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Larry Ellison is on the cusp of surpassing Elon Musk as world’s richest person after Oracle’s stock jumped $70 billion overnight

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  • Oracle cofounder Larry Ellison is about to pass Tesla CEO Elon Musk to claim the title of world’s richest person. The 81-year-old executive chairman has benefitted from Oracle’s growing cloud-infrastructure business; most notably this week, as the company announced it won several billion-dollar contracts in its most recent quarter.

The 81-year-old cofounder of software giant Oracle is on the verge of beating out Elon Musk for the title of world’s richest person. 

Ellison, who cofounded Oracle in the ‘70s and is still its chief technology officer and executive chairman, saw his net worth skyrocket over the past day to $364 billion, just short of Musk’s $384 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaire’s Index

Ellison’s wealth rose by $70 billion overnight after Oracle’s stock exploded by double digits after close Tuesday. On Wednesday, Oracle’s shares continued their upward trajectory, up about 40% in early morning trading. The value of the company’s shares has, as of Wednesday, doubled year-to-date. Ellison owns more than 40% of Oracle, and much of his wealth is tied to the company, according to Bloomberg

Oracle has benefitted from large infrastructure investments in its role as a cloud provider and its services have been highly sought after by data-hoarding AI companies since the release of ChatGPT set off an arms race for advanced large language models (LLMs) in 2022. 

The company said in its most recent quarter it won several contracts expected to yield $455 billion in revenue, a huge jump from the year prior, the Wall Street Journal reported. Before the end of the year, several more multibillion-dollar customers are expected to sign up with the company as well, said its CEO Safra Catz.

Oracle’s recent stock gains have lifted Ellison above Meta CEO and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who was previously the second-richest person behind Musk. Musk claimed the title of world’s richest for the first time in 2021 before being toppled by Amazon executive chairman Jeff Bezos and LVMH Bernard Arnault. Musk reclaimed the title in 2024 and has held onto it for 300 days, according to Bloomberg

Meanwhile, as Oracle’s stock is on the rise, Tesla’s shares are falling. The electric-car maker’s stock is down 13% year-to-date and its market share in the U.S. has dropped to its lowest point since 2017, Reuters reported citing data from research firm Cox Automotive.

But there may be hope for Musk, yet. Last week, Tesla’s board proposed a pay package that would make Musk the world’s first trillionaire—so long as he meets several lofty goals like increasing the company’s stock eightfold over the next 10 years.

Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business. Apply for an invitation.



This story originally appeared on Fortune

Marvel Entertainment Showcases John Walker’s Hilarious Roasting In New Thunderbolts Clip

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Instagram/@marvel

Indeed, there is yet another clip that Marvel Entertainment has most likely dropped from Thunderbolts. It shows Wyatt Russell’s John Walker getting ‘acted upon’ by relentless teasing from his teammates. The irony is immense to the extent that it lends to Walker’s desperate attempt to garner some respect after only a short stint as Captain America. The post advertises the film’s availability on Disney Plus and fuels the intense debates within the fandom about the reviled-but-loved character.

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The clip opens with a forceful declaration from Walker, “Not only knows the blood on your hands,” only to be immediately interrupted by one of his teammates who replied, “Pretty ludicrous coming from the Grocery Store Captain America.” That is the tone throughout the rest of the sequence-an hour-long masterclass in humiliation that somehow only endears Walker further. Walker makes a final attempt in defense of his legacy, saying, “It was actually the official Captain America,” and then, immediately with a sheepish grin, ad-libbed, “for like two seconds.” His team erupts into laughter, and Yelena kills him with another jab: “Junior varsity Captain America.”

So it’s worth saying what made this scene an argument for supporters of Walker. One comment felt like it captured the entire consciousness: “Best character in the film, they tried to make us hate him but it didn’t work.” Such sentiments will find echoes in other replies, one of which proclaims: “He was hilarious and real. Loved his character.”

