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  • Diogo Jota: Liverpool confirm number 20 shirt will be retired to honour forward | Football News

    Diogo Jota: Liverpool confirm number 20 shirt will be retired to honour forward | Football News

    Liverpool have confirmed that the number 20 shirt will be permanently retired in honour of Diogo Jota.

    The tribute marks the first time Liverpool have retired a player’s number throughout their 133-year history, as they honour the lives of Jota and his brother, Andre Silva, who were killed in a car crash in Spain on July 3.

    The retirement applies to the club at all levels, including men’s first team, women’s team and all academy sides.

    Liverpool came to the decision after consulting with Jota’s wife, Rute, and other members of his family.

    A statement from the club read: “The move is recognition of not only the immeasurable contribution our lad from Portugal made to the Reds’ on-pitch successes over the last five years, but also the profound personal impact he had on his teammates, colleagues and supporters and the everlasting connections he built with them.”

    Club CEO Michael Edwards also spoke on the matter, saying: “As a club, we were all acutely aware of the sentiment of our supporters – and we felt exactly the same way.

    “It was vitally important to us to involve Diogo’s wife, Rute, and his family in the decision and to ensure they were the first to know of our intention.

    “I believe this is the first time in Liverpool Football Club’s history that such an honour has been bestowed upon an individual. Therefore, we can say this is a unique tribute to a uniquely wonderful person.

    “By retiring this squad number, we are making it eternal – and therefore never to be forgotten.

    “Diogo joined us in 2020, he won us number 20, and he wore – with honour, distinction and affection – the number 20.

    “As far as Liverpool Football Club is concerned, he will be forever our number 20.”

    The Reds have also announced plans to pay tribute to them during Sunday’s pre-season friendly against Preston.

    There will be a rendition of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ prior to the 3pm kick-off and Preston will lay a wreath alongside the away supporters, Liverpool said.

    A minute’s silence will then be observed, with digital tributes displayed on the stadium big screen and on pitchside LED boards.

    Players from both teams will wear black armbands.

    The pre-match programme will also feature written tributes to Jota and Silva.

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  • Apple adds Mac Pro, iPads, and more to its vintage and obsolete products list

    Apple adds Mac Pro, iPads, and more to its vintage and obsolete products list

    Once again, Apple has updated its list of vintage and obsolete products. This update include the iconic, yet infamous “trash can” Mac Pro from 2013.

    The 2013 Mac Pro was a complete design departure from its predecessors (and successors) with its cylindrical design that looked like one of those sleek mini trash cans. It was praised at the time for its performance and cooling system due to its unique design. But the shape of the 2013 Mac Pro was also its downfall, since there was so space for Apple users to upgrade or replace its hardware. When Apple introduced a new Mac Pro in 2019 to replace the 2013 model, it was decidedly rectangular in shape and also drew comparisons to a cheese grater.

    SEE ALSO:

    175+ best Prime Day deals: We found last-chance offers on Apple, Yeti, and Samsung — score over 60% off

    Apple discontinued the 2013 Mac Pro in 2019, and has now officially designated it a vintage Apple product, according to MacRumors. What that technically means is Apple stopped selling them more than five years ago. For users with vintage devices, Apple can no longer guarantee parts or support and the devices may not support new system updates.

    Mashable Light Speed

    Obsolete products are ones that were discontinued seven years ago. Devices relegated to this list stop receiving all hardware support.

    What other products did Apple move to the vintage and obsolete pile recently? Here’s the list:


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    Apple devices added to the vintage list

    Apple devices added to the obsolete list

    • AirPort Express (2nd generation)

    • AirPort Time Capsules, 2TB and 3TB versions

    • AirPort Extreme 802.11ac

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  • Novak Djokovic’s Grand Slam title drought continues after Wimbledon semifinal loss

    Novak Djokovic’s Grand Slam title drought continues after Wimbledon semifinal loss

    When Novak Djokovic won his seventh men’s singles championship at Wimbledon in 2022 — the fourth consecutive year he’d won the iconic grass-court tournament — it appeared only a matter of time before he would win again and match Roger Federer for the most titles in the tournament’s history.

    Instead, for three consecutive years Djokovic, the Serbian superstar who owns the most Grand Slam titles in tennis history, has been denied that place atop Wimbledon’s all-time leaderboard as his grip on Grand Slam tournaments has loosened.

    Following losses in the 2023 and 2024 men’s singles final at Wimbledon to Spaniard star Carlos Alcaraz, Djokovic on Friday lost a semifinal to top-seeded Janik Sinner in straight sets, 6-3, 6-3, 6-4. It will mark the first time since 2017 that the men’s final will not include Djokovic, who had played for the Wimbledon title in 10 of the previous 12 years.

    It followed what Djokovic called a “nasty fall” he suffered during the fourth set of his quarterfinal victory Wednesday. Djokovic reportedly canceled a practice session Thursday.

    “I’m hoping the next 24-48 hours that the severity of what was happening on the court and what happened is not too bad, that I’ll be able to play at my best and free of pain in two days,” Djokovic said after finishing out his quarterfinal victory.

    The loss in Friday’s semifinal to Sinner not only kept him short of Federer’s mark at Wimbledon, it also extended his title drought across the four most prestigious tournaments in tennis, the Grand Slams. Since his last Slam victory at the 2023 U.S. Open, Djokovic has gone seven Slams without a win — his longest streak since 2016-18. If Djokovic does not win the season-ending Slam, the U.S. Open, he will have gone two calendar years without winning a Slam for the first time since 2009-10.

    Sinner will face Alcaraz in Sunday’s men’s singles final. Alcaraz will attempt to win his third consecutive Wimbledon final. It is also a rematch of this year’s French Open final, the first time since 2008 that the men’s French and Wimbledon finals have repeated. Their matchup represents a generational shift in the sport. Federer won his first Slam in 2003, with Rafael Nadal earning his first in 2005, and Djokovic joining them in 2008. Ever since, they had formed a “Big Three” that had dominated the sport. Yet while Federer and Nadal have both retired, and Djokovic is 38, Alcaraz is just 22 and Sinner 23.

    Djokovic still owns a place among elite company in Wimbledon history. His semifinal appearance was his 14th, a record for the tournament. He also joins Federer, Pete Sampras and William Renshaw as the only men to win the singles title seven times. Renshaw dominated the tournament’s 19th century era, before professionals were allowed to compete alongside amateurs, while Sampras collected his seven in an eight-year span, ending in 2000.

    Djokovic also already owns the most Grand Slam tournament victories all-time, with 24, two more than Rafael Nadal and four more than Federer.

    It is one of numerous accolades that have been earned by Djokovic, including the most weeks spent ranked as the world’s No. 1 player, the oldest player to hold the No. 1 ranking, and the only player to win all four Grand Slam events at least three times.

    All, and many more superlatives, belong to Djokovic. One of the few eluding him is at Wimbledon. Still.

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  • Finnish but not finished: History-makers from the north chase new heights

    Finnish but not finished: History-makers from the north chase new heights

    LA PALMA (Spain) – Finland is set for their best-ever finish at a FIBA U18 Women’s EuroBasket, and it’s no more than they deserve.

    Their growth into the youth elite has been coming, part of it coming from last year’s victorious FIBA U16 Women’s EuroBasket squad, who defied the odds in Miskolc, Hungary, to beat France for their first ever trophy in any age group.

    And this year’s U18 squad has steamrollered their way to the Semi-Finals where they meet Belgium for a chance to reach their first ever Final at this age group.

    In Finnish basketball, coaches and players have been doing a good job over the years, and now it’s showing.

    Anna Gardziella

    “Last year’s title was huge. It was something that I could only dream of. We showed that Finland can also manage to win games and competitions,” said Finland’s Anna Gardziella, one of the five players from the U16 success now making a name for themselves in this tournament.

    “Personally, winning another European title at the U18 level would mean everything. It would show that last year wasn’t just a one-time thing. For me, it would be a proud moment to share with my teammates, coaches, and everyone back home supporting us. But right now, the focus is just on giving everything we’ve got in the Semi-Finals.”

    Proving that their success back then was no fluke, the five players have joined the U18 squad and are now guaranteed a top-four spot, 12 months on in La Palma, Spain, already eclipsing their previous best finish of seventh, most recently achieved in 2022.

    “I think that in Finnish basketball, coaches and players have been doing a good job over the years, and now it’s showing,” Gardziella explained.

    “About our team, we have a team that wants to win every game we play. We know how good we can be if we play together and do the things we’re good at.

    “We’re taking it one game at a time and really focusing on what we can control. Of course, there’s a little pressure, but we trust each other and what we are doing.”

