Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Ultra-Processed Foods Should Be Treated More Like Cigarettes Than Food, Study Says
  2. NASA Delays Artemis II To March
  3. Google Plots Big Expansion in India as US Restricts Visas
  4. ‘Vibe Coding Kills Open Source’
  5. YouTube Kills Background Playback on Third-Party Mobile Browsers
  6. PayPal’s CEO Change Blindsided HP’s Board
  7. Adobe Is Killing A Popular Animation And Game Development Program
  8. Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 Alum Charged for Alleged Fraud
  9. The Switch is Now Nintendo’s Best-Selling Console of All Time
  10. Hidden Car Door Handles Are Officially Being Banned In China
  11. SpaceX Acquires xAI in $1.25 Trillion All-Stock Deal
  12. A Century of Hair Samples Proves Leaded Gas Ban Worked
  13. Leica Camera’s Owners Weigh $1.2 Billion Sale of Controlling Stake
  14. Feds Skipping Infosec Industry’s Biggest Conference This Year
  15. Finland To Introduce ‘Green Wave’ Automated System For Emergency Vehicles

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

Ultra-Processed Foods Should Be Treated More Like Cigarettes Than Food, Study Says

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) have more in common with cigarettes than with fruit or vegetables, and require far tighter regulation, according to a new report. The Guardian:
UPFs and cigarettes are engineered to encourage addiction and consumption, researchers from three US universities said, pointing to the parallels in widespread health harms that link both.

UPFs, which are widely available worldwide, are food products that have been industrially manufactured, often using emulsifiers or artificial colouring and flavours. The category includes soft drinks and packaged snacks such as crisps and biscuits. There are similarities in the production processes of UPFs and cigarettes, and in manufacturers’ efforts to optimise the “doses” of products and how quickly they act on reward pathways in the body, according to the paper from researchers at Harvard, the University of Michigan and Duke University.

They draw on data from the fields of addiction science, nutrition and public health history to make their comparisons, published on 3 February in the healthcare journal the Milbank Quarterly. The authors suggest that marketing claims on the products, such as being “low fat” or “sugar free,” are “health washing” that can stall regulation, akin to the advertising of cigarette filters in the 1950s as protective innovations that “in practice offered little meaningful benefit.”

infinity plus gum

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 3 Thread
I want a agreed-upon, stable, succinct, and intelligible definition of “ultra-processed” or I want to stop hearing the term.

Bad for science!

By methano • Score: 3 Thread
Crap like this is why the morons want to discredit science. Sometimes I almost want to join them. Because they say shit like this. UFP’s aren’t the best way to get nutrition but, as bad a cigarettes? No way. I’ve consumed a lot of both over the years. My health got a lot better after after I quit smoking. I didn’t notice a big change when I quit drinking Coke. I should know, I work at one of those research institutions mentioned above.

NASA Delays Artemis II To March

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
ClickOnThis writes:
NASA has delayed the Artemis II launch to March of this year, after a wet dress-rehearsal uncovered a hydrogen leak. From the NASA article:

During tanking, engineers spent several hours troubleshooting a liquid hydrogen leak in an interface used to route the cryogenic propellant into the rocket’s core stage, putting them behind in the countdown. Attempts to resolve the issue involved stopping the flow of liquid hydrogen into the core stage, allowing the interface to warm up for the seals to reseat, and adjusting the flow of the propellant.

Teams successfully filled all tanks in both the core stage and interim cryogenic propulsion stage before a team of five was sent to the launch pad to finish Orion closeout operations. Engineers conducted a first run at terminal countdown operations during the test, counting down to approximately 5 minutes left in the countdown, before the ground launch sequencer automatically stopped the countdown due to a spike in the liquid hydrogen leak rate.


Deja Vu?

By SlashbotAgent • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Freezing temperatures in Florida. Leaking o-rings. Fuel leak.

Why do I have this sense of deja vu?

For the record, I fully expected the launch to be delayed. just Artemis things.

Re:Completely Predictable

By ceoyoyo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Challenger was a problem with a solid fuel booster. No hydrogen involved. Columbia was an issue with ice, which would be a problem for any cryogenic fuel… basically anything other than solid fuel.

Google Plots Big Expansion in India as US Restricts Visas

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Alphabet is plotting to dramatically expand its presence in India [non-paywalled source], with the possibility of taking millions of square feet in new office space in Bangalore, India’s tech hub. From a report:
Google’s parent company has leased one office tower and purchased options on two others in Alembic City, a development in the Whitefield tech corridor, totaling 2.4 million square feet, according to people familiar with the deal. The first tower is expected to open to employees in the coming months, while construction on the remaining two is set to conclude next year.

Options in the real estate industry give would-be tenants the exclusive right to rent, or in some cases buy, a property at a predetermined price within a specific time frame. It’s also possible Alphabet will not exercise the option to use the additional towers. If it does take all of the space, the complex could accommodate as many as 20,000 additional staff, which could more than double the company’s footprint in India, said the people, asking not to be identified because the plans aren’t public. Alphabet currently employs around 14,000 in the country, out of a global workforce of roughly 190,000.

