20 Feb 2026

feedSlashdot

NASA Chief Classifies Starliner Flight As 'Type A' Mishap, Says Agency Made Mistakes

NASA has officially classified Boeing Starliner's 2024 crewed flight as a "Type A" mishap, acknowledging serious technical failures and leadership shortcomings that nearly left astronauts unable to safely return. Administrator Jared Isaacman released (PDF) a 311-page internal report citing flawed decision-making and cultural issues, with the next Starliner flight now planned as uncrewed pending major fixes. Ars Technica reports: As part of the announcement, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman sent an agency-wide letter that recognized the shortcomings of both Starliner's developer, Boeing, as well as the space agency itself. Starliner flew under the auspices of NASA's Commercial Crew Program, in which the agency procures astronaut transportation services to the International Space Station. "We are taking ownership of our shortcomings," Isaacman said. "Starliner has design and engineering deficiencies that must be corrected, but the most troubling failure revealed by this investigation is not hardware," Isaacman wrote in his letter to the NASA workforce. "It is decision-making and leadership that, if left unchecked, could create a culture incompatible with human spaceflight." Isaacman said there would be "leadership accountability" as a result of the decisions surrounding the Starliner program, but did not say which actions would be taken.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

20 Feb 2026 7:00am GMT

feedHacker News

Show HN: Fostrom, an IoT Cloud Platform built for developers

Comments

20 Feb 2026 6:20am GMT

Reading the undocumented MEMS accelerometer on Apple Silicon MacBooks via iokit

Comments

20 Feb 2026 5:06am GMT

feedSlashdot

Trump Directs US Government To Prepare Release of Files on Aliens and UFOs

US President Donald Trump says he will direct US agencies, including the defence department, to "begin the process of identifying and releasing" government files on aliens and extraterrestrial life. From a report: Trump made the declaration in a post on Truth Social, after he accused Barack Obama earlier in the day of revealing classified information when the former president said "aliens are real" on a podcast last week. "He's not supposed to be doing that," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One, adding: "He made a big mistake." Asked if he also thinks aliens are real, Trump answered: "Well, I don't know if they're real or not." Former US President Obama told podcast host Brian Tyler Cohen that he thinks aliens are real in an interview released last Saturday. "They're real, but I haven't seen them, and they're not being kept in Area 51," Obama said. "There's no underground facility unless there's this enormous conspiracy and they hid it from the president of the United States."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

20 Feb 2026 5:00am GMT

feedHacker News

Fast KV Compaction via Attention Matching

Comments

20 Feb 2026 4:46am GMT

feedSlashdot

Newborn Chicks Connect Sounds With Shapes Just Like Humans, Study Finds

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Scientific American: Why does "bouba" sound round and "kiki" sound spiky? This intuition that ties certain sounds to shapes is oddly reliable all over the world, and for at least a century, scientists have considered it a clue to the origin of language, theorizing that maybe our ancestors built their first words upon these instinctive associations between sound and meaning. But now a new study adds an unexpected twist: baby chickens make these same sound-shape connections, suggesting that the link to human language may not be so unique. The results, published today in Science, challenge a long-standing theory about the so-called bouba-kiki effect: that it might explain how humans first tethered meaning to sound to create language. Perhaps, the thinking goes, people just naturally agree on certain associations between shapes and sounds because of some innate feature of our brain or our world. But if the barnyard hen also agrees with such associations, you might wonder if we've been pecking at the wrong linguistic seed. Maria Loconsole, a comparative psychologist at the University of Padua in Italy, and her colleagues decided to investigate the bouba-kiki effect in baby chicks because the birds could be tested almost immediately after hatching, before their brain would be influenced by exposure to the world. The researchers placed chicks in front of two panels: one featured a flowerlike shape with gently rounded curves; the other had a spiky blotch reminiscent of a cartoon explosion. They then played recordings of humans saying either "bouba" or "kiki" and observed the birds' behavior. When the chicks heard "bouba," 80 percent of them approached the round shape first and spent an average of more than three minutes exploring it compared with an average of just under one minute spent exploring the spiky shape. The exploration preferences were flipped when the chicks heard "kiki." Because the tests took place within the chicks' carefully supervised first hours of life outside their eggshell, this association between particular sounds and shapes couldn't have been learned from experience. Instead it may be evidence of an innate perceptual bias that goes back way farther in our evolutionary history than previously believed. "We parted with birds on the evolutionary line 300 million years ago," says Aleksandra Cwiek, a linguist at Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toru, Poland, who was not involved in the study. "It's just mind-blowing."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

20 Feb 2026 3:30am GMT

19 Feb 2026

feedArs Technica

Lawsuit: ChatGPT told student he was "meant for greatness"—then came psychosis

"AI Injury Attorneys" target the chatbot design itself.

19 Feb 2026 10:44pm GMT

NASA chief classifies Starliner flight as "Type A" mishap, says agency made mistakes

"The most troubling failure revealed by this investigation is not hardware."

19 Feb 2026 9:59pm GMT

Rubik’s WOWCube adds complexity, possibility by reinventing the puzzle cube

Technology is a double-edged sword in the $399 Rubik's Cube-inspired toy.

19 Feb 2026 9:30pm GMT

feedLinuxiac

Ubuntu Touch 24.04-1.2 and 20.04 OTA-12 Roll Out With VoLTE and Xperia X Fixes

Ubuntu Touch 24.04-1.2 and 20.04 OTA-12 Roll Out With VoLTE and Xperia X Fixes

Ubuntu Touch 24.04-1.2 and 20.04 OTA-12 arrive with VoLTE stability improvements, a fix for Xperia X booting, and multiple bug and security updates.

19 Feb 2026 6:28pm GMT

LibreOffice 25.8.5 Released with 62 Bug Fixes Across Writer, Calc, and Impress

LibreOffice 25.8.5 Released with 62 Bug Fixes Across Writer, Calc, and Impress

The LibreOffice 25.8.5 update delivers 62 fixes improving stability, compatibility, and performance across all core applications.

19 Feb 2026 3:56pm GMT

Oracle Announces New Community Engagement Strategy for MySQL

Oracle Announces New Community Engagement Strategy for MySQL

Oracle outlines a new community engagement strategy for MySQL, promising greater transparency, ecosystem growth, and renewed focus on the Community Edition.

19 Feb 2026 3:20pm GMT