Author: admin

  • Inside New Brunswick’s ambituous plan for the world’s densest dark-sky corridor

    Inside New Brunswick’s ambituous plan for the world’s densest dark-sky corridor

    As a crescent moon sank into the forest, I looked high above the cabin behind me to see just how dark it was getting. Staring back at me was the Beehive Cluster, a swarm of stars that’s a surefire sign of dark skies. From here, a west-facing deck deep in the woods of southern New Brunswick, Canada, there was nothing but silence, a touch of frost, and some of the darkest skies in the Americas.

    What brought me here wasn’t just astronomy but astrotourism. “The U.S. has just announced an astrotourism project along U.S. Route 89, from Canada to Mexico,” said Stéphane Picard, an astronomer and astrophotographer at Cliff Valley Astronomy. “It’s impressive, but it stretches a thousand miles. We’ll have six dark-sky sites within 100 miles [160 kilometers] — and dozens of unique astrotourism experiences.”

    Continue Reading

  • The Best Co-op Games for Every Situation

    The Best Co-op Games for Every Situation

    Styled after 1950s cartoons, you might expect Cuphead to be an easy, light-hearted adventure. While it is light-hearted, it’s no walk in the park.

    The game starts with an ill-fated deal with the devil. You play as Cuphead, who inadvertently becomes the devil’s debt collector. Luckily, you can bring along your brother, Mugman, to help take down everyone on the devil’s list in hopes of earning your freedom. While challenging, taking on unique, well-designed boss encounters with a fantastic art style is very fun — especially when you bring a friend.

    Price: $19.99

    Number of players: 1-2

    Platforms: PC, Xbox Series X/S, PlayStation 5 and Nintendo Switch

    Genre: Side-scroller action/adventure, bullet hell, platformer

    Co-op style: Split screen


    Continue Reading

  • Some Tomatoes Are Evolving Backwards in Real Time

    Some Tomatoes Are Evolving Backwards in Real Time

    “Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links.”

    Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:

    • Evolution is often portrayed as stepping toward ever-greater complexity, but the natural world is filled with examples of organisms actually reverting back to a previous evolutionary state.

    • A new study examines this process in progress with tomato plants in Galápagos, finding that plants on the newer, western islands have developed alkaloids similar to eggplant relatives millions of years ago compared to modern tomato plants.

    • It’s possible these plants developed this strategy because the newer islands are barren and less biologically diverse, so the ancient molecule might provide better protection in such a harsh environment.


    The famous ape-to-man illustration, known as The March of Progress, depicts evolution as a one-way street toward evolutionary perfection—but nature isn’t always so simple.

    Many organisms have displayed what appears to be “reverse evolution,” or regression, where ancient attributes of past ancestors seem to reappear down the evolutionary line. Cave fish, for example, will lose eyesight and return to a state similar to a previous ancestor that lacked this visual organ, but the argument remains whether this is reverse evolution or simply the ending of an evolutionary pathway that creates a vestigial organ.

    Of course, complex animals are not the only ones that appear to rewind the evolutionary clock. A new study in Nature Communications, led by scientists at University of California (UC) Riverside, analyzed species of tomato in the Solanaceae family, comparing populations from both eastern and western islands of the Galápagos—that famous Pacific island chain that inspired Charles Darwin’s evolutionary theory nearly 200 years ago.

    The team specifically analyzed the tomato’s alkaloids, a bitter molecule that acts as a kind of pesticide to deter would-be predators and fungi. On the eastern islands, the tomatoes exhibited alkaloids similar to modern tomatoes, but on the western islands—which are geologically younger than the eastern ones—the tomatoes exhibited changes in four amino acids in the enzyme that makes these alkaloid molecules. They found this simple change caused the tomatoes to create alkaloids more similar to eggplant relatives from millions of years ago, seemingly reversing evolution.

    “It’s not something we usually expect, but here it is, happening in real time, on a volcanic island,” UC Riverside’s Adam Jozwiak, lead author of the study, said in a press statement. “Our group has been working hard to characterize the steps involved in alkaloid synthesis, so that we can try and control it.”

    However, this “reverse” wasn’t a spontaneous event. The researchers theorize that the cause of this evolutionary quirk could be traced to the new, western islands themselves. While the eastern islands are millions of years old, the western ones are only hundreds of thousands of years old and are still forming today. This means these islands contain less biological diversity as well as more barren soil. This more ancient landscape may have pushed the tomato to then adopt a more ancient survival strategy.

