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Submission + - NASA kills its X-57 electric plane before it ever flies (popsci.com) 1

schwit1 writes: NASA said today in a conference call with reporters that it would not ever be flying its experimental electric aircraft, the X-57, citing safety concerns that are insurmountable with the time and budget they have for the project. The X-57 program will wind down without the aircraft ever going up into the sky.

The project had previously seen challenges. For example, transistor modules in the electrical inverters kept failing and “blowing up” in testing, Sean Clark, the project’s principal investigator told Popular Science in January. That problem was solved, Clark said.

The problem that led them to scrap the plan to fly the aircraft stemmed from motors that power the propellers. Clark said today that analysis of the issue is ongoing. “As we got into the detailed analysis and airworthiness assessment of the motors themselves, we found that there were some potential failure modes with the motors mechanically, under flight loads, that we hadn’t seen on the ground,” he said. “We’ve got a great design in progress to fix it, it’s just [that] it would take too long for us to go through and implement that.”

NASA said that the reason behind permanently scrubbing the flight is safety and time. “Unfortunately, we recently discovered a potential failure mode in the propulsion system that we determined to pose an unacceptable risk to the pilot’s safety, and the safety of personnel on the ground, during ground tests,” Bradley Flick, the director of NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center in California, said in the call. “Mitigation of that failure would take the project well beyond its planned end at the end of this fiscal year, so NASA has decided to end the project on time without taking the vehicle to flight.”

Submission + - Smartwatches are being used to distribute Malware (defensenews.com)

frdmfghtr writes: Smartwatches are being sent to random military members loaded with malware, much like malware distribution via USB drives in the past.

From the article:

"The Department of the Army Criminal Investigation Division, or CID, in an announcement last week warned the watches may contain malware, potentially granting whoever sent the peripherals âoeaccess to saved data to include banking information, contacts, and account information such as usernames and passwords.â"

Recipients are advised not to turn them
In and report the incident to their local security office.

Submission + - Google releases the Pixel Fold (theverge.com)

frdmfghtr writes: Google has released the Pixel Fold, offering the Samsung Galaxy Fold some competition, even if it's a limited threat in the foldable phone/tablet market. From the article:

"The Pixel Fold is good, with some real advancements for folding phones. But, unsurprisingly, there are a lot of areas where it lags behind Samsung. It turns out that a four-year jumpstart does actually make a difference."

Too bad Google couldn't come up with something better than to copy the name format..."Galaxy Fold" vs "Pixel Fold." Reminds me of the "creativity" of the contactless pay methods: Apple Pay vs Google Pay vs Samsung Pay.

Comment Re:Idiotic design decisions (Score 2) 53

"More glare" is caused by morons who design LED streetlights and give priority to "we must show off that this is a LED light" over practical considerations.

Agreed...the problem is not that the fixtures are LED-based, but that they are a bad overall design. Any poorly-designed light is going to generate excess glare, LED or incandescent.

Comment Re: Generational divide (Score 2) 203

âoeAnd you know what? I don't know how younger people ever managed to learn anything with a headset and a webcam in front of a fucking computer screen with the teacher and fellow students appearing in tiny tiles, with the jerky video and unbearable audio lag, but I sure can't.â

I had to watch one of my kids finish kindergarten via Zoom. âoeZoomâ and âoekindergartenâ only belong in the same sentence if youâ(TM)re talking about zooming around a kindergarten playground. The teachers did the best they could in the sudden change in the school year, all the credit in the world to them.

I hope we never have to go through that shitstorm again.

Submission + - The Impact of the Artificial Intelligence Revolution on Programming Work (medium.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Artificial Intelligence (AI) has been a hot topic in recent years, as it is transforming many industries and aspects of daily life. One of the most impacted industries is software development, where AI has been altering the way programmers work and the skills they need. In this article, we will explore the effects of the AI revolution on programming work and the future of software development.

Submission + - SPAM: REAL-ID Requirement Pushed Back To 2025 1

frdmfghtr writes: From NBC News:

The deadline for the new IDs has already been extended previously. While time extensions in the past were caused by a lack of full state compliance with the requirements for issuing the more secure driverâ(TM)s licenses, the deadline was previously pushed from October 2021 to this coming May, officials said at the time, because the pandemic had made it harder for people to get into state motor vehicle departments to obtain the new identifications.

Link to Original Source

Comment What about other social media? (Score 1) 80

Can the same be said about other social media? The ability of foreign actors to covertly influence US politics? Will Snapchat come next?

Social media has let the disinformation (oh for fuck sake call it what it isâ"lying and manipulation) genie out of the bottle. A lot of good has come from social media, and a lot of evil has come from it, and the two donâ(TM)t necessarily cancel each other out to quiet the noise.

Comment What happened to summaries? (Score 5, Insightful) 16

Completely off topic and might burn some karmaâ¦so be it.

What the heck happened to article SUMMARIES? Way back when, an article summary was just that; a summary. The submitter might include a representative quote from the article, but would otherwise offer up a 3-4 sentence summary of the article. Now the summaries are closing in on half the original article.

Cue the âoeget off my lawnâ rebukes.

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