Category: Technology

  • The new echo warning update will appear as both a red dot on the Meet interface as well as a notification and a text alert

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • One needs to send ‘Book Slot’ to MyGovIndia Corona Helpdesk on WhatsApp, verify and then follow the requisite steps

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Gadgets 360/ Web Desk:

    According to Gadgets 360, the Apple II manual, a rare collectible inscribed and signed by late Apple founder Steve Jobs in 1980, has been auctioned for a whopping $787,484 on August 19. The buyer is Jim Irsay, the owner of the American football team Indianapolis Colts. Boston-based RR Auction sold the 41-year-old Apple II Reference Manual last week. The manual, which ran into 196 pages, was inscribed and signed opposite the ‘Table of Contents’ in blue ink by Jobs and Apple’s former angel investor and second CEO, Mike Mark Kula. The manual contains technical details of Apple II’s architecture and operation.

    Jobs had written, “Julian, your generation is the first to grow up with computers. Go change the world! Steven Jobs, 1980.”

    He referred to Julian Brewer, whose father Michael negotiated exclusive distribution rights for Apple in the UK in 1979.

    In a note on its website, RR Auction stated that “Jobs’ inscription, penned in the year of Apple’s stock market flotation, powerfully conveys his grand ambition and vision for the future of Apple Computer, Inc. and personal computing as a whole”. It adds that when Jobs and Mark Kula signed the Apple II manual, they were in the UK to promote the company.

    The note further states that the manual was “in fine condition, with a few small stains on the front cover”.

    Brewer, who was a teenager when Jobs signed the manual, was quoted as saying by RR Auction, “I was sitting in my bedroom writing games on my Apple II when dad called me down to meet some guests. To my amazement, it was Steve Jobs and Mike Mark Kula. I had the manual with me and only later understood how rare it was for Jobs to sign anything, let alone to write an inscription like this. He got on well with dad, so I feel the inscription was made with care.”

    While expressing what the Apple II manual meant for him, Irsay said in a statement provided to the auction house that Jobs was among the “most innovative minds of the past two centuries.”

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • California/ Web Desk:

    Normally Zoom is used to teach and meet in the global context of the epidemic, but many have described it as an exhausting experience. In response, Facebook has developed a virtual reality app that allows you to chat with friends in a more realistic way.

    According to AP News, Facebook is trying to pull in workplace users with a new virtual-reality meetings app called Horizon Workrooms. However, it does require a 300 Dollars VR headset, the most popular of which is the widely used Oculus Quest 2. People without a headset can join with a video call. Up to 50 people can be on the call, but only 16 can be in the VR space with avatars. For the full VR experience, users need to have a Facebook account.

    While entering the Horizon workroom, you see cartoon characters of different people sitting around a table in a room, which gives a sense of the real scene. With this app, you can also choose different outfits, avatars, and clothes. People wearing headsets will move their fingers and hands, so their digital avatar will also move their hands and fingers. In addition, the lips of their digital characters will also move whenever they speak. The virtual conference also has a whiteboard where you can share presentations and writings with others.

    Facebook aims to enable people to use Oculus for fun as well as serious activities and to have a unique virtual dating experience.

    “We’ve been using the app internally for over a year now, but 18 months of epidemics and lockdowns have shown that such platforms are the best for a meeting,” said Andrew Bosworth, vice president of Facebook Realty Labs

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is a fan of the “metaverse,” a vague concept that encompasses augmented and virtual reality with new ways of connecting. He expects it to be the next stage of how people experience the internet.

    Virtual reality has never really taken off, even during the pandemic, when remote work became the norm for millions of office workers and made the videoconferencing service Zoom a household name.

    On the other hand, Facebook staff have said that they can present themselves in a more confident way in the Horizon workroom than in Zoom, and it is much easier to talk to each other thanks to virtual characters.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • This month, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the world authority on the state of Earth’s climate, released the first installment of its Sixth Assessment Report on global warming. It was signed off by 195 member governments. It spells out, in no uncertain terms, the stakes we are up against — and why we have no time to waste in taking dramatic steps to build a green economy.