The roasting goes on in the comments. Catalina.lanuza’s remark: “He turns his body cam off,” was followed by explosions of laughter and agreement emojis. Another fan pinpointed, “The taco line was amazing,” which initiated a conversation about the end credits.

Turning this around, it suggests a picture of a character who’s gone past his very first and villainous appearance. One member of the pod states: “Great character arc, goes from being universally hated to sort of tolerated by his teammates.” That seemed to be what Marvel did: a character so flawed, so human, so oddly endearing despite his huge ego and utter lack of self-awareness.

Others have made even bolder comparisons, with one saying: “hot take….I like Walker better then Steve.” Naturally, this led to debates over character writing and performances, with one member venturing to defend Russell’s portrayal: “Russell’s US Agent definitely rocks, far better than Cap (mostly the current one) and one of the best and underestimated MCU characters ever.”

The comment section also shows some knowledgeable references to the comics, with one citing: “Ever since I’ve played MARVEL SUPER HEROES VS. STREET FIGHTER, I was always interested in U.S. AGENT,” sparking a barely niche conversation about Walker’s video game appearances and comic history, showing how the character resonates across mediums.

What’s interesting here is that Walker’s humiliation becomes his redemption. The constant trolling increases his likability as noted in a batch of comments. One user summed it up: “I love how he was roasted nonstop for this entire movie 😂” – with the laughter emoji implying that this treatment is part of his charm.”

The release of this clip has definitely struck a chord with the Marvel fans who want more profound characterization. The transition from despised government-appointed Captain America to reluctantly accepted Thunderbolt is certainly one of the more grey areas in the MCU. As we’ve seen in the comments, the audience has gone on to embrace his flaws, his limitations, and his desperate attempts at being worthy of their judgment despite the unending mockery.

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Marvel’s decision to highlight this scene shows an understanding that Walker is interesting not because of heroic deeds but because of his human qualities. These Thunderbolts might give him endless grief, but audiences have collectively decided he’s worth rooting for despite it all.




This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider

Charlie Sheen Remembers Moment He Felt Dad Martin Deliver ‘Biggest Betrayal’

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Charlie Sheen has been reflecting on his past a lot recently. One revelation he shared this week was a surprising admission about his father, Martin Sheen. Opening up in a new interview, the actor revealed his dad was responsible for one of the biggest betrayals he ever felt.

Martin Sheen signed his son Charlie Sheen’s arrest warrant

Charlie is doing the rounds to promote his new memoir and Netflix documentary. In an interview with Good Morning America on Monday, the actor opened up about the betrayal he felt following a decision from dad Martin. The older actor signed a warrant for his son’s arrest after he violated his probation.

“It felt like the biggest betrayal you could possibly endure,” Charlie said.

However, his dad’s decision actually came from a good place. He had become concerned about his son’s substance issues following an overdose, and wanted him to get help.

In time, the Two and a Half Men star came to realize this. He explained: “[I] saw it as love eventually. But in the moment, it’s like, in the book when my bodyguard comes to the bedroom door and he says, ‘You know, the US Marshals are on the way. We’re leaving in five…’”

It would be fair to say Charlie’s life had hit rock bottom before his arrest. He was facing charges related to assaulting then-girlfriend Brittany Ashland, had overdosed on injected cocaine and suffered a stroke. Clearly, 1998 wasn’t a good year for the star.

He didn’t end up getting any prison time. Instead, his probation was extended by a year.

Charlie did end up getting clean, and his dad stuck by him throughout. Speaking of how the “Apocalypse Now” actor has read his memoir, Charlie said: “Dad was like halfway through [my book]. He said, ‘Your use of humor in your darkest moments is a gift to the reader,’ is how he described it.”

TELL US – DID MARTIN DO THE RIGHT THING BY SIGNING THE ARREST WARRANT?



This story originally appeared on Realitytea

Creamy and Delicious Crockpot Mashed Potatoes

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This website may contain affiliate links and advertising so that we can provide recipes to you. Read my disclosure policy.

You MUST TRY these crockpot mashed potatoes! They are so creamy and delicious and super easy to make! Which makes them the perfect side for any meal.

Mashed potatoes in a crockpot. Mashed potatoes in a crockpot.

The Scoop on Why These Potatoes Rule

  • It’s basically hands-off! Toss the potatoes in the crockpot and let it do the work while you tackle the rest of your day.
  • Fewer dishes = happy you! Everything cooks in one pot, which means less mess and more time to actually enjoy dinner.
  • You’re in control! Like them chunky, smooth, or whipped? You get to decide to mash, mix, or rice them however you love best.

A Reader’s Review

Fantastic! Made them today for Thanksgiving, and this is how I’ll always make mashed potatoes from now on. Great and easy! Thanks

– Brenda

Slow Cooker Mashed Potato Ingredients

Overhead shot of labeled ingredients.Overhead shot of labeled ingredients.
  • Broth Swap: Chicken broth or vegetable broth can replace water, but the potatoes may turn beige.
  • Milk or Cream: Milk or heavy cream can replace half & half, but warm it first so the potatoes absorb it quickly and don’t get gluey.
  • Potatoes: Use russet potatoes for classic creamy mash, or Yukon Golds for a richer flavor. Chop into ½–1 inch pieces—smaller chunks cook faster.
  • Liquid: The potatoes don’t need to be submerged. Just add enough to steam. They’ll absorb what’s left when mashed along with the half & half.
  • Garlic Mashed: Add a few cloves of garlic to the crockpot with the potatoes.
  • Loaded Mashed: Stir in bacon, chives, shredded cheddar cheese, and sour cream before serving.

How to Make Crockpot Mashed Potatoes

If you want to save time and energy during the holidays, make this crockpot mashed potatoes recipe. The best part is they stay warm right in the crockpot until you’re ready to serve!

  1. Add to Crockpot & Cook: Add the peeled and diced potatoes and water to a 5-quart crockpot. Cover and cook for 4-5 hours on LOW, until the potatoes are very soft.
  2. Mash and Serve: Once cooked, add the half-and-half, butter, salt, and pepper to the soft potatoes. Use a hand potato masher, hand mixer, or potato ricer to mash the potatoes to your desired consistency. Overmixing makes them gluey. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Switch the crockpot to the WARM setting before covering and keeping warm for up to 2 hours.

Alyssa’s Pro Tip

Stirring: During the cooking time, stir once or twice to prevent browning, but avoid lifting the lid too often. This will prolong the cooking time and potentially cause the potatoes to brown.

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  • Add 5 pounds peeled and diced Russet or Yukon Gold potatoes and 1 cup water to a 5-quart crockpot. Cover and cook for 4-5 hours on LOW, until the potatoes are very soft.

  • Add 1 cup warm half and half, ½ cup melted unsalted butter, 1 ½ teaspoon salt, and ½ teaspoon ground black pepper to the soft potatoes, then use a hand masher, hand mixer, or potato ricer to mash the potatoes to your desired consistency. Season with additional salt and pepper to taste. Switch the crockpot to the WARM setting before covering and keeping warm for up to 2 hours.

Keeping Warm:

  • Keep mashed potatoes warm in the crockpot for up to 2 hours.
  • Add extra half & half, ¼ cup at a time, if they thicken as they sit.

Storing:

  • Cool completely, then store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days.

Make Ahead:

  1. Peel and chop potatoes up to 24 hours in advance.
  2. Place in a large bowl, cover with cold water (at least 1 inch above potatoes), and cover with plastic wrap.
  3. Refrigerate until ready to cook.
  4. Drain well and pat dry with a clean kitchen towel before adding to the crockpot.

Calories: 366kcalCarbohydrates: 53gProtein: 7gFat: 15gSaturated Fat: 9gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 4gTrans Fat: 0.5gCholesterol: 41mgSodium: 472mgPotassium: 1227mgFiber: 4gSugar: 3gVitamin A: 465IUVitamin C: 16mgCalcium: 74mgIron: 2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Mashed potatoes in a bowl with some butter and herbs on top. Mashed potatoes in a bowl with some butter and herbs on top.




This story originally appeared on TheRecipeCritic

My dog had a run-in with a rabid bat. Thank God for vaccines

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Since I became an adult, the list of things that I feel fairly confident will never happen to me has grown with each passing year: I will never win the lottery (I don’t buy tickets) or become a famous archaeologist (dreamed but never trained), but neither will I die while skydiving (no one can make me skydive) or have to worry about rabies.

When I was young, rabies was a big concern — as a child I was warned, repeatedly, to never approach a strange dog if I didn’t want to endure the excruciating pain of dozens of injections, delivered by a footlong needle, right in my stomach. When I first saw the scene in “To Kill a Mockingbird” in which Atticus shoots a mad dog, I could only hope my own father would be able to do the same.

But by the 1970s, as the canine rabies vaccine became widely available and increasingly mandatory, that scene and all its implications slipped toward the anachronistic.

Until my husband found one of our dogs gazing down at a grounded bat on our back patio the other night.

To be honest, our first reaction was dog-owner chagrin. Harley is a rescue hound, of indeterminate but clearly mixed breed, who is given to leaping in the air to snap at moths and making vain but enthusiastic attempts to catch lizards. My husband’s assumption that Harley had brought down this bat seemed questionable — the dog never actually catches the moths — but my sympathy was definitely with the bat, which appeared stunned.

Being very careful not to touch it, my husband moved the squeaking critter to a dog-free zone, in the hopes it would just flap away. Alas, it was dead the next morning. (Here is where I admit our first mistake — we should have simply put a box or bucket over the bat and called animal control.)

Harley is in quarantine for 30 days after an encounter with a rabid bat.

(Mary Mcnamara / Los Angeles Times)

As luck would have it, Harley had a vet appointment that very day, and so I casually mentioned the bat. The vet didn’t actually freeze, but she certainly used a very no-nonsense voice when she asked: “Did you bring the bat? We need the bat.”

Of course they needed the bat. Why hadn’t I thought to bring the bat? I live in the foothills where bear, bobcat and mountain lion sightings break up the tedium of coyote and raccoon encounters. I know that bats are potential rabies carriers, yet somehow I did not connect this with my own backyard.

I felt very stupid, especially when the vet informed me that, though only a small percentage of bats carry the disease, more than a few have been found in nearby Burbank and Glendale. A quick Google search revealed the L.A. County rabid bat map, which, on that day, listed 33 infected bats encountered during this year alone.

I (again very carefully) brought the bat to the vet’s office, which in turn shipped it to the county’s public veterinary health department. More, and increasingly panicked, online research reacquainted me with the horror of the disease, which is pretty much 100% fatal in all unvaccinated dogs and those unvaccinated humans who do not receive treatment before becoming symptomatic — just last year, a Fresno woman died from rabies after being bitten by a bat that she was trying to remove from her classroom.

Also its history. Turns out, rabid-dog attacks were a pretty big problem in L.A. until the Southern California Veterinary Medical Assn. began offering public vaccination clinics in 1958. According to the county public health website, the last locally acquired infection in a dog occurred 10 years later.

Vaccinations work; what a concept.

Harley, who recently turned 1, was already up to date on all his shots — the trip to the vet had been to get the next round, including a rabies booster. The vet, and then a very nice doctor with the county, reassured me that even if the bat turned out to be infected, there was virtually no chance of Harley getting sick.

I also learned that even an unvaccinated dog, or cat, can be protected if they are vaccinated quickly after an encounter with an animal carrying rabies.

So when the bat results came back positive — there are now 37 encounters listed on the map, including ours and three other new ones — I did not collapse in fear that my beloved dog would die.

“Out of an abundance of caution,” (the county official’s words) we are required to keep Harley in quarantine from other dogs (except his best buddy Koda, our border collie mix who’s also in lockdown) for 30 days. During this time we should monitor him for symptoms and give him loads of hugs because he is the best dog ever, and we could not bear to lose him. (OK, that last bit is not part of the official protocol, but we’re doing it anyway.)

We also had to fill out several forms and send in copies of his vaccination certificates as well as his photo. The county quickly distributed leaflets throughout the neighborhood, warning residents that a rabid bat had been found near the cross streets of our house and providing information of what to do if you find an ailing or dead bat in or near your house. (Which is how I learned that we should have covered the poor thing with a box or bucket and called animal control.)

All of this raised my personal anxiety level but was generally reassuring: L.A. County is very serious about preventing a resurgence of rabies.

With vaccinations of all kinds currently under siege, including among pet owners, I offer this story as a reminder: Rabies, like many other terrible diseases, still exists and can appear in your life when you least expect it.

My kids have never worried about meeting up with mad dogs (or whether their father would be able to shoot them) because they, and we, are privileged to live in a time when science has eradicated a fatal threat that was ubiquitous less than 60 years ago.

That luxury has, I fear, made us forgetful. Just as the success of other vaccines has lulled too many people to falsely believe that they need not fear measles or COVID-19 or, God help us, polio, the long absence of rabies gave me a false sense of security. I did not view that bat as a peril until I was reminded, by medical professionals and government officials, to do so.

In other words, I had never personally encountered rabies so I thought I never would. And then I did.

Maybe I should start buying lottery tickets.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Drones and salami: How Putin is testing the West with Poland airspace violation | World News

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The unprecedented Russian drone attacks on Poland are both a test and a warning.  How Europe and NATO respond could be crucial to security on this continent.

The Russians are past masters at what’s called “salami slicing”. Tactics that use a series of smaller actions to produce a much bigger outcome that otherwise would have been far more provocative.

The Kremlin is probing the West with gradual but steady escalation. A British Council building and an EU installation are bombed in Kyiv; a senior EU official’s plane’s GPS is jammed.

On their own each provocation produces nothing more than rhetoric from the West – but new lines are crossed and Russia is emboldened.

Ukraine war latest: NATO chief sends message to Putin

Image:
Vladimir Putin has a history of testing the West. Pic: Sputnik/Alexei Druzhinin/Kremlin via Reuters

Putin is good at this.

He used salami slicing tactics masterfully in 2014 with his “little green men” invasion of Crimea, a range of ambiguous military and diplomatic tactics to take control. The West’s confused delay in responding sealed Crimea’s fate.

He has just taken a larger slice of salami with his drone attacks on Poland.

A drone found in a field in Mniszkow, eastern Poland
Image:
A drone found in a field in Mniszkow, eastern Poland


They are of course a test of NATO’s readiness to deploy its Article 5 obligations. Russia has attacked a member state, allies believe deliberately.

Will NATO trigger the all for one, one for all mechanism in Poland’s defence and attack Russia? Not very likely.

But failing to respond projects weakness. Putin will see the results of his test and plot the next one.

Expect lots of talk of sanctions but remember they failed to avert this invasion and have failed to persuade Russia to reverse it. The only sanctions likely to bite are the ones the US president refuses to approve, on Russia’s oil trade.

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Russia’s Poland incursion represents ‘new chapter’ in Ukraine war, expert says

So how are the drones also a warning? Well, they pose a question.

Vladimir Putin is asking the West if it really wants to become more involved in this conflict with its own forces. Europeans are considering putting boots on the ground inside Ukraine after any potential ceasefire.

If this latest attack is awkward and complicated and hard to respond to now, what happens if Russia uses hybrid tactics then?

Deniable, ambiguous methods that the Russians excel in could make life very difficult for the alliance if it is embroiled in Ukraine.

Think twice before committing your troops there, Russia is warning the West.

Read more:
The pivotal question for NATO
Trump ready to move to second stage of Russia sanctions

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There is more Europe could do.

It could stop buying Russian energy, which it is still astonishingly importing – more than 20 billion euros a year at the last count.

It could use its massive economic advantage (20 times that of Russia’s, and that was before the war) to do more to fund Ukraine’s defence.

While it continues to do neither, expect more excruciating slices of the salami to come.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

By listening to these birds for decades, scientists track signs of a changing forest : NPR

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Miranda Zamarelli and Dick Holmes of Dartmouth College review one of the early paper maps used to chart songbird territories in a patch of woods in central New Hampshire.

Ari Daniel/For NPR


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Ari Daniel/For NPR

Miranda Zammarelli hikes into the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in central New Hampshire, pausing when she sees a tree with a pink ribbon wrapped around its trunk.

Zammarelli, a behavioral ecologist and PhD candidate at Dartmouth College, knows that ribbon well. It marks the corner of a 25-acre field site first established in 1969 to map the territories of the songbirds inhabiting it.

Her task now is simply to wander, wait and listen.

On this early morning in June, it doesn’t take long before a soft melody wafts down from the treetops. “That’s a black-throated blue warbler,” murmurs Zammarelli with a kind of reverence.

She uses a mapping app on her phone to input the location of the bird based on where she’s just heard him. The warbler’s small enough to fit in the palm of her hand, but this is breeding season and he’s got something big to say.

“He is singing right now because this is his territory,” she says. “So one bird sings, another bird responds. They’re basically having what I call a territorial rap battle. ‘Hey, this is my space, stay away.’ And the other bird’s like, ‘No, this is my space, stay away.’ And they’re singing back and forth trying to claim their spot.”

A male’s territory is where he’ll attract his mate and raise his young, so there’s a lot riding on his song.

Zammarelli and others have been mapping these territories for the last month and a half, documenting where some two dozen species of songbirds are located. These birds are high up in the food web, and they help disperse seeds and eat insects. Many of them are migratory, traveling between here and the Caribbean or Central or South America.

It’s important to understand these territories, says Zamarelli, because they offer a window into “the quality of the forest habitat for these birds.” Territories mean the forest is a healthy place for birds. “If birds are not using the habitat or less likely to have a territory there,” she says, “we can begin asking why.”

The territory maps go back decades. Before the cell phone app, they were all sketched by hand.

Seeing the forest for the birds

Dick Holmes gridded out and launched this field site back when he was just starting out as a biologist at Dartmouth. Today, he’s almost 89, and a professor emeritus.

“We have maps for every species for each of the 57 years,” he says, unfolding one of them. “So all the observations, you add ’em up from day to day, and you end up with a seasonal pattern showing all the different territories on the plot.”

The maps are swarms of X’s, arrows, dotted lines, and circles, the latter of which delineate the territories.

In the beginning, Holmes had a fairly simple question. He wanted to know how energy flows through an ecosystem — that is, how songbirds fit into the food web of their forest.

“How much energy do they use?” he says. “Where do they get their food?”

As Holmes and his team gathered more information on the birds year after year, their questions evolved. “We got interested in what determines the number of birds and why are their numbers increasing or decreasing,” he says.

For instance, the researchers heard a bird called the least flycatcher on the plot for the last time in 1994. And the American redstart — a jetblack little fellow with orange splashes — pretty much stopped breeding here in the early 2000s.

The primary reason appears to be that the forest — which had been clearcut in the 1920s and then left to regrow, undisturbed — has been aging and changing ever since. “It’s naturally growing, and we’re seeing how the bird populations and bird communities change as a result of this natural growth,” says Zammarelli.

That is, the ups and downs of these little songbirds have revealed how the forest around them has grown up. It’s a result that matches work done elsewhere, including a classic 1950 study from the southeastern U.S.

“There’s some species that seem to do well in a young forest,” says Holmes. “And as that forest ages, those changes cause the birds to move elsewhere.”

This field site has hosted hundreds of students and yielded over 200 scientific publications, all of which depended on poring over those paper maps — until Zammarelli began her PhD a few years back and her advisor, Matthew Ayres, asked if she knew anyone who could digitize them.

Each of these circles represents a different songbird territory. And each "X" corresponds to a bird that was seen or heard on the forest plot. Solid lines show flight movements and dotted lines register birds countersinging to one another.

Each of these circles represents a different songbird territory. And each “X” corresponds to a bird that was seen or heard on the forest plot. Solid lines show flight movements and dotted lines register birds countersinging to one another.

Ari Daniel/For NPR


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Ari Daniel/For NPR

“I was like, ‘I can do it,'” she recalls responding. “I had digitized collections before. That would be no problem at all.”

Holmes applauds Zammarelli’s efforts. “I had not even thought of the idea of digitizing, frankly, but I was glad to see it done,” he says. “Miranda’s done a bang-up job.”

A solid past, a flighty future

Getting the 50-plus years of maps into the computer enabled Zammarelli to bring the data to life in a new way and ask new questions. “That allowed us to look at how these birds are using the space, where are they using the space, and also how big of a territory they’re occupying in the habitat,” she says.

In a paper published in Ecology Letters late last year, Zammarelli and her colleagues considered seven species and found that birds, no matter the number, divide the habitat up equally. That means lots of chicks, which help keep songbird populations stable over time.

It’s a finding made possible by decades of mapmaking. “I think about all the hands these maps touched,” reflects Zammarelli. “This data’s like twice my lifetime. I feel very lucky and very grateful to be a part of a system that has been going on for over 50 years.”

To his knowledge, Holmes says this is the longest detailed record of breeding birds anywhere in the U.S., possibly the world.

“It’s important in terms of understanding what we’re doing to our environment,” he says. “Things are changing rapidly for various reasons … climate change being one. And trying to understand why these are happening, and how they’re happening is quite important.”

But he says the project now finds itself in a precarious place.

“Now, with the budgets being cut by the current administration, it’s hard to tell what’s gonna happen in the next few years,” says Holmes.

But at least for the next few minutes, Holmes and Zammarelli know exactly what will happen. The birds will continue to fill the air with melody, singing the collective song of their forest.



This story originally appeared on NPR

Microsoft to tap Anthropic for Office 365 as enterprises weigh risks of AI lock-in – Computerworld

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“The downside, of course, is the margin stacking that results,” Harrowell said. “AWS is not the cheapest LLM API provider, and their margin is layered on top of Anthropic’s. Microsoft will want to bring it on-platform as soon as they understand it and have the capacity. They seem to be buying capacity in every direction at the moment, with the deal with Nebius possibly reflecting delays in the Maia AI-ASICs.”

This means that delays in Microsoft’s Maia AI-ASICs, which underpin Azure’s AI capacity, may be forcing the company to rely on AWS to run Anthropic’s models.

However, this kind of cooperation between competitors is not unusual for the tech sector, according to Sharath Srinivasamurthy, research vice president at IDC. For instance, Apple sources display panels from Samsung despite being direct competitors in the smartphone market.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

LoL esports team suspends player for saying women can’t compete while menstruating

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A popular League of Legends esports player, Bwipo, has been suspended by his organization after he said on a Twitch stream that women shouldn’t be playing competitively while menstruating. Bwipo, whose real name is Gabriël Rau, told viewers on a Twitch stream: “I think there’s just not enough support for female pro players… women’s anatomy and their monthly cycles are just extremely different from males, and there’s no proper support system for women to go through what they’re going through.” And before he mentioned women’s anatomies, some viewers were probably thinking that he was going to talk about how there should be more support for women in esports. But then he continued:

“…even men just tilt out of their f—ing minds when they’re playing League of Legends. So, when a woman is on the wrong part of the month and playing competitively, there is a time of the month where you should not be f—ing playing competitive games as a woman, in my opinion.” He justified his statement by saying that it’s based on his experience “living with one for a while.” He claimed the woman he lived with played League of Legends made it “really obvious when she was just getting irritated at every stupid little thing.” Bwipo added: “This is not me trying to be sexist or anything.” His video circulated on Reddit, but it’s no longer available.

In a response to his statement posted on TikTok, the host and co-creator of League Awards, Eefje “sjokz” Depoorter, criticized and opposed his views. “I thought we’re past that,” she said about Bwipo calling a woman’s period the “wrong” time of the month. “That’s such a crazy take,” sjokz continued, talking about how women make Olympic records, climb mountains, work 24-hour shifts, are providers for their children, and care for the elderly, all while bleeding buckets and experiencing pain. “Also the notion that men aren’t emotional in games of League…” she trailed off and made a sound.

Bwipo’s organization, FlyQuest, then posted an announcement on X, acknowledging that he “made sexist comments” and that they were “antithetical” to its core values. “Comments that might discourage even one young woman from pursuing her dream of becoming a pro player harm the future of esports, and we take that very seriously,” it wrote. FlyQuest has decided to suspend “Bwipo from play for the next series in the LTA playoffs,” which he’s currently in. The organization is also donating his prize money from the event to causes that support women in gaming. To note, FlyQuest has an esports team called Red that showcases “women and gender expansive folks in gaming.”

After FlyQuest’s announcement, Bwipo posted an apology on X, admitting wrongdoing. “I’m sorry to those I hurt,” he wrote. “I regret using my platform to fuel vitriol and sexism instead of support.”




This story originally appeared on Engadget

Does a falling Associated British Foods share price signal an incoming recession?

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Image source: Getty Images

The Associated British Foods (LSE: ABF) share price fell 10% in early trading today (10 September) after it released a key trading update, ahead of full-year results later in the year. The FTSE 100 firm owns a motley collection of businesses across retail and grocery.

I view the health of the company as a bellwether for the wider UK economy. So, could it be signalling that tough times are ahead?

Primark

Accounting for 50% of the group’s revenue, Primark is the business that I watch most closely. One of the primary reasons why I bought the stock was a belief that its brand would resonate with consumers in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis. However, it would seem that even retailers at the lower end of the price spectrum are not immune to a consumer squeeze.

In H2 that ends in a few days’ time, the retailer is expecting sales growth to be lacklustre at 1%. Like-for-like sales are expected to come in around 2% lower than the same period last year.

However, there were some big disparities across different regions. In Central and Eastern Europe sales are expected to increase 9%, and in the US by 23%. But these account for a tiny fraction of total sales.

The UK is by far the most important region. Here, sales are expected to grow 1% in H2.

Consumer squeeze

It is easy for the retailer to blame macroeconomic factors for stuttering sales. I mean, what retailer out there is not struggling at the moment. But is it the only factor?

Back at H1 results, a sales decrease of 4%, led to Primark’s market share reducing from 6.9% to 6.7%. According to the latest figures from Kantar, it currently stands at 6.8%.

An unusually mild autumn last year was blamed for a poor set of numbers in H1. But with one of the hottest and driest spring and summer on record, I would have expected buoyant consumer shopping. Could it be that the consumer is falling out of love with a brand because of its limited online offering?

Click & Collect has finally reached all its 187 UK stores. But for me it is very difficult to assess the extent of its success in driving footfall into its stores.

Other businesses

One of the attractions of ABF (as it’s known) to me is that even if one part of its business is underperforming others get the opportunity to shine. Unfortunately, it looks as though Primark’s woes could be contagious.

In grocery, the picture looks mixed. Allied Bakeries, which manufactures Kingsmill bread, has been a loss-making business for some time, with the rising prominence of speciality breads. An expected merger with rival Hovis is a sensible move.

Many of its brand continue to perform well, though. This includes Twinings Tea and Ovaltine, in response to marketing and product innovation.

Bottom line

I continue to believe that the UK is heading for a recession. Indeed, I would not be surprised if we are not already in one.

The consumer has long tapped out and that has undoubtedly hurt ABF sales. I own the stock and will not sell because it is a well-run, conservatively managed business. But I am certainly not in a rush to buy more any time soon, either.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool