Categories
Technology

Stellantis Dodge Charger Daytona demonstrates the solid-state battery

The battle to use cheaper, more efficient and safer batteries for electric vehicles is heating up among automakers.

At the heart of this battle is the development of solid-state battery technology, an alternative to highly flammable and expensive lithium batteries that is attracting more and more attention.

As proof, Stellantis, the world's fourth largest automaker, is betting on the technology of its next generation of electric vehicles.

The Netherlands-based company said it will launch a demonstration fleet of Dodge Charger Daytona electric vehicles that will feature solid-state battery technology from US startup Factorial.

The demo fleet, expected to be launched by 2026, will provide a real-world impression of Factorial's technology. Factorial has been working with Stellantis since 2021 and also works with companies such as Daimler AG's Mercedes-Benz and Hyundai.

In addition to Dodge, the technology will eventually also be used on the Stellantis STLA Large multi-energy platform, which includes brands such as Jeep, Chrysler, Alfa Romeo and Maserati.

Stellantis said the integration of solid-state battery technology will lead to “improved performance, longer ranges and faster charging times in the coming years.”

Factorial, meanwhile, says its technology offers higher energy density, lower weight, improved performance and the potential to further reduce the overall cost of the vehicle over time.

Stellantis, Daimler and Hyundai are not the only ones relying on solid-state battery technology. Toyota, the world's largest automaker, has invested heavily in the technology. The company also formed a coalition with Nissan and Panasonic to boost production in Japan.

Until now, producing solid-state batteries has been an expensive undertaking. However, moves like the Stellantis demo fleet and large-scale production by companies like Factorial are expected to improve manufacturing processes and costs over time.

Other automakers, meanwhile, are working on ways to improve lithium batteries. Volkswagen, for example, is developing its own standardized battery cell in several European plants and a plant in Ontario, Canada.



Categories
Entertainment

Social Media Suppose shared a tweet about Lil Durk

Social media doesn’t speculate about that Give loaf left a now deleted message via Lil Durk.

RELATED: Here's everything you need to know about Lil Dirk's arrest and alleged murder plot

What is Tea with Dej & Durk?

Def Loaf left fans and social media users chatting after she posted a message and then deleted it. On Friday, October 25, the “Try Me” rapper took to X (formerly Twitter) with a little message. She wrote: “Free mine”, and added the folded hands emoji. People were quick to speculate that Dej Loaf's message was about Durk, as news of his arrest came a day before her post on Thursday, October 24th.

On Saturday, October 26, Dej Loaf reappeared on the platform after someone approached her about deleting the post. When the user tagged her and said, “We saw this post girl!!!!!!” Dej responded with: “As you should have done!” I said what I said.”

Shortly after, Dej published another post on X, urging people not to make assumptions about things they don't know about. She wrote: “People don’t even know half of the business they’re taking care of.”

At the moment, Dej has not confirmed whether she meant Lil Durk.

Social media reactions

The housemates quickly took to The Shade Room's comments section to share their thoughts on Dej's post. Many called her out for allegedly talking about her ex, while others recalled their alleged relationship.

Instagram user @thatsjust.diamond wrote:Her friend looks at her like, 'Who is that?'”

Instagram user @s.nashay wrote:You all know what she meant 🤣🤣”

While Instagram users @Prettyk1206 wrote: Having a girlfriend and supporting your ex-husband on social media is so 2024 🤣🤣🤣”

Then user @_tierralatrice wrote: Damn, she can’t say she’s releasing her cousin 😭”

Another Instagram user @Jataviatay wrote:The Durk & Dej era was a time to be alive ✨🔥”

Instagram user @a.com__________ wrote: Prison and death always make people say interesting things.”

Finally, Instagram user @gee2srt wrote:Dej should have kept this to himself 😭 India is going crazy lol.”

More details about Dej and Durk's relationship and his recent arrest

Fans believe that Dej may have been talking about Durk because there were previous rumors that they were dating. However, in a Hot97 interview in 2016, Durk clarified that they were just “friends.”

As TSR previously reported, U.S. Marshals arrested the “All My Life” artist on Thursday, October 24, in Florida. According to the Chicago Tribune, Durk is currently being held in Broward County, and his arrest coincided with California prosecutors jailing several other men in a murder plot against rappers, At the Rondo.

Jail records reviewed by The Shade Room revealed that the marshals arrested Durk on a murder-for-hire charge. Court documents indicate the attack was a shooting at a Los Angeles gas station in August 2022 that resulted in the death of Quando Rondo's cousin, Saviay'a Robinson. According to reports, the assassination attempt was aimed at avenging the death of Lil Durk's mentee. King Von. Prosecutors initially charged Timothy “Lul Tim” Leeks, an associate of Quando, with King Von’s murder. According to Complex, they dropped the aggravated murder charge in August 2023.

RELATED: Whew! Lil Durk's 10-Year-Old Son Accused of Shooting His Stepfather (PHOTO)

What do you think, roommates?

Categories
Technology

AI in all probability isn't the large promoting level for smartphones that Apple and different tech giants suppose it’s

As is tradition this time of year, Apple announced a new iPhone lineup last week. The promised centerpiece that would get us to buy these new devices was AI – or Apple Intelligence, as they called it. Still, the response from the collective world of consumer technology was muted.

Consumers' lack of enthusiasm was so obvious that Apple's stock price immediately fell by over a hundred billion dollars. Even the Wired Gadget Lab podcast, which is passionate about all things new tech, didn't find anything in the new features that would make them want to switch to the iPhone 16.

The only thing that seemed to cause some excitement wasn't the AI ​​features, but the addition of a new camera shutter button on the side of the phone. If a button is a better selling point than the most hyped technology of recent years, something is clearly wrong.

The reason for this is that AI is now past what tech blog The Media Copilot called the “miracle phase.” Two years ago, we were amazed that ChatGPT, DALL-E, and other generative AI systems were able to create coherent writing and realistic images from just a few words in a text prompt. But now the AI ​​has to show that it can actually be productive. Since their introduction, the models that enable these experiences have become much more powerful – and exponentially more expensive.

Still, Google, NVidia, Microsoft and OpenAI recently met at the White House to discuss AI infrastructure, suggesting that these companies are doubling down on technology.

According to Forbes, the industry is $500 billion (£375 billion) short of paying back the massive investment in AI hardware and software, and the $100 billion in AI revenue predicted in 2024 is not coming even close to this number. But Apple still needs to enthusiastically integrate AI features into its products for the same reason as Google, Samsung and Microsoft – to give consumers a reason to buy a new device.

Difficult sell?

Before AI, the industry tried to create hype around virtual reality and the Metaverse, an effort that likely culminated with the launch of the Apple Vision Pro headset in 2023 (a product, incidentally, in the announcement of the last was barely mentioned this week).

After the Metaverse failed to take off, tech companies needed something else to drive sales, and AI has become the new shiny thing. However, it remains to be seen whether consumers will embrace the AI-based features included in phones, such as photo editing and typing assistants. That's not to say that current AI isn't useful. AI technologies are used in multi-billion dollar industrial applications, from online advertising to healthcare and energy optimization.

Thanks to Apple's visual intelligence, the phone's camera can be pointed at something, such as a restaurant, to get information without having to perform a search.
Heiko Küverling

Generative AI has also become a useful tool for professionals in many fields. According to a survey, 97% of software developers have used AI tools to support their work. Many journalists, visual artists, musicians and filmmakers have used AI tools to create content faster and more efficiently.

But most of us aren't actually willing to pay for a service that draws funny cartoon cats or summarizes text – especially since attempts at AI-powered search have proven error-prone. Apple's approach to using artificial intelligence appears to be largely a mix of existing features, many of which are already built into popular third-party apps.

Apple's AI can help you create a custom emoji, transcribe a phone call, edit a photo or write an email – nice stuff, but no longer groundbreaking. There's also something called Reduce Mode, which is supposed to disturb you less and only let important notifications through, but how well that will work in reality remains unclear.

The only future-oriented function is called Visual Intelligence. This allows you to point the camera at something in the environment and get information without explicitly performing a search. For example, you could take a photo of a restaurant sign and the phone will tell you the menu, show you reviews – and maybe even help you reserve a table.

While this is very reminiscent of the lens in Google's Pixel phones (or the multimodal capabilities of ChatGPT), it does suggest a future use of AI that is more real-time, interactive, and based in real-world environments.

By extension, Apple Intelligence and Reduce Mode could evolve into so-called “context-aware computing,” which has been presented and demonstrated in research projects since the 1990s but, for the most part, has not yet become robust enough to be a real product category .

The kicker in all of this is that Apple Intelligence isn't really available for everyone to try out yet, as the new iPhones don't include it yet. Perhaps they will turn out to be more valuable than the limited information suggests. However, Apple used to be known for not releasing a product until it was truly ready, meaning the use case was crystal clear and the user experience was perfected.

This makes the iPod and iPhone so much more attractive than all the MP3 players and smartphones that came before them. It's unclear whether Apple's AI approach will be able to recoup some of the lost stock price, not to mention the hundreds of billions the company and the rest of the tech industry have invested. Finally, AI still has amazing potential, but it might be time to slow down
Take a moment to consider where it is actually most useful.The conversationThe conversation

Lars Erik Holmquist, Professor of Design and Innovation, Nottingham Trent University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Categories
Health

E. coli outbreak at McDonald's: CDC updates case depend

A deadly E. coli outbreak linked to McDonaldThe Quarter Pounders have led to 75 cases in 13 states, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday as it investigated the source of the spread.

The outbreak has resulted in 22 hospitalizations and one previously reported death of an older adult in Colorado.

Of the 61 patients for whom information is available, 22 were hospitalized and two people developed a serious condition that can lead to kidney failure, called hemolytic uremic syndrome. All 42 people surveyed by the CDC said they had eaten at McDonald's, while 39 people said they had eaten a beef hamburger, the agency said.

According to the CDC, the people with infections ranged in age from 13 to 88. The agency reiterated that the number of cases in the outbreak is likely much higher than previously reported. The CDC added that the outbreak may not be limited to the states with corresponding cases. That's because many patients don't get tested for E. coli and recover from an infection without receiving medical care, the CDC said. Additionally, it typically takes three to four weeks to determine whether a sick person is part of an outbreak.

Shares of the restaurant chain closed down 3% on Friday. The stock has fallen 7% since the CDC announced the outbreak on Tuesday, initially citing 49 cases and one death in 10 states.

McDonald's declined to comment on the update, citing the company's statement when it first announced the outbreak.

Quarter Pounder hamburgers are a key menu item for McDonald's, bringing in billions of dollars annually.

Health officials are closely examining the onion slices used in Quarter Pounder as a likely contaminant. McDonald's has ordered restaurants in the affected region to remove sliced ​​onions from their offerings and has stopped selling the ingredient in the region.

McDonald's locations in Colorado, Kansas, Utah, Wyoming and parts of Idaho, Iowa, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico and Oklahoma have temporarily stopped using Quarter Pounder onion slices and beef patties, according to the CDC.

McDonald's identified California-based fruit and vegetable giant Taylor Farms as a supplier of the sliced ​​onions that the company had removed from its supply chain. Taylor Farms has issued a recall for four raw onion products due to possible E. coli contamination. Burger King, Pizza Hut, KFC and Taco Bell have removed onions from select restaurants in response to the outbreak.

But federal authorities are also investigating the Quarter Pounders beef patty as a potential culprit.

As the CDC and other federal agencies track cases and work to contain the outbreak, McDonald's has pulled Quarter Pounders from restaurants in affected areas. About a fifth of McDonald's restaurants in the U.S. do not sell Quarter Pounder burgers.

McDonald's spokespeople said Wednesday that it was too early to say whether the outbreak would have any impact on traffic to its restaurants.

The company is expected to report its third-quarter results on Tuesday and could provide investors with more details about the situation on the conference call.

The outbreak comes after several quarters of sluggish U.S. sales at McDonald's. Price-conscious consumers are no longer visiting restaurants as often, leading McDonald's and other fast-food chains to turn to inexpensive meals to boost sales. According to StreetAccount estimates, Wall Street analysts expect the company to report third-quarter comparable sales growth of 0.5% in the United States.

For now, McDonald's is trying to reassure customers that its menu items are safe to eat and drink and that it is taking the outbreak seriously. Experts told CNBC that barring a more serious crisis, damage to the brand could be minimal, such as a related E. coli outbreak Wendy's two years ago.

Categories
Science

EPA proposes one other inconceivable commonplace – do you agree?

Short messages from Kip Hansen – October 25, 2024 – 650 words/3 min

Unsafe on every level! If the current government's Environmental Protection Agency [ EPA ] If dust is found in the ambient air in an apartment building, property owners would have to carry out an extremely expensive renovation.

“Wait, that’s crazy!” you might say. But hey, come on, it's the EPA and they're “still crazy after all these years.” (h/t Paul Simon)

Don't believe me, here it is in the NY Times:

“The Biden administration announced Thursday that it is tightening requirements for homes and child care facilities to remove lead-based paint dust, a move that could better protect more than 300,000 children a year from the toxic metal.”

Under the new rules, any detectable amount of lead dust in the building would be considered a “lead hazard” and property owners would have to pay for cleanup. Property and business owners who may be affected expressed concerns about potential cleanup costs.”

No, I didn't cheat…says the EPA any detectable lead dust content in the building”.

So how much lead – in what concentration – is present in the surrounding atmosphere?

Of course there are big differences, but when it comes to air pollution, the “National Trends in Lead Concentrations in 2010 – 2023” shows a value of just over 0.025 ug/m3 for the USA. This is a demonstrable level. The air measurement includes any fine dust particles in the air. In Europe, the lead content in soil is measured in nanograms/m3 and is 25-35 ng/m3, which is the same value. The average has hardly changed in the last decade.

This means that in both the US and Europe, ambient air has a detectable lead level of approximately 0.025 ug/m3. The measurements of the ambient air concentration include all particles (i.e. “dust” – PM2.5/PM10) in this air volume.

According to an MIT press release, “Testing for lead in water requires expensive, cumbersome equipment and typically takes days to obtain results.” Or, simple test strips are used that simply provide a yes or no answer about its presence of lead, but do not provide information about its concentration. Current EPA regulations require drinking water to contain no more than 15 parts per billion of lead, a concentration so low that it is difficult to detect.”

The new testing system being developed, as discussed in this press release, is said to be capable of detecting lead concentrations “as low as 1 part per billion.”

Today, no one wants their children or themselves exposed to lead in drinking water, in the paint on children's beds or toys, or in the paint dust in their older homes.

But “no detectable level” isn’t a standard – it’s an activist’s pipe dream.

The air around you likely contains detectable amounts of lead. A recent EPA document shows that airborne dust levels, averaged across all monitoring sites, range from 0.015 to 0.045 µg/m3.

If the water in your home likely has detectable levels of lead, and the dust in the air outside your home has detectable levels of lead, how is it possible to reduce the lead levels in your home to “no detectable levels”?

That's not it.

# # # # #

Author's comment:

A demonstrably impossible goal is not a goal at all. It's nonsensical. No amount of cleaning or renovation can possibly reduce lead levels in a home below the levels found in tap water and the ambient air and therefore in the home. Houses are not clean rooms and cannot be converted into one.

It's possible that the current crop of EPA administrators, NIH and UN-WHO apparatchiks have simply lost their minds. Or perhaps they have secret knowledge from another planet that makes the impossible possible and are hiding it in Area 51?

Things are getting stranger and stranger.

Thanks for reading.

# # # # #

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Categories
Sport

Stroll-off World Collection Recreation 1 greater than lived as much as the hype

  • Jeff Passan, ESPNOctober 26, 2024, 3:15 a.m. ET

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      Author of The Arm: Inside the Billion-Dollar Mystery of the Most Valuable Commodity in Sports

LOS ANGELES – About an hour after Freddie Freeman came the closest to a perfect baseball game, he stood near home plate and tried at Dodger Stadium, where he had just ended Game 1 of the World Series with an extra-inning grand slam Explain what just happened. Over 10 innings and 3 hours and 27 minutes, the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees evolved from a pitchers' duel to a hitting and baserunning exercise to strategic theater to an indelible highlight in the 120- year-long history of the World Series. Baseball at its finest comes in many forms. This game somehow managed to pack them all into one.

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The final result – Dodgers 6, Yankees 3 – doesn't exactly scream classic. It's misleading. On Friday night, the 52,394 people who were lucky enough to witness Game 1 in person saw the rare swarming sporting event, only to find that it had been outdone. The two most famous baseball franchises, true elites of their shores, fought. And then with a single hit, on a first-pitch, 93-mph fastball from Nestor Cortes, Freeman delivered the first walk-off grand slam in World Series history, 36 years after Kirk Gibson did it Did the same thing hobbling around the bases.

“Look at this game,” Freeman said, and began recounting everything that had transpired. Four innings of shutout baseball. The Dodgers scored a run on a sacrifice fly. Giancarlo Stanton countered with a massive two-run home run. The Dodgers hit back by holding off Yankees closer Luke Weaver. The Yankees appeared to be pushing ahead on a Gleyber Torres home run, but when a Dodgers fan reached over the fence to catch it, it was ruled interference, which was confirmed by replay. New York tagged Los Angeles' leading reliever, Blake Treinen, for a run in the 10th. And the tension in the bottom of the 10th: a walk and an infield single to lead off Shohei Ohtani, whose foul to left moved runners to second and third and Yankees manager Aaron Boone opened a base to intentionally walk Mookie Betts. Freeman will face Cortes, who hasn't thrown a pitch since September 18th.

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“Moments of switching back and forth – that’s what makes classics,” Freeman said. “And I think we created one tonight.”

The tens of millions of viewers in the United States, Japan and around the world know they saw it. Great baseball can be filled with both good (Jazz Chisholm Jr. steals second and third before scoring in the 10th inning) and bad (he was able to do it because of Treinen's slow throw). It can include great defense (Dodgers shortstop Tommy Edman saves a run in the sixth by holding a grounder in the infield) and unsightly defense (both Yankees corner outfielders turn doubles into triples).

“Some people think a slugfest is a good play,” Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy said. “Some people think a pitchers’ duel is a good game. I don't know it. I think if you just add a little bit of all the elements, it’s pretty fun.”

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This game had a lot to offer. Even before the first pitch, there was tension among the starters: Gerrit Cole and Jack Flaherty, two right-handers who grew up in Southern California. The Dodgers had desperately tried to sign Cole when he was still a free agent, and the Yankees tried to trade for Flaherty in July but then backed out, and the two men, now playing against their former suitors, spent the first innings to cheer each other up.

Stanton's sixth-inning home run and his subsequent look – not to mention Flaherty's forlorn face after realizing his mistake – left the Dodgers behind 2-1 and marked the beginning of intrigue between Boone and Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. who had left for Flaherty for the third time through the order and had paid dearly. Boone turned to Weaver in the eighth after Ohtani hit a double from the top of the wall and advanced to third base thanks to New York's sloppy defense. He was well placed strategically, but couldn't stop the Dodgers from tying the score.

Two innings later, it could have been Ohtani again or Betts or anyone else in the Dodgers' fearsome top-to-bottom lineup. Choosing Freeman, the 35-year-old first baseman, was as extraordinary a solution as one could imagine.

“I was hoping Mookie would get a hit to take the pressure off him,” said Freeman's father, Fred, to whom Freeman ran after the home run and clasped his hands through the net that surrounded the field. “Then they went for a walk with him. And I said, 'Oh, Freddie, Freddie, Freddie.' And then the first pitch.”

