Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Der Brummton ist amtlich Windräder eines Windparks müssen wegen Lärmbelästigung ausgebremst werden

Gute Nachrichten! Neues zum Klimawahn in der Bananenrepublik D!

Nicht nur verschandeln diese Windmühlen die Natur, sie töten auch massenweise Vögel, Fledermäuse, und Insekten.

"... Doch jetzt müssen die Windräder am „Windpark“ Königseiche oberhalb von Uhingen-Baiereck teilweise abgeschaltet werden, gefordert wird sogar deren Aus. Sie verursachen zu viel Lärm. Aus ursprünglichen Anwohnerprotesten ist ein behördlich belegter Immissionsfall geworden. ..."

Der Brummton ist amtlich: Windräder müssen wegen Lärm ausgebremst werden "Die Anwohner von Baiereck haben etwas „Glück“. Amtlich festgehalten ist, der störende Ton ist nicht bloß subjektives Empfinden, sondern messtechnisch nachgewiesen. Die Bürgerinitiative „Pro Schurwald“ fordert das Aus für den Windpark."

The expectations regarding the President Trump and General Secretary Xi Jinping summit in Beijing are high!

Will it be a watershed historic event? Hope and pray!

I will be myself in Beijing on Friday 5/15 to attend to an appointment at the German embassy for personal reasons.

Will this event trump (pardon my pun) the famous "President Richard Nixon’s historic eight-day visit to the People's Republic of China from February 21–28, 1972, ended 25 years of diplomatic separation between the U.S. and China. Meeting with Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai, Nixon aimed to normalize relations and gain leverage over the Soviet Union, producing the Shanghai Communiqué."?

Do not underestimate the businessman Trump!

New York Judge Says There Is No Tort of ‘Misgendering’

Hopefully, this will be the end of such obviously frivolous lawsuits with respect to human fads and manias!

Preferred pronouns! Laughable! I want to be called hesheit (pronounced heshit)! Just kidding! Caution: satire!

"At the Volokh Conspiracy, Senior Fellow Eugene Volokh writes about a decision where a judge in Manhattan ruled that repeatedly misgendering a person, in this case calling someone “him” who had asked to be called “them,” does not mean the misgender-er is liable for damages.
The misgendered party asked the judge to order the misgender-er to use the preferred pronoun and sought damages for each “instance of deliberate misgendering that has occurred and continued to occur.” The judge disagreed. “There is . . . no showing of any actual ‘misgendering’ or any legally cognizable injury arising from it,” Judge Gerald Lebovits wrote. “New York recognizes no tort of ‘misgendering.’”"

Trump Returns to China; Lonely Liberals on the Supreme Court

China-US trade talks kick off in Seoul ahead of high-profile leaders’ summit of President Trump and Xi Jinping in China

Good news! Auspicious! Hope and pray for a breakthrough!

"Senior officials from China and the United States have started a new round of trade talks in Seoul, South Korea, hours ahead of US President Donald Trump’s scheduled arrival in Beijing. ..."

China-US trade talks kick off in Seoul ahead of high-profile leaders’ summit | South China Morning Post

Golden Dome-style missile shield could cost up to $1.2T over 20 years to develop, deploy, and operate, CBO estimates

That is only $60 billion per year! Not too bad!

More concerning is how outdated it might be in the age of hypersonic missiles and drone warfare. How will the Golden Dome be adjusted for that?

Is the acquisition and development of Greenland included? Just kidding! 😊

"... CBO said most of the cost, over $1 trillion, would be needed for acquisition, including “costs for the system’s major components — namely, the interceptor layers and a space-based missile warning and tracking system.”

“The most expensive component is the space-based interceptor layer, which accounts for about 70 percent of acquisition costs and 60 percent of total costs,” the report says. ..."

Golden Dome-style missile shield could cost up to $1.2T over 20 years, CBO estimates - Breaking Defense

Amazon launches 30-minute delivery across the US

Good news! But Amazon is only catching up with the already very fast delivery widely available in China for almost everything. I recently blogged here and here about it.

"Amazon deliveries keep getting faster. On Tuesday, the online retailer announced the launch of its 30-minute delivery option, dubbed “Amazon Now,” in dozens of U.S. cities.

This ultra-fast delivery option will allow customers to shop across “thousands” of items, Amazon says, including fresh groceries, household essentials, and other locally relevant items. ..."

Amazon launches 30-minute delivery across the US | TechCrunch

Iran's very dubious claim of sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz

It seems to be an outrageous claim by the fanatic theocratic dictatorship and major global state sponsor of terrorism!

What about the the state of Oman or the United Arab Emirates?

All Western countries and beyond would be well advised to firmly reject this claim!

Take the Strait of Gibraltar as an example:
"The Strait of Gibraltar is classified under international law as a strait used for international navigation. Its legal status is primarily governed by the transit passage regime established by the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

This regime guarantees all ships and aircraft the right of free, continuous, and expeditious transit between the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, even when traversing the territorial waters of Spain, Morocco, or the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar." (Google AI)



Three Japanese megabanks to gain access to Anthropic's powerful AI model Mythos thanks to US Treasury Secretary Bessent

Good news! What will these banks do with Mythos?

How much die Prime Minister Takaichi influence this decision while Bessent visited Japan?

"Japan's three megabanks are set to gain access to Claude Mythos, the powerful artificial intelligence model developed by U.S. startup Anthropic, as soon as the end of May, Nikkei learned Wednesday. ..."

Japan megabanks to gain access to Anthropic's powerful AI model Mythos - Nikkei Asia "MUFG, Sumitomo Mitsui and Mizuho were likely informed of decision by Bessent"


Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, right, and U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent pose for photos at the prime minister's office in Tokyo on May 12. (Source)




Nvidia’s Jensen Huang joins Trump’s trip to China

Good news! This promises to be a very interesting summit! Expectations are rising!

"... Seventeen American CEOs were on the original list of business delegates released by the White House on Monday – a smaller group than Trump’s previous China trip in 2017, when 27 high-profile executives joined. ..."

Breaking | Nvidia’s Jensen Huang joins Trump’s trip to China after all | South China Morning Post "The Nvidia CEO, not included in the White House’s original delegation list, will be in Beijing with the US president, the company has confirmed"

Pentametallic nanoparticles self-assemble for ammonia decomposition catalyst in a simple synthesis

Amazing stuff! This seems to be a very promising approach!

"A counterintuitive technique developed by researchers ... allows pentametallic nanoparticles of relatively uniform size and composition to form spontaneously from a precursor solution containing the five metals. The nanoparticles are a promising catalyst for the decomposition of ammonia into hydrogen and the technique could also potentially be extended to produce other multimetallic nanoparticles. ...

Multimetallic nanocrystals can sometimes offer catalytic properties that nanocrystals of a single metal cannot such as higher atom economy for a precious metal or synergistic interactions between the metals.
However, they can be difficult to synthesise because different reactivities or natural crystal structures of the constituent metals may not lead to compositionally uniform products. ...

approach, depositing the metals from solution onto ruthenium nanoparticle seeds by mixing them with metal acetylacetonate precursor solutions and heating the mixture. When they studied bimetallic compositions, they found differing results. Iron formed variably sized, self-nucleated nanoparticles separate from ruthenium, copper formed core–shell nanoparticles, and cobalt and nickel both formed mixtures of the two. ..."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
Multimetallic nanocrystals offer valuable properties but are challenging to synthesize. Yoon et al. systematically explored how the interplay of ruthenium seeds with iron, cobalt, nickel, and copper precursors can be exploited to produce uniform pentametallic nanocrystals.
They showed that progressive addition of multiple metals suppresses unwanted nucleation and directs growth toward a uniform product. The resulting nanocrystals exhibited high thermal stability and enhanced catalytic activity for ammonia decomposition, highlighting a general strategy for designing complex functional nanomaterials. ...

Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Multimetallic nanocrystals exhibit physical and chemical properties unattainable in monometallic systems, arising from the synergistic interplay of their constituent elements.
Synthesizing these materials with precise control over their size and composition represents an important goal. Differences in reduction potentials, interfacial energies, and nucleation and growth kinetics among metal precursors create both thermodynamic and kinetic challenges that often lead to asynchronous reduction and incorporation processes. Rather than forming a single, uniform product, these disparities frequently generate multiple particle populations with distinct sizes and compositions. Therefore, rational design principles that govern competitive reduction and growth processes are critical to directing multimetallic synthesis toward uniform products.

RATIONALE
We hypothesized that the inherent chemical complexity of reduction for multiple metal precursors could be exploited rather than avoided. Specifically, we investigated whether introducing a high number of different competing metals simultaneously during a seed-mediated synthesis might suppress the formation of unwanted heterogeneous products. Under such competitive conditions, mutual affinities and altered energy barriers control the reaction pathways, guiding synthesis toward a single, compositionally uniform product.

RESULTS
We discovered a counterintuitive, composition-focusing effect in which increasing the number of reacting metals dramatically improved product uniformity
Whereas introducing one or two base metals to ruthenium seeds yielded inhomogeneous products, simultaneously adding four metal precursors suppressed side reactions, resulting in a single pentametallic nanocrystal product. Time-lapse analysis during the heating process demonstrated that the metals deposited sequentially.
The initial elements that deposited acted as mediators that lowered the energy barrier for the addition of subsequent metals, building a multidomain architecture. This focusing phenomenon also proved highly versatile, successfully yielding uniform products regardless of seed size, precursor ratios, or the constituent metals. When used as ammonia decomposition reaction catalysts, the pentametallic nanocrystal-based catalysts achieved a catalytic rate more than four times higher than that of ruthenium catalysts and maintained their structural integrity and performance even after high-temperature treatments up to 900°C.

