With COVID Tests Flooding In, US Healthcare Systems Are Breaking Down

Many healthcare systems around the US are feeling the crunch with thousands of tests flooding in via phone, email, snail mail, and even fax.

With millions of COVID-19 test results flooding in, many healthcare systems around the US are drowning in paperwork.

More than 3.4 million people have been confirmed to have caught the virus in the country — and that’s just those who tested positive. That kind of volume of tests comes with a massive uptick in paperwork as well.

Many health departments simply can’t keep up with all that data. Outdated analog data collection methods are compounding the issue, The New York Times reports, with gigantic stacks of faxed printouts piling up in offices.

“Picture the image of hundreds of faxes coming through, and the machine just shooting out paper,” Umair Shah, executive director at the Harris County Public Health department in Houston, told the Times.

“From an operational standpoint, it makes things incredibly difficult,” Shah added. “The data is moving slower than the disease.”

Harris county has been hit particularly hard, with 40,000 coronavirus cases so far.

The situation has gotten so far out of hand that Washington State had to call in 25 members of the National Guard just to assist with manual data entry, the Times reports.

Other tests are flooding in via phone lines, emails, and even snail mail, as healthcare workers desperately try to comply with strict digital privacy standards about healthcare data.

Inevitably, wires are being crossed, with reports being duplicated or ending up at the wrong department. And it can take up to two weeks to process and send out results of a COVID-19 test — far too long to be useful in any way, particularly for contact tracing purposes.

As many US states are experiencing record new daily numbers of confirmed COVID-19 cases, experts are worried that despite millions of tests, healthcare officials might never actually figure out what to do with all the data.

“The obsession with the number of tests obscures an important fundamental: What are we doing with all those tests?” Thomas Frieden, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told NYT.

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Someone Used Deepfake Tech to Invent a Fake Journalist

Someone found a new way to use deepfakes to spread disinformation online: using the tech to make up a fake journalist from scratch.

Fake News

Reuters reports that somebody used deepfake tech and a false name and biography to invent the persona of a journalist — and then got the sock puppet’s work published in several international newspapers.

Whoever’s behind the operation — Reuters was not able to track them down — managed to publish six articles and editorials in the Jerusalem Post and the Times of Israel while posting as an entirely fictitious author, according to the investigation. The dupe serves as a warning about how easily disinformation can spread online — and how new tech can enable it.

According to online profiles, Oliver Taylor is a student at the University of Birmingham who loves politics and coffee. But no actual records of Taylor exist, his phone number isn’t connected, and neither Reuters nor the publications that ran his work could verify his existence.

Face Case

And then there’s his headshot. Multiple experts told Reuters that Taylor’s supposed photo is almost certainly a forgery, seemingly generated by the same neural network tech behind websites like “thispersondoesnotexist.com.”

Deepfake artist Mario Klinkemann told Reuters that Taylor’s picture “has all the hallmarks” of a deepfake.

“I’m 100 percent sure,” he said.

New Trend

It’s not unprecedented for propagandists to invent personas for journalists. Earlier this month, for instance, an investigation by The Daily Beast found a network of 19 fake journalists that had been used to publish political content in a wide variety of conservative publications — including several that appeared to have used deepfake tech.

The Jerusalem Post told Reuters that editors didn’t vette Taylor very hard. And while his articles didn’t gain much traction, the phenomenon points to a looming threat in which operators could hide behind deepfake technology while publishing disinformation in reputable outlets.

“Absolutely we need to screen out impostors and up our defenses,” Times of Israel Opinion Editor Miriam Herschlag told Reuters. “But I don’t want to set up these barriers that prevent new voices from being heard.”

READ MORE: Deepfake used to attack activist couple shows new disinformation frontier [Reuters]

More on deepfakes: Expert: Online Disinfo Now Targeting COVID-19, Black Lives Matter

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Google Is Working on Tattoos That Turn Your Body Into a Touchpad

Google is investing heavily in new kinds of wearable technology, including high-tech tattoos that turn your body into a touchpad.

New Ink

Undeterred by its historic Google Glass flop, Google is still investing heavily in various oddball forms of wearable technology.

Recent projects, according to CNET, include new mixed reality glasses, virtual reality controllers that let you feel the weight of virtual objects, and new smartwatches. But perhaps the most unusual is a high-tech temporary tattoo that basically turns your flesh into a giant touchpad.

Flesh Look

CNET reports that the idea behind the tattoo project, dubbed SkinMarks, is to make interacting with technology feel more natural. The SkinMarks can be applied to fingers or parts of the hand that we control with instinctive fine motor skills, so using the sensors through a bend of the finger or a squeeze of the fist could become like second nature.

“Through a vastly reduced tattoo thickness and increased stretchability, a SkinMark is sufficiently thin and flexible to conform to irregular geometry, like flexure lines and protruding bones,” The Saarland University researchers who were funded by Google to develop the tech wrote in a white paper about the project.

I, Product

Aside from the market value of beating other tech giants like Facebook or Apple at the wearable game, CNET reports that Google is particularly incentivized to get more people to use wearable devices — or literally imprint them on their skin — in order to collect even more of that sweet, sweet user data.

Targeted advertising brings Google over $160 billion every year. And the brand new categories of data that devices like these tattoos would generate stands to be even more valuable

READ MORE: Google is quietly experimenting with holographic glasses and hybrid smartwatches [CNET]

More on wearables: Mark Zuckerberg: Wearables Will Soon Read Your Mind

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Newly-Discovered Bacteria Can Eat Metal as Food

Scientists discovered the first bacteria that chemosynthesizes the metal manganese, and they did it almost by accident while cleaning up an experiment.

Metal Mouth

A newly-discovered bacteria is capable of gobbling up the metal manganese and use it as a source of nutrition.

Jared Leadbetter, an environmental microbiologist at Caltech, found the bacteria almost purely by chance after he left glassware to soak in tapwater after conducting experiments with manganese. The next day, according to a university press release, he found the instruments coated in a weird film — the waste left behind after the bacteria enjoyed its snack.

Long Time Coming

Other bacteria consume manganese, but this is the first that can chemosynthesize it into useful fuel and leave behind manganese oxides. Such a bacteria has long been theorized and sought after, but no one had ever found it before. Leadbetter suggests that the finding, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, may have solved a mystery with water pipes in the area.

“There is a whole set of environmental engineering literature on drinking-water-distribution systems getting clogged by manganese oxides,” Leadbetter said in the release. “But how and for what reason such material is generated there has remained an enigma. Clearly, many scientists have considered that bacteria using manganese for energy might be responsible, but evidence supporting this idea was not available until now.”

Deeper Mystery

The discovery could also finally explain peculiar manganese orbs that dot the ocean floor — it’s possible that large colonies of the elusive bacteria, or something similar, could have gradually built them up.

“This underscores the need to better understand marine manganese nodules before they are decimated by mining,” Caltech researcher Hang Yu said in the release.

READ MORE: Bacteria with a metal diet discovered in dirty glassware [Caltech]

More on bacteria: This Professor Wants To Grow Entire Buildings out of Bacteria

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This Scientist Spends His Time Predicting the End of the World

Disaster preparedness expert Jeffrey Schlegelmilch spends his time predicting megadisasters, but says the COVID-19 pandemic hasn't reached that point.

Planning Ahead

Columbia University’s Jeffrey Schlegelmilch may have one of the coolest jobs in science — or the most depressing, depending on your vantage point.

As director of the university’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness, Schlegelmilch spends a lot of time thinking about the end of the world, as he discussed in a recent university blog. In a cruel twist of irony, he was reviewing proofs for a recent book as the COVID-19 pandemic began, but biological devastation is just one of the five categories of the “megadisasters” he’s trying to prepare the world for.

Pick Your Poison

The problem with planning for these megadisasters is that the world is changing at an increasingly rapid pace. Many of the lessons that society has learned — or refused to learn — may not apply in the future we’re headed toward.

“The disasters we are seeing are already different than in the past,” Schlegelmilch said in the release. “We can see this through more and more billion-dollar weather events, more spending on disaster response and recovery, more lives disrupted.”

Resilient Optimism

Alongside biological disasters like pandemics, Schlegelmilch’s research also focuses on four other categories of megadisasters: nuclear war, infrastructure failure, climate change, and cyber warfare. But amidst all that, he holds out hope that our current pandemic won’t reach that threshold.

“I am reluctant to put it in the same category as these others,” Schlegelmilch said. “We still time to reduce the impacts, if we are holistic in our perspective, and collaborative in our approaches.”