[…] US President Donald Trump’s visa restrictions have made it harder to bring foreign talent to America, prompting some companies to recruit more staff overseas. India has become an increasingly important place for US companies to hire, particularly in the race to dominate artificial intelligence.

Old boss once told me..

By TigerPlish • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Old boss once told me, he’d set up a complete call center for a US client in India, for less than he paid any one of his engineers, maybe 10 years before he and I worked together.

Just move to India already, Google. It’s cheaper, and no burdensome regulations. You’ll be free to exploit your workers far more than you do here.

I mean, that’s Google’s purpose, right? Pay as least as possible for everything, including people and talent?

Anyone with foresight saw this coming

By CommunityMember • Score: 3 Thread
The multinationals, which use H-1B’s extensively, and also already have numerous locations around the world, have always been going to be able to add employees where it made the most sense for the company, and that includes financially. This administrations visa restrictions and taxes is going to end up making it clear to those multinationals that it makes sense to move more and more employees outside of the US. It is hard to believe that someone did not make that point to the administration as part of the decision process. So this must be what the administration wants (i.e. for multinational tech to go elsewhere).

Indian employees best deployed in India

By unixisc • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Fully endorse this. If they want to hire Indians, for whatever reasons, just have offices in India! Instead of uprooting your employees from their homes in India, where they have families, relatives and others who can support them, just have your offices there. No need to struggle w/ visas, nor pay them US salaries (which they’d have to if they were to afford the living costs in the US). Pay them what is standard there, and set up the operations there accordingly

I have seen people, particularly the “free trade” crowd, argue that bringing them here brings jobs to Americans, since these new immigrants/guest workers have to buy products here locally. Doesn’t quite work, since those here temporarily would tend to convert dollars to rupees, determine that things are too expensive, and avoid shopping all that much. Also, if we want assimilation w/ US culture, it won’t happen as much, as for most of them, English is a second language. If people don’t like the “press ‘2’ for Espanol”, imagine when they have to press different numbers for Hindi, Gujarati, Telegu, et al. We’ll get one more country added to the culture wars, and local resentment against foreigners

Instead, build offices in different Indian cities for employees based in various places, so that they need not relocate. Even in the above story, Bangalore is already too congested, so Google would be better off building different campuses in other cities as well, such as Pune, Noida, Chennai, Kolkata and so on

‘Vibe Coding Kills Open Source’

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Four economists across Central European University, Bielefeld University and the Kiel Institute have built a general equilibrium model of the open-source software ecosystem and concluded that vibe coding — the increasingly common practice of letting AI agents select, assemble and modify packages on a developer’s behalf — erodes the very funding mechanism that keeps open-source projects alive.

The core problem is a decoupling of usage from engagement. Tailwind CSS’s npm downloads have climbed steadily, but its creator says documentation traffic is down about 40% since early 2023 and revenue has dropped close to 80%. Stack Overflow activity fell roughly 25% within six months of ChatGPT’s launch. Open-source maintainers monetize through documentation visits, bug reports, and community interaction. AI agents skip all of that.

The model finds that feedback loops once responsible for open source’s explosive growth now run in reverse. Fewer maintainers can justify sharing code, variety shrinks, and average quality falls — even as total usage rises. One proposed fix is a “Spotify for open source” model where AI platforms redistribute subscription revenue to maintainers based on package usage. Vibe-coded users need to contribute at least 84% of what direct users generate, or roughly 84% of all revenue must come from sources independent of how users access the software.

Re:The Akira License

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Does the Akira License involve biker gangs and racing around on a motorcycle?

Re:The Akira License

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 4, Funny Thread
I was picturing more giant mounds of pulsing formless protoplasm.

Oh yes, I remember Stack Overflow

By UsuallyReasonable • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

That was that website where I couldn’t answer questions in an area regarding which I am an expert, unless I had a certain amount of “reputation”. Rest in peace.

Where does innovation come from?

By ukoda • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
If everybody is vibe coding and nobody is writing open source code anymore where does the innovation come from?

If you think about most success open source project, including Linux itself, they usually start small with people seeing them as a potential future solution to a problem they are working on or just something interesting to play with. They start slowly and grow in usability and interest increases. Eventually it becomes something truly useful and usage becomes widespread.

AI and vibe coding breaks that process at the early stages because there is no longer the humans looking at new things and taking a chance on something new and unfinished. Open source relies on people looking forward but AI can only look backwards. A future driven by vibe coding looks like it will free of innovation. Sounds boring to me.

Re:Where does innovation come from?

By CAIMLAS • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

To say that open source is being killed by vibe coding is just… crazy. It’s simply wrong.

There are numerous vibe coding apps now which were written entirely with vibe coding. An entirely new paradigm of development exists today which didn’t exist even a year ago - claude code, opencode (omo/slim), codex, cursor, and on and on. Then you’ve got the agentic stacks, and everything else that’s largely open and free. “Come use this vibe coded thing I built this weekend! It’s live in production, you can see it working - and here’s the git repo!”