CONCLUSION
Our study demonstrates that competitive reactivity, typically viewed as a hurdle in chemical synthesis, can actively drive the formation of highly uniform multimetallic nanocrystals.
By increasing the number of competing elements, side reactions could be suppressed to focus the growth into a single structure.
The design rules established in this study provide a generalizable strategy for synthesizing complex multimetallic nanocrystals, offering a versatile platform for advancing catalysis and sustainable energy technologies."

Pentametallic nanoparticles self-assemble for ammonia decomposition catalyst | Chemistry World


KAIST unveils ‘complexity paradox’: Multimetallic nanoparticles grow more uniform as components increase


The five-metal nanoparticle showed potential as a catalyst to break ammonia down


The synthesis of the nanocrystal was surprisingly simple


Composition-focusing in multimetallic nanocrystal synthesis.


Ranking Arizona: Top 10 Arizona casinos for 2026. Really!

There are only a total of about 26 casinos in operation in Arizona! Most of them, if not all run by native Americans.

Ranking Arizona: Top 10 Arizona casinos for 2026 - AZ Big Media "Here are the Top 10 casinos in Arizona, based on public voting for the 2026 edition of Ranking Arizona, the state’s biggest and most comprehensive business opinion poll. Ranking Arizona is based purely on opinion and ranks companies based on how voters answer this simple question: with whom would you recommend doing business?"

Gaza’s Lost History on Display in a major international exhibition in Turin

This could be an interesting exhibition! However, from the article below I get the impression this is a pro Palestine (PLO/PNA) political statement, perhaps worse with antisemitic undertones!

"The project is a collaboration between Fondazione Merz, Turin’s Museo Egizio, and Geneva’s Musée d'Art et d'Histoire (MAH), with the support of the State of Palestine. It brings together around eighty archaeological artifacts dating from the Bronze Age to the Ottoman period, placing them in dialogue with works by seven contemporary Palestinian and international artists. Together, the institutions frame the exhibition as both a scholarly undertaking and a public reflection on memory, identity, and responsibility. ...

For years, the name Gaza has been associated almost exclusively with bombardment, siege, hunger, and ruin [???]. The Turin exhibition seeks to recover a much longer, nuanced history. ..."

"... The project brings together a selection of over eighty archaeological finds from the MAH – Musée d’art et d’histoire of Geneva on behalf of the State of Palestine and the Egyptian Museum of Turin – dating from the Bronze Age to the Ottoman period – and works by contemporary Palestinian and international artists Samaa Emad, Mirna Bamieh, Khalil Rabah, Vivien Sansour, Wael Shawky, Dima Srouji and Akram Zaatari. ..."

Gaza’s Lost History on Display in Turin - by Giovanni Vigna "A major exhibition at Fondazione Merz explores Gaza's ancient Mediterranean identity through archaeology, art, and archival photography, recovering a cultural memory often eclipsed by war."

GAZA, the future has an ancient heart (original news release)


An iron age statuette of a woman with a tambourine, from between 800 and 601 BC, discovered in Gaza. (Source)


The exhibition in Turin includes ancient artefacts found in Gaza and new work from artists across the Levant.


Head with pointed cap, from approximately the 5th century BCE, discovered in Gaza.


Garlic compound kills mosquitoes by halting mating and blocking egg-laying

Good news! I love garlic! Scientists were looking for an aphrodisiac and found the anaphrodisiac!

"... In fact, a new Yale study finds that garlic also functions as a de facto birth control for mosquitoes and other winged insects, an insight that could lead to eco-friendly pest control strategies. ...

the presence of garlic blocks mating in mosquitoes and a variety of fly species. ...

the idea that since fruit flies normally mate on fruits, maybe there’s something in fruits or vegetables that acts as an aphrodisiac and stimulates their mating. So, she went to the supermarket and bought 43 different fruits and vegetables. She made purées from each and put them in Petri dishes for the flies to sample. ...

The startling result was that garlic abolished mating completely. It blocked egg-laying, too. ..."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Highlights
• A “phytoscreen” identifies garlic as a potent deterrent of fly and mosquito behaviors
Diallyl disulfide, a garlic compound, inhibits mating and egg laying
Mating and egg-laying effects depend on taste and the TrpA1 channel
• Garlic exposure increases expression of a gene that encodes a satiety hormone

Summary
One means of controlling insect disease vectors and pests is with compounds that manipulate their behavior. An extraordinary variety of phytochemicals, i.e., compounds produced by plants, activate insect chemosensory systems. Fruits and vegetables present a source of compounds that are inexpensive and safe.
A “phytoscreen” of 43 fruits and vegetables identified garlic as a potent deterrent of mating and egg laying in Drosophila. 
Diallyl disulfide, a garlic compound, deters both behaviors. Mating and egg-laying effects depend on taste and the TrpA1 channel
Garlic inhibits mating and egg laying in Aedes vector mosquitoes and mating of the tsetse fly Glossina morsitans.
Garlic exposure increases expression of Drosophila head genes, including female-specific independent of transformer (fit), which encodes a satiety hormone that is essential for the effect of garlic on egg-laying preference."

From pantry to pest control: Garlic kills the mood — for mosquitoes, too | Yale News "Yale researchers discovered a naturally occurring compound in garlic that halts mating and egg-laying in insects."



Graphical abstract


English for trippers: An ally allays in an alley

Rally quickly!

Pakistan Thinks It’s Playing Trump, the Opposite May Be True by Michael Rubin

Recommendable! A brief synopsis of US-Pakistan foreign relations since 1947.

Pakistan Thinks It’s Playing Trump, the Opposite May Be True | American Enterprise Institute - AEI

Adam Smith's Legacy in Alberdi's Argentina

Recommendable! How much is Javier Milei influenced by Juan Bautista Alberdi?

"... However, one of the deepest and most successful applications of Smithian philosophy occurred in the Southern Cone of the Americas. Juan Bautista Alberdi, the intellectual father of the Argentine Constitution (1853), did not merely read Smith; he transformed his economic theories into a foundational institutional framework for a new nation. ..."

Adam Smith's Legacy in Alberdi's Argentina – Constanza Mazzina


Juan Bautista Alberdi (Source)


Disclaimer

Since end of February, I  am blogging from behind the Great Firewall of China.

My Internet service in China is very spotty. Thus, I am not able to blog as usual.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Panama Canal oil shipments soar 70% as Asian buyers turn to US crude

In times of war, there always winners and loosers! How much crude oil is coming from Venezuela?

"Crude oil and petroleum products traveling through the Panama Canal swelled more than 70% above last year's levels in April, as the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz sent Asian buyers scrambling to secure supplies from the U.S ..."

Panama Canal oil shipments soar 70% as Asian buyers turn to US crude - Nikkei Asia "With Hormuz unpassable due to Iran war, ships vie for limited canal transit slots"

The hidden structure behind a widely used class of materials: Relaxor ferroelectrics

Amazing stuff!

"Materials called relaxor ferroelectrics have been used for decades in technologies like ultrasounds, microphones, and sonar systems. Their unique properties come from their atomic structure, but that structure has stubbornly eluded direct measurement.

Now a team of researchers f... has directly characterized the three-dimensional atomic structure of a relaxor ferroelectric for the first time. The findings ... provide a framework for refining models used to design next-generation computing, energy, and sensing devices. ...

In their paper, the researchers describe how they used an emerging technique to reveal the distribution of electric charges in the material, with a surprising result.

“We realized the chemical disorder we observed in our experiments was not fully considered previously,” ... “Working with our collaborators, we were able to merge the experimental observations with simulations to refine the models and better predict what we see in experiments.” ...

Probing disordered materials

Leading simulations of relaxor ferroelectrics suggest that when an electric field is applied, the interactions of positively and negatively charged atoms in different nanoregions of the material help give rise to exceptional energy storage and sensing capabilities. The details of those nanoregions have been impossible to directly measure to date. ...

the researchers studied a relaxor ferroelectric material used in sensors, actuators, and defense systems that is a lead magnesium niobate-lead titanate alloy. They used an emerging measurement technique, called multi-slice electron ptychography (MEP), in which researchers move a nanoscale-sized probe of high-energy electrons over a material and measure the resulting electron diffraction patterns. ...

The technique revealed a hierarchy of chemical and polar structures that spanned from atomic to mesoscopic scales. The researchers also found that many regions of differing polarization in the material were much smaller than predicted by the leading simulations. The researchers then fed their new data back into those computer simulations and refined the models to better reflect their findings under different conditions. ..."

From the editor's summary and abstract:
"Editor’s summary
The complexity of lead-based relaxor ferroelectrics makes connecting microscopic characterization with macroscopic properties challenging.
One approach is to compare experimental and theoretical studies, but experiment often averages over material inhomogeneities and theory provides an atomistic view.
To overcome this mismatch, Zhu et al. used multislice electron ptychography, which provided three-dimensional volumetric characterization of the structure and chemistry of a prototypical relaxor material.
Direct comparison with bond valence molecular dynamics simulations revealed that a fully chemically disordered model with residual short-range ordering was necessary to enable agreement with experiment.  ...

Abstract
Introducing structural and/or chemical heterogeneity into otherwise ordered crystals can dramatically alter material properties.
Lead-based relaxor ferroelectrics such as 0.68Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3-0.32PbTiO3 are prototypical examples.
We performed three-dimensional (3D) volumetric characterization using multislice electron ptychography (MEP) and bond valence molecular dynamics (BVMD) simulations.
Real-space comparisons between the two under varying strain states revealed a coherent 3D view of the “polar slush.” Dipolar correlations from the atomic to domain scales are shown to be jointly modulated by strain and chemical configurations, with the best agreement found in a model accounting for both overall chemical disorder and residual short-range order.
Together, MEP and BVMD provide a framework for linking atomic-scale heterogeneity in complex materials by means of complementary 3D imaging and predictive modeling."

The hidden structure behind a widely used class of materials | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology "Relaxor ferroelectrics have been used in electronics and sensors for decades, but the source of their unique properties was a mystery until now."


Bridging experiment and theory of relaxor ferroelectrics at the atomic scale with multislice electron ptychography (preprint, open access, published August 2024, could be dated, contains no images)


Using a technique called multi-slice electron ptychography (MEP), researchers move a nanoscale-sized probe of electrons over a material and measure the resulting electron diffraction patterns. Overlapping regions can be used to create a 3-D scan of the material’s atomic structure.



From Brain Drain To Brain Gain to brain circulation: About High-Skilled tech migration between India and the US since the 1990s

Food for thought!

"How did high-skilled immigrants from India both support America's 2000s tech boom and spark India's transformation into the world's largest IT exporter? In the 1990s, a surge of Indian workers began acquiring computer science skills in hopes of migrating to the US, creating a massive skilled workforce. However, the cap on US visas blocked many of these workers from obtaining jobs in the US, while others who did find work ultimately returned to India after working in the American tech sector, a phenomenon known as "brain circulation."

The result was a remarkable win-win: Indian immigrants drove innovation, patenting, and productivity gains that lifted the entire US economy, creating American jobs in the process, while investment in computer skills and brain circulation fueled a tech boom in India that made it the global leader in IT services. ..."

From Brain Drain To Brain Gain: The Truth About High-Skilled Immigration  | Hoover Institution From Brain Drain To Brain Gain: The Truth About High-Skilled Immigration "How did high-skilled immigrants from India both support America’s 2000s tech boom and spark India’s transformation into the world’s largest IT exporter? Hint: it’s not a story of “brain drain” —  it’s actually one of brain circulation."

Earthquake-sensing fiber cables can also pick up speech from other, nearby fiber cables

Amazing stuff!

What is the definition of serendipity?

"Fiber optic cables used to detect earthquakes may also be able to eavesdrop on nearby conversations. Researchers reported last week at the European Geosciences Union meeting that distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) can accurately capture the faint vibrations of human speech.

DAS works by firing laser pulses down a fiber cable and measuring tiny changes in any light that reflects back. Geophysicists increasingly use the technique to study earthquakes, volcanoes, traffic, and even pedestrian footfalls, taking advantage of both dedicated research cables and unused “dark fiber” already buried beneath cities and oceans.
But in field tests, researchers found that exposed, coiled cables could also pick up nearby speech from several meters away. Feeding the signals into Whisper, a free AI transcription tool, produced readable real-time transcripts.

“Not many people realize that [fiber optic cables] can detect acoustic waves,” said geophysicist Jack Lee Smith. “This could be a privacy concern.”

The effect was limited: buried cables and straight fiber lines recorded speech poorly. Still, researchers say the findings highlight unexpected privacy risks as DAS use expands."

ScienceAdviser

Fiber optic cables can eavesdrop on nearby conversations "Cables used to detect earthquakes can also capture the faint vibrations of speech"

Image of the day/Bild des Tages

Die Last mit lebenslangen Berufspolitikern! Wer nichts wird, wird Berufspolitiker (Wirte wurden zu lange ungerechtfertigter Weise beleidigt)! 

Was hat der Mann eigentlich gemacht als die unsägliche SED Kanzlerin Merkel regierte? Ist er fleissig mitgelaufen?



Putin the Terrible Warns Armenia Over EU Ambitions, Citing ‘Ukrainian Scenario’

What else to expect from this megalomaniac and warmonger!

When will the apathetic and lethargic Russian people/Slav(e)s finally get rid of Putin the Terrible!

"During a press briefing on May 10, Vladimir Putin addressed Armenia’s growing alignment with the EU, urging Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to hold a referendum to choose between the EU and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). While claiming Moscow would support what benefits the Armenian people, Putin warned of “certain circumstances” and invoked the “Ukrainian scenario,” claiming that conflict began with Kyiv’s EU aspirations. ..."

Putin Warns Armenia Over EU Ambitions, Citing ‘Ukrainian Scenario’

Photonics advance could enable compact, high-performance lidar sensors with no moving parts

Good news!

"... A new study from ... researchers could help to enable next-generation lidar sensors that are compact, durable, and have no moving parts. The key advance is a novel design for a silicon-photonics chip, which is a semiconductor device that manipulates light rather than electricity.  ...

To avoid these drawbacks, the ... researchers designed and demonstrated an array of integrated antennas that minimizes unwanted crosstalk between the antennas. Their innovation allows a lidar chip to scan a wider field of view while maintaining low-noise operation compared to other silicon-photonics-based approaches. ..."

