Unprecedented picture of the sun just captured by stellar spacecraft

the sun and its corona

Space scientists have released the sharpest and most detailed picture of the sun and its outer atmosphere ever taken, revealing the jacket of gases enveloping the star, called the corona.

You’ve heard it since you were a kid: Don’t look at the sun unless you want to go blind. The sun’s brightness and radiation can cause retinal burns, heating and cooking the exposed tissue of the eye. Fortunately, there are high-powered telescopes that can do the dirty work: stare directly into the brightest object in the sky.

The Solar Orbiter, a collaborative mission of the European Space Agency and NASA launched in February 2020, snapped the new picture on March 7. The spacecraft shot it from within the orbit of Mercury, about 47 million miles from the sun.

The photo is a mosaic of 25 individual images layered to create one high-resolution spectacle, showcasing the furiously stewing cauldron of the solar system. The sun’s corona reaches nearly 2 million degrees Fahrenheit.

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To our eyes, the corona is usually hidden by the bright light of the sun’s surface, making it difficult to see without special instruments. That’s one reason why the new photo, released this week, is so exceptional.

The orbiter is studying the sun’s magnetic activity and so-called solar wind, gases flowing off the sun that cause “space weather.” Right now, scientists have a limited ability to forecast space weather, which can disrupt power grids, telecommunications, and GPS systems.

The orbiter is also trying to get to the bottom of what causes the corona’s extreme heat. Despite the corona being far away from the sun’s surface, the outer atmosphere is hundreds of times hotter. This defies most physics: Usually temperature drops as you move farther from a heat source.

NASA is also conducting groundbreaking research on the sun with its Parker Solar Probe. Last year, the probe traveled closer to the searing orb than any spacecraft before, dipping into the corona just 6.5 million miles from the sun’s surface. During the April 2021 flyby, Parker reached 90 to 95 percent of the distance from Earth to the star, and it’s expected to get a heck of a lot closer.

It cost ‘The Office’ $45,000 to make this comical music moment happen

A man (Steve Carell as Michael Scott on

Michael Scott loves a good music moment, and his taste isn’t cheap.

On the latest episode of Stitcher’s Office Ladies podcast, former co-stars Jenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey chatted all about the Season 6 episode “Murder.” In case you need an episode refresher, Michael has the Scranton branch play a murder-mystery game to distract them from rumors that Dunder Mifflin is filing for bankruptcy.

During the podcast episode, Fischer and Kinsey chatted about everything from that famous Office finger guns meme to yet another memorable music moment in Michael’s office.

Five minutes into “Murder,” Michael is spiraling alone in his office. He’s blasting music to drown out his bankruptcy fears, and once it’s clear his behavior is stressing out his colleagues, Jim walks in and turns off the tune.

The song Michael’s blasting is the 1998 banger “Lullaby” by Shawn Mullins. And apparently it cost a pretty penny to have Michael wallow to (and eventually sing) the catchy lyrics, “Everything is gonna be all right. Rockabye. Rockabye.”

The Office‘s line producer Randy Cordray told Fischer that the show paid $45,000 just to use that song in the episode.

Honestly? Worth it. The song absolutely made the scene.

The Office Ladies podcast has been a delightful source of financial filming tidbits. In past episodes, Fischer and Kinsey revealed that a song from the “Café Disco” episode of The Office cost $40,000, one of Michael’s jokes from “A Benihana Christmas” cost $60,000, and Jim’s gas station proposal to Pam (the most expensive scene in Office history) cost a whopping $250,000 to pull off. Dang.

Be sure to listen to the full podcast episode to hear more behind-the-scenes stories about filming the episode, “Murder.”

You can stream episodes of The Office on Peacock and follow along with the podcast every week on EarwolfApple Podcasts, or Stitcher.

‘Killing It’ trailer: Craig Robinson’s new comedy about killing snakes for cash

Screenshot from Killing It

The official trailer for upcoming series Killing It has arrived, giving us a better look at Peacock’s comedy about hunting snakes to save the environment. And also for profit. Mostly for profit.

The series follows Craig (The Office‘s Craig Robinson), a homeless, broke security guard who gets refused a $20,000 loan to purchase some land. Fortunately for him, he soon meets Uber driver Jillian (Claudia O’Doherty), an Australian woman who also earns cash by killing invasive Burmese pythons. It just so happens that there’s a $20,000 reward for person who kills the most snakes, prompting Jillian to propose a team-up.

“I’m tough,” she says. “Don’t you hear my rugged Australian accent?”

SEE ALSO:

50 revelations about ‘The Office’ from the ‘Office Ladies’ podcast

Be warned: Aside from the copious amounts of animal death, there is a scene involving a nail gun and a hand that may turn off people sensitive to such imagery. Of course, considering Killing It is created by Brooklyn Nine-Nine co-creator Dan Goor and executive producer Luke Del Tredici, it’s all played for laughs.

Killing It arrives on Peacock April 14.

Feds arrest alleged scammers behind notorious NFT rug pull

Screenshot of the OpenSea Frosties collection.

The rug-puller arrests have begun.

The Department of Justice announced Thursday that law enforcement rounded up two men accused of running not one, but two fraudulent non-fungible token projects. The men, both 20 years old, allegedly sold NFTs with a promised raft of benefits to unsuspecting investors before disappearing with the funds and leaving holders out to dry.

At issue were “Frosties” NFTs, still listed on OpenSea, which the DOJ said Ethan Nguyen and Andre Llacuna pitched as guaranteeing exclusive giveaways and “early access to a metaverse game.” Of course, the two men allegedly “abandoned the Frosties NFT project within hours after selling out of Frosties NFTs, deactivated the Frosties website, and transferred approximately $1.1 million in cryptocurrency proceeds from the scheme[.]”

In late 2021, the blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis reported that rug pulls “have emerged as the go-to scam of the DeFi ecosystem, accounting for 37% of all cryptocurrency scam revenue in 2021” for a total of at least $2.8 billion worth of crypto that year alone.

Nguyen and Llacuna are charged with wire fraud, which has a maximum potential sentence of 20 years in prison.

Notably, the two men supposedly operated under a ream of aliases, including such gems as “Frostie,” “Jakefiftyeight,” “Jobo,” “Joboethan,” “Meltfrost,” and “heyandre.”

And, at least according to law enforcement, Nguyen and Llacuna were queued up to run another rug pull expected to garner around $1.5 million in sales. That project, Embers, was scheduled to mint on March 26.

“Each individual Ember is carefully curated from over 150 traits, along with some incredibly rare 1/1s that have traits that can’t be found from any other Ember,” reads the project’s webpage. “Our vision is to create an amazing project that will shed light, joy, love, and creativity! Burn on, Embers!”

Screenshot of the Embers NFT website.

Burning your bags.
Credit: Screenshot: Embers

Thursday’s arrests make it all the more clear that cryptocurrency history is repeating itself. In 2017, the initial coin offering (ICO) boom drew scores of scammers and celebrity shills who profited off retail investors FOMOing into cryptocurrency. It took some time, but law enforcement and the Securities and Exchange Commission eventually cracked down on those scammers, too.

SEE ALSO:

Sick of NFTs? Insiders insist they’re just getting started.

What we’re seeing now is likely the tip of the Department of Justice’s investigatory iceberg when it comes to NFT scams. Don’t be surprised if Nguyen and Llacuna’s arrests only represent the first of many to come.

Crypto scammers are filling inboxes with fake ‘donate to Ukraine’ emails

Ukraine cryptocurrency email scams

Scammers are continuing to weaponize Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine in order to propel their immoral money-making schemes. There have been a slew of scams ranging from fake charity websites hosted on freshly registered domain names to phishing campaigns looking to steal sensitive information from potential donors to Ukraine.

Now, new research from email security firm Cyren looks into just how cryptocurrency fraudsters are utilizing email spam for their latest Ukraine-related fraud.

According to the report, researchers at Cyren have uncovered more than 100,000 emails per day trying to trick targets into donating to Bitcoin or Ethereum wallets setup by the scammers.

Domain names come into play once again with these email scams, as Cyren discovered a “large number” of these emails were spoofing email addresses using domains that were related to Ukraine in order to look “authentic.” However, a “significant number” of especially brazen scammers just used plain old Gmail addresses when trying to defraud their targets. 

In addition, some scam emails directed targets to recently created websites disguised as official charities benefitting the Ukrainian people. With a newly registered URL, often containing the word “Ukraine,” and their scam page setup, fraudsters will then try to direct potential victims via email to the fake charity website. Once on the site, scammers provide the target with a number of cryptocurrency wallets purporting to belong to organizations fundraising for Ukraine. These digital wallets, in fact, belong to the fraudsters.

Many of these emails used common internet marketing strategies, such as a call-to-action and appeal to a potential victim’s emotions right in the email subject line. “Help Ukraine war victims” and “Help Ukraine stop the war! – humanitarian fund raising” are two examples.

When the official Ukraine government Twitter account decided to post it’s now infamous tweet with its Bitcoin and Ethereum addresses, it unintentionally provided these crypto scammers with a blueprint for their schemes. Many of these scammers use that very @Ukraine tweet as a template – of course, with the Ukraine’s legit Bitcoin and Ethereum wallet addresses swapped out for theirs – within their scam emails and on their websites.

Researchers at Cyren found that more than 50 percent of the emails were routed through the U.S. Other popular apparent email origins include Indonesia, Brazil, India, South Africa, and Colombia. Cyren notes that this doesn’t necessarily mean that the emails originated in these countries, but that the server where the email came from is located in that particular place.

Those looking to donate to help the people affected by the ongoing crisis caused by Russia’s war in Ukraine should look for legitimate organizations and official donation links. They definitely should not donate to any cryptocurrency wallet or website address sent to them via unsolicited emails.

Volvo C40 Recharge is the EV version of that boxy, family-friendly Volvo we all know and love

A blue car on the road with a desert background.

There’s a long list of electric SUVs coming out this year.

As more compact SUVs with electric drivetrains become available the choices will be harder to make. It’s not just Tesla but Hyundai, Kia, Nissan, Fisker, Mazda, Toyota…

That’s where the Volvo C40 Recharge comes in with a new type of car from Volvo — completely electric with no gas equivalent. It’s a car made as an EV first and foremost. But it’s still very much a Volvo from its creative analog features, focus on sustainable materials, Google-based infotainment system, and overall aesthetic — even if it doesn’t have a traditional grille in front (there’s no more engine). It still maintains that boxy look we all know as Volvo and continues to carry the Swedish carmaker’s safety reputation. It’s distinct in its design from any other boxy Volvo mostly because of its sloping backside, but it’s not enough to doubt this is a Volvo SUV.

A car facing forward while in an open glass garage with a yucca plant on the right side.

It looks like a Volvo.
Credit: Volvo

While not a station wagon from Volvo’s glory days, the C40 Recharge is another voluminous car that has a family-friendly vibe. Volvo has leaned into the SUV segment and the C40 Recharge fits right in as a compact, sportier option. It reaches up to 112 mph and with dual motors can handle tougher terrain with all-wheel drive.

Its 226-mile range is not the most competitive battery capacity in an EV (the Tesla Model Y and X SUVs can reach upwards of 300 miles), but it knows its audience. This is for families who need a car to run errands, make it to activities, or go across town for a playdate. More than 200 miles of charge is plenty. Most charging happens at home when not road-tripping. (As much as 80 percent of charging is at home, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.)

A blue car from behind plugged into a charging plug.

You’re likely charging at home.
Credit: Volvo

While driving a Fjord blue C40 Recharge above the hills of the Palm Springs, California desert earlier this month, I proudly regenerated five miles of range coasting from several thousand feet up. On the way up, signs along the side of the road recommended turning off the AC to help the engine power through, and I felt smug in my battery-powered machine that I knew would recapture the lost energy on the way down.

After a whole day driving around Palm Springs, including a drive-by architecture tour to 10 different homes (it was easy after plugging in the locations into Google Maps) and an emergency trip to a Best Buy, I had well over 30 percent battery left.

Many times throughout the day I found myself riding behind or near another Volvo and the C40 Recharge blended right in. It slips in easily as part of the Volvo family, especially as the Swedish company commits to more and more EVs. The charging port, frunk (front trunk where the engine used to sit in gas-powered Volvos), and new grille will soon become expected features in any Volvo.

The C40 Recharge represents the company’s turn toward electric cars, but it looks like the familiar Volvo vibe isn’t going anywhere.

Gun reform activists to politicians: ‘Body bags. That’s what thoughts and prayers get us.’

Four activists stand next to body bags laid out on the National Mall.