    Top Players in La Palma

    VOTE: Who will be the MVP of the FIBA U18 Women’s EuroBasket 2025?

    From Finland’s newly-found golden generation of junior stars, Gardziella leads the team with 12.2 points a game and averages 13.4 in efficiency.

    Gardziella also averages 4.4 rebounds and 1.2 steals per contest, leading the new crop that also features Mona Pasanen, Jessi Nenonen, Alina Nikkila and Aluel Machol from last year’s U16 squad.

    However, the praise can’t solely belong to the players who have come up from the U16 level. Those who have stayed on from last year’s U18 team that finished a highly respectable eighth in Matosinhos, Portugal, have more than played their part.

    Five players that won last year’s FIBA U16 Women’s EuroBasket have joined Finland’s U18 squad and made an impact

    Look no further than Nicole Ogun, who averaged 10 points and 8.1 rebounds on 41 percent shooting last summer. She has formed a terrific duo with Gardziella that has been both breathtaking to the fans watching and devastating to the opposition.

    Ogun has maintained her consistency, averaging 9.0 points and 6.6 rebounds with an efficiency rating of 13.2.

    Every team needs an unsung hero, one who quietly gets on with the task at hand, has an unselfish presence, and is willing to do the work that doesn’t show on the stats. Erika Mace has been that player.

    Keen to get her teammates involved, Mace has 22 assists overall in the tournament, leading the Finns with 4.4 dimes, along with 8.2 points, 5 rebounds, and 3 steals per game. However, her work ethic and overall maturity at 18 are beyond her years.

    From lifting the U16 crown to a top four finish at this year’s FIBA U18 Women’s EuroBasket, there is no limit to the potential for this Finnish team, with thoughts possibly springing to the next Women’s EuroBasket in 2027, where they will be one of the co-hosts with Belgium, Lithuania, and Sweden.

    Could we see a chunk of this talented group be unleashed on the senior stage? Out of the U18 stars competing in Spain, only guard Tiia Talonen has senior experience, having played two games at the FIBA Women’s EuroBasket 2025 Qualifiers.

    “It has crossed my mind,” Gardziella said. “It’s a big thing for Finland to host FIBA Women’s EuroBasket. Right now, my focus is on the present and doing my best at the U18s. It pushes me to keep working, improving, and staying ready for that opportunity if it comes.”

    Can this group propel Finland to the levels that we have seen on the senior stage by France, Spain and more recently, Belgium?

    Either way, the future is certainly bright for women’s basketball in Finland.

    FIBA

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  • Newcastle transfers: Anthony Elanga joins in £55 million deal

    Newcastle transfers: Anthony Elanga joins in £55 million deal

    Newcastle United have completed the signing of forward Anthony Elanga from Nottingham Forest, the clubs announced Friday.

    A source told ESPN earlier this week that a deal had been agreed between Newcastle and Forest worth £55 million ($74m).

    The Sweden international leaves the City Ground after two seasons at the club.

    “I had an amazing two years at Nottingham Forest, they really helped me to become the player I am today, but I’m really happy to be here now,” Elango said in Newcastle’s statement.

    “The club won a trophy last season and are building something unique, something special that I really want to be part of.”

    After narrowly missing out on Champions League qualification last year, Elanga will play in Europe’s top competition with Newcastle, becoming their first major signing of the summer window.

    He made 82 appearances for Forest, scoring 11 times and registering 21 assists.

    “I’m delighted to welcome Anthony to Newcastle United,” Newcastle head coach Eddie Howe said. “He has been a key target for us so I’m delighted to secure him at this early part of pre-season.”

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  • Simulation-based pipeline tailors training data for dexterous robots | MIT News

    Simulation-based pipeline tailors training data for dexterous robots | MIT News

    When ChatGPT or Gemini give what seems to be an expert response to your burning questions, you may not realize how much information it relies on to give that reply. Like other popular generative artificial intelligence (AI) models, these chatbots rely on backbone systems called foundation models that train on billions, or even trillions, of data points.

    In a similar vein, engineers are hoping to build foundation models that train a range of robots on new skills like picking up, moving, and putting down objects in places like homes and factories. The problem is that it’s difficult to collect and transfer instructional data across robotic systems. You could teach your system by teleoperating the hardware step-by-step using technology like virtual reality (VR), but that can be time-consuming. Training on videos from the internet is less instructive, since the clips don’t provide a step-by-step, specialized task walk-through for particular robots.

    A simulation-driven approach called “PhysicsGen” from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and the Robotics and AI Institute customizes robot training data to help robots find the most efficient movements for a task. The system can multiply a few dozen VR demonstrations into nearly 3,000 simulations per machine. These high-quality instructions are then mapped to the precise configurations of mechanical companions like robotic arms and hands. 

    PhysicsGen creates data that generalize to specific robots and condition via a three-step process. First, a VR headset tracks how humans manipulate objects like blocks using their hands. These interactions are mapped in a 3D physics simulator at the same time, visualizing the key points of our hands as small spheres that mirror our gestures. For example, if you flipped a toy over, you’d see 3D shapes representing different parts of your hands rotating a virtual version of that object.

    The pipeline then remaps these points to a 3D model of the setup of a specific machine (like a robotic arm), moving them to the precise “joints” where a system twists and turns. Finally, PhysicsGen uses trajectory optimization — essentially simulating the most efficient motions to complete a task — so the robot knows the best ways to do things like repositioning a box.

    Each simulation is a detailed training data point that walks a robot through potential ways to handle objects. When implemented into a policy (or the action plan that the robot follows), the machine has a variety of ways to approach a task, and can try out different motions if one doesn’t work.

    “We’re creating robot-specific data without needing humans to re-record specialized demonstrations for each machine,” says Lujie Yang, an MIT PhD student in electrical engineering and computer science and CSAIL affiliate who is the lead author of a new paper introducing the project. “We’re scaling up the data in an autonomous and efficient way, making task instructions useful to a wider range of machines.”

    Generating so many instructional trajectories for robots could eventually help engineers build a massive dataset to guide machines like robotic arms and dexterous hands. For example, the pipeline might help two robotic arms collaborate on picking up warehouse items and placing them in the right boxes for deliveries. The system may also guide two robots to work together in a household on tasks like putting away cups.

    PhysicsGen’s potential also extends to converting data designed for older robots or different environments into useful instructions for new machines. “Despite being collected for a specific type of robot, we can revive these prior datasets to make them more generally useful,” adds Yang.

    Addition by multiplication

    PhysicsGen turned just 24 human demonstrations into thousands of simulated ones, helping both digital and real-world robots reorient objects.

    Yang and her colleagues first tested their pipeline in a virtual experiment where a floating robotic hand needed to rotate a block into a target position. The digital robot executed the task at a rate of 81 percent accuracy by training on PhysicGen’s massive dataset, a 60 percent improvement from a baseline that only learned from human demonstrations.

    The researchers also found that PhysicsGen could improve how virtual robotic arms collaborate to manipulate objects. Their system created extra training data that helped two pairs of robots successfully accomplish tasks as much as 30 percent more often than a purely human-taught baseline.

    In an experiment with a pair of real-world robotic arms, the researchers observed similar improvements as the machines teamed up to flip a large box into its designated position. When the robots deviated from the intended trajectory or mishandled the object, they were able to recover mid-task by referencing alternative trajectories from their library of instructional data.

    Senior author Russ Tedrake, who is the Toyota Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Aeronautics and Astronautics, and Mechanical Engineering at MIT, adds that this imitation-guided data generation technique combines the strengths of human demonstration with the power of robot motion planning algorithms.

    “Even a single demonstration from a human can make the motion planning problem much easier,” says Tedrake, who is also a senior vice president of large behavior models at the Toyota Research Institute and CSAIL principal investigator. “In the future, perhaps the foundation models will be able to provide this information, and this type of data generation technique will provide a type of post-training recipe for that model.”

    The future of PhysicsGen

    Soon, PhysicsGen may be extended to a new frontier: diversifying the tasks a machine can execute.

    “We’d like to use PhysicsGen to teach a robot to pour water when it’s only been trained to put away dishes, for example,” says Yang. “Our pipeline doesn’t just generate dynamically feasible motions for familiar tasks; it also has the potential of creating a diverse library of physical interactions that we believe can serve as building blocks for accomplishing entirely new tasks a human hasn’t demonstrated.”

    Creating lots of widely applicable training data may eventually help build a foundation model for robots, though MIT researchers caution that this is a somewhat distant goal. The CSAIL-led team is investigating how PhysicsGen can harness vast, unstructured resources — like internet videos — as seeds for simulation. The goal: transform everyday visual content into rich, robot-ready data that could teach machines to perform tasks no one explicitly showed them.

