Month: February 2023

FDA Authorizes First At-Home COVID and Flu Test, but You Can’t Buy One Yet – CNET

Symptoms of COVID and the flu overlap, making a dual test handy. However, the test’s maker has declared bankruptcy, leaving the future unclear.

Symptoms of COVID and the flu overlap, making a dual test handy. However, the test’s maker has declared bankruptcy, leaving the future unclear.

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No One Knows If Decades-Old Nukes Would Actually Work

Atomic weapons are complex, sensitive, and often pretty old. With testing banned, countries have to rely on good simulations to trust their weapons work. From a report: Flattened cities, millions of people burnt to death, and yet more tortured by radioactive fallout. That harrowing future may seem outlandish to some, but only because no nation has detonated a nuclear weapon in conflict since 1945. Countries including the US, Russia, and China wield hefty nuclear arsenals and regularly squabble over how to manage them — only last week, Russia suspended participation in its nuclear arms reduction treaty with the US. Thankfully, nuclear warheads mostly just sit there, motionless and silent, cozy in their silos and underground storage caverns. If someone actually tried to use one, though, would it definitely go off as intended? “Nobody really knows,” says Alex Wellerstein, a nuclear weapons historian at the Stevens Institute of Technology. The 20th century witnessed more than 2,000 nuclear tests — the vast majority carried out by the US and the Soviet Union. And while these did prove the countries’ nuclear capabilities, they don’t guarantee that a warhead strapped to a missile or some other delivery system would work today.

Surprisingly, as far as we know, the US has only ever tested a live nuclear warhead using a live missile system once, way back in 1962. It was launched from a submarine. The Soviet Union had performed a similar test the previous year, and China followed in 1966. No nation has ever tested a nuclear warhead delivered by an intercontinental ballistic missile. The missile could blow up on the launchpad, explains Wellerstein. No one wants to clean that mess up. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has, sadly, brought the specter of nuclear weaponry to the fore once again. In February, Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed new strategic nuclear weapons systems had been placed on combat duty, and he threatened to resume nuclear testing. Russia’s former defense minister, Dmitry Medvedev, has been particularly vocal about his country’s readiness to use nuclear weapons — including against Ukraine. Russia has around 4,500 non-retired nuclear warheads, according to the Federation of American Scientists, a nonprofit that focuses on security. Roughly 2,000 are considered “tactical” — smaller warheads that could be used on, for example, a foreign battlefield. To our knowledge, Russia has not begun “mating” those tactical warheads to delivery systems, such as missiles. Doing so involves certain safety risks, notes Lynn Rusten of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a think tank: “It would be really worrisome if we saw any indication that they were moving those warheads out of storage.”

If they were brought into operation, multiple things could in theory go wrong with these weapons. For one thing, the delivery systems themselves might not be reliable. Mark Schneider, formerly of the US Department of Defense’s senior executive service, has written about the many problems Russia has faced with its missiles so far during the war with Ukraine. Last spring, US officials said between 20 and 60 percent of Russian missiles were failing, either in terms of not launching or not hitting the intended target. That doesn’t necessarily matter, though, notes Schneider. When firing a nuclear warhead with a big explosive yield, “accuracy is much less relevant,” he says. Russia certainly has enough missiles to get a nuclear weapon more or less to where it wants — even if it takes more than one attempt. But what about the warheads themselves? Modern thermonuclear devices are complex bits of machinery designed to initiate a specific explosive sequence, sometimes called a fission-fusion-fission reaction, which releases a massive amount of energy. Wellerstein points out that some warheads designed decades ago are still part of nuclear arsenals. Over time, their parts must be carefully checked for degradation and refurbished or replaced. But certain components can become unavailable due to changes in manufacturing capabilities.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Atomic weapons are complex, sensitive, and often pretty old. With testing banned, countries have to rely on good simulations to trust their weapons work. From a report: Flattened cities, millions of people burnt to death, and yet more tortured by radioactive fallout. That harrowing future may seem outlandish to some, but only because no nation has detonated a nuclear weapon in conflict since 1945. Countries including the US, Russia, and China wield hefty nuclear arsenals and regularly squabble over how to manage them — only last week, Russia suspended participation in its nuclear arms reduction treaty with the US. Thankfully, nuclear warheads mostly just sit there, motionless and silent, cozy in their silos and underground storage caverns. If someone actually tried to use one, though, would it definitely go off as intended? “Nobody really knows,” says Alex Wellerstein, a nuclear weapons historian at the Stevens Institute of Technology. The 20th century witnessed more than 2,000 nuclear tests — the vast majority carried out by the US and the Soviet Union. And while these did prove the countries’ nuclear capabilities, they don’t guarantee that a warhead strapped to a missile or some other delivery system would work today.

