Tag: planned
How to Fix the “Something Didn’t Go As Planned” Error in Windows 11
Is the “Something Didn’t Go As Planned” error preventing you from installing your Windows 11 updates? Worry not—there are a few ways to get around this problem so you can install all your system updates successfully. Here’s how.
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France Opens Investigation Into Apple Over ‘Planned Obsolescence’ For iPhones
HOP said it hoped the investigation would demonstrate the iPhone maker was “associating the serial numbers of spare parts to those of a smartphone, including via microchips, giving the manufacturer the possibility of restricting repairs by non-approved repairers or to remotely degrade a smartphone repaired with generic parts.” The association called on Apple “to guarantee the right to repair devices under the logic of real circular economy.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
After a challenging Q1, what has Beyond Meat (BYND) planned for the rest of 2023
Shares of Beyond Meat, Inc. (NASDAQ: BYND) were up over 1% on Monday. The stock has dropped 13% year-to-date and 61% over the past 12 months. The company had a […]
The post After a challenging Q1, what has Beyond Meat (BYND) planned for the rest of 2023 first appeared on AlphaStreet.
France Investigating Apple Over Alleged ‘Planned Obsolescence’ Arising From Serialized Repair Parts
Apple’s self-service repair program requires customers to enter a device’s serial number when ordering parts for devices like iPhones and Macs, and any parts ordered need to be paired with the same device after installation. HOP said this policy gives Apple the potential to restrict repairs to approved technicians only, and limit the functionality of devices repaired with uncertified parts. The organization added that Apple’s self-service repair program is bad for the environment given that Apple ships large and heavy tools to customers.
Do-it-yourself repair website iFixit also expressed disappointment about the serial number requirement when Apple’s program launched last year.
“Integrating a serial number check into their checkout process is a dire omen and could allow Apple the power to block even more repairs in the future,” said iFixit’s Elizabeth Chamberlain. “Building the technology to provision individual repairs easily sets Apple up as the gateway to approve—or deny—any repairs in the future, with parts from any source.”
The Paris Public Prosecutor’s office is handling the investigation, and has yet to formally accuse Apple of any wrongdoing in relation to HOP’s complaint. The organization previously filed a complaint about Apple throttling the maximum performance of some older iPhone models with aging batteries when necessary in order to prevent the devices from unexpectedly shutting down, leading to a €25 million fine in France.
This article, “France Investigating Apple Over Alleged ‘Planned Obsolescence’ Arising From Serialized Repair Parts” first appeared on MacRumors.com
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Deliveries-By-Drone Continue Expanding. Pizza Deliveries Planned for Seattle
“If all goes well, the company expects to deliver pizzas in 2024,” reports local news outlet KUOW, noting that Zipline has battery-powered drones that hover above a customer’s location “and lowers the delivery on a tethered droid.”
“Obviously, it seems pretty sci-fi and a lot of customers think this is totally insane when they first hear about it,” said Keller Cliffton, cofounder and CEO of Zipline, a delivery drone company. “But what has really struck us is that there are about seven days of sci-fi magical amazement, and then on day eight people are basically bored of it — bored of it in the way that there’s no way they’re ever going back to the old way of receiving things… Anybody can pull out a phone, press a button on that phone, and place an order that can then be delivered autonomously to the home in a way that is 10 times as fast, half the cost, and fully zero emission compared to the way we do instant delivery today.”
Scenes of hot pizzas lowering out the sky onto Seattle porches are contingent on Zipline receiving approval from the FAA for an operations and safety plan. That plan is in the works but not yet submitted to the agency. The FAA may impose restrictions tailored to Seattle’s busy airspace such as on flight altitudes, hours of operation and places to avoid…
The plans don’t end with pizzas. Last year, Zipline announced a separate effort to deliver medical products and lab samples for the MultiCare Health System around Tacoma… As with the pizza proposal, the earliest estimates for medical deliveries around Tacoma are sometime in 2024. Zipline has also made delivery deals with supplement retailer GNC in Salt Lake City, and with Associated Couriers in Long Island, New York to deliver medications… [Zipline] has already been delivering some products for Walmart to customers in the Bentonville, Arkansas area and prescription drugs for some health care providers in parts of North Carolina and Utah. But the Washington state plans would involve newer types of drones, which the company calls Platform 2 Zips.
