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When Does MW3 Season 1 Start?
When Does MW3 Season 1 Start?
MW3 Season 1 likely starts on Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2023, and includes the MW3 Battle Pass, Urzikstan, and new multiplayer maps.
2023-11-14 05:56
HP Envy 16 (2023) Review
HP Envy 16 (2023) Review
Back in October, we said the 2022 HP Envy 16 passed its legendary Apple and
2023-08-10 05:26
SEC enforcement chief rejects criticism of crypto crackdown
SEC enforcement chief rejects criticism of crypto crackdown
By Chris Prentice NEW YORK A top U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) official on Friday rejected criticism
2023-06-17 04:26
The best VPN deals in June 2023
The best VPN deals in June 2023
The online world can be a dangerous place, with hackers, viruses, and surveillance software lurking
2023-06-02 20:50
Meta rolls back measures to tackle COVID misinformation
Meta rolls back measures to tackle COVID misinformation
Meta Platforms said on Friday a policy that was put in place to curb the spread of misinformation
2023-06-16 23:53
TikTok stars Addison Rae, Bella Poarch and Charli D'Amelio fall victim to deepfake porn scandal
TikTok stars Addison Rae, Bella Poarch and Charli D'Amelio fall victim to deepfake porn scandal
Manipulated images and videos depict the faces of these popular TikTokers imposed onto explicit pornographic content without their consent
2023-06-16 20:47
Upgrade your PC with Windows 11 Home for just $29.97
Upgrade your PC with Windows 11 Home for just $29.97
TL;DR: Through Sept. 17, you can get a lifetime license to Microsoft Windows 11 Home
2023-09-12 17:24
How to claim your Fortnite refund as part of the FTC settlement
How to claim your Fortnite refund as part of the FTC settlement
Folks who made unwanted purchases in Fortnite can start cashing in. Epic Games reached a
2023-09-20 23:21
EU antitrust regulators halt Amazon, iRobot probe, await info
EU antitrust regulators halt Amazon, iRobot probe, await info
BRUSSELS EU antitrust regulators have delayed their investigation into Amazon's $1.7 billion acquisition of robot vacuum cleaner maker
2023-09-12 00:24
Account tracking Elon Musk’s jet is now on Threads after it was suspended from Twitter
Account tracking Elon Musk’s jet is now on Threads after it was suspended from Twitter
The popular Twitter account tracking Elon Musk’s private jet, which was suspended from the social media platform, now has a new presence on Instagram’s rival platform Threads. “ElonJet has arrived to Threads,” the new account named “Elon Musk’s Jet” run by the University of Central Florida student Jack Sweeney posted last week. Mr Sweeney was stopped by Twitter last year from posting the realtime whereabouts of Mr Musk’s private jet using publicly available data. He had started tracking Musk’s plane in 2020, and at the time of his Twitter account’s suspension, it had over 500,000 followers. The Twitter owner reasoned that anyone posting real-time coordinates would be suspended “as it is a physical safety violation” after his son was pursued by an unknown motorist in Los Angeles. “Criticising me all day long is totally fine, but doxxing my real-time location and endangering my family is not,” Mr Musk said. “Legal action is being taken against Sweeney & organizations who supported harm to my family,” the Tesla titan said in a separate tweet. Following this, Mr Sweeney began posting on Twitter with the account, ElonJet but Delayed, sharing information on the SpaceX chief’s private jet’s movements with a 24-hour delay. However, he continued to post real-time updates on the plane on rival social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Mastodon. But despite Mr Musk’s threat, no “legal action” appears to have been taken against the college student. “Remember when Elon said he would sue me. Just another empty threat,” Mr Sweeney posted on Threads on Friday. Now, finding a new home on Threads, Mr Sweeney’s new account has already racked up more than 78,000 followers at the time of writing. “I’m honestly hoping Twitter dies... As I am hindered on there, you search for my name, seems I’m search banned,” the college student told Insider. Mr Sweeney also shared that while he would be posting manual updates of Mr Musk’s private jet to the new Threads account for now, he hopes Meta would allow him to return to auto-posting. “Zuck will I be allowed to stay,” he posted, seemingly taking a jibe at his account’s suspension on Twitter by Mr Musk. Read More Elon Musk says ‘Zuck is cuck’ as Threads inches closer to 100m users Threads: Kim Kardashian and the Dalai Lama among celebrities joining Meta’s new app Mark Zuckerberg trolls Elon Musk by posting Spider-Man meme on Twitter after launching rival Threads Elon Musk says ‘Zuck is cuck’ as Threads inches closer to 100m users Threads hits 70 million sign-ups on its second day Mark Zuckerberg trolls Elon Musk with Spider-Man meme after launching Twitter rival
2023-07-10 13:45
Threads active users have halved in a week, report says
Threads active users have halved in a week, report says
Meta's Threads had a moment in which it seemed it would overtake Twitter in a
2023-07-18 15:20
Scientists discover that megaladon's went extinct because of themselves
Scientists discover that megaladon's went extinct because of themselves
Scientists believe they have discovered the cause of the megalodon's extinction – and no, it’s not Jason Statham. Experts have been conducting research on fossils of teeth from the biggest species of shark the world has ever seen, which went extinct around 3.6 million years ago and measured at least 15 metres long. Research published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences explains that the animal was actually partially warm-blooded. Unlike most cold-blood sharks, the body temperature is thought to have been around 27 degrees. The temperature is higher than the sea temperatures around the time. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Study co author Robert Eagle, who is professor of marine science and geobiology at UCLA, said [via CNN]: “We found that O. megalodon had body temperatures significantly elevated compared to other sharks, consistent with it having a degree of internal heat production as modern warm-blooded (endothermic) animals do.” They were able to prove that the animals were warm-blooded by analysing how carbon-13 and oxygen-18 isotopes were closely bonded together in the fossilised teeth. Senior study author Kenshu Shimada is a paleobiologist at DePaul University in Chicago, who said: “A large body promotes efficiency in prey capture with wider spatial coverage, but it requires a lot of energy to maintain. “We know that Megalodon had gigantic cutting teeth used for feeding on marine mammals, such as cetaceans and pinnipeds, based on the fossil record. The new study is consistent with the idea that the evolution of warm-bloodedness was a gateway for the gigantism in Megalodon to keep up with the high metabolic demand.” The fact it was warm-blooded means that regulating body temperature could have been the cause of its eventual demise. The Earth was cooling when the animal went extinct, which could have been a critical factor. “The fact that Megalodon disappeared suggests the likely vulnerability of being warm-blooded because warm-bloodedness requires constant food intake to sustain high metabolism,” Shimada said. “Possibly, there was a shift in the marine ecosystem due to the climatic cooling,” causing the sea level to drop, altering the habitats of the populations of the types of food megalodon fed on such as marine mammals and leading to its extinction. “One of the big implications for this work is that it highlights the vulnerability of large apex predators, such the modern great white shark, to climate change given similarities in their biology with megalodon,” said lead study author Michael Griffiths, professor of environmental science, geochemist and paleoclimatologist at William Paterson University. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-07-04 21:54