    “It could be that the ancestral molecule provides better defense in the harsher western conditions,” Jozwiak says. “Some people don’t believe in this, but the genetic and chemical evidence points to a return to an ancestral state. The mechanism is there. It happened.”

    Whether organisms experience “reverse” evolution could largely be chalked up to semantics. With both cave fish and Galápagos tomatoes, evolution did its usual work of making life fit for the conditions at hand. Usually that means improving into ever greater complexity, and at other, less often times, it means reverting back to a golden oldie.

    You Might Also Like

    Continue Reading

  • Elon Musk claims his America party will change US politics. Experts disagree | US news

    Elon Musk claims his America party will change US politics. Experts disagree | US news

    “You want a new political party and you shall have it!” Elon Musk declared in early July.

    The world’s richest man is never one to shy away from grandiose statements, and he continued: “When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy. Today, the America Party is formed to give you back your freedom.”

    The America party, Musk hopes, will be a viable alternative to the Democratic and Republican parties: a political organization that can influence the future of US politics. He has mooted running candidates for two to three Senate seats and up to 10 House districts. Given the tight divide between Republicans and Democrats in Congress, Musk believes capturing the small number of seats “would be enough to serve as the deciding vote on contentious laws”.

    Given there is consistently strong support for an alternative to the Big Two parties, it should be a good idea, right?

    Wrong, said Bernard Tamas, professor of political science at Valdosta State University and author of The Demise and Rebirth of American Third Parties.

    “At this moment in American politics, I see no evidence that you’re going to get another party winning seats in Congress and actually being able to have an impact in the government,” Tamas said.

    “It’s not just the money that Democrats and Republicans have. They have all the resources. They have the money. They have 150 years of structure. They have all the professional politicians, and they have all the consultants, and they have all the Madison Avenue ad companies working for them.”

    The whole concept of the America party seemingly came together in a matter of weeks, following the famous row between Musk and Donald Trump. And as with many ideas born out of spite and fury, certain elements appear to have not been fully thought through. Americaparty.com, for example, is already registered to someone else, who now appears to be trying to sell the domain name for $6.9m. On X, which Musk owns, @AmericaParty was already taken, so the new venture had to opt for @AmericaPartyX.

    It’s not yet clear what the party will stand for, beyond opposition to Republicans’ ballooning of the national debt. Musk has yet to elaborate on the “contentious laws” his politicians would challenge, and there is no party platform or manifesto.

    In any case, third parties have rarely, if ever, been successful in the way Musk envisages. But where they can make a difference is in highlighting issues and pressuring the main two parties to act.

    “In terms of the parties that really had a big impact, they didn’t win seats,” Tamas said. “The job of third parties is disruption. It’s to sting like a bee. It’s to cause pain.”

    Tamas pointed to the Progressive party in Wisconsin and the Minnesota Farmer-Labor party, which managed to win key victories over relief for unemployed constituents and banking reform in the state, as examples of political groups that have managed to inflict such a bee sting. That doesn’t appear to be what Musk is going for, however, despite there being an opportunity for a stinging insect.

    “Here you have the Republican party moving farther and farther to the right, and farther and farther in this kind of Maga direction, with nobody in the Republican party in Congress willing to stand up at all to Trump or this movement,” Tamas said.

    “It’s a perfect opening for a third party. This is what it looks like historically. But you’re not going to replace them. What you do is you attack them for this. You’re trying to pull them back towards the center.

    “This is how the third parties have always succeeded. The idea is you cause them pain, and what they do, if it works, is they shift back towards something that reflects more what the public wants, or deals with the issues that the third party is bringing up.”

    Parties that have pursued the getting-people-elected approach have fared less well than the pain-inflictors. Forward party was founded by Andrew Yang, who had previously run for the Democratic presidential nomination, in 2022, with the slightly call-to-arms style slogan of “Not left. Not right. Forward.” These days the party barely features on the national political landscape, although it does continue to bleat out social media content – a recent 4 July post on Instagram attracted almost 40 likes.

    At its inception, Forward party figures claimed both the Republican and Democratic parties had become too radical, and said their new venture “can’t be pegged to the traditional left-right spectrum because we aren’t built like the existing parties”.