From the abstract:
"Integrated optical phased arrays (OPAs) have emerged as a promising technology for many applications due to their ability to dynamically control free-space optical beams in a compact and non-mechanical manner.
However, these integrated OPAs typically have a restricted field of view (FOV), limited by grating lobes caused by large antenna pitches that are typically necessary to reduce crosstalk between the antennas in the integrated OPA.
In this work, we develop and experimentally demonstrate for the first time, to the best of our knowledge, a set of integrated grating-based antennas with significantly-reduced inter-antenna crosstalk that enable half-wavelength-pitch integrated OPAs with grating-lobe-free and wide-FOV functionality.
First, we derive a generalized theoretical model to describe the coupling dynamics between lossy modes in a system and use this model to analyze the coupling between antennas.
Next, we design and demonstrate a set of three integrated grating-based antennas with different propagation coefficients to enable reduced inter-antenna crosstalk, successfully measuring a significant reduction from 100% to 1% coupling.
Finally, using these reduced-crosstalk antennas, we develop and demonstrate a half-wavelength-pitch integrated OPA, successfully demonstrating grating-lobe-free and wide-FOV functionality.
This work facilitates new functionality for high-performance integrated OPAs."

Photonics advance could enable compact, high-performance lidar sensors | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology "With a novel design, MIT researchers overcame a stubborn problem that has limited the effectiveness of chip-based systems for lidar."



Fig. 1: Wide-FOV integrated-OPA concept.



Fig. 2: Design of reduced-crosstalk antennas.



Jelena Notaros, senior author (Source)


How Anthropic aligns its models to be more ethically responsible

Good news!

"Anthropic allays blackmail problems, outlines alignment strategy

Anthropic published research on how it eliminated the agentic misalignment problem that plagued earlier Claude models—instances where AI systems would blackmail engineers or take ethically questionable actions to avoid shutdown.
The behavior originated in the pre-trained model rather than from misaligned reward signals during fine-tuning, since standard chat-based RLHF data didn’t cover agentic tool use.
The key breakthrough came from teaching Claude to explain its reasoning rather than just demonstrate correct behavior: training on responses that included ethical deliberation reduced misalignment from 22 percent to 3 percent, far more effective than training on aligned actions alone.
Even more striking, equivalent improvements came from “difficult advice” data—fictional scenarios where a human faces an ethical dilemma—which was 28 times more efficient and likely to generalize better given its distance from the evaluation distribution.
Every Claude model from Haiku 4.5 onward now scores perfectly on agentic misalignment evals, compared to Opus 4 models that engaged in blackmail up to 96 percent of the time.
The researchers note that while this progress is encouraging, fully aligning highly capable AI systems remains unsolved, and current auditing methods cannot yet rule out catastrophic autonomous action."

Data Points: How Anthropic aligns its models





The Simple Macroeconomics of AI. Really!

It appears this economist Daron Acemoglu and winner of the John Bates Clark Medal 2005 and Economics Nobel Prize 2024 has little clue regarding machine learning & AI! He has an impressive lifetime citation count of over 297,000!

Apparently, this economist is a total factor productivity fetishist! Or a one trick pony!

This fool does not even recognize that AI will dramatically and highly affect high skilled labor (e.g. economists, physicians, engineers, scientists) in the near future. Unfortunately, productivity for high skilled labor is, if I am not mistaken, more difficult to measure than for low skilled labor, a serious challenge for the total factor productivity fetishist!

This economist totally underestimates the fast pace of the AI revolution! What Ivory Tower is he living in? What a dismal economist!

This economist is even a professor at MIT since 1993! Apparently, he has little contact or understanding of what his ML & AI colleagues do at MIT!

"A few months before he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 2024, Daron Acemoglu published a paper that earned him few fans in Silicon Valley. Contrary to what Big Tech CEOs had been promising—an overhaul of all white-collar work [???] —Acemoglu estimated that AI would give only a small boost to US productivity and would not obviate the need for human work. It’s okay at automating certain tasks, he wrote, but some jobs will be perfectly fine. ..."

From the abstract:
"This paper evaluates claims about large macroeconomic implications of new advances in AI. It starts from a task-based model of AI’s effects, working through automation and task complementarities. So long as AI’s microeconomic effects are driven by cost savings/productivity improvements at the task level, its macroeconomic consequences will be given by a version of Hulten’s theorem: GDP and aggregate productivity gains can be estimated by what fraction of tasks are impacted and average task-level cost savings.
Using existing estimates on exposure to AI and productivity improvements at the task level, these macroeconomic effects appear nontrivial but modestno more than a 0.66% increase in total factor productivity (TFP) over 10 years. The paper then argues that even these estimates could be exaggerated, because early evidence is from easy-to-learn tasks, whereas some of the future effects will come from hard-to-learn tasks, where there are many context-dependent factors affecting decision-making and no objective outcome measures from which to learn successful performance.
Consequently, predicted TFP gains over the next 10 years are even more modest and are predicted to be less than 0.53%. 
I also explore AI’s wage and inequality effects. I show theoretically that even when AI improves the productivity of low-skill workers in certain tasks (without creating new tasks for them), this may increase rather than reduce inequality. Empirically, I find that AI advances are unlikely to increase inequality as much as previous automation technologies because their impact is more equally distributed across demographic groups, but there is also no evidence that AI will reduce labor income inequality. Instead, AI is predicted to widen the gap between capital and labor income [???].
Finally, some of the new tasks created by AI may have negative social value (such as design of algorithms for online manipulation), and I discuss how to incorporate the macroeconomic effects of new tasks that may have negative social value."

The Simple Macroeconomics of AI | NBER (open access, published May 2024)



Daron Acemoglu. Is the a simpleton?


English for trippers: Rural is plural

E.g. in the Ural mountains or on murals!

What is perhaps the most gravest mistake of Israel since 1948?

Why does Israel not give up the Hebrew written language for the Latin/Roman script?

Israel could have made a contribution to end the global Tower of Babel! What a missed opportunity since 1948!

Set an example for the entire Middle East and other Arab countries!

Perhaps, then China and other Asian countries could be more willing to do the same! What about India?

No disrespect intended for the very old Hebrew language, impressive ancient history and traditions!


The Tower of Babel by Pieter Bruegel the Elder c. 1563 AD (Source)


The U.A.E. has been secretly carrying out attacks on Iran in April

Bad news! Serious stuff! Certainly makes the situation more complicated!

Were these only defensive/retaliatory measures?

"The U.A.E. has been secretly carrying out attacks on Iran, people familiar with the matter said.
The revelation casts the Gulf monarchy as an active combatant in a war in which it has been Iran’s biggest target. 
A strike in April hit an oil refinery on Iran’s Lavan Island. The U.A.E.’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs declined to comment on the strikes but pointed to previous statements in which it asserted its right to respond—including militarily—to hostile acts. ..."

Wall Street Journal What's news

Former 46th President May Try to Block 70 Hours of Audio with Ghostwriter from Release by US Department of Justice

So the senile, demented and pathological liar, the 46th President did not only spent most of his time at the beaches of Delaware, he also prepared his biography in office!

What a lousy US President this was!

Biden May Try to Block 70 Hours of Audio with Ghostwriter from Release "Former President Joe Biden’s (D) lawyers may try to block the U.S. Department of Justice’s (DOJ) release of his 2017 interactions with the ghostwriter who helped him produce the book in which he talked about the death of his son, Beau."

President Trump Should Bring Jimmy Lai Home from his visit to China this week

That is a good suggestion!

"... A prominent critic of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), Lai has faced intense political pressure throughout his career and endured acts of intimidation, including assaults and petrol bomb attacks. Despite these attempts to silence him, he remained committed to defending press freedom. ..." (Wikipedia)

President Trump Should Bring Jimmy Lai Home | National Review "With this week’s meeting with Xi Jinping, Trump can turn a campaign promise into action."




Iron Dome battery in the Golan Heights struck by Hezbollah FPV Fiber-optic cable drone

Where are these terrorists getting these weapons from?

Caveat: I presume it was a fiber-optic cable drone.

Iron Dome battery struck by Hezbollah FPV drone | The Jerusalem Post "The IDF has struggled to respond to the FPV drone threat, which uses special cables and manual operation of the drone to outwit the military's advanced technologies for jamming and tracking drones.

Global human population has surpassed Earth’s sustainable carrying capacity. Really!

How often has this demagoguery been repeated over the past 2 centuries or so since Thomas Robert Malthus!

A piece of junk science! Ridiculous and laughable!

Incredible!!! One of the paper's author is the infamous Paul Ehrlich, who also published the controversial Population Bomb!

Fact are:
  • World population very likely will decline over the next several decades (see e.g. Japan, China, probably India)
  • Human ingenuity will save as like the last two hundred years of rapid population growth

From the abstract:
"The ecological concept of human carrying capacity is necessarily complicated because human beings are the ‘ultimate ecosystem engineers’ who moderate the environment for their benefit.
For at least the last few hundred years, human ingenuity, access to massive stocks of fossil fuels, and technological development have driven facilitation whereby increasing human abundance has promoted higher population growth rates. However, this positive relationship broke down during the 1950s, and by 1962, the global human population entered a phase where the growth rate consistently declined as population increased.
The onset of this negative phase occurred 8 years before a global biocapacity deficit began in 1970. The onset of the negative phase also varies regionally, with the lowest-income and highest fertility regions entering this phase later than higher-income regions.
A Ricker logistic model fitted to the negative phase predicts that the global population could reach 11.7–12.4 billion people between 2067 and 2076 [totally absurd!!!].
The same model fitted to the facilitation phase predicts a maximum population of 2.5 billion people that Earth might be able to maintain [Totally absurd!!!]. The negative phase also correlates strongly with the trend in global temperature anomaly, ecological footprint, and total emissions, with more of their variation explained by increasing population size rather than increasing per-capita consumption.
The Earth cannot sustain the future human population, or even today’s, without a major overhaul of socio-cultural practices for using land, water, energy, biodiversity, and other resources."

Global human population has surpassed Earth’s sustainable carrying capacity - IOPscience


First published 1968




On A Brief Survey of Deep Reinforcement Learning

Highly recommendable! An excellent survey paper on reinforcement learning! Well written! And the survey is only 16 pages long

The survey is not bloated with irrelevant references! On the contrary, most references are very relevant and well chosen.

This a survey from 2017, so it is more of historical relevance. Citation count about 6763 as of 5/11/2026 (Google Scholar).

Just finished reading it for the first time!

From the abstract:
"Deep reinforcement learning is poised to revolutionise the field of AI and represents a step towards building autonomous systems with a higher level understanding of the visual world.
Currently, deep learning is enabling reinforcement learning to scale to problems that were previously intractable, such as learning to play video games directly from pixels.
Deep reinforcement learning algorithms are also applied to robotics, allowing control policies for robots to be learned directly from camera inputs in the real world.
In this survey, we begin with an introduction to the general field of reinforcement learning, then progress to the main streams of value-based and policy-based methods.
Our survey will cover central algorithms in deep reinforcement learning, including the deep -network, trust region policy optimisation, and asynchronous advantage actor-critic. In parallel, we highlight the unique advantages of deep neural networks, focusing on visual understanding via reinforcement learning.
To conclude, we describe several current areas of research within the field."

[1708.05866] A Brief Survey of Deep Reinforcement Learning (open access)




Sunday, May 10, 2026

Fortress co-founder Wesley Edens was allegedly extorted by a female sexual partner

Another Me Too event! Men watch out especially if you are rich!

"A woman was indicted for allegedly trying to shake down the billionaire, who also co-owns the Milwaukee Bucks, by threatening to publicize explicit videos and photos. Prosecutors said she asked for as much as $1.215 billion."

"... answered a LinkedIn message from a China-born entrepreneur in 2022 that blossomed into a correspondence.

Changli “Sophia” Luo was a divorcée living in New York City who had founded One World Initiative Advocacy, a Manhattan-based nonprofit that said it worked to produce video interviews with economists and environmentalists. ..."

Wall Street Journal What's news

Fortress Co-Founder Allegedly Extorted By Sexual Partner "Woman charged for allegedly threatening to share sex videos, photos of Wesley Edens, who also co-owns Milwaukee Bucks"

Wesley Edens


Was this the female sex partner? Source


AI systems may soon be capable of performing AI research by themselves and autonomously

Good & bad news!

What if AI systems e.g. develop new and better atomic, biological and chemical weapons? Unfortunately, megalomaniacs and warmongers like Putin the Terrible or state sponsors of terrorism like Iran may not resist!

Caveat: I did not read the long blog post.

"In a recent blog post, Jack Clark, one of the founders of Anthropic, argues that AI systems may soon be capable of performing AI research by themselves, citing major improvements in their ability to code, conduct research, and manage other models. If he’s right, it would raise the possibility of “recursive self-improvement,” a milestone that could dramatically accelerate AI progress."

Doomslayer: Progress Roundup - by Malcolm Cochran

Japan Airlines Trials Humanoid Robots for Ground Handling tasks at airport with Chinese made robots

Good news! 

Interesting, the original JAL and GMO company news releases do not mention chinese made robots. Where did BBC news get the scoop from? Perhaps from the South China Morning Post?

"... For a start, the Chinese-made robots will be deployed to load and unload cargo containers ..."

"Japan Airlines (JAL) will start using humanoid robots in ground handling tasks at Tokyo's Haneda airport from May, in a two-year trial it said is aimed at easing employees' workload.

For a start, the Chinese-made robots will be deployed to load and unload cargo containers, JAL and GMO AI & Robotics, its partner in the project, said in a demonstration to the media on Monday. ..."

Japan Airlines Trials Humanoid Robots as Ground Handlers - Human Progress











First Malaria Drug for Babies Is Approved by WHO in Major Milestone

Good news! This is a bit of old news, first announced in April of this year.

"“The first malaria treatment for babies has been approved by the World Health Organization, opening the door to widespread use around the globe.

In parts of Africa, up to 18% of children under six months will be infected with malaria, but there has historically been no safe treatment for the smallest of them. ...

Medical leaders hope that Coartem Baby, which can be used to treat infants as small as 2kg (4.4lb), will fill the treatment gap.  ...

enable public-sector procurement for many countries with high rates of malaria, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa.”"

"... Novartis is making the treatment available on largely not-for-profit basis in malaria-endemic regions. ..."

"... prequalification of the first treatment developed specifically for newborns and young infants weighing between two and five kilograms. ..."

First Malaria Drug for Babies Is Approved in Major Milestone - Human Progress


English for trippers: Wilting and tilting

Like on stilts!

19 WTO Members Agree Among Themselves Not to Impose E-Commerce Duties

Good news! President Trump is not only about raising tariffs! 😊

"“The U.S. and ‌more than a dozen other countries including Japan, South Korea, Singapore and Australia on Thursday launched their own pact to not impose duties on e-commerce after no agreement was reached to end deadlock with Brazil, a document showed. ..."

19 WTO Members Agree Among Themselves Not to Impose E-Commerce Duties - Human Progress