Pagliacci Pizza’s co-owner told the news outlet that the drones “will enable us to scale our deliveries sustainably with up to 97% fewer emissions than cars.” They told CNET drones would deliver pizzas “while they’re still hot,” and told the Seattle Times that drone deliveries will make it possible to deliver pizzas to further away or difficult-to-reach locations. (“The Zipline drones can deliver goods to customers in a 10-mile service radius,” according to the newspaper, with drones flying more than 300 feet above the ground while remaining ‘nearly silent, designed to sound like rustling leaves in the wind,’ according to Zipline.)
Local news station KIRO notes that Zipline’s current system uses larger drones and small parachutes “for Walmart and other customers around the world.” And Pagliacci Pizza told them that since there’s no driver, tips offered during drone delivery would go to the kitchen staff.
Wednesday Zipline also announced a deal with wellness brand GNC, according to CNET, which “will begin with customers in Salt Lake City, with other cities to follow…
Zipline is also announcing a partnership with Associated Couriers to begin delivering prescription medications to patients at long-term care facilities in Long Island, New York. Associated Couriers plans to expand the service across the US and then internationally. The delivery company has already completed more than 600,000 deliveries to customers since 2016 using its previous iteration of drones….
Zipline is far from being the only company experimenting with drone delivery — Walmart, Google parent Alphabet, Amazon and startups like Flyby Robotics and Manna have also run trials and performed delivery services.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Fake stewards planned to disrupt coronation, Met Police chief says
And now for the afterparty! Mother of all concerts and Big Lunches planned for today
Bill Gates Visits Planned Site of ‘Most Advanced Nuclear Facility in the World’
The new plant will employ “between 200 and 250 people,” Gates writes in a blog post, “and those with experience in the coal plant will be able to do many of the jobs — such as operating a turbine and maintaining connections to the power grid — without much retraining.”
It’s called the Natrium plant, and it was designed by TerraPower, a company I started in 2008. When it opens (potentially in 2030), it will be the most advanced nuclear facility in the world, and it will be much safer and produce far less waste than conventional reactors.
All of this matters because the world needs to make a big bet on nuclear. As I wrote in my book How to Avoid a Climate Disaster , we need nuclear power if we’re going to meet the world’s growing need for energy while also eliminating carbon emissions. None of the other clean sources are as reliable, and none of the other reliable sources are as clean…
Another thing that sets TerraPower apart is its digital design process. Using supercomputers, they’ve digitally tested the Natrium design countless times, simulating every imaginable disaster, and it keeps holding up. TerraPower’s sophisticated work has drawn interest from around the globe, including an agreement to collaborate on nuclear power technology in Japan and investments from the South Korean conglomerate SK and the multinational steel company ArcelorMittal…
I’m excited about this project because of what it means for the future. It’s the kind of effort that will help America maintain its energy independence. And it will help our country remain a leader in energy innovation worldwide. The people of Kemmerer are at the forefront of the equitable transition to a clean, safe energy future, and it’s great to be partnering with them.
Gates writes that for safety the plant uses liquid sodium (instead of water) to absorb excess heat, and it even has an energy storage system “to control how much electricity it produces at any given time…”
“I’m convinced that the facility will be a win for the local economy, America’s energy independence, and the fight against climate change.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Honda says first e:Architecture-based EV is coming sooner than planned
Honda said today that plans to release its first e:Architecture-based electric vehicle in North America in 2025. That’s a year earlier than the Japanese automaker originally said it would introduce vehicles based on its in-house vehicle platform, which puts greater emphasis on software and over-the-air updates a la Tesla. Honda said in a statement that […]
Honda says first e:Architecture-based EV is coming sooner than planned by Harri Weber originally published on TechCrunch