Four years ago, hundreds of thousands of people marched in Washington, DC, to protest and mourn following the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, during which 17 people were killed. Millions of other Americans joined in solidarity around the country. The collective moment morphed into a student and youth-led organization, March for Our Lives, which is still fighting for stronger gun reform action from political leaders.

In 2022, March for Our Lives is honoring this anniversary with a bold piece of public protest — 1,100 body bags laid out along the National Mall, spelling out the phrase “thoughts and prayers.” It’s an emotive, physical representation of the organizers’ frustration with their political representatives, who continue to balk at passing legal reform, and a not-at-all subtle call-out to the government: This lack of action is killing people.

Each body bag is meant to represent over 150 deaths since February 2018, which total more than 170,000 people killed by gun violence in the last four years in America, according to the organization. The organizers and participants of Thursday’s demonstration include youth activists, Parkland survivors, and family members. Those on the ground for the demonstration, including youth advisory board members and founding organizers Kelly Choi and Bria Smith, want to make it clear that this is not just an art installation.

“We’re bringing that exposure, that violence we see every day on the streets, that we see in our schools, our churches, and our malls. We are bringing it to politicians who have the luxury to ignore it,” Smith said. “In order to get our politicians to hear us, we have to come down to their streets. They won’t come to our spaces and listen to what we have to say.”

A few of the body bags on the grass.


Credit: March for Our Lives

Body bags laid on the ground spell out "thoughts and prayers."


Credit: March for Our Lives

Choi explained this means calling out the meaningless platitudes shared across social media and beyond with every new shooting: “Those words — just saying those words — have caused so much pain and devastation and death all across the country.” 

In the demonstration’s press release, Daud Mumin, college student and board co-chair of March for Our Lives, said the fault of so many gun violence deaths lies explicitly with Congress. “Body bags. That’s what thoughts and prayers get us because these empty words do not stop bullets,” Mumin wrote. “This crisis is completely preventable if only politicians in Washington who have the power to make change took their jobs seriously and actually valued our lives.”

SEE ALSO:

Activists demand accountability on the anniversary of the Parkland shooting

The current presidential administration has yet to enact large scale gun reform. In his State of the Union address on March 1, President Joe Biden announced an initiative to reduce rates of gun violence, focused on supporting local law enforcement and community violence intervention, and simply called on his fellow legislators to enact life-saving gun reform at the congressional level. Many activists, including those with March for Our Lives, thought that was not enough.

“These politicians have created their own divides. So many young people around me are jaded and don’t want to take part in the political process because these politicians made promises that they still aren’t following through on. They just want to use our images. If they want a photo op today, they’ll have to take a picture of these body bags,” Choi said.

On the February anniversary of the Parkland shooting, March for Our Lives and its partners Change the Ref and Guns Down America launched ShockMarket.org, a tracking and advocacy tool that lets visitors monitor how many gun violence deaths have occurred since Biden took office. According to the site, which includes data from the Gun Violence Archive, there’s already been 52,263 gun deaths since Biden took office. The organization is also working toward midterm season, putting pressure on current leaders and galvanizing young voters. “We’ve had a re-shifting of voter culture,” Choi said. “It might sound corny, but we’re making voting cool. Young people are entering these political spectrums, and in the future they’ll possibly be taking these roles from these leaders.”

The organizers hope that the congressional leaders viewing the 1,100 body bags know that activists are not going to back down, and they urge those watching across the country to get involved themselves. March for Our Lives asks everyone to sign their petition calling for immediate legislation requiring background checks on all firearm sales, which will be sent to U.S. Senator and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who has previously committed himself to commonsense gun reform and authored the original bill requiring background checks. You can read more about the demonstration at marchforourlives.com/thoughtsandprayers.

‘The Batman’ deleted scene gives us more of that creepy cameo

Close up on Robert Pattinson as Batman in

If you haven’t seen The Batman, you might want to stay away from this deleted scene released by Warner Bros — spoilers ahead.

In an interview with Variety after the film’s release, director Matt Reeves talks about a cameo appearance that was originally meant to be bigger, featuring actor Barry Keoghan at Arkham Asylum. The deleted scene shows Keoghan as the Joker in full makeup (something Reeves’ team thought out carefully), telling Robert Pattinson’s Batman, “It’s almost our anniversary, isn’t it?”

