Thursday, April 4

Somewhat Political

 


In The News


Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Billie Eilish, Pearl Jam, and Nicki Minaj among group of 200 artists who penned an open letter to tech and digital music companies, expressing their concerns over the use of AI in music (More)

> Joe Flaherty, prolific actor and comedian, dies at age 82 (More) | Larry Lucchino, former president and CEO of the Boston Red Sox, dies at age 78 (More)

> Chicago Symphony Orchestra taps Klaus Mäkelä, 28, as its next music director; will be youngest in the orchestra's 133-year history (More) | SiriusXM to launch Taylor Swift channel April 7 ahead of the release of her new album (More)


Science & Technology
> Amazon to phase out its "Just Walk Out" technology at Amazon Fresh stores; approach, which scanned and billed customers via cameras and sensors, to be replaced with carts that let users scan items while they shop (More)

> Left-handedness linked to specific genetic variation that controls the production of tiny structures known as microtubules; feature was found at almost three times the rate in lefties, who make up about 10% of the population (More)

> Prototype smart contacts for health monitoring and drug delivery demonstrated; devices are powered by light and electrolytes contained in tears (More)


Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower (S&P 500 -0.7%, Dow -1.0%, Nasdaq -1.0%) as US 10-year Treasury yield rises to highest level since November (More) | US crude oil prices surpass $85 per barrel, highest since October (More)

> Tesla shares close down 5% after Q1 electric vehicle deliveries drop 8.5% year-over-year, the first quarterly decline since 2020 (More) | General Electric completes split into three public companies as aerospace and energy businesses begin trading on New York Stock Exchange; healthcare business split off in January 2023 (More)

> Bernard Arnault and his family ($233B), Elon Musk ($195B), and Jeff Bezos ($194B) top Forbes annual list of the world's billionaires, which features 2,781 people, up from last year; Taylor Swift and Earvin “Magic” Johnson among first-timers on list (More)

SOURCE:  1440 News

Understanding our Universe

How large is our universe?


Earth lives in the MILKY WAY GALAXY...


The Milky Way is about 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 km (about 100,000 light years) across. One light year is 10064 earth years.

So, can you imagine how long it would take to cross our galaxy?  100X10,064=1,006,400 YEARS...  That's a frigging long time.

Now get this, the size of our universe is billions or billions of billions of Milky Way Galaxies across.  AND...  according to the Hubble Telescope, it is still expanding.

According to our religious friends, earth is the only planet in the Universe to having humans living on it which really speaks to the power of God....  In this vast universe of ours, God only created ONE EARTH.

In and of itself, that thinking is extremely foolish and highlights the believer of being intellectually uninformed.

Even if we had enemies on the other side of the Milky Way Galaxy, it would take them 100,000 light years to get here or 10,064 earth years.  That is over 100 centuries.

How advanced do you think we would be in 100 centuries?

For many of us, understanding the size of our universe is difficult, especially when considering that it is still expanding.  AND...  since it is expanding, it must be expanding into SOMETHING...  right?

So, what do you think it is expanding into?

 

Horses


 

Understanding Humanoid Robots


Robots made their stage debut the day after New Year’s 1921. More than half-a-century before the world caught its first glimpse of George Lucas’ droids, a small army of silvery humanoids took to the stages of the First Czechoslovak Republic. They were, for all intents and purposes, humanoids: two arms, two legs, a head — the whole shebang.

Karel Čapek’s play, R.U.R (Rossumovi Univerzální Roboti), was a hit. It was translated into dozens of languages and played across Europe and North America. The work’s lasting legacy, however, was its introduction of the word “robot.” The meaning of the term has evolved a good bit in the intervening century, as Čapek’s robots were more organic than machine.

Decades of science fiction have, however, ensured that the public image of robots hasn’t strayed too far from its origins. For many, the humanoid form is still the platonic robot ideal — it’s just that the state of technology hasn’t caught up to that vision. Earlier this week, Nvidia held its own on-stage robot parade at its GTC developer conference, as CEO Jensen Huang was flanked by images of a half-dozen humanoids.  READ MORE...

Before the Big Bang

 

Wednesday, April 3

The Next Global Superpower

 

Humans Thrived - Neanderthals Perished


Why did humans take over the world while our closest relatives, the Neanderthals, became extinct? It's possible we were just smarter, but there's surprisingly little evidence that's true.



