Digitales Bahnsystem: Bahn will modernste IT-Abteilung teilweise auflösen

Es gibt Stellenabbau bei einer IT-Abteilung der Deutschen Bahn, die digitalisierte Signalanlagen, Moving Blocks und fahrerlosen Zugbetrieb entwickelt und testet. (Deutsche Bahn, Netzpolitik)

Es gibt Stellenabbau bei einer IT-Abteilung der Deutschen Bahn, die digitalisierte Signalanlagen, Moving Blocks und fahrerlosen Zugbetrieb entwickelt und testet. (Deutsche Bahn, Netzpolitik)

Anzeige: KI in der IT-Sicherheit gezielt und sicher einsetzen

Was KI kann, wo Gefahren lauern und wie man sie gezielt absichert: Dieser Workshop vermittelt IT-Verantwortlichen, die Chancen und Risiken künstlicher Intelligenz strategisch zu managen. Bis zum 31. Mai mit 15 Prozent Rabatt. (Golem Karrierewelt, KI)

Was KI kann, wo Gefahren lauern und wie man sie gezielt absichert: Dieser Workshop vermittelt IT-Verantwortlichen, die Chancen und Risiken künstlicher Intelligenz strategisch zu managen. Bis zum 31. Mai mit 15 Prozent Rabatt. (Golem Karrierewelt, KI)

RFK Jr. calls WHO “moribund” amid US withdrawal; China pledges to give $500M

As the rest of the world signed a pandemic agreement, the US sent an abrasive video.

China is poised to be the next big donor to the World Health Organization after Trump abruptly withdrew the US from the United Nations health agency on his first day in office, leaving a critical funding gap and leadership void.

On Tuesday, Chinese Vice Premier Liu Guozhong said that China would give an additional $500 million to WHO over the course of five years. Liu made the announcement at the World Health Assembly (WHA) being held in Geneva. The WHA is the decision-making body of WHO, comprised of delegations from member states, which meet annually to guide the agency's health agenda.

“The world is now facing the impacts of unilateralism and power politics, bringing major challenges to global health security," Liu told the WHA, according to The Washington Post. "China strongly believes that only with solidarity and mutual assistance can we create a healthy world together."

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Startup von Jony Ive gekauft: OpenAI plant eigene Hardware

OpenAI steht kurz vor der Übernahme des KI-Hardware-Startups io, mitgegründet vom Ex-Apple-Designchef Jony Ive, für knapp 6,5 Milliarden US-Dollar. (OpenAI, Apple)

OpenAI steht kurz vor der Übernahme des KI-Hardware-Startups io, mitgegründet vom Ex-Apple-Designchef Jony Ive, für knapp 6,5 Milliarden US-Dollar. (OpenAI, Apple)

I helped a lost dog’s AirTag ping its owner: An ode to replaceable batteries

The most repair-friendly device Apple makes needs to stick with coin batteries.

Out of all the books I read for my formal education, one bit, from one slim paperback, has lodged the deepest into my brain.

William Blundell's The Art and Craft of Feature Writing offers a "selective list of what readers like." It starts with a definitive No. 1: "Dogs, followed by other cute animals and well-behaved small children." People, Blundell writes, are your second-best option, providing they are doing or saying something interesting.

I have failed to provide Ars Technica readers with a dog story during nearly three years here. Today, I intend to fix that. This is a story about a dog, but also a rare optimistic take on a ubiquitous "smart" product, one that helped out a very good girl.

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Trump admin tells Supreme Court: DOGE needs to do its work in secret

DOJ complains of “sweeping, intrusive discovery” after DOGE refused FOIA requests.

The Department of Justice today asked the Supreme Court to block a ruling that requires DOGE to provide information about its government cost-cutting operations as part of court-ordered discovery.

President Trump's Justice Department sought an immediate halt to orders issued by US District Court for the District of Columbia. US Solicitor General John Sauer argued that the Department of Government Efficiency is exempt from the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) as a presidential advisory body and not an official "agency."

The district court "ordered USDS [US Doge Service] to submit to sweeping, intrusive discovery just to determine if USDS is subject to FOIA in the first place," Sauer wrote. "That order turns FOIA on its head, effectively giving respondent a win on the merits of its FOIA suit under the guise of figuring out whether FOIA even applies. And that order clearly violates the separation of powers, subjecting a presidential advisory body to intrusive discovery and threatening the confidentiality and candor of its advice, putatively to address a legal question that never should have necessitated discovery in this case at all."

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Oukitel WP300 is a rugged phone that houses modular smartwatch, earbud and flashlight accessories (crowdfunding]

Earlier this year Oukitel launched a rugged smartphone with a small, detachable screen on the back that you could pop out and snap into a watch band to wear as a watch or add to a clip for use as a Bluetooth earbud. Now Oukitel is doubling down on the …

Earlier this year Oukitel launched a rugged smartphone with a small, detachable screen on the back that you could pop out and snap into a watch band to wear as a watch or add to a clip for use as a Bluetooth earbud. Now Oukitel is doubling down on the concept with a new phone […]

The post Oukitel WP300 is a rugged phone that houses modular smartwatch, earbud and flashlight accessories (crowdfunding] appeared first on Liliputing.

“Microsoft has simply given us no other option,” Signal says as it blocks Windows Recall

Even after its refurbishing, Recall provides few ways to exclude specific apps.

Signal Messenger is warning the users of its Windows Desktop version that the privacy of their messages is under threat by Recall, the AI tool rolling out in Windows 11 that will screenshot, index, and store almost everything a user does every three seconds.

Effective immediately, Signal for Windows will by default block the ability of Windows to screenshot the app. Signal users who want to disable the block—for instance to preserve a conversation for their records or make use of accessibility features for sight-impaired users—will have to change settings inside their desktop version to enable screenshots.

My kingdom for an API

“Although Microsoft made several adjustments over the past twelve months in response to critical feedback, the revamped version of Recall still places any content that’s displayed within privacy-preserving apps like Signal at risk,” Signal officials wrote Wednesday. “As a result, we are enabling an extra layer of protection by default on Windows 11 in order to help maintain the security of Signal Desktop on that platform even though it introduces some usability trade-offs. Microsoft has simply given us no other option.”

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Scientists figure out how the brain forms emotional connections

Neural recordings track how neurons link environments to emotional events.

Whenever something bad happens to us, brain systems responsible for mediating emotions kick in to prevent it from happening again. When we get stung by a wasp, the association between pain and wasps is encoded in the region of the brain called the amygdala, which connects simple stimuli with basic emotions.

But the brain does more than simple associations; it also encodes lots of other stimuli that are less directly connected with the harmful event—things like the place where we got stung or the wasps’ nest in a nearby tree. These are combined into complex emotional models of potentially threatening circumstances.

Till now, we didn’t know exactly how these models are built. But we’re beginning to understand how it’s done.

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The physics of frilly Swiss cheese “flowers”

Tête de Moine is often served by scraping the top of a cheese wheel in a circular motion with a special tool.

Cheese connoisseurs are no doubt familiar with a particular kind of semi-hard Swiss cheese called "Tête de Moine." Rather than spreading or slicing the cheese, Tête de Moine is usually served by scraping the top of the cheese wheel in a circular motion using a specialized tool called a Girolle. This produces elegant thin shavings known as rosettes, since they resemble a frilly flower.

The method is both aesthetically pleasing and serves to enhance the aromas and mouth feel of the cheese, according to the authors of a new paper published in the journal Physical Review Letters (PRL). This group of physicists based in Paris noted a marked similarity between the frilly edges of those cheese flowers and certain leaves, fungi, corals, and even torn plastic sheets—all formed by different mechanisms. So naturally the physicists decided to conduct their own research to determine the underlying mechanism(s) for the delicate frills of Tête de Moine shavings.

Tête de Moine translates as "monk's head," and the name dates back to the 1790s, although the actual cheese originates back to a 12th-century Bellelay monastery in Switzerland. It's made from raw unpasteurized cow's milk and is matured for a minimum of 75 days on spruce boards and boasts a firm reddish-brown crust. The Girolle (named after the French word for chanterelles, which have a similar rosette shape) is a more recent innovation, invented in 1982 specifically for Tête de Moine by a man named Nicolas Crevoisier. It's just a round wooden plate with a pin stuck vertically in the middle—the better to skewer one's cheese wheel—and a crank handle to control the slicing blade.

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