: JNS column

Jewish News Syndicate editor-in-chief and National Review contributing writer Jonathan Tobin claimed that journalists who pushed the narrative that Democratic U.S. Senate candidate John Fetterman was completely healthy to run for office “lied” in order to ensure that Democrats “maintain control of the Senate.”

In his column for The Jewish News Syndicate, Tobin declared that these “team blue journalists” “were prepared to cover up or falsify the facts about his health in order to advance his candidacy.”

Additionally, he noted that this is part of a “trend that has become commonplace in legacy media outlets.”

SCHUMER, ON HOT MIC, ADMITS TO BIDEN THAT FETTERMAN HURT HIS CHANCES IN OZ DEBATE

FILE – Pennsylvania Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, a Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, speaks during a campaign event at the Steamfitters Technology Center in Harmony, Pa., Oct. 18, 2022. Fetterman is releasing a new doctor’s note saying that he’s recovering well from a May stroke as he vies for Pennsylvania’s pivotal U.S. Senate seat. 
(AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

Tobin’s piece, titled, “The painful truth about media bias: Some journalists lie,” began with the observation that the debate between Fetterman and his Republican opponent, Dr. Mehmet Oz, was the “most bizarre such encounter in living memory.”

Tobin said that Fetterman, who is still suffering lingering side effects from his stroke in May, “was clearly incapable of understanding many of the questions or articulating a coherent response. This was in spite of the fact that he was aided by a closed-captioning system.” 

He added, “It was a painful spectacle and should inspire sympathy for his plight. One can only hope that he is eventually able to completely recover.”

The author then went after the journalists defending Fetterman, though not so much the ones spinning his debate performance as “acceptable,” but the “number of prominent liberal reporters” who “interviewed Fetterman in the months since his stroke and then assured the public that he was fine.”

He targeted all those who went after the “only” journalist willing to call out Fetterman’s health issues prior to the debate, NBC News reporter Dasha Burns. Burns courted outrage by reporting that Fetterman had trouble with small talk ahead of their formal interview, which was closed-captioned so he could understand her questions.

Tobin wrote, “In response, team blue journalists performed a gang tackle on Burns, denouncing her as insensitive or as somehow bolstering the Republicans.”

FETTERMAN’S LINGERING STROKE EFFECTS WOULD CLEARLY HANDICAP HIM AS SENATOR, GOP SENATE EXPERTS SAY

Pennsylvania Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman participates in a debate with his GOP challenger Dr. Mehmet Oz on October 25 in Harrisburg, PA.
(NewsNation)

He pointed specifically to The Atlantic and Vogue contributor Molly Jong-Fast, New York Magazine’s Rebecca Traister and Kara Swisher of Vox and New York Magazine, as among those who trashed Burns in defense of Fetterman. He noted that the debate revealed that these “team blue journalists” were lying. 

Tobin wrote, “Anyone who watched the dismal spectacle now knows who told the truth about Fetterman and who didn’t. Burns was following the ethical standards of her profession and, regardless of her personal views about the election, gave the public important information.”

He added, “As for Jong-Fast, Traister and Swisher, there’s no nice way to characterize their claims. They lied.

NBC correspondent Dasha Burns told NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie that Democrat Senate candidate John Fetterman has ‘difficult’ time understanding small talk. 
(NBC)

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The columnist described their motives for doing so: “The same goes for all those who seconded their objections to Burns’s reporting. They want the Democrats to maintain control of the Senate. This means Fetterman must win. They were prepared to cover up or falsify the facts about his health in order to advance his candidacy.”

Tobin further described this defense of Fetterman as “sacrificing the truth in order to advance a political agenda,” which, he added, was “just one example of a trend that has become commonplace in legacy media outlets.”

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Monster black hole merger proves Einstein right (again)

Researchers studying the aftermath of a gargantuan black hole collision may have confirmed a gravitational phenomenon predicted by Albert Einstein a century ago.

According to new research published today (opens in new tab) (Oct. 12) in the journal Nature, the phenomenon — which is known as precession and is similar to the wobbling motion sometimes seen in a spinning top — occurred when two ancient black holes crashed together and merged into one. As the two massive objects swirled closer together, they released enormous ripples through the fabric of space-time known as gravitational waves, which surged outward across the cosmos, carrying energy and angular momentum away from the merging black holes.

Scientists first detected these waves emanating from the black holes in 2020, using the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in the U.S. and Virgo gravitational wave sensors in Italy. Now, after years of studying the wave patterns, researchers have confirmed that one of the black holes was rotating madly, to a degree never seen before.

Related: How dancing black holes get close enough to merge

The spinning black hole was twisting and turning 10 billion times faster than any previously observed black hole, which distorted space and time so much that it caused both black holes to wobble — or precess — in their orbits.

Researchers have observed precession in everything from spindle tops to dying star systems, but never in objects as enormous as binary black hole systems, in which the two cosmic vacuum cleaners orbit around a common center. However, Einstein’s theory of general relativity predicted more than 100 years ago that precession should occur in objects as large as binary black holes. Now, the study authors say, this rare phenomenon has been observed in nature for the first time.

Related: Researchers detect 1st merger between black holes with eccentric orbits

“We’ve always thought that binary black holes can do this,” lead study author Mark Hannam, director of the Gravity Exploration Institute at Cardiff University in the U.K., said in a statement (opens in new tab). “We have been hoping to spot an example ever since the first gravitational wave detections. We had to wait for five years and over 80 separate detections, but finally we have one!”

The black holes in question were many times more massive than the sun, with the larger of the two estimated at about 40 solar masses. Researchers first caught wind of the binary pair in 2020, when LIGO and Virgo detected a blast of gravitational waves released by the supposed collision of the two black holes. The team dubbed this collision GW200129, for the date of its discovery (Jan. 29, 2020). 

Since then, other scientists have pored over that initial gravitational wave data, uncovering ever odder secrets about this epic collision. (Though because scientists only have gravitational waves to go on and no direct observations, they can’t pinpoint the black holes’ precise location). 

For instance, in May 2022, a team of researchers calculated that the merger between the two black holes was both massive and lopsided, with gravitational waves blasting out of the collision in one direction while the newly merged black hole was likely “kicked” out of its home galaxy at more than 3 million mph  (4.8 million km/h) in the opposite direction.

This new research in Nature suggests that the two black holes had a chaotic relationship before their violent merger. As the two gargantuan objects tugged at each other in an ever-closer orbit, they began to wobble like tipsy tops, precessing several times every second. According to the study authors, this precessing effect is estimated to be 10 billion times faster than any other ever measured.

These findings vindicate Einstein, who predicted that such effects were possible in some of the universe’s largets objects. But the results also raise the question as to whether wibbly wobbly black hole mergers like this one are as rare as once thought.

“The larger black hole in this binary, which was about 40 times more massive than the sun, was spinning almost as fast as physically possible,” said study co-author Charlie Hoy, a researcher at Cardiff University at the time of the study, and now at the University of Portsmouth in the U.K. “Our current models of how binaries form suggest this one was extremely rare, maybe a one in a thousand event. Or it could be a sign that our models need to change.”

Originally published on Live Science.

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The 2023 Kia Niro proves why you stick with a winning formula

Enlarge / In green, the Kia Niro hybrid; in white, the Kia Niro EV. (Kia Niro PHEV not pictured)

Jonathan Gitlin

LEUCADIA, Calif.—The Kia Niro isn’t a flashy car. It doesn’t have a weird origin story like its stablemate, “the boar with a backpack.” There are no sporty pretensions, nor designs on exploring Moab off the grid. Instead, it’s just been an affordable family crossover, quietly going about its way as efficiently as possible, with hybrid, plug-in hybrid, and battery electric vehicle versions.

The Niro fills the lower end of Kia’s electrified offerings in the US, and for model year 2023, there’s a new second-generation Niro that’s on sale. As before, there are hybrid, plug-in hybrid, and BEV versions available, and they’ve actually even gotten a little cheaper, at least once you account for four years of inflation.

Kia’s design team always gives its work interesting names, and the Niro’s design philosophy is called “Joy for Reason.” But if you didn’t find the first Niro offensive, you’re unlikely to do so with the new one. Perhaps the most notable feature is the contrasting section that runs behind the rear door along the D pillar. It’s not just there for looks—it’s a functional aeroblade that controls airflow at the rear of the car to minimize drag and increase efficiency, and it can be body-colored should you prefer.

Enlarge / The black strip is a functional aeroblade.

Jonathan Gitlin

Inevitably, the Niro has grown a little. But not a lot—about two and a half inches longer at 174 inches (4,420 mm) from nose to tail and about half an inch wider at 71.8 inches (1,824 mm). The wheelbase is also stretched slightly to 107.1 inches (2,720 mm) The crossover’s height is unchanged at 60.8 inches (1,544 mm).

The Niro Hybrid

The cheapest Niro is the one with the smallest battery—the ‘regular’ hybrid version. This starts at $26,490 for the Niro LX, but you can spend as much as $34,790 on a Niro SX Touring with all the bells and whistles.

The Niro hybrid is powered by a 1.6 L, four-cylinder direct injection gasoline engine that generates 104 hp (77 kW) and 106 lb-ft (144 Nm), which works together with a 43 hp (32 kW), 125 lb-ft (170 Nm) permanent magnet electric motor, which is fed by a 1.3 kWh lithium-ion polymer traction battery. Together, they combine to give the Niro hybrid a total of 139 hp (104 kW) and 195 lb-ft (265 Nm) on the road, via a six-speed dual clutch transmission that drives the front wheels.

Enlarge / The Niro hybrid interior is sturdy and uncomplicated, but over-endowed with piano black.

Jonathan Gitlin

When fitted with the smallest wheels—in this case, 16-inch items—the Niro hybrid is at its most efficient, achieving an EPA rating of 53 mpg (4.44 L/100km), which makes it one of the most efficient non-plug-in cars from any automaker. Opt for the Touring package, which increases the wheel size to 18 inches, and that dips to 49 mpg (4.8 L/100 km), an easy demonstration of the effect that larger wheels have on drag and efficiency.

It’s even able to detect the presence of things like residential areas, school zones, and hospitals (via its GPS data) and will switch to EV mode at low speed to minimize the amount of air pollution it emits around potentially vulnerable people.

The Niro PHEV

Enlarge / The Niro PHEV qualifies for California’s carpool lanes.

Jonathan Gitlin

Kia has simplified the plug-in hybrid Niro offerings for 2023, dropping the more minimalist LX so you can pick from either the Niro PHEV EX ($33,740) or the Niro PHEV SX Touring ($39,490). The most notable specification change to the new Niro PHEV is a slightly greater traction battery capacity—now up 2.2 kWh to 11.1 kWh. That equates to an all-electric range of 33 miles (53 km), a 25 percent bump on the old car.

Under the Niro PHEV’s hood is the same 1.6 L GDI engine and six-speed transmission as the hybrid, but the electric motor is nearly twice as powerful, bringing 84 hp (62 kW) and 150 lb-ft (203 Nm) to the show, bringing overall power output to 180 hp (134 kW)—overall torque remains the same as in the Niro hybrid.

Charging time for the 11.1 kWh battery is about three hours on a level 2 charger, and Kia quotes 108 mpge (3.2 miles/kWh or 19.4 kWh/100 km).

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