
Ultra Open Earbuds: Boses Open-Ear-Hörstöpsel klippt sich ungewöhnlich ans Ohr
Bose konkurriert mit den neuen Ultra Open Earbuds direkt mit Huawei. Allerdings kosten die Freeclip fast nur die Hälfte der Bose-Hörstöpsel. (Bose, Audio)
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Bose konkurriert mit den neuen Ultra Open Earbuds direkt mit Huawei. Allerdings kosten die Freeclip fast nur die Hälfte der Bose-Hörstöpsel. (Bose, Audio)
Erstaunlicherweise konnte bis jetzt geheim gehalten werden, dass Anya Taylor-Joy in dem Film mitspielt. (Dune, Film)
Apple soll an einer KI-Erweiterung der Spotlight-Suchfunktion und die Xcode-Entwicklerwerkzeuge feilen. (KI, Apple)
Starfield und Indiana Jones kommen erst mal nicht auf die Playstation 5 und andere Plattformen – aber vier andere Spiele. (Xbox, Microsoft)
Google veröffentlicht mit Gemini 1.5 und 1.5 Pro Upgrades für sein Sprachmodell. Bis zu 1 Million Token können verarbeitet werden, auch Videos. (Gemini, Google)
Der Automobilzulieferer Continental streicht weltweit 7.150 Stellen, davon rund 1.750 im Bereich Forschung und Entwicklung. (Elektroauto, Wirtschaft)
Dieses Onlineseminar der Golem Karrierewelt bietet eine umfassende Vorbereitung auf die PCEP-Zertifizierung. Ideal für Programmieranfänger, die sich grundlegende Python-Kenntnisse aneignen und diese auszeichnen möchten. (Golem Karrierewelt, Python)
The long bones of the hind limbs appear to be genuine. The rest? Not so much.
Enlarge / Discovered in 1931, Tridentinosaurus antiquus has now been found to be, in part, a forgery. (credit: Valentina Rossi)
For more than 90 years, scientists have puzzled over an unusual 280 million-year-old reptilian fossil discovered in the Italian Alps. It's unusual because the skeleton is surrounded by a dark outline, long believed to be rarely preserved soft tissue. Alas, a fresh analysis employing a suite of cutting-edge techniques concluded that the dark outline is actually just bone-black paint. The fossil is a fake, according to a new paper published in the journal Paleontology.
An Italian engineer and museum employee named Gualtiero Adami found the fossil near the village of Piné. The fossil was a small lizard-like creature with a long neck and five-digit limbs. He turned it over to the local museum, and later that year, geologist Giorgio del Piaz announced the discovery of a new genus, dubbed Tridentinosaurus antiquus. The dark-colored body outline was presumed to be the remains of carbonized skin or flesh; fossilized plant material with carbonized leaf and shoot fragments were found in the same geographical area.
The specimen wasn't officially described scientifically until 1959 when Piero Leonardi declared it to be part of the Protorosauria group. He thought it was especially significant for understanding early reptile evolution because of the preservation of presumed soft tissue surrounding the skeletal remains. Some suggested that T. antiquus had been killed by a pyroclastic surge during a volcanic eruption, which would explain the carbonized skin since the intense heat would have burnt the outer layers almost instantly. It is also the oldest body fossil found in the Alps, at some 280 million years old.
It’s unclear how such egregiously bad images made it through peer-review.
Enlarge / An actual laboratory rat, who is intrigued. (credit: Getty | Photothek)
Appall and scorn ripped through scientists' social media networks Thursday as several egregiously bad AI-generated figures circulated from a peer-reviewed article recently published in a reputable journal. Those figures—which the authors acknowledge in the article's text were made by Midjourney—are all uninterpretable. They contain gibberish text and, most strikingly, one includes an image of a rat with grotesquely large and bizarre genitals, as well as a text label of "dck."
AI-generated Figure 1 of the paper. This image is supposed to show spermatogonial stem cells isolated, purified, and cultured from rat testes. (credit: Front. Cell Dev. Biol., Guo, Dong, Hao)
The article in question is titled "Cellular functions of spermatogonial stem cells in relation to JAK/STAT signaling pathway," which was authored by three researchers in China, including the corresponding author Dingjun Hao of Xi’an Honghui Hospital. It was published online Tuesday in the journal Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology.
A long way, and a lot of money, for half a cup.
Enlarge / A view of eight sample trays containing the final material from asteroid Bennu. (credit: NASA/Erika Blumenfeld & Joseph Aebersold)
After years of speculation, NASA finally revealed on Thursday the totality of the asteroid sample returned from Bennu to Earth last fall: 4.29 ounces (121.6 grams).
To put that number into perspective, the total mass is only slightly more than one-half cup of sugar or a box of 100 paper clips. It's about the same mass as a small avocado, and you can't even smear it on toast.
So, in some sense, it's a pretty small sample. Especially when you consider the lengths to which NASA and its partners went to retrieve it. The space agency's Goddard Space Flight Center worked with the University of Arizona and Lockheed Martin to build the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft for $800 million. It launched in September 2016 on an Atlas V rocket, which cost an additional $183.5 million. And as it has traipsed across the inner Solar System and back, NASA has spent an additional $200 million on mission operations.