Coding skills are no longer a barrier to iteration and improvement. There are so many cool projects out there now being done by people who have an idea and see a business case and want to fill it.

Aside from the projects, I’ve already taken 2 libraries myself and forked them to change (and improve) functionality for my specific use cases. I’m assuming they don’t want my changes, but they can always pull them back if they want. They can see I’ve got a fork. My willingness to deal with “well they may not accept my changes” + slowing my own velocity is low. The repo is public, the commit comments are better than anything I’ve personally done in the past.

“AI and vibe coding breaks that process at the early stages because there is no longer the humans looking at new things and taking a chance on something new and unfinished”

Um… have you even tried vibe coding? You can one-shot a project in 20 minutes. I’ve done it numerous times - an old project I spent weeks writing specifications for, boom, done. I also now have a very useful data indexer which integrates smb shares with MacOS finder. Any sort of idea can now quickly come to fruition in a couple hours with a good set of prompts. Want to make an antiquated database format convertible to a newer platform, and reimplement the frontend? I once had to take a 15-year old physical SCO system running a proprietary database over to a virtual environment, 10 years back. It was a painful process, because SCO and failing hardware. But today? Once I got to that point I could’ve reimplemented it anew in a couple days, allowing those companies to expand the software capabilities they paid hundreds of thousands for at the time, to something which suited their current business needs (which were a paper and spreadsheet process).

A mildly capable office tech could take an existing git repo of their project tree and maintain it/add features and maintain the product well enough using vibe coding, instead of languishing for a decade, like they had to previously.

You seem to be missing the fact that LLMs have vastly exceeded prior functionality. Today, the frontier models are easily 2x what they were in October. October was easily 2x what they were in May of last year. May of last year? 2x as capable as they were the year prior. We’re approaching exponential improvements, and models have been solving previously-unsolved NP hard problems: that’s innovation.

If you have an idea, it can be done with vibe coding today if you have the intelligence and creativity to do it. Simple as. If you don’t, you can’t - and won’t.

YouTube Kills Background Playback on Third-Party Mobile Browsers

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
YouTube has confirmed that it is blocking background playback — the ability to keep a video’s audio running after minimizing the browser or locking the screen — for non-Premium users across third-party mobile browsers including Samsung Internet, Brave, Vivaldi and Microsoft Edge.

Users began reporting the issue last week, noting that audio would cut out the moment they left the browser, sometimes after a brief “MediaOngoingActivity” notification flashed before media controls disappeared. A Google spokesperson told Android Authority that the platform “updated the experience to ensure consistency,” calling background play a Premium-exclusive feature.

Properly enshittifying

By yanestra • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Smell and distribution of the brown stains cannot be overlooked any further.

Only an Insucure Browser Would Allow Detection

By BrendaEM • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
No private browser would allow the detection of user activity—got that Firefox?

Google Must Die

By greytree • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If they had said “We’re doing this to make more money from advertising” one would merely by pissed off.

But when they say shit like “The platform updated the experience to ensure consistency” they are showing themselves to be complete and utter cunts.

Fuck Evil Google

Re:Only an Insucure Browser Would Allow Detection

By Dusanyu • Score: 5, Informative Thread
I was thinking the same thing because i can still do this without issue in brave.

The smell of desperation

By JustAnotherOldGuy • Score: 5, Informative Thread

You can smell the desperation as they fail to keep people from blocking ads. They’re just so so so so greedy and grasping that they piss themselves into a frenzy if they think they’re losing ad views.

Remember, if you go to the bathroom during a commercial, you’re breaking the implicit contract to watch every ad they show you, or you’ll be STEALING from the advertisers. (Some ad exec actually said something to that effect but I can’t find the quote.)

PayPal’s CEO Change Blindsided HP’s Board

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
PayPal said on Tuesday it was booting its CEO and replacing him with its board chair Enrique Lores, sparing no ambiguity as to why: “The pace of change and execution was not in line with the Board’s expectations,” it said in a statement. One group that was blindsided was HP, where Lores was until Tuesday serving as CEO, according to people familiar with the matter.

Lores’ switchup sent them rushing to launch a search process, those people said. HP’s board does have internal candidates which it’s considering for the top job, according to a person familiar with the board’s thinking. As chair of PayPal’s board, Lores played a role in a process evaluating internal and external candidates. It was unclear when or if he recused himself from the final decision to name him as CEO. But HP’s board was only made aware that Lores was taking the CEO role at PayPal in recent weeks, the people said.

Not Sure Which Is Worse

By Voyager529 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

…Paypal’s website and mobile app that’s 90% ads at this point, or HP’s pure-plastic laptops that continue to push boundaries on bloatware.

A pox on both houses.

Re: Not Sure Which Is Worse

By liqu1d • Score: 5, Funny Thread
HP bloat is insane. Every 10minutes or so I get a command prompt appearing running some code and disappearing. It’s their bloody battery manager which is so ingrained into windows the only way to uninstall it is a shotgun!

