Categories
Technology

10 classes from the James Webb telescope that would affect European know-how

The scientific world tumbles. New discoveries from the James Webb Space Telescope – A joint project by the European Space Agency (ESA), NASA and Canadian Space Agency (CSA) – are not only surprising, they contradict our deepest assumptions about how the universe works.

Basically, it seems that the universe may not play according to the rules that we have mostly understood.

What could all this mean for space research, space technology and future deep tech? And what should Space Tech companies, inventors, investors and VC funds in Europe be considered as a result of the latest discoveries?

At Beyond the earth daresIt is all about startups that build rockets, AIS for satellites, roombootech and fusion breaks.

TNW City Coworking Space – where your best work happens

A area of work for growth, cooperation and endless networking opportunities in the heart of technology.

But as a Space fanatic we also like to see deeper, beyond tables and pitches, into the places where the theory breaks and the secret begins.

Enter the 10 billion USD WebB telescope, which was sent to orbit from European space in French -Guayana to look at the oldest light in the universe. The machine introduced in 2021 has been fully functional since July 2022.

Webb is not just an upgrade from Hubble. It is a time machine, an infrared zeninel and – perhaps most important – a destroyer of comfortable scientific assumptions.

Thanks to his findings, it becomes clear that we are about to change theoretical physics and cosmology shortly before. Expect a wave of courageous new theories, revisions of textbooks and a new debate about everything, from gravity to the origin of the galaxies in the next few years.

Before we take into account the implications, we zoom in the big discoveries of WebB, the holes in the beats in what we know about the universe. Some of them trigger theoretical crises. Others could trigger completely new research and invention fields.

The greatest revolutions begin when the theory no longer matches data. This happened with quantum mechanics. With general theory of relativity. With DNA. And maybe with the WebB telescope.

Here are 10 of his discoveries that challenge our theories about the universe:

1. The universe is expanding faster than it should

We knew about the “Hubble tension“But WebB has just confirmed it precisely. After the mathematics, the universe is expanding 70–76 Kilometer per second per megaparsec (KM/S/MPC) – much faster than that 67 km/s/mpc Predicted by models based on the early universe (the cosmic microwave background). Translation? Something in our physics is wrong or at least incomplete. Optimization of dark energy? A new force? A misunderstood early universe? The door is open.

2. Galaxies grew up too quickly

WebB discovered adult, massive galaxies straight 500 to 700 million years after the Big Bang. These things are as big as the Milky Way, but their early appearance contradicts established science. According to the standard cosmological models, you should simply not exist. Theories say that galaxies are growing slowly. The reality says: You got up quickly. Either we miss a trick – or the early universe was much more efficient than we thought.

3. Dark matter may be wrong – moon is right?

This is controversial: Webbs findings correspond more with Modified Newtonian dynamics (moon))) As the prevailing dark matter. Moon has long been the outsider of gravity theories. But if early galaxies are brighter and larger than expected – just like the moon predicted – we may have to rethink which invisible hand forms the cosmos.

4. Black holes were too ambitious

How do you get a black hole with 9 million solar masses only 570 million years after the Big Bang? Webb found that. This is astonishing, since according to current models in the early universe, according to current models, there was simply not enough time or material to grow such colossal black holes so quickly – which indicates either unknown physics or completely new formation routes. The black holes in some early galaxies are 1,000 x massive (compared to the galaxy) than those in today's universe. Either black holes were formed over an exotic mechanism – or they started as something larger than stars.

5. Complex chemistry? So early?

The galaxy Jades-GS-Z14-0 is only 300 million years old, but it is already rich in elements such as nitrogen that normally takes billions of years and several generations of stars to build up. How did these elements get there? Either the first stars formed and died Much faster than we thought or the Big Bang let us “prefabricated” than expected.

6. Stars with warp speed formed

Webb shows early galaxies as intensive, explosive star factories – a surprise for scientists. Models expected slow, gradual star formation. Instead, it is “huge balls of star formation”. Something – maybe a lack of dust or different physics – accelerated the timeline. And the models cannot keep up again.

7. Planetisms last longer than we thought

It was assumed that planet -forming windows quickly disappear by stars. But webb sees it at 20 to 30 million years. These are great news for the formation of exoplanets – and possibly for life. If planetary systems have more time to develop, life -friendly environments can be more common than we have ever dared to hope.

8. Galaxies were strange shaped

Half of the early galaxies looks like pool noodles or surf boards, not the small round blobs that we expected. The standard model says that the structure takes place later. But webbs shows us that galaxies were organized early – and we did not expect in shapes. Something about angle impulse and material dynamics in the early universe has to rethink.

9. Exoplanet atmosphere models are all wrong

WebB's ultra-specific spectroscopy showed that our models from Exoplanet Atmosphere cannot reliably distinguish between different types. This shakes everything, from habitability to the search for bisignatures. Basically, our “spectral fingerprints” are smeared – and it goes back to the drawing board.

10. The cosmic web was already there

Webb found a 3 million light year filament part of the Cosmic web – only 830 Millions of years after the Big Bang. This structure should take billions of years. Either the early universe quickly built things, or we generally misunderstood the timeline.

What does that mean for the Tech Ecosystem? For founders and VCS in Deep Tech, these results are not just a scientific trivia. They are early signals.

Europe's focus in the focus

In our view, Europe is uniquely positioned to guide the next wave of innovation that is triggered by James Webb's discoveries. The data streaming in has already catalyzed new research efforts in leading centers such as the maximum institutes of Germany, the University of Cambridge in Great Britain and ETH Zurich in Switzerland.

In the private sector, a new generation of European Deep -Tech startups is increasing to the challenge.

Space Forge (UK) develops reusable satellites in order to enable the production of progressive materials such as semiconductors into the room, which could drastically reduce energy consumption and carbon emissions, which speaks to the climate crisis.

Bioorbit (UK) promotes the microgravitility capable of biologics against cancer, with some therapies of hospital-IV drops being shifted to self-governing injections at home and radically improve the access and comfort of the patient.

fly (Germany) uses a fleet of lidar-equipped satellites and drones to exactly monitor greenhouse gas emissions in real time-and support industries in compliance with increasingly strict EU regulations in order to report THG emissions.

European Deep -Tech companies are increasingly supported by Horizon Europe, the flagship and innovation program of the EU (2021–2027), with a total budget of € 95.5 billion. Horizon Europe supports high-risk, high-ranking projects in the areas of climate, digital and deep tech areas and serve as a critical bridge between border-scientific discoveries, as from YEWS and groundbreaking commercial applications.

In our understanding of the universe, gaps could open unexpected opportunities for the European deep tech. Just as Cern Europe put at the top of the energetic physics, Webb could become a launchpad for the continent's space tech industry.

The discoveries of WebB could trigger a new era of innovation by overturning everything we knew about the universe. If the early universe didn't expect anything, what could we be wrong about?

Could the laws of physics develop themselves? Are we missing hidden variables in space -time? Dark matter is an illusion and if so, what does galaxies really have? Could life be started earlier and more often than we imagine?

Each of these questions could unlock a new wave of basic physics, new technologies or even completely new startup categories. From quantum gravitational models to exotic materials to AI-designed cosmological simulations, there is space for founders to build on the edge of the secret.

What next? Potentially a new generation of inventions, investors and eye opening discoveries. Europe is ready to use.

By investing in deep tech, the continent can transform the revelations of WebB into commercial success and shape the future of science and society equally.

Categories
Entertainment

Terence Stamp, Superman actor, useless with 87

Hollywood mourns the loss of a beloved actor.

Terence stamp– Who was best for his roles in the Superman from 1978 and for his continuation of 1980, Superman II, on August 17th, confirmed his family to Reuters. He was 87.

“He leaves an extraordinary work, both as an actor and as a writer who will continue to touch and inspire people in the coming years,” said his family in an explanation to the outlet. “We ask for privacy at this sad time.”

Stamp was born as the son of a Tugboat stoker in the London East End and discovered his love for acting late into his teenage years.

“Only when we got our first television – I would have been about 17, I think, and I was already at work – I started to say things like” Oh, I could do that, “he said in 2013 to BFI.

Categories
Health

How Epic’s 82-year-old CEO Judy Faulkner constructed her software program manufacturing unit

Judy Faulkner, founder and chief executive officer of Epic Systems Corp., during the Forbes Healthcare Summit in New York, Dec. 5, 2023.

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Do not go public. Do not acquire or be acquired. Software must work.

These are the first three of the 10 commandments splashed across bathrooms and breakrooms at Epic Systems’ sprawling 1,670-acre campus in Verona, Wisconsin, just southwest of Madison. 

It’s not the wackiest part of working at the health-care software giant. Once a month, most of the company’s 14,000 employees pack into an underground auditorium called Deep Space for a mandatory staff meeting, which some jokingly refer to as “work church.” Executives go over company news and objectives. They also lead a grammar lesson, such as whether it’s OK to end sentences with a preposition and when to use “who” or “whom.”

Epic’s CEO is 82-year-old Judy Faulkner, who started the company in a Wisconsin basement in 1979 and has helmed the enterprise ever since. En route to building a business with $5.7 billion in annual revenue, Faulkner has kept significant distance from her tech peers, both physically and otherwise. Epic is about 2,000 miles east of both Seattle and Silicon Valley, and the company has never taken money from venture capitalists.

“I’ve described her as a female cross between Bill Gates and Willy Wonka,” Dr. Eric Dickson, CEO of UMass Memorial Health, said in an interview. The hospital system is an Epic customer, Dickson said, adding that he’s known Faulkner for around 20 years.

While Wonka is, of course, a fictional character, Gates for many years was the world’s wealthiest person, thanks to his enormous stake in Microsoft, before donating his way to 14th on the Forbes billionaires list. At the top of the leaderboard is Tesla’s Elon Musk, followed by Oracle’s Larry Ellison, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos.

Faulkner ranks 430th, with an estimated net worth of $7.8 billion, based on what Forbes says is her 43% ownership of Epic. The publication lists Epic as among the five largest private U.S. tech software and services companies by revenue. 

Epic is best known for its dominance in electronic health record, or EHR, software. An EHR is a digital version of a patient’s medical history that’s updated by doctors and nurses. About 42% of acute care hospitals in the U.S. use Epic, putting it way ahead of Oracle Health, which is in second place at 23%, according to an April report from Klas Research. Oracle acquired its way into the market with the $28 billion purchase of Cerner, a deal that closed in 2022. 

Epic says its technology is used in 3,300 hospitals and 71,000 clinics and by 325 million patients worldwide. Starting Monday, thousands of health-care executives will descend on Epic’s corporate headquarters for the company’s Users Group Meeting, one of its largest annual on-campus events.

As ubiquitous as Epic’s technology is across much of the health-care sector, doctors, hospital administrators, startups and patients have their share of complaints about the software’s user experience and its interoperability, or ability to work with other tools.

“With half a million or so clinicians using Epic, there will be some who find it easy and some who find it difficult,” an Epic spokesperson said in a statement.

Some folks might question Epic’s commitment to its third commandment, but there’s no doubting the company’s allegiance to the first one.

From Epic’s early days, Faulkner has been averse to the idea of running a public company and what she’s called the “tyranny of the quarter.” She said she came to that view after researching public companies and reading shareholder comments. 

“They were vitriolic, in many cases, because the only thing they were looking at was return on their investment,” Faulkner told CNBC. “Sometimes, there’s a lot more than that.”

Without the benefit of public stock, Faulkner’s wealth doesn’t multiply at the same rate as that of her fellow tech founders and CEOs. She’s fine with that. 

Faulkner, who rarely grants interviews, agreed to sit down for a half-hour chat with CNBC at Epic’s headquarters, where office buildings are themed, with many inspired by fiction, including “The Wizard of Oz,” “Alice in Wonderland” and the Harry Potter stories.

The interview took place in the Andromeda building in a conference room called The Cottage, which is connected to her office. Two of the walls are plastered with quotes such as “The geek shall inherit the Earth” and “All lasting business is built on friendship.” Faulkner’s dog Tundra, a fluffy Samoyed, also made an appearance.

‘The Trust Protector Committee’

A sign on the Epic campus says “Epic Intergalactic Headquarters.”

Courtesy: Epic

Faulkner celebrated her 82nd birthday Monday. While she has yet to publicly disclose when she plans to step down from her role, Faulkner confirmed that she has a succession plan in place that ensures Epic will remain privately held and constructed firmly as she envisioned long after she’s gone. 

Faulkner has never sold any of her voting shares, and that stock will be transferred into a trust after her death, according to Faulkner and Epic. The plan for now is that the trust will be governed by a voting committee made up of Faulkner’s husband, Dr. Gordon Faulkner, a retired pediatrician; her three children, and five longtime Epic employees, though Faulkner said she might include some additional staffers to make sure enough voices are represented. 

Members of the committee can’t vote for the company to go public or be acquired, among other rules, as she has previously disclosed. Some of the provisions are less consequential, such as a recommendation that the trust’s telephone hold music should be classical. 

“I like classical music,” she said. “I think when I was a child that it was played in our house a lot, just on the radio, just on the record player.” 

For further safekeeping, Faulkner established an oversight board called “The Trust Protector Committee,” Epic said, consisting of three health-care leaders — all Epic users. Its job is to sue members of the trust’s voting committee if they don’t follow the rules. 

The names of members of the voting committee and oversight board won’t be released, Faulkner told CNBC, but she said she’s identified who she would like to participate. 

After running Epic for the past 46 years, Faulkner has amassed her fair share of admirers and critics, with some in the latter camp even taking Epic to court.

But Faulkner continues to flout conventional business practices and has built Epic, despite its flaws and complexities, into the most powerful technology company in U.S. health care. 

Reflecting on her approach to leadership and decision-making, Faulkner said, “Just have the guts to do what you know is the right thing to do.” 

CNBC spoke with two dozen Epic customers, former Epic employees, industry experts and people close to Faulkner for this article, some of whom asked not to be named in order to speak freely. Details about Faulkner’s personal, educational and professional history were obtained from Faulkner directly, her Epic website testimonials, Epic, obituaries, news reports and publicly available records.

Sometimes when I do something that’s tough, I think of my mother, who went to jail in her 80s for protesting at a nuclear arms site, and I think, ‘I’m my mother’s daughter.’

Faulkner and her two siblings grew up in Erlton, New Jersey, now a part of Cherry Hill. Her father, Louis Greenfield, was an independent pharmacist who ran his own store, complete with a soda fountain. Her mother, Del Greenfield, was a peace activist who was involved with the South Jersey Peace Center and the Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility, which shared in the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize for its work in preventing nuclear war. 

“Sometimes when I do something that’s tough, I think of my mother, who went to jail in her 80s for protesting at a nuclear arms site, and I think, ‘I’m my mother’s daughter,'” Faulkner said. 

Faulkner’s parents, who both died in 2007, are honored at Epic’s campus. Employees can get ice cream at Lou’s Soda Fountain, while Del’s Nobel Prize certificate hangs in the hallway across from The Cottage.

Faulkner discovered a love of math as a seventh grader, when her teacher would leave puzzles on the blackboard each day, she said in one of her testimonials, the short stories and anecdotes she shares once a month on Epic’s website. She earned her undergraduate degree in math from Dickinson College in 1965.

After learning how to program during a summer job, Faulkner then enrolled in the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s nascent computer science program and was in graduate school there until 1970.

At UW–Madison, Faulkner took a course about computing in medicine that was taught by a pioneering physician, Dr. Warner Slack, one of the first people to recognize the promise of the technology within health care.

Faulkner began working with Slack and his team, and she was tasked with developing a system that could keep track of patient information over time. She eventually built what would become the kernel for Epic, though it took years of urging from potential users before she would actually launch the company in 1979. In the interim, she taught college-level computer science.

When Faulkner finally opened Epic for business, she did so with a small amount of cash from some colleagues at an initial valuation of $70,000. Now the company is worth many billions of dollars, though estimates of its valuation differ.

Some of the original shareholders eventually sold their stock back to the company.

“They got very good returns,” Faulkner wrote in a testimonial.

An accidental entrepreneur

Epic’s Deep Space Auditorium.

Epic Systems

Faulkner has publicly described herself as “the accidental CEO.” 

She told CNBC she read books and took daylong or multiday courses to learn more about management, business and leadership. But she didn’t always follow their advice. 

“I never got an MBA, which I think is a really good thing,” Faulkner said. “They would have taught me, ‘Here’s how you do venture capital.’ We didn’t do it. ‘Here’s how you go public.’ We didn’t do it. ‘Here’s how you do budgets.’ We don’t have budgets. We say, if you need it, buy it. If you don’t need it, don’t buy it.”

At the company’s Users Group Meeting last year, Faulkner took the stage dressed as a swan, with a plume of feathers in her hair. Every UGM meeting has a theme — this one was “storytime.” In costume, Faulkner told the thousands of health-care executives in attendance about her aversion to the public market. 

“Why be owned by people whose interest is primarily return of equity?” she said. 

She’s equally opposed to selling the business, which she makes clear in the company’s second commandment.

That hasn’t stopped other executives from trying to change her mind.  

In 2017, at the Digital Healthcare Innovation Summit in Boston, former General Electric CEO Jeff Immelt revealed that he’d spoken with Faulkner about acquiring Epic.

Faulkner shut him down immediately.

“It was a five-minute meeting — perhaps the shortest in history,” Immelt said, according to a report from Healthcare IT News. The report said he’d also considered buying Cerner.

Faulkner confirmed the encounter with CNBC.

“Others have asked to come and persuade us, and I’ve heard our staff say to them, ‘Just leave your car running,'” she said.

Faulkner has said in testimonials that she’s avoided buyers in order to remain independent and preserve Epic’s unique culture, and she doesn’t make acquisitions, calling them a distraction.

But no matter how much she loves her company and her job, at some point, somebody else is going to have to run Epic.

Faulkner has remained mum about who will be her eventual successor, other than to say that the person will have to be a software developer and a longtime Epic employee.

The obvious choice, according to 10 former Epic employees who spoke with CNBC, is Sumit Rana, who was named president of the company last August. The 49-year-old joined Epic right out of college in 1998 and helped build the company’s patient portal called MyChart. 

Rana, who was a toddler when Faulkner founded Epic, has been participating in more high-profile speaking engagements of late, including representing the company during the opening panel at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Quality Conference in July.

Faulkner declined to say whether Rana is the top contender for the job. 

“That’s the company’s business,” she said. “Sumit is a wonderful employee, and he would make a good CEO, but we’re not publicly announcing anything.”

A building on Epic’s Farm Campus.

Courtesy: Epic

While Faulkner doesn’t say much about the company’s succession plans, she hasn’t been shy about her plans for her personal wealth.

In 2015, she signed The Giving Pledge and agreed to donate 99% of her assets to charity, a decision that was inspired in part by a dinner she had with Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett that year.

Buffett created The Giving Pledge with Bill Gates and Gates’ then wife, Melinda French Gates, in 2010, encouraging the world’s richest people to give away the majority of their wealth. 

Following Faulkner’s pledge, she launched a family foundation called Roots & Wings with her husband in 2020. Roots & Wings provides grants to nonprofits that support low-income children and families. Faulkner’s daughter, Shana Dall’Osto, serves as executive director of the organization. 

Faulkner has been selling her nonvoting shares back to the company, giving the proceeds directly to Roots & Wings. 

“I’ve never cashed a single share for myself,” Faulkner told CNBC.

‘Bet the ranch’

Installing an EHR is an extremely complicated and costly project for health systems. If it doesn’t go well, it could “blow up” the whole business, Dr. Robert Grossman, CEO of NYU Langone Health, told CNBC in an interview. 

“We bet the ranch on Epic, let’s be very honest,” he said.

Fans of Epic say the company is fully tuned in to its customers’ needs.

“They don’t just operate and dial in,” said Michael Mayo, CEO of ​​Baptist Health in northeast Florida. “They visit our campus. They’re immersed here. They know our teams across our IT [information technology] component and our caregivers. They are in our facilities. And when we went live, which is a pretty scary time, they were in full force here.”

Each health system that uses Epic has a point person called a “BFF,” or “best friend forever,” who is available to answer questions and help solve problems. Epic doesn’t outsource any incoming calls to third parties, the company says, so staff members are responsible for picking up the phone 24/7.

Faulkner also makes herself easily accessible to customers, executives said.

Mike Slubowski, CEO of Trinity Health, which operates 93 hospitals across 26 states, said Faulkner always answers his emails within the day, if not the hour. 

She holds recurring meetings with senior health-care executives by phone or video call to answer questions and talk through an organization’s specific needs and ideas. Executives told CNBC that Faulkner takes copious notes and is receptive to feedback. If she doesn’t have an answer, she promptly calls someone who does. 

“She’ll stop right there and say, ‘Get so-and-so on the phone,'” said Dickson, of UMass Memorial Health. “I don’t know what so-and-so was doing prior to getting the call, but it’s clear that when Judy calls, you drop what you’re doing.”

Pete Durlach, corporate vice president for health and life sciences at Microsoft, said he’s been in meetings with Epic staffers who have gotten these impromptu calls. Microsoft and Epic have been close partners for around two decades, a relationship that’s gotten tighter as cloud and artificial intelligence technologies have advanced, he said. 

Epic employees at work.

Courtesy of Epic

“People definitely answer the phone when Judy calls,” Durlach said.

Epic doesn’t advertise or have a traditional marketing department; the company has relied heavily on word of mouth. Faulkner has also proven to be an effective salesperson. 

Ardent Health CEO Marty Bonick said that when he was debating whether to convert some of his hospitals to using Epic products, Faulkner ultimately helped sway him.

Ardent Health owns 30 hospitals and 280 outpatient care sites across six states. When Bonick joined Ardent in 2020, he said, roughly two-thirds of Ardent’s hospitals were using Epic. Bonick said he’d never worked with Epic and wanted to make sure that switching over the remainder of Ardent’s hospitals would be worthwhile. 

Bonick said he told Faulkner that he’d heard Epic’s product was expensive and difficult to implement.

“She came back with a presentation that she delivered personally, and spent probably over 90 minutes,” said Bonick, who was ultimately sold on the conversion. “I had to say, ‘OK, time out. I’ve got another meeting to go to,’ but she really was not watching the clock.”

Graveyard of competitors

Epic is used by all 20 of the top hospitals from the U.S. News & World Report rankings, and by the country’s seven largest health plans, according to the company.

Its dominance has come with plenty of controversy. 

Epic faces accusations of anticompetitive practices in two lawsuits from the past year. One was filed in September by data startup Particle Health, which alleges that Epic has used its EHR market power to “snuff out” competition in other emerging health-care markets.

Epic said in response it would “vigorously defend itself against Particle’s meritless claims.”

The second lawsuit was filed in May by CureIS Healthcare, a managed care services company that claims Epic has engaged in a “multi-prong scheme to destroy” CureIS’ business. CureIS alleges Epic has interfered with its customer relationships, blocked access to necessary data and raised unfounded security concerns, according to a complaint.

An Epic spokesperson told CNBC at the time of the filing that the company “believes in free and fair competition, and we also believe our customers are in the best position to choose the right solutions to meet their needs — whether with Epic or by adopting other products and services.” 

Epic’s competitors have also long accused the company of being territorial over its data and impeding efforts to share patient information between vendors. 

In a blog post last year, Oracle Executive Vice President Ken Glueck wrote that “everyone in the industry understands that Epic’s CEO Judy Faulkner is the single biggest obstacle to EHR interoperability.” 

Interoperability, in this case, refers to the exchange of electronic health data from one health-care organization to another. Since health data is siloed, stored across dozens of formats and protected by federal laws such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, it’s a complex undertaking.

Over the years, startups such as Practice Fusion and DrChrono have tried to crack the EHR market with promises of greater openness and more user-friendly products, but they have never become more than niche offerings. Some failed completely.  

Epic promotes its own interoperability tools such as Care Everywhere and EpicCare Link, which allows customers and their affiliates to exchange data with one another. Epic also participates in larger data exchange networks.

The Oz office building on Epic’s campus.

Courtesy: Epic Systems

Attention to detail

One of Epic’s biggest feats in its 46 years is managing to attract high-level tech talent far away from the nation’s engineering and business hubs, especially given the harsh Midwestern winters in Wisconsin. 

That’s where Epic’s headquarters comes into play. It’s a campus that industry executives and former employees likened to a techie’s Disney World. 

All 28 office buildings are themed. They’re clustered into mini-campuses, with names such as Prairie Campus, Wizards Academy Campus and Storybook Campus. 

The offices are designed by architecture firm Cuningham, which has also worked on projects at Disney theme parks all over the world. John Cuningham, the founder of the firm, said he’s worked with Faulkner for 30 years, and that she’s always been very involved in the process. 

Epic’s first campus, for instance, has more than 80 bathrooms, and Faulkner wanted to know the details of all of them. 

“Each one,” he said. “Light fixtures, faucets, mirrors, wallpaper, tile, sinks. I mean, I was thinking, ‘Oh, she’ll last for 10.’ She did all 85, and she still does that,” he said. 

I went down the slide, like everybody.

Warner Thomas

CEO of Sutter Health

On Epic’s grounds, a metal wizard stands in the courtyard of a castle, giant chocolate chips mark the entryway to a faux chocolate factory, and a hanging bridge leads to the company’s very own treehouse. 

Inside a building inspired by “Alice in Wonderland,” there’s a slide that takes employees into a small room where everything is upside down. It’s popular with visitors. 

“I was kind of blown away,” Warner Thomas, CEO of Sutter Health, a nonprofit health system in Northern California, told CNBC about his first trip to Epic’s campus. “I went down the slide, like everybody.”

The buildings are brimming with trinkets, ceramics, mosaics and paintings that Epic employees get to help source. Faulkner recruits a small group of volunteers to go with her to local art fairs and buy decorations for the campus. Some pieces cost thousands of dollars, according to former employees.  

Faulkner said she had just returned from an art fair ahead of her interview with CNBC.

‘Everybody knows Judy’

A cow-print bike on Epic’s campus.

Courtesy: Epic

Despite the fantastical themes on-site, employees are tasked with very real responsibilities. Since Faulkner places such a strong emphasis on supporting her customers, she holds her staff to high standards. 

Most employees work in person five days a week. Hours can be long and burnout is common, former employees say. In June, The Economist analyzed 900 companies across 19 industries, and found that Epic had the worst work-life balance in the software and IT services category. Several former employees told CNBC their work at Epic was all-consuming. 

Epic said the average employee works between 44 and 45 hours a week, based on monthly time sheet submissions between June 2024 and June 2025. The company said its turnover rate last year was 7%.

“People at Epic are dedicated and work hard,” an Epic spokesperson said in a statement.

Epic workers are entrusted with big projects, expected to interact directly with customers and generally take on a lot of responsibility. For some employees, that includes working alongside hospitals as they implement Epic’s technology.

“Some of these implementations really sucked,” said Brendan Keeler, a former Epic employee who frequently blogs about the company online. “So much of the success of an implementation was just a function of the politics of the hospital.”

Epic recruits the vast majority of its employees straight out of college, so its staff is relatively young. All new staffers go through extensive training, including a five-hour corporate philosophy class where they’re taught how to be a successful employee.

Faulkner said she used to teach the class by herself but that she now has help from one or two other people.

Faulkner’s influence is present in every corner of Epic’s campus, in its product and across much of the health-care industry.

“Everybody knows Judy Faulkner,” said Thomas, of Sutter Health. 

She’s still got a lot to do. The health-care industry is reckoning with rising costs, staffing shortages, the impact of AI and the Trump administration’s hefty cuts in the areas of medical science and research. 

And Faulkner isn’t ready to quit.

“It’s interesting and it’s challenging and it’s worthwhile,” Faulkner said.

WATCH: President Trump’s push to lower drug prices

Categories
Sport

2025 NFL preseason Week 2: Takeaways, evaluation

  • NFL NationAug 17, 2025, 12:38 AM ET

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      NFL Nation is made up of 32 team-specific reporters who cover the NFL year-round across ESPN.com, ESPN television shows, ESPN Radio, ESPN+ and social media platforms. It was established ahead of the 2013 season.

The second week of the 2025 NFL preseason kicked off Friday as several teams prepared to give extended looks to their starters in a dress rehearsal for the regular season.

To keep you updated on how teams fared, our NFL Nation reporters summarized the games below.

Quick links:
Full schedule | Where to watch | Depth charts
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Saturday’s results

Giants: Cue the Jaxson Dart hype. The first-round pick was again impressive in preseason action, especially while leading consecutive touchdown drives to begin the second half. He completed 5 of 6 passes for 62 yards on the first drive, which was capped by a 20-yard touchdown pass to tight end Greg Dulcich. Dart then capped the next drive with a 1-yard TD run. The rookie finished 14-of-16 for 137 yards with a TD passing and another rushing. This came on the heels of an impressive debut against the Bills. Even though Russell Wilson led a touchdown drive to start the game, Dart is showing he might be ready to start sooner rather than later. — Jordan Raanan

Next game: at New England Patriots (Thursday, 8 p.m. ET)

Jets: Quarterback Justin Fields and the passing offense were out of sync, which is not surprising. They’ve been sputtering throughout most of training camp, with Fields unable to get the ball downfield to his wide receivers. Fields completed his first throw — a 4-yard flare to tight end Mason Taylor — then finished with five straight incompletions in two series of action (a high snap and a QB pressure contributed to two of the errant throws.) Fields was 0-for-3 when targeting wideout Garrett Wilson, his old buddy from Ohio State. Yes, the Jets again showed potential in the running game, but it’s hard to be one-dimensional in the NFL. The lack of a legit WR2 to complement Wilson is one of the reasons they’re not clicking. — Rich Cimini

Next game: vs. Philadelphia Eagles (Friday, 7:30 p.m. ET)

Bucs: With quarterback Baker Mayfield sitting, Teddy Bridgewater hit running back Bucky Irving and wide receiver Emeka Egbuka for 15- and 5-yard touchdown passes. Wide receiver Jalen McMillan left the game with a back injury and will be evaluated for a concussion after a fall on his head/neck area. And while cornerback Zyon McCollum notched an interception (so did Kindle Vildor, along with a deep ball pass breakup), Jamel Dean surrendered a 42-yard reception to Roman Wilson, a 2-yard touchdown to Brandon Johnson and a pass interference call on a single drive. Tez Johnson’s splashy preseason debut included a 32-yard punt return. — Jenna Laine

Next game: vs. Buffalo Bills (Saturday, 7:30 p.m. ET)

Steelers: In a preseason game that wasn’t nearly as clean as the first, the Steelers’ run defense was dominant while the offensive ground game continued to look sluggish. The defense, playing without most of its starters, held the Bucs to 2.5 yards per carry in a first half featuring most of their starters. Juan Thornhill and Brandin Echols set the tone early, stuffing running back Bucky Irving on the first play of the game. The Steelers’ offense, however, had about as much success as Tampa Bay in running the ball. With starting RB Jaylen Warren sitting out for the second week in a row, rookie Kaleb Johnson saw plenty of action. Not counting his second-quarter 14-yard run, Johnson averaged just 0.5 yards per carry on four rushes. He had a better showing in the second half with a pair of 9-yard runs, but the second preseason game suggested the third-round pick still has room to grow. — Brooke Pryor

Next game: at Carolina Panthers (Thursday, 7:30 p.m. ET)

Rams: Third-string quarterback Stetson Bennett has looked much improved this preseason. Against the Chargers, Bennett completed 28 of 40 passes for 324 yards with three touchdowns and a fourth-quarter interception. Bennett’s first touchdown drive came against the majority of the Chargers’ starting defense. Bennett has started and played the majority of the Rams’ preseason games as coach Sean McVay does not play his first-stringers during the preseason.

Starting quarterback Matthew Stafford, who is dealing with an aggravated disk in his back, was scheduled to workout Saturday morning at the Rams’ facility. When asked to confirm that the workout took place, a Rams spokesperson declined to comment and said McVay would address the situation Monday. — Sarah Barshop

Next game: at Cleveland Browns (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET on NFL Network)

Chargers: The stars of Saturday’s game were the Chargers’ rookie receivers: KeAndre Lambert-Smith and Tre Harris. The rookies had the game’s best highlights, each with their own diving 30-plus-yard catches on the sideline. Lambert-Smith, a fifth-round pick who has been the star of training camp, finished with two catches for 66 yards. It was a breakout game for Harris, the Chargers’ second-round pick. Harris has struggled with drops and hadn’t had a catch in preseason until Saturday. He finished with six catches for 85 yards, leading the team in both categories. — Kris Rhim

Next game: at San Francisco 49ers (Saturday, 8:30 p.m. ET)

Ravens: Tyler Loop is officially the Ravens kicker to start the 2025 season, coach John Harbaugh announced after Loop’s impressive performance Saturday. The rookie sixth-round pick made 5 of 6 field goals, including kicks from 51 and 53 yards in Dallas. Ravens coach John Harbaugh said the decision at kicker would come in the preseason games, and Loop is now 6-of-8. Loop’s strong leg would provide a weapon that has been lacking lately in Baltimore. Former kicker Justin Tucker, who was cut in May, was 16-of-30 (53.3%) from beyond 50 yards over the past three years. — Jamison Hensley

Next game: at Washington Commanders (Saturday, noon ET)

Cowboys: Through two games, Joe Milton III has not done enough to convince the Cowboys he is the backup quarterback to Dak Prescott. Milton was intercepted in the second quarter forcing a deep ball into coverage. He took a sack on the first drive that led to a safety. He missed reads. It didn’t help that former Cowboys backup Cooper Rush started for the Ravens. Yes, Rush had two first-half picks and one was returned for a touchdown, but he also had a TD pass and smartly got the Ravens into field goal position late in the second quarter. The Cowboys have given Milton all of the second-team work this summer. It might be time to give Will Grier more work in the final week of the preseason. — Todd Archer

Next game: vs. Atlanta Falcons (Friday, 8 p.m. ET)

Broncos: The Broncos certainly flashed their depth Saturday night. With second- and third-teamers getting virtually all of the work, Denver scored on four of its first five drives and the Broncos’ defensive reserves held the Cardinals’ reserves to 126 yards through three quarters. Backup quarterback Jarrett Stidham is 30-of-38 passing for 376 yards with four touchdowns in 3½ quarters this preseason. Coach Sean Payton said the depth will make roster decisions far more difficult than last summer, with tough calls to make at wide receiver, running back and the defensive line in particular. — Jeff Legwold

Next game: at New Orleans Saints (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET)

Cardinals: Rookie cornerback Denzel Burke showed Saturday night that, while there’s work to do, he has what it takes to eventually be a piece of the Cardinals’ cornerback rotation. He had the kind of preseason game one would expect from a rookie: There were highs and there were lows. He played 33 snaps, was targeted six times and allowed three catches for 62 yards and a touchdown, but he flashed at times with plays that showed a natural talent. After fine-tuning his technique and learning more about the NFL game, Burke could work his way onto the field this season. — Josh Weinfuss

Next game: vs. Las Vegas Raiders (Saturday, 10 p.m. ET on NFL Network)

49ers: The 49ers didn’t have enough healthy starters on defense to give the first unit a full look against the Raiders, but the offense did. The good news? Quarterback Brock Purdy and receiver Ricky Pearsall carried their training camp connection into this one, connecting three times for 42 yards on the opening drive before Purdy & Co. called it a day. The bad news? Right guard Dominick Puni suffered a right knee injury on the field goal to cap that drive and was quickly ruled out. Suffice it to say, the Niners probably won’t use many of their projected Week 1 starters in the exhibition finale against the Chargers next week. — Nick Wagoner

Next game: vs. Los Angeles Chargers (Saturday, 8:30 p.m. ET)

Raiders: The Raiders’ run defense was stout against San Francisco compared with last week’s game in Seattle. In the first half, Las Vegas gave up an average of 2.8 yards on 18 carries. However, Las Vegas struggled to contain San Francisco’s passing attack, which was also a noticeable issue during Thursday’s joint practice.

Las Vegas’ first-team defense allowed 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy to complete 5 of 7 passes for 66 yards on the opening drive, which resulted in a field goal. After defensive end Maxx Crosby helped stop running back Patrick Taylor Jr. for a combined loss of 8 yards on two straight carries, the Raiders gave up a 21-yard reception to wideout Ricky Pearsall on third down, followed by an 11-yard catch from Isaiah Hodgins. Even though safety Jeremy Chinn picked off Mac Jones on the next drive, it was an inconsistent afternoon for the Raiders’ pass defense. — Ryan McFadden

Next game: at Arizona Cardinals (Saturday, 10 p.m. ET, NFL Network)

Texans: In what is likely the last we’ve seen of the Texans’ starting defense in preseason, Houston allowed only one first down through three series. That unit is primed to continue from where it finished in 2024: as a top-10 group in total defense. On the opening play, cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. intercepted Panthers quarterback Bryce Young off a scramble drill. The play was nullified because of a defensive holding call, but Houston just kept overwhelming the Panthers’ starting offense as it held Young to zero completions, and he took a sack. — DJ Bien-Aime

Next game: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers (7 p.m. ET, Thursday, NFL Network)

Panthers: A lot of work needs to be done. It was puzzling that Panthers coach Dave Canales didn’t give quarterback Bryce Young and the starters a third series. Young got only six plays, going 0-for-2 with a sack. He also had an interception negated by defensive holding. Young got a lot of good work in during the joint practice Thursday and looked solid. But after this effort, Canales has to consider giving the starters one more look in Thursday’s preseason finale against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Besides being outscored 7-0, they were outgained 68-2 in yards. Not exactly a confidence booster. — David Newton

Next game: at Detroit Lions (1 p.m. ET, Saturday)

Browns: Dillon Gabriel’s preseason debut was a mixed bag that leaves the Browns with continued questions at quarterback. The third-round pick completed eight of his first nine passes and led scoring drives on three of his five possessions in the first half. Gabriel, though, also threw a pick-six on a poor decision to force a pass and was later credited with a fumble on a botched handoff. Injuries have led to Joe Flacco being the likely starter for Week 1, but who could serve as the backup remains up in the air entering the preseason finale. — Daniel Oyefusi

Next game: vs. Los Angeles Rams (1 p.m. ET, Saturday)

Eagles: Rookie safety Andrew Mukuba made his case for cracking the starting lineup.

The second-round pick out of Texas had an interception return for a touchdown and a fumble recovery in the first half. The pick-six was off rookie QB Dillon Gabriel. Mukuba jumped in front of receiver Diontae Johnson to snag the pass and raced 75 yards down the right side for the score. Generating takeaways is nothing new for Mukuba, who led the SEC with five interceptions in 2024.

Mukuba got off to a hot start this summer before being slowed by a shoulder injury. Now back in action, he has resumed his competition with third-year player Sydney Brown for the starting spot opposite Reed Blankenship. It has been pretty even to this point, but this performance could move the needle in Mukuba’s favor. — Tim McManus

Next game: at New York Jets (7:30 p.m. ET, Friday)

Patriots: Undrafted free agent WR Efton Chism III (Eastern Washington) might have solidified his spot on the roster with six catches for 71 yards and a touchdown in the first half. The TD was a 12-yard catch-and-run on third-and-9 in which he evaded and/or broke tackles from six defenders.

The Patriots project to have Stefon Diggs, Kayshon Boutte and DeMario Douglas as their starting receivers, with Mack Hollins and 2025 third-round pick Kyle Williams also locks as complementary options. So Chism has essentially forced the team’s hand to keep six receivers and maybe even a seventh.

“Everybody is here for a reason, and he’s certainly made the most of his opportunities,” coach Mike Vrabel said at halftime on the WBZ-TV broadcast. “His play strength really shows up.” — Mike Reiss

Next game: at New York Giants (Thursday, 8 p.m. ET, Prime Video)

Vikings: The Vikings sat all of their starters and more than a dozen key backups, having prioritized the two days of joint practices with the Patriots over preseason playing time. That left two personnel groups to monitor: the backup quarterbacks and kick/punt returners.

Presumptive No. 2 quarterback Sam Howell had a shaky outing, completing only one of five passes for 13 yards with an interception. Rookie Max Brosmer played the entire second half and performed well enough, completing 15 of 26 passes for 156 yards, to make the backup competition interesting for the next few weeks.

Meanwhile, the return game offered interesting takeaways as rookie receiver Tai Felton took the first punt and kickoff returns, and rookie receiver Myles Price ripped off an 81-yard kickoff return in the fourth quarter. Felton fair-caught the only punt he saw, and he fumbled at the end of a 21-yard kickoff return. After the game, coach Kevin O’Connell said that the Vikings drafted Felton in part because of his kickoff return skills and that he simply needs more work in the role. There remains less clarity at the punt return position, however. — Kevin Seifert

Next game: at Tennessee Titans (Friday, 8 p.m. ET, CBS)

Packers: Penalties slowed down the Packers early; rookie second-round tackle Anthony Belton had five (FIVE!) by himself in the first half. But at least they got to see what second-year running back MarShawn Lloyd might be able to do after missing most of his rookie year because of injuries and illness. The 2024 third-round pick made the biggest play from scrimmage in the first half with a 33-yard catch on a wheel route from Malik Willis.

With Josh Jacobs and most of the first-stringers sitting, Lloyd started and played 11 snaps. He had six carries for 15 yards and was targeted four times with the one catch. The Packers like Lloyd’s explosiveness as a backup for Jacobs, but he needs to stay healthy. He has already missed time this summer (groin), and he appeared to get shaken up on his catch and did not play another snap. When asked after the game if Lloyd was OK, Packers coach Matt LaFleur said: “We’ll see.” — Rob Demovsky

Next game: vs. Seattle Seahawks (Saturday, 4 p.m. ET, NFL Network)

Colts: QB Anthony Richardson Sr. saw his most extensive preseason action yet after sustaining a dislocated finger in Week 1 against the Baltimore Ravens. He did little to hurt his bid to become the starting quarterback in his ongoing battle with Daniel Jones. Richardson completed 6 of 11 attempts for 73 yards, but his numbers were undermined by penalties. He started 5-of-6 for 64 yards, leading a methodical 90-yard touchdown drive with crisp passes before offensive penalties derailed his next two possessions (including a negated 38-yard completion). Jones started the game and led a field goal drive, completing 7 of 11 attempts for 101 yards. — Stephen Holder

Next game: at Cincinnati Bengals (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET)

Dolphins: This might be a quarterback battle, after all — backup quarterback, that is. Zach Wilson put together a solid start in the Dolphins’ second preseason game, completing 15 of 23 passes for 151 yards and a touchdown. But he looked hesitant to throw at times and missed a couple of would-be touchdowns, including a deep pass to a wide-open Dee Eskridge that he underthrew.

Rookie Quinn Ewers was markedly improved from his debut, completing 11 of 16 passes with a pair of touchdowns to fellow rookie Theo Wease Jr. Miami signed Wilson to be its backup quarterback this season, and the team will likely keep three passers, but Wilson has not run away with the job, and Ewers is steadily improving as he learns this offense. — Marcel Louis-Jacques

Next game: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars (Saturday, 7 p.m. ET, NFL Network)

Lions: Lions RB Sione Vaki made his preseason debut, contributing on offense and special teams. Vaki exited practice early after suffering a hamstring injury July 21, which sidelined him for a period, but he returned to practice this week prior to suiting up against Miami. Vaki displayed his versatility, forcing a fumble on a punt return, which the Dolphins recovered. He also gained 30 yards from five carries during the first half.

Despite playing in a loaded backfield, he could expand his role due to his ability to play multiple roles, Lions coach Dan Campbell has said. Detroit picked Vaki in the fourth round of the 2024 NFL draft out of Utah, and he appeared in 16 games as a rookie. — Eric Woodyard

Next game: vs. Houston Texans (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET)

Friday’s results

Seahawks: Zach Charbonnet continued to show why he’ll have a bigger role in the Seahawks’ backfield this season than you might expect. With Kenneth Walker III out again, Charbonnet carried five times for 45 yards on the opening drive, showing excellent vision and burst on a 15-yard touchdown run.

Walker has missed extensive chunks of time in the spring and summer after missing 11 games last year, and it’s enough to wonder not only about his availability but how crisp he’ll be in a new blocking scheme when he is on the field. The ever-reliable Charbonnet, meanwhile, hasn’t missed a day, and his production has been validating all the glowing praise he gets from teammates and coaches. Between Charbonnet’s strong offseason and Walker’s availability issues, it may be more of an even split in Seattle’s backfield than a typical starter-backup situation. — Brady Henderson

Next game: vs. Green Bay Packers (4 p.m. ET, Saturday, NFL Network)

Chiefs: All four of the Chiefs’ prominent rookies on defense — tackle Omarr Norman-Lott, end Ashton Gillotte, cornerback Nohl Williams and linebacker Jeffrey Bassa — struggled with extending playing time Friday. The Chiefs’ defense gave up huge chunks of rushing yards in the first half as Norman-Lott and Gillotte weren’t able to make much of an impact. Bassa, who was a star in the preseason opener against the Arizona Cardinals, was exploited by the Seahawks’ misdirection plays. Williams showed his physicality again, but he left the game in the third quarter with a concussion. — Nate Taylor

Next game: vs. Chicago Bears (8:20 p.m. ET, Friday)

Titans: Rookie receiver Elic Ayomanor had what he called his worst practice of training camp Tuesday when he went up against the Falcons’ defensive backs. Ayomanor bounced back with a solid practice Wednesday, and he carried that momentum over to game day.

Ayomanor caught two passes for 47 yards and is becoming a problem working the middle of the field. Fellow rookie Gunnar Helm is a playmaker, whether it’s finding holes in zone or running seam routes. Helm went up and grabbed a Brandon Allen pass over two defenders for a 25-yard touchdown, finishing with four receptions for 48 yards.– Turron Davenport

Next game: vs. Minnesota Vikings (8 p.m. ET, Friday)

Falcons: The Falcons’ wide receiver corps is not making things easy for the coaching staff with a little more than a week until cut day. Against the Titans, David Sills V, Chris Blair and Dylan Drummond all had moments. Blair caught a 52-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Easton Stick. Drummond has 12 catches in two preseason games.

Sills, who has been Kirk Cousins’ favorite target in practice, had two catches on the first series Friday and was then removed from the game, potentially indicating that the coaches have seen enough and Sills has a 53-man roster spot already. Casey Washington didn’t suit up Friday, meaning he’s a lock. — Marc Raimondi

Next game: at Dallas Cowboys (8 p.m. ET, Friday)

Sunday’s games

Jacksonville Jaguars at New Orleans Saints, 1 p.m. (NFL Network)

Buffalo Bills at Chicago Bears, 8 p.m. ET

Monday’s game

Cincinnati Bengals at Washington Commanders, 8 p.m. ET (ESPN)

Categories
Science

New gentle materials presses interstellar probe dream nearer

Every material used as a light sail is bound to very restrictive physical requirements. It must be extremely light, cannot melt from the energy used on it and does not have to bend from this pressure, but does not break. Various research groups around the world have worked on materials from which they believe that they will meet these requirements and a new paper from researchers from the University of Pennsylvania describes experimental tests of what they are for the most functional, previously developed light sailing material.

Modern designs of light sailing use lasers to push the sail along the sail instead of simply relying on photons from the next star to do this. This modern design is part of the design of the Breakthrough Starshot initiative to maintain a probe up to 20% of the speed of light and to get to Alpha Centauri. But to have a sail that is able to request the three properties mentioned above.

The researcher's solution is a three -layer material. His “core” consists of Molybdän -Disulfide, which is desirable for its high reflection capacity. In the past, it was difficult to produce large, smooth leaves of this material, but the researchers developed a two -stage process for this. First you spint molybdenum directly on a substrate. Then “Sulferize” the molybdenum by inserting it into a chemical vapor separation at high temperature and inserting hydrogen sulfide gas, which reacts with the molybdenum at an elevated temperature of 750 ° C to generate molybddenum -disulfide.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udykxhq7x78

Fraser discusses the future of the sun sail

There is an aluminum oxide layer on both sides of the molyb dancer, which is estimated for the thermal emission degree. It is designed in such a way that the laser light can pass directly to the molybdenum that it then reflects back, but the aluminum oxide is also designed so that it is strongly emitted in the infrared wavelength. In other words, it would enable the heat transmitted by the laser – so that the sail can cool down.

Another design is the shape of the sail itself. It is designed in such a way that it should be obtained with a hexagonal structure. This enables the structure itself to bend at intended points without causing too much stress to a certain point in the material itself, which can otherwise lead to breaking it.

According to the experimental results that the researchers presented, the new material was much better than any previous material that was presented as a potential light sail, at least in relation to two important metrics. It reflected 50% of the laser light, which was directed towards it, while only about 4% of the energy transmitted by the laser absorbed. This absorption number is much lower than earlier experimental results.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHLM9OHMMSYM

Fraser discusses another light sailing technology with nanogße holes.

While the corrugated design enables more flexibility in the structure, it also adds a certain weight. The general “surface density” of the material is about 0.7 g / m2 and a destination from a breakthrough of star shot of 0.1 g / m2 with an unsolved design of 0.7 g / m2. While it is still the same size, there is much more material science work before a material can get to this level of density.

Overall, this paper represents a further step towards the development of a fully functional light control, which one day could push a probe to our next star system. Admittedly, a lot of other development has to take place so that this mission is a success – sailing material is only a small part of it. Since more and more researchers are committed and tackled the technical challenges in connection with this extraordinary goal, closer humanity becomes an interstellar species.

Learn more:

MF Campbell et al. – Experimental demonstration of corrugated sheet nanolaminate films as reflective light sail

Ut – researchers continue to scale

UT – What should light sails be made from?

Ut – photonic lights are our best shot to reach another star

Categories
Technology

Subscriptions sneak into all the pieces – even the efficiency of your automotive

The subscription model loved by software now crept into cars.

Volkswagen is the youngest car manufacturer who takes over the price structure. The German brand has introduced a monthly subscription fee to access the full performance of some of its ID.3 electric vehicles.

Auto Express discovered That the Volkswagen ID.3 Pro and ProS in Great Britain were listed as a production of 201 PS, but were able to reach 228 hp – if the customers paid extra. For these additional 27 hp, buyers can pay £ 16.50 per month, £ 165 per year or £ 649 for a lifelong subscription that transmits by car when it is resold.

Volkswagen described the add-on as an “optional power supply upgrade”.

TNW City Coworking Space – where your best work happens

A area of work for growth, cooperation and endless networking opportunities in the heart of technology.

“If customers want to have an even sportier driving experience, they now have the opportunity to do this in the course of the vehicle instead of determining with a higher initial purchase price from the start,” said the company in a statement.

Volkswagen is not the first car manufacturer that introduces intended subscription services. European brands particularly like to have the model, since BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Polestar offer all upgrades through monthly fees.

The companies argue that plans offer control, flexibility and ongoing updates. They also offer the car manufacturers the ongoing cash flow, uppseling options after purchase and a valuable source for customer data. Essentially, they transform cars in platforms – replicating a model that has become omnipresent in the software.

Gone are the days of unique payments for apps. Subscribers that were made popular in the early 2010s by Spotify, Netflix and Productivity apps are the dominant model today.

There is even one now Category of tools This canceled undesirable subscriptions. Of course they are available after subscription.

The collective costs of these services can add up to large sums. You can also have forever paid for things that we never own, depending on providers who can increase their prices or remove characteristics from a mood.

Of course, we just couldn't pay and lose access to all these services. Better still, we could trigger a good old -fashioned outcry. It worked for BMW customers, whose anger already led in their cars over monthly fees for heated seats, the company led to scraping the plans.

Alternatively, we could simply wait for the subscription to spread throughout our life until a Tech Lord begins to raise a monthly fee for the air that we breathe. I will vote with my wallet – and heroically comfortably protest from my keyboard.

Categories
Science

Britain’s Web Zero Masochism and the China Mirage – Watts Up With That?

From Tilak’s Substack

It is one of the enduring marvels of political hubris that a small, deindustrialising island nation contributing less than 0.8% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions believes it can “lead the world” into abandoning fossil fuels. This belief – sincerely held by Westminster’s political elites on both the Conservative and Labour benches – has birthed an energy policy that combines moral grandstanding with economic self-harm. The outcome is a textbook case study in how virtue-signalling masquerading as “climate leadership” can hobble an economy while empowering the very geopolitical rivals it purports to outpace.

The latest manifestation of this delusion comes courtesy of Ed Miliband’s “Head of Mission Control for Clean Power by 2030”, Chris Stark. Writing in the Telegraph, Stark urged Britain to emulate China in becoming an “electrostate” – a nation powered entirely by abundant low-carbon electricity – claiming that “we ignore these changes at our peril”. Stark’s premise is as breathtaking in its naivety as it is in its selectivity. China, he tells us, is “laying vast networks of transmission lines, rolling out the world’s biggest fleet of electric vehicles and deploying solar and wind at a scale that dwarfs the rest of the world.”

China’s Net Zero Pledge: Smoke, Mirrors and 2060

It is an attractive picture – if one edits out the inconvenient facts that China remains 60% powered by coal, is permitting two new coal plants a week and is adding annual coal capacity equivalent to the entire UK electricity grid. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), coal consumption hit another new record last year – 8.77 billion metric tons – due to soaring coal use by China and India. In fact, the International Energy Agency reports that China’s coal consumption has ballooned from 1.3 million tonnes in 2000 to an estimated 4.5 billion tonnes today. That is not a typographical error. It is the energy reality.

To the climate faithful, China’s promise of carbon neutrality by 2060 is an audacious “bid to lead the world”. To seasoned China observers, it is an exercise in diplomatic theatre. Veteran China watcher Patricia Adams writing for the Global Warming Policy Foundation reminds us that the Chinese Communist Party’s highest priority is not the UN’s Framework Convention on Climate Change agenda but its own political survival. That survival depends on sustained economic growth – which in turn requires ever-increasing fossil fuel use. Critical pollution issues such as urban smog and ambient air quality also need to be handled to head off domestic disaffection among China’s vast cities. Global climate change “leadership” does not make the list in China’s political priorities though this is not apparent for naïve Sinophiles like Ed Miliband and Chris Stark.

UNFCCC, Article 3 paragraph 1 [1992] states that “The Parties should protect the climate system for the benefit of present and future generations of humankind, on the basis of equity and in accordance with their common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities. Accordingly, the developed country Parties should take the lead in combating climate change and the adverse effects thereof.” From the earliest climate negotiations, Beijing has positioned itself as champion of the “developing country” bloc, thereby exempting itself from binding emission cuts while demanding vast flows of “climate finance” from the West.

The Paris Agreement of 2015, celebrated in Western capitals as a breakthrough, was in practice a grand bargain in which China promised to go emissions neutral by 2060 – a milestone decades into the future with no commitments on how much emissions will increase and at what rate they decline after a peak. In return, the Obama and Biden administrations imposed costly green mandates and subsidies on the US economy while launching an all-out regulatory onslaught on US coal, oil and natural gas.

In 2010, senior official in the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Professor Dr Ottmar Edenhofer confessed that climate policy has almost nothing to do any more with environmental protection, and that the then-upcoming world climate summit in Cancun was actually an economic conference in which the redistribution of the world’s resources was the object to be negotiated over.

In 2015, Christiana Figueres, the-then Executive Secretary of UNFCCC, asserted that the goal of environmental activists was to re-define capitalism itself. “This is the first time in the history of mankind that we are setting ourselves the task of intentionally, within a defined period of time, to change the economic development model that has been reigning for at least 150 years, since the Industrial Revolution,” she said. Of the Paris climate change conference which was to be held that year, she added: “This is probably the most difficult task we have ever given ourselves, which is to intentionally transform the economic development model for the first time in human history.”

Since Paris, China’s greenhouse gas emissions have grown, not fallen. Between 2018 and 2023, it approved more new coal capacity than the rest of the world combined. China’s wind and solar installations, while headline-grabbing, produce a modest share of its power, plagued by curtailment rates that are the “worst in the world”. As Patricia Adams documents, generous subsidies created vast unused capacity, with some curtailed wind output sufficient to power Beijing for a year – if only it could reach the grid.

Britain’s Self-Imposed Energy Straitjacket

In contrast, Britain has gone all in. In 2008, under Labour’s Gordon Brown, Parliament passed a legally binding commitment to cut emissions 80% by 2050. In 2019, after an 88-minute Commons debate, that target became 100% – Net Zero – on the advice of the Climate Change Committee, which based its cost projections for offshore wind on a single high-wind year. Boris Johnson, in full booster mode, declared Britain the “Saudi Arabia of wind”.

What makes the Stark–Miliband “lets emulate China” line so astonishing is that it misreads China’s renewables investments as a sign of ideological commitment, when in fact it is a form of state capitalism at work. Beijing’s solar, wind and electric vehicle build-out is not a crusade against fossil fuels but a calculated strategy to dominate the supply chains of technologies that the West has chosen – politically, not economically – to depend on.

By promoting solar panels, wind turbines and EV batteries to Western markets – and ensuring they are produced with cheap, coal-fired electricity at home – China captures the high-value manufacturing and export markets, while leaving its competitors to grapple with the higher costs of integrating intermittent renewables into their grids. Behind the manufacture of wind, solar and EV components and finished products lay entire globe-encompassing supply chains stretching from mining through to refining of minerals and rare earths, dominated singularly by China.

Ed Miliband visited China in March where he pledged closer cooperation with China on green energy. Yet, five months later, the Government has still not revealed the text of the memorandum he signed. According to the Guardian, the UK Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero Ed Miliband “is hoping to shape a new global axis in favour of climate action along with China and developing countries, to counter Donald Trump’s abandonment of green policies in the US.”

This is what makes Miliband’s starry-eyed talk of a “new global axis” with China to lead on climate so laughable to seasoned observers. China is not joining Britain’s green crusade; it is monetising it. It is perfectly content for the UK and EU to legislate themselves into energy poverty while buying Chinese kit to do it.

The public in Britain is told that high bills are a Putin problem, that we are “hostages to volatile gas markets”, and that more wind farms and solar panels will free us from this volatility. Natural gas prices in Europe have declined to almost where they were before the supply crisis brought on by the Ukraine-Russia war. However, estimated electricity bills for an average household in the UK have increased by 35.5%, from £652 in 2021 to £884 in 2024, according to Ofgem data. While increased gas prices (which include an additional carbon tax paid by power companies that generate electricity using natural gas) played a role in this increase, the work by David Turver and Andrew Montford show that the array of subsidies, systems balancing costs (due to intermittency of renewables) and expanding the grid to support increased reliance on solar and wind farms play a far more important role.

Britain once had a thriving industrial base anchored in affordable, secure energy. Today, energy-intensive manufacturing – steel, chemicals, glass – is being priced out. Citing the Office for National Statistics, the Financial Times reported that output in 2025 in the UK’s energy-intensive industries has fallen by a third since 2021 to reach a 35-year low, reflecting their exposure to the highest electricity prices of developed economies. The production of paper, petrochemicals, basic metals and inorganic products such as cement and ceramics was in 2024 at its lowest level in records stretching back to 1990. The figures underline the challenge facing ministers as they seek to shield British industry from high energy costs that put businesses at a severe disadvantage to competitors in the US and China.

The original Climate Change Act in 2008 included no sort of cost-benefit analysis at all. As Paul Homewood notes, “it was passed almost unanimously through Parliament on the basis that when you are saving the planet, costs do not matter.” It was the same story when Theresa May amended the 2008 Act to set the 2019 Net Zero target.

Meanwhile, the Government ploughs ahead with EV mandates, boiler bans and infrastructure upgrades for an all-electric future, at a cost to the UK economy that may run over £1 trillion. The Treasury’s Net Zero Review blithely assumes that “a successful and orderly transition” will yield lower household costs and “wider health co-benefits”. Yet no serious scenario work appears to account for what happens if global fossil fuel demand remains robust – as every credible forecast says it will – and Britain’s self-imposed constraints simply shift production, and emissions, overseas as it has done over the past two decades of economic decline.

Energy Realism Versus ‘Climate Leadership’: Trump Upends the Globalist Climate Agenda

In the developing world, energy realism prevails not just in China. India’s message to the 2023 COP28 annual climate conference was blunt: “It is very clear that India’s energy needs for development, which are substantial, cannot be deferred… India’s reliance on coal is critical to its energy security in the background of the relative paucity of oil and natural gas of domestic origin.”

African leaders are increasingly vocal about the hypocrisy of Western governments that developed on the back of fossil fuels now denying them the same fossil fuel-based energy ladder. Even Germany, after years of climate posturing, reverted to burning lignite when its energy security crumbled post-Ukraine war after having shut down its nuclear plants post-Fukushima at very short notice.

But what was once a united “collective West” climate worldview – represented in the UN via its specialised agencies such as the IPCC – has shattered. President Trump’s energy team led by Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, is charging full steam ahead, firing off policy and regulatory initiatives at a pace designed to overwhelm the capacity of opponents to respond. It is leaving the administration’s zealous climate adversaries scrambling to oppose the Trumpian counter-revolution.

Under President Trump’s watch, the US has exited the Paris Agreement and ceased financial commitments to the UN climate agenda. Under its “energy dominance” mantra, Trump’s administration is set to continue playing to American strengths in exploiting American coal, oil and natural gas resources and to unleash a “nuclear renaissance”. The Green agenda, championed under the Obama administration and turbocharged by the Biden one, which unleashed the massive Inflation Reduction Act boondoggle for the Democrat Party-favoured renewables sector, is now being dismantled piece by piece.

Britain, meanwhile, clings to “climate leadership”, the idea that moral example will change the world’s energy trajectory. This is the same delusion that informed Barack Obama’s “grand bargain” with Xi Jinping under the Paris Agreement, a deal that tied US hands with costly regulation while asking little of China beyond a vague 2030 peak. If this is leadership, it is leadership of the lead lemming charging over the cliff.

This article was published in The Daily Sceptic https://dailysceptic.org/2025/08/14/the-folly-of-climate-leadership-britains-net-zero-masochism-and-the-china-mirage/

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Entertainment

Yaya Mayweather turns the heads with a brand new dance video

Looks like Yaya Mayweather Shakes the timeline a little differently this Friday!

Relatives: Yikes! Fans speculate yaya Mayweather disinquer NBA Youngboy's marriage after reacting to “Homewrecker” training

Yaya Mayweather dances and is in business

After you recently passed your Instagram story in response to “HomeWrecker” training with your ex, NBA Youngboyand his two -year marriage to Jazlyn's mychelleYaya returned to the Internet in a much better mood. Yaya shared a tikok with an older man who danced to “Gimmie” Chris Brown. She labeled it “How I woke up this morning when I know that I illuminated the Internet last night and I will do it again.”

On Friday, she returned online, this time completely prepared for the tictok that she shared the divided energy. While wearing two braids, SIS was a whole atmosphere in the kitchen! She calmly hit the Harlem shake and then threw it into a circle to shake Ya a ** 'from mystic.

Click here to display the clip.

Social media reacts

People gathered in the shadow room of teenagers to see Yaya's new video! While many called them up in the comments, others joked that this was their way of winning NBA Youngboy back.

Instagram user @only.shari, “I love whatever wrong, with yaya 😂😂😂 ❤️”

Instagram user @Just_kim_iam added, “Love me … 'An Idgaf, what you think' kind of person … 🤣🤣🤣 🤣🤣🤣”

While Instagram user @shesdadevil_ wrote, “I love how our generation still looks like children. Well, some of us. “

Instagram user @kinggceaser wrote, “She knows what she does. She lets NBA Jung boy refresh his memory that is all.”

Instagram user @bigboyvon29 added, “YB makes this call tonight. You will be on good conditions until Sunday”

While Instagram user @Wealth_victory wrote“She should have common sense to leave this man alone. Let him live with his wife”

Instagram user @loveslady wrote, “She says I shake it up and you are crazy, you know that she loves her. She doesn't care what nobody says.”

Instagram user @keekeetheepony added, “I just hate how Delulu is for YB, she is pretty and has money”

While Instagram @tatz_wholtwa wrote, “Youngboy, I understand now 😂😂 well”

Castability overload and Mayweather strength

If Yaya doesn't cut her story, she shares sweet videos of her and NBAS baby. Kentrell Gauden Jr. In the latest clip, she informed a video of her four-year-old and playfully labeled that she had Spider-Man at home. All in the comments were impressed by the surprising force he showed when he climbed the wall.

Relatives: Yaya Mayweather Pens Loving Note for NBA Youngboy before he closed lyrics who claim that she is pregnant (video)

What do you think with co -apartments?

Categories
Health

Unitedhealth Shares Log Greatest Day since 2020 after Buffett's new participation was revealed

Unitedhealth Group Inc. Signpiece on the bottom of the New York Stock Exchange on April 21, 2025.

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty pictures

Stock Diagram -iconstock -Igram -Symbol

Unitedhealth Friday

The shares of Unitedhealth decreased by almost 50% for 2025 to Thursday before Buffett's submission. The largest private health insurer has become the face of public setback against the increasing costs of health care in this country. Unitedhealth is currently facing an investigation by the Ministry of Justice for his Medicare -Billing practices.

In May the company achieved its annual income prospects and the CEO Andrew Witty resigned. Last month, Unitedhealth gave a new outlook from 2025, which was okay in Wall Street and reached the stock.

“The move of Berkshire is a great vote of trust in UNH and could offer a short-term trading soil for most of the MCO room. In view of the investment balance of Berkshire, it could serve as short-term under the ground and rally point for other investors in which the room can certainly invest in the German bank, in a note, in a noticry, in a noticry.

Do not miss these findings from CNBC Pro

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Sport

Liverpool signal Giovanni Leoni: Scouting report, tactical match

  • Sam Tighe

  • What a Lindop

    Close

    What a Lindop

    correspondent

      Beth Lindop in Liverpool is the Liverpool correspondent from ESPN and also covers the WSL and UWCL.

August 15, 2025, 12:31 p.m. one

After Liverpool had strongly invested her attack in the dramatic revision of her attack, she signed her defense line with the 26 million pounds, which was signed by Center Back Giovanni Leoni by the series -a -niebenparm. At the age of only 18, the Italy Youth International still immerses only his toes in the pool of high -ranking football at the highest level, but the red saw enough of 14 league to sanction a quick step.

Leoni started the 2024-25 campaign on the bench, but he had gained a foothold in the first team by Christmas. Then, in the course of the second half of the season, he helped build the defense and convert losses into draws – enough of protecting the Krociati from relegation.

How did Liverpool choose the goal with his Premier League -Switch and what will Leoni bring the defending champion?

How Liverpool Leoni identified and signed

For years, the signing of a promising young central defender has classified highly in Liverpool's list of priorities. Last summer, the Anfield Club was interested in signing Lilles Leny Yoro before finally coming to Manchester United. The Reds were also admirers from Dean Huijsen in Bournemouth, who made £ 50 million to Real Madrid in the early this summer.

In just 17 series -a appearances for Parma last season, Leoni was one of the most exciting young talents of Italian football and fits the profile that the Premier League master was looking for. It is understandably far from the finished article, but Liverpool is confident that the 6-foot 4 defender has all the physical attributes that are necessary to develop into a first-class center, especially with the possibility of learning from his Idol Virgil van Dijk.

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After Parma had made his breakthrough under the manager Cristian Chivu in the second half of the season, Leoni had spoken to Inter Milan after his coach this summer. Liverpool – supported by sports director Richard Hughes' extensive contacts in Italy – was able to quickly make a contract for the line. Sources said that despite the interest of several clubs in his home country and elsewhere in the Premier League, the player was in Anfield in the Premier League.

There were some suggestions that Liverpool could borrow Leoni this season, although this idea was quickly rejected by the club's hierarchy. Although Liverpool is still pursuing a deal for the English international Marc Guéhi, Leoni will join Van Dijk, Ibrahima Konaté and Joe Gomez under the manager of Arne Slot's First Team Center Back Options for the upcoming campaign. – Beth Lindop

What Leoni brings to Liverpool

Leonis sheer size and strength contradicts its tender age. He is still a teenager, but he cuts a hulking figure on the pitch and his shoulders seem to be made of steel. He clearly enjoys physical duels with equally powerful strikers; During the last section of the season, he dominated Juventus' Dusan Vlahovic on the way to a vital 1-0 victory, and Leoni was also brilliant with Romelu Lukaku in a 0-0 draw with Napoli and went for magic sayings and literally followed him around the field.

This ability to cope with strong No. 9 is by far its outstanding feature. He is aggressive on site and strong in the air – his 63% air victory last season was one of the best – and he lives to defend the box, and already showed a good awareness of where crosses and cuts could land.

Leoni is ultimately a prospect for the future, but the young defender showed last season in series A that he can immediately participate in Liverpool's first team. Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

Leoni is versatile in his position and is able to play as a right or left -handed middle in a back of four or anywhere over the line in a third line. When he is stationed in the center of a three-man setup, he escapes, roams and finds someone a duel.

There are coaching points for Liverpool to address. His passport selection in the last season tends to be extremely safe and either briefly played to the next man, back to the goalkeeper or played it in the general direction of a striker. That could have been more of a tactical instructions than a personal deficiency – Parma fought against relegation until the last day, which means that they were really able to commit to the risk structure – but the slot wants possession that the ball was more considering when the ball is at the feet of Leonis.

Leoni never wore the ball up and into space and opened and others the pitch. This could also have been of design, but in view of the fact that he joined an elite ball-dominant team, it is worth mentioning that he classified in series A for ball bearers and only the 6th percentile for progressive procedures in the first (i.e. lowest) percentile. – Sam Tighe

How Leoni will fit in Liverpool

In order to have the chance of success as a center in the Premier League today, they probably have to be big and strong. Take a look at the physical structure of the defensive corps, which Arsenal, Manchester City and Liverpool have gathered, for example. Leoni clearly ticks this box. It will be well suited for the Titanic fight, which is now taking place in set pieces, regardless of the opponent, and a good fit when it comes to facing the influx of really physical strikers that we see in the Premier League.

However, there could be little concern that Leoni should grow to a powerful player, but the type of top end speed and mobility that many of the best center reccruses have. According to gradients, its maximum speed lasted 31.82 km/h last season, only 54th under the back of the series -A -Mitte, which played 900 minutes or more. For a Liverpool comparison, van Dijk has registered 33.79 km/h and Konaté 33.57 km/h.

In view of the fact that Liverpool's full -back is probably extremely attacking fashion that work mobility features and mobility features in the center of the team, they will be more important than ever. The fact that Leoni is hardly fast jumps off the assembly line, and the statistics confirm it. It is also not the fastest over 5 meters and is not particularly smooth or slowing down.

The rest of his game can be easy to fesse through coaching, with better players and in a more expansive system. Take a player from a graded descent battle, and of course you will see that more qualities are in the foreground on the ball. From there, the slot should be able to hand over exactly how long Leoni is required before it can have a positive effect on the senior page. – Tighe