
Podcast Besser Wissen: Der dreidimensionale Trend
Stereoskopische Bilder waren in den vergangenen Jahrhunderten immer mal wieder in Mode – wir spüren der Faszination im Podcast nach. (Besser Wissen, Kameras)

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Stereoskopische Bilder waren in den vergangenen Jahrhunderten immer mal wieder in Mode – wir spüren der Faszination im Podcast nach. (Besser Wissen, Kameras)
Taiwan ist wieder einmal von einem stärkeren Beben erschüttert worden. Berichtet wird von 26 Verletzten, die Halbleiterfertigung steht vorerst still. (TSMC, Wirtschaft)
Die IC-Rider-Serie des Herstellers ICH kommt mit einem 240-Grad-Blick nach hinten – das Kamerabild wird in einem HUD dargestellt. (Mobilität, Auto)
Outlook stürzt bei einigen Anwendern ab, wenn sie versuchen, eine E-Mail zu schreiben. Ein Update mit einem Fix gibt es erst in einer Woche. (Outlook, Microsoft)
Bisher ist es nur den USA, Russland und China im Weltraum gelungen, zwei Objekte aneinander andocken zu lassen. Nun ist dieses Manöver auch Indien gelungen. (Raumfahrt, Satelliten)
Der neue US-Präsident Trump bricht mit zentralen Projekten seines Vorgängers Biden. Statt auf Klimaschutz setzt er auf “das flüssige Gold unter unseren Füßen”. (Donald Trump, Elektroauto)
Netzwerktechnologien wie WLAN sind das Rückgrat moderner IT-Systeme. Im fünftägigen Intensivworkshop der Golem Karrierewelt werden Protokolle, Konzepte und Konfigurationen praxisnah vermittelt. (Golem Karrierewelt, WLAN)
A withdrawal from the UN health agency is a year-long process.
On his first day in office, President Trump issued an executive order to withdrawal the US from the World Health Organization, a process that requires a one-year notice period as set out in a 1948 Joint Resolution of Congress.
Trump initially tried to extract the US from the United Nations health agency in July 2020, but the process did not come to completion before he was voted out of office.
At the time, Trump criticized the agency's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, claimed it was protecting China, and asserted that it was overcharging the US in dues. "China has total control over the World Health Organization despite only paying $40 million per year, compared to what the United States has been paying, which is approximately $450 million a year," Trump said in 2020 prior to issuing the first notice of withdrawal.
It’s pretty smart, but it doesn’t require Apple Intelligence.
A report from Mark Gurman in Bloomberg makes the very reasonable suggestion that automatic email categorization in Apple Mail, already present since iOS 18 arrived on the iPhone, is coming to Macs and iPads in a few months. The feature should arrive with macOS 15.4 and possibly iPadOS 18.4, both due in April.
Similar to Google's server-side Gmail sorting, which debuted in May 2013, Apple's Mail app on iOS sorts email into categories: "Primary," "Transactions," "Updates," and "Promotions." Moving an email manually from one category to another generally fixes the categorization for that sender from then on. You cannot create new categories, however, or alter how Apple's sorting functions.
Some may prefer the simplicity of a single scroll of messages, versus having to check four separate inboxes to ensure that nothing got missorted or is more important than the label implies. I've used sorting on iOS and generally found it helpful, though I also use the Filters button in the lower-left corner on iOS to do a double-check of all the mail addressed specifically to me. On a Mac desktop, I'm partial to Mimestream, but that's because all my mail comes through Google/Workspace accounts. I'll be watching to see how Mail's sorting translates to macOS.
It’s pretty smart, but it doesn’t require Apple Intelligence.
A report from Mark Gurman in Bloomberg makes the very reasonable suggestion that automatic email categorization in Apple Mail, already present since iOS 18 arrived on the iPhone, is coming to Macs and iPads in a few months. The feature should arrive with macOS 15.4 and possibly iPadOS 18.4, both due in April.
Similar to Google's server-side Gmail sorting, which debuted in May 2013, Apple's Mail app on iOS sorts email into categories: "Primary," "Transactions," "Updates," and "Promotions." Moving an email manually from one category to another generally fixes the categorization for that sender from then on. You cannot create new categories, however, or alter how Apple's sorting functions.
Some may prefer the simplicity of a single scroll of messages, versus having to check four separate inboxes to ensure that nothing got missorted or is more important than the label implies. I've used sorting on iOS and generally found it helpful, though I also use the Filters button in the lower-left corner on iOS to do a double-check of all the mail addressed specifically to me. On a Mac desktop, I'm partial to Mimestream, but that's because all my mail comes through Google/Workspace accounts. I'll be watching to see how Mail's sorting translates to macOS.