READ MORE: Q&A: Coming soon? A brief guide to 21st-century megadisasters [Columbia University]

More on disaster preparedness: Astronaut: Killer Asteroid Plan Must Be Better Than COVID Response

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Fauci Describes White House Behavior as “Bizarre”

In an interview with the Atlantic published today, Fauci described the White House's attacks against him as

Rather than concerning itself with coronavirus cases surging in the country, the White House seems determined to undermine and discredit top US infectious diseases expert Anthony Fauci — a decision that has mystified the immunologist, according to an interview today with the Atlantic.

Fauci’s remarks follow a confusing week of attacks from the Trump administration. In a Fox News interview with Sean Hannity last week, president Donald Trump himself took aim at Fauci, claiming that “he’s made a lot of mistakes.”

Over the weekend, trade adviser Peter Navarro piled on, heavily criticizing Fauci’s response to the pandemic in a USA Today opinion piece. He claimed that Fauci “has been wrong about everything I have interacted with him on,” including an early flip-flopping on the importance of masks and underplaying the risks of the then-growing pandemic.

Days later, Trump attempted to distance himself from Navarro, claiming he “made a statement representing himself,” to reporters this week, as the Washington Post reported. “He shouldn’t be doing that,” he added.

In an interview with the Atlantic published today, Fauci described the White House’s attacks against him as “bizarre” and “nonsense.”

Fauci isn’t planning on admitting any mistakes.

“I stand by everything I said,” he told the magazine. “Contextually, at the time I said it, it was absolutely true.”

To many, discrediting Fauci is an inherently political move that’s likely to keep life-saving information out of the hands of the American public.

“I cannot figure out in my wildest dreams why they would want to do that,” Fauci told the Atlantic.

“I think if you talk to reasonable people in the White House, they realize that was a major mistake on their part, because it doesn’t do anything but reflect poorly on them,” he added.

But the damage was done with Navarro’s scathing op-ed.

“When the staff lets out something like that and the entire scientific and press community push back on it, it ultimately hurts the president,” Fauci argued.

Fauci also said that he has no intentions of quitting now.

Trump seems to be desperate to come out on top after the inexplicable back and forth, despite the White House’s scattered responses.

According to Fox News, Trump told reporters in the Oval Office today that “I have a very good relationship with Dr. Fauci.”

“We’re all on the same team, including Dr. Fauci,” Trump added.

Fauci hasn’t actually spoken with the president for over a month, according to a Financial Times report last week.

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This Star Appears to Have Survived a Supernova

A white dwarf star from a binary star system was just sent hurtling through the Milky Way at 559,000 mph after experiencing a

A white dwarf star was sent hurtling through the Milky Way at more than half a million miles per hour after experiencing a “partial supernova.”

White dwarves are extremely dense, Earth-sized cores that are left over after a star has depleted all its fuel and shed its outer layers.

Astronomers believe the white dwarf in question, dubbed SDSS J1240+6710, was once part of a binary star system, the BBC reports. First discovered in 2015 some 1,430 light-years from Earth, astronomers detected a highly unusual mix of oxygen, neon, magnesium, and silicon in its atmosphere — not the layers of hydrogen and helium white dwarves usually are made up of.

Several years later, using data from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, an international team of astronomers discovered that the bizarre white dwarf also had carbon, sodium, and aluminum in its atmosphere, the tell-tale signs of a supernova.

Making matters even more unusual, the scientists didn’t find heavier elements including iron, nickel, chromium, and manganese, which usually are found after “Type Ia” supernova, which occur in binary systems where one of the stars is a white dwarf.

This led them to believe that the white dwarf only experienced — and survived — a “partial” supernova.

“That’s what makes this white dwarf unique — it did undergo nuclear burning, but stopped before it got to iron,” Gänsicke told Space.com.

“This star is unique because it has all the key features of a white dwarf but it has this very high velocity and unusual abundances that make no sense when combined with its low mass,” Boris Gänsicke, physics professor at the University of Warwick, UK, and lead author of a paper about the research published the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, said in a statement.

“It would have been a type of supernova, but of a kind that that we haven’t seen before,” he added.

Here’s what they think might have happened: Both stars in the suspected binary system were shot in opposite directions, like a cosmic slingshot, when the white dwarf suddenly shed a large portion of its mass.

Such an event would have resulted in a blip of light that would’ve been near impossible to detect from Earth.

“When it had its supernova event, it was likely just brief, maybe a couple of hours,” Gänsicke told Space.com.

“We are now discovering that there are different types of white dwarf that survive supernovae under different conditions and using the compositions, masses and velocities that they have, we can figure out what type of supernova they have undergone,” Gänsicke explained in the statement.

“There is clearly a whole zoo out there,” he added. “Studying the survivors of supernovae in our Milky Way will help us to understand the myriads of supernovae that we see going off in other galaxies.”

READ MORE: ‘Partial supernova’ blasts white dwarf star across the Milky Way [Space.com]

More on white dwarves: Star Blasts Own Planets Into Shattered Corpses, Devours Remains

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This $25,000 Gadget Can Steal Almost Any Car That Starts With a Fob

This $25,000 gadget, in the shape of a Nintendo Game Boy, is a magic key that can emulate the signal from a whole host of car maker's key fobs.

Game Boy Car

It’s stylized like a Nintendo Game Boy, but you won’t be able to play “Super Mario Land” on it.

Instead, the $25,000 device is designed to emulate the signal from a whole host of car makers’ key fobs. In other words, The Drive reports, it’s a skeleton car key — a devious gadget that lets you steal almost any modern car.

The SOS Key Tool is being sold by SOS Autokeys, a Bulgarian company that claims it doesn’t want to break any laws, according to The Drive. But potential owners won’t have to go through a background check, either. So, uh, we’re sure that everything they do will be perfectly legit.

Pop and Unlock

By activating a proximity system through the press of a button, owners of the shady device can scan and record any signal coming from the target car. The tool will even allow you to start the car through keyless ignition.

A similar technology was likely used by hackers who targeted Teslas in August of last year. Thieves showed up on home security video footage walking up to a Tesla owner’s home with what appeared to be some sort of device, likely attempting to spoof the vehicle’s fob signal.

As soon as The Drive published its story, all traces of the device seemed to disappear. Has law and order prevailed?

READ MORE: This $25,000 ‘Game Boy’ Is Made For Stealing Cars, Not Playing Tetris [The Drive]

More on cars: German Court: Tesla’s “Autopilot” Is False Advertising

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Someone Apparently Just Hacked Elon Musk, Joe Biden, Jeff Bezos and Kanye West

Someone appears to have hacked the Twitter accounts of Elon Musk, Joe Biden, Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Barack Obama, and Kanye West.

God Mode

Someone appears to have hacked the Twitter accounts of Elon Musk, Joe Biden, Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Barack Obama, Kanye West and a dazzling array of other celebrities, business magnates, politicians and other public figures. They even somehow accessed the account of Apple, which has never tweeted before.

The accounts are all posting similar messages, which promise that if you send bitcoin to a certain address, they’ll send double back — a classic scam.

Image

Easy Marks

Sure, it seems like an obvious ruse. But people on the internet aren’t particularly bright, and it looks like people have sent at least $100,000 to the address in the scam.

$104,000 has been received at the BTC address involved in the Twitter hack so far. More than 250 transactions so far

— Tom Warren (@tomwarren) July 15, 2020

Tug of War

It’s difficult to believe that tech figures like Musk and Bezos, nevermind public figures like Biden and West, wouldn’t have two-factor authentication enabled on their accounts. That makes the hack doubly impressive, because it means that the attackers somehow figured out not only their credentials but a way to access their text messages as well.

At press time, it appears that Musk is still struggling to control his own account, with earlier messages disappearing even while new ones appear.

READ MORE: Crypto scammers hack Elon Musk, Apple and Bill Gates on Twitter [Engadget]

More on Twitter: Twitter Verifies Fake Congressional Candidate Invented by Teen

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Scientists Build Tiny Camera For Beetles to Carry Around

Scientists built a beetle-sized backpack camera that they can use to livestream the daily routine of an insect from the bug's perspective.

Beetlecam

To get a first-hand look at the daily life of insects, scientists built a tiny camera they can mount on a beetle using a lilliputian backpack.

The Beetlecam (our name, not theirs) comes from the computer science department of the University of Washington, who were tasked with designing a camera light enough to not interrupt a bug’s daily routine but powerful enough to stream live footage to a smartphone. The result, Gizmodo reports, is a teeny robotic rig that grants real-time access to a bug’s view of the world.

Packing Light

The main challenge the team had to overcome was building a camera small enough to be carried by the death-feigning and Pinacate beetles — both of which Gizmodo reports are known for carrying things up steep inclines — and making the camera powerful enough to be worth using in the first place.

Even a smartphone’s built-in camera would be too heavy, so the scientists took inspiration from insects themselves, according to research published Wednesday in the journal Science Robotics. Like a fly’s compound eyes, the Beetlecam has a wide field of vision but only a small range in which the image is particularly sharp.

First Glimpse

The resulting footage is about as good as you’d expect from a beetle-friendly backpack. Gizmodo reports that the black-and-white footage streams between just one and five frames per second.

Looking forward, Gizmodo reports that the researchers may someday do away with the beetle part of the Beetlecam altogether, with bug-sized surveillance robots. We, needless to say, prefer spying on bugs instead.

READ MORE: Researchers Created Tiny Camera Backpacks for Beetles [Gizmodo]

More on insects: Scientists Warn “Insect Apocalypse” Could Doom Humanity

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Scientists Found Something Surprising in Closest-Ever Photos of the Sun

NASA just released the closest pictures ever taken of the Sun, courtesy of the Solar Orbiter. And they already made a big discovery.

NASA just released the closest pictures ever taken of the Sun — not to be confused with the highest resolution ones — courtesy of the Solar Orbiter, a collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA). The close-ups are breathtaking to look at, and also reveal something entirely unexpected as well: small flares they’re calling “campfires,” all over the star’s surface.

“The campfires we are talking about here are the little nephews of solar flares, at least a million, perhaps a billion times smaller,” said principal investigator David Berghmans, an astrophysicist at the Royal Observatory of Belgium in Brussels, in a a NASA statement. “When looking at the new high resolution EUI images, they are literally everywhere we look.”

Despite the majority of staff at ground control at the European Space Operations Center in Germany having to work from home during the ongoing pandemic, the team was able to obtain the images from the Solar Orbiter as it made its closest pass on June 15.

The Orbiter came within just 48 million miles of the Sun. Its closest pass within the next year or so will get it within just 26.1 million miles. NASA’s Parker Solar Probe came even closer in June, getting to within just 11.6 million miles from the surface.

A closer flyby also means better images. “Because the camera itself doesn’t doesn’t have any zoom capability, that zooming happens by getting closer to the Sun,” Daniel Müller, ESA’s Solar Orbiter Project Scientist, told The Verge.

“These unprecedented pictures of the Sun are the closest we have ever obtained,” Holly Gilbert, NASA project scientist for the mission at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, said in the NASA statement. “These amazing images will help scientists piece together the Sun’s atmospheric layers, which is important for understanding how it drives space weather near the Earth and throughout the solar system.”

Scientists are still unsure as to the exact nature of these “little” flare-ups — each of them are about the size of a country.

But we might soon know more thanks to the Solar Orbiter’s other scientific instruments. The Spectral Imaging of the Coronal Environment, or SPICE instrument, can measure the exact temperature of each nanoflare.

“So we’re eagerly awaiting our next data set,” Frédéric Auchère, principal investigator for SPICE operations at the Institute for Space Astrophysics in Orsay, France, said in NASA’s statement. “The hope is to detect nanoflares for sure and to quantify their role in coronal heating.”

Müller suggested to The Verge that the campfires “in total they could add up enough energy to heat the corona.” In other words, all these tiny flares could add up to enough energy to heat up the Sun’s entire atmosphere.

The Solar Orbiter is outfitted with an entire suite of scientific gear. Counting the cameras and the SPICE instrument, the small spacecraft features ten different instruments, all collecting invaluable data about our star.

Scientists weren’t expecting to find anything groundbreaking from the Orbiter’s first ever images — yet thanks to the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager, astronomers were astonished to discover what they called “campfires” all over the Sun’s surface.

“We didn’t really expect such great results right from the start,” Müller, ESA’s Solar Orbiter Project Scientist, said in an ESA statement. “We can also see how our ten scientific instruments complement each other, providing a holistic picture of the Sun and the surrounding environment.”

As part of a different experiment, scientists are excited to soon get a much closer and detailed look at structures of solar wind, massive streams of charged particles released from the Sun’s corona that make their way through the solar system.

Thanks to yet another instrument, the researchers are also getting an unprecedented look at the Sun’s magnetic field, particularly at each of its poles.

READ MORE: The closest images of the Sun ever taken reveal tiny solar flares dotting the star’s surface [The Verge]

More on the Solar Orbiter: A Space Probe Just Took the Closest Pictures of the Sun Ever

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For the First Time, Scientists Grow Human Sperm Stem Cells in Lab

Scientists grew stermatogonial stem cells — the precursors to sperm — in a lab for the first time, potentially unlocking new fertility treatments.

For the first time, scientists have been able to grow spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs), which are the cells that eventually develop into fully-fledged sperm, in a laboratory environment.

It’s too soon for the cells to be used in any sort of clinical setting, but this research lays the groundwork for game-changing developments for fertility medicine. Doctors have long sought after a way to jumpstart sperm production, but actually isolating and generating these SSCs was never possible. Now that it is, those treatments could someday become possible as well.

“We think our approach — which is backed up by several techniques, including single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis — is a significant step toward bringing SSC therapy into the clinic,” Miles Wilkinson, an obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences researcher at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, said in a press release.

SSCs can generate more stem cells and as many as 1,000 sperm every couple of seconds — but until this new study, published Monday in the journal PNAS, scientists were unable to differentiate and isolate SSCs from other, similar cells in the testicles.

“Next, our main goal is to learn how to maintain and expand human SSCs longer so they might be clinically useful,” Wilkinson said in the release.

If that happens, it could open up brand-new parenting options for transgender or non-binary people, as well as cisgender men who aren’t producing sperm due to old age or any other reason. But for now, the scientists are only at the point of growing new cells in a dish.

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This Black Hole Just Glitched

A supermassive black hole seems to have bugged out: its corona rapidly vanished into nothing before a brand new one took its place.

Blink Out

A distant supermassive black hole seems to have restarted itself, in a cosmic glitch so striking it would leave the architects of The Matrix puzzled.

Astronomers observing the black hole watched as its corona, the incredibly bright ring of particles that circles its event horizon, vanished over the course of a year. Then, even more confusingly, it reappeared, as though the entire black hole was turned off and on again.

Celestial Phoenix

In just a year, which is blazingly fast on a celestial time scale, the corona dimmed 10,000 times over. Then, in a few months, it formed a new one that’s now almost as bright as the original.

“We expect that luminosity changes this big should vary on timescales of many thousands to millions of years,” MIT physicist Erin Kara said in a press release. “But in this object, we saw it change by 10,000 over a year, and it even changed by a factor of 100 in eight hours, which is just totally unheard of and really mind-boggling.”

Gummed Up

The scientists suspect that something gummed up the works: According to research published Thursday in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, the black hole may have eaten a star that jammed everything up like a wrench stuck in a machine’s gears.

“This will be really important to understanding how a black hole’s corona is heated and powered in the first place,” Kara added.

READ MORE: In a first, astronomers watch a black hole’s corona disappear, then reappear [MIT]

More on black holes: Astronomers Find Nearest Black Hole to Earth, and It’s Strange

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Scientists: Blood Iron Levels Strongly Correlated With Long Lifespan

A massive new study strongly links high blood iron levels with a longer lifespan, giving hope to new longevity treatments.

Iron Man

Scientists may have just uncovered a new secret to extending the human lifespan: making sure there’s the right amount of iron in our blood.

University of Edinburgh scientists looked at data about 1.75 million people’s lifespans, including 60,000 who lived to reach an unusually old age, and found a clear link between blood iron levels and a longer life, according to research published Thursday in the journal Nature Communications. Specifically, the team found that multiple genes that seem to regulate blood iron levels were often found in long-lived people, and now speculate that they could develop lifespan-extending pharmaceuticals to do the same thing.

Knowledge Gap

The team also thinks their research fills in a knowledge gap that explains the link between lifespan, diet, and disease.

“We are very excited by these findings as they strongly suggest that high levels of iron in the blood reduces our healthy years of life, and keeping these levels in check could prevent age-related damage,” Edinburgh researcher Paul Timmers said in a press release. “We speculate that our findings on iron metabolism might also start to explain why very high levels of iron-rich red meat in the diet has been linked to age-related conditions such as heart disease.”

New Groundwork

Timmers warned, though, that the implications for diet and any potential treatments are speculative for now, and far beyond the scope of this new study.

Even so, the study lays an important groundwork for future attempts to tease out what it is that makes some people live longer — and to find out how everyone else can get a slice of the iron-rich pie.

READ MORE: Blood iron levels could be key to slowing ageing, gene study shows [University of Edinburgh]

More on longevity: This Scientist Predicted He Would Live to 150. Now He’s Not So Sure

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What is Futurism? Italy’s Art Movement that Love Speed and …

Unique Forms of Continuity in Space by Umberto Boccioni. 1913. (Photo: Wikipedia)

Fascinated by new industry and thrilled by what laid ahead, the early 20th-century Futurists carved out a place in history. Growing out of Italy, these artists worked as painters, sculptors, graphic designers, musicians, architects, and industrial designers. Together, they helped shape a new, modern style of art that still has staying power today.

The Futurists were revolutionaries, members of an avant-garde movement that sought to free itself from the artistic norms of the past. Through frequent, well-laid-out manifestos, they were able to spread their ideas widely and enjoyed great success prior to World War I. This group firmly looked forward and couldnt get enough of what they saw. For the Futurists, the past was something to look down on. Airplanes and automobiles symbolized the speed they craved and the dynamism with which they saw the world.

Today, the Futurist movement is known for its embracing of speed, violence, and youth culture in an attempt to move culture forward. Though the movement is probably most widely associated with Umberto Boccionis sculpture Unique Forms of Continuity in Space, theres a lot more to explore.

Italian futurists Luigi Russolo, Carlo Carr, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Umberto Boccioni and Gino Severini in front of Le Figaro, Paris, February 9, 1912 (Photo: Wikipedia)

Futurism was founded in Milan by the Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. He published his Manifesto of Futurism in 1909, first in the La gazzetta dellEmilia and then in Frances daily newspaper Le Figaro.

This initial manifesto laid out the Futurists disdain for the past, stating We want no part of it, the past, we the young and strong Futurists! In the text, its also clear that Marinetti wishes to reestablish Italy as a new cultural center. Italy, which was only unified in 1870, was still basking in the glory of the ancient Roman Empire and the Italian Renaissance. For the Futurists, this wasnt enough.

In fact, Marinetti was through with the past, writing, We will free Italy from her innumerable museums which cover her like countless cemeteries. Futurists saw much more beauty in the great industrial discoveries of the 20th century than classical painting and sculpture. In the manifesto, they outright state that modern industrial inventions are much more appealing: We declarea new beauty, the beauty of speed. A racing motor caris more beautiful than theVictory of Samothrace.

The manifesto also promoted violence and the necessity of war, but interestingly did not discuss or outline any rules for the visual arts. That would come later, with the 1914 Technical Manifesto for Futurist Painting. It was just one of many manifestos that they would produce, as the Futurists wrote about all sorts of topics, from architecture and religion to clothing.

Surrounding Marinetti during this early stage was a core group of artists that would shape Futurism and, particularly, the visual arts. Composer Luigi Russolo, as well as painters Umberto Boccioni, Carlo Carr, Giacomo Balla, and Gino Severini formed the original Futurists.

Dynamism of a Cyclist by Umberto Boccioni. 1913. (Photo: Wikipedia)

As the early manifesto did not directly address the artistic output of Futurism, it took some time before there was a cohesive visual. A hallmark of Futurist art is the depiction of speed and movement.

In particular, they adhered to principals of universal dynamism, which meant that no single object is separate from its background or another object. The sixteen people around you in a rolling motor bus are in turn and at the same time one, ten four three; they are motionless and they change places. The motor bus rushes into the houses which it passes, and in their turn the houses throw themselves upon the motor bus and are blended with it.

This is best exemplified in Giacomo Ballas Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash, where the motion of walking the dog is shown through the multiplying of the dogs feet, leash, and owners legs. Urban scenes such as this were typical subject matter for the Futurists, who saw the city environment as the apex of their ideals.

Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash by Giacomo Balla. 1912. (Photo: Wikipedia)

Umberto Boccioni explained the principals of Futurist art by distinguishing it from another avant-garde movementImpressionism. While the impressionists paint a picture to give one particular moment and subordinate the life of the picture to its resemblance to this moment, we synthesize every moment (time, place, form, color-tone) and thus paint the picture.

The Futurists were also highly influenced by Cubism, which was first brought to the group by Gino Severini. Severini came into contact with the style while visiting Paris in 1911 and introduced its use of broken color fields and short brushstrokes to the Futurists. The core artists used these techniques to create even more dynamic scenes of everything from cyclists to dancers to cities under construction.

Eventually, Boccioni took his work from two dimensions to three dimensions and created the acclaimed sculpture Unique Forms of Continuity in Space. Aerodynamic and fluid, its emblematic of the painters new obsession with sculpture and its ability to suggest motion. Interestingly, the sculpture was never cast in bronze during Boccionis lifetime. His original plaster cast is located in So Paulos contemporary art museum. Several bronze casts were made beginning in 1931, with one of the original casts acquired by New Yorks MoMA.

Dynamic Hieroglyphic of the Bal Tabarin by Gino Severini. 1912. (Photo: Wikipedia)

Brooklyn Bridge by Joseph Stella. 1919-1920. (Photo: Wikipedia)

The beginning of World War I signaled the end of the original Futurist group. Boccioni created only one painting during the war and was drafted into the Italian army. It was a huge blow for the group when he was killed in 1916 during a training exercise.

After the end of the war, Marinetti revived the movement. This period was later called Second Futurism which became associated with Fascism. Similar to many Fascists, they felt that Italy was a country divided between the industrialized north and agricultural south and wished to build a bridge to bring them together. Marinettis Futurist Political Party was actually absorbed into Benito Mussolinis Fascist Party, though Marinetti would later disagree with some of their principals and withdraw from political life.

Post-World War I Futurism was dedicated to new types of expression. In particular, Aeropainting became a popular style in the 1920s. It combined the love for flight with aerial landscapes and was often used in propaganda. Not limited to landscapes, Aeropainting was actually varied in its subject matter and remained popular until 1940.

After the defeat of Mussolini and Marinettis death in 1944, Futurism as a formal movement was dead. However, it remained highly influential for subsequent 20th-century art movements like Dada, Surrealism, andin terms of designArt Deco.

Today, works by Futurist artists can be found in major collections around the world and are essential to understanding early 20th-century culture.

Speeding Motorboat by Benedetta Cappa. 1923. (Photo: WikiArt)

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What is Futurism? Italy's Art Movement that Love Speed and ...

Crap: NASA’s Mars "Mole" Finally Started Digging, Then Hit Another Obstacle – Futurism

NASA has been desperately trying to use the mole attached its InSight Mars lander to bury into the Martian soil for more than 17 long months, but progress has been slow. The Martian soil composition just wasnt what the scientists expected, forcing them to improvise.

In the latest update, NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory outlined how the 16-inch, jackhammer-like mole, formally known as the Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package (or HP3), encountered its latest obstacle.

While it was able to finally bury its entire length into the soil, according to an early June update, it seems to have had some trouble getting to the desired minimum depth of ten feet (or 3 meters). After a lengthy hammering session of 150 strokes on June 20, as JPL puts it, the mole caused bits of soil jostling within the scoop possible evidence that the mole had begun bouncing in place, knocking the bottom of the scoop.

The moles mission objective is to take Mars temperature from below the surface.

Like studying the heat leaving a car engine, it measures the heat coming from Mars interior to reveal how much heat is flowing out of the body of the planet, and what the source of the heat is, NASA wrote in a mission brief.

But getting deeper might prove very difficult going forward. The moles tether was found to be moving side to side now, according to images beamed back to Earth following the moles June hammering session.

The scientists best guess is that the soil isnt providing sufficient friction. The soil beneath NASAs InSight lander proved to be cement-like duricrust according to JPL, that may have caused the mole to recoil and bounce around.

The team behind the mole at the German Aerospace Center (DLR) are hoping to scoop up some nearby soil and throw it into the hole after the mole to provide some more friction.

The news comes after scientists at NASA had to get creative to free the mole by hitting it with its scooping shovel back in March, after themoles entire apparatus got stuck in the sand-like terrain.

The team at DLR estimate that it may require 300 cubic centimeters of sand to fill the gaps, a number of scrapes of InSights shovel scoop.

READ MORE: The mole on Mars from NASAs InSight lander may be stuck again [Space.com]

More on the mole: NASA InSight Lander Finally Manages to Bury Its Mole Into Mars

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Crap: NASA's Mars "Mole" Finally Started Digging, Then Hit Another Obstacle - Futurism

Astronomers Surprised to Find Stars Streaming Into the Center of Our Galaxy – Futurism

Moving In

Scientists say theyve discovered a vast trail of about 200 stars is streaming towards the center of the Milky Waya starry river they think could be the remains of an ancient dwarf galaxy devoured by our own.

I was not expecting to see new stellar streams, but it was a great surprise, Lina Necib, a Postdoctoral Fellow at the California Institute of Technology, told Newsweek.

The galactic merger hypothesis seems to be the most likely origin story for the stars, according to research published Monday in the journal Nature Astronomy based on a new analysis of data from the European Space Agencys Gaia spacecraft. Necib dubbed the stellar stream Nyx, after the Greek goddess of the night, and the mother of death and darkness.

Using the next Gaia data release, Necib added, we will also look at the extension of the Nyx stars further from the plane of the Milky Way and build a coherent story of the formation of the Milky Way.

If the stars really came from some ancient dwarf galaxy, then its also possible the stellar stream is held together by some of that galaxys dark matter giving astronomers an interesting new place to look for it. But theres no guarantee thats the case, Newsweek reports. The stars could also, Necib admits, be Milky Way natives that simply got jostled out of place.

It could also be stars from the disk of the Milky Way that are vibrating because of a collision of the disk, Necib told Newsweek.

READ MORE: Vast Stream of Stars From Beyond Milky Way Found Moving Toward Galaxy Center [Newsweek]

More on the galaxy: This Star Drifted Into the Milky Way From Another Galaxy

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Instead of Fighting COVID, the White House Is Attacking Anthony Fauci – Futurism

The coronavirus pandemic is veering out of control in many parts of the United States. Florida has officially a dubious national record, with 15,300 new cases in a single day.

And the White House, rather than addressing the deepening health crisis, has decided to attack its top infectious disease expert. As The Washington Post reported over the weekend,Trump administration staffers are claiming that Fauci has repeatedly misled the public and has been unjustifiably critical of the President.

Just last week, Trump himself said Fauci was a nice man, but hes made a lot of mistakes, during a Fox News interview with Sean Hannity.

A White House official even released a statement claiming several White House officials are concerned about the number of times Dr. Fauci has been wrong on things, according to the Post.

The administration is also targeting Fauci for public reassurances made in late February, when he allegedly downplayed the severity and risks of community transmission of the virus.

It is true that Fauci has changed his tune but hes done so in line with scientists understanding of the pandemic, which has drastically changed over the last five months.

The numbers paint a damning picture of the US response. More than 3.3 million Americans have been infected so far, according to the latest numbers, with at least 134,900 deaths. Even adjusted for population, the nation outranks most other countries in the world in terms of confirmed cases and deaths.

The US is still very much riding the first wave of the pandemic, as Fauci warned earlier this month and the numbers, particularly in the South, are still sharply on the rise.

What worries me is the slope of the curve, Fauci told the Financial Times last week. It still looks like its exponential.

As a country, when you compare us to other countries, I dont think you can say were doing great, Fauci said during a podcast interview with FiveThirtyEight last week. I mean, were just not.

Hospitals are getting overwhelmed with COVID-19 positive patients while states are opening up again. Shelter in place orders specifically designed to stop this exact thing from happening have long been lifted in many parts of the country.

The situation, the best I can describe it is dire and its getting worse, it seems like, every day, Harris Health System CEO Esmail Porsa told MSNBC this morning.

Houstons Lyndon B. Johnson Hospital has officially run out of hospital beds. Its ICU is at 113 percent capacity, according to Porsa. 75 percent are COVID-19 positive.

Despite the numbers and repeated warnings, the Trump administrations response has only rarely heeded Faucis advice. Case in point: The first time Trump wore a face mask in public was this weekend.

In fact, the administration seems to be actively trying to downplay Faucis role. Officials cancelled Faucis scheduled appearances after his remarks last week, the Post reports.

In other words, relations between the top infectious disease specialist and the administration are at an all-time low. Fauci even told Financial Times that the last time he spoke to president Trump was on June 2, over two months ago.

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Futuristic Architecture of the 70s: Photographs of a Modern World with a Twist of Science Fiction – ArchDaily

Futuristic Architecture of the 70s: Photographs of a Modern World with a Twist of Science Fiction

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The Manifesto of Futurism, written by Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti in 1909, was the rallying cry for the avant-garde movement driven by the writers, musicians, artists, and even architects (among them Antonio Sant'Elia) in the early 20th century. After the manifesto's publication, Futurism quickly came to the forefront of public conscience and opened the way for many other cutting edge movements in the art world and beyond.

While the movement would undergo a significant decline in the years following World War II, it reinvented itself decades later during the Space Age, when faith in technology and industry were at a fever-pitch and the world's powers were racing to put humans on the Moon. All of a sudden, humanity had a new cultural panorama that inspired everyfacet of society--from musicians, to scientists, to architects. Withthe combination of engineering and art, not to mention the bountiful scientific achievements of the time, works of architecture turned into works of science fiction.

Recently, photographer Stefano Perego documented a series of works that exemplify the legacy left behind by the radical architects of the 1970s. Truly acolytes of their time, these architects sought to bring the future to the present through their designs, giving us iconic works such as the prototype Futuro House (Matti Suuronen, 1968), the Makedonium (Jordan Grabuloski + Iskra Grabuloska, 1974) or the spherical houses of the Bolwoningen community (Dries Kreijkamp, 1980-1985).

All of these projects mix organic and geometric forms with materials like plastic, steel, and concrete to bring to life humanity'sdreamsfor the future.

The formative role that science fiction played in architecture, along with film, art, and literature, is captured in a series of writings from the late 1950s and early 60s. Reyner Banham, in his 1958 article Space, Fiction, and Architecture, cited Lszl Moholy Nagy, affirming that "we need utopians of genius, a new Julio Verne, not to outline an easy-to-understand technological utopia but to outline the very condition of future men."[1] Banham reinforced the idea that this longing and aspiration would inspire the architectural imagination of an entire generation. In this same writing, he concludes that science fiction is "a part of the essential education to form the imagination of any technologist."[2]

Stefano Perego (1984) is an architectural photographer based in Milan, Italy. He collaborates frequently with architectural studios as well as artists and is co-author of a book SOVIET ASIA (Modern Soviet Architecture in Central Asia). His strong interest in the architecture of the later 20th century has centered his work Modernism, Brutalism, and Post-Modernism. You can see more of Stefano Perego's work by visiting his website and checking out his Instagram account.

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Futuristic Architecture of the 70s: Photographs of a Modern World with a Twist of Science Fiction - ArchDaily

Futurism – Wikipedia

Artistic and social movement

Futurism (Italian: Futurismo) was an artistic and social movement that originated in Italy in the early 20th century. It emphasised speed, technology, youth, violence, and objects such as the car, the airplane, and the industrial city. Its key figures were the Italians Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Umberto Boccioni, Carlo Carr, Fortunato Depero, Gino Severini, Giacomo Balla, and Luigi Russolo. It glorified modernity and aimed to liberate Italy from the weight of its past.[1] Cubism contributed to the formation of Italian Futurism's artistic style.[2] Important Futurist works included Marinetti's Manifesto of Futurism, Boccioni's sculpture Unique Forms of Continuity in Space, Balla's painting Abstract Speed + Sound, and Russolo's The Art of Noises.

Although it was largely an Italian phenomenon, there were parallel movements in Russia, where some Russian Futurists would later go on to found groups of their own; other countries either had a few Futurists or had movements inspired by Futurism. The Futurists practiced in every medium of art, including painting, sculpture, ceramics, graphic design, industrial design, interior design, urban design, theatre, film, fashion, textiles, literature, music, architecture, and even cooking.

To some extent Futurism influenced the art movements Art Deco, Constructivism, Surrealism, and Dada, and to a greater degree Precisionism, Rayonism, and Vorticism.

Futurism is an avant-garde movement founded in Milan in 1909 by the Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti.[1] Marinetti launched the movement in his Manifesto of Futurism,[3] which he published for the first time on 5 February 1909 in La gazzetta dell'Emilia, an article then reproduced in the French daily newspaper Le Figaro on Saturday 20 February 1909.[4][5][6] He was soon joined by the painters Umberto Boccioni, Carlo Carr, Giacomo Balla, Gino Severini and the composer Luigi Russolo. Marinetti expressed a passionate loathing of everything old, especially political and artistic tradition. "We want no part of it, the past", he wrote, "we the young and strong Futurists!" The Futurists admired speed, technology, youth and violence, the car, the airplane and the industrial city, all that represented the technological triumph of humanity over nature, and they were passionate nationalists. They repudiated the cult of the past and all imitation, praised originality, "however daring, however violent", bore proudly "the smear of madness", dismissed art critics as useless, rebelled against harmony and good taste, swept away all the themes and subjects of all previous art, and gloried in science.

Publishing manifestos was a feature of Futurism, and the Futurists (usually led or prompted by Marinetti) wrote them on many topics, including painting, architecture, music, literature, photography, religion, women, fashion and cuisine.[7][8]

The founding manifesto did not contain a positive artistic programme, which the Futurists attempted to create in their subsequent Technical Manifesto of Futurist Painting (published in Italian as a leaflet by Poesia, Milan, 11 April 1910).[9] This committed them to a "universal dynamism", which was to be directly represented in painting. Objects in reality were not separate from one another or from their surroundings: "The sixteen people around you in a rolling motor bus are in turn and at the same time one, ten four three; they are motionless and they change places. ... The motor bus rushes into the houses which it passes, and in their turn the houses throw themselves upon the motor bus and are blended with it."[10]

The Futurist painters were slow to develop a distinctive style and subject matter. In 1910 and 1911 they used the techniques of Divisionism, breaking light and color down into a field of stippled dots and stripes, which had been adopted from Divisionism by Giovanni Segantini and others. Later, Severini, who lived in Paris, attributed their backwardness in style and method at this time to their distance from Paris, the centre of avant-garde art.[11] Severini was the first to come into contact with Cubism and following a visit to Paris in 1911 the Futurist painters adopted the methods of the Cubists. Cubism offered them a means of analysing energy in paintings and expressing dynamism.

They often painted modern urban scenes. Carr's Funeral of the Anarchist Galli (191011) is a large canvas representing events that the artist had himself been involved in, in 1904. The action of a police attack and riot is rendered energetically with diagonals and broken planes. His Leaving the Theatre (191011) uses a Divisionist technique to render isolated and faceless figures trudging home at night under street lights.

Boccioni's The City Rises (1910) represents scenes of construction and manual labour with a huge, rearing red horse in the centre foreground, which workmen struggle to control. His States of Mind, in three large panels, The Farewell, Those who Go, and Those Who Stay, "made his first great statement of Futurist painting, bringing his interests in Bergson, Cubism and the individual's complex experience of the modern world together in what has been described as one of the 'minor masterpieces' of early twentieth century painting."[12] The work attempts to convey feelings and sensations experienced in time, using new means of expression, including "lines of force", which were intended to convey the directional tendencies of objects through space, "simultaneity", which combined memories, present impressions and anticipation of future events, and "emotional ambience" in which the artist seeks by intuition to link sympathies between the exterior scene and interior emotion.[12]

Boccioni's intentions in art were strongly influenced by the ideas of Bergson, including the idea of intuition, which Bergson defined as a simple, indivisible experience of sympathy through which one is moved into the inner being of an object to grasp what is unique and ineffable within it. The Futurists aimed through their art thus to enable the viewer to apprehend the inner being of what they depicted. Boccioni developed these ideas at length in his book, Pittura scultura Futuriste: Dinamismo plastico (Futurist Painting Sculpture: Plastic Dynamism) (1914).[13]

Balla's Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash (1912) exemplifies the Futurists' insistence that the perceived world is in constant movement. The painting depicts a dog whose legs, tail and leashand the feet of the woman walking ithave been multiplied to a blur of movement. It illustrates the precepts of the Technical Manifesto of Futurist Painting that, "On account of the persistency of an image upon the retina, moving objects constantly multiply themselves; their form changes like rapid vibrations, in their mad career. Thus a running horse has not four legs, but twenty, and their movements are triangular."[10] His Rhythm of the Bow (1912) similarly depicts the movements of a violinist's hand and instrument, rendered in rapid strokes within a triangular frame.

The adoption of Cubism determined the style of much subsequent Futurist painting, which Boccioni and Severini in particular continued to render in the broken colors and short brush-strokes of divisionism. But Futurist painting differed in both subject matter and treatment from the quiet and static Cubism of Picasso, Braque and Gris. As the art critic Robert Hughes observed, "In Futurism, the eye is fixed and the object moves, but it is still the basic vocabulary of Cubismfragmented and overlapping planes".[14] While there were Futurist portraits: Carr's Woman with Absinthe (1911), Severini's Self-Portrait (1912), and Boccioni's Matter (1912), it was the urban scene and vehicles in motion that typified Futurist painting; Boccioni's The Street Enters the House (1911), Severini's Dynamic Hieroglyph of the Bal Tabarin (1912), and Russolo's Automobile at Speed (1913)

The Futurists held their first exhibition outside of Italy in 1912 at the Bernheim-Jeune gallery, Paris, which included works by Umberto Boccioni, Gino Severini, Carlo Carr, Luigi Russolo and Giacomo Balla.[15][16]

In 1912 and 1913, Boccioni turned to sculpture to translate into three dimensions his Futurist ideas. In Unique Forms of Continuity in Space (1913) he attempted to realise the relationship between the object and its environment, which was central to his theory of "dynamism". The sculpture represents a striding figure, cast in bronze posthumously and exhibited in the Tate Modern. (It now appears on the national side of Italian 20 eurocent coins). He explored the theme further in Synthesis of Human Dynamism (1912), Speeding Muscles (1913) and Spiral Expansion of Speeding Muscles (1913). His ideas on sculpture were published in the Technical Manifesto of Futurist Sculpture[17] In 1915 Balla also turned to sculpture making abstract "reconstructions", which were created out of various materials, were apparently moveable and even made noises. He said that, after making twenty pictures in which he had studied the velocity of automobiles, he understood that "the single plane of the canvas did not permit the suggestion of the dynamic volume of speed in depth ... I felt the need to construct the first dynamic plastic complex with iron wires, cardboard planes, cloth and tissue paper, etc."[18]

In 1914, personal quarrels and artistic differences between the Milan group, around Marinetti, Boccioni, and Balla, and the Florence group, around Carr, Ardengo Soffici (18791964) and Giovanni Papini (18811956), created a rift in Italian Futurism. The Florence group resented the dominance of Marinetti and Boccioni, whom they accused of trying to establish "an immobile church with an infallible creed", and each group dismissed the other as passiste.

Futurism had from the outset admired violence and was intensely patriotic. The Futurist Manifesto had declared, "We will glorify warthe world's only hygienemilitarism, patriotism, the destructive gesture of freedom-bringers, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and scorn for woman."[6][19] Although it owed much of its character and some of its ideas to radical political movements, it was not much involved in politics until the autumn of 1913.[18] Then, fearing the re-election of Giolitti, Marinetti published a political manifesto. In 1914 the Futurists began to campaign actively against the Austro-Hungarian empire, which still controlled some Italian territories, and Italian neutrality between the major powers. In September, Boccioni, seated in the balcony of the Teatro dal Verme in Milan, tore up an Austrian flag and threw it into the audience, while Marinetti waved an Italian flag. When Italy entered the First World War in 1915, many Futurists enlisted.[20] The experience of the war marked several Futurists, particularly Marinetti, who fought in the mountains of Trentino at the border of Italy and Austria-Hungary, actively engaging in propaganda.[21] The combat experience also influenced Futurist music.[22]

The outbreak of war disguised the fact that Italian Futurism had come to an end. The Florence group had formally acknowledged their withdrawal from the movement by the end of 1914. Boccioni produced only one war picture and was killed in 1916. Severini painted some significant war pictures in 1915 (e.g. War, Armored Train, and Red Cross Train), but in Paris turned towards Cubism and post-war was associated with the Return to Order.

After the war, Marinetti revived the movement. This revival was called il secondo Futurismo (Second Futurism) by writers in the 1960s. The art historian Giovanni Lista has classified Futurism by decades: "Plastic Dynamism" for the first decade, "Mechanical Art" for the 1920s, "Aeroaesthetics" for the 1930s.

Russian Futurism was a movement of literature and the visual arts, involving various Futurist groups. The poet Vladimir Mayakovsky was a prominent member of the movement, as were Velimir Khlebnikov and Aleksei Kruchyonykh; visual artists such as David Burliuk, Mikhail Larionov, Natalia Goncharova, Lyubov Popova, and Kazimir Malevich found inspiration in the imagery of Futurist writings, and were writers themselves. Poets and painters collaborated on theatre production such as the Futurist opera Victory Over the Sun, with texts by Kruchenykh, music by Mikhail Matyushin, and sets by Malevich.

The main style of painting was Cubo-Futurism, extant during the 1910s. Cubo-Futurism combines the forms of Cubism with the Futurist representation of movement; like their Italian contemporaries, the Russian Futurists were fascinated with dynamism, speed and the restlessness of modern urban life.

The Russian Futurists sought controversy by repudiating the art of the past, saying that Pushkin and Dostoevsky should be "heaved overboard from the steamship of modernity". They acknowledged no authority and professed not to owe anything even to Marinetti, whose principles they had earlier adopted, most of whom obstructed him when he came to Russia to proselytize in 1914.

The movement began to decline after the revolution of 1917. The Futurists either stayed, were persecuted, or left the country. Popova, Mayakovsky and Malevich became part of the Soviet establishment and the brief Agitprop movement of the 1920s; Popova died of a fever, Malevich would be briefly imprisoned and forced to paint in the new state-approved style, and Mayakovsky committed suicide on April 14, 1930.

The Futurist architect Antonio Sant'Elia expressed his ideas of modernity in his drawings for La Citt Nuova (The New City) (19121914). This project was never built and Sant'Elia was killed in the First World War, but his ideas influenced later generations of architects and artists. The city was a backdrop onto which the dynamism of Futurist life is projected. The city had replaced the landscape as the setting for the exciting modern life. Sant'Elia aimed to create a city as an efficient, fast-paced machine. He manipulates light and shape to emphasize the sculptural quality of his projects. Baroque curves and encrustations had been stripped away to reveal the essential lines of forms unprecedented from their simplicity. In the new city, every aspect of life was to be rationalized and centralized into one great powerhouse of energy. The city was not meant to last, and each subsequent generation was expected to build their own city rather than inheriting the architecture of the past.

Futurist architects were sometimes at odds with the Fascist state's tendency towards Roman imperial-classical aesthetic patterns. Nevertheless, several Futurist buildings were built in the years 19201940, including public buildings such as railway stations, maritime resorts and post offices. Examples of Futurist buildings still in use today are Trento's railway station, built by Angiolo Mazzoni, and the Santa Maria Novella station in Florence. The Florence station was designed in 1932 by the Gruppo Toscano (Tuscan Group) of architects, which included Giovanni Michelucci and Italo Gamberini, with contributions by Mazzoni.

Futurist music rejected tradition and introduced experimental sounds inspired by machinery, and would influence several 20th-century composers.

Francesco Balilla Pratella joined the Futurist movement in 1910 and wrote a Manifesto of Futurist Musicians in which he appealed to the young (as had Marinetti), because only they could understand what he had to say. According to Pratella, Italian music was inferior to music abroad. He praised the "sublime genius" of Wagner and saw some value in the work of other contemporary composers, for example Richard Strauss, Elgar, Mussorgsky, and Sibelius. By contrast, the Italian symphony was dominated by opera in an "absurd and anti-musical form". The conservatories was said to encourage backwardness and mediocrity. The publishers perpetuated mediocrity and the domination of music by the "rickety and vulgar" operas of Puccini and Umberto Giordano. The only Italian Pratella could praise was his teacher Pietro Mascagni, because he had rebelled against the publishers and attempted innovation in opera, but even Mascagni was too traditional for Pratella's tastes. In the face of this mediocrity and conservatism, Pratella unfurled "the red flag of Futurism, calling to its flaming symbol such young composers as have hearts to love and fight, minds to conceive, and brows free of cowardice."

Luigi Russolo (18851947) wrote The Art of Noises (1913),[23][24] an influential text in 20th-century musical aesthetics. Russolo used instruments he called intonarumori, which were acoustic noise generators that permitted the performer to create and control the dynamics and pitch of several different types of noises. Russolo and Marinetti gave the first concert of Futurist music, complete with intonarumori, in 1914. However they were prevented from performing in many major European cities by the outbreak of war.

Futurism was one of several 20th-century movements in art music that paid homage to, included or imitated machines. Ferruccio Busoni has been seen as anticipating some Futurist ideas, though he remained wedded to tradition.[25] Russolo's intonarumori influenced Stravinsky, Arthur Honegger, George Antheil, Edgar Varse,[12] Stockhausen and John Cage. In Pacific 231, Honegger imitated the sound of a steam locomotive. There are also Futurist elements in Prokofiev's The Steel Step and in his Second Symphony.

Most notable in this respect, however, is the American George Antheil. His fascination with machinery is evident in his Airplane Sonata, Death of the Machines, and the 30-minute Ballet Mcanique. The Ballet Mcanique was originally intended to accompany an experimental film by Fernand Lger, but the musical score is twice the length of the film and now stands alone. The score calls for a percussion ensemble consisting of three xylophones, four bass drums, a tam-tam, three airplane propellers, seven electric bells, a siren, two "live pianists", and sixteen synchronized player pianos. Antheil's piece was the first to synchronize machines with human players and to exploit the difference between what machines and humans can play.

The Futuristic movement also influenced the concept of dance. Indeed, dancing was interpreted as an alternative way of expressing man's ultimate fusion with the machine. The altitude of a flying plane, the power of a car's motor and the roaring loud sounds of complex machinery were all signs of man's intelligence and excellence which the art of dance had to emphasize and praise. This type of dance is considered futuristic since it disrupts the referential system of traditional, classical dance and introduces a different style, new to the sophisticated bourgeois audience. The dancer no longer performs a story, a clear content, that can be read according to the rules of ballet. One of the most famous futuristic dancers was the Italian Giannina Censi[it]. Trained as a classical ballerina, she is known for her "Aerodanze" and continued to earn her living by performing in classical and popular productions. She describes this innovative form of dance as the result of a deep collaboration with Marinetti and his poetry. Through these words, she explains: " I launched this idea of the aerial-futurist poetry with Marinetti, he himself declaiming the poetry. A small stage of a few square meters;... I made myself a satin costume with a helmet; everything that the plane did had to be expressed by my body. It flew and, moreover, it gave the impression of these wings that trembled, of the apparatus that trembled,... And the face had to express what the pilot felt."[26][27]

Futurism as a literary movement made its official debut with F.T. Marinetti's Manifesto of Futurism (1909), as it delineated the various ideals Futurist poetry should strive for. Poetry, the predominate medium of Futurist literature, can be characterized by its unexpected combinations of images and hyper-conciseness (not to be confused with the actual length of the poem). The Futurists called their style of poetry parole in libert (word autonomy), in which all ideas of meter were rejected and the word became the main unit of concern. In this way, the Futurists managed to create a new language free of syntax punctuation, and metrics that allowed for free expression.

Theater also has an important place within the Futurist universe. Works in this genre have scenes that are few sentences long, have an emphasis on nonsensical humor, and attempt to discredit the deep rooted traditions via parody and other devaluation techniques.There are a number of examples of Futurist novels from both the initial period of Futurism and the neo-Futurist period, from Marinetti himself to a number of lesser known Futurists, such as Primo Conti, Ardengo Soffici and Giordano Bruno Sanzin (Zig Zag, Il Romanzo Futurista edited by Alessandro Masi, 1995). They are very diverse in style, with very little recourse to the characteristics of Futurist Poetry, such as 'parole in libert'. Arnaldo Ginna's 'Le locomotive con le calze'(Trains with socks on) plunges into a world of absurd nonsense, childishly crude. His brother Bruno Corra wrote in Sam Dunn morto (Sam Dunn is Dead) a masterpiece of Futurist fiction, in a genre he himself called 'Synthetic' characterized by compression, and precision; it is a sophisticated piece that rises above the other novels through the strength and pervasiveness of its irony. Science Fiction novels play an important role in Futurist literature.[28]

When interviewed about her favorite film of all times,[29] famed movie critic Pauline Kael stated that the director Dimitri Kirsanoff, in his silent experimental film Mnilmontant "developed a technique that suggests the movement known in painting as Futurism".[30]

Thas ("Thas"), directed by Anton Giulio Bragaglia (1917), is the only surviving of the 1910s Italian futurist cinema to date (35 min. of the original 70 min.). [31]

Within F.T. Marinetti's The Founding and Manifesto of Futurism, two of his tenets briefly highlight his hatred for women under the pretense that it fuels the Futurist movement's visceral nature:

9. We intend to glorify warthe only hygiene of the worldmilitarism, patriotism, the destructive gesture of anarchists, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and contempt for woman.10. We intend to destroy museums, libraries, academics of every sort and to fight against moralism, feminism, and every utilitarian opportunistic cowardice.[3]

Marinetti would begin to contradict himself when, in 1911, he called Luisa, Marchesa Casati a Futurist; he dedicated a portrait of himself painted by Carr to her, the said dedication declaring Casati as a Futurist being pasted on the canvas itself.[32]

In 1912, only three years after the Manifesto of Futurism was published, Valentine de Saint-Point responded to Marinetti's claims in her Manifesto of the Futurist Woman (Response to F.T. Marinetti.) Marinetti even later referred to her as "the 'first futurist woman.'"[33] Her manifesto begins with a misanthropic tone by presenting how men and women are equal and both deserve contempt.[34] She instead suggests that rather than the binary being limited to men and women, it should be replaced with "femininity and masculinity"; ample cultures and individuals should possess elements of both.[34] Yet, she still embraces the core values of Futurism, especially its focus on "virility" and "brutality". Saint-Point uses this as a segue into her antifeminist argumentgiving women equal rights destroys their innate "potency" to strive for a better, more fulfilling life.[34]

In Russian Futurist and Cubo-Futurist circles, however, from the start, there was a higher percentage of women participants than in Italy; exmples of major female Futurists are Natalia Goncharova, Aleksandra Ekster, and Lyubov Popova. Although Marinetti expressed his approval of Olga Rozanova's paintings during his 1914 lecture tour of Russia, it is possible that the women painters' negative reaction to the said tour may have largely been due to his misogyny.

Despite the chauvinistic nature of the Italian Futurist program, many serious professional female artists adopted the style, especially so after the end of the first World War. Notably among these female futurists is F.T Marinetti's own wife Benedetta Cappa Marinetti, whom he had met in 1918 and exchanged a series of letters discussing each of their respective work in Futurism. Letters continued to be exchanged between the two with F.T Marinetti often complimenting Benedetta - the single name she was best known as - on her genius. In a letter dated August 16, 1919, Marinetti wrote to Benedetta "Do not forget your promise to work. You must carry your genius to its ultimate splendor. Every day."[35] Although many of Benedetta's paintings were exhibited in major Italian exhibitions like the 1930-1936 Venice Biennales (in which she was the first woman to have her art displayed since the exhibition's founding in 1895[36]), the 1935 Rome Quadriennale and several other futurist exhibitions, she was oft overshadowed in her work by her husband. The first introduction of Benedetta's feminist convictions regarding futurism is in the form of a public dialogue in 1925 (with a L.R Cannonieri) concerning the role of women in society.[36] Benedetta was also one of the first to paint in Aeropittura, an abstract and futurist art style of landscape from the view of an airplane.

Many Italian Futurists supported Fascism in the hope of modernizing a country divided between the industrialising north and the rural, archaic South. Like the Fascists, the Futurists were Italian nationalists, radicals, admirers of violence, and were opposed to parliamentary democracy. Marinetti founded the Futurist Political Party (Partito Politico Futurista) in early 1918, which was absorbed into Benito Mussolini's Fasci Italiani di Combattimento in 1919, making Marinetti one of the first members of the National Fascist Party. He opposed Fascism's later exaltation of existing institutions, calling them "reactionary", and walked out of the 1920 Fascist party congress in disgust, withdrawing from politics for three years; but he supported Italian Fascism until his death in 1944. The Futurists' association with Fascism after its triumph in 1922 brought them official acceptance in Italy and the ability to carry out important work, especially in architecture. After the Second World War, many Futurist artists had difficulty in their careers because of their association with a defeated and discredited regime.

Marinetti sought to make Futurism the official state art of Fascist Italy but failed to do so. Mussolini chose to give patronage to numerous styles and movements in order to keep artists loyal to the regime. Opening the exhibition of art by the Novecento Italiano group in 1923, he said, "I declare that it is far from my idea to encourage anything like a state art. Art belongs to the domain of the individual. The state has only one duty: not to undermine art, to provide humane conditions for artists, to encourage them from the artistic and national point of view."[37] Mussolini's mistress, Margherita Sarfatti, who was as able a cultural entrepreneur as Marinetti, successfully promoted the rival Novecento group, and even persuaded Marinetti to sit on its board. Although in the early years of Italian Fascism modern art was tolerated and even embraced, towards the end of the 1930s, right-wing Fascists introduced the concept of "degenerate art" from Germany to Italy and condemned Futurism.

Marinetti made numerous moves to ingratiate himself with the regime, becoming less radical and avant-garde with each. He moved from Milan to Rome to be nearer the centre of things. He became an academician despite his condemnation of academies, married despite his condemnation of marriage, promoted religious art after the Lateran Treaty of 1929 and even reconciled himself to the Catholic Church, declaring that Jesus was a Futurist.

Although Futurism mostly became identified with Fascism, it had leftist and anti-Fascist supporters. They tended to oppose Marinetti's artistic and political direction of the movement, and in 1924 the socialists, communists and anarchists walked out of the Milan Futurist Congress. The anti-Fascist voices in Futurism were not completely silenced until the annexation of Abyssinia and the Italo-German Pact of Steel in 1939.[38] This association of Fascists, socialists and anarchists in the Futurist movement, which may seem odd today, can be understood in terms of the influence of Georges Sorel, whose ideas about the regenerative effect of political violence had adherents right across the political spectrum.

Futurism expanded to encompass many artistic domains and ultimately included painting, sculpture, ceramics, graphic design, industrial design, interior design, theatre design, textiles, drama, literature, music and architecture.

Aeropainting (aeropittura) was a major expression of the second generation of Futurism beginning in 1926. The technology and excitement of flight, directly experienced by most aeropainters,[39] offered aeroplanes and aerial landscape as new subject matter. Aeropainting was varied in subject matter and treatment, including realism (especially in works of propaganda), abstraction, dynamism, quiet Umbrian landscapes,[40] portraits of Mussolini (e.g. Dottori's Portrait of il Duce), devotional religious paintings, decorative art, and pictures of planes.

Aeropainting was launched in a manifesto of 1929, Perspectives of Flight, signed by Benedetta, Depero, Dottori, Filla, Marinetti, Prampolini, Somenzi and Tato (Guglielmo Sansoni). The artists stated that "The changing perspectives of flight constitute an absolutely new reality that has nothing in common with the reality traditionally constituted by a terrestrial perspective" and that "Painting from this new reality requires a profound contempt for detail and a need to synthesise and transfigure everything." Crispolti identifies three main "positions" in aeropainting: "a vision of cosmic projection, at its most typical in Prampolini's 'cosmic idealism' ...; a 'reverie' of aerial fantasies sometimes verging on fairy-tale (for example in Dottori ...); and a kind of aeronautical documentarism that comes dizzyingly close to direct celebration of machinery (particularly in Crali, but also in Tato and Ambrosi)."[41]

Eventually there were over a hundred aeropainters. Major figures include Fortunato Depero, Marisa Mori, Enrico Prampolini, Gerardo Dottori and Crali. Crali continued to produce aeropittura up until the 1980s.

Futurism influenced many other twentieth-century art movements, including Art Deco, Vorticism, Constructivism, Surrealism, Dada, and much later Neo-Futurism[42][43] and the Grosvenor School linocut artists.[44] Futurism as a coherent and organized artistic movement is now regarded as extinct, having died out in 1944 with the death of its leader Marinetti.

Nonetheless, the ideals of Futurism remain as significant components of modern Western culture; the emphasis on youth, speed, power and technology finding expression in much of modern commercial cinema and culture. Ridley Scott consciously evoked the designs of Sant'Elia in Blade Runner. Echoes of Marinetti's thought, especially his "dreamt-of metallization of the human body", are still strongly prevalent in Japanese culture, and surface in manga/anime and the works of artists such as Shinya Tsukamoto, director of the Tetsuo (lit. "Ironman") films. Futurism has produced several reactions, including the literary genre of cyberpunkin which technology was often treated with a critical eyewhilst artists who came to prominence during the first flush of the Internet, such as Stelarc and Mariko Mori, produce work which comments on Futurist ideals. and the art and architecture movement Neo-Futurism in which technology is considered a driver to a better quality of life and sustainability values.[45][46]

A revival of sorts of the Futurist movement in theatre began in 1988 with the creation of the Neo-Futurist style in Chicago, which utilizes Futurism's focus on speed and brevity to create a new form of immediate theatre. Currently, there are active Neo-Futurist troupes in Chicago, New York, San Francisco, and Montreal.[47]

Futurist ideas have been a major influence in Western popular music; examples include ZTT Records, named after Marinetti's poem Zang Tumb Tumb; the band Art of Noise, named after Russolo's manifesto The Art of Noises; and the Adam and the Ants single "Zerox", the cover featuring a photograph by Bragaglia. Influences can also be discerned in dance music since the 1980s.[48]

Japanese Composer Ryuichi Sakamoto's 1986 album "Futurista" was inspired by the movement. It features a speech from Tommaso Marinetti in the track 'Variety Show'.[49]

In 2009, Italian director Marco Bellocchio included Futurist art in his feature film Vincere.[50]

In 2014, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum featured the exhibition "Italian Futurism, 19091944: Reconstructing the Universe".[51] This was the first comprehensive overview of Italian Futurism to be presented in the United States.[52]

Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art is a museum in London, with a collection solely centered around modern Italian artists and their works. It is best known for its large collection of Futurist paintings.

Photos, in descending order: Carlo Carr, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Umberto Boccioni, Luigi Russolo. Paintings, in descending order: Luigi Russolo, 1911, Souvenir d'un nuit, 1911-12, La rvolte (two versions are depicted here); Umberto Boccioni, 1912, Le rire; Gino Severini, 1911, La danseuse obsedante. Published in The Sun, 25 February 1912

Paintings by Gino Severini, 1911, La Danse du Pan-Pan, and Severini, 1913, L'autobus. Published in Les Annales politiques et littraires, Le Paradoxe Cubiste, 14 March 1920

Paintings by Gino Severini, 1911, Souvenirs de Voyage; Albert Gleizes, 1912, Man on a Balcony, L'Homme au balcon; Severini, 191213, Portrait de Mlle Jeanne Paul-Fort; Luigi Russolo, 191112, La Rvolte. Published in Les Annales politiques et littraires, Le Paradoxe Cubiste (continued), n. 1916, 14 March 1920

This is a partial list of people involved with the Futurist movement.

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