The Starship program hits another speed bump with second consecutive failure

Observers in Florida, the Bahamas, and the Turks and Caicos Islands spotted falling debris.

SpaceX's Starship launcher spun out of control minutes after liftoff Thursday, showering fiery debris over the Bahamas and dealing another setback to Elon Musk's rocket program after a failure under similar circumstances less than two months ago.

Starship and its Super Heavy booster, loaded with millions of pounds of methane and liquid oxygen propellants, lumbered off their launch pad in Texas at 5:30 pm CST (6:30 pm EST; 23:30 UTC) to begin the eighth full-scale test flight of SpaceX's new-generation rocket. Thirty-three Raptor engines propelled the 404-foot-tall (123.1-meter) rocket through a clear afternoon sky with more than twice the power of NASA's Saturn V rocket, the workhorse of the Apollo lunar program.

Repeating a feat SpaceX accomplished with Starship twice before, the rocket's Super Heavy booster separated from the Starship upper stage roughly two-and-a-half minutes into the flight, then guided itself back to the Texas coastline for a catch by mechanical arms on the launch pad's tower. SpaceX is now 3-for-3 with attempts to catch a Super Heavy booster back at the launch site, a sign that engineers are well on their way to mastering how to recover and reuse boosters in a similar way as they do with the smaller workhorse Falcon 9 rocket.

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Intuitive Machines’ second attempt to land on the Moon also went sideways

“I would like to get more data before we can determine the orientation.”

Inside a small control room, during the middle of the day on Thursday local time in Texas, about a dozen white-knuckled engineers at a space startup named Intuitive Machines started to get worried. Their spacecraft, a lander named Athena, was beginning its final descent down to the lunar surface.

A little more than a year had passed since the company's first attempt to land on the Moon with a similarly built vehicle, Odysseus. Due to problems with that spacecraft's laser rangefinder, it skidded into the Moon's surface and toppled over.

So engineers at Intuitive Machines had checked, and re-checked the laser-based altimeters on Athena. When the lander got down within about 30 km of the lunar surface, they tested the rangefinders again. Worryingly, there was some noise in the readings as the laser bounced off the Moon. However, the engineers had reason to believe that, maybe, the readings would improve as the spacecraft got nearer to the surface.

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Lilbits: A weird new AI phone, Apple refreshes the MacBook Air, Intel Arrow Lake goes business-class, and postmarketOS is looking for a new name

Would you be willing to grant a smartphone with access to huge amounts of personal date in order to develop a personalized AI assistant that an help you get things done? Arguably that’s something you may already be doing if you’re using an …

Would you be willing to grant a smartphone with access to huge amounts of personal date in order to develop a personalized AI assistant that an help you get things done? Arguably that’s something you may already be doing if you’re using an Android phone, but a startup called Newnal is taking things to a […]

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“Literally just a copy”—hit iOS game accused of unauthorized HTML5 code theft

Web game illicitly “wrapped in a mobile shell” climbed the paid App Store charts.

Here at Ars, we've frequently about the video game industry's ongoing problem with blatant game cloning, and the shifting legal and ethical landscape around the issue. But we've rarely seen a case of alleged game theft as blatant as the one surrounding recent iOS App Store hit My Baby or Not!, which appears to cross the line from mere cloning into outright code theft of recent indie web game Diapers, Please!.

The small, five-person development team at VoltekPlay created Diapers, Please! as part of a recent one-week Game Jam. The game was posted as a free-to-play HTML5 release on itch.io on February 23, featuring simple gameplay that involves choosing a baby that matches the visual traits of two pictured parents (with a little bit of Papers, Please-style authoritarian styling to boot).

Three days later, on February 26, My Baby or Not! appeared on the App Store, with screenshots and gameplay that looked not just similar but downright identical to the Diapers, Please! web release. The two games even shared the same description:

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CMU research shows compression alone may unlock AI puzzle-solving abilities

New research challenges prevailing idea that AI needs massive datasets to solve problems.

A pair of Carnegie Mellon University researchers recently discovered hints that the process of compressing information can solve complex reasoning tasks without pre-training on a large number of examples. Their system tackles some types of abstract pattern-matching tasks using only the puzzles themselves, challenging conventional wisdom about how machine learning systems acquire problem-solving abilities.

"Can lossless information compression by itself produce intelligent behavior?" ask Isaac Liao, a first-year PhD student, and his advisor Professor Albert Gu from CMU's Machine Learning Department. Their work suggests the answer might be yes. To demonstrate, they created CompressARC and published the results in a comprehensive post on Liao's website.

