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Rating 2025 NFL rookie impression for non-Spherical 1 draft picks

  • Field YatesMay 12, 2025, 06:50 AM ET

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      Field Yates is a fantasy football expert and NFL draft analyst for ESPN. You can find him on Fantasy Football Now on Sunday mornings and regularly on NFL Live throughout the week, as well as the Fantasy Focus and First Draft podcasts. A graduate of Wesleyan University (CT) and native of Weston, Mass., Yates has previous experience interning with the New England Patriots on both their coaching and scouting staffs.

The dust has settled on the 2025 NFL draft, as we’ve had a few weeks to digest and assess all 257 picks.

The headliners of any draft class will always be the first-round picks; they obviously arrive to the NFL with great expectations. But there are several Day 2 and Day 3 players who will make instant, notable contributions. Look back to 2024, when fourth-round running back Bucky Irving had 1,122 rushing yards and third-round safety Calen Bullock had five interceptions. Both numbers led all rookies last season.

With that in mind, I’m going to rank 10 players on each side of the ball selected in Rounds 2-7 who I expect will make the greatest immediate impact as rookies. I’m factoring in potential role, upside and talent. Let’s start with a quarterback who could see a bunch of starts.

Jump to:
Offense | Defense

Offensive players

Derek Carr retiring from football means the Saints will go into training camp with a quarterback competition. And I believe Shough will beat out Spencer Rattler and Jake Haener for the starting job.

Now, the Saints’ roster might not be set up for the immediate success of a rookie quarterback, but they will likely give Shough every chance to show he can become their long-term fixture under center. Shough’s arm talent, ability to read the defense and mobility are the foundation of an impressive skill set. He threw 23 touchdown passes last season and has 32 career starts under his belt.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

The Broncos entered the draft needing a running back, and many — myself included — thought they might take one with their first-round pick at No. 20. Instead, the Broncos got their guy 40 picks later. Harvey can be the “joker” in Sean Payton’s offense, impacting the game as both a runner and receiver. He actually reminds me of Bucky Irving, who was on this list last year and went on to a great rookie season. Harvey is a compact back who plays with a big-back mentality, running through defenders without sacrificing quickness. He’s an adept pass catcher, too.

It was clear that Miami valued Savaiinaea during the draft, making an aggressive push up the board to get him. He gives the Dolphins a legitimate starting guard candidate right out of the gate; they had a desperate need to upgrade the position. Savaiinaea showed excellent positional versatility in college, but he should slide inside as a starting guard in Miami’s zone-heavy scheme. He allowed only two sacks over three seasons at Arizona.

The Browns snagged a pair of running backs in the first four rounds of the draft, as Judkins and Dylan Sampson (No. 126) give this offense a power and speed duo. Judkins was excellent at both stops in his college career. He showed that he can dominate between the tackles at Ohio State, but he also proved he can be a do-it-all back who even impacts the passing game at Ole Miss. Judkins is a decisive, physical runner who should fit perfectly in the AFC North. Nick Chubb returning seems unlikely, which means Judkins will only have to battle Jerome Ford and Sampson for work.

Henderson is one of the most explosive players in the rookie class, and he will be a big-time factor on third down in New England because of his pass-catching and pass-protecting traits. He provided the lightning to Judkins’ thunder for Ohio State last season, and I see a similar profile with the Patriots. Henderson could complement Rhamondre Stevenson well in New England. He provides instant offense as a runner and receiver.

The Steelers saw Najee Harris depart in free agency this offseason, making running back a strong priority for them at some point early in the draft. Johnson had an outstanding 2024 season at Iowa, using his size, physicality and pass-game acumen to become one of FBS’s best RBs. He ran for 1,537 yards and scored 23 touchdowns from scrimmage. Jaylen Warren will of course play a useful role for Pittsburgh, but offensive coordinator Arthur Smith has a well-established affinity for bigger, bruising backs like Johnson. It won’t surprise me at all if he leads Pittsburgh in carries this season.

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Kaleb Johnson’s NFL draft profile

Check out stats from Iowa RB Kaleb Johnson ahead of the 2025 NFL draft.

The Jets’ hole at tight end was one of the most glaring position needs in the league entering the draft. Their top returning player, Jeremy Ruckert, has zero touchdowns in three seasons. But Taylor is a pro-ready fix. He can hold his own as a blocker and has the ultrareliable hands necessary to work the middle of the field and provide a safety net for quarterback Justin Fields.

Lions GM Brad Holmes has made it a point to target reliable and extremely tough players in the draft. That describes Ratledge well. He allowed only one sack in each of the past two seasons at Georgia and exudes toughness on tape. Kevin Zeitler’s departure to Tennessee opens a starting guard job in Detroit, and I like Ratledge’s chances to fill that role.

The Texans had to remake their wide receiver room this offseason, with Tank Dell’s timeline to return from his knee injury still uncertain and Stefon Diggs departing for the Patriots. Higgins will join Christian Kirk and fellow draft pick Jaylin Noel in trying to fill that void. Higgins brings an excellent combination of size and speed to the position, similar to teammate Nico Collins. He showed very good discipline and body control on passes thrown his way on the sideline in college, and that should help him build chemistry with C.J. Stroud in a hurry.

The Bengals came into the draft with an obvious need at guard, using a pair of picks on Fairchild and Jalen Rivers in the fifth round. I view Fairchild as the superior prospect, and he should have the inside track to start right away for Cincinnati. He brings reliable pass protection — he allowed pressure on 0.4% of his pass-block reps during the 2024 season — and toughness. Fairchild rarely found himself out of position in college and has an excellent temperament. He plays every snap with a level of consistency that offensive line coaches love.

Four more to watch

Gunnar Helm, TE, Tennessee Titans (No. 120): Helm will have the opportunity to be Cam Ward’s best friend as a safety valve at tight end. Helm isn’t going to provide explosive plays, but he showed great hands and middle-of-the-field instincts at Texas. He finds soft spots in zone coverage and is effective staying alive in unscripted situations. He’ll pair well with Ward in this offense.

What to know from the 2025 NFL draft

• See all 257 picks | Pick-by-pick analysis
• Kiper’s grades | Miller’s best 100 picks
• Yates’ favorite picks | Overreactions
• Kiper’s Day 1 winners | Day 2 winners
• Sanders to Browns | Hunter to Jaguars

Jaylin Lane, WR/PR, Washington Commanders (No. 128): While Lane will have a chance to earn receiver snaps for Washington, what most excites me about his early impact is in the kicking game. Lane is arguably the best punt returner in the draft class. Back in 2021, he averaged 15.5 yards per return, second best in FBS. He’s shifty and instinctive, and he can flat-out fly. Olamide Zaccheaus handled the highest number of punt returns for the Commanders in 2024 but signed with the Bears this offseason. Lane should help pile up hidden yards.

Robbie Ouzts, FB, Seattle Seahawks (No. 175): Ouzts did not see the football much at Alabama (16 career catches), but he is a rugged and versatile blocker. The Seahawks hired Klint Kubiak this offseason and will rely much more on two-RB sets. Ouzts will make the move to fullback and compete for that starting role. His combination of power at the point of attack and understanding of angles as a run blocker should allow him to make the position switch relatively seamlessly.

Brashard Smith, RB, Kansas City Chiefs (No. 228): There were several late-round running backs I could have chosen here, as the exceptional depth of the class pushed many of them down the board. Smith switched from wide receiver at Miami to running back at SMU, which speaks to his unique versatility that should lead to schemed touches for him in Kansas City. Smith is great after the catch and shows fantastic lateral agility and straight-line speed.

Defensive players

There is uncertainty surrounding Jeremiah Owusu-Koramoah’s health after his neck injury last season, and that likely played a role in the Browns opening the second round with Schwesinger, whose movement skills have some shades of JOK. Schwesinger broke out in 2024, piling up 115 tackles and playing excellent coverage. His ability to carry pass catchers up the middle of the field and find space in zone drops make him an every-down player for Cleveland.

Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald maximizes the talent of safeties, and few safeties have entered the NFL with Emmanwori’s physical traits. The 6-foot-3, 220-pounder has 4.38 speed and explosiveness. The Seahawks moving up the board for him signals they believe Emmanwori can fit in somewhere from the jump. He certainly has the speed and range to play center field, but I also see the size and physicality to play in the box as a “big nickel” safety/linebacker hybrid.

Man, what value at No. 47, even with the knee injury concerns. I actually liked Johnson as a fit at No. 16 for Arizona, given his skill set and the team’s need at corner. Getting him in Round 2 is even better. Johnson has excellent ball skills and size, along with the instincts to thrive in Arizona’s zone-heavy scheme. The Cardinals played 61.0% of their coverage snaps in zone in 2024.

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See why Michigan’s Will Johnson is a top NFL draft prospect

Check out highlights from Michigan CB Will Johnson after he’s selected by the Cardinals in the 2025 NFL draft.

Cincinnati has worked to overhaul its defense this offseason and found a plug-and-play starter in Knight, whose hard-hitting, physical nature should bring an attitude adjustment to the Bengals’ D. Knight finished his college career at South Carolina and was around the ball often. He had three forced fumbles, a pair of sacks and an interception last season. Remember, Germaine Pratt requested a trade, too, so there could be plenty of snaps on the table for Knight.

The 49ers entered the draft with a need at one starting linebacker spot after Dre Greenlaw left in free agency, and Martin can fill it. He lacks ideal size at 6-foot and 197 pounds, but he makes up for it with electric speed and a fearless nature on every snap. Martin showed legitimate pass-rush instincts in 2023, too, with six sacks. And while he was injured for most of 2024, his 140 tackles in 2023 were the most by any Oklahoma State player since 1984.

Regardless of where Tuimoloau ended up, I was always going to feel really good about his prospects of playing early. JTT was a three-year starter and four-year contributor at Ohio State, and he displays terrific instincts, power, hand usage and explosion off the edge. In Indy, I think he can make a real impact as a pass rusher and run defender. Tuimoloau had 12.5 sacks in 2024, often looking his best during the biggest moments.

Adding another defensive tackle was a priority for the Chiefs early in this draft, considering they lost Tershawn Wharton in free agency. Having another big body on the defensive line can make life easier for Chris Jones. Norman-Lott is a standout pass rusher from inside, showing disruptive up-field rush skills that helped him to 9.5 sacks over the past two seasons. Playing next to Jones should create plenty of one-on-one rush reps for him.

Breaking News from Adam Schefter

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I don’t think any other edge rusher in this year’s class takes his run stuffing/edge setting responsibilities as pridefully as Scourton. He’s a heavy-handed, powerful and intense player on every single down. Defensive coordinator Ejiro Evero will trust Scourton in any situation given that dependability as a run defender and his pass-rush prowess. While his sack production dipped in 2024 (five), he led the Big Ten in sacks at Purdue in 2023 (10). Scourton arrives in Carolina with an advanced arsenal of rush tactics and can contribute right away — especially since the team cut Jadeveon Clowney.

The Eagles’ remodel of their secondary continued into the draft, as they used the final pick of the second round on the instinctive, pro-ready Mukuba. I love his football IQ, and while Mukuba has a smaller frame for a safety (he was only 186 pounds at the combine), he packs a lot of power as a physical tackler. His versatility to play in the slot a little bit should only increase early playing time.

Tampa Bay doubled-dipped at cornerback on Day 2, selecting Parrish in Round 3 after taking Benjamin Morrison in Round 2. Parrish finished 64th on my final board, and I believe he can translate his versatile game to the pro level. He played 395 snaps as an outside corner and 201 snaps as a slot corner in 2024. Parrish has premier speed and capable ball skills, and he is a very skilled blitzer. That should shine on a Todd Bowles-coached team.

Three more to watch

Barryn Sorrell, Edge, Green Bay Packers (No. 124): The Packers were tied for the highest percentage of snaps in zone coverage last season at 70.2%, but I think defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley wants more man coverage. He just didn’t have the right personnel. The best way to help corners in man coverage is having an impactful pass rush. Sorrel brings value because of his versatility, as Texas did a very good job of letting him rush from multiple alignments, including as an interior rusher. That’s a blueprint Green Bay can follow.

Tyrion Ingram-Dawkins, DL, Minnesota Vikings (No. 139): Minnesota overhauled its defensive line this offseason with a pair of big-ticket veteran additions in Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave, so Ingram-Dawkins does not have a clear path to a large role. But his versatility is key. Georgia played him in multiple spots along the defensive front, and while his sack production was not robust, he was a havoc wreaker with his length, burst and strength. Coordinator Brian Flores is among the most innovative defensive minds in the league and will throw out some wonky fronts that can confuse quarterbacks. Ingram-Dawkins has the traits to be a movable chess piece along the D-line as depth in Minnesota.

Jordan Phillips, DT, Miami Dolphins (No. 143): Phillips was a wrestler and weightlifter in high school, and that shows up on his tape. He is one of the most physical run defenders in the rookie class and plays with excellent leverage. Miami landed Kenneth Grant with its first-round pick, but Phillips will also help the Dolphins become much more physical and tougher on the defensive front.

Categories
Science

Professional evaluation warns the enlargement of the soundness of wind and photo voltaic power that endangers French energy grid stability – watts with that?

From the emergency zone

From P Gosselin

The French find out that the combination of nuclear energy with unstable wind and sun is not a good idea and is a risk to the power grid.
Spain recently had to learn a similar lesson in a very painful way.

Symbol Picture generated by GROK AI.

In a recently carried out EDF report on nuclear security, the general inspector's report for nuclear security and radiation protection, leading author and training Admiral Jean Casabian came to the conclusion that a further expansion of wind and solar energy in France is a serious risk of the country's power grid.

According to the report, the instability of a weather-dependent wind and solar power supply for nuclear power in France is a technical and financial burden.

Page 13 of the report means:

The massive arrival of new renewable electricity sources (Re), both intermittent and a priority on the net, has multiplied load fluctuations.

They are neither without a risk of the safety of the power supply system (including power outages) nor without restrictions on the operation of our facilities. In the long term, you question our economic model. (…)

The modulation has from flexibility to restrictions, whereby the nuclear energy must satisfy demand alone or in connection with hydropower, unless we use thermal and carbon -intensive agents.

In addition, the load has a frequent influence on the machine, which is classified more often by deep cycling. The increase in random events is not obvious, but the effects are estimated over time.

I believe that the priority of renewable energies in a one-sided, nuclear-renewable energy scheme leads to performance fluctuations that would be all the cheaper to do without security, since they are never insignificant in terms of security, especially reactivity control, and the waiting, long and operating costs of our treats. “

Many previously claimed that the nuclear industry could be harmoniously paired with wind energy and thus lead to a decarbonized French electricity mix. But that proves to be more fantastic than reality. The latest Spanish power failure was a blatant example of what can happen if the ideology speaks together with hard science and reality.

Many engineers and specialists had warned of the risks and complications associated with nuclear power plants to adapt their performance to uncontrolled, fluctuating energies such as wind and sun.

Aassdn site summarizes here:

In the global energy war, which is conducted by this pro-wind and pro-Photovoltaic lobbying in France, which contradicts the energy interests of France, this discrete report appears to the intermittent energy policy in France. Even if energy and political players have not yet fully grasped the importance of this historical technical report, it cannot be denied that it is a milestone and cannot be buried or downplayed by Luc Rémont, CEO from Edf. “

Hat-Tip: Blackout News.

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Categories
Technology

Jeep Compass EV Breaks Cowl – however will it come to the USA?