    The IPCC has been publishing reports on the state of the climate and projections for climate change since 1990. The first IPCC report surmised that human activities were behind global warming, but that further scientific evidence was needed. By the time the Fourth Assessment Report came out in 2007, the evidence for human-caused global warming was described as “unequivocal,” with at least a 9 out of 10 chance of being correct. The report confirmed that the warming of the Earth’s surface to record levels was due to the extra heat being trapped by greenhouse gases and called for immediate action to combat the challenge of global warming.

    The Sixth Assessment Report finally states in absolute terms that anthropogenic emissions are responsible for the rising temperatures in the atmosphere, lands and the oceans. In other words, the fossil fuel industry is destroying the planet. And, in a similar tone to some of its previous reports, the IPCC warns that time is running out to combat global warming and avoid its worse effects. Without sharp reduction in emissions, we could easily exceed the 2 degrees Celsius (2°C) temperature threshold by the middle of the century.

    Of course, we are already in a climate crisis. Heat waves have broken records this summer in many parts of the world, including the Pacific Northwest of the United States and western Canada; wildfires have ravaged huge areas in southern Europe, causing “disaster without precedent” in Greece, Spain and the Italian island of Sardinia; and deadly floods have upended life in China and Germany. Global average temperatures stand now at 1.1°C above pre-industrial levels. A global warming increase of 1.5°C would have a much greater effect on the probability of extreme weather effects like heat waves, floods, droughts and storms, and at 2°C, things get a lot nastier — and for a much larger percentage of the world’s population.

    At current trends, it’s most unlikely that global warming can be held at 1.5°C. We have already emitted enough greenhouse gases into the atmosphere to cause 2°C of warming, according to a group of international scientists who published their findings in Nature Climate Change. Even a 3°C increase or more is plausible. In fact, the Network for Greening the Financial System (a group of central banks and supervisors) is already considering climate scenarios with over 3°C of warming, labeling it the “Hot House World.”

    Yet, in spite of all the dire climate warnings by IPCC and scores of other scientific studies, the world’s political and corporate leaders continue with their “business-as-usual” approach when it comes to tackling the climate crisis.

    Almost immediately after the release of the new IPCC report, the Biden administration urged the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to increase oil production because higher prices threaten global economic recovery. In fact, Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, actually criticized the world’s major oil producers for not producing enough oil. Naturally, Republicans responded by demanding that the Biden administration should encourage U.S. oil producers to boost production instead of turning to OPEC.

    Preposterously, the Biden administration seems to think that the best way to tackle global warming caused by anthropogenic emissions is through increasing levels of combustion of fossil fuels.

    This must also be the thinking behind China’s affinity for coal, as the world’s biggest carbon polluter is actually financing more than 70 percent of coal plants built globally.

    Or perhaps this is all part of a framework that assumes, “We are doomed, so let’s get it over with quickly.”

    In either case, one suspects that political inaction and the prospect of losing the battle against the climate emergency may be the reason why the new IPCC climate report has fully embraced the idea of carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere with the aid of technology as a necessary strategy to contain global warming.

    The need for carbon removal was also addressed in the IPCC’s 2018 special report on the 1.5°C temperature limit, both through natural and technological carbon dioxide removal strategies. And an IPCC special report on carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS) dates all the way back to 2005. But it seems that IPCC is now placing greater emphasis than before on innovation and carbon-removal technologies, especially through the process known as direct air carbon capture and storage (DACCS).

    The actual rationale for the emphasis on a technological fix (geoengineering, by the way, which involves large-scale intervention in and manipulation of the Earth’s natural system, is not included in the IPCC’s latest report) lies in the belief that we can no longer hope to limit global warming to 1.5°C without carbon dioxide removal of greenhouse gas emissions from the atmosphere, which will then be stored into underground geologic structures or deep under the sea.

    Unfortunately, there is a long history of technological promises to address the climate crisis, and the main result is delaying action towards decarbonization and a shift to clean energy, as researchers from Lancaster University have so convincingly argued in a published article in Nature Climate Change.

    As things stand, technological solutions to global warming are largely procrastination methods favored by the fossil fuel industry and its political allies. The carbon removal industry is still in its infancy, costs are extremely high, and the methods are unreliable. Nonetheless, both governments and the private sector are investing billions of dollars in the industry and attempts are being made to sell the idea to the public as a necessary step in avoiding a climate catastrophe. A Swiss company called Climeworks is just finishing the completion of a new large-scale direct air capture plant in Iceland, and a similar project is in the works in Norway with hopes that it would actually lead to the creation of “a full-scale carbon capture chain, capable of storing Europe’s emissions permanently under the North Sea.” South Korea is also working on a carbon capture and storage project that may become the biggest in the world.

    In the U.S., Republican lawmakers have also been very aggressive in touting carbon capture and storage technologies since the introduction of the Green New Deal legislation by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Edward Markey in 2019.

    It all adds up. Relying on technology to attempt to meet climate targets at this stage of the game is meant to obstruct the world from moving away from the use of fossil fuels. If we emphasize those false “fixes,” we are simply quickening the pace of a complete climate collapse with utterly catastrophic consequences for all life on planet Earth.

    Our only hope to tackle effectively the climate crisis and save the planet rests not with technological solutions but, instead, with a Green International Economic Order. We need a Global Green New Deal (GGND) to reach net zero emissions by 2050. And this means a world economy without fossil fuels and the industry behind them that is destroying life on the planet.

    Decarbonizing the global economy and shifting to clean energy is not an easy task, but it is surely feasible both from a financial and technical standpoint, as numerous studies have shown. According to leading progressive UMass-Amherst economist Robert Pollin, we need to invest between 2.5 to 3 percent of global GDP per year in order to attain a clean energy transformation. Moreover, while 250 years of growth based on the use of fossil fuels have delivered (unequal) economic benefits to the world, a world economy run on clean energy will bring environmental, social and economic benefits. One major study released out of Stanford University shows that a GGND would create nearly 30 million more long-term, full-time jobs than if we remained stuck with what it calls “business-as-usual energy.”

    The latest IPCC report, just like previous ones released by the organization, predicts disaster if we do not radically — and immediately — curb carbon dioxide emissions. But we know by now that we cannot rely on our political leaders to do what must be done to save the planet. Nor can we expect technology to solve the climate emergency. Carbon removal and carbon capture technologies won’t solve global warming in time, if ever. Only a roadmap calling for a complete transition away from fossil fuels will save planet Earth.

    Pressures from below — led by those on the front lines, labor unions, environmental groups, civil rights movements and students — are our only hope for the necessary changes in the way we produce, deliver and consume energy.

    And change is happening. We are moving forward.

    Think of how a climate awareness protest by a Swedish teenager turned into a global movement. Or the impact that the Sunrise Movement has had on U.S. politics on account of its activism on the climate crisis within only a few years after it was founded. Or the fact that we have 20 labor unions in California (including two representing thousands of oil workers) endorsing a clean energy transition report produced by a group of progressive economists at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. Or of the great work that the Labor Network for Sustainability is doing in engaging workers and communities in the mission of “building a transition to a society that is ecologically sustainable and economically just.”

    The future belongs to the green economy. It can happen. It will happen.

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • As per the last trends of Google, the company had also discontinued the Pixel 4 and 4 XL less than a year after their introduction

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Through this feature, users will be able to share a tweet in up to 20 separate DM chats

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • The OnePlus 9 RT will come with a Snapdragon 870 processor, 120Hz OLED, a 4,500mAh battery, and OxygenOS 12 out of the box

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • The upcoming iPhones are expected to feature a video version of the iPhone’s Portrait mode

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro, coming later this year, will have a completely new design, and will run on Tensor

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • The Pixel 5A’s screen has got a slight boost to 6.34 inches, a small increase over the 4A 5G’s 6.2-inch display

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • BBC/ Web Desk:

    The rapid takeover of Afghanistan raises fresh challenges for technology firms on how to deal with content related to the group.

    “The Taliban is sanctioned as a terrorist organization under US law and we have banned them from our services under our Dangerous Organization policies. This means we remove accounts maintained by or on behalf of the Taliban and prohibit praise, support, and representation of them,” a Facebook spokesperson told the BBC.

    According to the BBC, Facebook says it has a dedicated team of Afghan experts to monitor and remove content linked to the group.