The pair tested their approach on the Abstraction and Reasoning Corpus (ARC-AGI), an unbeaten visual benchmark created in 2019 by machine learning researcher François Chollet to test AI systems' abstract reasoning skills. ARC presents systems with grid-based image puzzles where each provides several examples demonstrating an underlying rule, and the system must infer that rule to apply it to a new example.

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Nubia Focus 2 Ultra has a rotating ring around the camera

The Nubia Focus 2 Ultra is a smartphone with a 6.8 inch, 120 Hz AMOLED display, a Unisoc T760 processor, 8GB of RAM, Android 15 software, and a 5,000 mAh battery. But what makes this phone noteworthy is its camera system. There’s a ring around th…

The Nubia Focus 2 Ultra is a smartphone with a 6.8 inch, 120 Hz AMOLED display, a Unisoc T760 processor, 8GB of RAM, Android 15 software, and a 5,000 mAh battery. But what makes this phone noteworthy is its camera system. There’s a ring around the rear camera that you can rotate to adjust the zoom […]

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When Europe needed it most, the Ariane 6 rocket finally delivered

“For this sovereignty, we must yield to the temptation of preferring SpaceX.”

Europe's Ariane 6 rocket lifted off Thursday from French Guiana and deployed a high-resolution reconnaissance satellite into orbit for the French military, notching a success on its first operational flight.

The 184-foot-tall (56-meter) rocket lifted off from Kourou, French Guiana, at 11:24 am EST (16:24 UTC). Twin solid-fueled boosters and a hydrogen-fueled core stage engine powered the Ariane 6 through thick clouds on an arcing trajectory north from the spaceport on South America's northeastern coast.

The rocket shed its strap-on boosters a little more than two minutes into the flight, then jettisoned its core stage nearly eight minutes after liftoff. The spent rocket parts fell into the Atlantic Ocean. The upper stage's Vinci engine ignited two times to reach a nearly circular polar orbit about 500 miles (800 kilometers) above the Earth. A little more than an hour after launch, the Ariane 6 upper stage deployed CSO-3, a sharp-eyed French military spy satellite, to begin a mission providing optical surveillance imagery to French intelligence agencies and military forces.

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No one asked for this: Google is testing round keys in Gboard

A lot of Gboard beta users are suddenly remembering they joined the beta.

Most Android phones ship with Google's Gboard as the default input option. It's a reliable, feature-rich on-screen keyboard, so most folks just keep using it instead of installing a third-party option. Depending on how you feel about circles, it might be time to check out some of those alternatives. Google has quietly released an update that changes the shape and position of the keys, and users are not pleased.

In the latest build of Gboard (v15.1.05.726012951-beta-arm64-v8a), Google has changed the key shape from the long-running squares to circle shapes. If you're using the four-row layout, the keys are like little pills. In five-row mode with the exposed number row, the keys are collapsed further into circles. The reactions seem split between those annoyed by this change and those annoyed that everyone else is so annoyed.

Change can be hard sometimes, so certainly some of the discontent is just a function of having the phone interface changed without warning. If you find it particularly distasteful, you can head into the Gboard settings and open the Themes menu. From there, you can tap on a theme and then turn off the key borders. Thus, you won't be distracted by the horror of rounded edges. That's not the only problem with the silent update, though.

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Lenovo ThinkPad X13 Gen 6 is a 2.05 pound laptop with Intel 200H or AMD Ryzen AI PRO 300

Lenovo’s new Thinkpad X13 Gen 6 is a 13.3 inch laptop with a thin and light design, a choice of Intel Arrow Lake or AMD Ryzen AI PRO processor options, and an $1139 starting price. Unveiled this week at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the lap…

Lenovo’s new Thinkpad X13 Gen 6 is a 13.3 inch laptop with a thin and light design, a choice of Intel Arrow Lake or AMD Ryzen AI PRO processor options, and an $1139 starting price. Unveiled this week at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, the laptop should be available in the US in June, 2025. Compared […]

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Daily Deals (3-06-2025)

Amazon is giving away a bunch of PC games for free to Prime members. The Epic Games Store is giving away another free game to anyone with an account. And you can pick up a refurbished Steam Deck from Valve for $349. Meanwhile if you’re looking fo…

Amazon is giving away a bunch of PC games for free to Prime members. The Epic Games Store is giving away another free game to anyone with an account. And you can pick up a refurbished Steam Deck from Valve for $349. Meanwhile if you’re looking for a dirt cheap PC that you’re probably not going to […]

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