Surprisingly, as far as we know, the US has only ever tested a live nuclear warhead using a live missile system once, way back in 1962. It was launched from a submarine. The Soviet Union had performed a similar test the previous year, and China followed in 1966. No nation has ever tested a nuclear warhead delivered by an intercontinental ballistic missile. The missile could blow up on the launchpad, explains Wellerstein. No one wants to clean that mess up. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has, sadly, brought the specter of nuclear weaponry to the fore once again. In February, Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed new strategic nuclear weapons systems had been placed on combat duty, and he threatened to resume nuclear testing. Russia’s former defense minister, Dmitry Medvedev, has been particularly vocal about his country’s readiness to use nuclear weapons — including against Ukraine. Russia has around 4,500 non-retired nuclear warheads, according to the Federation of American Scientists, a nonprofit that focuses on security. Roughly 2,000 are considered “tactical” — smaller warheads that could be used on, for example, a foreign battlefield. To our knowledge, Russia has not begun “mating” those tactical warheads to delivery systems, such as missiles. Doing so involves certain safety risks, notes Lynn Rusten of the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a think tank: “It would be really worrisome if we saw any indication that they were moving those warheads out of storage.”

If they were brought into operation, multiple things could in theory go wrong with these weapons. For one thing, the delivery systems themselves might not be reliable. Mark Schneider, formerly of the US Department of Defense’s senior executive service, has written about the many problems Russia has faced with its missiles so far during the war with Ukraine. Last spring, US officials said between 20 and 60 percent of Russian missiles were failing, either in terms of not launching or not hitting the intended target. That doesn’t necessarily matter, though, notes Schneider. When firing a nuclear warhead with a big explosive yield, “accuracy is much less relevant,” he says. Russia certainly has enough missiles to get a nuclear weapon more or less to where it wants — even if it takes more than one attempt. But what about the warheads themselves? Modern thermonuclear devices are complex bits of machinery designed to initiate a specific explosive sequence, sometimes called a fission-fusion-fission reaction, which releases a massive amount of energy. Wellerstein points out that some warheads designed decades ago are still part of nuclear arsenals. Over time, their parts must be carefully checked for degradation and refurbished or replaced. But certain components can become unavailable due to changes in manufacturing capabilities.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Best Food Delivery Services of 2023 – CNET

We compare Uber Eats, DoorDash and more so you don’t have to.

We compare Uber Eats, DoorDash and more so you don’t have to.

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Best TV for 2023: Samsung, TCL, LG and More – CNET

Great TVs are all 4K now, but they can range in price from the expensive OLED to cheaper LCD technology, with stops in between.

Great TVs are all 4K now, but they can range in price from the expensive OLED to cheaper LCD technology, with stops in between.

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The iPhone SE 4 isn’t canceled, apparently

Image: The Verge

Apple is reportedly once again working on a next-generation iPhone SE, according to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, despite his previous reports that it had canceled work on the phone. In a Twitter thread, Kuo says the company has “restarted” the project and that the iPhone SE 4 will feature an OLED display — a first for the company’s budget line — as well as a 5G modem designed by Apple instead of longtime supplier Qualcomm.
He predicts that the phone will more or less be “a minor modification of the 6.1-inch iPhone 14” and that it’ll go into production at the beginning of 2024, presumably coinciding with a release later that year. It’s unclear if the phone will have some of the iPhone 14’s premium features like Emergency SOS via satellite, Face ID, and a dual-camera system with night mode, all of which the 2022 third-gen iPhone SE currently lacks. Kuo does, however, mention that Apple will have to “overcome the technical obstacles related to mmWave and satellite communications” when it comes to its modem before it brings it to its mainline phones.

(3/10)2. The new iPhone SE 4 will equip with Apple’s 5G baseband chip produced by a 4nm process (similar to 5nm) and will only support Sub-6GHz as the current plan.— 郭明錤 (Ming-Chi Kuo) (@mingchikuo) February 27, 2023

This report is basically the exact opposite of what Kuo reported in early January, when he said that the iPhone SE 4 was canceled and that Apple would be sticking with Qualcomm’s chips for the iPhone 15 and 16. Now, Kuo says that “the new iPhone SE 4 will equip with Apple’s 5G baseband chip produced by a 4nm process” and that it’ll only support sub-6 5G, not the ultrafast mmWave tech. That’s not necessarily a surprise, though, given that the same is true for the current iPhone SE.
Kuo says that it’s a “foregone conclusion that Qualcomm’s Apple orders will decline significantly” after it adopts its own modems in the iPhone SE, even though they may take a generation or two to make their way to its flagship phones. Kuo predicts that the Apple-made modems will also start to show up in Apple Watches and iPads, assuming everything goes well.
PS: if these rumors hold true and the iPhone SE 4 does end up with a 6.1-inch display, it’ll mean that Apple ignored the pleas from my colleague Sean Hollister and me to revive the Mini’s form factor in its budget lineup. I invite all devotes of the 5.4-inch screen to take some time to process this and to prepare for another long journey through the large phone wastes. Congrats to all the big phone fans, though.

Image: The Verge

Apple is reportedly once again working on a next-generation iPhone SE, according to analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, despite his previous reports that it had canceled work on the phone. In a Twitter thread, Kuo says the company has “restarted” the project and that the iPhone SE 4 will feature an OLED display — a first for the company’s budget line — as well as a 5G modem designed by Apple instead of longtime supplier Qualcomm.