The Batman is visiting his cackling Arkham associate in order to understand and hopefully apprehend the masked serial killer murdering high-profile Gotham residents.

“He’s a nobody, wants to be somebody,” the Joker says. “He feels these people have all wronged him.” He goes on to unpack the Riddler’s psychology with surprising accuracy, and to get under Batman’s skin in ways no one else can.

SEE ALSO:

‘The Batman’ director on that surprising ending and where it might lead

  • ‘The Batman’ Review: A crime-thriller suffocated by PG-13 demands

  • ‘The Batman’s politics are deliberately hollow

    The Batman is now in theaters (without this scene).

If your kid isn’t ready for a phone, a smartwatch might be a better fit

Child wearing red fitness tracker

The percentage of kids who have a smartphone grows by the year: As of Oct. 2019, over half of kids have their own phones by age 11 (compared to ages 13 and 14 over the past few years). Kids seem to start begging for their own phone as soon as they can talk (or at least it probably feels that way to parents who are always handing their phone over to provide entertainment). In some ways, your child having a phone on them at all times can alleviate some serious worries about location and communication, and educational TV shows on a tablet are a handy distraction when parents need some peace and quiet.

But though parental control software exists for this exact purpose, a parent’s worries about internet safety, cyberbullying, and screen time might outnumber the reasons for a young child to have a cell phone or tablet.

But just because your kiddo isn’t ready for a phone or iPad doesn’t mean they can’t have any tech. Kid-friendly smartwatches let parents stay in touch with kids while they’re away from home, and most are equipped with GPS to keep tabs on a kid’s whereabouts without having to send a “Where are you?” message. Unlike smartwatches for adults, kids’ smartwatches don’t promote social media sharing and usually don’t have the option to get on the internet at all, so screen time isn’t as much of a concern.

SEE ALSO:

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For kids, the freedom that comes with having their very own connected device — and potentially more leniency when it comes to doing things unsupervised — is pretty priceless. The fact that they can flex their Apple Watch-like bling around their friends is an obvious bonus.

Some kid watches are also great tools for establishing a daily chore, homework, or bedtime routine. Parents can use the app to set daily reminders like “brush teeth for two minutes” or “read for 15 minutes before bedtime,” then sprinkle in some leverage by scheduling a reward after. Kids can cross stuff off the list with the help of a built-in stopwatch or by setting their own alarms. Activities that are typically mundane are suddenly a lot more fun when an animated celebration, badges, or sibling leaderboard competition are involved (and when a parent isn’t doing the nagging). When healthy habits are established early, they can carry over into adulthood (when deep-rooted bad habits are typically harder to kick).

What to look for in a smartwatch for a kid

GPS will be the biggest deciding factor for parents looking into smartwatches specifically to keep track of kids with busy schedules. True smartwatches (like the Verizon Gizmo) act more like a cell phone in the sense that parents have a live tab of a kid’s location and the ability to text and call. Wearables focused more on fitness tracking (like the Fitbit Ace 2) may skip location services altogether, as well as the option for any two-way communication. Don’t feel like messing with an app at all? There are standalone smartwatches that are ready to go without any invested setup.


Letting kids know that you can see their location can foster mutual respect and help with parental boundaries.

Watches focused on physical activity do have their advantages, though. Parents worried about screen time will appreciate the way that smart fitness trackers are not only a less web-based device than a smartphone, but that they actually encourage kids to get up and moving. Kids can check their step count for the day or get a reminder to stand up for a few minutes, but the most fun part is easily the on-screen celebration when a daily activity or sleep goal is met. Settings can be tweaked in the parent app, but having a kid set their own alarms or follow their own activity rules could be a great way to assume some responsibility.

A smartwatch might be replacing the need for a whole phone or tablet, but that doesn’t mean entertainment is completely off the table. Some watches geared toward younger children have games from math and numbers challenges to augmented reality mysteries, and a camera with funny face filters might pop up, too. For such a small screen, the resolution is surprisingly clear and more than enough to keep kids busy in line at the store, in the waiting room, or in the car.

Things will go a lot smoother when your kid is in on the plan. If you do end up opting for a watch with location tracking or GPS boundaries, letting them know that you can see their location can foster mutual respect — even if that respect is unspoken and initially met with opposition.

Here are the best smartwatches for kids in 2022: