John Cornyn Encourages People To Sign Up For Obamacare After Fighting To Repeal It

The GOP senator voted more than a dozen times to repeal the ACA and led Senate Republican efforts to dismantle it.

Judge Dismisses Charges Against Administrator Implicated In Larry Nassar Case

Prosecutors say former Michigan State University President Lou Anna Simon lied to police about Nassar.

5 Great Netflix Documentary Movies You May Have Missed In 2020

Watched “Tiger King”? Try these under-the-radar docs next.

Rick Bright To Testify That Trump Admin Was Unprepared For COVID-19: Reports

The ousted official will warn the U.S. may soon face its “darkest winter in modern history.”

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The Legacy of Empire Strikes Back's Biggest Spoiler, 40 Years Later

“No, I am your father.” Five words that changed not just the life of Star Wars’ Luke Skywalker but movies in general.

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There's At Least One Keyboard Worse Than Apple's Butterfly Switch Fiasco

Reminding us that things can always be worse, YouTube’s Foone Turing has created a keyboard that is based around a floppy drive and a stack of floppy disks that somehow looks even more frustrating to use than Apple’s much-maligned butterfly keyboards.

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YouTube Music Gets Library Transfer Feature as Google Preps for the Death of Google Play Music

YouTube Music was supposed to be the successor to Google Play Music, when it launched in 2018, but it lacked a number of core features, including the ability to transfer your music library over from Google’s previous music streaming app. Now, ahead of Google Play Music’s impending death sometime later this year,…

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MIT develops a way to use wireless signals from in-home appliances to better understand your health

Having a holistic picture of your health might not mean just wearing a device like an Apple Watch that can monitor your biometrics – researchers at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab (CSAIL) have developed a new system that can figure out when and where in-home appliances like hair dryers, stoves, microwaves and washing machines are being used, and they believe that info could help inform healthcare practitioners about the habits and challenges of people under their care.

The researchers devised a system called ‘Sapple’ which uses just two sensors placed in a person’s home to determine use patterns of devices including stoves, hair dryers and ore. There’s one location sensor that works using radio signals to figure out placement, with a user able to calibrate it to cover their area by simply walking the bounds of their space. A second sensor measures energy usage through the home, and combines that data with movement information to matching energy use signals with physical locations of specific applicants, to provide data both when aa person is using the appliances around the house, and for how long.

This gets around a lot of the issues raised by similar systems, including more simple voltage meters used on their own. While appliances do tend to have specific energy use patterns that mean you can identify them just based on consumption, it’s hard to tell when and how they’re being used with that data on its own. This info can let health professionals know if a patient is taking proper care of hygiene, food preparation and intake and more.

Of course, the system does sound like one that has a lot of potential privacy pitfalls, but its intended use is for specific cases, like providing supervised care of aging populations that need it while also still preserving resources and enabling better distancing, which is actually a more urgent need right now as we continue to figure out how to address caregiving in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.

It’s a clever system in that it doesn’t require any special smart IoT devices to work, beyond the two simple sensors, and essentially also doesn’t require any technical expertise on the part of the patients receiving care.

Unreal Engine 5 revealed with must-see PlayStation 5 demo

While Microsoft has been slowly but consistently revealing new information about the Xbox Series X, we’ve been waiting on something particularly juicy about the PlayStation 5. We may have received that juicy reveal today with Epic’s announcement of Unreal Engine 5, which was put on display by way of a tech demo running on PlayStation 5. You can check out … Continue reading