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Submission + - Iceland Just Found Its First Mosquitoes (cnn.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Iceland’s frozen, inhospitable winters have long protected it from mosquitoes, but that may be changing. This week, scientists announced the discovery of three mosquitoes — marking the country’s first confirmed finding of these insects in the wild. Mosquitoes are found almost everywhere in the world, with the exception of Antarctica and, until very recently, Iceland, due to their extreme cold.

The mosquitoes were discovered by Bjorn Hjaltason in Kioafell, Kjos, in western Iceland about 20 miles north of the capital Reykjavik. “At dusk on October 16, I caught sight of a strange fly,” Hjaltason posted in a Facebook group about insects, according to reports in the Icelandic media. “I immediately suspected what was going on and quickly collected the fly,” he added.

He contacted Matthías Alfreosson, an entomologist at the Natural Science Institute of Iceland, who drove out to Hjaltason’s house the next day. They captured three in total, two females and a male. Alfreðsson identified them as mosquitoes from the Culiseta annulata species. A single mosquito from a different species was discovered many years ago on an airplane at the country’s Keflavik International Airport, Alfreosson told CNN, but this “is the first record of mosquitoes occurring in the natural environment in Iceland.”

Comment Pertinent Example (Score -1, Troll) 206

Before her presidential run, Kamala Harris had a section on her page covering a few scandals she had as attorney general involving covering up a DNA lab's screwups. A week after announcing her run for president, it was scrubbed off her page. The change was buried three pages back in her history, as hundreds of edits had been made in the intervening days.

To this day, no mention of it is on her personal page, nor on her page as attorney general.

Submission + - CCP GOTION DEAD: Whitmer-funded Chinese battery maker pulls plug on project (themidwesterner.news)

schwit1 writes: While Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s Michigan Economic Development Corporation contends it’s “not the outcome we hoped for,” residents in Mecosta County are celebrating its decision to nix $715 million in taxpayer-funded incentives for Gotion.

MEDC officials on Thursday notified lawmakers that the company with strong ties to the Chinese Communist Party is in breach of its economic development contract, which was negotiated in secret by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s administration and select lawmakers just three years ago.

“It’s about damn time,” Marjorie Steele, founder of the Economic Development Responsibility Alliance that opposed Gotion’s planned $2.4 billion EV battery plant, told Bridge Michigan. “What the MEDC tried to pull here in Big Rapids was just so egregious.”

Whitmer claimed in 2022 that the agreement, which included $715 million in taxpayer-funded incentives and tax breaks, would fuel “the biggest ever economic development project in Northern Michigan” and create “2,350 good-paying jobs in Big Rapids.”

Submission + - Japanese convenience stores are hiring robots run by workers in the Philippines

John.Banister writes: Teleoperated robot workers are here! No more worries about immigrants taking jobs, as the jobs themselves can be exported. Anything that isn't done by the cheapest labor can be exported to where the skilled labor is cheap. And, what better way to train AI replacements than the encoded stimulus and response of teleoperation?

Submission + - Japanese convenience stores are hiring robots run by workers in the Philippines

John.Banister writes: Teleoperated robot workers are here! No more worries about immigrants taking jobs, as the jobs themselves can be exported. Anything that isn't done by the cheapest labor can be exported to where the skilled labor is cheap. And, what better way to train AI replacements than the encoded stimulus and response of teleoperation?

Submission + - Am I The Last Surviving 3-Digit User ID on Slashdot? 3

Jeremiah Cornelius writes: Some distinctions mean very little to anyone other than the singular individual holding them. Are there others remaining? Does Rob Malda ever bother checking in here? Who remembers the promising ascent and rapid zenith of VA Linux Systems? How about the decade-old sighting of the Slashdot PT Cruiser?

If you're out there we want to hear from you. Or just tell us why we don't.

Submission + - Alaska Airlines grounds flights nationwide due to IT outage (go.com)

schwit1 writes: Alaska Airlines flights were grounded nationwide on Thursday after the airline said it was experiencing an "IT outage affecting operations."

The Federal Aviation Administration issued a ground stop after a request by the airline.

Alaska Airlines flights departing from Seattle Tacoma International Airport were not affected, according to the latest advisory from the FAA.

It's the second IT outage affecting the airline this year.

Submission + - Former R.I. Governor Raimondo is Rethinking Coding Education Push in AI Era

theodp writes: As Governor of Rhode Island, the Boston Globe reports, Gina Raimondo made a relentless push to expand computer science in K-12 education, part of an effort to train more students to code. But during a forum at the Harvard Institute of Politics this week, the former R.I. Governor and past U.S. Secretary of Commerce suggested the Computer Science for All initiative might have been a dud (YouTube).

“For a long time, everyone said, ‘let’s make everybody a coder,’” Raimondo said. “We’re going to predict this is where the skills are going to be. Everyone should be a software coder. I don’t know, it doesn’t look necessarily like a super idea right now with AI.”

Raimondo was responding to a question about investing in research and development versus the government picking specific companies to invest in, the Globe notes. She was critical of President Trump’s strategy of having the United States take a stake in companies, although she defended the Biden administration’s handling of subsidies through the CHIPS and Science Act. “You could pick 100 different examples,” Raimondo said. “The government gets it wrong a lot.” Raimondo launched the computer science initiative as governor in 2016 to ensure that it was part of every student’s experience in Rhode Island. It was a trendy – and widely praised – strategy at the time.

Comment Yes but (Score 1) 2

Anyone who believes a word Trump says should have their head examined, me included.

He lies with every breath and most of the time he has no idea what he's doing or what he's done.

He lives in the moment with no past, no future, just primal rage and monomania for whatever lie or grift he's currently running.

Comment Re:What if engineers on a strong basic income (Score 4, Informative) 69

What if engineers on a strong basic income designed 3D printable things that had recyclability built-in from the start, instead of working for capitalist profit-seeking bosses maximizing cost, not engineering, efficiency?

This model brings you the glorious Trabant, practically unchanged over it's 25 year lifespan.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

My friend's family had one in Romania. When going up a hill, he passengers would have to get out, as it didn't have enough horsepower to climb anything but a shallow grade. Production numbers were low, and the waitlist stretched for years, as the workers got paid the same if they made 10,000 cars or 50,000 cars per year. They never made any improvements or fixed any bugs because, again, they got paid the same no matter what they produced.

They were easy to work on as they had no features or powered anything, and a strong person could pull the motor out with their bare hands. It was terrible in every other respect. Cramped, uncomfortable, unreliable, underpowered, and handled poorly.

Comment Re:They realized the downside (Score 1) 53

If AI pushes people out of jobs, it's because AI allows the work to be done at lower cost. Remember, cost means "human cost." Those out of jobs are out because they were wasting human effort, wasting human lives. The AI allows a lower cost to humanity.

A good government would help the displaced workers find or create new jobs; so would their former employers if they were good employers (it does happen.)

One thing the government can do to help generate new jobs is to remove restrictions on home businesses and licensure requirements (you need a license to braid hair why?)
If the government gives money for something, more of that something usually results. Give money to people not working, you get people not working.

Comment Re:If they're paying for the power.... (Score 1) 53

Electricity used for AI may actually provide worthy additions to human knowledge or production efficiency, etc..

Electricity used for bitcoin mining provides no benefit to humanity. In fact, by adding to the total planetary supply of money and money equivalents, it increases inflation, making everything worse. Since day one, it's been a waste of human resources, a negative-sum game.

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