    Somehow, a promise to not really have a firm ideological stance on anything isn’t a very sexy pitch to voters. Among the “elected affiliates” named on Forward’s website are the former mayor of Newberry, Florida, a town of 7,300 people, and a man who “is responsible for sanitation and utilities” in the Connecticut borough of Stonington – population 976 people.

    There is widespread support for a third party. Polls have repeatedly shown that people want a third party. But what that looks like remains to be seen. In Musk’s own survey on social media asking if people wanted him to start a new party, only 65% said yes, and 34% said no, although a poll in early July showed that 14% of voters said they would be very likely to support the party, with 26% somewhat likely.

    There are already issues with the America party becoming a viable third choice. Musk is approaching eccentric political advisers, including Curtis Yarvin, a rightwing tech blogger who has argued American democracy has run its course and the country should instead be run by a dictator-esque CEO.

    A more fundamental problem with the America party is unique to Musk: people really don’t like him. A poll last week found that 60% of Americans have an unfavorable view of Musk, compared with 32% in favor.

    America shall have a third party, Musk declared at the start of his new venture. But does America want this kind of third party, with these kind of aims, run by this kind of man?


    Continue Reading

  • I’ve been using Amazon’s Alexa Plus for one day — here are my first impressions

    I’ve been using Amazon’s Alexa Plus for one day — here are my first impressions

    I’ve waited two years to try out the new Alexa, which was first announced way back in 2023, and this week I finally got access to Alexa Plus. I’ve now spent 24 hours with Amazon’s generative AI-powered voice assistant, and it’s not just an improvement on the original; it’s an entirely new assistant.

    Alexa Plus knows more, can do more, and is easier to interact with because it understands more. I can ramble, pause, sigh, cough, change my request mid-sentence, and it can adapt and respond appropriately. No more, “Sorry, I’m not sure about that.” Miraculous.

    I’m impressed, but I found a few flaws. It’s no secret that Amazon has been struggling to reinvent Alexa; reports of delays and setbacks have plagued the project since it was announced. Amazon’s slow rollout of Alexa Plus is also a clue that confidence isn’t sky-high. While the expansion has recently ramped up (Amazon told me it’s now in “many millions” of homes), the upgraded assistant is still in Early Access. It’s a beta product, but that means it should get better.

    I’ll publish an in-depth hands-on with Alexa Plus after spending a lot more time with it and testing the full list of new features it’s been pushing at me since arriving in my home. But here’s how I spent my first 24 hours with Alexa Plus along with my initial impressions of Alexa’s metamorphosis.

    Echo smart displays get an updated UI when Alexa Plus is activated. Here it is on the Show 21.

    Alexa Plus landed on my Echo devices fairly late in the day, so, after going through some simple setup steps, my first experiment was having it help me cook dinner.

    I asked Alexa for a recipe for salmon tacos, told it I wanted the first one it suggested, and asked it to read me the steps. This is something I’ve done many times before, and while Alexa responded with more detailed suggestions and in a more conversational tone, it mostly felt like business as usual.

    But then, as it was reading me the steps, it displayed everything it was saying in a full-screen, chatbot-style interface on the Show 8 smart display, rather than just showing a static page of recipe steps and ingredients.

    It’s a vast improvement over cooking with the old Alexa

    At first, not having the recipe visible confused me. I couldn’t complete the steps as fast as Alexa was saying them. Then I realized that I didn’t need to keep going back to the screen to scroll through the recipe as I’m used to doing. Instead, I could just ask Alexa to read out the info as I needed it.

    “Which spices do I need for the seasoning?” I said, standing in front of the spice cupboard. “How do I make the sauce?” I asked as I moved around the kitchen, getting the ingredients. Alexa replied with information pulled from the relevant sections. When I was putting the salmon in the air fryer, I asked, “How long do I need to cook the salmon?” Alexa replied with the right time, and I said, “Set a timer for that,” and it did.

    It’s a vast improvement over cooking with the old Alexa, which can’t respond on the fly like that. And which also loves to close the recipe on me in the middle of cooking, and then pretend it had never heard of that recipe when I ask it to show it again.

    But the new experience wasn’t perfect. At one point, I asked how much sour cream I needed. “I apologize, but the exact amount of sour cream for the white sauce isn’t specific in the recipe details I have.” It was right there in the ingredients list. Then it told me that one cup would probably be fine, as if it was guessing, even though that’s how much the recipe said.

    Alexa also lost the recipe once or twice when I hadn’t interacted for a few minutes. A quick, “Alexa, can you show me that salmon taco recipe?” usually brought it back successfully. But once it completely forgot what it was doing and tried to gaslight me by saying we hadn’t had any conversations about salmon tacos today. I guess some things just don’t change.

    Thursday morning coffee routine hiccup

    The next morning, I walked into the kitchen and asked Alexa to make me a coffee. This normally triggers an Alexa Routine I created that turns on the Bosch coffee maker and starts making a coffee grande (Bosch lets you select specific coffee styles in its Alexa skill). This time, Alexa said, “I’m sorry, I can’t actually make coffee for you. Is there something else you’d like me to do instead?”

    This is where the friction between the old Alexa’s command and control structure and the new, generative-AI Alexa’s method of listening to what I say and “deciding” what I want it to do became clear. Alexa couldn’t parse that I wanted it to run a routine from my smart home rather than have it do something for me.

    Amazon isn’t the only company struggling to merge its voice assistant’s old functions with its new generative AI capabilities. This is a big part of why we’ve yet to see a smarter Siri in our HomePods or any major Gemini updates to Google Home beyond its own beta program.

    The new smart home widget and calendar widget.

    The new smart home widget and calendar widget.

    I rephrased, saying, “Alexa, can you run my ‘make me a coffee’ routine?” It asked me which of my two coffee routines I wanted to run. I picked the one I wanted, and this time it ran.

    For my second cup, I tried a different tactic. Instead of using a routine, I just asked it to tap into the capabilities of the connected appliance: “Alexa, can you ask my coffee machine to make me a coffee grande?” It worked.

    This last action is a big change and one that should make using smart home gadgets much easier. When the new Alexa was first announced, then-Alexa chief Dave Limp told me it would be capable of disambiguating controls for smart gadgets; know what they’re capable of and use those tools when you ask for them without you having to do any setup. My first impressions here are promising, but I’ll be doing a lot more testing.

    Breakfast with Wimbledon, score!

    As I sat down with my coffee and granola, I put Alexa’s new conversational skills to the test. I wanted to talk about the most important event in the world right now: Wimbledon. My family is bored to tears by tennis, and it was too early to ping my go-to tennis buddy, Verge features editor Kevin Nguyen. So, I asked Alexa to tell me how the tournament was going.

    After we talked back and forth about the championships, with Alexa giving me the lowdown on who was playing today, who were the favorites, as well as some interesting tidbits such as what would be historic about an Alcaraz win on Sunday, I asked for the score for the match that was currently taking place.

    Disappointingly, I didn’t get the exact set / game breakdown, but it did accurately tell me that the first women’s semi-final was tied at zero sets each. I then asked it to show me the match on YouTube TV, and it launched the app on the Echo Show 21 I was using (which has FireTV software built in). However, I had to tune in to ESPN on my own. Nicely done, Alexa.

    Lunchtime trip planning lies

    We have a family camping trip to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park planned for later this month, so while making lunch, I asked Alexa for some day trip ideas. After a bit of back and forth, I settled on Gatlinburg. It suggested Ripley’s Aquarium, which I had not heard of, and will definitely check out, as well as the Dollywood theme park, which was already on our list.

    A voice in your home confidently telling you something that’s not true hits a little harder than a chatbot lying to you in a text window

    I asked if there were any deals on Dollywood tickets, and Alexa excitedly told me about a great deal where I could get a two-day ticket for just $42 a day. I asked it to help me book those, and it showed me a link, along with some generic tips for buying tickets and how to check out.

    I pulled out my phone to open the chat — you can pick up any chat you start on an Echo device from the Alexa app, and soon on the web — and navigated to the Dollywood website. Once there, I learned that the pricing information Alexa had given me was wrong. I would be paying $122, not $84, for a two-day ticket. Bad Alexa.

    Chatbots giving incorrect information isn’t anything new. And Amazon acknowledges that delivering accurate, real-time information is a “known limitation” for Alexa Plus. But somehow, a voice in your home confidently telling you something that turns out not to be true, hits a little harder than a chatbot lying to you in a text window on your phone or computer, where you can quickly fact-check it with a Google search.

    An easier evening routine

    That afternoon, I decided to try a feature I’ve been excited for: creating a smart home routine by voice. I’ve set up many, many, many routines in the Alexa app over the years, and it’s a fiddly, time-consuming process that often goes wrong. Telling Alexa what I want and having it figure out the details definitely appeals.

    I started with something not too complicated. I told Alexa I wanted to dim the lights in the living room and kitchen to 60 percent, play relaxing music from the Echo Studio, and adjust the thermostat to 76 degrees. I said I wanted this to happen every night at 6PM, but I also wanted to trigger it with my voice at any time.

    After a couple of minutes of back and forth, we ended up with two routines: one that runs every night at 6 and one that I can execute with a voice command whenever I like. (Alexa Routines can only have one trigger each, hence the need for two routines.) Alexa then offered to test the routine, which worked, and it then ran as scheduled. Good Alexa.

    I’m mostly excited about this feature for my family, who rely on me to set things up for them. This should make it easier for them to bend our smart home to their will.

    A few other thoughts from my first day with Alexa Plus

    This just feels like a big waste of screen real estate.

    This just feels like a big waste of screen real estate.

    • The default voice is way too peppy. I immediately switched to one of the other options (there are 8 total), picking “feminine grounded,” which sounds the most like the original Alexa. What can I say, I’m a traditionalist!
    • Controlling multiple smart home devices with one request is the bomb. I told Alexa to turn off the hallway lights, set the thermostat upstairs to 78, and start the vacuum in the kitchen. And it did it all. Excellent Alexa.
    • I really like not having to say Alexa all the time. After the first summoning, I could talk to it without repeating the wake word, making conversations more free-flowing. A blue light on the screen or speaker indicates when it’s still engaged, but I’d like it if this would stay longer; it seems to time out after about 30 seconds.
    • The new smart home widget is great. The Show 21 and 15 have a whole new UI, with redesigned widgets that are cleaner and more useful. The smart home widget, in particular, is a big improvement, being more interactive and customizable. I also really like the redesigned calendar widget, which can go full screen and show day, week, and month layouts. There’s still no option to keep the Show fixed on a full-screen widget, though, and the new UI feels cramped on the Show 8 and 5.
    • There’s too much chatbot. The text transcript of a conversation taking up the whole screen feels clunky and overwhelming, especially on larger screens like the Show 21. A smaller window showing the chat with the rest of the content still visible would be better.

    After one day with Alexa, I’m impressed. Despite some slip-ups, it did make my life better, which is very promising. While there are some rough edges to smooth out, several promised features are still MIA, and I’ve yet to put any of the flashier agentic abilities like booking a plumber, a restaurant, or an Uber — the changes I’ve seen so far are mostly good.

    The big shift for my household will be getting used to more personality in our AI

    However, I am super skeptical about how well it will interact with my smart home. Asking Alexa to run that coffee routine the next morning prompted the worrying response, “I can’t run Routines on demand.” Based on several Reddit threads, it seems some existing skills and APIs aren’t jiving well with the new administration.

    A significant difference between a smart home voice assistant and a Chat-GPT-style chatbot is that the former can take actions in your home. This makes it potentially both more useful and more problematic. If ChatGPT hallucinates that the weather outside is frightful in a text box, it’s not going to do much damage. You can see how an AI with control of my smart thermostat could cause problems if it gets hold of the wrong end of the weather stick.

    The biggest shift for my household with Alexa Plus will be getting used to more personality in our AI. My kids are 14 and 17. They’ve basically grown up with Alexa, and this new version is totally different. My 14-year-old daughter’s first reaction to hearing it was shock. “That’s not nice!” she gasped. “The way it talked back to you.”

    It wasn’t that Alexa was rude; she was objecting to the extra personality it exhibited. She’s firmly of the opinion that machines should not try to act like humans. I’m on the fence, but after spending some more time with Alexa Plus, I might be picking a side. We’ll see.

    Photos by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

    Continue Reading

  • Today’s ‘Quordle’ Hints And Answers For Sunday, July 13

    Today’s ‘Quordle’ Hints And Answers For Sunday, July 13

    Before today’s Quordle hints and answers, here’s where you can find the ones for Saturday’s game:

    ForbesToday’s ‘Quordle’ Hints And Answers For Saturday, July 12

    Hey, folks! Hints and the answers for today’s Quordle words are just ahead.

    How To Play Quordle

    For any newcomers joining us, here’s how to play Quordle: Just start typing in words. You have four five-letter words to guess and nine attempts to find them all. The catch is that you play all four words simultaneously.

    If you get a letter in the right place for any of the four words, it will light up in green. If a word contains a letter from one of your guesses but it’s in the wrong place, it will appear in yellow. You could always check out the practice games before taking on the daily puzzle.

    Here are some hints for today’s Quordle game, followed by the answers:

    What Are Today’s Quordle Hints?

    • Word 1 (top left) hint — type of canoe originally used originally by the Inuit. Also a travel search website
    • Word 2 (top right) hint — criticize something as unnecessary
    • Word 3 (bottom left) hint — adjective for something with a healthy reddish color
    • Word 4 (bottom right) hint — in “Shake It Off,” Taylor Swift accurately declares one of these is gonna hate, hate, hate
    • One word has a pair of repeated letters. Another has two pairs of repeated letters
    • Today’s words start with K, D, R and H

    Play Puzzles & Games on Forbes

    What Are Today’s Quordle Answers?

    Spoiler alert! Don’t scroll any further down the page until you’re ready to find out today’s Quordle answers.

    This is your final warning!

    Today’s words are…

    That’s all there is to it for today’s Quordle clues and answers. Be sure to check my blog for hints and the solution for Monday’s game if you need them. See you then!

    If you’d like to chat about Quordle and New York Times word games such as Wordle, Connections and Strands (and to hang out with a bunch of lovely people), join us over at Discord! Also, subscribe to my newsletter, Pastimes!

    Continue Reading

  • Tanner Usrey Tries Not to Party Too Hard on New ‘These Days’ Album

    Tanner Usrey Tries Not to Party Too Hard on New ‘These Days’ Album

    “People say I need a viral moment,” Tannery Usrey says. “But you know what? That moment happens every time I write a new song, and every time I step onstage. If you chase that viral moment, it’ll eat you to death.”

    For a decade, Usrey has toured relentlessly, with the music and hard-partying appeal to sustain a career playing clubs and dance halls in his native Texas. Then, one of his songs, “The Light,” appeared on Yellowstone in 2022, and Usrey landed a deal with Atlantic, releasing his 2023 debut album, Crossing Lines, in the wake. Suddenly, Usrey felt as though he was on the cusp of a breakthrough and became hellbent on making the most of the opportunity.

    He does that on These Days, his second album, released on Friday. It’s a record that finds him assessing not just his songs, but his entire approach to music and touring — on These Days, Usrey grows up, fast.

    “It’s about heartbreak, as usual, but the overall theme is more mature than what I’ve been writing about,” Usrey tells Rolling Stone. “It’s about counting the little wins, and that’s why I named it These Days. I want to appreciate every little moment, and every day that I make it through, and everybody else makes it through. It’s not all self-destruction anymore, it’s about real stuff.”

    Usrey’s voice was what first endeared him to Texas crowds in the early 2010s, when he played acoustic shows with his older brother, Tim. He can sing with a country twang or hold a long blues note, and do both with his extensive vocal range. For These Days, Usrey wanted to showcase all that, which led him to tap Dave Cobb to produce.

    “I think my voice shows on the record,” Usrey says. “[Cobb is] amazing at capturing voices, and I don’t think I’ve had anything like this yet. I needed to remind everybody else, and myself, ‘Hey, you can sing.’”

    Usrey was raised on country music but eventually found himself drawn to the songwriting of the Texas and Red Dirt scenes, particularly the raw honesty in the lyrics of Cross Canadian Ragweed, Wade Bowen, and the Randy Rogers Band. He internalized that honestly, writing a string of songs that reflects his life experiences or state of mind. These Days is the distillation of years of Usrey refining that approach.

    On the track “Better Weather,” Usrey laments a relationship undone by toxicity, repeating the refrain, “I’m prayin’ for better weather” as though trying to convince himself he’s put the relationship behind him. 

    “I was thinking about the person that got away,” he recalls. “You self-destruct out of a relationship but you still hope that they’re happy. You lie to them, and you tell them, ‘I’m good!’ but you still hope that they get the dream that they wanted.”

    Meanwhile, “Do It to Myself” finds Usrey reckoning with the maturity he was searching for on this album. The song was written while he and Cobb were recording and Usrey caught himself partying just a little too hard.

    “I got the idea while we were in the studio in Savannah,” he says. “Me and [drummer] Chris Powell, the night before, we’d drank about two bottles of tequila, just talking with each other. The next day, Dave says, ‘Let’s go out on a boat!’ I was seeing double. It felt like I was looking through 3-D glasses. And I was like, ‘Man, I guess I fucking do it to myself.’”

    To lean further into personal introspection, Usrey collaborated with songwriters like Aaron Raitiere, Raina Wallace (formerly of the Lowdown Drifters), and Cobb himself — all writers who have embraced a personal worldview in their writing.

    “I’ve been reading the Rick Rubin book The Creative Act,” Usrey says. “I read that you have to take in everything around you. I’ll be sitting at a restaurant, and I’ll overhear somebody talking, and I’ll take that story in. And I’ll take in myself, and what I’m going through, and what my friends and my family are going through.”

    In the end, however, Usrey still sees writing and recording new songs as an opportunity to expand his high-energy live show. He is currently in the midst of a short run with Cody Jinks, winning over some of the “Hippies and Cowboys” singer’s fans in the process. He also has fall dates on the books opening for Ella Langley, his duet partner on 2023’s “Beautiful Lies.”

    But the latter half of 2025 will feature Usrey on his own headlining Bad Love Tour, named after a song on These Days. He’ll hit venues like Bowery Ballroom in New York and the 40 Watt Club in Athens, Georgia, and is also on the bill of ACL Fest in Austin.

    Usrey describes himself as a “road dog” who’d still be playing 200 dates a year if his team would let him, but he says for all the excitement of releasing a new record, the payoff — for him — happens when he’s onstage.

    Trending Stories

    “I just want people to think it’s the best show they’ve been to,” Usrey says. “It sounds cocky, but that’s what I want: ‘Damn, that band’s fucking tight. He can sing.’”

    Josh Crutchmer is a journalist and author whose latest books, Never Say Never and Red Dirt Unplugged are available via Back Lounge Publishing.

    Continue Reading

  • CM Bugti meets HRCP delegation, criticizes ‘distorted narrative’ on Balochistan – ARY News

    1. CM Bugti meets HRCP delegation, criticizes ‘distorted narrative’ on Balochistan  ARY News
    2. FC to be deployed for security at Pat Feeder Canal project in Dera Bugti  Dawn
    3. Identity-based passenger killings reveals India-backed terror agenda: Sarfraz Bugti  Daily Lead Pakistan
    4. HRCP delegation led by Chairperson calls on Governor:  dailyindependent.com.pk
    5. Balochistan Apex Committee to meet today  Dunya News

    Continue Reading

  • Strategy reports Q2 $14.05B unrealized gain on digital assets

    Strategy reports Q2 $14.05B unrealized gain on digital assets

    As bitcoin, ethereum and other cryptocurrencies see major legal, institutional, and technological developments, the financial landscape continues to adapt. Stay up on the crypto news that matters with the “Crypto Currents” weekly from The Fly. Also, join us for your essential daily recap, every day at 2 PM ET on FlyCast radio.

    STRATEGY REPORTS $14.05B UNREALIZED GAIN FOR Q2: In a Monday regulatory filing, Strategy (MSTR) disclosed that the fair value of the company’s bitcoin is reflected within the consolidated balance sheets each reporting period-end. Its unrealized gain on digital assets for the quarter ended June 30 was $14.05B, which will result in a net gain for the quarter ended June 30, partially offset by a related deferred tax expense of $4.04B, the company disclosed. “Upon adopting ASU 2023-08 on January 1, 2025, the company is no longer required to account for its bitcoin under a cost-less-impairment accounting model and it no longer establishes a deferred tax asset related to bitcoin impairment losses. Instead, the company establishes a deferred tax liability if the market value of bitcoin at the reporting date is greater than the average cost basis of its bitcoin holdings at such reporting date, and any subsequent increases or decreases in the market value of bitcoin increase or decrease the deferred tax liability,” the filing stated.

    COINBASE DOUBLE DOWNGRADE: On Thursday, H.C. Wainwright double downgraded Coinbase (COIN) to Sell from Buy with a $300 price target. The firm cited valuation for the downgrade. It still views Coinbase as a “Best of Breed” crypto exchange and remains positive on the sector. However, the stock’s valuation has “outstripped near-term fundamentals” following the 150% rally since the April lows, the analyst said.

    Meanwhile, Barclays raised the firm’s price target on Coinbase to $359 from $202 and kept an Equal Weight rating on the shares. Heading into the Q2 reports for the brokers, asset managers and exchanges, the firm said trading activity was “generally robust” through the quarter. The Federal funds rate remains supportive for net interest income through the rest of the year, the analyst said. Barclays sees the trading environment as “fairly robust.”

    Additionally on Tuesday, KULR Technology Group (KULR) announced it had secured a $20M credit facility with Coinbase Credit. The agreement establishes a multi-draw loan facility initially totaling up to $20M, which will be available to KULR upon execution of the credit facility. The company intends to use the net proceeds to fund its strategic bitcoin accumulation goals.

    Continue Reading

  • All Grow a Garden Pet Treats and Toys (July 2025)

    All Grow a Garden Pet Treats and Toys (July 2025)

    Grow a Garden has released a new game-changing update, and you can now upgrade your adorable pets with mutations. Not only that, the game introduces a new kind of item, exclusive for the pets— toys and treats. So, if you’re curious about how these new items are going to affect your pets in the game, we are here to help. We have compiled a list of all the pet treats in Grow a Garden, complete with their price and uses.

    List of All Grow a Garden Pet Treats

    In Grow a Garden, you can find pet treats and toys either at the Gear Shop or the crafting stations. While crafting them provides some basic boosts for your pets, the Gear Shop currently holds toys and treats that can rapidly boost your pets XP and passives.

    With that in mind, check out the table below to know about every pet treat and toy’s stats:

    1. Small Toy

    The Small Toy looks like a ball and gives the impression that you can use it to play fetch with your pets in Grow a Garden. But instead, you feed them the ball (God knows how) to boost their passive ability. Suppose your pet gives a certain mutation, well, the toy would increase the chances of that mutation being applied to plants.

    The Small Toy can be obtained at the crafting station using a few simple resources, like a common egg, a coconut seed, and a coconut. You also need to spend a million Sheckles to craft it.

    2. Small Treat

    The Small Treat looks like a chewable white bone. It can also be obtained using the crafting station, simply by inputting items like a common egg, a dragon fruit seed, and a blueberry fruit.

    After you submit the items, spend 1 million Sheckles, and the crafting process will begin. And once you feed it to your pet, the treat will give a small amount of XP boost to pets for a short duration. So, getting a few of them will aid in leveling up your pet faster.

    3. Medium Toy

    The Medium Toy has a squishy dumbbell look and is found at the Gear Shop in Grow a Garden. So, no need to gather a bunch of crafting ingredients, and you can simply buy it directly from the shop using Sheckles.

    The Medium Toy grants pets a medium boost in their passive traits. Whether the pet is providing a mutation, boosting the XP of other pets, reducing the egg hatch time, or advancing the cooldown, this toy will help in improving all of them.

    4. Medium Treat

    The Medium Treat looks similar to the small treat bone, but is brown in color. You can purchase this treat from the Gear shop by spending Sheckles or Robux. It will help in boosting the XP gain of your pets for a given duration.

    The new update in Grow a Garden is all about mutating your highest-level pets. So, you should buy and use these medium treats to attain the level threshold and give your pet mutations that increase their value and contributions in your garden.

    5. Levelup Lollipop

    The Levelup Lollipop looks the same as its name suggests, and you can purchase it from the Gear Shop. Note that this is the first Prismatic gear, so it will be a lot more difficult to get your hands on this item. Go through the official stock Discord server to be notified when it arrives.

    The Levelup Lollipop will increase the age of your pets by 1 level. Since it’s meaningless to use the Lollipop on young pets, make sure that you save this item and use it only on high-level pets.

    So, which item do you prefer the most to level up pets in Grow a Garden and why? Let us know in the comments below.

    Bipradeep Biswas

    A Computer Science graduate with a passion for gaming, currently specializing in Minecraft and popular Roblox games.


    Continue Reading