Re:Not Sure Which Is Worse

By Tony Isaac • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Well at least there’s a cure for both.

UBlock does a pretty good job of blocking PayPal’s ads.
And if you buy an HP computer (or for that matter, ANY Windows computer), the first step is to wipe the hard drive and install a fresh, clean copy of Windows directly from Microsoft. NONE of the computer manufacturer’s branded software, ads any value whatsoever.

Re:This is what is worse.

By edi_guy • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I counter with, I would think the board of any public corporation would have a succession plan ready, say for instance there is a health emergency with the CEO. Or more likely the CEO does something bad and needs to be removed. The response to this should be “Enrique Lores has decided to leave HP, the acting CEO is Stacy Smith who is fully capable of fulfilling the role.”

From what I have seen over the years, public boards of directors are utterly useless. They provide almost zero oversight. They approve non-sensical CEO pay. Just awful.

Sidenote. I worked at a Fortune 50, public firm in a role where I was included in the exec deferred comp plans. There was a ~100 page plan detail and no kidding, 80 of those pages outlined all the stuff that only applied to C-suite comp. All the special goodies, health insurance for life, the corporate jet, crazy stock options that could never be under water. They could not lose money even if the firm went bankrupt. This part of the system is completely broken.

Adobe Is Killing A Popular Animation And Game Development Program

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Adobe has emailed users of Adobe Animate to let them know the popular animation and game development program will be discontinued on March 1, an abrupt decision that has angered animators and game developers who say the tool remains an industry standard in television and game production.

Animate, the successor to the once-popular Flash, is widely used for graphic creation, animation and building games in HTML5. The company has not offered a reason for the shutdown. On BlueSky, artist and animator Julia Glassman wrote that many television productions, games, and animated media still rely on Animate and Flash pipelines and cannot simply pivot to entirely new software.

“Again, Charlie Brown. Again, and again, & aga

By Pseudonymous Powers • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
If only there were some precedent for software developers or even specifically Adobe behaving in this way that could have warned the users that this sort of thing might happen.

why not?

By drinkypoo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

many television productions, games, and animated media still rely on Animate and Flash pipelines and cannot simply pivot to entirely new software.

“cannot”? Why not? Is this one of Adobe’s cloud-only programs? Nope, wikipedia to the rescue:

Technical support and the ability to download content will be available for end users until March 1, 2027, support for enterprise customers will continue until March 1, 2029. However, despite this discontinuation, the software will still function.

So… the software (which is, by the way, Flash) will continue to work as long as Windows doesn’t change too much underneath it, and will receive enterprise support for FOUR YEARS. If you cannot “pivot” away from Flash in FOUR YEARS then you deserve to fail. Most media in current production won’t even still be made in four years.

It’s local

By SuperDre • Score: 3 Thread
As far as I know, it’s a local application, so even if they discontinue it, you can still run it. I’m still using VB6 as our main development platform for our daily used application, and MS discontinued it in 2021 (of course any new application is not being developed in VB6 anymore, but the moneymaker still is).

Misleading much?

By flibbidyfloo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
It’s a bit misleading to post in the summary that it will be discontinued “March 1” without mentioning that’s 2027 - more than a year away, and the product will continue to work, but just stop getting updates on that date. I agree it’s tough to rework your whole pipeline, but if your entire business model relies on someone else’s product never changing or going away, then you’re bad at business.

Synfic (Open Source) Might Work for Some Animators

By BrendaEM • Score: 3 Thread
https://www.synfig.org/

Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 Alum Charged for Alleged Fraud

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
By now, the Forbes 30 Under 30 list has become more than a little notorious for the amount of entrants who go on to be charged with fraud.[…] Gokce Guven, a 26-year-old Turkish national and the founder and CEO of fintech startup Kalder, was charged last week with alleged securities fraud, wire fraud, visa fraud, and aggravated identity theft. The New York-based fintech startup — which uses the “Turn Your Rewards into [a] Revenue Engine” tagline — says it can help companies create and monetize individual rewards programs. The company was founded in 2022, and offers participating firms the opportunity to earn ongoing revenue streams via partner affiliate sales, Axios previously reported.

Guven was featured in last year’s Forbes 30 Under 30 list. The magazine notes in the writeup that Guven’s clients included major chocolatier Godiva and the International Air Transport Association, the trade organization that represents a majority of the world’s airlines. Kalder also claims to have enjoyed the backing of a number of prominent VC firms. The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that, during Kalder’s seed round in April of 2024, Guven managed to raise $7 million from more than a dozen investors after presenting a pitch deck that was rife with false information.

According to the government, Kalder’s pitch deck claimed that there were 26 brands “using Kalder” and another 53 brands in “live freemium.” However, officials say that, in reality, Kalder had, in many cases, only been offering heavily discounted pilot programs to many of those companies. Other brands “had no agreement with Kalder whatsoever — not even for free services,” officials said in a press release announcing the indictment. The pitch deck also “falsely reported that Kalder’s recurring revenue had steadily grown month over month since February 2023 and that by March 2024, Kalder had reached $1.2 million in annual recurring revenue.” The government also accuses Guven of having kept two separate sets of financial books.

You can buy your way with forbes

By Revek • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I thought it was common knowledge that forbes would let anyone have a write up in their rag for money. I never questioned that the 30 under 30 were all paying to have their names on that list. It stands to reason frauds would use this to perpetuate their fraud. I’m thinking my common knowledge, isn’t.

Does 30 Under 30 actually have a lot of frauds?

By ranton • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

By now, the Forbes 30 Under 30 list has become more than a little notorious for the amount of entrants who go on to be charged with fraud

Have there really been that many frauds? Gemini found 7 former winners who have been charged with fraud (5 found guilty with 2 cases ongoing) out of 420 members. When you include other issues like sex offenses and workplace bullying it goes up to 15. So around 1.5 - 3.5% of their winners either went on to do bad things or were already doing them without getting caught.

Is the rest of the enterprise business world really any better than that?

Re:fake it until you make it is out of hand

By tsqr • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Outright lies are criminal and should be prosecuted.

Alternatively, the fraudster should be elected to the highest office in the land.

Financial Crime?

By goldspider • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

There’s no such thing as a “financial crime” in the US if you have over a billion dollars and are willing to pay tribute to the king.

The Switch is Now Nintendo’s Best-Selling Console of All Time

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The original Switch is officially Nintendo’s best-selling console of all time after surpassing the DS handheld in lifetime sales. From a report:
In its latest earnings release, Nintendo reports that the Nintendo Switch has, as of December 31, 2025, sold 155.37 million units since its launch in 2017, compared to 154.02 million units for the 2004 Nintendo DS.

In November, Nintendo reported that the Switch and DS were neck and neck. We expected the holiday sales period would see the Switch surpass the DS, even with Nintendo announcing that primary development would focus on the Switch 2. Nintendo previously said that it would continue to sell the original Switch “while taking consumer demand and the business environment into consideration.”

Nintendo has to keep selling the Switch if it wants to dethrone Sony’s PlayStation 2 as the best-selling video game console of all time. The PlayStation 2, discontinued in January 2013, sold more than 160 million units over its 13-year lifespan.

Re:I wonder

By mccalli • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I don’t think it was for prestige. The huge success and Wii Fit craze took everyone by surprise, likely including Nintendo themselves. Add that Sony were losing it with pricing/drm/whatever and a whole “Wii Sixty” meme was born - cheaper to buy a Wii and an Xbox 360 than a single Playstation (I forget the gen - 3? 4?).

Remember Nintendo were coming off relatively poor market share - for all the nostalgia today, the Gamecube in its day was considered a failure and very much an afterthought (although I seem to remember that was a consumer view, and that it made the most profit of that gen. Again, just casting mind back to what was said at the time, not quoting any hard data here). The PS and XBox owned the Gamecube era, so Nintendo likely didn’t have manufacturing capacity at the time to handle the huge demand for the Wii.

Hidden Car Door Handles Are Officially Being Banned In China

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
sinij writes:

Automakers have increasingly implemented door handles that retract into the bodywork for aerodynamic reasons, but they are now off limits in China.

My issue is with electronic-only door latch mechanism. It should be possible to open the door from both inside and outside the car in case of complete power loss.


Re: modern cars are less safe

By Z00L00K • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Add to that the stupid nagging systems that are just annoying, beeping and throwing up a text about something it thinks is wrong.

An annoyed driver is not a good driver.

Re:Deadly

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Tesla has done its very best to turn its vehicles into deathtraps — note as well the Angela Chao incident (drove into a pond, couldn’t get out of the car, rescuers struggled to break in, she died).

The problem — as usual — is that Elon Musk has ordered his company to satisfy his pathetic manbaby concept of what’s “cool” instead of what’s sound engineering and safety practice. That not only includes doors that can be immediately and obviously opened by manual action from either side, but breakable windows. (Most rescuers carry tools expressly designed to punch out windows. You want those tools to work on your vehicle first time every time.)

The Cybertruck is the automotive equivalent of the Titan submersible: if you get in one, you should fully expect to die and be pleasantly surprised if you don’t.

Re:Deadly

By Arrogant-Bastard • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The cybertruck however isn’t just dangerous to its occupants , its sharp edges are a danger to any pedestrians[....]

Indeed. And to rescuers: there’s an analysis circulating in the rescue community that examines the Cybertruck from the point of view of rescuers trying to approach it and extract victims. Those sharp edges you mentioned are included in it, as are the slanted roof, the windows, the doors, the steel panels, the batteries, and more. The conclusion is that it might be the most dangerous consumer vehicle for rescuers to encounter.

Re: modern cars are less safe

By flink • Score: 5, Informative Thread

You might not like the risk of not being able to open your car if the battery is flat but since I see these mostly on EVs, if your battery is dead you have bigger problems. Other than that’s what’s bad about them?

If your car crashes and catches on fire and you lose 12V power, your “bigger problems” include dying horribly in a lithium fire. Also, your “bigger problems” could include getting inside the car to pop the hood so you can change the dead battery. I’d rather not have to jimmy the lock or smash the window to do that.

They also suck in places with cold weather. Water gets behind them and they freeze, getting stuck. If you don’t lock your car when brushing snow off off the roof, then you gotta try to pick compacted snow out from behind them. They are just a needless frivolity to save like .02% on aero efficiency.

Fortunately while my car has the idiotic things, they still mechanically operate the door latch when you pull on them, both inside and out, so I don’t have to worry about getting trapped inside. There’s also a mechanical lock hidden behind the handle, so if the battery is dead I can still unlock the car.

Re: modern cars are less safe

By bradley13 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

This. Ours has lane following, among other features. Get near the line at the edge of the road, and it steers towards the middle of the road. Only, we live in the mountains, with roads too narrow to have a center line.

If you meet oncoming traffic, there is room to pass, if both cars are very near the edge. The lane following sees you getting close to the edge, and steers left, like it wants to crash into the oncoming car.

Turn it off? Sure, you can, but it resets every time you start the car. Sometimes you forget. Great safety feature :-/

SpaceX Acquires xAI in $1.25 Trillion All-Stock Deal

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Elon Musk’s SpaceX has acquired his AI startup xAI in an all-stock deal that values the combined entity at $1.25 trillion, ahead of what would be the largest initial public offering in history. SpaceX pegged its own valuation at $1 trillion — a markup from the $800 billion it commanded in a December secondary stock sale — and priced xAI at $250 billion based on a recent $20 billion funding round that valued the two-year-old AI company at $230 billion.

SpaceX CFO Bret Johnsen told investors on a call Monday that shares in the combined company would be priced at $527 and that xAI shares would convert into SpaceX stock at a roughly seven-to-one exchange rate. The company is still targeting a June IPO expected to raise as much as $50 billion, surpassing Saudi Aramco’s $29 billion listing in 2019.

Musk said the least expensive way to do AI computation within two to three years will be in space. “Global electricity demand for AI simply cannot be met with terrestrial solutions, even in the near term, without imposing hardship on communities and the environment,” he wrote. SpaceX filed last Friday for permission to launch up to a million satellites into Earth’s orbit. xAI merged with Musk’s social media platform X last March in a $113 billion deal, and Tesla announced a $2 billion investment in xAI last week.

Re:I get the value of SpaceX, but…

By quenda • Score: 5, Funny Thread

xai? Isn’t that the stuff mostly used to make

What a whining hater. XAI owns Twitter. Thats at least $44B.
XAI is losing $6B/yr, multiply that by industry standard P/E of -40, and you get close to a $250B valuation.

Re:Must be nice …

By Aristos Mazer • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The valuation of SpaceX is based on the external purchasers that have put forth bids over the years, the most recent one settling in January of this year. The valuation of xAI is based on the latest funding round raised from venture capitalists outside of Musk. So there are more people than Musk who believe this valuation — believe it enough to put multiple billions of their own dollars on the line for it. Whether that is the true valuation or not, well, that’s always the game of stocks, right? If enough people believe a price, that’s the price.

Re:Must be nice …

By procrastinatos • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

If you call your Qatari friends, and ask them to invest in xAI at a given valuation, with the promise that
- you’ll back that valuation by having both Tesla and SpaceX acquire shares in xAI at the same price a week later;
- you’ll have SpaceX fully acquire xAI another two weeks later at a 10% markup;
- you’ll take the entire shebang public at again a 25-50% markup in half a year or so.

Do you think that your Qatari friends are actually investing in your fledgling AI startup? Or in something else entirely?

It’s all a circlejerk, and in the case of the Muskonomy, more oftent than not, just outright masturbation.
 

hot in here

By Tom • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Musk said the least expensive way to do AI computation within two to three years will be in space.

Has someone told him about the heat problem in space? Vacuum is cold, but it’s also a near perfect insulation. Getting rid of heat is a constant problem for space craft because there is no heat exchange and radiating it off is the only option you have and it’s terribly inefficient. And last I checked, GPUs generate quite a bit of heat.

Re:I get the value of SpaceX, but…

By bruceki • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Look up kessler syndrome and then think about a million more in orbit. We may be locking ourselves out of space. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/….

A Century of Hair Samples Proves Leaded Gas Ban Worked

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Scientists at the University of Utah have analyzed nearly a century’s worth of human hair samples and found that lead concentrations dropped 100-fold after the EPA began cracking down on leaded gasoline and other lead-based products in the 1970s.

The findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, drew on hair collected from Utah residents — some preserved in family scrapbooks going back generations. Lead levels peaked between 1916 and 1969 at around 100 parts per million, fell to 10 ppm by 1990, and dropped below 1 ppm by 2024. The decline largely tracks the phase-out of leaded gasoline after President Nixon established the EPA in 1970; before the agency acted, most gasolines contained about 2 grams of lead per gallon, releasing nearly 2 pounds of lead per person into the environment each year.

The study arrives amid the Trump administration’s broader push to scale back the EPA. Lead regulations have not yet been targeted, but the authors note concerns about loosened enforcement of the 2024 Lead and Copper rule on replacing old lead pipes.

Re:tough luck for people living near small airport

By XXongo • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Partly true.

More information here https://www.epa.gov/newsreleas… and here https://www.faa.gov/newsroom/l…

Unlikely to get lead back in gasoline

By MtViewGuy • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Look, tetraethyl lead was a “cheap” way to get gasoline-fueled engines to run higher compression without pre-detonation (knocking) damaging the engine. The development of electronic fuel injection in the 1970’s and 1980’s pretty much eliminated the knocking problem by electronically adjusting the timing of spark plug ignition via knock sensors and a small computer, which meant modern gasoline-fueled engines for street-legal vehicles rarely suffer from this issue. Besides, modern refining technology makes it possible for gasoline RON octane ratings as high as 99 (circa 95 pump octane) in unleaded fuel, pretty much eliminating the need for tetraethyl lead.

Re:tough luck for people living near small airport

By Kisai • Score: 4, Informative Thread

You kind of missed the point.

We’re not talking about lead poisoning, we’re talking about the effects of long term lead exposure. In places that used leaded gas, the IQ of the general populace went down 7 points. The only thing worse is living next to a lead smelter. If you visited the city the smelter was in in the 80’s, everything was dead. There was no vegetation for a mile around the smelter site itself. During the 90’s they changed something with the smokestacks (adding a few feet to the height) and that helped somewhat.

But the children and teenagers that went to school in that city all had a noticeable IQ loss.

cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/trail-bc-lead-testing-blood-children-1.7626719

> Teck said in an email to CBC News it is trying to reduce emissions; aside from its involvement in THEP, the company installed a KIVCET smelter in 1997, which it says led to a 99.5 per cent reduction in emissions. It also has a program to reduce lead dust in the air, which since 2012, has seen an 80 per cent reduction in annual ambient lead levels, Teck said.
> “Down to the lowest measurable levels, we see harms in children, including IQ deficits, increased risk of ADHD-type behaviours. When we think about pregnant women, we can also see, with very small increases in blood lead, an increased risk of pre-term birth.”

Re:WTF does this have to do with it?

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
At this point, anyone who suggests that Trump is the same as any president before him must still be huffing leaded gas, in between eating lead paint chips. There is no fucking way that any president in the recent past, going back to Eisenhower, comes close to the level of malfeasance that Trump does. One example: name one other president that proposed suing the FTC for a personal cash payout. This is an unconscionable conflict of interest, since Trump can force the agencies in question to “settle” and still walk away with truckloads of money. If any other president even hinted as much as this, it would be a massive scandal, and likely impeachment.

Yes, motherfucker, orange man is bad. That doesn’t even touch on the child raping, or creeping fascism, among other things.

Re:WTF does this have to do with it?

By gtall • Score: 4, Informative Thread

That asshole is suing his own, our own, IRS for $10 Billion. He won’t get all that but he may get a payout. And who is going to defend the IRS? We have no Justice Department. The sycophants running the joint are not going to put up a fight. That is the alleged president trying steal $10 Billion from the gov. itself. I suppose that cuts out the middle men he’s been using so far.

Leica Camera’s Owners Weigh $1.2 Billion Sale of Controlling Stake

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
The owners of Leica Camera AG — Austrian billionaire Andreas Kaufmann and private equity giant Blackstone — are considering a sale of a controlling stake in the German camera maker in a deal that could value the company at about $1.2 billion, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

HSG, formerly known as Sequoia Capital China, and Altor Equity Partners are among a handful of bidders. The Kaufmann family could re-invest following a transaction. Leica traces its roots roughly 150 years to Ernst Leitz’s microscope company and was publicly traded on the Frankfurt stock exchange until the Kaufmann family took it private in 2012.

I get the snakebite kit out

By scalptalc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Anytime I read something like “Equity Partners”.

Bad for consumers

By locater16 • Score: 3 Thread
For those not familiar with the camera world: Leica has done a relatively good job recently positioning itself as a “premium” camera brand. You do pay a ton, but from lenses to most cameras you get stuff that’s noticeably at least a bit better in most ways than any directly competing product.

Of course a sale means the owners assume they’ve maxxed out how far they can take this, and any potential buyers are probably the type to cut corners and ride higher profit margins on the brand name until it’s wrung out and worthless.

Leica’s Cameras, Optics, image processin and Brand

By williamyf • Score: 3 Thread

Leica Cameras, as in point and Shoot and Profesional Cameras are very good.
Their optics are very good to.
Some of their image processing technologies, like using RYGB sensors (Red, Yellow, Green, Blue) are very interesting.

And, in a world were phones with high end cameras use the Carl Zeiss branding ad nauseam, some phone brands partner with Leica for some needed diferentiation.

