[syndicated profile] slashdot_feed

Posted by BeauHD

Cadmium zinc telluride (CZT), a hard-to-manufacture semiconductor produced by only a handful of companies, is enabling a quiet revolution in medical imaging, science, and security by delivering faster scans, lower radiation doses, and far more precise X-ray and gamma-ray detection. "You get beautiful pictures from this scanner," says Dr Kshama Wechalekar, head of nuclear medicine and PET. "It's an amazing feat of engineering and physics." The BBC reports: Kromek is one of just a few firms in the world that can make CZT. You may never have heard of the stuff but, in Dr Wechalekar's words, it is enabling a "revolution" in medical imaging. This wonder material has many other uses, such as in X-ray telescopes, radiation detectors and airport security scanners. And it is increasingly sought-after. Investigations of patients' lungs performed by Dr Wechalekar and her colleagues involve looking for the presence of many tiny blood clots in people with long Covid, or a larger clot known as a pulmonary embolism, for example. The 1-million-pound scanner works by detecting gamma rays emitted by a radioactive substance that is injected into patients' bodies. But the scanner's sensitivity means less of this substance is needed than before: "We can reduce doses about 30%," says Dr Wechalekar. While CZT-based scanners are not new in general, large, whole-body scanners such as this one are a relatively recent innovation. CZT itself has been around for decades but it is notoriously difficult to manufacture. "It has taken a long time for it to develop into an industrial-scale production process," says Arnab Basu, founding chief executive of Kromek. [...] The newly formed CZT, a semiconductor, can detect tiny photon particles in X-rays and gamma rays with incredible precision -- like a highly specialized version of the light-sensing, silicon-based image sensor in your smartphone camera. Whenever a high energy photon strikes the CZT, it mobilizes an electron and this electrical signal can be used to make an image. Earlier scanner technology used a two-step process, which was not as precise. "It's digital," says Dr Basu. "It's a single conversion step. It retains all the important information such as timing, the energy of the X-ray that is hitting the CZT detector -- you can create color, or spectroscopic images."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

[syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed

Posted by SB Sarah

Blue gift box with silver ribbonWe’re back with more Holiday Wishes! This week we’re talking with Rae A., Josephine, and Sneezy!

This week we are talking romance bookstores and road trips, luxurious bidets, webtoons, and, of course, books. And some ranting about women artists in history.

We are traveling as far as Taiwan in this episode – and this should be the last of my laryngitis – hooray for all of us!

Updates? Updates!

Thanks to your Patreon pledges, we have reached our goal with the F’ICE campaign, and all dynamic ads will be turned off permanently for everyone who listens. Thank you so much!

You can gift a Patreon membership if you’re so inclined! A lovely gift for someone you know who loves the show.

AND! The Smart Bitches Candle Collection is LIVE! I partnered with Wax Cabin Candle Company, an independent small chandlery, to offer two limited edition candles just for the holiday season!

A black 11oz jar candle with the bad decisions book club logo on it - a burgundy book open like a tent with light coming out, with just one more page written on the sideThey are on sale now through early January, and you can buy one or both in a gift set! And they are going very fast! 

The Smart Bitches 20th Anniversary candle is an 11 ounce hand poured soy candle with notes of sea salt, book pages, sandalwood and jasmine.

The Bad Decisions Book Club candle, also 11 ounces, is designed to be the perfect pairing for late night reading, with scents of sweet tobacco, book pages, leather, rose, and sandalwood. I had a marvelous time picking out the scents.

So if you’re looking for the perfect gift for yourself or the book lovers in your life, check out the 2025 Smart Bitches Candle collection. You can shop small, support the site, and spread light and warmth this year.

 

Listen to the podcast →
Read the transcript →

Here are the books we discuss in this podcast:

We also discussed:

If you like the podcast, you can subscribe to our feed, or find us at iTunes. You can also find us on Stitcher, and Spotify, too. We also have a cool page for the podcast on iTunes.

More ways to sponsor:

Sponsor us through Patreon! (What is Patreon?)

What did you think of today's episode? Got ideas? Suggestions? You can talk to us on the blog entries for the podcast or talk to us on Facebook if that's where you hang out online. You can email us at sbjpodcast@gmail.com or you can call and leave us a message at our Google voice number: 201-371-3272. Please don't forget to give us a name and where you're calling from so we can work your message into an upcoming podcast.

Thanks for listening!

Remember to subscribe to our podcast feed, find us on iTunes or on Stitcher.
[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Lana DeGaetano

How is it pawssible that the winter is nearly here? If the frigid tempurratures and toasty hot chocolate wasn't enough for you, then you are probably aware that we're closing in on Christmas. Yup, that means Santa Claws will be swooping down our chimneys when we least expect it, and our cats are going to have a meltdown once they realize Santa has them on the naughty list this year. Why, you might ask. Well, why not? They climb our Christmas trees like they're an olympian, they slap us awake if we're two minutes late on breakfast, and they have a way about them akin to a cartoon supervillain…

But, sweet hoomans, you are on the nice list this year. You've spent the entire 12 months catering toward your fluffy fellas every desire and need, and now, you're humble help has paid off. You can finally kick back, relax, and watch some cheesy Christmas comedy movies and curl up under a blanket you won during a workplace White Elephant last year. Sounds like heaven, right? Except, one thing is missing: feline funnies and another catto in the flesh. Grab your precious pet, and lock in. The feel-good funnies aren't going to scroll through themselves!

A Cut Above The Law

Dec. 12th, 2025 04:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read A Cut Above The Law

Instead of answering, she pulls a razor blade out of her purse and starts slicing open the charger packages.
Me: "Whoa, okay, so you’re going to pay for those you’re opening, right? Since you know… you’re damaging the packages?"
Customer: "You’re an idiot."

Read A Cut Above The Law

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Bar Mor Hazut

When winter comes, we all have to find creative ways to stay warm during extremely cold days. 

There are several different approaches one may try when fighting the cold. First, the clothes. While we would all love to stay in our PJs all day long and never leave our bed, most people actually have to leave their home, which means they have to wrap themselves in the warmest clothes possible. A cosy sweater, a big pair of boots, a fussy hat, and a coat are a must during the coldest days of the year, and they can ensure you arrive where you were headed in one piece.

Then, one can also indulge in a nice, warm beverage. It can be coffee, tea, or even hot chocolate, as long as it has steam coming out of the top, and it makes your throat and belly warm. You can even go as far as taking soup with you if it helps you weather the storm.

While the cat memes below don't exactly help us physically fight the cold, they do warm our hearts a great deal, so we consider that a win. If you agree, go ahead and scroll down to enjoy this heartwarming collection. Then, check out even more of these hisstercial cat memes.

[syndicated profile] slashdot_feed

Posted by BeauHD

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: Do Kwon, the South Korean cryptocurrency entrepreneur behind two digital currencies that lost an estimated $40 billion in 2022, was sentenced in New York federal court on Thursday to 15 years in prison for fraud and conspiracy. Kwon, 34, who co-founded Singapore-based Terraform Labs and developed the TerraUSD and Luna currencies, previously pleaded guilty and admitted to misleading investors about a coin that was supposed to maintain a steady price during periods of crypto market volatility. Kwon was one of several cryptocurrency moguls to face federal charges after a slump in digital token prices in 2022 prompted the collapse of a number of companies. [...] Kwon was accused of misleading investors in 2021 about TerraUSD, a so-called stablecoin designed to maintain a value of $1. Prosecutors alleged that when TerraUSD slipped below its $1 peg in May 2021, Kwon told investors a computer algorithm known as "Terra Protocol" had restored the coin's value. Instead, Kwon arranged for a high-frequency trading firm to secretly buy millions of dollars of the token to artificially prop up its price, according to charging documents. "I made false and misleading statements about why it regained its peg by failing to disclose a trading firm's role in restoring that peg," Kwon said in court. "What I did was wrong." He also faces charges in South Korea, and under his plea deal, prosecutors won't oppose his transfer abroad after he serves half of his U.S. sentence.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by John Amato

Ever since Sydney Sweeney appeared in the American Eagle jean ad, Fox News has been obsessed making sure to flaunt her every chance they get.

It was the right wing that jumped to mild criticism of the ad and blew it up into an MAGA media narrative to start another faux outrage to cry about.

Sweeney needs no help from Fox News to up her media exposure, but the way Fox News is treating her, fawning over her body incessantly and using her as a troll tool, is just creepy.

Jesse Watters is one of the worst offenders, using the 28-year-old buxom actress as a pin pushing voodoo doll against the left.

With a shit-eating grin, Watters ogles at the idea of covering her.

Sidney Sweeney's everywhere.

Now we are in the news business, so we have to cover her.

It's our duty.

It's not Fox News's duty to cover her every move. She is a much-in-demand working actress who doesn't need the icky Fox News attention.

Fox News routinely objectifies women at almost the same rate as Donald Trump.

Jesse, put your tongue in your mouth and spend some alone time at home in the bathroom if you must.

Spare us all.

[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by Oliver Willis

Panelists on Fox News lashed out at New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani Monday after he released a video advising immigrants of their constitutional rights.

On Sunday, Mamdani explained in a short video that he intends to protect the rights of the more than 3 million immigrants who live in the city, and that he supports standing up to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Know your rights. Protect your neighbors.

New York is — and always will be — a city for all immigrants.

Zohran Kwame Mamdani (@zohrankmamdani.bsky.social) 2025-12-07T17:03:18.640Z

Mamdani explained that ICE agents need a judicial warrant before gaining access to homes, schools, and other areas. He also outlined ways that ICE agents have falsely claimed to have the right to arrest people, and that people have a right to not answer questions from ICE.

read more

97% of Buildings On Earth 3D-Mapped

Dec. 12th, 2025 02:02 am
[syndicated profile] slashdot_feed

Posted by BeauHD

Longtime Slashdot reader Gilmoure shares a report from Nature: Scientists have produced the most detailed 3D map of almost all buildings in the world. The map, called GlobalBuildingAtlas, combines satellite imagery and machine learning to generate 3D models for 97% of buildings on Earth. The dataset, published in the open-access journal Earth System Science Data on December 1, covers 2.75 billion buildings, each mapped with footprints and heights at a spatial resolution of 3 meters by 3 meters. The 3D map opens new possibilities for disaster risk assessment, climate modeling and urban planning, according to study co-author Xiaoxiang Zhu, an Earth observation data scientist at the Technical University of Munich in Germany. "Imagine a video game with the world's buildings already mapped in basic spatial dimensions!" writes Gilmoure.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

[syndicated profile] slashdot_feed

Posted by BeauHD

joshuark shares a report from BleepingComputer: More than 10,000 Docker Hub container images expose data that should be protected, including live credentials to production systems, CI/CD databases, or LLM model keys. After scanning container images uploaded to Docker Hub in November, security researchers at threat intelligence company Flare found that 10,456 of them exposed one or more keys. The most frequent secrets were access tokens for various AI models (OpenAI, HuggingFace, Anthropic, Gemini, Groq). In total, the researchers found 4,000 such keys. "These multi-secret exposures represent critical risks, as they often provide full access to cloud environments, Git repositories, CI/CD systems, payment integrations, and other core infrastructure components," Flare notes. [...] Additionally, they found hardcoded API tokens for AI services being hardcoded in Python application files, config.json files, YAML configs, GitHub tokens, and credentials for multiple internal environments. Some of the sensitive data was present in the manifest of Docker images, a file that provides details about the image.Flare notes that roughly 25% of developers who accidentally exposed secrets on Docker Hub realized the mistake and removed the leaked secret from the container or manifest file within 48 hours. However, in 75% of these cases, the leaked key was not revoked, meaning that anyone who stole it during the exposure period could still use it later to mount attacks. Flare suggests that developers avoid storing secrets in container images, stop using static, long-lived credentials, and centralize their secrets management using a dedicated vault or secrets manager. Organizations should implement active scanning across the entire software development life cycle and revoke exposed secrets and invalidate old sessions immediately.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

A Story With A Punchline

Dec. 12th, 2025 02:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read A Story With A Punchline

Me: "We did a deal on cameras, where you got an accessory pack for free when you bought a certain brand of camera. Of course, we received one fewer accessory pack than cameras, so at some point, we had to tell a customer that we didn't have the pack at that time and that we'd call him as soon as it was in."

Read A Story With A Punchline

[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read The Hitchhiker’s Guide To Bureaucracy

Comeuppance Just Desserts Getting What They Deserve

I queue at the office and as soon as I present the paperwork to the young front office employee, he quickly scans it and tells me, "these must be checked by him", pointing to a senior employee whose sight immediately makes my Vogon detecting senses tingle.

Read The Hitchhiker’s Guide To Bureaucracy

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

Another day, another grand jury refusing to reindict New York Attorney General Letitia James on the laughably thin mortgage fraud allegations manufactured by the Trump administration.

If you’re feeling like you’ve heard this one before, that’s because you have—last week, when a different grand jury also declined to reindict James. 

All of this flailing, hoping to find some grand jury somewhere in Virginia that will bite at this rancid apple, is the fallout from President Donald Trump’s pet insurance lawyer, Lindsey Halligan, being tossed from her role as acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. 

FILE - Lindsey Halligan, outside of the White House, Aug. 20, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)
Lindsey Halligan

Since Halligan was the only person to present the cases against James and against former FBI Director James Comey to the grand jury—and the only person to sign the indictments—they went out the door right along with Halligan. 

Ever since then, the Trump administration has been trying to recapture that Halligan magic. How hard could it be to get an indictment, really?

Unfortunately for the administration, what this seems to reveal is that Halligan likely did not get those indictments in an entirely kosher fashion. 

To be fair, even Halligan needed a few grand juries to truly get her mojo working. She initially put James’ niece before a Norfolk grand jury, where the niece promptly explained that she had lived in the house for years and did not pay rent. Unfortunately for Halligan, that seriously undercut any allegation that James was fraudulently using the home as an investment property. 

Never one to be deterred, Halligan then went to a different grand jury in Alexandria and somehow just plumb forgot to have the niece provide testimony, but she did manage to net an indictment. Neat how that works.  

But Halligan is nothing if not resourceful. In her attempt to indict Comey, she employed a cool move called “not having the full grand jury review the indictment you presented to the court”—a move that lawyers who value their bar license typically don’t attempt.

Still, Trump has another trick up his sleeve: putting Halligan before the Senate to be confirmed.

On Wednesday, Halligan sent her 28-page questionnaire to the Senate, which seems like a very long document for someone with literally zero relevant experience for the job she thinks she deserves.

To make this happen, Trump has to get GOP senators to agree to kill the tradition of home-state senators having the courtesy of approving a nominee to the federal bench in their state. And if they don’t approve it, the nomination doesn’t move forward. 

FILE - New York Attorney General, Letitia James, speaks after pleading not guilty outside the United States District Court Oct. 24, 2025, in Norfolk, Va. (AP Photo/John Clark, File)
New York Attorney General Letitia James

But even those GOP senators otherwise willing to cede their power to Trump don’t seem inclined to go along with that. Senate Majority Leader John Thune said that the majority of his GOP colleagues oppose ending the tradition. And since Virginia has two Democratic senators, the chance of getting Halligan through is pretty slim. 

Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi can kick and scream about Democratic senators being obstructionist all they want, but both Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner approved of Halligan’s predecessor, Erik Siebert, who was also nominated by Trump. 

But Siebert proved unwilling to turn his office into a stop on the Trump Retribution Tour, which is how we got Halligan.

Just as a thought exercise, let’s say that the GOP upends the tradition and Halligan gets through the Senate. Let’s say that, somehow, she even manages to indict James on these incredibly thin charges. That just gets Halligan and the DOJ right back to the beginning, needing to get through an absolute blizzard of pretrial motions while preparing for trial. 

And if they make it out of that alive, they’ve still got a trial. But since juries—grand and otherwise—are proving themselves remarkably resilient in the face of Trump’s lies, good luck ever getting a conviction.

[syndicated profile] dailykos_feed

A daily roundup of the best stories and cartoons by Daily Kos staff and contributors to keep you in the know.

Trump's economic approval hits all-time low

Republicans are begging him to course-correct before a blue wave crashes over the midterms.

House Democrats target even more seats in 2026 as GOP flails

“We are full speed ahead while Republicans are running scared.”

Trump's immunity demands go global

Well, he’s certainly right to be worried …

Defense bill could force Hegseth to tell truth on boat strikes

It also includes military pay increases and continued funding for Ukraine in Russia’s war.

GOP's culture war is coming for your pocket change

Slavery? Suffrage? Civil Rights Movement? Never happened!

Cartoon: Nap time

Don’t worry, Dozy Don—Stephen Miller will bring you your blankie.

Education chief is hyped to body-slam student loan borrowers

Trump’s team wants to make student loans even more painful.

Watch Nancy Mace spiral about her airport meltdown

All we have to say is “yikes.” 😬

Click here to see more cartoons.

December 2020

S M T W T F S
  123 45
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags