How a destroyed robotaxi revived a debate over technology...
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[Snow-covered trees in Japan] Snow-covered trees in Japan, known as snow monsters, or "Juhyo." Tomohiro Ohsumi/Getty  BROWSING  [Classifieds banner image]( The wackiest headlines from the week as they would appear in a Classifieds section. Careers ISO NURSE SHARK: A female stingray in Charlotte is [pregnant]( but hereâs the dramaâthere are no males in her North Carolina aquarium. Sheâs got a lot of explaining to do. PRO CORNHOLER: Two Colorado high-school seniors became the first students ever to receive scholarships to play [Division I collegiate cornhole](. The pair, both five-star recruits, will attend Winthrop University and spend the rest of their lives trying to explain their cheap college tuition to everyone they meet. Personal FOUNDâHITCHHIKING MAGGOTS: A Delta flight from Amsterdam to Detroit had to turn around after two hours because [maggots]( began raining down on passengers from an overhead bin. The crawlers hitched a ride on a rotting fish someone had in their carry-on but eventually had to pay for a real seat. ISO COUSINS: Cousins are [disappearing]( in Canada as the size of families shrinks, a new study showed. In 2095, the average Canadian 15-year-old girl will have 3.6 living cousins, down from 15.3 in 1950. Researchers fear kids will miss out on important developmental stages without those relatives, like learning to make fart sounds during funerals. For sale MIXTAPES: Cassette tapes [are cool again]( in Japan, which means they will be at every Urban Outfitters in the US in about five years. SOME GUYâS SKIN: A Swiss art collector paid seven figures for the [tattooed skin]( right off an Austrian performance artistâs back. The collector will just have photos until the artist dies, when heâll be able to acquire the actual skin.âMM  PRESENTED BY CAREERBUILDER Hiringâs ânow what?â moment [CareerBuilder]( The effects of COVID-19 are still rippling through the hiring market. But what exactly does that impact look like? It can be hard to tell from year to year. Thatâs why CareerBuilder partnered with Morning Consult to create the [State of Hiring and Retention report](. They surveyed 400 hiring decision-makers, and hereâs a glimpse of their findings: - 60% of hiring managers said improving the quality of new hires is a recruiting priority.
- 53% said theyâve recently had to change their offer package to entice new employees.
- Top retention tactics include competitive pay raises + schedule/location flexibility. [The report]( details how offer packages are changing, todayâs top recruiting tools, and how employees are handling return-to-office policies. [Download the report]( to learn more. Â SNAPSHOT Â [Photo of the week](#)
[Houses sitting on a cliff in California]Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images In a highly volatile real estate market, it might feel like the ground could fall out from under you at any moment. But that was [literally the problem]( facing three homes in Dana Point, CA, this week following a historic âPineapple Expressâ storm that created mudslides and landslides throughout the state. While one home looks like it was attacked by the Mandarin in Iron Man 3 and is seconds away from sliding into the ocean, the cityâs building inspector said the residence is anchored to bedrock, and none of the homes are in imminent danger.âDL Â SCIENCE Â [Dept. of Progress](#)
[Science joke about matter]ImgFlip Here are some illuminating scientific discoveries from the week to help you live better and maybe even befriend a tiger (please donât). Would you eat meat rice? South Korean researchers who combined animal cells with rice grains say the product can help combat food insecurity and climate change. The [hybrid beef-rice]( has higher nutritional content than regular rice thanks to the addition of bovine muscle and fat cellsâis said to taste nuttier and feel harder than its conventional counterpart. Thereâs only 7% more protein per 100-gram serving (about the same as adding one gram of brisket to your plate), but meat rice can still supplement meals in food-insecure areas, the researchers say. Growing cultured beef is also better for the environment than raising cattle. Google will track our methane emissions from space. In partnership with the nonprofit Environmental Defense Fund, Google will use its AI and computing capabilities to [create a map]( of the planetâs big methane emitters based on data from the satellite MethaneSAT, which launches next month. Google will cross-reference the satelliteâs methane detection with the locations of oil and gas infrastructure to determine the types of equipment that leak the greenhouse gas. The data will be available later this year on the Google Earth Engine platform, which is free to researchers, nonprofits, and news media. Big cats can recognize voices theyâve heard before. The infamously [gentle reunion]( between Christian the lion and his former human owners feels a little less unbelievable now that new research shows big cats can tell familiar people apart from strangers by their voices. A study of lions, leopards, cheetahs, and tigers raised either by their mothers or by humans found that the catsâ responses were [faster]( more acute (e.g., both ears moving vs. just one twitching), and longer when they heard the voice of someone known to them. And domesticity didnât seem to have anything to do with itâthe researchers say any big cat can learn whoâs taking care of them after enough interaction.âML Â TOGETHER WITH FACET [Facet]( Flex your money muscles . Alarming stat alert: [Americans waste $397 million]( on unused gym memberships every year. You know what kind of membership could actually **pay for itself? A Facet membership that offers expert financial advice for a flat annual fee, thatâs what. And right now, Facetâs [waiving their enrollment fee for new annual members](. Â NEWS ANALYSIS Â [Are driverless dreams going up in flames?](
[Waymo robotaxi on fire]( Francisco Fire Department via X In the 19th century, Luddites smashed up automatic looms to protest the new technology. Last weekend, people at a San Francisco Lunar New Year celebration seemed to have the same ideaâbut with more firepower. A mob [incinerated]( an autonomous vehicle (AV) operated by Alphabet subsidiary Waymo after it rolled into a crowded intersection. After one person jumped on the hood and smashed the windshield of the driverlessâand passengerlessâJaguar I-PACE crossover, others began breaking windows and spray-painting the body. The car was eventually [set ablaze]( with fireworks. Though the mobâs motivation is unknown, the attack felt like a comeuppance: Over the past few years, SF has been a major testing hub for AVs, along with Phoenix and Austin. The hundreds of driverless taxis zipping around the cityâs hills annoy residents almost as much as out-of-towners who call it San Fran. AVs have been filmed causing traffic jams and [blocking]( emergency vehicles on numerous occasions. One has even been at the center of a very serious accident. The roadblocks have cast doubt on the near-term prospect of a future where getting chauffeured around by AI is mainstream. So, buckle in while we explore the state of the AV industry and what it might take to stop it from inspiring rage. Industry stuck in a rut One major setback for a driverless future came in October, when a Cruise AV, operated by GM, struck a woman who was thrown into its path after getting hit by a human driver in San Francisco. Instead of stopping immediately, the Cruise AV dragged the pedestrian 20 feet as it tried to pull over to the side of the road. The woman sustained serious injuries. California and federal officials are investigating the company, which has been in crisis ever since an investigation by an outside law firm that Cruise hired found that the incident was the result of multiple technical failures. Cruise admitted that it improperly failed to disclose all the details to regulators. The company recalled its entire fleet of 950 AVs, paused all testing countrywide, and sacked top executives. Californiaâs DMV has suspended Cruiseâs permit to test AVs on public roads. But itâs not just about Cruise: - Waymo recalled 444 self-driving cars this week after two of its AVs in Arizona bumped the same towed vehicle minutes apart.
- A handful of Chinese companies, including Didi, have recently stopped testing their AVs in California. While friction between the US and China could be to blame, George Washington University Engineering professor John Helveston told Business Insider that Didiâs exit might have to do with the harsher regulatory environment following the Cruise accident. Experts say that the biggest issues with current AVs occur when they run into unusual situations that might be a no-brainer for a person. Itâs likely a human driver wouldâve stopped the car to check on a pedestrian they just hit before trying to pull over, while many SF Uber drivers wouldâve probably used common sense and avoided the chaos of the Lunar New Year festivities. Is it just an image problem? The industryâs problems are its own doing, according to the Vergeâs transportation editor, Andrew J. Hawkins. He blames the current loss of public trust on [years of overpromising]( by some industry executives ([ahem]( Elon) that weâll all be cruising around in the backseat while our cars drive themselves in the near future. Hawkins believes a lack of regulation allowed some companies to rush into testing AVs, which ultimately undermined the publicâs confidence in the tech. Meanwhile, some say we should remember that while the spate of high-profile AV fails is disconcerting, humans behind the wheel can spell even more troubleâespecially since theyâre not always attentive or sober. Ars Technica reporter Timothy B. Lee, who analyzed Cruise and Waymo crash reports, claims that Waymo AVs [already appear safer]( than human drivers, though he says more research is needed. While Lee notes that both companiesâ driverless cars sometimes struggle to avoid hitting inanimate objects and Cruiseâs AVs need to be better at navigating intersections, theyâve mostly been involved in minor accidents. He argues that given AVsâ potential to become âmuch saferâ than human drivers, ending testing on city streets âcould easily cost more lives than it saves.â But the publicâs perception of AVs doesnât always match the carsâ safety record: A study published in Transportation Research in 2021 found that autonomous vehicles will have to be [much less likely]( âpotentially unrealistically,â to crash than human drivers for passengers to trust them. Most people probably have time to get used to the ideaâ¦a [recent report]( by S&P Global Mobility predicts that a car âthat can go anywhere and do everything a human driver canâ will not arrive before at least 2035, while in the meantime, AVs will only be operated in designated areas or as an aid for human drivers.âSK  BREW'S BEST  #
[To-do list graphic] Cook: Decadent pasta with cauliflower. Donât skimp on the [cheesy breadcrumbs](. Soften: Struggling to spread cold butter on your toast? Try keeping it at [room temp]( like they do in France. Watch: Bottoms can best be described as a modern take on the â80s high-school comedy. Lucky for you, itâs [now streaming](. Listen: If you need another reason to expense a standing deskâ¦this podcast explores how the [human body adapts to technology](. Art rec: David Shrigleyâs [Zodiac prints](. Read: Does private equity have to cost you your soul? Former PE employee Carrie Sun weighs the question in her [new memoir](. Wanna merge accounting with AI? From manual entry to elevated analysis, [transform the future of accounting](.  DESTINATIONS  [Place to be: The preferred POTUS inn](#)
[Beekman Arms inn]Bryan Bedder/Getty Images Itâs a big world out there. In this section, weâll teleport you to an interesting locationâand hopefully give you travel ideas in the process. Thereâs no hotel more relevant during Presidents Day weekend than the Beekman Arms, the self-proclaimed oldest inn in the US, famous for providing shelter to real American presidents (George Washington, Bill Clinton) and actors who have portrayed them in film and TV (Jack Nicholson, Beau Bridges). âThe Beek,â as locals call it, opened in 1766 in New Yorkâs Hudson Valley and has counted many presidents and would-be presidents among its list of [famous guests]( over the years. - Franklin D. Roosevelt wrapped up his campaigns for governor and president with speeches on the innâs front porch.
- George Washington really did sleep there. During the Revolutionary War, he stayed at the Beek along with Philip Schuyler, Benedict Arnold, and Alexander Hamilton.
- Bill Clinton and Benjamin Harrison have also been there, along with VPs Al Gore, Aaron Burr, Levi Morton, and Nelson Rockefeller. You can leave with some history, too. If stealing towels from the room isnât your thing, the hotelâs antique market is located in a two-story barn behind the building and hosts about 30 dealers ready to sell you some historic knickknacks. There are vintage paintings, books, and furniture for people who want to take home something more interesting than the hotel shampoo bottles.âDL Â COMMUNITY Â [Crowd work](#) Last week, we asked you to share the worst gift youâve ever received on Valentineâs Day. Here are our favorite answers: - âSenior year in college, my then-boyfriend gave me candy and flowers. When it was delivered, he didnât have enough money to cover the cost and I paid for my âgift.âââErin from Boston, MA
- âI had only been dating this guy for a few weeks and he gave me an expensive ENGAGEMENT RING on Valentineâs Day. He said he wasnât proposing but wanted me to wear it and pretend we were engaged. We broke up shortly after that incident.ââJen from Pennsylvania
- âMy boyfriend gave me a gift certificate to see his dentist for teeth whitening and a dental exam.ââHeather from Provo, Utah
- âMy husband bought me an ax. It was a nice one, but I suggested in the future Iâd prefer not to get weapons for Valentineâs Day.ââAmy from Midlothian, VA This weekâs prompt A personal finance writer shared how she lost $50,000 in an elaborate scam, and now we are never answering our phones again. [Tell us your own scam story here](. Â SHARE THE BREW Â # [Share Morning Brew]( with your friends, acquire free Brew swag, and then acquire more friends as a result of your fresh Brew swag. Weâre saying weâll give you free stuff and more friends if you share a link. One link. Your referral count: 0 [Click to Share]( Or copy & paste your referral link to others:
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