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      Final trailer for Venom: The Last Dance introduces Knull, god of symbiotes

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 20:02

    Tom Hardy returns for one more round as host of an alien symbiote, in Venom: The Last Dance .

    Tom Hardy is back for one last hurrah as investigative journalist Eddie Brock, host of an alien symbiote that imparts superhuman powers to its host, in the final trailer for Venom: The Last Dance . The trailer has all the wise-cracking "buddy cop" vibes and fast-paced action we've come to expect from the franchise, including a trip to Vegas where Venom discovers the addictive allure of slot machines. But there are also hints of an inevitable bittersweet farewell—because this time they'll face off against Knull, god-creator of the symbiotes.

    (Spoilers for Venom and Venom: There Will Be Carnage below.)

    As previously reported , the first film in the franchise served as an origin story for our antihero. A bioengineering firm called the Life Foundation discovered a comet covered with symbiotic lifeforms and brought four samples back to Earth. Brock's then-fiancée, Anne Weying (Michelle Williams), showed him classified documents revealing that the foundation was conducting human/symbiote experiments. The symbiotes needed oxygen-breathing hosts to survive, but they invariably ended up killing those hosts.

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      Here’s why you shouldn’t freak out about lead in your cinnamon

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 19:47

    Cinnamon buns.

    Enlarge / Cinnamon buns. (credit: Getty | Christoph Schmidt )

    Consumer Reports on Thursday reported the concentration of lead it found in 36 ground cinnamon products , leading to a round of startling headlines. The testing is particularly nerve-racking given that it closely follows the tragic poisoning of at least 519 US children , who were exposed to extremely high levels of lead from purposefully tainted cinnamon in applesauce snack pouches.

    With that horrifying event in mind, parents are likely primed to be alarmed by any other lead findings in cinnamon. So, how concerning were the concentrations Consumer Reports found? And does one need to strictly adhere to the limits the organization recommends? By my calculations, not very and probably not. It's really not an alarming report.

    Similar to the outlet's chocolate testing before it, the lead concentrations found in cinnamons were largely within standard ranges. In all, the report is more of a reminder that trace amounts of heavy metals are present in various common foods. And such watchdog testing can play a crucial role in keeping consumers safe, especially with underfunded and underpowered regulators.

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      Google rolls out voice-powered AI chat to the Android masses

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 17:37

    The Google Gemini logo.

    Enlarge / The Google Gemini logo. (credit: Google)

    On Thursday, Google made Gemini Live , its voice-based AI chatbot feature, available for free to all Android users. The feature allows users to interact with Gemini through voice commands on their Android devices. That's notable because competitor OpenAI's Advanced Voice Mode feature of ChatGPT, which is similar to Gemini Live, has not yet fully shipped.

    Google unveiled Gemini Live during its Pixel 9 launch event last month. Initially, the feature was exclusive to Gemini Advanced subscribers, but now it's accessible to anyone using the Gemini app or its overlay on Android.

    Gemini Live enables users to ask questions aloud and even interrupt the AI's responses mid-sentence. Users can choose from several voice options for Gemini's responses, adding a level of customization to the interaction.

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      Evidence of “snowball Earth” found in ancient rocks

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 17:00 · 1 minute

    Image of a white planet with small patches of blue against a black background.

    Enlarge / Artist's conception of the state of the Earth during its global glaciations. (credit: NASA )

    Earth has gone through many geologic phases, but it did have one striking period of stasis: Our planet experienced a tropical environment where algae and single-celled organisms flourished for almost 2 billion years. Then things changed drastically as the planet was plunged into a deep freeze.

    It was previously unclear when Earth became a gargantuan freezer. Now, University College London researchers have found evidence in an outcrop of rocks in Scotland, known as the Port Askaig Formation, that show evidence of the transition from a tropical Earth to a frozen one 717 million years ago. This marks the onset of the Sturtian glaciation and would be the first of two " snowball Earth " events during which much of the planet’s surface was covered in ice. It is thought that multicellular life began to emerge after Earth thawed.

    Found in the Scottish islands known as the Garvellachs, this outcrop within the Port Askaig Formation is unique because it offers the first conclusive evidence of when a tropical Earth froze over—underlying layers that are a timeline from a warmer era to a frigid one. Other rocks that formed during the same time period in other parts of the world lack this transitional evidence because ancient glaciers most likely scraped it off.

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      A cartoon butt clenching a bar of soap has invaded my online ads

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 16:58

    The state of New York says that this guy is the "assman," not me. Show him the butt ads!

    Enlarge / The state of New York says that this guy is the "assman," not me. Show him the butt ads! (credit: Seinfeld)

    According to my research, everyone has a butt.

    But that doesn't mean, when I'm imbibing my morning cuppa and reading up on the recent presidential debate, that I want to see an ad showing an illustrated derrière with a bar of soap clenched firmly between its two ripe cheeks.

    Yet there it was, a riotous rump residing right in the middle of a New York Times article this week, causing me to reflect on just how far the Gray Lady has stooped to pick up those ad dollars lying in the gutter.

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      Boeing risks losing billions as 33,000 workers vote to strike

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 16:26

    Union members cheer during a news conference following a vote count on the union contract at the IAM District 751 Main Union Hall in Seattle, Washington, US, on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024.

    Enlarge / Union members cheer during a news conference following a vote count on the union contract at the IAM District 751 Main Union Hall in Seattle, Washington, US, on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024. (credit: Bloomberg / Contributor | Bloomberg )

    More than 33,000 unionized Boeing workers went on strike Friday, rejecting what they say were unfair terms of a deal the embattled aerospace company tentatively reached with their union .

    The rejected deal tried and failed to win over workers by offering a 25 percent wage increase and promised to build Boeing's next jet in the Puget Sound region in Washington, which Boeing claimed offered "job security for generations to come."

    But after International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) District 751 president Jon Holden urged the union to accept the deal—which Boeing said was the "largest-ever general wage increase" in the company's history— hundreds of Boeing employees immediately began resisting ahead of a Thursday vote that ultimately doomed the deal.

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      Neofetch is over, but many screenshot system info tools stand ready

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 15:18 · 1 minute

    Four terminal windows open to different system information fetching tools

    Enlarge / Sorry about all the black space in the lower-right corner. Nerdfetch does not make good use of the space it's given—unlike the Asahi install on this MacBook. (credit: Kevin Purdy)

    Almost nobody truly needed Neofetch, but the people who did use it? They really liked it.

    Neofetch, run from a terminal, displayed key system information alongside an ASCII-art image of the operating system or distribution running on that system. You knew most of this data, but if you're taking a screenshot of your system, it looked cool and conveyed a lot of data in a small space. "The overall purpose of Neofetch is to be used in screen-shots of your system," wrote Neofetch's creator, Dylan Araps, on its Github repository . "Neofetch shows the information other people want to see."

    Neofetch did that, providing cool screenshots and proof-of-life images across nearly 150 OS versions until late April. The last update to the tool was made three years before that, and Araps' Github profile now contains a rather succinct coda: "Have taken up farming." Araps joins " going to a commune in Vermont " and " I now make furniture out of wood " in the pantheon of programmers who do not just leave the field but flee it into another realm entirely.

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      Free Starlink Internet is coming to all of United’s airplanes

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 14:01

    A child plays with a handheld games console while sitting in an airplane seat

    Enlarge / Soon you'll be able to stream games and video for free on United flights. (credit: United)

    United Airlines announced this morning that it is giving its in-flight Internet access an upgrade. It has signed a deal with Starlink to deliver SpaceX's satellite-based service to all its aircraft, a process that will start in 2025. And the good news for passengers is that the in-flight Wi-Fi will be free of charge.

    The flying experience as it relates to consumer technology has come a very long way in the two-and-a-bit decades that Ars has been publishing. At the turn of the century, even having a power socket in your seat was a long shot. Laptop batteries didn't last that long, either—usually less than the runtime of whatever DVD I hoped to distract myself with, if memory serves.

    Bring a spare battery and that might double, but it helped to have a book or magazine to read.

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      “Fascists”: Elon Musk responds to proposed fines for disinformation on X

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 6 days ago - 13:32

    A smartphone displays Elon Musk's profile on X, the app formerly known as Twitter.

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Dan Kitwood )

    Elon Musk has lambasted Australia’s government as “fascists” over proposed laws that could levy substantial fines on social media companies if they fail to comply with rules to combat the spread of disinformation and online scams.

    The billionaire owner of social media site X posted the word “fascists” on Friday in response to the bill, which would strengthen the Australian media regulator’s ability to hold companies responsible for the content on their platforms and levy potential fines of up to 5 percent of global revenue. The bill, which was proposed this week, has yet to be passed.

    Musk’s comments drew rebukes from senior Australian politicians, with Stephen Jones, Australia’s finance minister, telling national broadcaster ABC that it was “crackpot stuff” and the legislation was a matter of sovereignty.

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