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Major Homebuilder To Test Placing Mini Data Centers in Suburban Backyards

NewtonsLaw writes: According to Realtor.com, a California startup called Span plans to partner with Nvidia, PulteGroup, and other homebuilders to equip new homes with mini-data centers, so as to relieve the need to build and power much larger traditional centers. The article states the company "can install 8,000 XFRA units about six times faster and at five times lower cost than the construction of a typical centralized 100 megawatt data center of the same size." Could this be the solution to at least some of the problems hindering the rollout of greater data-center capacity for AI systems? "One big reason the XFRA model works is that the average American home only uses about 40 percent of its electrical capacity," Span said. "As big data center developers struggle to find power sources and distribution capacity, XFRA uses capacity that's already available."

The startup says they will launch a 100-home proof of concept within the year to see if the idea is viable.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

404 Media

404 Media is an independent media company founded by technology journalists Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg, Samantha Cole, and Joseph Cox.

‘HELLO BOSS’: Inside the Chinese Realtime Deepfake Software Powering Scams Around the World

‘HELLO BOSS’: Inside the Chinese Realtime Deepfake Software Powering Scams Around the World

“Oh my god. Oh my god,” I yelled as I looked at my own face on someone else’s body. It was all there: my five o’clock shadow, my goofy grin, even the bags under my eyes.

I was on a Microsoft Teams call interacting with this deepfake version of myself in realtime. Ordinarily the other person on the line looks nothing like me, but by using a gaming laptop and a sought-after, cutting edge piece of software for scammers, his face morphed into mine. My deepfake pinched his cheek, covered his nose, and stroked his chin, all without the illusion breaking.

Whereas video deepfakes used to be about superimposing someone’s face onto an existing video, the tool I was using promised something else: the ability to shapeshift into someone—anyone—live during a video call. After weeks of back and forth with the Chinese-language scammers selling the tool, called Haotian AI, I had obtained a copy of the software. Haotian AI is built to work specifically with platforms we all use everyday: WhatsApp, Microsoft Teams, Zoom, TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube.

💡
Do you know anything else about Haotian AI, similar technology, or scam compounds? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.

Haotian AI marks the next stage in deepfake scams and fraud, one that the public and tech companies may not be ready for, where criminals are able to change their appearance in real time to trick people, including Americans, into handing over their money. Romance scams, tax fraud, virtual kidnappings: all stand to be amplified by live deepfake software which continues to improve in quality.

404 Media’s experimentation with Haotian AI marks the first time a journalist has managed to test this software to see how it really works, how effective it is, and what its existence means for the present and very near future of scams. Our investigation finds Haotian AI demonstrates its tool as a way to impersonate at least one U.S. police department. We link Haotian AI to Chinese money laundering networks and the ecosystem providing services to massive scam compounds in South East Asia, and find that Haotian AI has brought in more than $4 million dollars for its creators. Our investigation also reveals Haotian AI is likely based on open source face swap tools, meaning the true value of the software is its sophisticated technical support. With that, even the least tech-savvy criminals can now access realtime deepfake software, opening up the possibility for more fraudsters around the world to use this powerful technology.

“It is far ahead of everything on the market,” the user interface of Haotian AI reads.

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A clip of a Microsoft Teams call using Haotian AI.

Haotian AI’s realtime deepfakes can be particularly impressive, able to handle adjustments in lighting and objects appearing in front of the subject’s face, according to demos the company has posted on Telegram. One demo video shows an Asian woman magically transforming into actor Gal Gadot. In the demo, the deepfake Gadot blows a kiss, covers one of her eyes, and rapidly swipes her hand past her face, with the software not glitching once. Other tools sometimes fail when a user touches their own face. When they do so, the software malfunctions and shows the real person underneath. In the demos, Haotian AI keeps the illusion going, though. Another demo video shows a realistic, albeit dewy skinned, Elon Musk and Jackie Chan. 

In a direct and live demonstration with me over the messaging app Telegram, a Haotian AI technician showed in real time how the software can also make a subject’s lips thicker or thinner, or their jawline sharper or more rounded. The user interface of Haotian AI also lets customers adjust the size of their deepfake’s nose, use an “acne removal” feature, and change the shape of their eyes. For an effective deepfake, some configuration may be required, according to 404 Media’s own tests.

And Haotian AI may not just beat the human eye, but tools designed to detect deepfakes as well. Xception is a deepfake detection model; in a paper published last June, researchers found it “struggled” to detect Haotian AI-generated deepfakes.

“While Xception hit 89.1% accuracy on the control stuff, it misclassified almost 100% of the Haotian samples as ‘authentic,’” Charles Fross, one of the authors of that paper, told 404 Media in an email. “Haotian’s work is shockingly convincing, especially with how it handles facial and body movements.”

There are now a variety of ways to produce deepfakes, but generally they work by training a machine learning model on images of a person’s face, then mapping that face onto another face in a video, frame by frame, a process that could take seconds, minutes, or more, depending on the method on how long the video is. Realtime deepfakes work similarly, but are more sophisticated because they have to track a face and map the deepfake face onto it moment to moment.

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One of Haotian AI's demonstration videos.

Haotian AI is squarely part of the sprawling Chinese-language crime ecosystem that provides services to multibillion scam compounds in South East Asia. In practical terms, these networks exist on Telegram. Once you join a central channel which lists vetted services on offer, you can access what feels like a limitless array of illegal products: Money laundering. Malware. “High-end” escorts. These Chinese-language Telegram networks are easily accessible, dangerous, and massive. Researchers have said one market, called Xinbi Guarantee, has facilitated a massive $21 billion in transactions. Authorities have attempted to sever another, called Huione Group, from the U.S. financial system.

When WIRED reported on Haotian AI in December and approached Telegram for comment, the main Haotian AI Telegram channel became inaccessible.

But the company has continued to operate, push significant updates, and sell its technology, 404 Media found.

‘COME IN’

I found Haotian AI’s Telegram account and, through Google Translate, said I was interested in buying the technology. For weeks, these conversations didn’t go very far. Someone representing the company would ask if I had a powerful PC to run the software, I would say yes, and the person would not reply. Something shifted in March, and the company became a lot more responsive. I made sure to log on to Telegram when Haotian AI’s representatives were online. 

Haotian AI is based out of Cambodia, according to cybercrime fighting NGO Chong Lua Dao. Hieu Minh Ngo, a former hacker prosecuted by the U.S. for identity theft who now works to combat fraud with the organization, shared screenshots with 404 Media showing Haotian AI offering physical installation of the software “in some areas of Cambodia.” Ngo also shared a video which appears to show Haotian AI’s customer support staff installing the software in an office building in Phnom Penh.

In my chats with Haotian AI, the representative sent over a table explaining the PC specification requirements for Haotian AI. The specs resembled a moderate to high gaming PC: an i7 processor; 16GB of DDR5 RAM; and, most importantly, an Nvidia 4080 SUPER graphics card. Having a card like this, with a powerful parallel processing architecture, as with other forms of generative AI, is the key to unlocking an effective realtime video deepfake. 

The company then asked for an array of screenshots that showed we had access to a PC that matched or beat these specifications. I asked 404 Media’s Emanuel Maiberg to take each of the requested screenshots on his beefy gaming PC. After several days of relaying this information over, which may have been a tactic to ensure we weren’t timewasters, Haotian AI agreed to take us to the next step.

“Come in,” the company contact said after they made a dedicated Telegram group chat to connect us with other parts of Haotian AI. That group included myself, the person I had been speaking to, and two other Haotian AI Telegram contacts, including one referred to as a “technician.” They would run me through how to install the software.

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Image: a video of a Haotian AI advert. Provided by Chong Lua Dao.

That person uploaded four files: the Haotian AI client itself split into three password locked files, and a piece of remote access software called AnyDesk. As it turned out, I wouldn’t be doing any installing myself; as part of its service, Haotian AI wanted to remote into Emanuel’s PC to perform the installation itself. “You can sit in front of your computer and watch the whole thing while I’m remotely connected,” one of the Haotian AI representatives said, according to Telegram’s automatic translation of the chat.

As journalists who handle sensitive information all the time, we did not feel comfortable letting a criminal-adjacent group have free access to one of our computers, where who knows what they might do. Tom Cross, head of threat research at cybersecurity firm GetReal Security, agreed to let us test on one of his computers instead. Cross downloaded the remote access software and let the scammers in.

Cross said he watched as the technician created a new partition on the hard drive, turned off multiple Windows security features including the firewall, downloaded and installed WinRAR, and configured a copy of Windows Defender that was included in the provided files. The technician then uncompressed the Haotian AI files on that new partition, installed and logged into the Haotian AI software, and downloaded an update from Nvidia for some specific drivers. Finally, the technician installed Telegram. All of that is fairly technical stuff that an ordinary user or scammer may not know how to do properly or quickly. The whole process was over in a few minutes. 

To signify I was a new customer, the company changed the group chat’s profile picture to Haotian AI’s distinctive wolf logo, and the English text “New!” plastered underneath.

The company then wanted to call me on Telegram to do a live demonstration of the tool. Understanding they were likely speaking to a non-native speaker, a Haotian AI representative asked, “Do you understand Chinese?” I explained I could only text and wouldn’t talk. That wasn’t an issue.

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A demonstration Haotian AI gave to 404 Media.

The technician then called me on Telegram and texted what he was doing while demonstrating the software. I don’t think I ever saw the technician’s real face. Instead when he started the call he was using the software to look like Andy Lau, the prolific Hong Kong actor. At one point, he changed himself into a woman too. The technician, likely based somewhere on the other side of the world, smothered his mouth with his hand and covered his eye. This live demonstration was on par with the previously recorded Gadot one.

Haotian AI gave me free access to the tool for a day, but only with the ability to turn into a few preselected faces. For a custom model that would let us transform into anyone we wanted, we needed to provide a series of photos of the target and, of course, pay. Haotian AI quoted us $1,998 a year for the software, and $498 per custom model. The company wanted to be paid specifically in TRON (TRC20), a version of the cryptocurrency Tether which runs on the TRON blockchain. Unlike volatile Bitcoin, Tether is tied to the U.S. dollar. We sent the requested amount of cryptocurrency.

The fact that Haotian AI still sold the technology to a non-Chinese speaker shows the tool may not be limited to that regional cybercrime ecosystem. Haotian AI’s deepfakes are especially impressive when compared to other tools that scammers in, say, Nigeria are using. The only thing slowing Haotian AI from spreading may be the language barrier (or the cost in some cases).

I shared the payment address with Chainalysis, a cryptocurrency tracing company, to ask what insight they had on it. “The wallet provided has processed over $253K between January 6, 2026—present. Overall, Chainalysis has identified over $4M in total in-flows to Haotian wallets dating back to October 2023,” Andrew Fierman, head of national security intelligence at Chainalysis, said in an emailed statement. “These wallets have interacted extensively on-chain with HuionePay and with Chinese-language money laundering services and scam technology vendors—such as digital alteration and translation providers—intended to identify, target, and manipulate victims.”

BUILDING A FACE

To build a custom model, Haotian AI asked me to provide three to eight photos of the target face. They wanted photos with the subject looking straight at the camera; no obstructions to the facial features like hair covering the face; no showing of teeth or strange expressions; and no heavy Photoshop editing.

At my desk, I took nine selfies. For some of these, I deliberately wore my glasses just to test whether Haotian AI would ask me to take the photos again. After this, the Haotian AI customer support representative asked me to join another dedicated group chat on Telegram. This chat, the representative explained, was “a dedicated technical support group set up just for you.”

Someone in that group asked me what chat platforms I wanted to use Haotian AI with. I said WhatsApp and Zoom, and Haotian AI sent over instructions for feeding the software’s output into live calls on those platforms. Essentially, Haotian AI acts as a virtual camera a user can select when using Microsoft Teams or one of the other platforms.

While providing instructions for how to configure Haotian AI with WhatsApp, a customer support worker sent a couple of related screenshots. One of them showed a WhatsApp video call including the distinctive logo of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) in Washington D.C. The MPD told 404 Media it has not received reports of scammers using deepfakes, but in November the MPD warned the public that fraudsters were impersonating MPD officials in video calls.

Scam compounds in South East Asia sometimes build elaborate, Hollywood-style sets to trick victims into thinking they are talking to the authorities, including rooms, flags, and scammers wearing uniforms. They are often run by Chinese organized crime figures.

404 Media asked multiple companies that Haotian AI targets whether they have mitigations to stop these sorts of realtime deepfakes. A Zoom spokesperson said, “We recently announced that Zoom is further enhancing meeting security with integrated deepfake risk detection offering, providing real‑time alerts when synthetic audio or video is detected. This tool will launch this summer.”

Meta did not answer the question directly, and pointed to its other work targeting infrastructure used by scam centers, including taking down tens of millions of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp accounts.

Microsoft, TikTok, and Google acknowledged requests for comment but ultimately did not provide statements.

On the same day I shared my selfies with Haotian AI, someone in the group chat said my custom model was ready. The Haotian AI software updated automatically, and now we could finally test the software with my own face.

First we tested the software with GetReal’s Cross. The results were poor, at best. I could make out my haggard eyes, a bit of my facial hair, but the face was digitally stretched across Cross’ who has a different build to me. Cross was also in a hotel room with quite dark lighting.

For the deepfake to be convincing, a scammer needs to put more work in, with ideal lighting conditions and a model whose face structure somewhat resembles that of the target. “Since the AI ​​merely swaps facial features, if the model's face shape differs too significantly from that of the character design, the resulting output will be suboptimal,” Haotian AI’s customer support told me in a chat. 

When we instead tested the tool with Ian McGrew, a product manager at GetReal Security, the results were much, much better. His face size is closer to mine. That said, McGrew’s facial features are really nothing like my own.. But, with McGrew sitting in a Starbucks on the gaming laptop over public WiFi, Haotian AI turned his face into mine. 

I opened the Microsoft Teams call to test the software. Immediately upon joining, I was greeted by my own face. The deepfake of me cheekingly had one eyebrow raised, then smiled and waved after I started shouting “oh my god, oh my god.” 

Like in Haotian AI’s own demo videos, I asked McGrew to touch his face, pull on his cheeks, and cover his eyes. Although the deepfake wasn’t as pristine as the, say, Gadot demonstration video, it still produced a convincing result. 

There were some limitations. Haotian AI can handle a subject swiping their hand in front of their face, but only if their fingers are all together, making a single solid object. With the fingers spread out, the deepfake can warp and distort. This appears to be a broader problem with realtime deepfakes at the moment, so much so that people on the lookout for scammers are asking them to perform a so-called three finger test. Sometimes when McGrew put his fingers towards his eyes, it made the eyes bulge.

Cross also examined the Haotian AI files themselves. “The deepfake software includes some popular AI libraries for face selection, face swapping, and post-swap enhancement, including ‘inswapper’ a face swapping ML model that is available on HuggingFace and is included in many popular open source face swapping tools, such as FaceFusion,” he told me.

Inswapper is maintained by a company called InsightFace. InsightFace offers both an open source version of inswapper and a paid product for enterprises. “The open-source models we release on GitHub (including inswapper) are strictly intended for non-commercial research and academic purposes. Any use of these models in a criminal context, such as the ‘Haotian AI’ software you mentioned, is a direct violation of our intended use cases and the spirit of our licensing terms,” a spokesperson for InsightFace told 404 Media in an email. “For any legitimate commercial application of our technology, we provide a formal licensing process. This allows us to ensure that the technology is being used by vetted organizations for ethical and legal purposes. This process is fundamentally different from the anonymous, unauthorized misuse of open-source research code by third parties.” 

The company said that the “dual-use” of AI is a challenge for the research community. “We have no control over how anonymous actors integrate open-source research code once it is published for the scientific community, but we do not condone, support, or have any affiliation with criminal entities,” InsightFace’s spokesperson said.

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A clip of a Microsoft Teams call using Haotian AI.

If Haotian AI is at least in part relying on open source face swapping tools, that means the company’s value really comes from its technical support. A non-technical scammer—a criminal who may know how to trick people, but doesn’t grasp the minutiae of deepfakes—is now able to digitally alter their appearance in real time. 

Chong Lua Dao, the NGO, told 404 Media that scam compounds use many different deepfake tools. Sometimes that can be free, open source programs, those developed internally, or bought from contractors, the group said.

In 404 Media’s own survey of the Chinese-language ecosystem, some other tools include Panda AI, which says it can be used with WhatsApp mobile; Xiaomi Technology AI which has pricing close to Haotian AI’s; and Ark Technology AI which offers similar capabilities.

For years, scam compounds in South East Asia have operated almost openly, with local authorities doing little about the massive influx of criminals and human trafficking victims forced to work inside them. More recently some agencies have closed compounds, letting journalists physically walk their grounds.

In a court record filed last month, an FBI Special Agent detailed how the agency has interviewed victims from scam compounds and parsed a mountain of evidence seized from the sites. As part of that case, U.S. authorities charged two Chinese nationals, seized $700 million in cryptocurrency, and shut down a Telegram channel used to lure people to work at a compound in Cambodia.

Which brings up the question of whether people providing technological services to these compounds might also be targeted by authorities. “Prosecuting the application providers is tricky. The technology itself isn't the crime; the relationship is. There has to be evidence that the seller knew, or willfully ignored, that their customer was a scam operation,” Erin West, a former prosecutor and now founder of Operation Shamrock, an organization focused on educating people about, and disrupting, organized scam groups, told 404 Media in an emailed statement.

“Real-time deepfake software isn't ending up in scam compounds by accident. If prosecutors can prove knowledge or willful blindness, these companies belong in court right alongside the operators they enable. That's how you go after the supply chain instead of chasing victims one stolen retirement at a time,” she added.

The FBI recently shut down a different provider that was allegedly using “neural networks” to generate realistic photos of fake ID documents. In February 2024, 404 Media revealed the existence of OnlyFake, where users could pay a small amount of cryptocurrency to make photos of fake driver licenses and passports. Two years later, the U.S. Department of Justice announced it had charged the site’s creator, a Ukrainian national called Yurii Nazarenko, who then pleaded guilty to fraud and conspiracy-related charges. 

In response to a detailed list of questions from 404 Media, a Haotian AI representative simply replied “OK” in Chinese.

Haotian AI is expanding into other areas even more unambiguously focused on fraud. One of those is a tool to help bypass know your customer, or KYC, checks. Often people making an account online will need to take a selfie and upload a copy of their ID. Haotian AI’s new tool promises to let customers circumvent those checks by controlling a persona looking into a virtual camera. 

“Hello! Due to business expansion, our company is launching new products, including customized facial recognition technology and KYC verification. New and existing customers are welcome to inquire. Free testing is available! Thank you for your support and trust,” Haotian AI wrote in a Telegram announcement in April. In the accompanying demonstration video, a user appears to bypass a KYC selfie check by controlling a video of a woman.

Haotian AI ended the announcement with this: “We wish you continued success and prosperity!”


Formula 1 News

Formula 1® - The Official F1® Website

The next steps for Aston Martin after progress in Miami

Both Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll took the chequered flag for Aston Martin for the first time this season at the Miami Grand Prix.

What we learned about the pecking order after Miami

After a lengthier than normal break, the F1 circus reconvened in Miami for the second Sprint weekend of the season as the newly upgraded cars broke cover – causing a few changes to the pecking order.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

AMD puts out new slottable GPU for AI-curious enterprises

AMD hopes to win over enterprise AI customers with a more affordable datacenter GPU that can drop into conventional air-cooled servers. Announced on Thursday, the MI350P is the House of Zen’s first PCIe-based Instinct accelerator since the MI210 debuted all the way back in 2022. Until now, AMD’s best GPUs have only been available in packs of eight and used socketed OAM modules that weren’t compatible with most server platforms. By comparison, The MI350P can slot into just about any 19-inch pizza box design that offers enough power and airflow, making it a much easier sell for enterprises dipping their toes into on-prem AI for the first time. The 600-watt, dual-slot card is essentially a MI350X that’s been cut in half. That means the CNDA-based GPU is packing 4.6 petaFLOPS of FP4 compute and 144 GB of VRAM spread across four HBM3e stacks delivering a respectable 4 TB/s of memory bandwidth. AMD supports configurations ranging from one to eight MI350Ps, though a lack of high-speed interconnects on these cards means it’ll be limited to PCIe 5.0 speeds (128 GB/s) for chip-to-chip communications, potentially limiting its potential in larger models. AMD hasn’t shared pricing for the cards just yet, but at least on paper, the MI350P is well positioned to compete with either Nvidia’s H200 NVL or RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell PCIe cards. Compared to the 141 GB H200, the MI350P promises about 38 percent higher peak performance at FP8, while eking out a narrow VRAM capacity advantage. But the H200 does pull ahead when it comes to memory bandwidth. With six HBM3e stacks to the MI350P’s four, the nearly two-year-old card’s memory is still about 20 percent faster. Nvidia's H200 also supports high-speed chip-to-chip communications over NVLink, while the MI350P doesn’t use AMD’s equivalent Infinity Fabric interconnect. However, all this assumes you can still find H200 NVLs in the wild. Since last summer, Nvidia has been pushing its RTX Pro 6000 Server cards on enterprise customers. As of writing, the card is Nvidia’s most powerful Blackwell-based accelerator offered in a PCIe formfactor. Compared to the RTX Pro 6000, the MI350P’s price starts becoming a bigger factor than performance. Workstation versions of the RTX Pro, which ditch the passive cooler for an active one, routinely sell for between $8,000 to $10,000 apiece, making it one of Nvidia’s more affordable datacenter-class GPUs. Depending on how pricing shakes out, AMD may have to push hard to be competitive. Having said that, the MI350P is still the better-specced part, delivering 2.3x higher peak flops, 2.5x the memory bandwidth, and 50 percent more vRAN of the RTX Pro. Now, this all assumes peak FLOPS and memory bandwidth, which is rarely realistic. The tensors used by AI workloads are rarely the ideal shape for squeezing the maximum number of FLOPS out of a chip. This is why we run for Maximum Achievable MatMul FLOPS (MAMF) and Babel Stream memory bandwidth benchmarks as part of our AI test suite. AMD seems to understand that peak FLOPS don’t really translate cleanly into real-world performance, and in the marketing materials shared with El Reg prior to publication, compared the MI350P’s theoretical performance against its real-world delivered performance. It’d be nice to see Nvidia and others adopt similar practices regarding accelerator performance claims, though we suspect getting everyone to agree on the best way to measure this might not be easy. The MI350P’s launch comes as AMD prepares to address a very different and likely more lucrative segment with its first rack-scale compute platform, codenamed Helios. That system is due out in the second half of the year, and is aimed primarily at large hyperscale and neocloud deployments. The system packs 72 of its all-new MI455X GPUs into a single double-wide OCP rack that behaves like an enormous accelerator. The platform will be AMD’s first crack at Nvidia’s NVL72 racks, which launched alongside its Blackwell generation nearly two years ago. ®

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Wij, werkers, hoeven ons niet als lammetjes naar de slachtbank te laten leiden

Nobelprijswinnaar J.M. Coetzee weigert literair festival in Israël te bezoeken vanwege de ‘genocidale campagne in Gaza

Israëlische kolonist aangeklaagd voor mishandeling christelijke non in Jeruzalem

Amsterdamse cruisegebied totaal onveilig, homo's steeds vaker bespuugd en mishandeld door 'groepjes jonge jongens'

Twee kerels die elkaar ergens in de frisse buitenlucht ritmisch afwerken tegen een boom, dat lijkt ons precies hoe moeder natuur het ooit bedoeld heeft, maar daar is niet iedereen het klaarblijkelijk mee eens. In Amsterdam heb je bijvoorbeeld De oeverlanden, een klein gebied dat voor rampetampen gebruikt wordt. Staat netjes aangegeven, heeft verder niemand last van, tenzij je er zelf naar binnen gaat natuurlijk, bijvoorbeeld om elkaar af te trekken de aldaar aanwezige homo's uit te schelden, te bespugen of in elkaar te trappen, zoals steeds meer groepjes jonge jongens blijken te doen. Ja je zou zeggen: ga meiden versieren, kanjers, de wereld ligt aan jullie voeten, maar goed, iedereen doet het op z'n eigen manier.


The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

The Only Way Is Essex star Jake Hall found dead in Mallorca

Towie star Hall, 35, found unresponsive with head wounds reportedly caused by shards of glass at villa on Spanish island

The Only Way Is Essex star Jake Hall has been found dead in a freak accident in Mallorca.

The former reality TV show personality was found unresponsive with head wounds reportedly caused by shards of glass at a villa on the Spanish island.

Continue reading...

Pussy Riot protest and an Attenborough portrait in sand: photos of the day – Thursday

The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world

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Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Honderden woningen moeten wijken voor nieuw ziekenhuis in Dordrecht

Het Albert Schweitzer ziekenhuis in Dordrecht en de gemeente willen een nieuw, toekomstbestendig ziekenhuis bouwen, direct voor de deur van de huidige locatie. Het parkeerterrein zou hiervoor in zijn geheel gebruikt kunnen worden, is de gedachte. Dit gaat dan wel ten koste van meer dan zevenhonderd nieuwbouwwoningen.

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Europarlement aan lidstaten: maak haast met Europese defensieunie

BRUSSEL (ANP) - Europarlementariërs uit elf landen en vier politieke groepen roepen de lidstaten op snel een Europese defensieunie op te richten. Alleen daarmee kan Europa zich zelfstandig verdedigen. Die unie moet een plek krijgen binnen de NAVO, maar ook los van de NAVO kunnen opereren.

"Niet gescheiden, maar scheidbaar", zei de Nederlandse Europarlementariër Reinier van Lanschot (Volt), initiatiefnemer van de oproep aan de lidstaten, donderdag op een persconferentie.

De Europese defensieunie moet de NAVO versterken maar onafhankelijk van de VS kunnen opereren, bepleiten de initiatiefnemers. Ze sluiten op termijn een Europees leger niet uit.

Een geïntegreerde commandostructuur

De nationale legers moeten onder één geïntegreerde commandostructuur gaan vallen. Binnen de defensieunie moet gezamenlijk defensiematerieel binnen de EU worden aangekocht en materieel moet worden gestandaardiseerd, zo willen ze.

Het gaat nu om dertig Europarlementariërs van de centrumrechtse EVP, de sociaaldemocraten (S&D), de liberale Renew en de Groenen. Ze verwachten dat meer Europarlementariërs zich bij het initiatief aansluiten.

Europese defensieunie

Er wordt al lang gepraat over een Europese defensieunie. De Europese Commissie is voorstander, maar veel lidstaten zien dat niet zitten. Zo willen Frankrijk en Duitsland bijvoorbeeld dat defensiematerieel in hun landen wordt gekocht, verduidelijkte Van Lanschot. "Dat moeten we doorbreken."

De initiatiefnemers vinden ook dat de Europese defensieunie moet samenwerken met het Verenigd Koninkrijk, Noorwegen, Canada en Oekraïne.

De tijd dringt, waarschuwt Van Lanschot. "Rusland is, ook al zijn ze in Oekraïne aan het vechten, zich ook aan het voorbereiden op een eventuele aanval op Europa. Als we nu de juiste dingen doen, kunnen we voorkomen dat dat gebeurt."


5 onmisbare schoonmaaktips voor de voorjaarsschoonmaak

Zodra de eerste zonnestralen naar binnen vallen, zie je het meteen: stof, strepen op de ramen en hoekjes die je in de winter hebt overgeslagen. De voorjaarsschoonmaak is hét moment om je huis weer fris, licht en opgeruimd te maken. In dit artikel ontdek je 5 praktische schoonmaaktips die perfect passen bij het voorjaar en die je zonder moeite in één of twee dagen kunt uitvoeren.

1. Ramen lappen voor een echt voorjaarsgevoel

Schone ramen maken direct een wereld van verschil. Meer licht, een frissere uitstraling en minder sombere sfeer in huis.

  • Stof eerst vensterbanken, kozijnen en raamdecoratie.
  • Was de ramen met lauwwarm water en een beetje afwasmiddel.
  • Gebruik daarna water met een scheutje natuurazijn voor een streeploos resultaat.
  • Trek het raam droog met een raamtrekker en werk de randen af met een microvezeldoek.

SEO-tip: Verwerk varianten als “ramen lappen”, “ramen schoonmaken” en “streeploze ramen” in tussenkopjes en alt-teksten van eventuele foto’s.

2. Frisse slaapkamer: beddengoed, matras en kledingkast

De slaapkamer is dé plek waar je gezondheid en hygiëne samenkomen. Een voorjaarsbeurt zorgt voor betere nachtrust én een frisser gevoel.

  • Was al het beddengoed op een hogere temperatuur.
  • Stofzuig de matras rustig en draai of keer hem om.
  • Ventileer de slaapkamer goed door ramen en deuren tegen elkaar open te zetten.
  • Ruim de kledingkast op: winterkleding wassen, opbergen en plaats maken voor voorjaars- en zomerkleding.

Zo voeg je extra zoekwoorden toe: “slaapkamer schoonmaken”, “matras reinigen” en “kledingkast opruimen”.

shutterstock_2573018201

3. Vloeren en verborgen stofnesten aanpakken

Tijdens de winter blijft stof graag hangen op plekken waar je niet dagelijks komt. De voorjaarsschoonmaak is hét moment om die verborgen stofnesten aan te pakken.

  • Schuif meubels van de muur en stofzuig erachter en eronder.
  • Neem plinten, de bovenkant van kasten en lampenkappen af met een licht vochtige doek.
  • Dweil harde vloeren met een mild schoonmaakmiddel of groene zeep.
  • Klop vloerkleden buiten uit en laat ze even luchten.

Gebruik in de tekst termen als “vloeren schoonmaken”, “grote schoonmaak” en “voorjaarsschoonmaak in huis”.

4. Ontspullen: minder rommel, makkelijker schoonmaken

Een belangrijk onderdeel van de voorjaarsschoonmaak is ontspullen. Hoe minder spullen je hebt, hoe minder je hoeft schoon te maken.

  • Werk per ruimte of per categorie: boeken, keukenspullen, badkamerproducten.
  • Maak drie stapels: houden, weggeven/verkopen en weggooien.
  • Breng bruikbare spullen direct naar de kringloop of zet ze online.

Zo kun je zoekwoorden als “ontspullen”, “opruimen in het voorjaar” en “rommel in huis verminderen” op een natuurlijke manier verwerken.

5. Hygiënische reset: vergeet aanraakpunten niet

Voor een echt frisse start in het voorjaar pak je ook de plekken aan die iedereen de hele dag door aanraakt.

Denk aan:

  • Deurklinken en lichtknoppen
  • Afstandsbedieningen en spelcomputers
  • Telefoons, tablets en toetsenborden
  • Keukenkastjes, koelkastdeur en prullenbak

Maak deze aanraakpunten schoon met een doekje en een mild, desinfecterend schoonmaakmiddel. Zo geef je je huis een hygiënische boost die perfect past bij de voorjaarsschoonmaak.


The Moscow Times - Independent News From Russia

The Moscow Times offers everything you need to know about Russia: Breaking news, top stories, business, analysis, opinion, multimedia

Kremlin Offers Thoughts and Prayers to Businesses Hurting From Constant Internet Outages

Top spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the government has no plans to provide financial support to businesses that have seen their bottom lines negatively impacted by mobile internet outages in Moscow and other cities throughout the country in recent months.

Found Photo

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photo

50th Annual Piedmont 4th of July Parade, Piedmont, California

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

50th Annual Piedmont 4th of July Parade, Piedmont, California

Messier 77 (NIRCam)

europeanspaceagency posted a photo:

Messier 77 (NIRCam)

This latest Picture of the Month from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope features Messier 77 (M77), a barred spiral galaxy famous among astronomers for its combination of relative proximity and spectacular features to study. It is located 45 million light-years away in the constellation Cetus (The Whale). This new image, from Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam), highlights its swirling spiral arms, the dust in its disc and its piercingly bright core like never before.

At the heart of M77 is a compact region filled with hot gas that handily outshines the rest of the galaxy put together, even overcoming the light-gathering capacity of Webb’s cameras. This is an active galactic nucleus (AGN), and it’s powered by M77’s central supermassive black hole, which is eight million times as massive as our Sun. Gas in the galaxy’s central regions is pulled by the strong gravity into a tight and rapid orbit around the black hole, where it crashes together and heats up, releasing tremendous amounts of radiation. The starburst pattern radiating from M77’s centre is diffraction spikes that are a feature of the telescope’s optics. They are most often seen from stars, but the bright and compact AGN creates some in this image too.

The bright AGN lies within a larger structure that is uniquely highlighted by Webb’s NIRCam. Since its discovery in 1780, M77 has been variously identified as a nebula (before the concept of separate galaxies beyond our own), a star cluster, and an ordinary spiral galaxy. But near-infrared images reveal a bar spanning from the inner end of one spiral arm to the other, a bar which doesn’t appear in visible-light images of the galaxy. Bars in galaxies channel vast amounts of star-forming material through a dense central region, and indeed M77 is an extremely prolific star-forming galaxy thanks to this bar, spawning tens of Suns worth of new stars every year!

Beyond the bar, M77’s spiral arms spin lazily out into the disc of the galaxy and beyond. The arms are the location of much of this new star birth, with dense clumps of gas collapsing to form tightly-packed clusters of stars. NIRCam pinpoints the light from these stars along the spiral arms, as well as capturing the glow that suffuses the galaxy from the billions of stars in its disc. Particularly along the southern spiral arm, NIRCam also traces infrared emission at slightly longer wavelengths – shown here in red colours – from complex molecules including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).

The data used to create this image are from an observing programme (#3707) that surveyed massive, nearby, star-forming galaxies to create a rich dataset useful for many scientific investigations. As can be seen here, the stunning resolution of Webb’s instruments reveals star clusters and rich reservoirs of gas, which can be used to explore the cycle of star formation, life and death in these and other galaxies.

[Image Description: A spiral galaxy shown in near-infrared light. Six long, thin rays of light emit from the centre, which are diffraction spikes created by the telescope’s optics. A glowing bar spans across the centre. A glittering orange ring of stars and dust surrounds the bar; at each side, the ring splits off into a spiral arm that winds outwards, traced by dark red dust and more glowing orange spots. The galaxy’s disc is a pale glow.]

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Credits: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, A. Leroy; CC BY 4.0

Messier 77 (MIRI + NIRCam)

europeanspaceagency posted a photo:

Messier 77 (MIRI + NIRCam)

This latest Picture of the Month from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope features Messier 77 (M77), a barred spiral galaxy famous among astronomers for its combination of relative proximity and spectacular features to study. It is located 45 million light-years away in the constellation Cetus (The Whale). This new image from Webb highlights its swirling spiral arms, the dust in its disc and its piercingly bright core like never before.

At the heart of M77 is a compact region filled with hot gas that handily outshines the rest of the galaxy put together, even overcoming the light-gathering capacity of Webb’s cameras. This is an active galactic nucleus (AGN), and it’s powered by M77’s central supermassive black hole, which is eight million times as massive as our Sun. Gas in the galaxy’s central regions is pulled by the strong gravity into a tight and rapid orbit around the black hole, where it crashes together and heats up, releasing tremendous amounts of radiation.

The bright orange lines appearing to radiate out from the centre of M77 are not actually a feature of the galaxy: they are a type of distortion that arises from the optical design of the telescope. Called diffraction spikes, they are created because the intense light from the unresolved AGN is bent ('diffracted') very slightly at the edges of Webb’s hexagonal mirror panels and around one of the struts that hold up its secondary mirror. This distinctive six-plus-two-pointed pattern is the same for any image taken by Webb. For diffraction spikes to appear, the light source has to be very bright and very concentrated, so they’re most often seen on stars. But in some galaxies, as here, the nucleus is bright and compact enough to make diffraction spikes appear as well.

M77 is not just known for its easily visible AGN, but also as a prolific star-forming galaxy. Data in this image from Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) reveals a bar spanning across the central region, which doesn’t appear in visible-light images of the galaxy. The bar is enclosed by a bright ring, called a starburst ring, formed by the inner ends of M77’s two spiral arms. Starburst regions in galaxies are typified by extremely high star-formation rates. This ring is more than 6000 light-years across and displays intense and widespread starbursts, visible in this image by the densely concentrated orange bubbles all around the ring. Since M77 is relatively close to Earth, this starburst ring is a very well-studied example of the phenomenon.

Beyond the ring and bar, M77’s spiral arms spin lazily out into the disc of the galaxy and beyond. The arms are the location of much of this new star birth, with dense clumps of gas collapsing to form tightly-packed clusters of stars. NIRCam pinpoints the light from these stars along the spiral arms, as well as capturing the glow that suffuses the galaxy from the billions of stars in its disc. Particularly along the southern spiral arm, NIRCam also traces infrared emission at slightly longer wavelengths from complex molecules including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).

As an active spiral galaxy, M77’s disc is filled with gas and dust which is both a product of and fuel for future star formation. NIRCam picks out the glitter of countless stars spread across the disc, and Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) fills out the view with the glow of interstellar dust grains emitted at longer wavelengths, shown here in dark red. The dust forms a huge vortex of smoky, swirling filaments with cavities in between.

The data used to create this image are from an observing programme (#3707) that surveyed massive, nearby, star-forming galaxies to create a rich dataset useful for many scientific investigations. As can be seen here, the stunning resolution of Webb’s instruments reveals star clusters and rich reservoirs of gas, which can be used to explore the cycle of star formation, life and death in these and other galaxies.

[Image Description: A spiral galaxy shown in infrared light. Six long and two smaller rays of light emit from the centre, which are diffraction spikes created by the telescope’s optics. A glowing bar spans across the centre. A glittering ring of stars and dust surrounds the bar; at each side, the ring splits off into a spiral arm that winds outwards. Faint, dark red dust clouds swirl throughout the rest of the disc, backed by a pale glow from all the galaxy’s stars.]

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Credits: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, A. Leroy; CC BY 4.0

Sensitive and sturdy

europeanspaceagency posted a photo:

Sensitive and sturdy

Both incredibly robust and sensitive, this small metallic capsule hosts a range of sensors that collected data as it blasted off at 4300 km per hour.

The scaled-down version of the ExoMars landing module measures just 8 cm in diameter compared to the actual 3.8 metre spacecraft that will carry the Rosalind Franklin rover to the Red Planet. To illustrate the scale, the robot figurine is pictured alongside the capsule on martian-like terrain.

The mini capsule is one of 20 models launched during a test campaign that mimicked the aerodynamics of a Mars atmospheric entry at supersonic speeds last year. A robust, miniaturised piece of technology, it can withstand almost 17 000 g-force of acceleration. This is roughly 11 000 times greater than the acceleration experienced by a Formula 1 driver at full throttle and far beyond what most electronics can survive.

Each model carried electronics circuits to monitor its 230-metre flight path, including magnetometers, accelerometers and radar to analyse the capsule’s movement, trajectory and stability during the free-flight experiment.

The tiny replica of the ExoMars descent module darted from a smooth-bore gun faster than a speeding bullet. In the blink of an eye, all sensors began recording data, while specialised tracking technology allowed cameras to follow the incredibly fast object throughout its entire flight.

This video has been slowed down 60 times – the actual flight lasted just half a second. 

The tests provided critical data on how the spacecraft would behave during entry into the martian atmosphere. Following a two-year journey to the Red Planet, the ExoMars descent module will approach Mars at a speed of 21 000 km per hour, relying on heat shields, parachutes and retro rockets to land safely.

The tests took place at the French-German Research Institute of Saint-Louis (ISL), a leading research centre with facilities for investigating the aerodynamics of vehicles such as reentry capsules.

Credits: ESA – A. Conigli