Jeep has just pulled the brand new compass eV off the wraps, and although it is an exciting leap into the electrical future, there is a hook-it may not be made to the United States soon.

This is a brand-new electrical version of the Jeep compass, and on the StLA platform of Stellis-der same architecture, the models such as the Peugeot E-3008 and E-5008 are based much smoothly and packs much more inside than earlier versions of the compass.

Let's start with what is cool: The new Compass EV packs on a single load, a 74 kWh battery and the quick charging, which brings it from 20% to 80% in about 30 minutes. Not bad for a compact SUV with jeeps badge in the nose.

There are two versions: a model with a front -wheel drive with 213 hp and a strong all -wheel drive with 375 hp. The AWD setup is not only for looks-even without a front traction, 20% inclination can be mastered and equipped with additional soil and better off-road angles. In short, it's still a jeep.

The design was also refreshed, and inside you will find the type of technology and comfort that you would expect in a modern EV – Sleek, Smart and ready for both street and dirt paths.

But here is the thing: Although production begins in Italy soon, Jeep did not say whether the Compass EV is coming to America. And the signs are not promising.

The plans to build it in Canada were recently put on ice, the production was now delayed until at least in early 2026. Part of it might have to do with possible US tariffs for Canadian and Mexican vehicles – regarding a layer of uncertainty compared to the entire rollout.

According to Kelley Blue Book, a Stellatis spokesman confirmed that the company has “temporarily worked on the next generation Jeep compass, including the activities in the Canadian facility, which was originally supposed to build the model. They added that Stellantis” re-evaluated its product strategy in North America “in order to better meet customer needs and the demand for various drive strand options.

While Europe and other markets are preparing to preserve the Compass eV soon, American drivers could wait – or completely miss.

This is a shame because this electric jeep hits many sweet spots on paper. Let's just hope that it will find a way here.



Categories
Entertainment

Halle Bailey is nesting with these fireplace followers on the Web

Halle Bailey Has the Internet up to date after dropping some vacation films. Phew, and we will also keep it real: Halos Mama looks far too good here! Convince yourself!

Relatives: triple trouble! Halle Bailey, Baby Halo & Chloe Bailey have switched off the timeline with Sweet Family Flick (photo)

Halle Bailey beats the internet with its fire brigade films

Phew, Chileeeee! Halle Bailey already has summer 2005 and there is very bad, okay! SIS had the internet in ruins after throwing some flicks from their latest tropical vacation on Saturday, May 10th.

Halle started the Mother's Day weekend properly and showed her snatching “Mom Bod”, just as she wrote in the caption. “The Little Mermaid” star, who organized a white swimsuit with a pink shirt on a yacht that is casually draped on her arm. And baby, the body is body, a lot of tea, okay! The fans do not waste time to flood their comments, show crazy love and beat up how good they look in the new recordings.

Halle Bailey shakes the pressure pressure to Halo after Halo

In the midst of all the love after showing her motherbod, Halle scored a break for the Vacay vibes for a second to keep her with the fans over her body after the baby to Halo Real. TSR let TSR shared in a clip livebitez. Halle told the fans that she was “thicker” than usual, and she felt unsafe, especially since she was small all her life.

Now that she is 25 years old, she has played that the weight does not fall as it used to be. She also let people know that her vacation with Chloe was the first real break she took in a minute, so she was not on her usual training. Nevertheless, she spread her fans and herself a positive and notices that she decides to give herself and live at the moment.

“My message for today is to enjoy the moment, not to be too hard for yourself and to be fun.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/djfzuaxpjju/?img_index=1

Social media reacts

The fans remain in the comment area of ​​the Shade Room via Halle Bailey's holiday films. People continue to water them and said how much they loved to see a natural body on their food.

Instagram user @naightynerdninja wrote, She looks like she is sleeping in cocoa butter. This lady is so beautiful and natural.

Instagram user @So acutie_pie83 wrote, In honor of the Mother's Day I appreciate the natural mother Bods😍. “

During Instagram user @Pititmotozerland wrote, It is so refreshing to see a black woman who is not a natural body here. ”

Then Instagram user @KkaWaiiCoutepie wrote,Okay, Lil Mermaid Done was fat after getting this cock out 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷 😂🩷

Another Instagram user @Cupcakemama216 wrote, How does it come that my mother bod doesn't look like this – I love her soooo very much. ”

Instagram user @loresee_ wrote, This is what real bodies look like for a baby !!!!! ”

While another Instagram user @unapologistisch_meh_ wrote, Yassss

Instagram user @Realatldon wrote, It looks good if you don't have to address DDG every time you see them and vice versa. ”

Then another Instagram Userdee_Godez wrote, “Category – Skin. Host – Face Card (Deadly) 😍”

Finally Instagram user @Brooklynz_Mermaid wrote,She has this old school beauty timelessly and classic 😍😍 😍😍😍 ”

Halle, Halo and Chloe Bailey are viral with this family photo

There is no doubt that Halle Bailey knows how to get viral. She recently let the internet go crazy and thought that she saw Triple when she appeared in a photo with Halo and her big sister Chloe Bailey. People couldn't stop talking about their resemblance and said they gave direct copies paste vibes. See the viral photo below.

Relatives: Tryna Spin the block? The fans think that DDG wants Halle Bailey back after shared this post (video)

What do you think with co -apartments?

Categories
Science

Persecution of the geological historical past of the moon with Lugo

By Andy Tomaswick

Some parts of the moon are more interesting than others, especially when looking for future places where people can land and work. There are also some parts of the moon, of which we know less than others, such as the irregular mare spots (IMPS) that absorb the landscape. We know very little about how they were shaped and what that could mean for the history of the moon itself. A new mission called Lunar Geology Orbiter (Lugo) aims to collect more data about the Imps and look for lava clocks that could serve as future houses for humanity.

Imps are a number of “enigmatic volcanic land forms”, according to a new paper by Petr Brož of the Czech Academy of Sciences and its co-authors. So far, ninety -one of these characteristics have been found and are typically characterized by topographical depression, which can range from a few hundred meters to a few kilometers in width. They have two main features – a relatively smooth hill surrounded by a “Hummocky and Blockboden”.

Interestingly, they have significantly fewer catroaches than the environment, which indicates that they are either really old or very young depending on the processes they have created. Understanding these processes is one of Lugo's main missions.

Fraser discusses how to explore lava watches.

The other primary mission goal is to collect further data about Mondlavastuben. These features of the lunar landscape are also hotly debated, but could possibly be of crucial importance for the future human settlement of the moon. The estimates of their characteristics such as size and depth vary greatly and can differ dramatically whether they will be helpful for moon colonists or not.

Enter Lugo – the proposed orbiter that collects more data than ever before on these functions. In its current proposed form, it has four instruments, of which each unique data contributes to its scientific mission.

According to the paper, the first and most important instrument is a soil -penetrating radar. This instrument looks through the surface of the lunar to map the underground domain of both the Imps and the Lavastube. For Imps, the interface between the basic rock and regolith can be detailed and show the underground structure of the function. Similarly, differences in the dielectric properties between open cavities and the surrounding rock in lava tubes can determine and create an underground image that was not absorbed on the moon.

How can we explore lava tubes? Fraser tries to answer this question.

A hyper-spectral camera helps to collect age-related data on the regolith to collect lava clocks and indoor impersons. It can also carry out some basic spectroscopy, so that scientists can estimate the composition of the regolith in the areas of interest.

The last two instruments, a narrow angle camera (NAC) and a lidar sensor, are combined to create an exact topographical map of the characteristics of interest. In particular, the NAC can deliver very high -resolution images of the characteristics and help to determine their age and possibly their formation mechanisms.

The mission plan requires several passes over the six largest Imps, all of which have over 1,000 m diameter. Other, smaller Imps and lava tubes are considered secondary goals, as do other interesting geological features such as the moon couple and “floor -controlled crater”.

Lugo could provide crucial data for the design of floor-based LAVA tube discoverers, such as the fraser discussed in this video.

However, Lugo will not act alone – three other missions are planned in the next few years that would complement its scientific goals. The Dimple Lander of NASA is planned to take radioisotope measurements of the regolith's age at its landing site. Lunarleper, which is planned for the start around 2030, would also wear a soil -driven radar, but would be based on the surface rather than on the orbit and therefore have a relatively limited area. Trailblazer, another orbital mission, could also help optimize the spectra and signals required by the operators of Lugo.

Ultimately, Lugo still has to be financed, so it has a long way to go until the start. However, if it is financed, it seems good to grant many additional insights into the geological educational process and the characteristics of the moon on a detailed accuracy that we have never had before. If we ultimately use some of this data to plan the location of future moon bases, the people who live in them will certainly be grateful.

Learn more:
P Brož et al. – Lunar Geology Orbiter Concept to examine irregular mare spots and lava tubes from the orbit
Ut – the entrance of a moonlavastube that is shown from space
UT – it's time to study Mondlavastuben. Here is a mission that could help
Ut – mapping of lava clocks on the moon and Mars from space

Categories
Technology

Do you need to be viral? Listed here are Eight ideas from the Creator of 'BBl Drizzy' '

A year ago this week a viral hit gave an insight into the future of AI music: “BBL Drizzy”.

The song was created during the feud between Kendrick Lamar and Drake. When the rapper Disses exchanged, a comedian based in New York named Willonius Hatcher-Schh King Willonious – brought his own trail into the beef.

Inspired by a dubious claim that Drake had a Brazilian butt lift, “BBL Drizzy” -Misch -Ki, comedy, pop culture and music. The song quickly became viral. It was later tried in a beat by Star Producer Metro Boomin, who was also viral, and was covered by Drake himself.

“BBL Drizzy” became a cultural test stone. The Washington Post called it “a real breakthrough for AI art” while Wired described it as “the beginning of the future of AI music”. Time magazine called Willionius one of the 100 most influential people in AI.

Willonius – Who will speak TNW conference On June 19 – is modest about his creation. “It was just one of these things where everything was perfectly aligned,” he says. But that sells his success briefly. Willonius has set up a proven track record for creating online sensations. Here are some of his tips on the striking internet gold.

Open Ai, Cherry Ventures Datasnipper, Monzo, Bunq and many more confirmed for the TNW Conference 2025

On June 19th and 20th June with the 1000th of founders, investors and innovation champions in Amsterdam.

1. Honen your skills

Willonius had spent his craft as a comedian and writer for years before moving the focus on AI. He challenged himself to write 30 scripts in 30 days, to produce an album every monthand “enter my 10,000 hours”To master comedy music.

He applied the same work ethic on AI. From December 2022 to April 2023, he spent eight hours a day in Chatgpt. He also experimented intensively with visual tools, created Midjourney over 30,000 pictures and generated film trailer for his scripts.

“You never know what could be viral,” he says. “Everything you can do is only a system and a work morality to maintain. Even if [‘BBL Drizzy’] I became viral, my whole thing was to continue working. “

2. Enter a zeitgeist

Timing is an important part of viral success – and “BBL Drizzy” came to a perfect moment. The public had tied up the interest in AI and the Drake Kendrick-Fehde.

In April, Rapper Rick Ross made his own contribution to beef and claimed that Drake's rear posterior was surgically improved. Days earlier, a team of former Google Deepmind researchers published the beta version of a powerful new AI music generator called Udio.

Willonius brought together all of this. He wrote comedy texts that gently mocked Drake and caused Udio to transform them into different songs. Finally, he decided on a vintage soul sound of the 70s. With a catchy title and a choir over the alleged butt, the track brought the feud to a new dimension.

“There were comedians who tried to make jokes about it,” says Willonius. “But don't really make songs about this beef.”

3. Follow not only the amount

Willonius was always fascinated by new forms of creativity. In 2007 he scored a viral hit on YouTube – A parody Soulja Boy is widely mocked and yet wildly influential “crank that”. But he soon searched for the original paths.

Instead of following the trends, he was looking for new approaches.

“If I had made sketches on Tikkok, I would have just done it because everyone else would have done it,” he says. “And in my career I had the greatest success every time I went my own way.”

4. Be consistent

There is no guaranteed formula for viral success. Willonius prefers to focus on the factors that he can control. One of them is consistency.

When he started creating AI videos, they did not always bring the views he expected. “It made me contain my expectations of my content – because they don't know what will ever become viral.”

Instead of obsessing every view, Willonius focused on publishing a steady stream of high -quality content. The brand finally hit.

“Don't worry about the views,” he suggests. “Just worry about consistency and if you like what you produce. Everything else is outside of your control.”

5. Hugging Kaizen

In his approach to consistency, Willonius uses a Japanese concept called “Kaizen”. Kaizen, a philosophy of continuous improvement, emphasizes the importance of small, incremental changes.

“Every time you do art, you should be able to be better than the last time you did art,” he says.

“These are two things that I do: stay consistent and try to get better every time. And when I do these two things, I am satisfied with the result.”

6. Quality counts

A big reason for BBL Drizzy's success? It's just a great song

The catchy hook, the unforgettable texts and the classic soul sound are a joy in the ear.

“I think it has shown that people don't really care whether a song is generated or not,” says Willonius.

“They just wanted to enjoy it and let them feel something. And when you heard this song, it made you laugh.”

7. Find your audience

When the beef between Drake and Lamar became ugly, “BBL Drizzy” offered a welcome break. It was a funny, carefree, good-natured switch of a malignant rap feud.

The approach gave the route a broad attraction.

“It's a fun song – the lyrics are funny and it's clean,” says Willonius. “Everyone in every age group, in every age group and in every gender can enjoy it. Small children can sing it – and it is a very sensible song.”

8. Keep an eye on the future

Pop culture and technology move quickly. Willonius follows each of them carefully and is looking for emerging trends. He is particularly happy about the creative possibilities of AI video.

“We are now at the point where someone could make a AI feature film if they wanted … The models are getting better,” he says. “You look more realistic and lifelong.”

A big advantage, he says, is the democratizing effect. For creators from marginalized backgrounds and those with limited resources, AI can open new doors to success.

“It is an exciting time to be a creator,” he says. “And it's an exciting time for AI because it is getting better and better.”

There is still no magical formula for viral hits. But Ki can give creators new tricks in the sleeves.

If you want to catch King Willonius' conversation or something else on the full agenda for the TNW conference, we have a special offer for you. Use the Code TNWXMedia2025 at the cash register to get a 30% discount on your ticket.

Categories
Health

Walgreens doubles robots to fill recipes in the midst of turnaround

A robot arm fills the recipes in a micro filling center in Walgreens.

With kind permission: Walgreens

As a fighting drugstore chains, they work to regain their reason, Walgreens doubles with automation.

The company extends the number of retail stores operated by its microfillment centers and in which robots fill out thousands of recipes for patients who take medication for the treatment or treatment of diabetes, high blood pressure and other diseases.

Walgreens would like to release the time for the pharmacy staff, reduce their routine tasks and remove inventory waste. With less prescription fillings, employees can interact directly with patients and carry out more clinical services such as vaccinations and tests.

Walgreens introduced the robot centers for the first time in 2021, but in 2023 the expansion was in order to focus on collecting feedback and improving performance at existing locations. After more than a year failure of upgrades, including new internal tools, the company said that it was ready to expand the reach of this technology again.

Walgreens said CNBC that his 11 microfillment centers can serve more than 5,000 business by the end of the year, compared to 4,800 in February and 4,300 in October 2023. From February, according to Walgreens, the centers processed 40% of the volume of provisions in February.

This leads to around 16 million recipes that are filled on the various websites every month, the company said.

The renewed automation boost comes when Walgreens is prepared to go privately with Sycamore partners in about 10 billion US dollars, which is expected to close at the end of the year.

The deal would limit a turbulent chapter for Walgreens as a stock corporation, which is characterized by a rocky transition from pandemic, the reimbursement rates of the pharmacy, weaker consumer expenses and violent competition from the pharmazie refund ratio CVS healthPresent Amazon and other retail giants.

Like CVS, Walgreens has shifted from opening new business to close hundreds of underperformance locations to support profits. Both companies run to remain relevant, since online retailers increasingly choose customers and patients to quickly deliver according to traditional pharmacy visits.

The changes also follow the increasing dissatisfaction among the pharmacy employees: In 2023, burnout and chronically lower employment were spent on the chains to examine their operating models again.

Walgreens said that the investment in robot pharmacy has already paid off.

So far, micro-fulfillment centers have saved savings of around $ 500 million by reducing excess inventory and increasing efficiency, said Kayla Heffington, Vice President of the Pharmacy Operative Model. Heffington added that shops that use the facilities give 40% more vaccines than those that are not.

“At the moment you are the backbone that helps us to compensate for part of the workload in our shops and obviously give more time for our pharmacists and technicians to spend time with patients,” said Rick Gates, Chief pharmacy officer from Walgreens.

“It gives us much more flexibility to reduce the costs, increase care and increase the speed of therapy – all of these things,” he said.

Gates added that the centers of Walgreens provide a competitive advantage, since independent pharmacies and some competitors have no centralized support for their business. Despite it, WalmartPresent Albertsons And Kroger Have tested or are currently using your own microfillment systems to output food items and other recipes.

Micro-fulfillment centers are equipped with their own risks, such as: B. a strong dependence on demanding robotics that can lead to disruptions if errors occur. However, the facilities become an integral part of retail because they offer the cost savings and their ability to rationalize work processes, reduce the burden on employees and deliver customers to customers faster.

How Walgreens Micro Full Fillment works

In a Walgreens micro-filling center, which contributes to filling thousands of recipes.

With kind permission: Walgreens

When a Walgreens single-handed pharmacy receives a recipe, the system determines whether it should be filled in this place or directed to a nearby microfillment center. Maintenance medication or prescription drugs that are regularly taken for the treatment of chronic health states, and after refilling that do not require immediate collection, are often sent to microfillment.

At the core of each facility there is a highly automated system that uses robotics, conveyor belts and barcode scanners, among other things, to fill recipes. The operations are supported by a team of pharmacists and other experts.

Instead of employees who fill out the recipes by hand in the shops, pill bottles move through an automated and carefully choreographed assembly line.

Pharmacy technicians fill canister with medication for robot pods to do without, and pharmacists check these canisters to ensure that they are correct. Yellow robotic arms grip for a marked prescription bottle and adhere to a canister that precisely spends the specific medication for this bottle.

Robot arms fill the recipes in a Walgreens micro-full-full center.

With kind permission: Walgreens

Certain regulations are filled at separate trading stations, including inhalators and anti -Bab Till packs. Each recipe is then sorted and the delivery to the locations in retail savings is packed for the final collection.

There are further measures for security and security measures throughout the process, said Ahlam Antar, a registered group leader of a microfillment center in Mansfield, Massachusetts.

For example, the robot pods automatically block and signal an error with a red-or-colored light when a worker creates a canister on the wrong donor and prevents the wrong pills in a recipe.

According to Sarah Gonsalves, a high -ranking certified pharmacy technician at the Mansfield location, the proper training of employees in the centers is to ensure the accuracy and safety of the patients.

She said a central part of her role was to ensure that technicians can correctly perform the various tasks in the process.

Improvements to robot recipe fillings

Antar, who has been working at the Mansfield site since its opening in 2022, said that Walgreens had improved after he had considered feedback from shops and patients during the break. This includes setting up new roles that are required to support the process on the website, e.g. B. a training manager for all 11 locations.

According to a Walgreen spokesman, the facilities also plan to become too large a bottle too large after changing the use of smaller prescription vials. They said that the centers would enable more recipes to send per order and reduce the costs.

A robot arm fills a prescription bottle in a Walgreens microfillment center.

With kind permission: Walgreens

Heffington said that the automated locations have contributed to reducing the costs for the fulfillment of Walgreen's recipe by almost 13% compared to the previous year.

She said Walgreens had increased the prescription volume by 126% compared to the previous year and has now filled up more than 170 million recipes annually. The company hopes to increase this number to 180 million or even more.

Heffington added that Walgreens implemented new internal tools to pursue the work in all 11 centers and to provide real -time data about where a patient's recipe is in the microfillment process.

“When a patient called the shop and said: 'Hey, can you tell me where my recipe is today?' [Workers] Can do this with great specificity, “said Heffington thanks to the new tools.

Despite the company's progress, Gate said that more work has to be done with microfillment centers.

For example, he pointed out the possibility of shipping recipes directly towards the patient's door towers instead of relying this burden on retail stores.

“It is currently only step one,” he said.

According to some reports, further improvements in institutions may be necessary. For example, Wral News in April reported that some customers in a Walgreens business in Garner, North Carolina, say that they only receive prescription fillings, with several pills missing, or their medicine is delayed.

Personnel staff of the pharmacy papers see advantages

A customer sees goods for sale in a Walgreens business in the Hollywood district in Los Angeles.

Christopher Lee | Bloomberg | Getty pictures

Before Brian Gange's business in Arizona relied on an automated facility, he went to the pharmacy every morning, knew that a massive list of recipes was waiting in his work to be filled for the day.

With the help of microfillment, this list is now considerably smaller every day.

“We don't have to spend so much time for these repetitive performance tasks,” he told CNBC. “It really takes great weight from our shoulders.”

Gange said that he and his team have time to step behind the pharmacy and to interact with the customers of face to face, to answer questions, to give advice, to carry out health tests or to give vaccines.

This type of attention can make the difference for a patient.

For example, Gange remembers to achieve a patient's blood pressure for five minutes, although he was overwhelmed by tasks a few years ago while working at another location in Walgreens. In the end, he sent this person into the emergency room because their blood pressure was “out of the charts”.

The wife of this patient visited the pharmacy the next day to thank Gange, and said her husband “would probably not be here today” without this test test.

“I shouldn't have to ask myself whether I have this five or ten minutes to check blood pressure for a patient,” said Gange. “Micro Fullment and centralized services are really what enable us to do this time.”

“That really enables us to better provide them,” he added.

Categories
Sport

MLB Energy Rankings Week 6: Purple-hot AL staff makes top-5 debut

The battle between National League powerhouses for the No. 1 spot continues in Week 6.

The Dodgers, Mets and Padres are still duking it out for the title of best team in baseball, with Los Angeles retaking the top spot from New York on our list. The top five is rounded out by a new team, as well, with the Tigers breaking in at the No. 5 spot.

Detroit is the top American League team this week, with the Yankees coming in at No. 7, the Mariners cracking the top 10 and the Royals, the week’s biggest risers, at No. 11.

What else has changed in the span of one week?

Our expert panel has combined to rank every team based on a combination of what we’ve seen so far and what we already knew going into the 162-game marathon that is a full baseball season. We also asked ESPN MLB experts David Schoenfield, Jorge Castillo and Bradford Doolittle to weigh in with an observation for all 30 teams.

