投稿時間:2023-11-13 01:05:22 RSSフィード2023-11-13 01:00分まとめ(5件)

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海外TECH AppleInsider - Frontpage News Apple's bug-squashing week was part of its efforts to minimize errors https://appleinsider.com/articles/23/11/12/apples-bug-squashing-week-was-part-of-its-efforts-to-minimize-errors?utm_medium=rss Apple s week long pause on development for its next generation of operating systems and to debug code instead was necessary to ensure iOS macOS and other releases have the best chance of bug free releases reckons a report In late October Apple software head Craig Federighi implemented a week long pause on the development of its next operating systems round including iOS iPadOS macOS watchOS and tvOS The pause was used to fix bugs and improve the performance of the elements that Apple s software team has produced and was quickly lifted with normal development resuming right after Mark Gurman writing for the Bloomberg Power On newsletter on Sunday points out that this isn t the first time Apple has done this sort of thing as bugs have been a problem for the company in the past Read more 2023-11-12 15:56:23
海外TECH AppleInsider - Frontpage News Daily deals Nov. 12: M3 iMac $100-$150 off, Beats Studio 3 Headphones $169, Apple Magic Keyboard & Mouse sale https://appleinsider.com/articles/23/11/12/daily-deals-nov-12-m3-imac-100-150-off-beats-studio-3-headphones-169-apple-magic-keyboard-mouse-sale?utm_medium=rss Today s hottest deals include Sony wireless headphones for off a Microsoft audio dock an Apple Magic Keyboard with Touch ID Magic Mouse bundle for off an Onkyo channel K network AV receiver and more Get a Magic Keyboard Magic Mouse for The AppleInsider team scours the web for unbeatable deals at online stores to showcase a list of excellent bargains on popular tech items including deals on Apple products TVs accessories and other gadgets We post the top deals every day to help you get more bang for your buck Read more 2023-11-12 15:48:24
海外TECH Engadget Terminator is back with a new anime series coming to Netflix https://www.engadget.com/terminator-is-back-with-a-new-anime-series-coming-to-netflix-154925265.html?src=rss Netflix is giving the Terminator franchise the anime treatment in a new series that s set to hit the streaming platform soon The company dropped the first teaser for Terminator The Anime Series nbsp this weekend during its Geeked Week event Details so far are scant but we do know it ll be produced by Production IG the Japanese animation studio behind the original Ghost in the Shell movie and spinoff TV series Terminator The Anime Series will take us back to August when the Skynet AI has first become self aware and turned against humans It will feature a cast of new characters according to Variety nbsp On August th Two days from now Everything changes Terminator The Anime Series is COMING SOON GeekedWeek pic twitter com mcbxavrnVーNetflix Geeked NetflixGeeked November Also on board as executive producers are Skydance and Project Power writer Mattson Tomlin who will be the series writer and showrunner Netflix hasn t announced a release date yet or shown any preview scenes so here s hoping we get an expanded trailer soon The Terminator franchise has had quite a few installments not all of them good but going back to the beginning could be just the refresh it needs This article originally appeared on Engadget at 2023-11-12 15:49:25
海外TECH Engadget What happened to Washington's wildlife after the largest dam removal in US history https://www.engadget.com/hitting-the-books-eat-poop-die-joe-roman-hatchette-books-153032502.html?src=rss The man made flood that miraculously saved our heroes at the end of O Brother Where Art Thou were an actual occurrence in the th and th century ーand a fairly common one at that ーas river valleys across the American West were dammed up and drowned out at the altar of economic progress and electrification Such was the case with Washington State s Elwha river in the s Its dam provided the economic impetus to develop the Olympic Peninsula but also blocked off nearly miles of river from the open ocean preventing native salmon species from making their annual spawning trek However after decades of legal wrangling by the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe the biggest dams on the river today are the kind made by beavers nbsp In this week s Hitting the Books selection Eat Poop Die How Animals Make Our World University of Vermont conservation biologist Joe Roman recounts how quickly nature can recover when a foot tall migration barrier is removed from the local ecosystem This excerpt discusses the naturalists and biologists who strive to understand how nutrients flow through the Pacific Northwest s food web and the myriad ways it s impacted by migratory salmon The book as a whole takes a fascinating look at how the most basic of biological functions yup poopin of even just a few species can potentially impact life in every corner of the planet nbsp nbsp nbsp Hatchette BooksExcerpted from by Eat Poop Die How Animals Make Our World by Joe Roman Published by Hachette Book Group Copyright by Joe Roman All rights reserved When construction began in the Elwha Dam was designed to attract economic development to the Olympic Peninsula in Washington supplying the growing community of Port Angeles with electric power It was one of the first high head dams in the region with water moving more than a hundred yards from the reservoir to the river below Before the dam was built the river hosted ten anadromous fish runs All five species of Pacific salmon ーpink chum sockeye Chinook and coho ーwere found in the river along with bull trout and steelhead In a good year hundreds of thousands of salmon ascended the Elwha to spawn But the contractors never finished the promised fish ladders As a result the Elwha cut off most of the watershed from the ocean and percent of migratory salmon habitat Thousands of dams block the rivers of the world decimating fish populations and clogging nutrient arteries from sea to mountain spring Some have fish ladders Others ship fish across concrete walls Many act as permanent barriers to migration for thousands of species By the s there was growing concern about the effect of the Elwha on native salmon Populations had declined by per cent devastating local wildlife and Indigenous communities River salmon are essential to the culture and economy of the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe In the tribe filed a motion through the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to stop the relicensing of the Elwha Dam and the Glines Canyon Dam an upstream impoundment that was even taller than the Elwha By blocking salmon migration the dams violated the Treaty of Point No Point in which the Klallam ceded a vast amount of the Olympic Peninsula on the stipulation that they and all their descendants would have the right of taking fish at usual and accustomed grounds The tribe partnered with environmental groups including the Sierra Club and the Seattle Audubon Society to pressure local and federal officials to remove the dams In Congress passed the Elwha River Ecosystem and Fisheries Restoration Act which authorized the dismantling of the Elwha and Glines Canyon Dams The demolition of the Elwha Dam was the largest dam removal project in history it cost million and took about three years Beginning in September coffer dams shunted water to one side as the Elwha Dam was decommissioned and destroyed The Glines Canyon was more challenging According to Pess a glorified jackhammer on a floating barge was required to dismantle the two hundred foot impoundment The barge didn t work when the water got low so new equipment was helicoptered in By most of the dam had come down but rockfall still blocked fish passage It took another year of moving rocks and concrete before the fish had full access to the river The response of the fish was quick satisfying and sometimes surprising Elwha River bull trout landlocked for more than a century started swimming back to the ocean The Chinook salmon in the watershed increased from an average of about two thousand to four thousand Many of the Chinook were descendants of hatchery fish Pess told me over dinner at Nerka If ninety percent of your population prior to dam removal is from a hatchery you can t just assume that a totally natural population will show up right away Steelhead trout which had been down to a few hundred now numbered more than two thousand Within a few years a larger mix of wild and local hatchery fish had moved back to the Elwha watershed And the surrounding wildlife responded too The American dipper a river bird fed on salmon eggs and insects infused with the new marine derived nutrients Their survival rates went up and the females who had access to fish became healthier than those without They started having multiple broods and didn t have to travel so far for their food a return perhaps to how life was before the dam A study in nearby British Columbia showed that songbird abundance and diversity increased with the number of salmon They weren t eating the fish ーin fact they weren t even present during salmon migration But they were benefiting from the increase in insects and other invertebrates Just as exciting the removal of the dams rekindled migratory patterns that had gone dormant Pacific lamprey started traveling up the river to breed Bull trout that had spent generations in the reservoir above the dam began migrating out to sea Rainbow trout swam up and down the river for the first time in decades Over the years the river started to look almost natural as the sediments that had built up behind the dams washed downstream The success on the Elwha could be the start of something big encouraging the removal of other aging dams There are plans to remove the Enloe Dam a fifty four foot concrete wall in northern Washington which would open up two hundred miles of river habitat for steelhead and Chinook salmon Critically endangered killer whales downstream off the coast of the Pacific Northwest would benefit from this boost in salmon and as there are only seventy individuals remaining they need every fish they can get The spring Chinook salmon run on the Klamath River in Northern California is down percent since eight dams were constructed in the twentieth century Coho salmon have also been in steep decline In the next few years four dams are scheduled to come down with the goal of restoring salmon migration Farther north the Snake River dams could be breached to save the endangered salmon of Washington State If that happens historic numbers of salmon could come back ーalong with the many species that depended on the energy and nutrients they carry upstream Other dams are going up in the West ーdams of sticks and stones and mud Beaver dams help salmon by creating new slow water habitats critical for juvenile salmon In Washington beaver ponds cool the streams making them more productive for salmon In Alaska the ponds are warmer and the salmon use them to help metabolize what they eat Unlike the enormous concrete impoundments designed for stability beaver dams are dynamic heterogeneous landscapes that salmon can easily travel through Beavers eat they build dams they poop they move on We humans might want things to be stable but Earth and its creatures are dynamic This article originally appeared on Engadget at 2023-11-12 15:30:32
金融 ◇◇ 保険デイリーニュース ◇◇(損保担当者必携!) 保険デイリーニュース(11/13) http://www.yanaharu.com/ins/?p=5388 あいおい損保,ガリバー,サイバー 2023-11-12 15:04:30

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