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Astronomers spot a super-rare class of black hole for the first time

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As Vanderbilt University research assistant professor, Dr. Karam Jani, explained to Engadget, the signal itself was minuscule — a mere four squiggly lines lasting just a tenth of a second — but its implications for our understanding of the cosmos are immense. “We were able to confirm that this came from a collision of two black holes,” Jani said. “Both of those are extremely massive; something that we know that stars cannot make.” 

The individual black holes weighed roughly 85 and 65 times the mass of the sun, respectively. Both are beyond the theoretical weight limit of collapsars. When they smashed together six billion years ago in a region of space 5 gigaparsecs away, they released “eight solar masses of energy” in the form of a gravitational wave and gave birth to the even more massive IMBH that the team detected, according to a Vanderbilt press release.

Jani explains that IMBHs exist in what is known as a “black hole desert” given that we previously had no observationally confirmed signal of an IMBH’s existence. “We just don’t know.. like it is a gap in nature,” Jani posited. “Does [nature] have a certain preference of making only a few black holes in these different masses?”

Of course, the universe is a big place and just because we hadn’t found any IMBHs to date doesn’t mean we weren’t looking for them. Astronomers have found 305 potential candidates based on the analysis of more than a million images taken during the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. However their presences were noticed based on the emissions of ultraluminous X ray sources (ULXs) and the movement of globular clusters, never direct observation. Astronomers in 2009 discovered one such luminous candidate at the edge of the ESO 243-49 galaxy 290 million light years away (below).

ESO 243-49

NASA/ESA

“Such a detection is essential,” lead author Sean Farrell of the University of Leicester said in 2009. “While it is already known that stellar-mass black holes are the remnants of massive stars, the formation mechanisms of supermassive black holes are still unknown. The identification of HLX-1 is therefore an important step towards a better understanding of the formation of the supermassive black holes that exist at the center of the Milky Way and other galaxies.”

“This is a milestone in modern astronomy and a personal milestone after six years of intensive research of hunting these elusive black holes,” Jani said. “The system we’ve discovered is so bizarre that it breaks a number of previous assumptions about how black holes form.” He notes that the process for making an IMBH is 500 times more rare than that of either stellar or supermassive black holes — on par with the odds of intercepting a golf ball shot from Argentina in mid-flight with a second golf ball shot from China.

“We have looked into every known scenario that would have created this black hole but don’t have a conclusive explanation for it just yet,” he concluded. “What we do know for certain is that whatever makes this intermediate-mass black hole is a much rarer process. We will need to find many more to understand their origins.”

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Engadget The Morning After | Engadget

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— Richard

NVIDIA’s RTX 3070, 3080 and 3090 arrive to take the graphics processing crown

The 3090 has 24GB of RAM and is 50 percent faster than a Titan RTX.

RTX 30 Series graphics cards

After teases, leaks and rumors, the NVIDIA 30 Series RTX GPUs are here. That’s good news for almost everyone, except maybe anyone who just finished a high-priced PC build using a formerly top-of-the-line 2080Ti graphics setup. 

That’s because the 30 Series uses new Ampere architecture, which blows away the floating point performance of its older Turing technology. These cards can pack up to 24GB of RAM and, at the high-end, the $1,499 RTX 3090 card is ready for 8K gaming at 60 fps.

Meanwhile, there are lower-priced options, and even the $499 RTX 3070 will outperform a 2080Ti once it ships in October. Like the 3090, the RTX 3080 will have Micron’s latest GDDR6X memory on board and go on sale September 17th for $699.
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The Galaxy Z Fold 2 unveiled

Samsung’s next foldable launches September 18th.

Galaxy Z Fold 2

Pre-orders are already open for the Galaxy Z Fold 2, but with its $2,000 price, I can understand why you want to know a bit more before you get in line. Fortunately, we not only have the breakdown of specs and features, Cherlynn Low and Chris Velazco did a live streamed hands-on session, so you can see Samsung’s latest foldable phone in action.

Take a few minutes and check out the “advanced” Multi-Active Window multitasking, or how apps like Microsoft Office fill the extra space and even add a PC-like toolbar at the top. The price has gone up $20 from the original, but the software might make a dual-screen experience worthwhile this time.
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Walmart’s $98-a-year Amazon Prime rival launches September 15th

Let them fight.

Walmart+

On September 15th, customers can hand over $98 a year, or $12.95 a month, to join the membership-and-benefits program. The big perk that Walmart+ offers is unlimited free delivery on orders over $35 from its network of 4,700 stores across the US, many of which can get your items to you the same day.
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Apple’s iOS 13.7 adds an ‘Express’ option to the Exposure Notifications API

This might be the last big update before iOS 14.

Among the updates in iOS 13.7 is a tweak to the COVID-19 exposure notification API, made by Apple and Google. The Exposure Notifications Express framework allows you to more easily participate in your local health authority’s efforts to inform people if they’ve been in contact with someone who got sick with COVID-19, even if they haven’t released an app.

When you upgrade, you’ll see a new section of the Settings menu that includes a toggle to Turn on Exposure Notifications. Doing so will let you know if there’s an app you can download in your area. Meanwhile, in places where the local health authorities have decided to use Apple’s new framework, iOS 13.7 allows you to receive exposure notifications on your device without downloading a separate app to your phone. Google will roll out a version of the Express setup for Android phones later this month.
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But wait, there’s more…

Amazon drivers are hanging phones in trees to get more deliveries

Joe Biden’s team brings official campaign signs to ‘Animal Crossing’

JAXJOX made an interactive fitness studio you can build over time

Facebook and Twitter caught Russian trolls running a literal fake news site

FDA approves first automated insulin system for kids

Alienware rolls out laptops with 360Hz displays

‘Game of Thrones’ duo are making a ‘Three-Body Problem’ series for Netflix

‘Fortnite’ will soon support ray-tracing and NVIDIA’s DLSS tech

NVIDIA’s Reflex technology promises to reduce input lag on your PC

‘Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War’ will have ray-tracing support

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Russian law could force Apple to cut App Store fee to 20 percent

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A Russian lawmaker has proposed a bill that would see all app store transactions capped at 20 percent,  down from the usual 30 percent. Reuters is reporting that Fedot Tumusov, a member of the State Duma, Russia’s lower house in its parliament, has tabled the law. At the same time, it would mandate that a third of the app store commission would be paid to the government as part of a fund to train people in IT.

Apple, Google, Valve and other companies that run software stores have a fairly common practice of taking a 30 percent cut from each transaction. This has become an increasingly-contentious issue, especially with Apple, as more developers and regulators complain that it is unfair. Discussion about the rules, in both the US and Europe, with strong backing from rival software companies like Epic, will continue to rumble.

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Rocket Lab gains FAA approval to launch missions from the US

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Rocket Lab is on a roll this week. After successfully returning to launch following a failure in July, the company announced that it has received FAA clearance to launch small satellites from its Electron rockets in the US. So far, all its missions have flown from the Launch Complex 1 (LC-1) facility in New Zealand, but it can now officially operate from its LC-2 pad at Wallops Island, Virginia.

Rocket Lab unveiled the Wallops site late in 2018 and had the opening ceremony towards the end of last year. The company also built a third launch complex in New Zealand, all to serve its goal of eventually launching up to 130 Electron rockets per year. It hopes a lot of those will be for US government customers, so the FAA permit is a big step to “streamline the path to orbit and enable responsive space access from US soil,” the company wrote in a press release.

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Samsung’s Premiere 4K ultra short throw is the first projector certified for HDR10+

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“Over the past few months, we have seen how consumers are spending more time at home and how the role of everyday life continues to change. TV has become the center of entertainment, a fitness partner, a co-worker and a source for news. The Premiere re-imagines the home cinema experience with an all-new, compact design, 4K picture quality and big sound for tight spaces that can be used for any at-home activity and living room arrangements.”

In addition, both Premiere models will come equipped with Samsung’s Smart TV platform, so viewers can access all the streaming apps they want and take advantage of mobile connectivity features, such as mirroring. They’ll come with Filmmaker Mode, as well, which strips content of motion smoothing, enabling viewers to enjoy movies as the filmmakers intended.

While the models have similar feature sets, they do have another difference aside from the sizes of the images they can project: The LSP9T supports HDR10+, making it the first projector certified for the standard. If you’ll recall, Samsung and Amazon launched HDR10+ as an open standard alternative to Dolby Vision back in 2017, and most of the Korean tech giant’s newer TV models already support the feature. HDR10+, Samsung said back then, can adjust brightness on a “scene-by-scene or even frame-by-frame basis.”

The Premiere will be available starting later this year in the US, Europe, Korea and other regions, but Samsung has yet to reveal how much it will cost. It calls the projector the “new anchor product” in its lifestyle product portfolio, though, so it mostly likely won’t be one of its more affordable devices.

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Amazon opens the first permanent online-only Whole Foods store

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Amazon opened the new location on September 1st to exclusively serve customers in the Brooklyn area. In its announcement, the company said that grocery delivery continues to be one of its fastest-growing businesses and that online grocery sales tripled year-over-year for the second quarter of 2020. “[W]e’re thrilled to increase access to grocery delivery. It’s never been more important,” the announcement reads.

While the new location could help Whole Foods fulfill the bigger demand for grocery delivery these days, Amazon actually started working on the project a year ago. Since people need access to online services now more than ever, it might not be the last permanent online-only store Amazon and Whole Foods open.

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LG teases a reveal of its dual-screen ‘Wing’ phone on September 14th

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LG claims this device is just the first one in its Explorer Project, which “will include devices that deliver distinctive and yet unexplored usability experiences,” while phones like the Velvet represent mainstream needs in its Universal line.

The teaser doesn’t clearly show the Wing in action, but LG announced Rave, Ficto, Tubi and Naver as partners in the project, with the hardware powered by Qualcomm’s chips. Tubi is a name we know for free ad-supported video streaming, while South Korean search giant (and owner of the Line messaging app) Naver is apparently working on a customized dual-screen web browser.

We should get all the details on this Explorer Project and the LG Wing on September 14th at 10AM ET.

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DARPA’s hypersonic weapons move closer to free-flight testing

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Defense News points out an earlier report that one of the weapons was destroyed during a captive carry test, but DARPA said those results were classified. According to today’s announcement, both variants have successfully completed captive carry tests.

Next up is testing that focuses on “ hydrocarbon scramjet-powered propulsion and thermal management techniques to enable prolonged hypersonic cruise, in addition to affordable system designs and manufacturing approaches.” Program manager Andrew Knoedler said in a statement that “These tests provide us a large measure of confidence – already well informed by years of simulation and wind tunnel work – that gives us faith the unique design path we embarked on will provide unmatched capability to US forces.”

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AT&T reportedly backs away from selling Warner Bros. Interactive

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For the time being, AT&T has reportedly decided against selling its Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment gaming division to another company. According to Bloomberg, the telecom concluded the unit was too valuable to ditch, even if a sale would have helped the company with its $165 billion debt load. 

When news of the potential sale first broke, CNBC reported the sale of the division could have netted AT&T as much as $4 billion. Several prominent video game publishers were reportedly interested, including Microsoft, Take-Two, EA and Activision Blizzard. Bloomberg reports two main factors likely led to AT&T’s decision to scrap the sale.

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B&H Photo knocks $250 off Lenovo’s high-powered Legion 7 laptop

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This particular model is $250 off and its specs are impressive: in addition to the RTX 2070 GPU with Max-Q, it’s powered by a 10th-gen Core i7 processor, 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. It also has a 15.6-inch 1080p, 240Hz display, so you’re getting an even better refresh rate than on the discounted Razer Blade 15. This discount is a good one for a gaming laptop with high-powered specs like this.

Just keep in mind that this model isn’t the latest Legion laptop — Lenovo announced new Legion 5i and 7i machines yesterday that will be available in October. However, the design hasn’t changed much, although the new models are less weighty, and they add support for NVIDIA’s Advanced Optimus graphics switching and a new air intake mechanism that should keep the new laptops even cooler than previous models. But even if you skip the latest advancements, you’ll still be able to do a ton of gaming on this discounted Legion 7 laptop.

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