Week 5 | Preseason rankings

Record: 25-12
Previous ranking: 2

The Dodgers are suddenly scrambling in the outfield. Teoscar Hernandez was tied for the MLB lead in RBIs when he landed on the injured list because of a groin strain that manager Dave Roberts said would keep Hernandez out for “weeks.” James Outman replaced Hernandez on the roster and started in center field Tuesday with Andy Pages sliding over to right. Meanwhile, Michael Conforto continues to struggle. With Tommy Edman also out, Roberts says he sees a lot of platooning in the short term. At least Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman are both red-hot to carry the offense. — Schoenfield

Record: 24-14
Previous ranking: 1

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

When the Mets signed ex-Yankee Clay Holmes this past winter, it was a mild surprise. The bigger surprise was that he was inked to join the rotation. Holmes entered the 2025 season with four career starts, all during his debut season for Pittsburgh in 2018 — whereas he has played a relief role in 307 games over eight MLB seasons. Seven starts into his Mets career, Holmes looks like a bona fide rotation fixture. He’s 4-1 with a 2.95 ERA and 2.18 FIP. His strikeout and walk ratios are matches for what he posted last season as a reliever, and he has yet to give up a homer to 156 batters faced. — Doolittle

Record: 23-13
Previous ranking: 4

Michael King and Nick Pivetta continue to team for one of the best duos in the majors, going a combined 9-2 with a 2.12 ERA. King returned to the Bronx — where he played for the Yankees for four seasons — and pitched another gem Tuesday, giving up three hits and two runs in six innings (although the Padres’ bullpen had a rare meltdown and proceeded to give up 10 runs in the seventh inning). After a poor outing on Opening Day, King has a 1.71 ERA over his past seven starts. — Schoenfield

Record: 22-16
Previous ranking: 5

The Cubs’ offense has been a force, but the team is facing adversity among its starting pitchers. First, Justin Steele needed Tommy John surgery and was lost for the season. Then Javier Assad, out because of an oblique strain to begin the season, sustained another oblique strain during a rehab start and was shut down. Finally, on Monday, Shota Imanaga was put on the IL because of a strained hamstring. The Cubs haven’t provided a timetable for Imanaga’s return. It’ll be on Matthew Boyd (2.75 ERA), Colin Rea (2.43 ERA) and Jameson Taillon (3.86 ERA) to hold down the rotation for now. — Castillo

Record: 23-13
Previous ranking: 7

The Tigers have flourished in a number of ways during the season’s opening weeks but one thing that really stands out is the degree to which they have dominated at Comerica Park. They’ve started 13-3 at home with a net per-game differential of plus-2.81 runs, the best in baseball. To put it another way, that differential translates to an .819 expected winning percentage, or 133 wins over 162 games. Not unrelated: Detroit has also moved into the early lead in the chase for the AL’s top postseason seed, which of course carries with it home-field advantage in October. — Doolittle

Record: 24-14
Previous ranking: 6

Logan Webb just keeps rolling along as one of the most underrated starters in MLB. He led the majors in innings pitched in 2023, ranked second in 2024 and again ranks among the league leaders this season. He has given up only one home run in 48⅓ innings and is producing a career-high strikeout rate (up eight percentage points from last season). He has used his sweeper more this year, but his changeup has been much more effective than it was in 2024, perhaps because he’s throwing it less often. — Schoenfield

Record: 21-16
Previous ranking: 3

The amazing numbers of Aaron Judge’s start

If you thought the Yankees’ superstar couldn’t get any better — think again. Here are the most astounding stats of his season so far.
David Schoenfield »

Max Fried has been exceptional as a Yankee, posting a 1.05 ERA through eight starts. Carlos Rodón has rebounded from a choppy early stretch and sports a 2.96 ERA in eight outings. Outside of those two, the Yankees’ rotation is iffy at best without Gerrit Cole and Luis Gil. Clarke Schmidt recorded his best start of the season Tuesday against the Padres after dealing with injuries. Will Warren has a 5.65 ERA. Carlos Carrasco was designated for assignment. Marcus Stroman is out indefinitely. While Gil is progressing in his recovery from a lat strain, the Yankees need Fried and Rodón to continue registering quality starts. — Castillo

Record: 21-15
Previous ranking: 8

Bryce Harper’s homer during the Phillies’ wild 11-9 loss to Arizona on Tuesday ended a 13-game long-ball drought. That’s far from Harper’s longest homerless streak — he went 38 games without one in 2023 — but it still highlighted an uneven start for Philly’s marquee player. Harper has started every game thus far for manager Rob Thomson. Does he need a rest? Should the Phils be worried? Probably not. Harper’s BABIP has cratered but that’s one indicator that tends to regress to career norms. His power numbers are down but, per Statcast, his bat speed is actually up from 2024. He’ll be fine. — Doolittle

Record: 22-14
Previous ranking: 11

And finally Cal Raleigh rested … almost. Raleigh had started the first 34 games of the season, either at catcher or DH. His two-homer, five-RBI game Saturday against the Rangers helped power the Mariners to their eighth consecutive series victory. Against the Athletics on Tuesday, Raleigh was on the bench … until the ninth inning. Trailing 3-2 with the bases loaded and one out, Raleigh pinch hit for Mitch Garver and delivered a go-ahead two-run single in a 5-3 victory. His 12 home runs are tied with Aaron Judge and Kyle Schwarber for the MLB lead. — Schoenfield

Record: 19-18
Previous ranking: 9

Geraldo Perdomo continues to rake, including a 4-for-5 game with two doubles and three RBIs in Sunday’s wild 11-9 win over the Phillies. Perdomo has more walks than strikeouts, is 9-for-9 stealing bases, has a 99th percentile ranking in outs above average at shortstop and has already produced 2.2 fWAR compared to 2.0 all of 2024. That figure puts him in a five-way tie for the third-highest fWAR — behind only Aaron Judge and Pete Alonso. — Schoenfield

Record: 22-16
Previous ranking: 19

The Royals’ offense has been moving in the right direction, aiding a recent torrid stretch that was driven by elite run prevention. Bobby Witt Jr. has produced all along but, as good as he is, he can’t do it alone. Help has arrived in the form of Maikel Garcia, whose surge has brought his season numbers into lockstep with Witt. Garcia’s swing decisions have improved by leaps and bounds, lowering his already-solid strikeout rate and lifting his walk rate well over league average. Garcia, who has started at four different positions, will merit All-Star consideration if he maintains this pace. — Doolittle

Record: 19-19
Previous ranking: 10

Boston received a huge blow over the weekend, losing Triston Casas for the season because of a ruptured patellar tendon. Now the Red Sox have to figure out who will play first base. The current answer is a combination of Romy Gonzalez and Abraham Toro, but that probably isn’t permanent — and Gonzalez exited Wednesday night’s win after a collision on the base path and is day-to-day. Boston could move Rafael Devers to first base and have Masataka Yoshida, who hasn’t played this season because a shoulder injury is inhibiting his ability to throw, as its DH. The Red Sox could shift rookie Kristian Campbell from second base. They could seek external help. They could even call up one of their top two prospects, Roman Anthony or Marcelo Mayer, to play first. They have options. — Castillo

Record: 22-15
Previous ranking: 16

ESPN ‘Sunday Night Baseball’

Catch the biggest names and the best teams in baseball on ESPN all season long.

Sunday, 7 p.m. ET: Phillies-Guardians

The Guardians have stayed afloat in the standings thanks to a spate of comeback wins and one-run victories. Eventually they’ll need some of their underperforming positions to produce. Steven Kwan has arguably been the best at his position in left field but his outfield partners have collectively been among the worst. Right fielder Jhonkensy Noel has sputtered along with a sub-.500 OPS while, in center, Opening Day starter Lane Thomas had an OPS under .400 before hitting the IL because of a bruised wrist. Cleveland needs numbers from both before the close-game luck begins to run out. — Doolittle

Record: 17-19
Previous ranking: 13

As a group, the Braves’ outfield ranks in the bottom five by wins above average. The fixes: get Ronald Acuña Jr. back, get Michael Harris II going and navigate the weeks until Jurickson Profar returns from suspension. On the latter front, a promising left-field platoon might be taking shape in Alex Verdugo and Eli White. For now, both are needed to man the outfield corners, but that will change when Acuña returns. At the plate, Verdugo has a career .783 OPS against righties; meanwhile, after struggling early in his career against southpaws, White has crushed them in limited time the past two seasons. — Doolittle

Record: 19-19
Previous ranking: 14

The Reds’ season continues to be strange. Their plus-30 run differential ranks eighth in the majors and suggests a 22-16 record. Instead, they remain tethered to .500 territory. The offense’s inconsistency is the main culprit. After scoring 22 runs in a three-game sweep of the Rockies in Denver, Cincinnati tallied three or fewer runs in six of their next nine games. Jose Trevino and Gavin Lux have been crucial contributors in their first seasons in Cincinnati, but the Reds need more from Elly De La Cruz, one of the sport’s most dynamic talents who has been about a league-average hitter so far. — Castillo

Record: 18-18
Previous ranking: 12

As the Astros struggle to score runs, it won’t help that Yordan Alvarez landed on the IL because of hand inflammation. The All-Star slugger was already off to the worst start of his career, hitting .210/.306/.340 with only three home runs and seven extra-base hits in 29 games, when he was scratched from Saturday’s lineup and then didn’t play Sunday before the Astros finally put him on the IL. Alvarez isn’t the only Astros hitter struggling as Yainer Diaz and Christian Walker have sub-.300 OBPs, and Jose Altuve is scuffling with sub-100 OPS+, his lowest since 2013. — Schoenfield

Record: 19-19
Previous ranking: 18

Joey Ortiz, acquired before last season in the trade for Corbin Burnes, put together a 3.1 fWAR rookie campaign in 2024, hitting 11 home runs with a 104 wRC+ and good defense at third base. That’s what makes his production in 2025 so shocking. Now playing shortstop as Willy Adames’ replacement, Ortiz has compiled -0.6 fWAR in 37 games this season. He’s batting .175 without a home run and a .206 slugging percentage. His 27 wRC+ ranks 160th out of 161 qualified players and has hampered the offense, which as a whole has a 90 wRC+, the seventh-lowest mark in the majors. — Castillo

Record: 20-18
Previous ranking: 20

The A’s got to within one game of first place and had a chance to tie Seattle on Tuesday but blew a ninth-inning lead. It was the second blown save in four games for the A’s. On Saturday, Mason Miller had a rare bad outing, serving up a walk-off grand slam to Miami’s Kyle Stowers. With Miller unavailable Tuesday after throwing 55 pitches over three days, Tyler Ferguson came on for the save — his fourth appearance in four days — and gave up a 3-2 lead. It was the first time an A’s pitcher threw four days in a row since 2015. — Schoenfield

Record: 18-19
Previous ranking: 15

Passan predicts MLB mega-contracts

Who will be the next star to get $100 million? $300 million? $600 million!?
Jeff Passan »

Looking to turn around a moribund offense, the Rangers hired former All-Star Bret Boone as the team’s hitting coach, while firing offensive coordinator Donnie Ecker. At the time of the move, the Rangers ranked 25th in the majors in batting average, 25th in slugging and 29th in both runs and walk rate. Previous hitting coach Justin Viele and assistant hitting coach Seth Conner remain on staff. Texas then erupted for 16 hits Tuesday in Boone’s first game, winning consecutive games for the first time since April 17. Evan Carter returned to the majors and went 2-for-5. — Schoenfield

Record: 16-20
Previous ranking: 17

Steinbrenner Field has not been very kind to the Rays so far. They’re 9-15 in their temporary digs and 7-5 elsewhere. The stadium has played as expected, as a hitters’ haven. Opponents have taken better advantage of that with 35 home runs and a .256/.313/.418 slash line. Meanwhile, the Rays have hit 22 home runs at home. They’re built to win games with pitching and defense. That combination so far hasn’t been suited for Steinbrenner Field. — Castillo

Record: 16-20
Previous ranking: 22

The Blue Jays made four major offseason acquisitions. Three — Anthony Santander, Andres Gimenez and Max Scherzer — have been colossal disappointments. Santander has a 75 wRC+ as the team’s primary DH. Gimenez is a defense-first second baseman, but he began the year as the team’s cleanup hitter and has a 68 wRC+. Scherzer has thrown three innings. But Jeff Hoffman has established himself as one of the top closers in baseball after two teams nixed agreements with him during the winter due to concerns about his shoulder health. The right-hander gave up two runs over his first 14 appearances, recording a 1.10 ERA, until his three-run hiccup Tuesday against the Angels. — Castillo

Record: 17-20
Previous ranking: 21

A Twins offense that has floundered for much of the season received a much-needed boost when oft-injured Royce Lewis finally made his season debut. Lewis went down because of a hamstring strain in mid-March and sat out the first five-plus weeks. That was nothing new for a talented player whose career high in games is 82. When he has played, he has produced, posting a 124 career OPS+ with 35 homers and 110 RBIs per 162 games played. Now that Lewis is back, the spotlight falls on shortstop Carlos Correa, who continues to limp along with career-worst percentages. — Doolittle

Record: 19-19
Previous ranking: 24

By most metrics, the Cardinals have by far deployed the best defense in baseball. In the middle of it is center fielder Victor Scott II. Coming off a disastrous rookie season in 2024, in which he posted a 40 OPS+ in 53 games, Scott is thriving as a contact-first speedster with elite defense at a premium position. He’s tied for fourth in the majors in defensive runs saved and outs above average while batting .289 with 11 steals in 12 attempts. At 24, Scott is solidifying himself as a centerpiece of the Cardinals’ rebuild. — Castillo

Record: 17-21
Previous ranking: 25

In the middle of April, the Nationals’ bullpen performance was so off-the-charts bad that manager Dave Martinez called a meeting in his office just to address the relievers. Did it work? At the time, their relief ERA was an astounding 7.21. Three weeks later, that number is … 7.22. The irony is that closer Kyle Finnegan, who was non-tendered by Washington last fall before signing back late in the offseason, has been pretty good (3.07 ERA over 15 appearances with 12 saves in 14 chances). That tells you a little about how badly the rest of the bullpen has struggled. — Doolittle

Record: 13-22
Previous ranking: 23

First-month grades for all 30 MLB teams

Is your favorite team acing — or flunking — the early part of the 2025 season? We break it all down.
From five A’s to an F- »

General manager Mike Elias took blame for the team’s ghastly start and voiced his support for manager Brandon Hyde last Friday. Elias’ offseason decision-making and the subsequent injuries have tanked the starting rotation, but the vaunted offense isn’t doing its part. Cedric Mullins, Jackson Holliday and Ryan O’Hearn have been bright spots, but Adley Rutschman, Ryan Mountcastle, Heston Kjerstad and Jordan Westburg all have an OPS+ under 100. Gunnar Henderson, slowed by an intercostal strain to begin the season, isn’t playing like the MVP candidate he was in 2024. Tyler O’Neill is on the IL again. Baltimore ranks 23rd in runs scored and that isn’t good enough to overcome the rotation’s warts. — Castillo

Record: 12-26
Previous ranking: 28

It has been a disastrous season for the Pirates, on and off the field. There was the controversy surrounding the franchise’s decision to replace a Roberto Clemente logo with a hard iced tea ad at PNC Park. Last week, a fan broke his neck, clavicle and back when he fell from the 21-foot-high Clemente Wall onto the field. This week, a video of a PNC Park usher fighting a fan went viral. On the field, the Pirates are in last place in the NL Central again with one of the worst offenses in the majors. — Castillo

Record: 14-22
Previous ranking: 27

The Marlins have been competitive in some facets this season, but the area that decidedly does not fit that bill has been a glaringly awful starting rotation. Miami’s 6.35 rotation ERA ranks ahead of only the 6-29 Rockies. The Marlins have always been built on strong rotations when they’ve been good — but in 2025, they’ve produced only five quality starts in 36 games. Surely their starter ERA will move in the right direction from here (right?), but if it doesn’t, the franchise nadir (a 5.58 rotation ERA in 2007) could be in jeopardy. — Doolittle

Record: 15-20
Previous ranking: 26

Part of the problem with the slumping Angels: a defense that ranks second worst in the majors in defensive runs saved (ahead of only the A’s). Catcher Logan O’Hoppe, first baseman Nolan Schanuel and third baseman Luis Rengifo all rank as the worst at their positions via defensive runs saved. Schanuel and Rengifo also rank near the bottom in Statcast’s outs above average, as does center fielder Jo Adell. (Kyren Paris has been getting more time there of late.) The Angels back up that bad defense with the worst team OBP in the majors. — Schoenfield

Record: 10-27
Previous ranking: 29

The White Sox aren’t what analysts would label as “good,” but their record would be less terrible if not for an amazing 2-10 start in one-run games. Five of the losses were last-inning road defeats, including Tuesday’s debacle that featured rookie Chase Meidroth getting bonked on the head by a routine pop-up. Chicago’s saves leader is Brandon Eisert — with one. That’s right: After six weeks of the season, the White Sox have recorded exactly one save. The late-game failings undermine a club that, by and large, has cleared the low bar of playing better than it did in 2024. — Doolittle

Record: 6-29
Previous ranking: 30

Early MLB 2025 trade deadline preview

From major league stars like Sandy Alcantara to up-and-coming prospects, here’s who could be on the trade block come July for all 30 teams.

Players likely to be traded »

The Rockies actually won two games in a row last week, beating the Braves 2-1 behind a solid outing from Chase Dollander and then beating the Giants 4-3 with two runs in the eighth inning. Alas, the losing picked right back up and the Rockies’ wRC+ fell to 64 (100 is average). The MLB low since 1901 is 68 (by the 1920 Philadelphia A’s) and even last year’s woeful White Sox came in at 75. So, yes, we’re looking at one of the worst offenses of all time. — Schoenfield

Categories
Technology

Zoox is paying homage to robotaxis after the crash of Las Vegas, citing software program mounted

The self -driving vehicle unit of Amazon, Zoox, has published a voluntary security recall after one of his autonomous vehicles was involved in a small collision in Las Vegas. The incident, which took place in April 2025, prompted the company to examine and identify a software problem that has an impact on how the robotaxi anticipates the path of another vehicle.

The call back, which affects 270 vehicles built with Zoox, was officially submitted to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). According to Zoox, the problem has already been treated via a software update, which was made available from the fleet remote.

The Robotaxis from Zoox, which works like a steering wheel or pedals without driving controls, are part of Amazon's entry into the autonomous living space. According to Zoox's security recall report, the vehicle could not give in to oncoming traffic while making an unprotected left curve, which led to a collision at low speed at a regular passenger car. While damage was low, the event lifted flags about the behavior of the system in complex urban scenarios.

The determination of security and reliability remains key factors for the use of the relatively new autonomous driving technology. Waymo in the ownership of alphabet continues to run the sector in both security and operational scale, with the services in several cities such as Phoenix and San Francisco. But GMS cruise and Ford/VW-von Argo Ai have been forced to give up operations in recent years.

In June 2025, Tesla is also expected to start the robotaxi race with the start of its own service, which uses the FSD software (self-drispiving). While the FSD was very regulatory last year, the safety regulations are expected to be loosening as part of the Trump administration.

Zoox, whom Amazon acquired in 2020, said that he voluntarily published the recall as part of his commitment to security. “It is important that we remain transparent about our processes and the collective decisions that we make,” said the company in an explanation.



Categories
Science

What precisely do we’ve got with grants? – Watts?

From the Daily Caller

Steve Milloy
Participant

The United States is by far the world's leading donor in biomedical research. According to reports, the Trump government is reportedly planning to ask the Congress to reduce the budget of the National Institutes of Health from $ 47 billion to $ 27 billion in order to meet the expenses for the states' expenses.

Grant recipients and their support communities in the weapons are not unexpected. They claim that the proposed cuts would withdraw the financing that they need to find remedies. They say the US will lose its global dominance in this area together with enormous profits.

But the critical questions are: “What does the research actually financed by the NIH actually indicate?” And “are the services worth the money?” The answers, at least according to Nih itself, seem to be shockingly little for the huge sums. (Related: Steve Milloy: Trump's EPA has the right to be skeptical about “sun blocking”)

On his website, Nih divides his services for 2024 under three headings: (1) “Progress of human health”; (2) “Promising medical results” and (3) “Basic research knowledge”. Five NIH-Anglagene are successful under each heading.

The first article listed under “Human Health Advances”, a category that represents the latest and largest from NIH research, is “precise blood test for Alzheimer's disease”. After listening to a left head train to the head train Trump and Elon Musk because he had attributed Alzheimer's research at the age of 20, I examined the advance of the Alzheimer's that Nih had touted Nih on his list of success.

The progress referred to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in July 2024, in which he reported on a new blood test, which correctly diagnosed Alzheimer's with 1,213 Swedish Alzheimer's patients with an accuracy of 90 percent.

Although this sounds impressive, the authors of the study qualify their results with two important restrictions: (1) In other cohorts of patients, further tests were required to confirm their results; and (2) “Future studies should evaluate how the use of blood tests for these biomarkers influence clinical care.” Far from being a “advance of human health”, the researchers admitted that they still had to confirm their results and that they are not sure whether the blood test is useful, even if the results are confirmed.

Nih was only one of 20 different researchers of research. It recorded two Swedish researchers a total of 993,478 US dollars. The other 14 Swedish researchers in the study were apparently financed by the other around Swedish donors.

The study is really only remarkable because Nih anointed it as top for 2024. But what does that say about the other 36.8 billion US dollars that NiH spent on 60,000 other grants? An incompatible Alzheimer's blood examination is pride and joy under all this financing?

A recently from the Washington Post OP-ED entitled “Science needs more shrimp on treadmills” said that “the National Institutes of Health does not finance too much stupid science. It is not financed enough.” The author tried to owe Nih to the development of medication for weight reduction such as Ozempic. In 1984 a hiker -NiH researcher published a study on Gila Monster Gift. After four decades of research elsewhere, others used the finding to develop the blockbuster GLP-1 medication. In a way, this is an amazing story. On the other hand, it is not proof that NIH's enormous expenses for taxpayers achieve results.

President Nixon started the “war against cancer” in 1971, and since then, every president has tried to make a name for himself in these efforts, but the breakthroughs have limited. In 1986 the all-star biostatistic John Bailarar observed that cancer remained unbeaten. In 2018, cancer researchers in the British Medical Journal reported that the expensive medication, which were recommended by the guidelines for cancer treatments in the United States, was based on “weak evidence”. President Biden's “Cancer Moonshot” essentially produced zero.

Nih did not mention cancer progress under “Progress of Human Health” or “promising medical knowledge” for 2024. The only mention of cancer comes in “basic research knowledge” with “assigning and spreading cancer”. Fifty -four years after the start of the Cancer War, there we are.

None of this is called that Nih should not finance medical research. However, if NIH continues to spend tax money, it has to make some expenses and entry of achievements. We are $ 36 trillion and cannot afford it to make designated billions of dollars for non-productive research in the hope that something will ultimately appear.

And no, there is no need to worry about foreign competition. We spend about 18 times more than Great Britain, our next competitor in relation to medical research. The rest of the world may freely ride the rest of the world on the back of the US taxpayers. It may also be that the rest of the world has recognized that there are more productive opportunities to spend your taxpayers.

Steve Milloy is a biostatistic and lawyer, publishes Junkscience.com and is on X @Junkscience.

The views and opinions in this comment are that of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

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