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Freeman has been painful to watch over the past month. Not just because he hadn't had an extra-base hit in the Dodgers' first 11 playoff games. Freeman is clearly in pain. His sprained ankle throbs. His body hurts. He's an eight-time All-Star, a future Hall of Famer and a World Series champion with Atlanta in 2021. He's already had a brutal year, with his three-year-old son Max suffering from severe illness Guillain-Barré syndrome . Freeman continued to fight through the pain, hoping that the five days off since the NLCS would do enough good for his body to do something memorable.

His triple in the first inning, as he hobbled around the bases, showed he was prepared. Nobody knew that an even better finale was coming.

“He's a superhero in my eyes, really, honestly and truly,” Dodgers reliever Anthony Banda said. “Seeing how he got through the injury and the rehab he did and the time he put in and trying to get healthy and get back on the field and do everything he did can – that speaks volumes about him as a player.” And as a person, he cares about the organization, and that’s what drives us all.

That's true for everyone on the field Friday, including the Yankees, who now have to recover from a blow to the knee that's about as severe as it gets. The good news is that there is still plenty to play for, countless opportunities for the Yankees to do so, and that the standards have risen from high to stratospheric for the rest of the series.

To suggest that any of the games, however many there are, can compete with Game 1 is unfair – unless it's the kind of series where the magic happens all the way through, where two teams are so good, so poised, so ready for the moment and so eager to win that the hype is merely an accelerator. Maybe Game 2 on Saturday evening will continue where Game 1 so clearly delivered.

“The end,” Dodgers center fielder Kiké Hernández said. “I mean, it doesn’t get any better than that.”

That's actually the case because Hernández forgets one thing. When it comes to the Dodgers and Yankees, the 120th World Series, this clash of the titans that has so much more great baseball in them, that's just the beginning.

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Entertainment

Beyoncé speaks about her three youngsters on the Kamala Harris Rally in Houston

Beyonce returns to her roots.

The “Texas Hold 'Em” singer recently stepped out for a surprise appearance on Vice President Kamala Harris' rally in her hometown of Houston.

“I’m not here as a celebrity. I'm not here as a politician. I'm here as a mother, a mother who cares deeply about the world in which my children and all our children live,” Beyoncé shared from the stage. “A world where we have the freedom to control our bodies, a world where we are not divided.”

The Grammy winner– who shares children Blue ivy12 and twins Rumi And Mister6, with husband Jay Zcontinued: “Imagine our daughters growing up and seeing what is possible, without ceilings and restrictions. Imagine our grandmothers. Imagine what they are feeling now, those who lived through this historic day, even those who are no longer with us physically.” Imagine all the sacrifices they made so that we could have the strength of a woman can experience what is in their power.

And while Beyoncé's performance thrilled fans, it wasn't a success complete Surprise. After all, sources with direct knowledge of the event told NBC News earlier this week that she would be taking the stage alongside Democratic candidate for president.

Categories
Health

What McDonald’s must do subsequent after E. coli outbreak

In this photo illustration, a McDonald’s Quarter Pounder hamburger meal is seen at a McDonald’s on October 23, 2024 in the Flatbush neighborhood in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. 

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

As McDonald’s and health authorities race to contain a deadly E. coli outbreak, the burger chain faces challenges in the months ahead to keep the trust of diners and investors.

Shares of the fast-food giant have fallen 7% since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued an advisory notice Tuesday, warning that the company’s Quarter Pounder burgers have been linked to an E. coli outbreak in 10 states that has led to one death.

Health investigators have zeroed in on the slivered onions used in the Quarter Pounder as the likely contaminant. McDonald’s confirmed that California-based vegetable producer Taylor Farms is the supplier of onions it removed from its supply chain. Taylor Farms issued a recall on four raw onion products, citing potential E. coli contamination, restaurant supplier U.S. Foods said in a notice to customers Thursday. (U.S. Foods is not a supplier for McDonald’s.)

The CDC initially reported 49 people became ill from the outbreak from Sept. 27 to Oct. 11. The tally has now risen to 75 cases across 13 states, including at least 22 hospitalizations, according to a CDC update on Friday. Health experts say the number of cases will likely rise as the investigation progresses.

Just two days after the CDC issued its advisory notice, it’s too soon to tell how the outbreak could affect McDonald’s business, especially if the case count grows. But investors are already worried that it could cause sales to fall at the company, which has been trying to rebound from lagging traffic by offering deals to price-sensitive customers.

Company spokespeople said Wednesday that’s it’s far too early to share if the outbreak was having any effect on its restaurants’ sales. McDonald’s is expected to report its third-quarter results on Oct. 29 before the markets open.

The damage to the business will depend in part on how effectively McDonald’s has already contained the outbreak — and how well it can convince diners it is safe to eat at its restaurants.

Where the investigation could go next

Investigations into multistate foodborne outbreaks can last from a few weeks to up to several months. 

But Dr. Thomas Jaenisch, an epidemiology professor at the Colorado School of Public Health, believes it will likely take two or three weeks for federal agencies and McDonald’s to determine the exact source of contamination and chain of events leading to the E. coli outbreak. He said any testing of ingredients and supply sources “really shouldn’t take that long.”

The CDC has said the number of confirmed cases related to the McDonald’s E. coli outbreak could grow as the investigation continues, as many people recover from an infection without testing for it or receiving medical care. It also typically takes three to four weeks to determine if a sick patient is part of an outbreak, the agency added. 

There’s also the possibility that cases could crop up in new states or regions that haven’t reported any illnesses, according to Xiang Yang, a professor and meat scientist at the University of California, Davis. 

For example, a person traveling to a state impacted by the outbreak, such as Colorado, could have gotten infected with E. coli and brought it back to where they are from, according to Yang. It is also unclear if the onion supplier ships ingredients to restaurants in other regions of the U.S., which could potentially spread the E.coli strain that caused the McDonald’s outbreak. 

That strain, called O157:H7, can cause a serious complication that can lead to kidney failure. One of the patients in the McDonald’s outbreak suffered from that condition, known as hemolytic uremic syndrome. The federal government essentially bans the sale of any ground beef contaminated with the strain, requiring suppliers to test their products for it.

E. coli can spread through contaminated food or water, or by an individual coming into contact with an infected person, environment or animal. 

The CDC and the 10 states impacted have been interviewing each patient case to get detailed information about their exposure to E. coli, such as what they ate and when, according to Craig Hedberg, the co-director of the Minnesota Integrated Food Safety Center of Excellence. Hedberg is also a member of the McDonald’s Food Safety Advisory Council, but said he has not worked with the company on its response to the outbreak. 

The CDC and the states have been sharing the information they gather with the Food and Drug Administration to trace onion distribution and identify a specific source of contamination, he said. The information is also shared with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service, which does the same with ground beef. 

The CDC is investigating both the Quarter Pounder’s uncooked slivered onions and its beef patty as the potential culprit for the outbreak. 

Hedberg said contamination of raw onions with E. coli is “highly plausible,” noting several salmonella outbreaks have been linked to onions in recent years. 

McDonald’s uses a single onion supplier, which washes and slices the vegetable, in the affected area. 

Meanwhile, McDonald’s uses multiple beef suppliers in the region, and its burgers are supposed to be cooked to an internal temperature that would kill the bacteria. The size of the outbreak “would imply widespread undercooking by many different individual McDonald’s restaurants” if beef was the culprit, according to Hedberg.

But he said that seems unlikely since most fast-food chains have designed their cooking systems to prevent E. coli contamination of ground beef, which is a widely recognized hazard. Still, investigators will likely examine the cooking practices of multiple locations as part of the investigation, Hedberg noted. 

Jaenisch said he hopes the investigation will also examine the preparation process for Quarter Pounders to see if there is any potential for cross contamination between slivered onions and other ingredients.

“When you prepare the burger at McDonald’s, at which point are the slivered onions added? Do they have a bowl of slivered onions, someone puts their hands in it and then touches the tomatoes?” Jaenisch said. “I would look very closely at that point of preparation.”

McDonald’s has already pulled Quarter Pounders from restaurants in the affected areas. Roughly a fifth of McDonald’s U.S. restaurants are not selling Quarter Pounder burgers at this time. The company has also instructed restaurants in the area to remove slivered onions from their supply, and has paused the distribution of that ingredient in the region.

Customers pass in the Drive Thru lane during breakfast hours at a McDonald’s restaurant on October 23, 2024 in Omaha, Nebraska.

Mario Tama | Getty Images

Learning from the past

Based on past foodborne illness outbreaks at other restaurant chains, it’s not a given that McDonald’s sales and brand image will suffer.

For example, rival Wendy’s dealt with its own link to an E. coli outbreak two years ago. More than 100 people got sick across six states. Still, the incident didn’t have a long-term effect on the chain’s sales.

“They got past it, and you never really heard about it,” KeyBanc analyst Eric Gonzalez told CNBC. “I think there were some operators in the area that probably saw a mid-to-high single digit, maybe 10% decline for a couple days of a week or so, and then it reverted as the news cycle moved on.”

On the other side of the spectrum is Jack in the Box, which became the poster child for food safety issues decades ago.

An outbreak in 1992 and 1993 linked to the chain resulted in the deaths of four children and infected more than 700 people. Media coverage, coupled with the severity of the outbreak, led to a steep decline in sales that year, fueled three straight years of losses and tarnished Jack in the Box’s reputation for years.

And then there’s Chipotle, a more recent example of a chain that struggled for years to improve its food safety and turn around its image after a string of foodborne illnesses.

“It was sort of a victim of its own inexperience, in a way, where not only were there multiple illnesses — E. coli, salmonella, norovirus — but you didn’t really have the expertise and experience level to manage through the crisis,” Gonzalez said.

After the initial wave of outbreaks in 2015, it took Chipotle several more years and a new CEO to rebuild trust in its burritos and bowls.

While investors fear the outbreak will hit McDonald’s sales, it’s unlikely that the burger giant turns into another Chipotle or Jack in the Box.

“We don’t know where this is going to land, as far as McDonald’s is concerned, but you have to have a little bit of confidence in their ability to contain the outbreak,” Gonzalez said. “It’s a very sophisticated organization with a sophisticated supply chain, and I don’t doubt their capabilities.”

Reassuring customers

McDonald’s has already been taking steps to reassure customers about the safety of its food. Barring a much more serious crisis, it may be able to contain the damage to its brand, experts said.

Shortly after the CDC issued its notice, the company released a statement outlining the steps it’s taken to contain the outbreak, along with a video featuring McDonald’s USA President Joe Erlinger.

The following morning, Erlinger appeared on NBC’s “TODAY,” telling viewers — and potential customers — that its food and drinks were safe to consume.

“Any kind of product safety recall requires some crisis communication and reassurance on the part of the corporation that it takes safety seriously, that it takes consumer health seriously and that it will react appropriately,” said Jo-Ellen Pozner, associate professor at the Santa Clara University Leavey School of Business.

She added that she thinks McDonald’s needs to apologize “very publicly” and aim its messaging at both consumers and its shareholders. However, that transparency means more media coverage, which reminds consumers about the crisis and risks scaring them away from McDonald’s restaurants.

Yang said McDonald’s appears to be “doing what they can do so far” while waiting for more information on the specific source of contamination. 

But other experts hope the chain does more to mitigate the potential spread of the outbreak during the investigation.

Dr. Darin Detwiler, professor of food policy and corporate social responsibility at Northeastern University, said he believes locations in other unaffected states should be “doubling up on their sanitation procedures and protocols and do more testing of their ingredients.” 

“Don’t wait until the lawyers or inspectors say you have a problem,” Detwiler said. 

“Why don’t you make the assumption that there could be something in your state, and check out your product,” he said. “That is being proactive. That is corporate social responsibility.”

Bill Marler, an attorney who specializes in cases involving foodborne illnesses, said McDonald’s should also follow in the footsteps of Jack in the Box, which offered to pay medical bills and lost wages for the victims of its E. coli outbreak.

“They just need to be seen as a good corporate player, and that’s really how they’re going to be able to bounce back pretty quickly,” Marler said.

One potential plaintiff tied to the crisis has already reached out to Marler, who represented hundreds of people who sued Jack in the Box in a class-action lawsuit, leading to a settlement of more than $50 million.

McDonald’s is already facing at least two lawsuits tied to the outbreak.

Both Clarissa DeBock, of Nebraska, and Eric Stelly, a resident of Greeley, Colorado, are suing the company for damages in excess of $50,000 after allegedly testing positive for E. coli after eating at McDonald’s, according to court filings.

“McDonald’s has nowhere to hide. They’re strictly liable for producing food that was contaminated. They may be able to point the finger at the onion supplier or the meat supplier, but ultimately they made the hamburger,” said Marler.

McDonald’s declined to comment on the lawsuits.

While media coverage of related lawsuits could bring more attention to McDonald’s, the suits themselves are unlikely to threaten the chain’s existence, according to Pozner.

“McDonald’s is as ubiquitous as Coke. It’s one of these very taken-for-granted brands, for its value as a brand to be diminished in a significant way, would require a much more serious outcome of the E. coli outbreak,” she said. “The scope of this tragedy is still very contained.”

Slumping sales

The outbreak comes as McDonald’s tries to win back diners who balked at years of price increases. For months, McDonald’s has been locked in a war with its rivals over competing value meals.

The restaurant industry broadly has seen traffic fall as inflation-weary consumers cook more at home and visit eateries less frequently. Fast-food chains, including McDonald’s, Burger King and Wendy’s, have turned to discounts and value meals to win back customers.

McDonald’s U.S. restaurants have been offering a $5 value meal since late June. And earlier this month, the chain launched its Chicken Big Mac nationwide, betting that customers would be willing to pay its higher price point because of the novelty. Those moves seemed to be paying off for McDonald’s before the outbreak.

“This is somewhat of a momentum killer for them,” Gonzalez said, adding that the burger category has plenty of “capable substitutes” for McDonald’s.

Combined, McDonald’s, Burger King and Wendy’s control roughly 70% of the burger quick-service restaurant segment, according to Barclays. McDonald’s alone holds 48.8% market share.

“It’s not a zero-sum game, but the burger category specifically is one of the more concentrated segments,” Gonzalez said. “If McDonald’s loses a point of sales, that’s 3 to 4 points up for grabs for Wendy’s or Burger King to capture.”

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Technology

How your on-line world might change if huge tech corporations like Google are compelled to fold

The US Justice Department may be on the verge of seeking a breakup of Google to reduce its dominance. If the government takes action and is successful in court, it could mean the company is split into separate entities — a search engine, an advertising company, a video website, a mapping app — that are not allowed to share data with each other.

While still a long way off, it is being considered in the wake of a series of rulings in the US and EU that suggest regulators are growing increasingly frustrated with the power of big tech companies. This power tends to be highly concentrated, whether through Google's monopoly as a search engine, Meta's data collection on Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, or small businesses' dependence on Amazon.

But what would breaking up these tech giants mean for consumers? Proponents of such a transformation of Silicon Valley argue that it would lead to more competition and more choice. And in the best case, the future scenario could look something like this:

The year is 2030 and you're on your way to meet a friend for dinner. You receive a message notification on WhatsApp sent by your girlfriend via her Signal messaging app. Sending and receiving messages from different apps has become so common that you hardly notice it anymore.

In fact, “interoperability” – the seamless collaboration of different systems and technologies – exists everywhere. Just as you could send an email from Gmail to Hotmail in 2024, you can now choose from a range of social media apps alongside Instagram, TikTok and Snapchat, with text, images and videos posted to a network , are easily accessible via another.

You choose an app because you like the way it looks or the way it filters and presents content – not just because everyone else is accessing it.

Likewise, your restaurant choices and directions information came from apps you selected from a much larger selection than the one you had access to in 2024. You view reviews created by people you follow, regardless of the platform on which they shared it.

Product placement and AI-generated content have all but disappeared because the maps app doesn't want to risk giving you advice you don't want. If this were the case, you would simply switch to a competitor that offers better service.

This increased competition is central to those committed to breaking up big tech companies. Instead of app developers having to pay 30% of their revenue to Google or Apple, there would be numerous app stores available, all competing to offer the best apps by reducing their profit margins. The theory is that the app market – and technological innovation – would flourish as a result.

Research also suggests that the existence of competing apps makes consumers less lazy and forces companies to offer better products and better value for money.

Private browsing

In 2024, you should have trusted the results that Google Search, Google Maps, or a Google ad gave you. And because Google owns your data, it could, without your say, auction off information about you to other companies trying to reach you.

You may have found Google's services useful, but the greatest benefit from personalized data would have gone to Google. And another big change that could come from breaking up big tech companies is that you may finally become the sole owner of that data.

You might be the only one with complete access to your browsing history – the products you searched for, the products you bought, and the products you almost bought. You would own the information about where you went to lunch, what you ordered and how much you spent.

Other information you might have includes things like how you commute to work, which video clips make you laugh, and which books you've read and which you've immediately given up on. The same goes for how you met your partner online, your dating history, and the health data your watch has collected about how hard you work out at the gym.

Your training, your data.
PeopleImages.com – Yuri A/Shutterstock

In the imagined year 2030, you would store this data on an encrypted server and various companies would offer apps to help you organize and manage your information. Whenever you wish, you can choose to use your data for your own purposes.

A breakup is hard

However, breaking up large technology companies is not without risks. An obvious consequence is that these large companies would be less profitable.

Currently, Google and Meta make (a lot) of money from advertising, and that's only possible because they have so much information about us. If they didn't do this, they might have to charge users for the services they provide.

Interoperability and greater competition could also create more scope for scam app operators. And while a wider selection of apps might be fine for some, it can be problematic for those who already find modern technology challenging enough.

For regulators, however, the challenge of modern technology appears to be a sense of powerlessness. And if they actually decide to take the radical option and break up dominant companies, it could make a big difference in the online world for all of us.The conversationThe conversation

Renaud Foucart, Lecturer in Economics, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Technology

An entire stranger: Timothée Chalamet on Bob Dylan and reside music

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When they set out to make a film about Bob Dylan, it was clear to all the creatives involved that the songs had to be performed live. Even Timothée Chalamet, the actor who plays Dylan, agreed.

“It was important for me to sing and play it on set because it was in the spirit of the film to play it live,” Chalamet said in a featurette about “A Complete Unknown.” To achieve this, Chalamet had to emulate Dylan as an artist, from his singing and stage presence to his guitar playing and harmonica skills.

“He [Chalamet] “Learn the whole thing from the ground up,” said music supervisor Steven Gizicki. “It’s harmonica, guitar and vocals. It’s very special.”

Directed by James Mangold, A Complete Unknown begins with 19-year-old Dylan moving from Minnesota to New York City in the early 1960s. In the West Village, Dylan made a name for himself as a gifted singer and songwriter. Dylan became a central member of the folk movement as his songs became rallying cries not only for people but also for social causes.

“His genius lies in the power of his songs and his personality, which ultimately elevates him to the point where he is greater than the movement into which he was absorbed,” Mangold said.

Chalamet admires Dylan's refusal to be “boxed in” as an artist. No better example of Dylan's fearlessness is his decision to switch from acoustic to electric instruments at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival. This controversial decision is one of the moments that shaped the future of rock music.

“Many of the artists in American popular culture who had the courage to break away from the expectations expected of them, that moment began with Bob,” Chalamet added.

In addition to Chalamet, A Complete Unknown stars Edward Norton, Elle Fanning, Monica Barbaro, Boyd Holbrook, Norbert Leo Butz, Dan Fogler and Scoot McNairy.

A Complete Unknown hits theaters on December 25, 2024.