Microsoft Develops Set-Top Box Microsoft has been developing designs for a simple set-top device for streaming video and other entertainment options. More
Stock market today: Wall Street drifts ahead of a big week for earnings reports Wall Street is holding steadier following a three-week losing streak. The S&P 500 was up 0.1% Monday, coming off its longest weekly losing streak since September. The Dow Jones Industrial ... 04/22/2024 - 4:35 am | View Link
Bitcoin, ASML, TSMC, And Netflix Take Wall Street For A Wild Wide. What Is Next? Bitcoin "halving," and earnings from ASML Holding, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, and Netflix took Wall Street for a wild ride last week, with the CBOE Volatility Index spiking close to 25%. 04/21/2024 - 10:13 pm | View Link
Inseego Corp (INSG) Stock: A SWOT Analysis Based on Inseego Corp (INSG), the company’s capital structure generated 2.61 points at debt to capital in total, while cash flow to debt ratio is standing at 0.04. The debt to equity ratio resting at ... 04/21/2024 - 5:15 pm | View Link
Resources Top 5: Does this stonker copper hit bring back the Sandfire days for you as well? Work will be supported by an already in the money placement of $1.5 million at 7c per share, with transaction payments in the form of performance rights to be based on resource milestones at 5Mt, 10Mt ... 04/21/2024 - 8:52 am | View Link
Five Leeds stars the Whites are vulnerable to losing if they don’t win promotion We break down five key players Leeds United could lose in the summer should they miss out on promotion to the Premier League, which is a real danger given their recent drop in form ... 04/20/2024 - 7:36 am | View Link
Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | NurPhoto)
TikTok owner ByteDance is preparing to sue the US government now that President Biden has signed into law a bill that will ban TikTok in the US if its Chinese owner doesn't sell the company within 270 days. While it's impossible to predict the outcome with certainty, law professors speaking to Ars believe that ByteDance will have a strong First Amendment case in its lawsuit against the US.
One reason for this belief is that just a few months ago, a US District Court judge blocked a Montana state law that attempted to ban TikTok.
Enlarge / A DOS prompt.
Microsoft has open-sourced another bit of computing history this week: The company teamed up with IBM to release the source code of 1988's MS-DOS 4.00, a version better known for its unpopularity, bugginess, and convoluted development history than its utility as a computer operating system.
The MS-DOS 4.00 code is available on Microsoft's MS-DOS GitHub page along with versions 1.25 and 2.0, which Microsoft open-sourced in cooperation with the Computer History Museum back in 2014.
Enlarge / A 2014 Tesla Model S driving on Autopilot rear-ended a Culver City fire truck that was parked in the high-occupancy vehicle lane on Interstate 405. (credit: Culver City Firefighters Local 1927 / Facebook)
Tesla's lousy week continues. On Tuesday, the electric car maker posted its quarterly results showing precipitous falls in sales and profitability.
Enlarge / The slide-on Joy-Con connection point shown in the center of the image may be a thing of the past on the Switch 2
The iconic slide-in "click" of the Switch Joy-Cons may be replaced with a magnetic attachment mechanism in the Switch 2, according to a report from Spanish-language gaming news site Vandal.
The site notes that this new design could make direct Switch 2 backward compatibility with existing Switch Joy-Cons "difficult." Even so, we can envision some sort of optional magnetic shim that could make older Joy-Cons attachable with the new system's magnetic connection points.
Enlarge (credit: Getty | Jeffrey Greenberg)
The Food and Drug Administration reported late Thursday that about 20 percent of retail milk samples from around the country tested positive for genetic fragments of the bird flu, aka highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus H5N1. While retail milk is still considered to be safe, the finding suggests that the spread of the virus in cows is more extensive than is currently known.
The FDA used a test called quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), which can only detect the presence of genetic fragments.
Enlarge / A newly revealed research proposal from 1971 shows that Richard Nixon’s science advisors embarked on an extensive analysis of the potential risks of climate change. (credit: Oliver Atkins/National Archives)
In 1971, President Richard Nixon’s science advisers proposed a multimillion dollar climate change research project with benefits they said were too “immense” to be quantified, since they involved “ensuring man’s survival,” according to a White House document newly obtained by the nonprofit National Security Archive and shared exclusively with Inside Climate News.
The plan would have established six global and 10 regional monitoring stations in remote locations to collect data on carbon dioxide, solar radiation, aerosols and other factors that exert influence on the atmosphere.