All of this is valuable stuff.

Re: Bad for consumers

By YetanotherUID • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The high-end compact C-Lux, D-Lux and V-Lux series are all Panasonic-made, and account for the majority of Leica sales. All the Leica DG lenses in m4/3 are also Panasonic-made. Leica Q cameras have mostly Panasonic innards, as do the L mount SL series.

Lenses in the L mount system (the one actually aimed at pros who need basic modern functions like autofocus, rather than at dentists and accountants buying status symbol M cameras and lenses) are mostly made by Panasonic and Sigma.

Feds Skipping Infosec Industry’s Biggest Conference This Year

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency won’t attend the annual RSA Conference in March, an agency spokesperson confirmed to The Register. Sessions involving speakers from the FBI and National Security Agency (NSA) have also disappeared from the agenda.

“Since the beginning of this administration, CISA has made significant progress in returning to our statutory, core mission and focusing on President Trump’s policies for maximum security for all Americans,” CISA spokesperson Marci McCarthy told us. “CISA has reviewed and determined that we will not participate in the RSA Conference since we regularly review all stakeholder engagements, to ensure maximum impact and good stewardship of taxpayer dollars.”

McCarthy declined to comment on whether the decision had anything to do with former CISA director Jen Easterly being named chief executive of RSAC last week. Easterly, who was appointed to lead America’s top cyber-defense agency under the Biden administration, joined her predecessor and CISA’s first-ever director Chris Krebs in President Trump’s line of fire back in July.

Re:Bunker Mentality

By PsychoSlashDot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

So they are afraid to engage with the knowledgeable public.

They don’t acknowledge that experts have expertise. They don’t believe anything exists that cannot be seen by the naked eye. They don’t accept that anything can be true with is not common sense.

The US medical system is devolving into witchcraft, so why wouldn’t this administration shun RSA? Just get NordVPN and you’ll be safe from all those brown-skinned trans-cyberian-orchestrators in enemy nation-states such as Canada, Themiddleeast, California and Norway (who won’t set a Noblepiece Price to sell Greenland’s rare-earth-AI datacenters).

They don’t understand how ignorant they are.

Doesn’t pass the smell test

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

“to ensure maximum impact and good stewardship of taxpayer dollars”

White house ball room *mic drop*

Re:Doesn’t pass the smell test

By SirSlud • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Lets ignore for a moment the fact that privately funding an addition to the White House invites all kinds of inappropriate opportunity for the sort of quid pro quo one would generally want to presumably not have ones government engaged in …

The ballroom triples the square footage. Hosting gets more expensive, maintenance gets more expensive, heating gets, cleaning gets more expensive. Building a thing is not the only cost associated with that thing.

Re:Petty

By cusco • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They’re probably also trying to avoid getting laughed at.

Re:Focused on what now?

By sg_oneill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This is the insanity that keeps frusturating me about how some of these administrations are being run.

You’ve got Attorney generals and DOJ heads constantly stressing that they see their job as to executute trumps agenda, and it just fucking isn’t. An Attorney Generals job is to uphold the law. The DOJs job is to uphold the law. None of it is to be a team player with the president. After all, if one the president men commits a crime on trumps orders, how can we be sure the DOJ will arrest them for committing the crime? Apparently the DOJ is now VERY CLEAR that this is not how it works anymore.

When sane governance returns to washington, whoever is next really owes america a push to properly legislate the independence of the public service, like adult countries do. Because this is bullshit. No more political appointments. No more political judges. No more overriding the judicial and legislative branches. All that shit needs to burn down. and be replaced by something impartial and independent.

Finland To Introduce ‘Green Wave’ Automated System For Emergency Vehicles

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot
alternative_right writes:
Fintraffic’s national traffic priority system, which is set to be introduced this summer, will recognize the location of an emergency vehicle and automatically change the lights to green to facilitate its passage.

(Why isn’t everyone doing this already?)

Why isn’t everyone doing this already?

By backslashdot • Score: 4, Funny Thread

When I was in college someone told me you could flip a traffic light green by flashing your headlights on and off. I found out instead it was a great way to get pulled over, especially if there was a police car nearby.

Been in place for over 35 years in the US

By Matt_Bennett • Score: 3 Thread

it’s called Priority Green (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_signal_preemption) , and was pretty common before the early 1990. 10Hz IR beacon is “low priority” 14Hz is “high priority.”

Re: Is anyone already doing this?

By stevenm86 • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Yes exactly. It’s called the 3M Opticom system for traffic light preemption. A while back, there was a market for homebrew transmitters which quickly became criminalized. Some cities are transitioning to GPS-based preemption (centrally coordinated) but the IR-based system is still very common. It’s also used by buses to extend the duration of the green phase (low priority preemption) without changing an existing red, like the high priority signal would.

Re: Is anyone already doing this?

By ThePhish • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Infrared. Biggest name in the game is Opticom. There are a few outlier audio-based systems, but the big one is Opticom.