AOC Says Her Twitter Account Broke After She Made Fun of Elon Musk

Another day, another Elon Musk feud on Twitter — except now, he's the owner of the social network, and he's beefing with AOC.

Latest Feud

Another day, another Elon Musk feud on Twitter — except now, he's the owner of the social network, and he's beefing with a sitting member of Congress.

The whole thing started innocently enough earlier this week, when firebrand Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY, and better known by her initials, "AOC") subtweeted the website's new owner.

"Lmao at a billionaire earnestly trying to sell people on the idea that 'free speech' is actually a $8/mo subscription plan," the New York Democratic Socialist tweeted in a post that, upon Futurism's perusal, appeared to load only half the time.

Sweat Equity

Not one to be shown up, Musk later posted a screenshot of an AOC-branded sweatshirt from the congressperson's website, with its $58 price tag circled and an emoji belying the billionaire's alleged affront at the price.

In response, Ocasio-Cortez said she was proud her sweatshirts were made by union labor, and that the proceeds from their sales were going to fund educational support for needy kids. She later dug in further, noting that her account was "conveniently" not working and joking that Musk couldn't buy his way "out of insecurity."

Yo @elonmusk while I have your attention, why should people pay $8 just for their app to get bricked when they say something you don’t like?

This is what my app has looked like ever since my tweet upset you yesterday. What’s good? Doesn’t seem very free speechy to me ? pic.twitter.com/e3hcZ7T9up

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) November 3, 2022

Bricked

To be clear, any suggestion that Musk personally had anything to do with any Twitter glitches on AOC's part would seem ludicrously petty. But then again, this is a guy who once hired a private detective to investigate a random critic.

Occam's razor, though, suggests that it was probably AOC's mega-viral tweet that broke the site's notoriously dodgy infrastructure. Of course, that's not a ringing endorsement of the site that Musk just acquired for the colossal sum of $44 billion.

More on Twitter: Twitter Working on Plan to Charge Users to Watch Videos

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AOC Says Her Twitter Account Broke After She Made Fun of Elon Musk

US Gov to Crack Down on "Bossware" That Spies On Employees’ Computers

In the era of remote work, employers have turned to invasive

Spying @ Home

Ever since the COVID-19 pandemic drove a wave of working from home, companies have been relentless in their efforts to digitally police and spy on remote employees by using what's known as "bossware." That's the pejorative name for software that tracks the websites an employee visits, screenshots their computer screens, and even records their faces and voices.

And now, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), an agency of the federal government, is looking to intervene.

"Close, constant surveillance and management through electronic means threaten employees' basic ability to exercise their rights," said NLRB general counsel Jennifer Abruzzo, in a Monday memo. "I plan to urge the Board to apply the Act to protect employees, to the greatest extent possible, from intrusive or abusive electronic monitoring and automated management practices."

Undoing Unions

In particular, Abruzzo is worried about how bossware could infringe on workers' rights to unionize. It's not hard to imagine how such invasive surveillance could be used to bust unionization. Even if the technology isn't explicitly deployed to impede organization efforts, the ominous presence of the surveillance on its own can be a looming deterrent, which Abruzzo argues is illegal.

And now is the perfect moment for the NLRB to step in. The use and abuse of worker surveillance tech in general — not just bossware — has been "growing by the minute," Mark Gaston Pearce, executive director of the Workers' Rights Institute at Georgetown Law School, told CBS.

"Employers are embracing technology because technology helps them run a more efficient business," Gaston explained. "… What comes with that is monitoring a lot of things that employers have no business doing."

Overbearing Overlord

In some ways, surveillance tech like bossware can be worse than having a nosy, actual human boss. Generally speaking, in a physical workplace employees have an understanding of how much privacy they have (unless they work at a place like Amazon or Walmart, that is).

But when bossware spies on you, who knows how much information an employer could be gathering — or even when they're looking in. And if it surveils an employee's personal computer, which more often than not contains plenty of personal information that a boss has no business seeing, that's especially invasive.

Which is why Abruzzo is pushing to require employers to disclose exactly how much they're tracking.

It's a stern message from the NLRB, but at the end of the day, it's just a memo. We'll have to wait and see how enforcing it pans out.

More on surveillance: Casinos to Use Facial Recognition to Keep "Problem Gamblers" Away

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US Gov to Crack Down on "Bossware" That Spies On Employees' Computers

Cats May Be Tampering With Crime Scenes, Scientists Say

Cats, ever the mischievous and frisky pets, may be harboring a lot more human DNA than once thought, possibly tampering crime scenes, a new study says.

Cat Burglar

Cats are known for not really minding their own business, getting their furry paws on just about anything they can.

And it turns out, this makes them effective vectors for DNA evidence, according to a study published last month in the journal Forensic Science International: Genetic Supplement Series.

Researchers collaborating with the Victoria Police Forensic Services Department in Australia found detectable human DNA in 80 percent of the samples collected from 20 pet cats, with 70 percent of the samples strong enough that they could be linked to a person of interest in a crime scene investigation.

"Collection of human DNA needs to become very important in crime scene investigations, but there is a lack of data on companion animals such as cats and dogs in their relationship to human DNA transfer," said study lead author Heidi Monkman, a forensic scientist at Flinders University, in a statement.

"These companion animals can be highly relevant in assessing the presence and activities of the inhabitants of the household, or any recent visitors to the scene."

Here Kitty

One possible takeaway is that cats — and other companion pets like dogs — could be harboring DNA that could help solve a case.

The bigger issue, though, is that pets could introduce foreign DNA that muddles a crime scene, possibly leading to an innocent person being implicated. A pet could be carrying the DNA of a complete stranger, or it might bring the DNA of its owner into a crime scene that they had nothing to do with.

Monkman's colleague and co-author of the paper, Maria Goray, is an experienced crime scene investigator and an expert in DNA transfer. She believes their findings could help clear up how pets might tamper a crime scene by carrying outside DNA.

"Are these DNA findings a result of a criminal activity or could they have been transferred and deposited at the scene via a pet?" Goray asked.

It's a question worth asking — especially because innocent people have been jailed off botched DNA science far too often.

More on DNA evidence: Cops Upload Image of Suspect Generated From DNA, Then Delete After Mass Criticism

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Cats May Be Tampering With Crime Scenes, Scientists Say

Elon Musk Meeting With Advertisers, Begging Them Not to Leave Twitter

Advertisers are fleeing Twitter in droves now that Tesla CEO Elon Musk has taken over control. Now, he's trying to pick up the pieces and begging them to return.

Advertisers are fleeing Twitter in droves now that Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has taken over control.

Ever since officially closing the $44 billion deal, Musk has been busy gutting the company's executive suite and dissolving its board. Senior executives, as well as Twitter's advertising chief Sarah Personette, have departed as well.

After all, Musk has been very clear about his disdain for advertising for years now.

The resulting uncertainty has advertisers spooked — major advertising holding company IPG has already advised clients to pull out temporarily — and the billionaire CEO is in serious damage mode.

Now, Reuters reports, Musk is spending most of this week meeting with advertisers in New York, trying to reassure them that Twitter won't turn into a "free-for-all hellscape."

According to one of Reuters' sources, the meetings have been "very productive" — but plenty of other marketers are far from satisfied.

Advertisers are reportedly grilling Musk over his plans to address the rampant misinformation being spread on the platform, a trend that Musk himself has been actively contributing to since the acquisition.

And if he's succeeding in ameliorating advertisers in private, he's antagonizing them publicly. On Wednesday, Musk posted a poll asking users whether advertisers should support either "freedom of speech," or "political 'correctness'" — a type of false dichotomy that echoes the rhetoric of far-right conspiracy theorists and conservative pundits.

"Those type of provocations are not helping to calm the waters," an unnamed media buyer told Reuters.

Some are going public with the same sentiment.

"Unless Elon hires new leaders committed to keeping this 'free' platform safe from hate speech, it's not a platform brands can/should advertise on," Allie Wassum, global media director for the Nike-owned shoe brand Jordan, wrote in a LinkedIn post.

So far, Musk's plans for the social media platform remain strikingly muddy. In addition to the behind-the-scenes advertising plays, he's also announced that users will have to pay to retain their verification badge, though he's engaged in a comically public negotiation as to what the cost might be.

He's also hinted that previously banned users — former US president Donald Trump chief among them — might eventually get a chance to return, but only once "we have a clear process for doing so, which will take at least a few more weeks."

The move was seen by many as a way to wait out the impending midterm elections. After all, Twitter has played a huge role in disseminating misinformation and swaying elections in the past.

While advertisers are running for the hills, to Musk advertising is clearly only a small part of the picture — even though historically, social giants like Twitter have struggled to diversify their revenue sources much beyond display ads.

Musk nodded to that reality in a vague open letter posted last week.

"Low relevancy ads are spam, but highly relevant ads are actually content!" he wrote in the note, addressed to "Twitter advertisers."

Big picture, Twitter's operations are in free fall right now and Musk has yet to provide advertisers with a cohesive plan to pick up the pieces.

While he's hinted at the creation of a new content moderation council made up of both "people from all viewpoints" and "wildly divergent views," advertisers are clearly going to be thinking twice about continuing their business with Twitter.

With or without advertising, Twitter's finances are reportedly in a very deep hole. The billions of dollars Musk had to borrow to finance his mega acquisition will cost Twitter around $1 billion a year in interest alone.

The company also wasn't anywhere near profitable before Musk took over, losing hundreds of millions of dollars in a single quarter.

Whether that picture will change any time soon is as unclear as ever, especially in the face of a wintry economy.

But, of course, Musk has proved his critics wrong before. So anything's possible.

READ MORE: Advertisers begin to grill Elon Musk over Twitter 'free-for-all' [Reuters]

More on the saga: Elon Musk Pulling Engineers From Tesla Autopilot to Work on Twitter

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Elon Musk Meeting With Advertisers, Begging Them Not to Leave Twitter

This house is designed for life on Mars (but it’s in England) – Fast Company

How do you think we should live on Mars? Thats the (very open-ended) question that was recently posed to more than 200 people in England. The answer has just landed in a public square in Bristol, UKand its a two-story, solar-powered dwelling with a kitchenette, a hydroponic garden, and a Martian toilet.