Neanderthals had big brains, language and sophisticated tools. They made art and jewellery. They were smart, suggesting a curious possibility. Maybe the crucial differences weren't at the individual level, but in our societies.


Two hundred and fifty thousand years ago, Europe and western Asia were Neanderthal lands. Homo sapiens inhabited southern Africa. Estimates vary but perhaps 100,000 years ago, modern humans migrated out of Africa.


Forty thousand years ago Neanderthals disappeared from Asia and Europe, replaced by humans. Their slow, inevitable replacement suggests humans had some advantage, but not what it was.     READ MORE...

Elephant


 

In The NEWS


Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Caitlin Clark leads No. 1 seed Iowa to Elite Eight victory over No. 3 seed LSU; No. 3 seed Connecticut tops No. 1 seed USC to join No. 3 seed NC State and No. 1 seed South Carolina in the Final Four (More) | See Final Four bracket and schedule (More)

> Formula 1 owner Liberty Media purchases MotoGP's parent company Dorna in deal valuing the motorbike series at $4.5B (More)

> Vontae Davis, two-time NFL Pro Bowl cornerback, found dead at his Florida home at age 35 (More) | Barbara Rush, Golden Globe-winning actress whose career spanned nearly 60 years, dies at age 97 (More)



Science & Technology
> Health officials confirm human case of avian influenza A—or H5N1, also known as the bird flu—after coming in contact with infected cattle; case is the second in the US, risk to public remains low (More) | More than 82 million poultry have been infected since 2022; see stats here (More)

> Archaeologists uncover what is believed to be a 130,000-year-old stingray sculpture; artifact would be the oldest known example of humans sculpting depictions of other animals (More)

> Physical activity lengthens the time of non-REM sleep phases at night, increasing the overall quality of rest; study adds quantitative support to anecdotal link between exercise and sleep (More)



Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower (S&P 500 -0.2%, Dow -0.6%, Nasdaq -0.1%) as investors consider last week's inflation data (More) | Gold prices retreat from record high (More)

> Trump Media and Technology Group shares close down 22% after the Truth Social owner reports $58M net loss and $4M revenue in 2023 (More) | Sam Altman removed from ownership structure of OpenAI Startup Fund, the ChatGPT maker's venture capital arm (More)

> Microsoft to unbundle Teams and Office worldwide following scrutiny from European regulators and rival Slack over antitrust concerns (More) | Google to destroy browsing data of 136 million users to settle class-action lawsuit accusing the tech giant of secretly tracking users of Chrome's private mode (More)



Politics & World Affairs
In partnership with Tangle

> Florida's Supreme Court upholds 2022 15-week abortion ban, allowing a separate 2023 six-week ban to take effect in 30 days; court also allows proposed amendment codifying the right to an abortion in the state constitution to appear on November ballot (More) | Former President Donald Trump posts $175M bond in New York civil fraud case, avoiding asset seizure during appeals process (More)

> Severe thunderstorms sweep across central and eastern US, bringing floods, hail, and tornadoes through today (More) | Section of California's Highway 1 near Big Sur remains closed after weekend storm causes part of roadway to crumble (More)

> Germany legalizes possession of small amounts of cannabis for recreational use, effective yesterday; Germany becomes third European Union member to legalize recreational use of cannabis after Malta and Luxembourg (More)

SOURCE:  1440 News

The Physics Around us

Everything on earth is composed of molecules.  A molecule is composed of one or more atoms.  Atoms are composed of protons, electrons, and neutrons.  


Protons and Neutrons are composed of quarks that can be further identified as up or down.  An electron does not break down into anything and is referred to as a type of Lepton.  There are six types of quarks that vary in size and are considered the smallest unit of matter.


It is widely believed that electrons and quarks are actually vibrating filaments of energy and their movements cannot be predicted unless they are being observed, then they move along a path, but that path is also unpredictable.


Somehow, gravity holds all of this together along with the other forces of Physics.


As different atoms combine, different types of molecules are formed which gives rise to the various types of matter than we see around us., like a tree, a bird, a human, or a rock.


What is interesting about atoms is that they are always composed of a nucleus that contains protons and neutrons, with an electron flying around it as if in orbit all of its own.


We can break atoms apart or we can fuse atoms together, using what is called the weak/strong nuclear force, to create different type of matter.  But no one really knows from where all these subatomic particles originated.  Although and again, it is widely believed that the creation of the universe caused them to appear.


Now, the obvious question is, did these subatomic particles just start randomly connecting with each other?  If so, then their random combinations are rather remarkable to say the least.  The odds are against them randomly forming and yet that is exactly what they did.  


Physics is not based on the appearances of random events and random combinations of subatomic particles...  and yet, there is no other explanation, except speculation and conjecture.



Somewhat Political





 

Microplastics in Ancient Remains


Microplastics have been found in historic soil samples for the first time, according to a new study, potentially upending the way archaeological remains are preserved.


Researchers found microplastics in soil deposits more than seven meters (23 feet) underground, which were deposited in the first or second century CE and excavated in the 1980s, a team led by researchers from the University of York in the United Kingdom said in a statement published Friday.


In total, the study identified 16 different microplastic polymer types in contemporary and archived soil samples, the statement adds.


Microplastics are tiny pieces of plastic that are no larger than five millimeters (0.2 inches)—about the size of a single sesame seed—and form when larger plastics break down, either by chemically degrading or physically wearing down into smaller pieces.      READ MORE...

General Relativity

 

Tuesday, April 2

I'm Your Captain

 

Italian Town Cannot Find Home Buyers


A national law has created a huge hurdle for offloading some historic, and very cheap, houses.

In central Italy’s medieval town of Patrica, a strategy to breathe new life into empty properties has hit a possibly insurmountable snafu.

Patrica recently adopted a plan that has seen success in other depopulated Italian areas: Selling off its deserted abodes for a single euro each — about $1.08 in today’s American currency — to those interested for a fixer-upper opportunity.

It may seem unique and unusual, but these opportunities have popped up in other parts of Italy in the past several years, all in an effort to repopulate the regions where these residences stand.     READ MORE...

Put Some Pork on Your Fork


GO CANADA !
Well Said Mayor Dorval, Quebec mayor.
"PUT SOME PORK ON YOUR FORK"


A commercial promoting pork says: "PUT SOME PORK ON YOUR FORK"The MAYOR REFUSES TO REMOVE PORK FROM SCHOOL CAFETERIA MENU AND EXPLAINS WHY:


Muslim parents demanded the abolition of pork in all the school canteens of a Montreal suburb. The mayor of the Montreal suburb of Dorval has refused, and the town clerk sent a note to all parents to explain why.


"Muslims must understand that they have to adapt to Canada, its customs, its traditions, and its way of life, because that's where they chose to immigrate.

"Muslims must understand that they have to integrate and learn to live in CANADA.
"They must understand that it is for them to change their lifestyle, not the Canadians who, so generously, welcomed them.


"Muslims must understand that Canadians are neither racist nor xenophobic. Canada accepted many immigrants before Muslims showed up (whereas the reverse is not true, in that Muslim states do not accept non-Muslim immigrants)."


"Just like other nations, Canadians are not willing to give up their identity or their culture ." And, if Canada is a land of welcome, it's not the Mayor of Dorval who welcomes foreigners, but the Canadian people as a whole .


"Finally,they must understand t hat in Canada with its Judeo-Christian roots, Christmas trees, churches and religious festivals, religion must remain in the private domain."


The municipality of Dorval was right to refuse any concessions to Islam and Sharia.


"For Muslims who disagree with secularism and do not feel comfortable in Canada, there are 57 beautiful Muslim countries in the world, most of them under-populated and ready to receive them with open halal arms in accordance with Sharia.


"If you left your country for Canada, and not for other Muslim countries, it is because you have considered that life is better in Canada than elsewhere. We will not let you drag Canada down to the level of those 57 countries.


"Ask yourself this question - just once: "Why is it better here in Canada than where you came from?" "A canteen with pork on the menu is part of the answer."


If you came to Canada with the idea that you will displace us with your prolific propagation and eventually take over the country, you should pack up and go back to the country you came from. We have no room here for you and your ideology.

In The NEWS


Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
In partnership with The Ascent

> Chance Perdomo, actor known for starring roles in "Gen V" and "Chilling Adventures of Sabrina," dies following a motorcycle crash at age 27 (More) | Tim McGovern, Oscar-winning visual effects innovator, dies at age 68 (More)

> Beyoncé's "Cowboy Carter" album becomes most-streamed album in a single day in 2024 on Spotify, most first-day streams for country album by a female artist on Amazon Music (More)

> "Godzilla x Kong: New Empire" hauls in $194M at the global box office in its opening weekend (More) | Singer Lizzo suggests via social media she's departing the music industry amid sexual harassment lawsuit (More)


Science & Technology
> NASA's Curiosity rover begins exploring Mars' Gediz Vallis channel, a surface feature of the planet believed to have been an ancient river (More) | What happened to all the water on Mars? (More)

> Researchers demonstrate optical fiber with data transfer rates above 300 terabits, or roughly 1 million times faster than average household broadband (More)

> Engineers develop four-legged robot with basic climbing and hopping skills; advance may find applications for search and rescue applications in dangerous and unstable terrain (More)


Business & Markets
> Fast-fashion firm Shein reports $2B in profit in 2023, more than double year-over-year; numbers come ahead of planned initial public offering later this year (More) | $20 per hour minimum wage for California fast food workers begins today (More)

> AT&T confirms data leak of an estimated 7.6 million active accounts, more than 65 million former accounts to the dark web; company initiates mass passcode reset (More)

> California public employee pension fund to back activist investors Nelson Peltz and Jay Rasulo in upcoming Disney board vote; CalPERS, the largest public pension fund in the US, owns 6.6 million Disney shares (More) | Disney's proxy battle explained (More)


Politics & World Affairs
> Crews begin removing first steel section of Baltimore's collapsed Key Bridge following last week's collision by a cargo ship; what caused ship to lose power before crash still under investigation (More) | Minute-by-minute breakdown of the accident (More)

> King Charles makes first major public appearance since cancer diagnosis, attending Easter services in Windsor (More) | Pope Francis skips Good Friday processional, presides over Easter mass; appearance comes amid increasing concerns over the 87-year-old pontiff's health (More)

> India's minority parties unite to protest arrest of prominent opposition leader, accuse Prime Minister Narendra Modi of silencing critics ahead of April 19 kickoff of national elections (More)


SOURCE:  1440 News

Democrats Fear Donald Trump


Ever since Donald Trump became President, the Democrats have had an unnatural FEAR of the man.


From the very beginning of his Presidency, the Democrats have waged a political and media war against the man, first accusing him of illegitimately winning the Presidency due to Russian inference.  


Next, the continued to hound him and tried to IMPEACH him twice and the only reason that did not work was that the Republicans had the majority in the Senate.


Members of Congress LIED TO THE MEDIA that they had a smoking gun on Trump, knowing all along they had nothing at all.  But, the MEDIA literally loved what was happening and rather than fact checking published article after article trying to convince the general public that Trump was corrupt.


The 2020 election was questionable but there was not enough evidence to prove it had been rigged.


However, the Democrats and the Media continued to POUNCE on trump, threatening law suits as they tried to figure out how to destroy the man financially.


When Trump announced he was running for President again, the Democrats and Media went BOLLISTIC - again, the FEAR of TRUMP was upon them.


Luckily for the Democrats, numerous District Attorneys filed law suit after law suit in an effort to stop Trump from becoming President again.


While the law suits were bogus, they were designed to where Trump would have to be in court rather than on the campaign trail.


Trump claimed ELECTION INTERFERENCE and as time progressed, more and more people began to agree with him that they Democrats were using the DOJ and legal action to DEFEAT TRUMP because they were fearful, they could not stop him any other way.


The more the Democrats threw at Trump, the greater his influence and support became and the more that the general public saw that there were two tiers of justice...  one for Republicans and one for Democrats.


IN SHORT - the Democrats cannot defeat Trump at the ballot box, so they are trying to use other methods of slowing down his progress.  Unfortunately, these are the tactics used in THIRD WORLD COUNTRIES and in COMMUNIST COUNTRIES...


I THOUGHT THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA WAS BETTER THAN THAT...



Somewhat Political