He predicts that the phone will more or less be “a minor modification of the 6.1-inch iPhone 14” and that it’ll go into production at the beginning of 2024, presumably coinciding with a release later that year. It’s unclear if the phone will have some of the iPhone 14’s premium features like Emergency SOS via satellite, Face ID, and a dual-camera system with night mode, all of which the 2022 third-gen iPhone SE currently lacks. Kuo does, however, mention that Apple will have to “overcome the technical obstacles related to mmWave and satellite communications” when it comes to its modem before it brings it to its mainline phones.

(3/10)
2. The new iPhone SE 4 will equip with Apple’s 5G baseband chip produced by a 4nm process (similar to 5nm) and will only support Sub-6GHz as the current plan.

— 郭明錤 (Ming-Chi Kuo) (@mingchikuo) February 27, 2023

This report is basically the exact opposite of what Kuo reported in early January, when he said that the iPhone SE 4 was canceled and that Apple would be sticking with Qualcomm’s chips for the iPhone 15 and 16. Now, Kuo says that “the new iPhone SE 4 will equip with Apple’s 5G baseband chip produced by a 4nm process” and that it’ll only support sub-6 5G, not the ultrafast mmWave tech. That’s not necessarily a surprise, though, given that the same is true for the current iPhone SE.

Kuo says that it’s a “foregone conclusion that Qualcomm’s Apple orders will decline significantly” after it adopts its own modems in the iPhone SE, even though they may take a generation or two to make their way to its flagship phones. Kuo predicts that the Apple-made modems will also start to show up in Apple Watches and iPads, assuming everything goes well.

PS: if these rumors hold true and the iPhone SE 4 does end up with a 6.1-inch display, it’ll mean that Apple ignored the pleas from my colleague Sean Hollister and me to revive the Mini’s form factor in its budget lineup. I invite all devotes of the 5.4-inch screen to take some time to process this and to prepare for another long journey through the large phone wastes. Congrats to all the big phone fans, though.

Read More 

Facebook and Instagram will help prevent the spread of teens’ intimate photos

Meta is taking further action as part of its long-running promise to combat sextortion and other forms of child sexual abuse material (CSAM). The company has revealed that Facebook and Instagram are founding members of Take It Down, an initiative from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) that helps young people and their parents remove intimate photos posted online. The system relies on locally stored photos, but theoretically protects privacy.
Instead of sharing the photos themselves, concerned users visit Take It Down to upload generated hashes. If Facebook, Instagram and other program members spot those hashes elsewhere, they can pull and block the content so it won’t proliferate. Meta notes that this isn’t just for those under 18, either. Parents can act on a child’s behalf, and adults can scrub images taken of them when they were younger. The NCMEC warns that platforms may have “limited capabilities” to remove content that’s already online, but this could still help mitigate or undo the damage from unwanted sharing. We’ve asked Meta for clarification.
Meta announced its anti-sextortion plans in November as part of a broader crackdown against “suspicious” adults messaging teens. The project is a follow-up to the StopNCII technology the company developed to fight revenge porn, and shares a similar implementation. This is the latest in a string of efforts to protect teens on Meta’s social networks. The company already limits sensitive content for teen Instagram users and restricts ads targeting young audiences, for instance.
The action isn’t entirely voluntary. Meta is under pressure from state attorneys general and other government bodies to show that it protects teens, particularly in light of whistleblower Frances Haugen’s accusations that the firm downplayed research into Instagram’s effects on mental health. The new takedown platform may lift some of that pressure even as it gives abuse survivors more control over their online presence.

Meta is taking further action as part of its long-running promise to combat sextortion and other forms of child sexual abuse material (CSAM). The company has revealed that Facebook and Instagram are founding members of Take It Down, an initiative from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) that helps young people and their parents remove intimate photos posted online. The system relies on locally stored photos, but theoretically protects privacy.

Instead of sharing the photos themselves, concerned users visit Take It Down to upload generated hashes. If Facebook, Instagram and other program members spot those hashes elsewhere, they can pull and block the content so it won’t proliferate. Meta notes that this isn’t just for those under 18, either. Parents can act on a child’s behalf, and adults can scrub images taken of them when they were younger. The NCMEC warns that platforms may have “limited capabilities” to remove content that’s already online, but this could still help mitigate or undo the damage from unwanted sharing. We’ve asked Meta for clarification.

Meta announced its anti-sextortion plans in November as part of a broader crackdown against “suspicious” adults messaging teens. The project is a follow-up to the StopNCII technology the company developed to fight revenge porn, and shares a similar implementation. This is the latest in a string of efforts to protect teens on Meta’s social networks. The company already limits sensitive content for teen Instagram users and restricts ads targeting young audiences, for instance.

The action isn’t entirely voluntary. Meta is under pressure from state attorneys general and other government bodies to show that it protects teens, particularly in light of whistleblower Frances Haugen’s accusations that the firm downplayed research into Instagram’s effects on mental health. The new takedown platform may lift some of that pressure even as it gives abuse survivors more control over their online presence.

Read More 

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