[Photo: Luke ODonovan]Dubbed the Martian House, the structure will open to the public next week and host a series of talks and workshops about sustainable living. Unlike the flurry of farfetched renderings of Mars colonies populating the internet, the Martian House is a tangible object thats designed to get people to think less about actually colonizing space and more about living with scarce resources, and within your means in a constrained environment that isnt driven by consumerism.

The Martian House was conceived of by artists Ella Good and Nicki Kent, who wanted to use Mars as a lens to focus on what we really need and how we want to live on Earth. It was designed by two British architecture and design firms: Pearce+ and Hugh Broughton Architects, which has designed a number of science research stations in Antarctica. The architects consulted with space scientists about the climate conditions on Mars and how those should translate into their design.

They also ran a series ofworkshops in Bristol, where members of the public could dream up their ideal home features in space, like an open kitchen, or a view of the Martian landscape. The most common request, however, was living plants. Theyre a living thingthey need to be tended and looked after, and you can eat them, says Hugh Broughton Architects director, Hugh Broughton. But its as much the caring as anything else, which is very therapeutic, especially in an alien environment. (At the U.S. South Pole Station in Antarctica, Broughton says researchers can book a half-hour slot to just sit in the hydroponic garden, tend the plants, or even read a book in the warmth.)

[Photo: Luke ODonovan]Naturally, plants hold a special place on the second floor of the Martian House. Together with a kitchenette, the hydroponic living room is contained within a pressurized, double-skin inflatable structure lined with gold foil. This comes with a window and a skylight, and the gold coating is meant to reflect the sun and reduce heat gain on the surface. (The temperature on Mars is cold, but Broughton says the equipment required for lighting and ventilation will build up enough heat inside.)

On Mars, the walls within would be filled with Martian regolith, a silt-like volcanic rockthats readily available on the planet. The Bristol version, however is filled with air. Meanwhile, the ground floor houses compact bedroom pods and a Duravit toilet with a heated seat, illuminated bowl, and an odor extraction mechanism because you cant just open the window on a planet with so little oxygen. On Mars, this half of the house would be built underground, within Marss empty lava tubes. In Bristol, it sits in a boarded-up shipping container.

[Photo: Luke ODonovan]The Martian House was designed to withstand the red planets harsh climate (an average temperature of -80 degrees and high cosmic radiation), but this isnt meant to be a NASA-proof house for Mars. Im sure there are technical holes, or someone would say the rocket dimensions are this and your house wouldnt pack in like that, but thats not the aim, says Broughton. Its aim is to, as closely as possible, represent what a house on Mars would be like, but actually in the process to provoke questions about our own lives on Earth.

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This house is designed for life on Mars (but it's in England) - Fast Company

Mars was once covered in water and this giant map shows us where – BGR

Scientists have long believed that the now dusty Red Planet was once home to rivers, lakes, and other assorted bodies of water. But proving the existence of that water and what happened to it has always been difficult. Data collected over the past decade has allowed scientists to create a map of ancient water traces, confirming Mars was once covered in water.

Mars is an intriguing planet. Once believed to be abundant in water, the atmosphere has long since thinned, leaving the planet a shell of what it once was. The planets history has also long been an interest to scientists, with many believing it a strong candidate for space-based colonies at some point down the line.

Many of these beliefs, though, are fueled by the planets history and the traces of ancient water weve discovered across its surface. Some even say that Mars is hiding water under its surface. Of course, it has been difficult to analyze these components properly. Thats because getting sediment and other samples back from Mars hasnt been possible until recently.

However, with the data that NASA and the ESA have gathered from the Curiosity Rover, and now even Perseveranceas well as other spacecraft based around studying the Martian surfacewe know that water was once quite abundant on the Red Planet.

The ESA released a video detailing this new Martian water map. The video showcases where weve found ancient traces of water on the Martian surface. These traces often come in the form of deposits of aqueous minerals. These are minerals that have been altered by water, like clay.

The close-up studies of the Martian surface by Curiosity and Perseverance show that clays are present on Mars. As such, it only makes sense for water also to be present. This new map is, however, a much broader look at where water would have been found on the planet.

Some scientists say that we have oversimplified the Red Planet as a whole. And as a result, we have missed the bigger picture. Instead of seeing these minerals and ancient water traces as the oddity, we should be more intrigued when we dont see them. After all, Mars once had an atmosphere similar to Earths. And that could have allowed life to blossom there.

Unfortunately, its hard to say exactly when the atmosphere became so thin and the water dried up. But, with NASA planning to return samples from Mars in the coming years, we could soon have more answers and data to sift through. Researchers published two papers on the subject in the journal Icarus.

The first paper gives a great overlook of where the minerals were found. However, the second paper dives deeper, offering a quantified look at the minerals. These papers have provided important context and groundwork that we needed to establish before properly addressing questions surrounding ancient traces of water on Mars.

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Mars was once covered in water and this giant map shows us where - BGR

Rocket Lab Seeks to Answer ‘Are We Alone?’ by Launching First Private Mission to Venus – Gizmodo

An illustration of the small spacecraft that Rocket Lab is currently developing to cruise through Venus clouds.Illustration: Rocket Lab

SpaceX might have its sights set on Mars, but Rocket Lab is seeking to become the first private company to reach Venus and explore its clouds for signs of potential habitability.

Rocket Lab revealed new details about its self-funded mission to the Venusian clouds in a recent paper published in the journal Aerospace. The California-based company is building a small probe thats designed to fly through the planets upper atmosphere for a duration of roughly five minutes and at altitudes between 29 and 37 miles (48 to 60 kilometers) above the surface. The company is hoping to launch its spacecraft in May 2023 and have the probe reach Venus in October of that same year, with a backup launch window in January 2025.

The probe is designed to fly aboard the companys trusty Electron rocketthe only reusable orbital-class small rocket currently in existence, according to the company. Electron will send the probe on a 100-mile (165-kilometer) orbit above Earth; then, the rockets high-energy upper stage Photon will perform a series of burns to raise the probes orbit to where it can achieve escape velocity from Earths gravitational pull.

Rocket Lab is no stranger to audacious feats; the company pulled off a daring stunt in May by using a helicopter to catch a falling rocket mid-air. Sending a probe to Venus, however, is a major step beyond, as the second planet from the Sun is located some 38 million miles (61 million kilometers) from Earth at its nearest proximity. Its closer to Earth than Mars, but Venus is far less welcoming of spacecraft due to its extremely hot atmosphere and air pressure thats 90 times higher than that of Earths.

A mission like this to Venus would signal a new era of planetary exploration, in which private companies, and not just government space agencies, make attempts to explore distant bodies. Rocket Lab is also slated to launch twin spacecraft to Mars in 2024 as part of a subcontract with the University of California Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory. Two other private space companies, Impulse Space and Relativity Space, recently announced a joint venture to launch a mission to Mars as early as 2024.

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Rocket Labs self-funded science mission sounds noble, and possibly even important, but theres more to this mission than sniffing the Venusian atmosphere for possible biosignatures. Its possible that Rocket Lab is using the mission to test its spacecraft in anticipation of national space agencies, like NASA or the European Space Agency, wanting to further outsource similar projects. And as the Rocket Lab study points out, the mission will also put its Photon spacecraft to the test and demonstrate the success of a high-performance, low-cost, fast-turnaround deep space entry mission delivering Decadal-class science with small spacecraft and small launch vehicles. Though not stated in the study, this technology could eventually be leveraged to support commercialized supply chains (or other linkages) between celestial bodies, such as supporting colonists on Mars. Rocket Lab also wants to initiate a campaign of smaller missions to explore Venus, the paper says.

NASA hasnt sent a dedicated probe to Venus since the Magellan program, which arrived at the planet in 1989 and wrapped up science operations in 1994. That is set to change later this decade, as NASAs DAVINCI mission is scheduled to launch to Venus in 2029. The probe will plunge through Venus atmosphere prior to landing on its surface. DAVINCI is one of three upcoming Venus missions, as Venus is very hot right now, both literally and figuratively.

Indeed, Venus boasts temperatures that reach up to 880 degrees Fahrenheit (471 degrees Celsius), while featuring a thick, carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere and a volcanic landscape. The planet is not fit for habitability today, but scientists believe it may have started off with similar conditions to Earth and over time became the hellish world it is today.

In September 2020, a group of scientists claimed that Venus may have signs of life in its clouds based on a detection of what might be phosphine in the Venusian atmosphere. Phosphine is considered a biosignature gas on Earth. Thats the main driving force behind Rocket Labs mission to Venusto help gather further evidence of potential life in the Venusian clouds. Were sending our Photon spacecraft to Venus in search of life, Rocket Lab wrote on Twitter. However, the phosphine detection was largely met with skepticism, with scientists raising doubts over the data, among other quibbles.

Rocket Labs search for life in Venus clouds may turn up empty, but a mission to the planets atmosphere could answer key questions about its past. A 2019 study from NASAs Goddard Institute for Space Studies suggested that Venus may have once had oceans on its surface for about 2 to 3 billion years, indicating potentially habitable conditions during its early history. Either way, and should Rocket Lab successfully make it to Venus, itll set a new standard for private space ambitions.

More: NASAs DAVINCI Mission Will Plunge Through the Hellish Atmosphere of Venus

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Rocket Lab Seeks to Answer 'Are We Alone?' by Launching First Private Mission to Venus - Gizmodo

How ‘Don’t Worry Darling’ Palm Springs locations add to thrills – Los Angeles Times

Olivia Wilde remembers driving to Palm Springs for the first time 20 years ago, taking in the Midcentury Modern architecture, the palm trees, the lush golf courses and the flowing fountains, a verdant city plopped in the middle of a desert. Every time the native New Yorker looked out the window, the same thought ran through her head: If we settled Mars, this is what it would look like.

It felt like the ultimate expression of mans dominance and power, Wilde says over the phone, taking a walk around New York. Its so beautiful, but its also a really strange place. If not for all the creature comforts that man has created, you would die very quickly out here. And its the desert, so its spooky. I recall thinking that someday we have to make a horror movie out there.

That day has arrived with Dont Worry Darling, opening in theaters Sept. 23 after world premiering next week at the Venice Film Festival, a psychological thriller about a couple (Florence Pugh and Harry Styles) living in a utopian desert community called the Victory Project. Its a place where men leave in the mornings in their vintage Corvettes and Pontiacs for mysterious jobs while the women stay home, make the beds, scrub the bathtubs and cook up a pot roast for dinner. The ethos, in the words of the communitys leader, Frank (Chris Pine), is all about mining pure, unbridled potential. That and hedonism. The women must keep the liquor cabinets fully stocked too.

As the song goes, Its the good life if youre one of the men nuzzling your submissive wife over a bacon and eggs breakfast. Otherwise, to use another line from the same Sinatra song, You hide all the sadness you feel. The tension between the colonys seductive glamour and the level of control it imposes on the women who live there (imagine the most draconian HOA and you get the idea) gradually becomes exposed as Pughs character begins to question her surroundings over the course of the films two-hour running time.

Palm Springs stands in for the otherworldly setting of the Victory Project in Dont Worry Darling, an elite community with some dark secrets.

(Merrick Morton/Warner Bros. Pictures)

There was a moment when Dont Worry Darling might not have happened in Palm Springs. Wilde, writer Katie Silberman and production designer Katie Byron, the trio who collaborated on Wildes directorial debut, the acclaimed 2019 teen comedy Booksmart, had embarked on an early road trip to the desert to start scouting locations. It was July 2020, hotter than hell and the beginning of the pandemic, which made the Victory Projects life of revolving dinner parties feel like a complete fantasy. Taking in all the butterfly rooflines of communities like Canyon View Estates, they were certain they had found the movies setting.

But because of COVID, Wilde says, very reasonable powers that be suggested moving the production to New Zealand to save money. Wilde understood the logic but resisted, believing that, on a subconscious level, Palm Springs connected to what she calls the patriarchal masculinity that was essential to the story she was telling.

For me, New Zealand is this ecological gem thats evidence of natures power, Wilde says, and feels connected to Mother Nature and femininity. I think if I made a sequel about the matriarchy, New Zealand would be a reasonable place to go because its a place where you go to be humbled by nature. Thats the opposite of what the character Frank wants. He wants people to feel that nature is humbled in their presence, that man has molded nature to his will.

Chris Pine as Frank, the charismatic leader of the Victory Project, in Dont Worry Darling.

(Warner Bros. Pictures)

The location for Franks home was vitally important, and Wilde lucked out in securing the Kaufmann Desert House, a marvel of Modernism, a home made from glass, steel and Utah stone, epitomizing the indoor-outdoor Southern California lifestyle aesthetic. The home, built in 1946 to the designs of Richard Neutra, has been immortalized in photographs, including Slim Aarons Poolside Gossip, a shot that, coincidentally, Wilde had pinned to her wall while she was developing Dont Worry Darling.

To have that image on the wall and then be able to crawl inside it felt like that scene in Mary Poppins when they jump into the chalk drawings on the sidewalk, Wilde says.

The movie makes use of a couple of other Palm Springs landmarks, the City Hall and the Visitors Center, both designed by renowned architect Albert Frey. But for another key location, the building that stands in as the Victory Projects mysterious headquarters (employees only!), the films location manager, Chris Baugh, ventured a couple of hours north to the Mojave Desert community of Newberry Springs. There, atop a 150-foot cinder cone, sits a building known as the Volcano House, a saucer-like structure that appears to have materialized from another planet or dimension.

The Volcano House in Newberry Springs serves at the setting for the Victory Project headquarters in Dont Worry Darling.

(Warner Bros. Pictures)

We got shivers down our spines when we first saw it, Byron says. Adds cinematographer Matthew Libatique: It just feels like it melts into the landscape. Its a trek to get out there, but when everyone saw it, they knew: This is it. This is what the Victory Projects headquarters would look like.

The triumph associated with the communitys name appears to be confined, as the films trailer hints, to a small slice of the population. And yet, Wilde says, its easy to be seduced by iconography of the midcentury, Rat Pack era, which is why she hoped to keep Dont Worry Darling from being didactic in its depiction of its patriarchal world.

Filming at the Kaufmann Desert House as the films community gathers for a speech from Frank (Chris Pine).

(Merrick Morton/Warner Bros. Pictures)

Theres a recklessness to the debauchery that feels almost aspirational to us today, Wilde says, Because it feels like a world without consequence. Id be lying if I said I didnt find it really compelling and alluring. I didnt want to make a preachy feminist parable that depicts men as villains. I think the film is about our collective complicity in this futuristic infrastructure that objectifies women.

And what I found so interesting was the complicity in myself, she continues. That feeling of, Oh, Im all about new-wave feminism and smash the patriarchy. But here I am loving this era and you can use the Rat Pack as an example of it that was really horrendous for women. That tension between knowing somethings wrong but still being very seduced by it is where the movie sits. I want the audience to be tugged back and forth between those emotions.

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How 'Don't Worry Darling' Palm Springs locations add to thrills - Los Angeles Times

20 Best Xbox One Space Games To Explore The Great Unknown – Gameranx

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]

The Xbox One may be a last-gen console now, but that doesnt mean theres not a lot you can do with it still. In fact, given that the Series X is both hard to find and doesnt have a lot of original games on it, you might have the urge to play your Xbox One more. And if youre looking for a space kick, we got something special for you here.

Lets start out with something that is honestly very unique compared to the other titles that are upcoming. Deep Rock Galactic focuses on you and 3 other players being a team of space dwarves (yes, the species exists in space, deal with it!), and your job is to go to various spots in the galaxy and try to mine as much material as you can.

If youre expecting a, But, youd be right in thinking that far ahead. Because within these places are massive hordes of monsters that will keep coming without end until you get what you need and then depart.

So work together, set up gadgets to help you fight off the horde, and get out with your loot!

We know that some of you will be mad that Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga is so low on this list, but lets be honest here, the LEGO video game titles are meant to satisfy a certain kind of gamer, and if thats not you, then youll find this very over the top.

If it is a game for you though, then youll want to try this version of the titles because it literally brings all 9 mainline movies into one game for you to play. Youll fight enemies, collect bricks and various other things, and of course, play as a large menagerie of other Star Wars characters.

Its simple fun, what more could you ask for?

Space Hulk: Tactics is one of many (MANY!!!) titles that hails in origins from the Warhammer 40K board game universe. In Space Hulk: Tactics, youll actually get a faithful recreation of the board game, but with some fun video game twists.

A space hulk if you dont know isnt a machine, but rather, a part of space in which there is a large mass of ships, debris, asteroids and so on all clumped together to make things very difficult to go around.

Youll play as either the Blood Angels Squad, or, youll play as the Genestealers race for the first time ever, and square of in deep campaigns. Or, take the fight to multiplayer to see who comes out on top there!

If youre looking for a more creative side of these space adventures, you need only look at Astroneer. Why is that? Because in this game, youll be a space adventurer in the 25th century, and youll be given the power to go and terraform worlds in order to make it more suitable for you and your employers, as well as just shaping the planets to your whim.

Youll be able to go to a good sect of planets, and you can do things above ground, below ground, craft items and vehicles to help with your exploration or expansion, and more!

The visual style also helps it stand out, so dont miss out!

What do you get when you mix intense action, mind-bending abilities, space combat, and a storyline about a former cult weapon trying to take out those that created them? No, its not an anime (though it couldve been), rather, its the game Chorus

You are Nara, who was a created being by a dark cult known as The Circle. They had great plans for you, but then, you broke away from their control, and now, with your sentient ship Forsaken at your side, you must travel the galaxy in order to rally a resistance in order to take The Circle down.

Both on the ground and in the depths of space youll be able to do all sorts of battles, so get ready for a deep and dark journey.

In the real world, the question of surviving Mars is one that many are not only asking, but are trying to figure out openly so that we can at least attempt to colonize it one day.

In the video game Surviving Mars, youll actually be tasked with trying to make it happen, and in quick order. You might think that making a colony on Mars from the video game standpoint would be easy, but theres a lot more in it than you realize.

Youll have to place the colony, grow the colony, manage the resources you have, get the resources of Mars to try and help you further, and explore The Red Planet in order to see what mysteries lie on it and underneath its surface.

You are a scientists on the Talos I space station, and your team is in the midst of doing experience that could change things for the human race as a whole.

But then, out of nowhere, as you yourself are being tested in the experiment, the station goes dark, and when you awaken, nothing is as it should be. An alien race is ravaging the station, you cant remember who you are, and all of a suddenyou have abilities.

Now, you must use these new gifts to not just unravel the truth of all thats going on, but to fight back against the invading threat. If youre looking for intense action and a bit of alien horror, here you go!

Stellaris is one of many games out there that gives you a universe to explore and they actually back that up in the best way. In this case, you are a planet that has finally gotten into the space exploration age of its cycle. So nowits time to make the most of it.

Youll start out small, building and sending out all sorts of science and exploration ships to try and get a better grasp of whats out there. But then, youll change tactics and start to shape your global empire.

Youll meet other species, have to worry about maintaining the power of your newly growing empire, and more. So be ready for an ever-evolving adventure in Stellaris!

Lets just say for a sec that you dont want to control humans in a game because you dont want to hurt thembut youre more than willing to do it to a fictional race! Well then, Kerbal Space Program is for you then.

Because in this game, youll take control of the Kerbals, a race of beings who are trying to get into space and expand. Thankfully, they have you, unfortunately, its going to be a trial-and-error process.

So much so that youll really need to learn from your mistakes, and then once you have the baseplate, you go and start exploring the solar system and beyond, set up space stations and colonies, and more!

Do it for the Kerbals!

Not unlike a previous title, Elite Dangerous is a game that has a massive universe to explore. The catch though is that youre not ruling over a whole race, instead, you are in control of yourself, and will go on your own journey in any way you want to see how you fit in to this universe.

All you have to start the game is a ship and some credits, the rest is up to you. Be something good, be something bad, influence the universe around you, or let everyone else do the hard work. Either way you look at it, the universe is a big place, and the way you carve out your role in it is entirely and emphatically up to youand the other players who affect the game as a whole.

If youre looking for a more mature Star Wars game (sorry, Lego!), then look no further than Star Wars: Squadrons.

Banking off the fan-love for the dogfighting elements in the Battlefront games, Star Wars: Squadrons puts you in the cockpit of some of the most legendary vehicles in the Star Wars universe. Whether you play as the New Republic or the Empire, your skills as a pilot will be tested to the limit.

Whats more, there is a storyline that takes place right after Return of the Jedi to help further prove where in-canon it is. So go and take to the skies and space and see if you have what it takes to be the best pilot in the galaxy.

You are the daughter of Ellen Ripley, and one day, you get word that on a nearby space station there is a recorded message from her. You rush to the station, only to find out that the station is offlineand that theres an old friend waiting for you.

Yes, Alien Isolation once again puts a group of people (but mainly you) up against the Xenomorph, and its your job to go and complete a series of tasks to get the station back up and running so you can escape and kill the Xenomorph.

But the Alien is always on the hunt, and youll need to be ready for it at all times so you can run and hide.

Do you think you can survive?

We promise, this isnt a game that is graphic or untoward, its honestly not the kind of title youre thinking of as a whole.

Because in point of fact, Lovers In A Dangerous Spacetime is 1-4 person co-op game where you are on a giant spaceship going around the galaxy trying to fight off the enemies that are indeed anti-love, were not making this up, promise.

Only through teamwork can you make this dream work. Because youll need to move the ship around, fire its thrusters, collect space bunnies, and more! Its a fun and frantic old-school arcade style title, and if you think thats good, jump in and play!

If we had made this list several years ago, theres no doubt that No Mans Sky would be very low on it. Hello Games promised gamers a literal universe to explore without fear of getting bored or planets just being window dressing. And yet, when it came out, we were very much bored of it, and many of the promises they made (like multiplayer) were not in the game.

To their credit though, No Mans Sky got better as time went on. It got more content, it got multiplayer and co-op, and now, its almost an entirely new game. So if youve been waiting for the right moment to go and try it out, here is your chance.

The Outer Worlds is easily one of the most expansive RPGs out there in the world right now, and so its not that surprising that the game is made by the geniuses over at Obsidian.

And just like many of the titles that theyve made over the years, the game is not only big, but its reliant on your choices and what you do next. The story puts you as a person waking up from a deep cryo sleep and finding that the galaxy is a MUCH different place.

Now, youre asked to defend a colony, and to go up against the corporate overlords that are trying to take everything for themselves.

Make the path you want to go on, and see just how crazy this game can get.

While the Destiny franchise hasnt fully lived up to the expectations of both fans, critics, and even Bungie, the developer has been working at it for YEARS to try and get it up to the high standards that many have, and they have succeeded in many regards.

Even now, there are key updates, expansions, and fixes that are being done in order to make the game more fun, more expansive, and better to do either by yourself or with friends.

So whether youre a new player who needs to dive into this vast universe, or a player just wants to dive back in to see what theyve missed, you would be wise to give Destiny 2 a look.

Showtime, A-Holes!

There have been a lot of superhero video games that have not just come out late, but a vast majority of them have a quality to them that cant be denied (Arkham series, Spider-Man), and one of them includes Marvels Guardians of the Galaxy.

In the game, youll play solely as Peter Quill, aka Star-Lord, and with the rest of the GOTG at your back youll go through a deep story thatll take you from one edge of the Marvel Universe to the other as you try and fight off bad guys, meet unique allies, and just try and stay alive long enough to jam to tunes.

The game is better than you likely realize, so dont miss out!

Our third Star Wars game on this list, we saved the best for last via Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order. This very special singleplayer game (take that EA!) puts you in the role of Jedi Padawan Cal Kestis, who survives Order 66 and has gone into hiding in order to survive.

But, when things suddenly change, he gives himself a new mission, to re-establish the Jedi Order so that they can fight back against the Inquisitors and Darth Vader.

Learn to wield your lightsaber in special combat not really done in the Star Wars games before, and see the galaxy far, far away from a new perspective.

What? Putting Among Us at #2 isnt sus at allunless youre trying to divert attention away from yourself!!!!

As we keep our eye on you, well mention that Among Us was one of the many games that took over the gaming world for a time in the pandemic. So much so that the game (which was released well before the pandemic, mind you) got a whole bunch of memes, video content, fan art and cosplays, and yes, expansions within the game itself via the Airship map and other things.

The game is infinitely replayable because you need to find the imposter, whoever that may be, and get them out before they kill you all.

Sounds simple, right? Good luck with that*heads to push the airlock button*

Anytime we can fairly put the Mass Effect Legendary Edition at the top slot? Were going to do it, you better believe we will. Why is that? Because this is arguably the greatest video game trilogy of all time. Even its controversial ending cant fully bring down all the greatness that these three games had, and theres a reason why so many love it to this day.

Plus, the legendary edition gives the games a visual overhaul for you to enjoy, as well as the DLC for each title and some special quality of life improvements to make them that much better.

So if youre ready to embrace your inner Shepherd once more, get the Mass Effect Legendary Edition.

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20 Best Xbox One Space Games To Explore The Great Unknown - Gameranx

Elon Musks Plan to Send a Million Colonists to Mars by 2050 Is Pure …

Artists conception of a Martian colony, with SpaceX Starship rockets in the background. Image: SpaceX

In a recent interview, Elon Musk repeated his stated goal of wanting to transport one million people to Mars by 2050. The SpaceX founder says the future of humanity is at stake, which, okay, but the timeline he offers is ludicrous, and heres why.

Before we plunge into this, I need to make it crystal clear that many of the challenges addressed in this article are not insurmountable. Technological feasibility is not my gripe, nor do I take issue with the desire to colonize the Red Planet, though, as Ive written before, the colonization of Mars will necessitate the transformation of the human species as we know it.

That the fourth planet from the Sun may host bustling cities at some point in the distant future is possible. My issue with all of this has to do with the stupendously unreasonable timelines under which Musk believes this will happen. In an April 2022 interview with TED curator Chris Anderson, the billionaire rehashed his plan to send one million colonists to Mars by 2050, and he did so while maintaining a remarkably straight face.

Speaking to a seemingly credulous Anderson, Musk spoke of a herculean Battlestar Galactica-like effort to transport thousands of colonists to Mars with a thousand SpaceX Starship rockets. Musks vision remains aligned with a series of tweets from 2020, in which he articulated a plan to build 100 Starships each year over a 10-year period.

Departing inbatches, each Starship would leave for Mars during key 30-day windows that open once every 26 months (the launch interval is to take advantage of the Earth-Mars alignment, when the two planets are closest to each other). Should launches begin in 2028, and assuming this intense launch cadence can be realized, Musk figures the Martian city of his dreams, with its million inhabitants, could come to fruition in just 22 years.

For Musk, the lofty figure of one million isnt just a goal or a predictionits a necessary requirement for sustaining a colony on Mars. The critical threshold, he told Anderson, is if the ships from Earth stop coming for any reason, which could decide the fate of the Martian colony and ultimately of humanity itself. Musk is claiming a philanthropic motive, saying our inability to colonize Mars and transition to an interplanetary species could serve as a filter that ultimately results in our doom. As he told Anderson, I think this is important for maximizing the probable lifespan of humanity or consciousness, but the probable lifespan of civilizational consciousness as we know it is like a small candle in the vast darkness of the universea delicate candle that could just go out.

Conceptual image of a Starship spacecraft arriving at Mars. Image: SpaceX

But as Musk also told Anderson, life on Mars, especially in the beginning, will not be luxurious. Rather, it will be dangerous, cramped, difficult, hard work, and you might not make it back, he said, adding: But itll be glorious.

Glorious for Elon Musk, maybe, but certainly not for the colonists relegated to eking out an existence in a supremely hostile and unaccommodating world. Well, assuming they ever get there. The SpaceX CEO told Anderson that almost anyone can work and save up and eventually have $100,000 and be able to go to Mars if they want, in reference to the hypothesized cost of each journey. Alternatively, prospective Martians could procure funding from government sponsors or by taking out a loan, Musk said.

Musk, I would argue, is getting way ahead of himself. NASA, by comparison, is hoping to land the first humans on Mars by the late 2030s or early 2040s. A modest human presence would follow, but very slowly and cautiously, with pioneering explorers, scientists, and possibly even some colonists, taking their first tentative baby steps on this hostile, alien world in the years and decades to follow.

These disparate visions of how and when Mars might get colonized are completely out of alignment. Its as if Musk and NASA inhabit two different realities. And its not as if the truth lies somewhere in between. Someone is not just wrong; someone is catastrophically wrong, and that someone is Elon Musk.

Back-of-the-envelope calculations are fun, but they can lead to erroneous and over-simplified conclusions. A necessary reality check suggests its going to take significant time and effort for SpaceX to develop, test, and certify Starship and then build these megarockets in the quantities Musk desires.

Conceptual view of a SpaceX Starship rocket blasting off. Image: SpaceX

To be clear, the fully integrated Starship has not yet reached space. Im confident SpaceX will eventually have its jumbo rocket, but the heavy launcher, a key element of Musks Martian plans, doesnt yet exist. The current plan is to send a fully integrated, uncrewed Starship on a super-quick orbital spaceflight later this year, but further testing and refinements will be required before the vehicle can be put to functional use.

Importantly, Starship is meant to be reusable, requiring SpaceX to develop an unprecedented Mechazilla tower that will somehow catch the rocket during vertical descent and landing. Nothing like this has ever been done, and it could take some time to develop.

Musk is also having to contend with regulators; the Federal Aviation Administration and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are concerned about potential environmental damage at the SpaceX launch site in south Texas. As of this writing, SpaceX has not received FAA approval to launch the two-stage Starship at the Boca Chica facility.

Once Starship becomes an actual thing, SpaceX will then have to contend with the daunting challenge of building these rockets en masse. Musks hand-waving proclamation that 100 Starships will be built each year is truly ambitious, but Ill believe it when I see it. The company isnt currently able to produce its Raptor engines at the pace required to sustain operations. Late last year, Musk said this Raptor production crisis threatens a genuine risk of bankruptcy if SpaceX cannot launch a Starship rocket once every two weeks. Yet were supposed to believe that, in around six years or so, SpaceX will have solved its engine production problems and somehow figured out a way to manufacture Starships in vast quantitiesa logistical challenge that will require the steady flow of human labor, materials, propellants, and everything else that will make up this future rocket.

Should SpaceX be capable of transporting so many people to Mars across such a short time frame, there will still exist a tremendous number of challenges to overcome. First and foremost, theres the human factor to consider. Very simply, our meat suits are not built for space or hostile alien worlds. The Red Planet, with its achingly thin atmosphere, cold temperatures, and non-existent magnetosphere, offers no oxygen to breathe, no water at the surface, and no protection from deadly ionizing radiation.

Conceptual image showing humans on the Martian surface. Image: SpaceX

Fulfilling Elon Musks dream of establishing a self-sustaining colony on Mars entails risks that are far beyond those of sending a small group of humans on a round-trip mission to that planet, Thomas Lang, a professor at the UCSF Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging in San Francisco, explained to me. The risks of a relatively small Mars mission, which might comprise six-month transits to and from the destination and 18-month sojourns on the surface, are already daunting.

These challenges, he said, include the maintaining of human physiology at the functional level, protecting colonists from radiation, and dealing with the effects of extreme isolation. Space agencies around the world are currently investigating these risks, and Lang believes well eventually find ways to overcome them.

But even if these risks can be addressed, establishing a one-million-person colony on Mars still represents a leap into the unknown, both in terms of engineering and social evolution, Lang said. Private firms like SpaceX, and also government agencies, could eventually build the spacecraft and several of the different supporting technologies like habitats, power generation, and transport, he said, but those challenges would be small compared to the challenge of figuring out how to live off the land, extracting from Mars the resources needed to support this population. And if some solutions were to emerge for the on-site production of resources during initial Martian missions, its not clear that it could be successfully scaled up to support a large population, Lang added.

Jill Sohm, director of the Environment Studies Program at the University of Southern California, thinks of the problem in terms of basic human needs. Humans can go a few minutes without breathing, a few days without drinking, and a few weeks without eating, so oxygen, water, and food are the bare necessities, she told me. Without these, we could not survive, let alone thrive.

Altering the atmosphere of Mars such that air is breathable within a few decades is clearly not possible. This means colonists will need to live in enclosed environments and have efficient recycling systems to remove carbon dioxide and generate oxygen to keep the air breathable, explained Sohm. Providing water to a million people represents another very difficult challenge. Sohm said water can be made with hydrogen, oxygen, and a lot of energy, but those things arent readily available on Mars.

Bringing water that distance from Earth for a large colony is also not possible, so ice would have to be found and melted on Mars. Ice can apparently be found at the poles and perhaps below the surface, but the poles are extremely cold and far away from warmer areas where a colony would likely be built, Sohm said. If enough ice could be located and extracted to provide water, again we would need an efficient recycling system that kept it from leaving the colony. All waste would need to be captured and cleaned and put back into circulation.

Its a daunting challenge, no doubt. Now, an infrastructure to support a million Martians may eventually be built, but the unspoken suggestion that such an infrastructure will spontaneously and instantly come to exist with the arrival of these thirsty colonists is nothing short of a joke.

Then theres the question of how to feed them. Sohm estimates that the settlers would require approximately 580 square miles (1,500 square kilometers) of agricultural crop land to feed a colony of that size.

This may not sound like a lot, but its around the size of the city of Los Angeles, where I live, she said. Colonists would need good quality soil, water, and some form of fertilizer, the latter of which could be produced through wastewater treatment and composting food, she added. Sohm, admitting shes not an engineer, said she cant say how feasible any of this is, but I would say that this assessment makes clear to me that it is a monumental task, and the hard truth is that we dont have a handle on how to replicate on a large scale the natural processes that make our planet so special and habitable.

To which she added: Id point out that all of this would only provide the bare minimum of survival for anyone living in a Mars colony, so we would actually need to ask ourselves the question of what we would consider a good life on Mars that would make it worth it for anyone to take the risk.

Serkan Saydam, a mining engineering professor from the University of New South Wales in Australia, says we currently possess the technology required to send people to Mars, but we lack the tech to establish a Martian colony, and we will very likely lack the capacity to sustain a Martian city inhabited by a million people by 2050. Because to establish an off-Earth city, we will need to establish many other off-Earth operations to construct the city and also support its people, Saydam said.

Firstly, colonists will need new technologies to extract resources locally, as bringing these required materials from Earth would be very risky, extremely expensive, and simply not feasible, he explained. Colonists will have to source and extract the majority of the required materials on Mars and possibly from nearby asteroids, and also establish beneficiation systems for processing the raw materials and facilities for manufacturing products, he said. These activities will require human labor, which will in turn require water and food, Saydam added.

To allow for these sorts of operations, the technology must produce more energy and materials than whats needed for basic survival on Mars, he said, and these elements will also need to be stored for future use in the colony. Saydam said robots would make these processes easier, but even our terrestrial mining systems are not fully autonomous yet.

Saydam provided me with a daunting list of other challenges that will need to be overcome, such as acquiring a deeper geological and geotechnical understanding of Mars, establishing a reliable power supply, creating markets to support the supply chain, reducing risks for business and other stakeholders, forging legal standards and ethical guidelines for the settling of new land, and safeguarding space for peaceful endeavors, among other issues.

Artists conception of a Martian colony. Image: SpaceX

Sohms earlier point about our inability to replicate natural processes on a large scale reminded me of the failed Biosphere 2 experiments from the 1990s. The two sealed missions demonstrated the formidable challenges of managing closed ecosystems. That a large colony on Mars could survive and thrive without this ability seems doubtful.

Kevin Olsen, a physicist at the University of Oxford who does data analysis for the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter mission, said its fundamentally impossible to create a completely closed environment in space. Air, water, and fuel will be slowly lost over a long time period, so a colony needs to become a factory and produce these things, he said.

This technology is far, far behind the technology of space flight and habitation construction, explained Olsen. A recent experiment involving NASAs Perseverance rover, in which oxygen was extracted from the carbon dioxide in the Martian atmosphere, was an interesting advance, said Olsen. Thats true, but we are not even remotely close to transforming this proof-of-concept experiment into something practical.

Earth, unlike Mars, has a strong magnetic field that protects us from ionizing radiation. Our magnetic field is large enough that it also offers protection to the International Space Station, Olsen told me, so even our long-term stays and radiation experiments in space wont really prepare us for the dangers of long-term exposure on a cruise to Mars and life on its surface.

During the recent TED interview, Anderson and Musk discussed a vast array of subterranean tunnels to protect Martian settlers from dangerous levels of radiation. Thatll make for quite the travel brochure, as migrants will essentially be asked to live like moles, making only brief appearances at the surface.

Radiation presents a serious health risk, as does isolation. Indeed, the level of isolation of this community would be unprecedented, and success in this endeavor would ultimately mean establishing a whole new human civilization, said Lang, who says were still learning about the social dynamics of groups and individuals in the context of isolation.

We have data from a range of environments, including nuclear subs, polar research stations, the ISS, and the Russian-based Mars 500 experiments, Lang explained. However, what about the social dynamics of a large society, so isolated from the Mother Planet, living in a hostile environment? The price that such a society would pay for episodes of social chaos or group psychosis could be immediately fatal. To flourish, such a society would have to maintain a very high level of cohesion across a million people.

On the topic of social stability, Musk told Anderson that theres certainly risk there, and hopefully the people of Mars will be more enlightened, and will not fight amongst each other too much.

The colonization of Mars, said Olsen, will be a fundamentally difficult undertaking, and the desire to do it quickly makes it even more dangerous. The space industry, whether private or public, is currently very safety conscious, with governments and the public unwilling to risk the lives of astronauts. Setting up a colony will go far beyond the experimentation and exploration we are used to in terms of complexity, difficulty, and danger, and we need to be prepared for it to not go smoothly, he said. This will be an industrial undertaking, and well need to treat it more like we do Earths other high-risk industries such as commercial fishing, mining, or steel working.

Sohm wonders about the point of it all. Why attempt to build a million-person colony on Mars? We have a planetary crisis here on Earth, she said, and I think we have the moral obligation to spend our time, effort, and money on helping to solve it for all the 7 billion-plus people that live here now, rather than transporting a small fraction of what would surely be some of the most privileged people on Earth to escape its problems and attempt to make a new life on another planet.

Lang says the construction of a large colony will be a multi-stage process that will take decades to achieve. Itll also require continuous support from multiple generations of humans.

I believe that this support would be worthwhile, Lang told me. If achieved, the establishment of a self-sustaining society on Mars would be a landmark in human history, and would set the stage for spreading human civilization across the whole solar system.

Sohm and Lang are both right, and wed be wise to take care of our business on Earth while also seeking to build an existence outside of our home planet. We can do both, and its wrong to suggest these goals are somehow mutually exclusive.

At the same time, its important for us be realistic about the future and when we can reasonably expect to do the things that Musk is promising. Musk, whether intentionally or unintentionally, is peddling a false view of humanitys short-term potential. There are consequences to this at the individual level, as many of Musks fans and followers take him at his literal word. The worlds richest man needs to start taking this responsibility far more seriously than he does.

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Elon Musks Plan to Send a Million Colonists to Mars by 2050 Is Pure ...

Princess of Mars – Wikipedia

2009 American film

Princess of Mars (retitled and re-released in 2012 as John Carter of Mars[1]) is a 2009 direct-to-DVD science fiction film made by American independent studio The Asylum, loosely based on the 1917 novel A Princess of Mars by author Edgar Rice Burroughs. The film's promotional art mentions how the original story inspired some elements of James Cameron's 2009 film Avatar, but neither the credits nor promotional material mention Edgar Rice Burroughs. It is not to be confused with the higher-budget 2012 film John Carter, which is an adaptation of the novel. In the UK, the film was released with the title The Martian Colony Wars.

John Carter (Antonio Sabato, Jr.) is a modern-day U.S. Army sniper serving in Afghanistan, wounded in the line of duty and used in a teleportation experiment wherein he is transferred to Barsoom, a planet outside of Earth's solar system, where he exhibits the ability to leap amazing distances. Initially enslaved by the Tharks, he earns a rank among them and later saves a rival group's princess, the human-looking Dejah Thoris (Traci Lords), from death.

The group of Tharks, led by Tars Tarkas, takes Carter to their leader Tal Hajus, guarded by Tars Tarkas' daughter Sola. Learning that Tarkas gave Carter a military rank only Hajus can give, Tarkas and Carter are forced to duel. Upon winning, Carter faces Sarka, an Afghan mercenary who had betrayed him. When Sarka escapes, Carter helps Tarkas kill Hajus and become the new leader of the Tharks.

Captain Carter then learns that Dejah Thoris has fled to the planetary air-cleaning station that keeps Barsoom habitable, which Sarka damages, causing the atmosphere to deteriorate. John Carter and Sarka face each other in a duel, but Sarka is killed by an insect during the fight. After Carter and Dejah Thoris reactivate the station, Carter is returned to Earth, where he declines to tell his superiors about his adventures for fear they will colonize Barsoom, and returns to military duties while hoping one day to return to the planet.

This film makes extensive use of the Vasquez Rocks for its alien landscape, appearing throughout the film as different locations.[citation needed]

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Princess of Mars - Wikipedia

Elon Musk is confident that ‘humanity will reach Mars in our lifetime’ but Twitter is NOT! – India TV News

Tech billionaire Elon Musk is optimistic and has expressed confidence that "humanity will reach Mars in your lifetime". On Twitter, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO wrote that "without a common goal, humanity will fight itself". "Moon brought us together in a69, Mars can do that in the future," Musk said. But Twitter has something different to say. They asked Musk several times when humanity was planning to reach their current residential planet.

A user wrote, "will common citizens be able to afford mars ?" Another said, "its like going to the northpole but with no oxygen, and no one likes going to the northpole, so why would anyone would want to go to mars?"

Last month, the tech billionaire said that his space venture SpaceX aims to build over 1,000 Starships to transport life to Mars. The Tesla CEO had stated that making life multi-planetary will help back up the ecosystems on Earth and added that apart from humans no other species can transport life to Mars. ALSO READ:Elon Musk had twins last year with his company's top executive, netizens are in shock!

Referring to Biblical patriarch Noah who built an Ark that survived the great flood on Earth, Musk said his Starship models will be "modern Noah's Arks", that can save "life from a calamity on Earth". SpaceX is developing Starship to take people and cargo to the moon, Mars and beyond. The vehicle consists of two elements: a first-stage booster called Super Heavy and an upper-stage spacecraft known as Starship.

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Elon Musk is confident that 'humanity will reach Mars in our lifetime' but Twitter is NOT! - India TV News

Human rights on Mars wont be the same as those on Earth – Gulf News

Kim Stanley Robinson writes best-selling novels about a colony on Mars. Elon Musk talks of actually colonising Mars. There is even a 30-page constitution, courtesy of a Yale political science class, for a Mars settlement. The actual prospects for a settlement remain uncertain, but the question of how it should be organised could stand some further scrutiny.

The Yale proposal is about how to make a Mars settlement democratic, as is an earlier proposal published in Space Legal Issues. But I fear a harsher question needs to be addressed first: Should a Mars settlement allow for contractual servitude?

When the New World was settled, it was common practice for workers to sign multi-year contracts, receiving passage across the ocean but giving up a share of their earnings and some of their freedom.

Financing the voyage to Mars

Contractual servitude is distinct from slavery in the sense that it is chosen voluntarily. But once the contract is signed, the worker is in an uncomfortable position, in both an economic and democratic sense. And once these individuals land in the New World or, as the case may be, on Mars their protection by mainstream legal institutions cannot be assumed.

It is easy to inveigh against contractual servitude, but it has one valuable function: It creates incentives for someone to finance the voyage in the first place. If I had to finance my own passage to Mars, and then sustain myself when I got there, and pay off the travel costs, I would never go. But if a company can send a few thousand people, keep half the profits, and remain in charge, the voyage might stand a chance, at least decades from now when the technology is further along.

That said, I am fine with banning contractual servitude on Mars, if that is what a democratic society decides. My point is that this is a more pressing question than what kind of new participatory rights the new Martians will have. Keep in mind the economic point about trade-offs: If poorer people are not allowed to sign up for these funded voyages, then maybe only billionaires will visit Mars.

The tension is that most people have well-developed moralities for wealthy, democratic societies in which most citizens can earn their keep or be provided for by a well-funded social welfare state. Neither of those assumptions holds for Mars, which at least at the beginning will be a kind of pre-subsistence economy.

The upshot is that feasible Mars constitutions will probably offend the educated classes dearly.

Another option for a Mars constitution is to have the US government fund the voyage and apply some version of military law to the venture, as one might find on an aircraft carrier. Earlier Nasa voyages were based on military command and involved no democracy.

I support such a plan, but also note that governmental space exploration has slowed dramatically since its peak in the 1960s and 1970s. It is the private sector that has revived interest in a Mars settlement.

Ideally I might like Mars to be settled by a religious group rather than by a government or a corporation. After all, various Puritan groups helped to settle North America, and they had the unity and sense of mission to pull off a very difficult and dangerous endeavour. Similarly, Mormons helped settle the American West.

Not surprisingly, many of these early governments had strong theocratic elements. While I dont view theocracy as either efficient or just, if the key question is motivating the settlers, then the religion option ought to be taken seriously. Like contractual servitude, it could serve a practical purpose.

Yet religious settlements willing to go to Mars may be hard to come by. Relative religious freedom is available in many places on Earth. A victim of persecution in, say, North Korea, will find it far easier now and maybe forever to seek asylum in South Korea instead of Mars.

I suspect that no feasible constitution for a Mars settlement would be very popular in the broad sense. Ages of exploration tend to encourage strong non-democratic or anti-democratic elements. Perhaps the best that can be hoped for is a very democratic philosophy for life on Earth, with the understanding that Mars will be very different.

Can we accept and indeed embrace such a dialectical and contradictory set of perspectives? Can the proper answer to such a fundamental question as how society should be organised so firmly depend on which planet we are talking about? Might some sceptics suggest that, with illiberal values ascendant on Earth, it would be better for Mars to offer an alternative?

These are all valid questions. The debate over a Martian constitution is interesting, but it may also be premature.

Tyler Cowen is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is a professor of economics at George Mason University and writes for the blog Marginal Revolution.

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Human rights on Mars wont be the same as those on Earth - Gulf News

Learning hands-on to inspire her students – Atmore News

Marcia Adams participates in the moon walking exercise

By MELISSA DANIELSpecial to Atmore News

Five action-packed 12-hour days provided Escambia County Middle School math teacher Marcia Adams an experience of a lifetime. Recently, she had the opportunity to attend Space Academy for Educators (aka Space Camp) with 70 other educators in Huntsville.She was able to be an astronaut and travel into space. She was able to be an engineer and build a rocket. She was a scientist and performed experiments on the international space station. (ISS)She was able to feel what it would be like to walk on the moon and feel 3Gs. She experienced the stress of being a flight director on a NASA mission. She landed a rover on Mars and built a lunar colony. She was able to reenact a helicopter crash and be lifted to safety. She experienced space travel and saw the Earth from up above.In all activities, Ms. Adams could see how math and science work together to further knowledge here on Earth. She was challenged by former astronaut Bob Gibson to find ways to integrate reading, writing and communication of the English language to her students while engaging them in the exciting world of math and science.NASA chemist, physicist and engineer Lowell Zoeller shared that NASA has a job for everyone. Trade jobs are needed because once a colony is built on the moon, every job will be needed. He stated that teamwork, communication and writing were the key to success in job force. Thinking spontaneously and being able to problem solve is a key to teaching skills for the future as there are jobs that have yet to be created.Ms. Adams is excited to bring back this knowledge and share the resources provided to her with the students of Atmore.

Melissa Daniel, formerly a teacher at ECMS, now teaches at Robertsdale Elementary.

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Learning hands-on to inspire her students - Atmore News

NASA Announces Plan To Put Moon On Mars By 2040 – The Onion

WASHINGTONSaying the ambitious new project would be a historic, once-in-a-generation leap forward in the annals of space exploration, NASA announced Friday its plan to put the moon on Mars by 2040. Ever since we first sent a man to the moon half a century ago, the American people have been waiting for us to take the next step and send the moon to Mars, said NASA administrator Bill Nelson, adding that within two decades, the famed image of Apollo 11 commander Neil Armstrongs first footprint on the moon would be joined in the public consciousness by photos of the 1,500-mile-wide crater the moon was expected to leave on the Red Planet. No space mission is without risks. The moon could descent too quickly and disintegrate on impact with the Martian surface, or it could, upon its return, fail to achieve the velocity needed to escape the gravity of Mars and make it back home to its orbit around the Earth. But should we succeed in our mission, it could open up many other opportunities for us, such as putting the Earth on Mars, putting Mars on Venus, and so on. Nelson added that it might also one day be possible to build a colony on Mars that could be inhabited by hundreds of moons.

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NASA Announces Plan To Put Moon On Mars By 2040 - The Onion

Agencies respond to gender inequality in the industry – AdNews

Source: Tim Mossholder via Unsplash

Agencieshave quickly responded to a call to reveal what they are doing to supportgender equality in the advertising industry

The UN Womens recent campaign, in partnership with The Monkeys, part of AccentureSong, called on Australians to examine its efforts for gender equality, saying as robo-farms, humans walking on Mars, and a Moon colony aremore likely to happen before we reach global gender equality.

Mums in Ads, via LinkedIn, called on agencies to share what they are genuinely doing: The recent research is showing the major hurdle for women everywhere is the clash between child-rearing and workplace equality.

When careers and kids arent facilitated to work together, thats when womens equity starts to really plummet. And Adland has been historically bad at helping women overcome this.

Thinkerbell: We have gender pay equity and this is reviewed six monthly with the CFO and Head of People and Culture measured on this. We have 58% females in leadership and a 61% female workforce.

We offer 10 weeks parental leave for the primary carer and 4 weeks for the secondary carer, along with up to 52 weeks paid superannuation for the primary caregiver as we are aware of the significant long term impact this has on nest eggs for retirement.

We hope one day to get to parity for primary and secondary carer as we know how important it is for the secondary carer to be available in the early development of the baby.

Weve always been flexible and offer flexibility to those who need it (not just parents). We have multiple people working overseas to visit family for extended periods as well as many who have relocated outside of Sydney and Melbourne, and we make this work with regular check-ins and ensuring they are included in Thinkerbell events and training.

We have a lot of part timers (parents and non-parents) and offer flexibility to those who need it, this includes remote working, and parents structuring their days around school runs, child pick ups and other commitments.

We have full time and part time mums working with us in leadership roles and they bring invaluable skills and knowledge to these roles. We will always consider part timers for promotions. In terms of recruitment, we would make hiring a part timer for a role if they bring the right skills and experience to the role like anyone else.

We make sure those on parental leave are kept across training and events throughout their leave, with regular check-ins, and keeping in touch days. We work on a dedicated phased return to work plan allowing both family and career roles to flourish to ensure a smooth and enjoyable transition back to work.

Clemenger Group Limited said: We conduct a pay gap analysis every year for Clemenger Group and will continue to do so annually.

Our paid parental leave policy is gender neutral and offers primary carers up to 20 weeks of leave (including in the unfortunate event of a stillbirth).

Our flexible guidelines are open to every person in Clemenger Group, and empower them to do their best work from wherever that may be.

We have strong part-time permanent representation across the Clemenger Group agencies, including in management roles.

We have the ambition for 50% of key leadership roles across the Group being held by females by the end of 2024 and are reviewing our recruitment and promotion practices to fulfil this

Host/Havas said: Its a brave (and nave) agency that can honestly say they are doing everything they can. So the short answer is no, were not - but the longer answer is below for what its worth.

We look at gender pay and distribution at ever level and in every team. We can confirm that we have no gender pay gap at any level and are assessed by WGEA annually.

We offer paid parental leave to all parents, regardless of gender, with a minimum of 3 month paid leave and no upper limit based on tenure. We also offer comprehensive return to work support including (but not limited to) optional paid stay in touch days throughout leave, paid child care of any type or flying family members out to support the transition, and encouraging a gradual return to work if thats preferred.

We have had core hours in place for a number of years. We also have staff members (both men and women) who work part time and even partly interstate or overseas to accommodate their family commitments.

The transition back to work from parental leave is so fraught (and a bit awful for many). Having senior leaders who navigated it themselves helps build empathy around the complexity of it, and offer support and mentoring.

Howatson+Company said: We can confirm we have no gender pay gap and review annually.

We have 3 months paid parental leave, regardless of sex and pay for 12 months continuation of super for all primary carers regardless of gender. In addition, we offer paid leave for pregnancy loss, those undergoing fertility treatments, surrogacy, adoption and menopause. We offer gradual transitions back to work depending on the individuals needs, support networks and role.

We have men and women, parents and non-parents working full and part time, in some cases fully remote or hybrid. We just ask that our team work in a way that suits them, and does not impact their clients or colleagues.

We offer 5 days pay for 4 days work, or 4 days pay for 3 days work for returning primary carers. Currently we have 5 staff taking advantage of this. But definitely agree that continuing to look at job redesign for each role on an individual basis is important.

We pride ourselves on promoting based on achievement and have recently promoted two of our superstars about to go on parental leave.

We support gradual transitions back to work (per question 2) and each carer (primary or secondary) has a one on one with another parent before and after leave to help them ask any questions around how they might best come back to work and adjust their working arrangements if needed.

We offer each individual a training budget, and many of the team have moved into new roles in the agency with support from the team e.g. from EA/office management to finance, from account management to strategy.

Communicado said: 50% of our team are part time mums including 70% our leadership team and 100% of the owners of the company. We have adapted roles to suit (whether that be 2 to 4 days or entirely remote) and we support parents doing work in the hours that they can. This isnt limited to new mums, we have always supported parents at all stages of parenting, for example those trying to get pregnant as well as parents to teens and late teens, particularly during the crucial VCE stage.

We feel paid parental leave is challenging for smaller predominantly female businesses and we acknowledge more needs to be done here in addition to a broader industry solution to make it more achievable for us to offer more.

Overall, we celebrate flexible working arrangements for everyone (even prior to the pandemic) which includes 100% remote work, team members that have made the sea change interstate, or the hybrid working model.

Bullfrog said: While we at Bullfrog certainly don't claim to have it 100% perfect, we are extremely proud of our transparent People Policy, which includes: 6 months' paid Parental Leave including super, 'Leap Allowances' for personal development, Holiday Exchanges and much more see the CB comments for more details.

DDB Remedy Australia said: [We} are continually working on and improving support for all our parents with 3 months paid leave and a non-gendered parental leave policy.

Importantly we support smooth transitions back into the work place with part time and flexible hours as well as job share options.

We support our parents at all stages of the caregiving journey via Circle In - a parenting platform which supports family-inclusive workplaces and helps create a culture that supports caregivers.

There is more to be done of course and we look forward to being inspired by our team and indeed the rest of the industry.

Have something to say on this? Share your views in the comments section below. Or if you have a news story or tip-off, drop us a line at adnews@yaffa.com.au

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Agencies respond to gender inequality in the industry - AdNews

7 great shows or movies about the Moon to watch after ‘Moonhaven’ – Syfy

With the current condition of our planet right now, escaping to the Moon is looking more and more attractive. WriterPeter Ocko(Lodge 49)is clearly feeling it too, as evidenced by his latest creation, the AMC+ series, Moonhaven. The drama starsEmma McDonald(Queens of Mystery),Joe Manganiello(True Blood),Kadeem Hardison(Black Monday), andDominic Monaghan(Lost) as a cast of characters who all end up in the Moon-based utopian community in our near(ish) future. Although the community is meant to be a tactile think tank working to find solutions to save humanity on the doomed Earth, McDonald'sBella Sway discovers a lot of secrets going on inside this slice of space "heaven".

Of course, moon-based cinematic stories go all the way back toGeorges Mlis's 1902 film,A Trip to the Moon. But, they've certainly gotten more complicated and compelling in the last 120 years. With the premiere of Moonhaven today, July 7, on AMC+, SYFY WIRE got inspired to dig up some other choice, Moon-centric, sci-fi stories that are worth your exploration.

For All Mankind is in the midst of its third season on Apple TV+ and the Moon has been central to all three seasons of its storytelling. The series poses an alternative scenario for the Soviet/U.S. space race, where the U.S.S.R. actually beat the United States in the race to land on the Moon which creates a cascade of history-changing events. Along with some great "what if" riffs on geopolitical outcomes and scientific advancements led by a more global space race, For All Mankind also tells great personal stories about the astronauts, scientists, civil servants, and NASA members who are behind the advancements that drive the seasons. Earth's Moon is a central player to it all, as an initial goal and then as a lunar outpost for several countries looking to conquer Mars next. A high water mark in Moon/space episodic storytelling on TV.

Away (2020) only lasted one season on Netflix but theHilary Swankstarring drama uses the Moon as the literal launching pad for NASA's mission to Mars expedition. Taking a more soapy/family drama angle to its storytelling, Away focuses on the astronauts who leave their families behind as they break new boundaries in space exploration. For the moon fans, there's some cool lunar set pieces in the early episodes as it helps prep the astronauts for their longer mission. If you like family dramas like This is Us and Parenthood mashed together with your space stories, then this might be the perfect series for you.

Director Duncan Jones' first film Moon garnered both audience and critical acclaim when it debuted in 2009. It stars Sam Rockwell asSam Bell, an alternative fuel miner heading a solitary three-year project on the dark side of the Moon. Separated from his family and humans for the whole mission, Bell's only companion is an A.I. namedGERTY (Kevin Spacey), and let's just say that relationship hasn't left him in the best headspace. Go into this one pure if you can because there are a lot of great twists and turns coming 'atcha as Bell inches closer to his impending return home date.

Yes, the astronauts don't actually make it to the Moon in Ron Howard's now-classic dramatization of the Apollo 13 mission, but the whole goal is to get there so let's not split hairs. Apollo 13 stars Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, and Bill Paxton playing the crew of NASA's doomed return mission to the Moon. When their mission experiences early failures, the film shifts into a thriller about how theMission Control scientists and the trio orbiting the Earth feverishly problem solve how to get their lifeboat back to Earth safely. From the cinematography to the performances, Apollo 13 still holds up as a breathtaking watch that gets micro nerdy with its portrayal of science and history.

After the success of Apollo 13, Ron Howard and Tom Hanks reunited to produce this12-part miniseries that uses the docuseries format to tell the story of the Apollo program which ran from the 1960s to the early 1970s. Mixing actor dramatizations and actual era footage, From the Earth to the Moon is all about NASA taking to heart John F. Kennedy's mandate to have a U.S. astronaut be the first to walk on the Moon. Compelling and exhaustive, this will give the Moon geeks a whole lot of context and history about how we got to Neil Armstrong's walk on the Moon.

For those looking for some lighter fare,Aardman Animation first introduced the world to Wallace and Gromit in the classic short, A Grand Day Out. The Academy Award-nominated claymation classic finds the two cheese-loving roomies building a rocket to get them to the Moon for a top-up of some choice fromage. Once there, they meet a coin-operated robot who yearns to return to Earth with them. Hilarious, silly yet heartfelt, the majority of the story takes place on the Moon so you get your fill of the lunar landscape and some stellar laughs.

The Minions are still having their moment at the current box office, and that's amazing because it's been 12 years since the whole franchise kicked off in 2010 with Despicable Me. Many may not remember that the mission at the heart of that film is supervillain Gru's plan to steal the Moon as the ultimate flex against his baddie competition. Looking to shrink the Moon for easier yoinking, Gru (Steve Carrell) and his Minions spend the film looking up at the big orb until they actually achieve their crazy plan... and then quickly discover that the shrinking is temporary. Let's just say the gravitation pull is not good. As the strong start to the beloved ongoing franchise and a celebration of the Moon, this one is a fun adventure for families.

You can stream lots of great sci-fi right here on Peacock.

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7 great shows or movies about the Moon to watch after 'Moonhaven' - Syfy

It’s a freaking adventure with these upcoming Summer Game Fest titles – NAG

Violence is not always the answer. Sometimes, a sarcastic comment will do more damage. Or maybe you finally have a role for that large wheel of cheese you stuffed into your pants. Adventure games are rarely concerned about the physics of storage, and they welcome wit as much as brawn.

The genre that ruled the Nineties has never returned to mainstream glory. But its very much alive and active on the indie scene, as these titles from Summer Game Fest demonstrate.

Sunday Gold [Steam Link]

Sunday Gold is a funky, gritty dystopian point-and-click adventure meets turn-based RPG game. Play as a trio of fugitives out to destroy a conspiracy in a grim cyberpunk city. The locations look great for the neon hell-hole they represent, and the visual style makes this feel almost like a comic book.

Highwater [Steam Link]

The world ended on a Sunday, but rumour has it that some people plan to escape to Mars. Travel the flooded apocalypse in this RPG adventure with turn-based combat. Highwater emphasises exploration with a lot of story, which is always a great combo if you get it right, and the minimalist art style makes it stand out from other upcoming RPGs.

NAIAD [Steam Link]

NAIAD is one of those hand-crafted solo-developer gems that just overflows with character and exciting ideas. Play as the mermaid Naiad as she swims through numerous spaces, including orchards, forests and caves, learning new tricks from creatures to overcome obstacles.

Time Flies [Steam Link]

Were all going to die. This is the inspiration for Time Flies, a game where you play as a fly and live about as long as one. Tasked with an extensive bucket list but little time, what will you choose to do in the open world where you explore and try different things. The art style and philosophical nature wont be to everyones taste, but it looks intriguing.

Instinction [Steam Link]

Theres not much on the plot of Instinction, except that its based in a world where dinosaurs still live, yet you are armed with modern weapons. Still, this first-person adventure game looks incredible and very atmospheric. The lack of gameplay footage or a release window is concerning is it just a tech demo? But it is also a recent beneficiary of an Epic MegaGrant, so it might well be very legit.

Puzzles for Clef [Steam Link]

Its Clefs birthday, and she goes to the island of her ancestors for a treasure hunt a setup for this whimsical exploration platform game. Solve puzzles to unlock new areas of the world with pleasant exotic regions. If youre over chasing monsters or blowing things up for the red key, this looks like a nice change of pace.

A Twisted Tale [Steam Link]

Taking inspiration from the golden age of point-and-click adventure games, A Twisted Tale is bright, funny and full of promise. But thats all we know there isnt anything yet about its plot. The art looks good (if a little unpolished), and this is definitely a wishlist item for genre fans looking for some old-school nostalgia.

Last Time I Saw You [Steam Link]

Last Time I Saw You looks pretty fantastic. A young teen keeps seeing a specific girl in his dreams, and he starts wondering if theres more to his visions. The hand-drawn art is stunning, and the locations feel very lush. This is that type of game where youll play just to see the next area and find new characters.

Phonopolis [Steam Link]

When the city of Phonopolis is at risk of takeover by a tyrant, only a young boy seems to notice and its up to him to stop that from happening! Indie adventure games often distinguish themselves with creative art styles and gameplay. Phonopolis is a perfect example: the graphics and sound design are whimsical, the puzzles look lateral, and the gameplay will be more elaborate than your standard adventure experience.

Once Upon A Jester [Steam Link]

Two best friends want to steal the royal diamond, so they concoct an elaborate plan that includes touring around the kingdom as an improv comedy show! This game even has a proper theme song that explains some of the plot, and the bold visuals really work for the zany premise and world.

Snufkin: Melody of Moominvalley [Steam Link]

Fans of the Moomins (and Moomin-inspired memes), pay attention! Snufkin, the friend of the creatures of Moomin valley, appears in his own game a musical adventure where he tries to return harmony to the valley after some villain built a bunch of parks there. Visually it evokes the feel of a storybook, and the gameplay encourages exploration across the world of the Moomins.

This Rain Will Never End [Steam Link]

Dont let the child-like pixel art fool you: This Rain Will Never End comes across as a dark and intense adventure game, based in a morbid city with many shady characters and dark alleys. You are investigating the mayors suicide and the neverending rain that seemed to follow his death. Talk to characters, collect clues, stay alive and solve the mystery or the rain will never end.

Deliver Us Mars [Steam Link]

Deliver Us Mars is the ambitious sequel to Deliver Us Moon, offering a bend between narrative-rich adventure and Tomb Raider-style exploration. Take control of an astronaut as she investigates the fate of crucial colony ships and recovers them from a mysterious group. The whole package looks excellent, including motion-capture and highly realistic graphics.

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It's a freaking adventure with these upcoming Summer Game Fest titles - NAG

Elon Musk Secretly Fathered Twins With a Neuralink Exec Who Reported to Him – Jalopnik

Photo: Patrick Pleul (Getty Images)

Elon Musk, the worlds richest man, CEO of Tesla, and co-founder of brain-computer startup Neuralink, has been revealed to have fathered twins with Shivon Zilis, a Neuralink executive who reports directly to him, Business Insider reports.

The news was discovered through court documents filed in Spring of 2022, after Musk and Zilis sought to change the last names of the twins, born in November 2021. Per Business Insider:

In April, Musk, 51, and Zilis, 36, filed a petition to change the twins names in order to have their fathers last name and contain their mothers last name as part of their middle name. The order was approved by a judge in Austin, Texas, this May.

The twins were born weeks before Musk and Claire Boucher, the musician who performs as Grimes, had their second child via surrogate in December.

Zilis met the Tesla boss through her work with artificial intelligence research startup OpenAI, co-founded by Musk, who left his role there in 2018. She then moved to Tesla in 2017 before becoming director of operations and special projects for Neuralink, according to Business Insider. Neuralink, co-founded by Musk in 2016, is focused on creating brain-machine interface technology, using devices implanted in the human brain to communicate with computers.

Photo: Jim Watson/AFP (Getty Images)

At most American companies, a sexual relationship between a supervisor and a direct-report employee is grounds for dismissal, even when the relationship is consensual. In February of this year, CNN president Jef Zucker resigned after it was revealed that he had carried out an undisclosed romantic relationship with an employee described as his key lieutenant. In 2020, McDonalds fired CEO Steve Easterbrook and later sued him to try to recoup his exit bonus after his sexual relationship with an employee was made public. Most companies frown on relationships between supervisors and direct-report employees, because the professional power imbalance can never be completely disentangled from the personal relationship.

Counting the newly-revealed twins, Musk now has nine living children with three different women: five with ex-wife Justine Wilson, two with musician Grimes, and two with Zilis. The Zilis-Musk twins were born just a few weeks before Musks second child with Grimes.

Notably, Musk has repeatedly voiced concerns over the shrinking global birth rate. Whatever the reason, it seems to be a real fixation for the billionaire, who cites it as one of the biggest threats to humanity, alongside the climate crisis and rogue artificial intelligence. According to Business Insider:

He began sounding the alarm about declining birth rates in 2017, when he tweeted, The worlds population is accelerating towards collapse, but few seem to notice or care.

Since the beginning of 2022, the mogul has tweeted more than a dozen times about population issues.

Some have speculated that Musks concern about population growth are related to his goal of establishing a human colony on Mars an effort that would doubtless require lots of manpower.

I guess if you have enough money to singlehandedly fix humanitys most pressing concerns on Earth, but choose not to, youve got to come up with a few new crazy problems to fret over.

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Elon Musk Secretly Fathered Twins With a Neuralink Exec Who Reported to Him - Jalopnik

New ‘Lost in Space’ Season 3 trailer shows the entire Space Family Robinson in danger – Space.com

Hot on the heels of the first mindblowing trailer we saw just one month ago, come a second equally-as-amazing trailer for the third and final season of "Lost in Space."

If you haven't watched Netflix's "Lost in Space," already then go and do so immediately. Tell your barista that half-soy, non-fat double-blended pumpkin spice latte is To Go, scurry home and switch on Netflix. You'll thank us later.

The show is a reimagining of the pioneering sci-fi series of the same name that aired on black-and-white TV screens across America in 1965. That show came from the imagination of Irwin Allen and showrunner Zack Estrin has reworked this in the same manner Ron D. Moore did to Glen A. Larson's 1978 "Battlestar Galactica." It's been updated, reimagined, regendered, tweaked and fine-tuned and the end result has been one of the finest sci-fi shows on TV in recent years.

At the end of the second season, which aired 2019, we saw an entire ship of robots attack and board the Resolute mother ship, with more incoming to retrieve the alien engine. Maureen (Molly Parker) and Don (Ignacio Serricchio) manage to trap them, while Judy (Taylor Russell) leads a mission to send the Resolute's 97 children to the Alpha Centauri colony in a Jupiter landing ship using the alien engine, piloted by the Robot.

The Jupiter carrying the children escapes through a rift in space, but the human-made radar signature that the Robot followed has led the ship to an unknown star system. There they find the Fortuna, a ship that had vanished nearly 20 years earlier and was commanded by Grant Kelly, Judy's biological father.

Related: The best sci-fi movies and TV shows to stream on Netflix in November

Unlike the first trailer, this time we get to see much more of the Robinson family and the dilemmas they face. We also see the binary star system close to where the Resolute is located, with one star colored blue and the other fiery red almost opposite in nature all of which connects underlying themes throughout the show: the robot's two expressions, fire and water, love and hate, right and wrong and so on. While the second season wasn't quite as good as the first, we still expect great things from this suburb sci-fi.

According to the official synopsis from Netflix, "In the third and final season of Lost in Space, the stakes are higher than ever and the Robinson familys survival instincts will be put to the ultimate test. After a year of being trapped on a mysterious planet, Judy, Penny, Will and the Robot must lead the 97 young Colonists in a harrowing evacuation but not before secrets are unearthed that will change their lives forever. Meanwhile John and Maureen with Don at their side must battle overwhelming odds as they try to reunite with their kids. The Robinsons will have to grapple with the emotional challenge of not just being lost but being separated from the ones they love as they face the greatest alien threat yet."

The cast also includes Toby Stephens (John Robinson), Mina Sundwall (Penny Robinson) and Parker Posey as Dr. Smith.

Seasons 1 and 2 of "Lost in Space" are currently available on Netflix and Season 3 will be available in its entirety on Wednesday, Dec 1. "Lost in Space" is only available on the subscription service Netflix. Subscriptions start at $8.99 a month.

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New 'Lost in Space' Season 3 trailer shows the entire Space Family Robinson in danger - Space.com