    Yang and her colleagues also aim to make PhysicsGen even more useful for robots with diverse shapes and configurations in the future. To make that happen, they plan to leverage datasets with demonstrations of real robots, capturing how robotic joints move instead of human ones.

    The researchers also plan to incorporate reinforcement learning, where an AI system learns by trial and error, to make PhysicsGen expand its dataset beyond human-provided examples. They may augment their pipeline with advanced perception techniques to help a robot perceive and interpret their environment visually, allowing the machine to analyze and adapt to the complexities of the physical world.

    For now, PhysicsGen shows how AI can help us teach different robots to manipulate objects within the same category, particularly rigid ones. The pipeline may soon help robots find the best ways to handle soft items (like fruits) and deformable ones (like clay), but those interactions aren’t easy to simulate yet.

    Yang and Tedrake wrote the paper with two CSAIL colleagues: co-lead author and MIT PhD student Hyung Ju “Terry” Suh SM ’22 and MIT PhD student Bernhard Paus Græsdal. Robotics and AI Institute researchers Tong Zhao ’22, MEng ’23, Tarik Kelestemur, Jiuguang Wang, and Tao Pang PhD ’23 are also authors. Their work was supported by the Robotics and AI Institute and Amazon.

    The researchers recently presented their work at the Robotics: Science and Systems conference.

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  • Meet the history-making captain who made Poland dream at EURO 2025

    Meet the history-making captain who made Poland dream at EURO 2025

    From farm to phenomenon: Pajor’s record-breaking season

    Pajor came into EURO 2025 on the back of the most emphatic campaign of her career to date – and one etched in the FC Barcelona history books.

    The prolific striker registered 43 goals in 46 games across all competitions to help the Spanish giants to a domestic double.

    In the league alone, Pajor contributed to 35 goals —scoring 25 and with 10 assists— in the best recorded return of her career, and the best individual campaign for any player in Barcelona history.

    Sometimes, just sometimes, the 28-year-old can’t believe she plays for the Catalan club.

    It presented a new challenge for the forward, one she has seized with both hands.

    “Barcelona play so well with the ball, when I speak with Alexia [Putellas] and Aitana [Bonmatí] in training they tell me that when they see the ball coming, they don’t think where they want to play, they make that decision before they even received the ball,” Pajor said in an interview with the Guardian.

    “Once they have the ball, they know exactly what they want to do, and that benefits everyone; Barcelona players learn early.

    “Alexia learned that when she was 10, and she doesn’t have to think, it’s innate for her. Our rivals usually play really low against us, but in one way I have more space because my team moves the ball quicker and I can be in on goal after just one touch.”

    The move to Spain has seen her develop even further as a player, which is benefiting club and national teammates.

    Pajor hopes this will eventually translate into Polish football, both internationally and domestically, with things already on the rise.

    With their qualification to EURO 2025, anything is possible.

    “The senior team is going to the Euros and the under-17 side played in the World Cup for the first time,” she continued.

    “This kind of success will help improve football at home; more and more girls are playing the game, which means we will get more academies and more teams.

    “I want football in Poland to be professional like here in Spain or in Germany in two to three years… we have potential and I think we will only get better.”

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  • ‘High probability’ Trump and Xi will meet this year, Rubio says

    ‘High probability’ Trump and Xi will meet this year, Rubio says



    CNN
     — 

    There is a “high probability” that US President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping will meet this year, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Friday.

    “The odds are high,” Rubio told journalists gathered in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Friday. “I think both sides want to see it happen.”

    Rubio said he was unable to provide a date for any potential meeting but said there was a “strong desire on both sides to do it.” He added that it’s necessary to build the “right atmosphere” ahead of any such meeting in order to enable concrete deliverables.

    The US top diplomat met his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in Kuala Lumpur on Friday for the first in-person meeting between the two foreign ministers, which comes as the US and China navigate trade frictions – and compete for influence in Asia.

    The roughly hour-long meeting was “very constructive” and “positive,” Rubio said on Friday evening local time.

    “We’re two big, powerful countries, and there are always going to be issues that we disagree on,” Rubio said, adding “I thought it was (a) very constructive, positive meeting, and (there’s) a lot of work to do.”

    Both Rubio and Wang were attending regional meetings in the Malaysian capital this week, where foreign ministers from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, gathered alongside regional partners including Russia, Japan, South Korea and Australia.

    The US and China have endured fraught trade relations since Trump’s return to office earlier this year, escalating and then de-escalating a tit-for-tat tariff spat sparked by the US president’s global trade war and sparring over export controls.

    Tensions were eased as the two sides agreed to a trade framework during talks between negotiators in London last month, and US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said earlier this week he would meet with Chinese counterparts to continue discussions in the coming weeks. A 90-day pause negotiated between the two sides in May was set to expire in August.

    Chinese officials have decried the US tariffs and threatened to retaliate if the US reaches deals with other trade partners at the expense of Chinese interests – a sign that Beijing sees the US as using agreements with other countries as a means to squeeze its economy.

    But both sides signaled that the meeting between Wang and Rubio was a productive one with a positive tone – and a step toward expanding cooperation, rather than frictions, between them.

    On Friday, Rubio said his meeting with Wang gave the two sides an opportunity to identify areas to work together, but he did not detail areas of possible cooperation.

    “That was our message – that (we have) the opportunity here to achieve some strategic stability and identify areas where we can cooperate together on and build better communications and a working trust,” he said.

    The Chinese foreign ministry called Friday’s meeting “positive, pragmatic and constructive” in a statement published after Rubio spoke to the media.

    Both sides “agreed to strengthen diplomatic channels and communication and dialogue at all levels in all fields,” the statement said. It also said Wang reiterated calls for Washington to view China with an “objective, rational and pragmatic attitude” and treat it in an “equal” manner.

    Trump’s trade war has added a layer of complexity to Rubio’s first trip to Asia as Washington’s top diplomat. The US in recent days sent letters to a number of countries announcing the tariff rates they would face in less than a month unless they strike trade deals with the US.

    Eight of the 10 countries in ASEAN – along with South Korea and Japan – will face tariffs from the US on August 1, if the implementation deadline holds.

    That’s created an opening for Chinese Foreign Minister Wang, who has looked to project a message that China remains a stable economic partner for the region. In meetings with ASEAN counterparts Thursday, Wang said China “always regards” ASEAN as a “priority” for China’s regional diplomacy.

    US government officials have positioned Rubio’s trip as part of an effort to show that Washington remains committed to the region, where China is a key economic partner but also has friction with nations like the Philippines over its aggression in the South China Sea.

    “In his first trip to Asia as secretary of state, Secretary Rubio is focused on reaffirming the United States’ commitment to advancing a free, open and secure Indo-Pacific region,” Tammy Bruce, the State Department spokeswoman, said in a statement earlier this week.

    On Friday, Rubio pushed back on the idea that US tariffs could create an opportunity for China economically in the region, and said Washington is committed to addressing “tremendous trade imbalances” with countries that have accumulated over the past few decades.

    “We’re resetting tariff levels with virtually every country in the world,” he told journalists, noting that such imbalances are “unfair to America and American workers.”

    Last year, the US notched a $295 billion goods trade deficit with China, according to data from the US Census Bureau.

    “I think countries are going to trade with multiple countries. We don’t view this as an opening for anyone. We don’t view it that way. We view it as an opportunity to reset global trade in a way that’s fair for Americans after two or three decades of unfairness,” he said.

    Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba in recent days said his country needs to wean itself off of dependence on the US – particularly citing security – as Tokyo faces the prospect of new tariffs. Rubio pointed to active US-Japan military exercises before making the case that such a move would be positive.

    “The idea that Japan’s military would become more capable is not something we would be offended by; it’s something we would actually be encouraged by,” Rubio said.

    CNN’s Anna Cooban and Shawn Deng contributed to this report.

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  • Overview ‹ Reconstructing Hidden Objects with Wireless Signals — MIT Media Lab

    Overview ‹ Reconstructing Hidden Objects with Wireless Signals — MIT Media Lab

    What if devices could see through walls, boxes, and clutter?

    We’ve developed mmNorm, a new technology that creates 3D models of objects—even when they’re completely hidden from view. While traditional cameras and LiDAR systems can only detect and recontruct what’s in their direct line of sight, mmNorm uses millimeter-wave (mmWave) radar—the same kind of wireless signal used in 5G networks and airport scanners—that can pass through common materials like cardboard, fabric, and plastic. 

    This technology could enable robots to find and pick up items inside closed containers, allow AR headsets to reveal objects behind furniture, and help smart devices understand gestures even when users are out of sight.

    How does it work?

    Instead of simply measuring the strength of radar reflections (as past methods do), mmNorm estimates the curvature of hidden objects by analyzing how radar waves bounce off them. This allows it to reconstruct the object’s shape with much greater accuracy.

    Here’s the process:

    • Estimate Surface Normals
      mmNorm determines which direction each part of the hidden object surface is facing, based on the patterns of radar reflections.
    • Reconstruct the Surface Candidates
      It then pieces together these surface directions to form multiple surface candidates for the object’s shape.
    • Optimize the Result
      Finally, mmNorm simulates how different 3D shapes candidate would reflect radar signals and selects the one that best matches the actual radar measurements.

    We tested mmNorm on over 60 everyday objects—including mugs, tools, and toys—hidden behind boxes and clutter. You can see examples of these reconstructions in our video:

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  • Pedro Pascal Addresses ‘Fantastic Four’ Casting Criticisms

    Pedro Pascal Addresses ‘Fantastic Four’ Casting Criticisms

    It’s hard to imagine MCU fans anticipating any casting more in recent years than Fantastic Four. After long months of rumors and speculation, Marvel Studios announced their lineup on Valentine’s Day 2024, with Pedro Pascal as leading hero Reed Richards/Mister Fantastic. Criticisms of the actor’s appearance have since flooded the internet, with many social media users calling Pascal too old for the part.

    The 50-year-old star of “The Last of Us” and “The Mandalorian” said he took these comments to heart more than usual.

    “I think that sometimes the outside will find you no matter how much you try to protect yourself from it, and it just comes with the territory,” Pascal told AP Entertainment at a London-based “Fantastic Four” fan event. “I think maybe my nerves were bigger than they usually are, and so I think I just was a little bit more sensitive to the love that people have for stories like this, because I know that they wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for the love that people have for these characters.”

    Matt Shakman’s “The Fantastic Four: First Steps” takes place in an alternate universe with a retro-futuristic 1960s-inspired setting. According to a recent prequel comic, the events of the film occur roughly four years after the founding of the team of superhero adventurers.

    In Marvel Comics, Reed Richards gains the power to stretch his body in elastic shapes after he leads an unsanctioned research trip to outer space, where he is then inadvertently bombarded with cosmic rays. Along for the ride are Sue Storm (Vanessa Kirby), Johnny Storm (Joseph Quinn) and Ben Grimm (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), all of whom gain likewise extraordinary powers.

    Collage of "Fantastic Four" and "Superman" movies. (Christopher Smith for TheWrap)

    While direct ages are never given for the characters in their origin comic, key details hint at Reed and Ben (longtime best friends) both being in their mid-30s at the time of the accident. Sue has alternatively been portrayed as a relative contemporary of Reed’s and as roughly a decade younger than her husband, placing her in her 20s when she gained her powers. Johnny was a teenager, roughly 16, when they went into space.

    When looking at these ages, Pascal certainly isn’t alone in being on the older side for the character. The actor, who recently turned 50, is joined in the cast by Moss-Bachrach (48), Kirby (38) and Quinn (31). This places all four actors as roughly a decade older than their comic book counterparts would’ve been at the time of their voyage. Of course, an adaptation need not stick to exact parameters of the nearly 64-year-old origin story.

    But performance isn’t about appearance alone. Pascal asserted that he takes the role seriously and intended to portray the character in a way he hopes fans will find satisfying.

    “I think that it’s very important for me that expectations be fulfilled,” he said. “But I also know that the only way to do that is to give it all my focus and all my heart and my body and my soul, and so that was the best I could do.”

    Despite Pascal’s rocketing popularity over the past several years, “The Fantastic Four: First Steps” presents the actor with a unique challenge. Although he has portrayed characters in popular franchises like “Star Wars,” “Game of Thrones,” “The Last of Us” and the DC Comics universe, Reed Richards will easily be the most popular character he’s taken on to date.

    The actor seems to be enjoying the challenge.

    “It is the best time of my life,” Pascal said at the fan event. “I look around, and it’s an incredible reflection of what I’m experiencing right now. I’m having an amazing time.”

    “The Fantastic Four: First Steps” rockets into theaters July 25.

    The cast of Marvel's "The Fantastic Four: First Steps" (Marvel Studios)


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