    “We also have a dedicated team of Afghanistan experts, who are native Dari and Pashto speakers and have knowledge of local context, helping to identify and alert us to emerging issues on the platform,” they added.

    The social media giant said it does not make decisions about the recognition of national governments but instead follows the “authority of the international community”.

    Facebook highlighted that the policy applies to all of its platforms including its flagship social media network, Instagram and WhatsApp. However, there are reports that the Taliban is using WhatsApp to communicate. Facebook told the BBC that it would take action if it found accounts on the app to be linked to the group.

    Rival social media platforms have also come under scrutiny over how they handle Taliban-related content.

    In response to BBC questions about the Taliban’s use of Twitter, a company spokesperson highlighted policies against violent organizations and hateful conduct. According to its rules, Twitter does not allow groups that promote terrorism or violence against civilians.

    YouTube did not immediately respond to a BBC request for comment on its policies in respect to the Taliban.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • Los Angeles/ Web Desk:

    Whether it’s a handgun, a revolver, or a rifle, they have one thing in common: the ammunition that burns in a bullet pushes the bullet forward, which has its own limits. Now the world’s fastest shotgun has been developed at a speed of 200 feet per second. This is because the gun pushes the bullet forward with electromagnetic force.

    Interestingly, the gun is considered to be the most powerful coil gun ever sold to the public, and also the most powerful handheld coil gun ever built. It was built by Arc Flash Labs. This model weighs 20 pounds with a battery installed inside and its charger can be purchased separately.

    Photo Courtesy: arcflashlabs.com

    According to the Arc Flash Labs, the GR-1 Anvil is an eight-stage semi-automatic gun that can be called the world’s first handgun powered by electromagnetic force due to the coil. It is fitted with iron magnetic bullets that travel at a speed of 200 feet per second. It can fire 20 rounds with full force in one minute and 100 rounds at half power.

    Despite all this, it is claimed that it is not a deadly weapon and law enforcers will be able to fire it like rubber bullets because they are not lethal due to their structure. Just as an air gun’s knife is harmless, so is its firearm less harmful, and similar guns are used to start sports competitions. But it can also be used to hunt small animals.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • The policy will apply for all of its platforms, including its flagship social media network, Instagram and WhatsApp

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Silicon Valley/ Gadgets360:

    This year, WhatsApp has added a number of new features to its platform and further improved existing features. Whatsapp will soon introduce another new important feature its new update soon in the Google Play Beta program. Technology website WABetaInfo reports that WhatsApp is further improving playback speed, multi-device login, archives, and other key features for voice messages.

    According to Gadgets360, WhatsApp is reportedly working on a new option that will allow users to view status updates of their contacts via their profile pictures. Currently, there is a separate tab inside the WhatsApp app where you can view status updates. The ability to view the status of a user is likely to be expanded to the chats section now, wherein users will be able to tap on the profile picture and get the option to view the contact’s status.

    Photo Courtesy: WABetaInfo

    Tracker of WhatsApp features WABetaInfo reports that this new feature is under development. It was reportedly spotted in the code of the latest WhatsApp for Android beta version 2.21.17.5. When a user taps the profile picture of a contact, WhatsApp will present an option box asking if they want to view the status update or the profile picture. Users can choose the status update option to view the status of that specific user. This is very similar to what Twitter introduced with Twitter Fleets.

    There is no clarity on when this feature will roll out for WhatsApp users. It is still under development and hasn’t been released for public beta testing yet. This means that even if users are on the latest beta, they will not be able to see this feature yet.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • Microsoft is also updating its mail and calendar apps in Windows 11 to match the operating system’s new visual style

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Tech giants including Alphabet Inc’s Google, Uber Tech Inc have also said all their US employees have to be vaccinated before returning

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • These features include the ability for people to limit comments and DM (direct message) requests during spikes of increased attention

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Balasore/ Web Desk:

    For the past few years, India is expanding its defence and successful trials of missiles and weapons are conducted. On one hand, India raises its voice for the peace formation in the region and on the other hand Modi government regularly experimenting the missiles and mass destructive weapons.

    Now, India has successfully tested the Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO)-developed Indigenous Technology Cruise Missile off the coast of Odisha’s Balasore district. As per the sources, the missile flew for around 150 km with an indigenous cruise engine.

    “More tests would be conducted in near future,” sources added.

    Earlier, on July 23 India had successfully test-fired indigenously developed New Generation Akash Missile (Akash-NG), a Surface to Air Missile defence system in Balasore. It was the second test firing of the 30 km strike-range air defence missile systems in two days. The missile has been designed and developed by the Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO).

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • This feature will cover all transfers between iOS and Android phones, though it’s unclear when it’ll be available for all devices

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Gadgets360/Web Desk:

    According to Gadgets 360, WhatsApp Web and desktop apps are reportedly getting photo editing tools, a feature that has been present only in the mobile app till now. These tools will allow users to edit photos, with an additional option to add stickers, before sending them.

    WhatsApp update tracker WABetaInfo has noted new editing tools on WhatsApp Web and desktop app. These editing options referred to as ‘Drawing Tools’ allow editing images before sending them from WhatsApp Web or desktop app. The mobile app has had image editing tools since the beginning. With the new Drawing Tools, users can add emojis or text to the image, and crop or rotate it, before sharing them.

    Users need to make sure they are using the latest version of the web browser and WhatsApp desktop app in order to use photo editing tools called “drawing tools”. When the user uploads the image, a new drawing or editing tool will appear at the top of the WhatsApp page.

    The tools can be seen on top after you select the image you’d like to share. The option to add text is still present at the bottom along with the ‘view once’ option. This feature may not be visible to all users right away. According to the publication, the feature will soon be visible to all users and they are recommended to update to the latest version of WhatsApp on Android, iOS, and desktop.

    Unfortunately, WhatsApp web and desktop apps don’t yet offer the ability to add filters such as black and white or Chrome to photos. In addition, web users will still not be able to edit the video. That is, you can crop the video.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • The updated Xbox app will include a new “cloud games” section, with access to all of the same games available on xCloud on the web

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • The expansion in Telangana is a part of Amazon India’s plans to increase its national storage capability by close to 40 per cent, in 2021

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Sun Francisco/ Web Desk:

    It’s not always convenient to physically type out messages. In fact, it can often be slower if you’re trying to tell someone a lot of information very quickly which is why voice messages are now so popular. But not everyone likes receiving voice messages because it’s not always convenient to listen to them.

    That’s why WhatsApp has now added a speech-to-text feature that will turn your spoken words into a text message.

    Whatsapp has introduced a way to send text messages without having to physically type them out. The new feature is called Dictation, and lets you speak messages into your mobile’s microphone then translates them into text.

    The Dictation feature was added in the latest WhatsApp update and is available on both iPhone and Android.

    WhatsApp users can easily send a bunch of messages without even typing them on the messaging app, all thanks to digital assistants. You just need to ask the virtual assistant to send a WhatsApp and then your work will be done.

    First, go into the Apple App Store or Google Play Store and make sure you’ve got the latest version of WhatsApp installed.

    Then follow these steps:

    • Open WhatsApp
    • Open a chat with the contact you want to speak to
    • Open up the chat keyboard, where you’d normally type messages
    • Look for a microphone icon (not the one next to the chat bar): on Android, it’s black and in the top right, and on iPhone, it’s in the very bottom right of the screen.
    • If you want a comma and question mark, simply say “comma” or “question mark” out loud. It’s the same story for adding “full stop”.
    • Once you’ve finished your message, check it over and then hit send.

    When you’re speaking into the microphone, remember to talk clearly and enunciate words as turning speech into text is very tricky for apps.

    It’s also best to dictate your message in a quiet place, to give your microphone the best chance of picking up your words. You can always edit your dictated message before you send it anyway, to correct any typos that may appear.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • Silicon Valley/ Web Desk:

    Most of us must have used the third-party sign-in option to log in to a new application. Users are given the option to log in with an email address, Facebook, or Twitter account to avoid the hassle of remembering the password for each app.

    But for some users, the process of signing in to a third-party application becomes more difficult, but now Google has made this complex problem of its users easier.

    According to a report published on the technology website 9 to5 Google, Google has further improved the process and made the sign-in experience much easier. The technology giant has added “One Tap Authentication” to its module called “Google Identity Services”, which makes it much easier to sign in to third-party applications.

    This new method will work directly on existing websites and will not redirect users to a separate sign-in patch. The purpose of this new feature is to streamline the user browsing experience without any hassle.

    According to the report, this feature will also be available for Android phone users, and “One Tap Prompt” will appear on Android users’ mobiles, while desktop users will be able to view it directly upwards. This feature will work for both newly signed up users and old logged-in users.

    According to the report, users will also be able to see their name, email address, and profile picture at the bottom of the website.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • “The future of the auto industry is electric,” President Joe Biden said in a voiceover to a video posted on Twitter Wednesday night. “There’s no turning back.”

    Automakers seem to agree with him. On Thursday, the “Big Three” American carmakers — Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler (now part of the Dutch auto giant Stellantis) — announced a goal of having 40 to 50 percent of their new vehicle sales by 2030 be electric, in line with a new Biden executive order announced the same day. That would represent a giant step forward for the electrification of transport: Current EV sales in the United States have hovered around a paltry 2 to 3 percent of the total car market over the past several years

    The commitments are indicative of a larger change in the automotive industry’s mindset toward electric vehicles, led by the president’s strategic support. Biden has boosted EVs at every opportunity, driving around a racetrack in the electric F-150 Lightning and promising to build 500,000 electric vehicle charging stations. Encouraging American-made EV sales allows the president to tackle multiple objectives at once: fighting climate change, creating “good-paying, union jobs,” and outcompeting China. Labor groups appear to be getting on board as well: The United Auto Workers Union, which represents more than 400,000 workers in North America, released a statement supporting the 40 to 50 percent goal.

    U.S. carmakers have already begun shifting toward electric vehicles. Ford recently released an all-electric Mustang EV, in addition to the much-anticipated electric F-150, and the company promised earlier this year to more than double its investments in electric and autonomous  vehicles. General Motors has gone even further, planning to only sell electric vehicles by 2035. 

    While the new goal from the Big Three seems ambitious, some climate experts have pointed out that it may be less impressive than it appears. The switch to EVs is expected to happen rapidly as costs go down and consumers adjust: According to a Rhodium Group report, sales of electric vehicles are slated to reach 27 to 39 percent by 2031, even absent any new federal policy. Some states, including California and Massachusetts, have vowed to end the sales of gas-powered vehicles entirely by 2035. 

    And other Biden priorities on EVs are still hanging in the balance. In his American Jobs Plan, the president initially hoped to spend $174 billion on electric vehicle development and infrastructure, including $15 billion earmarked for his 500,000 charging stations. But the bipartisan infrastructure deal, agreed to last week by a group of Democratic and Republican senators, includes only $15 billion total for electric cars and buses, jeopardizing Biden’s promise of a U.S. EV market that could rival China and Europe. The president’s focus on having “point-of-sale” rebates for electric cars — instead of a flawed tax-credit system — has also been left out of the deal. 

    Still, the White House is forging ahead on other ways to cut emissions from transport. The Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Transport also unveiled new fuel efficiency standards for cars and trucks Thursday, beginning the process of reversing President Donald Trump’s rollback of those standards during his presidency. The proposed rules require a one-time increase in fuel economy by 10 percent in 2023, followed by a 5 percent improvement annually through 2026. a That would mean automakers would have to reach a fleet-average 48 miles per gallon over the next 5 years.

    This story was originally published by Grist with the headline ‘Big Three’ automakers join Biden in electric car promises on Aug 6, 2021.

    This post was originally published on Grist.

  • iOS 15 remains within the beta phase and we can expect more changes and enhancements to follow aside from lens flare within the coming days

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Social Media/ Web Desk:

    Taking photos and recording videos of almost every fun, important, and random moment has become common in the contemporary world, but not every memory should leave a digital print.

    WhatsApp has rolled out a new feature “View Once” photos and videos that disappear from the chat after they’ve been opened, giving users greater control over their privacy. This feature provides users with a chance to share the moment with others and not leave a digital footprint.

     “As with all the personal messages you send on WhatsApp, ‘View Once’ media is protected by end-to-end encryption so WhatsApp cannot see them,” the messaging app’s blog said.

    “Media will not be saved to the recipient’s Photos or Gallery. Once you send a view once a photo or video, you won’t be able to view it again,” WhatsApp said in a statement.

    They will also be clearly marked with a new “one-time” icon. After the media has been viewed, the message will appear as “opened” to avoid any confusion about what was happening in the chat at the time. This feature also won’t allow forward, save, star, or share photos or videos that were sent or received with the view once media is enabled.

    We’re rolling out the feature to everyone starting this week and are looking forward to feedback on this new way to send private and disappearing media, the messaging app said.

    This post was originally published on VOSA.

  • The feature should be welcome when a user is using the app at night or in dark environments

    This post was originally published on The Asian Age | Home.

  • Malaysia’s Kinabalu Park, which surrounds Mount Kinabalu, the 20-largest peak in the world, is home to a nickel mine like none other. In lieu of heavy machinery, plumes of sulfur dioxide, or rivers red with runoff, you’ll find four acres of a leafy-green shrub, tended to since 2015 by local villagers. Once or twice per year, they shave off about a foot of growth from the 20-foot-tall plants. Then, they burn that crop to produce an ashy “bio-ore” that is up to 25 percent nickel by weight.

    Producing metal by growing plants, or phytomining, has long been tipped as an alternative, environmentally-sustainable way to reshape – if not replace – the mining industry. Of 320,000 recognized plant species, only around 700 are so-called “hyperaccumulators,” like Kinabalu’s P. rufuschaneyi. Over time, they suck the soil dry of metals like nickel, zinc, cobalt, and even gold.

    While two-thirds of nickel is used to make stainless steel, the metal is also snapped up by producers of everything from kitchenwares to mobile phones, medical equipment to power generation. Zinc, on the other hand, is essential for churning out paints, rubber, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, plastics, inks, soaps, and batteries. And, as supplies of these hard-to-find metals dry up around the world, demand remains as strong as ever. 

    The idea of phytomining was first put forth in 1983 by an agronomist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture named Rufus L. Chaney. Other research groups before the Malaysia team have shown that the solar-powered and carbon-neutral metal extraction process works in practice — a key step to winning over mining industry investors, who have insisted on field trials of several acres to show proof of principle. The most recent data out of Kinabalu Park, a UNESCO-listed heritage site located on the island of Borneo, is finally turning industry heads, as they shows the scales have tipped in favor of phytomining’s commercial viability.

    “We can now demonstrate that metal farms can produce between 150 to 250 kilograms of nickel per hectare (170 to 280 pounds per acre), annually,” said Antony van der Ent, a senior research fellow at Australia’s University of Queensland whose thesis work spurred the Malaysia trial. At the midpoint of that range, a farmer would net a cool $3,800 per acre of nickel at today’s prices – which, van der Ent added, is “on par with some of the best-performing agricultural crops on fertile soils, while operating costs are similar.”

    Take, for instance, palm oil – a crop as notorious for its profitability as its role in driving deforestation in Asia and Africa. Farmers planting oil palm trees, prior to the pandemic, stood to clear 2.84 metric tons (3.12 tons) of crude oil annually on average – or $2,710 in today’s prices. For farmers in Malaysia and Indonesia, where 90 percent of the world’s palm oil is grown, nickel farming might just prove a more attractive option. 

    “At this stage, phytomining can go full-scale for nickel immediately, while phytomining for cobalt, thallium, and selenium is within reach,” van der Ent said. 

    While van der Ent’s team has won over some in the mining industry, adoption of phytomining isn’t yet on the fast track. That’s despite the Malaysia plot and other examples suggesting that while plants are of course less capital intensive and more environmentally friendly than traditional mining, they are also more efficient. Still, in an industry that van der Ent characterizes as resistant to change, phytomining’s immediate future could be more as a complement to traditional mining than its replacement. 


    Several Indonesian nickel mining companies are now looking to partner with van der Ent’s Malaysia team. “We have lined up several industry partners who’ve agreed to implement trials in Indonesia,” he said. “But due to COVID, this development is currently on hold.”

    When travel restrictions are lifted and borders open up, van der Ent hopes to show that there are a number of advantages to phytomining that traditional mining simply can’t offer. “There is an abundance of unconventional ores that could be unlocked through phytomining,” he said. One example is soil abundant in tropical regions that typically contain 0.5 to 1 percent nickel by weight, which is below the cut-off where a company could profitably implement conventional strip mining. 

    Antony van der Ent
    Antony van der Ent, left, and his colleague Sukaibin Sumail, a local field researcher, examine a P. rufuschaneyi at the test plot in Kinabalu Park. Courtesy of Antony van der Ent

    Strip mining takes place in thick layers of soil containing more than 1 percent nickel by weight that occur in places like Brazil, Cuba, Indonesia, the Philippines, and New Caledonia, the French territory in the South Pacific. This process involves removing a layer of soil or rock, referred to as overburden, before mining that seam for the target metal. And it comes at great environmental cost. Because nickel is difficult to extract, the process calls for heavy machinery that runs on diesel and generates carbon, as well as large, acid-leaching installations needed to separate the metal from its ore. 

    Those nickel-rich soils, however, are becoming increasingly scarce — and it might well be that an undersupply eventually drives more and more companies to embrace phytomining. That, and the fact that bio-ore contains 20 to 30 percent nickel by weight, and is also more compact and cheaper to transport than typical ores – which hover around the one to three percent mark by weight.

    Still, regardless of how the Indonesia partnerships eventually go, it’s unlikely that major mining companies will swap out strip mines for shrubbery overnight. That’s why phytoremediation, a spin-off technology which complements mining rather than replacing it, might just be the thin end of the wedge.


    Currently, as strip mining happens, the surrounding topsoil becomes littered with toxic metal tailings. This layer typically has to be dug out, carted off, and sold to landfills, often at great cost to the mine operator. In the case of coal extraction, the cost of rehabilitation, for strip-mined land, averages $71,000 per acre. In the E.U. alone, there are an estimated 130 million acres in need of clean up. It’s a hefty bill for mining companies – and that’s if they choose to foot it at all. High-profile inquiries in Indonesia, Australia, and the U.S. show mining companies are all too often willing to shirk rehab responsibilities. 

    The residue, though, is commonly composed of nickel, cobalt, sodium, and cadmium. With a little physical or chemical treatment of the soil, one can create precisely the conditions in which certain hyperaccumulators thrive – it’s as simple as planting a seed and recovering the additional ore at a later date. “Trash from treasure,” as van der Ent put it.

    Marcus Radford, an environmental consultant based in Western Australia, added that phytomining on these sites is a win-win. It would make mine remediation cheaper, quicker, and easier. Add to that, it would revitalize the local ecosystem. “It’s a way of putting back, rather than taking away,” he said. 

    Phytoremediation has been tested in France, Greece, Albania, and Italy, but the experiments have seen varying levels of success. In Italy’s Tuscany region, for example, researchers planted various cottonwood and willow species over arsenic-contaminated pyrite waste. While both plants grew successfully in challenging conditions, arsenic wasn’t recovered at a significant level. That said, small-scale phytoremediation in France and elsewhere, has been shown to recover nickel, zinc, and cadmium.

    In order for the mining industry to adopt phytoremediation, the practice will need boardroom backing, van der Ent explained, adding that the support turns on wide-scale implementation. Scaling up, however, requires funding, so there’s a bit of a chicken-and-egg problem. 

    “It’s only uptake by industry that is holding up translation of phytomining to large-scale application,” van der Ent said. “Industry invariably asks for a field-scale demonstration of phytomining to prove operational viability, but is not prepared to fund such a pilot project. I firmly believe that once a proven field demonstration at scale exists, this will attract funding.”

    Van der Ent is optimistic that the pandemic-delayed push into Indonesia will do the trick. Just to be sure, though, he’s also planning to scale the Malaysia trial up to nearly 50 acres – which would call for the application of an industrial-scale hydrometallurgical plant, which separates the target metal, in this case nickel, from its ore via a water-based medium. They won’t have to manually burn the crop as they are doing now – meaning the process will be carbon negative, as opposed to what van der Ent labels as carbon neutral. 

    Once COVID restrictions lift, he hopes the team will bring new life to the term “smelting plants.”

    This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Plant-based metal? The mining industry could get a sustainable makeover. on Aug 3, 2021.

    This post was originally published on Grist.