All posts tagged: takes

In Japan, a Journalist Takes a Stand by Striking Out on His Own

In Japan, a Journalist Takes a Stand by Striking Out on His Own

Makoto Watanabe has never forgotten the day when his previous employer, one of Japan’s biggest newspapers, retreated from its biggest investigative scoop about the Fukushima nuclear disaster: that workers had fled the plant against orders from the plant’s manager. It was 11 years ago, and the Asahi Shimbun had come under fire from other media and government supporters, who said the newspaper had misrepresented what were just garbled instructions. After proclaiming that it stood behind the story, the Asahi did an abrupt about-face at a news conference and retracted it. The newspaper later gutted the investigative group he worked on that produced the article, telling reporters to be less contentious toward authorities. Mr. Watanabe quit his job at the leading newspaper, a rare move in Japan. But what he did next was more unusual: Mr. Watanabe started Japan’s first media nonprofit dedicated to investigative journalism. “The newspaper was more interested in protecting its privileged access than informing its readers,” Mr. Watanabe, 50, recalled. “I wanted to make a new media that wouldn’t fold.” Eight years …

Hera asteroid mission takes stunning images of Mars’s moon Deimos

Hera asteroid mission takes stunning images of Mars’s moon Deimos

Mars appears light blue in this near-infrared image taken by the Hera spacecraft. Its moon Deimos is the dark mark towards the centre of the image ESA A space exploration mission to study an asteroid that NASA deliberately crashed a spacecraft into three years ago has taken stunning bonus images of Mars and its moon Deimos en route to its final destination.  NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) in 2022 was an attempt to show that bodies on a collision course with our planet could be deliberately redirected to avoid catastrophic impact. Observations from Earth showed that by smashing the 610-kilogram craft into the distant asteroid Dimorphos at 6.6 kilometres per second, NASA successfully changed the asteroid’s orbit. Dimorphos presents no risk to Earth and was merely acting as a test subject. Hera is a subsequent European Space Agency mission designed to get a closer look at the effect of the crash. The craft is around the size of a small car, weighing 1081 kilograms when fully fuelled. It launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on …

Trump takes fight over foreign aid funding to U.S. Supreme Court

Trump takes fight over foreign aid funding to U.S. Supreme Court

U.S. President Donald Trump talks to reporters from the Resolute Desk after signing an executive order to appoint the deputy administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration in the Oval Office at the White House on January 30, 2025 in Washington, DC. Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images News | Getty Images President Donald Trump’s administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to put on hold a federal judge’s order requiring the government to pay foreign aid funds to contractors and grant recipients for past work. The administration filed a request urging the justices to halt Washington-based U.S. District Judge Amir Ali’s order, arguing that it amounted to judicial overreach. Ali’s order gave the administration a deadline of 11:59 p.m. Wednesday night. Source link

Sofia Carson takes a second chance on life in sweet ‘The Life List’ trailer

Sofia Carson takes a second chance on life in sweet ‘The Life List’ trailer

Sofia Carson (Carry-On) experiences a second coming-of-age in Netflix’s upcoming film The Life List, based on the novel by Lori Nelson Spielman. Carson stars as Alex, a young woman grieving the loss of her mother (Connie Britton, Zero Day). However, her mother is still with her in the form of video messages she left Alex before her death. In these messages, she asks Alex to check off items from a list of goals she wrote as a teenager, including “go all out in a mosh pit” and “do stand-up comedy.” Each completed goal means Alex gets a new message from her mother’s lawyer (Kyle Allen, A Haunting in Venice). What follows is a journey of risk-taking, self-discovery, and maybe even true love. Check out the beginnings of Alex’s journey in the trailer above. The Life List hits Netflix March 28. Source link

Knowledge management takes center stage in the AI journey

Knowledge management takes center stage in the AI journey

ZDNET According to the Ark Invest Big Ideas 2025 report, agents will increase enterprise productivity via software. Companies that deploy agents should be able to increase unit volume with the same workforce and optimize their workforce toward higher-value activities.  Artificial intelligence (AI) will also supercharge knowledge work. Through 2030, Ark expects the amount of software deployed per knowledge worker to grow considerably as businesses invest in productivity solutions. AI agents are poised to accelerate the adoption of digital applications and create an epochal shift in human-computer interaction. Also: Here’s what AI likely means for traditional BI and analytics tools According to the 2025 Connectivity Benchmark Report by MuleSoft and Deloitte Digital, 93% of IT leaders report intentions to introduce autonomous AI agents within the next two years, and nearly half have already done so. However, the journey to agentic AI adoption and a digital labor force will not be easy without a deliberate focus on data and knowledge management strategy.  The Mulesoft and Deloitte research, based on feedback from 1,050 CIOs, reveals that data is trapped across siloed enterprise applications. …

UK takes bold measures to enhance AI security for national safety

UK takes bold measures to enhance AI security for national safety

Safeguarding Britain’s national security and protecting citizens from crime will become founding principles of the UK’s approach to AI security from today. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference and just days after the conclusion of the AI Action Summit in Paris, Peter Kyle has today recast the AI Safety Institute the ‘AI Security Institute’. This new name will reflect its focus on serious AI risks with security implications, such as how the technology can be used to develop chemical and biological weapons and how it can be used to carry out cyber-attacks and enable crimes. The Institute will also partner across government, including with the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, the Ministry of Defence’s science and technology organisation, to assess the risks posed by frontier AI. New approaches to tackle the criminal use of AI As part of this update, the Institute will also launch a new criminal misuse team which will work jointly with the Home Office to conduct research on a range of crime and AI security issues which threaten to harm British …

Man Asks If It’s Normal That His Wife Always Takes The Middle Seat When They Fly Together

Man Asks If It’s Normal That His Wife Always Takes The Middle Seat When They Fly Together

Traveling gives people the wonderful opportunity to see the world and different cultures, but the process of getting to your destination isn’t that wonderful. Now, why could this be? Could this be because of the lengthy flights or the seat in front of you constantly reclining, backing into your knees? Good guesses, but no. The notorious middle seat takes the cake. Staying wedged between two people for the next whatever amount of hours of your life. However, have you ever heard of someone willingly taking the dreadful seat? Well, one husband touched on this subject on a Reddit post, sharing that his wife oddly does. He said that his wife has no problem taking the middle seat when they fly together, but it made him wonder if she was really just doing it to be nice. A man questioned whether it’s typical for wives to always take the middle seat when flying with their husbands. This strange little arrangement started on their first trip together when his wife declared her interest in the middle seat. …

What it takes to make flying safe

What it takes to make flying safe

This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. Wednesday night’s deadly airplane crash was tragic—and, to many experts, not altogether surprising. The collision between a commercial airplane and a military helicopter in Washington, D.C., has led many people to take a closer look at the complex systems that commercial flying relies on, and the strain that some of those systems are under. I spoke with my colleague Ian Bogost, who writes often about the airline industry, about the factors that shape our perceptions of flying. Lora Kelley: This incident is not an aberration, but rather something experts seem to have seen coming. What were some of the warning signs? Ian Bogost: Aviation experts had been fearing that something like this would happen not just at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, but all across the country. Near misses have been on the rise, as have “runway incursions”—planes accidentally …

It Actually Takes a Lot Longer Than You’d Think to Lose Muscle From Not Working Out

It Actually Takes a Lot Longer Than You’d Think to Lose Muscle From Not Working Out

If you love to work out, it can be mentally and physically difficult to take time off. I like to strength train four days a week and incorporate cardio by boxing or running, so when I’m too sedentary, my body gets restless, and my focus goes out the window. If I catch a cold or have a jam-packed vacation planned, I feel guilty for allowing my routine to lag for a week or two. But occasionally, dialing down your fitness can be good for you—and unless you really fall out of practice, you’re not going to lose your hard-earned gains. Just like building your base takes time, so does losing it. We gain strength and endurance by a principle called progressive overload, which involves adding a little bit of intensity to workouts over time as your body adjusts to the original level. “The beauty of progressive overload is we can go back and forth as needed to accommodate as we get stronger,” says Andy Stern, a personal trainer and co-founder of Rumble Boxing. Every day, …

TikTok Ban Takes Effect and App Goes Dark in the U.S.

TikTok Ban Takes Effect and App Goes Dark in the U.S.

“Sorry, TikTok isn’t available right now,” the message read. Hours before a federal law banning TikTok from the United States took effect on Sunday, the Chinese-owned social media app went dark, and U.S. users could no longer access videos on the platform. Instead, the app greeted them with a message that said “a law banning TikTok has been enacted.” “We are fortunate that President Trump has indicated that he will work with us on a solution,” the message said. “Please stay tuned!” In addition, TikTok’s sister app, Lemon8, stopped working and showed U.S. users a message saying that it “isn’t available right now.” Both TikTok and Lemon8 are owned by ByteDance, a Chinese internet giant. CapCut, a popular video-editing app from ByteDance, was also unavailable. Apple said it had removed TikTok and other ByteDance apps, including Lemon8, from its app store, and users said that Google’s U.S. app store had also removed TikTok. Searching for the apps on Apple’s app store on Sunday yielded a new message: “TikTok and other ByteDance apps are not available …