Dr Michelle Ng turned a moment of loss into a new beginning for herself
On Jun 28, 2025, Dr Michelle Ng was 39 weeks pregnant, nine days away from giving birth.
That’s when she received an email from her previous employer, saying that they would pause her senior doctor incentives and deduct from her maternity pay to cover the commissions for doctors hired in her place.
She read the email twice. Then she went on to draft her resignation letter with conviction.
What happened next would transform Dr Michelle’s and her family’s lives. Within a few months, she would open ARTÉ by Dr M, an aesthetic clinic that had built a waiting list stretching to Feb 2026 before it even opened its doors in Dec 2025.
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But that Jun morning, none of that was visible. All she could see was the uncertainty of her future with her four-year-old daughter and her soon-to-be-born son, a career ending where motherhood began.
This is Dr Michelle’s story—how she turned a moment of loss, on the brink of motherhood, into the start of something entirely new. Vulcan Post spoke with her and her husband, Vincent, to understand the challenges, the risks, and the decisions that led to ARTÉ by Dr M.
Facing “career suicide” for taking her maternity leave
An NUS Medicine graduate with dermatology rotations at public hospitals, Dr Michelle built a strong foundation in skin and facial anatomy. She is renowned for her ambidextrous injection skills, which are widely regarded as highly advanced.
Over more than a decade in the field, she moved between doctor-led and investor-owned clinics, generating S$200,000–S$300,000 in monthly revenue from her work alone, according to her husband, Vincent.
She joined her ex-employer in 2023. But when her second pregnancy came in early 2025, her employer’s support waned. At 12 weeks, tests confirmed a high-risk pregnancy. Despite mounting fatigue and medical complications, she continued showing up for her patients, even as her body signalled the need to slow down.
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(Left): Dr Michelle Ng at the hospital when she was pregnant with her son last year; (Right): Dr Michelle Ng with her children./ Image Credit: ARTÉ by Dr. M
With lessons learned from her first pregnancy—when she had little time to bond with her first child after opting for half-day arrangements despite being fully entitled to maternity leave—Dr Michelle decided to take her full entitlement for her second child.
She took 16 weeks of government-paid maternity leave plus six weeks of shared parental leave (three weeks from her husband), totalling 22 weeks (about five months) to recover and spend time with her family.
However, upon applying for leave, she was told by her ex-employer that going on maternity leave for that long is “career suicide.” Dr Michelle was disheartened and lost all hope in her career, but she knew that she had to prove otherwise.
The final straw came nine days before her son’s delivery in Jul 2025. Her ex-employer sent an email informing her of the temporary pause of her senior doctor incentives during her maternity period, and any commissions paid to covering doctors in her absence will be deducted from her maternity salary.
The next day, between prenatal appointments and birth preparations, she drafted her response. Dr Michelle informed them that the deduction was not allowed under the relevant laws, tendered her resignation, and began her four-month notice period—sacrificing her remaining shared parental leave in the process.
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That same day, her son Louis was born, and the idea of ARTÉ then slowly took shape.
Navigating motherhood & ambition
ARTÉ by Dr. M opened its doors in the middle of Dec 2025, but the journey tested Dr Michelle in every way.
In the lead-up, she navigated one of the most demanding periods of her life: caring for a newborn, managing postpartum recovery, and simultaneously building a clinic from the ground up.
She secured a unit at Millenia Walk, negotiated with her landlord, Pontiac Land Group, coordinated with medical suppliers, and oversaw a complex renovation—all within the span of just a few months.
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Shortly after giving birth, Dr Michelle went on to build ARTÉ by Dr. M, overseeing the interior design and daily operations./ Image Credit: ARTÉ by Dr. M
Then, just as things began to take shape, another challenge surfaced.
Her long-term domestic helper left abruptly, leaving Dr Michelle scrambling to arrange childcare while keeping the clinic’s construction on track. On top of that, as with any major project, renovation delays arose, pushing ARTÉ’s opening back by a month from the original Nov 2025 target.
Watching her hold everything together through that chaos, her husband left his 13-year career in commodities to support her.
“I couldn’t bear to see her carry everything on her own,” he said. “The way she showed up for her patients during her maternity period, and for what she believes in. It made it clear to me that this was more than just a career. It was her calling, and she convinced me to give up my career to help her give her best for her patients.”
ARTÉ by Dr. M’s storefront and vast corridors./ Image Credit: ARTÉ by Dr. M
The couple’s capital investment exceeded S$1 million for equipment and renovation alone in the 1,600 sqft unit, with monthly operating costs averaging between S$60,000 and S$100,000.
“Many people commented that I was crazy to start a business as soon as I gave birth, but it was this belief that I told myself that I wanted ARTÉ to be a beacon of hope for all women that anything is possible even in the most demanding seasons of life,” Dr Ng recalled.
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She runs the clinic supported by a team of four
ARTÉ by Dr. M specialises in non-surgical anti-ageing treatments with a focus on injectables (including botox, dermal fillers, and collagen stimulators), alongside lasers and Ultherapy Prime machines for skin lifting, tightening and rejuvenation.
Dr Michelle administering Ultherapy Prime machines and injectables to stimulate collagen./ Image Credit: ARTÉ by Dr. M
Dr Michelle is the clinic’s sole doctor, supported by a team of four.
Treatments led by her typically begin from S$800 up to S$2,000 per session, while non-doctor therapist treatments start from S$200. For patients looking for a more personalised approach, the clinic also offers customised programs tailored to individual needs and budgets.
Dr Michelle said transparency is a core principle of the clinic. “There are no hard-selling and no hidden fees,” she explained. Treatments are usually structured in three sessions, followed by a detailed review of progress.
The clinic’s reputation was evident even before its doors opened in Dec 2025: bookings were filled up to Feb 2026, reflecting the trust Dr Michelle had built with her patients over the years.
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Beyond patient experience, Dr Michelle shared that ARTÉ represents a deliberate choice about how care should be practised. “The field has become increasingly commoditised, with price wars and the race to the bottom,” she said. More investors are setting up clinics with commercial priorities at the forefront, while medical risks become secondary to sales performance and treatment pricing.
“For us, every treatment, even for trials, is done with full intent, and we give our 100%,” she added.
“There are sacrifices that come with building something you believe in”
Today, Dr Michelle is not only an aesthetic doctor but also a speaker and trainer for leading global brands such as Merz, where she mentors and trains younger doctors.
She also has plans to grow ARTÉ meaningfully, guided by the same patient-centric principles on which it was built.
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Dr Michelle and her family./ Image Credit: ARTÉ by Dr. M
Yet behind all this growth lies a reality she carries quietly. She sees patients six days a week, often skipping meals and returning home after her children have already fallen asleep.
She shared, “There are sacrifices that come with building something you believe in. I don’t always get the time I wish I had at home, but when I am present, I make sure I am fully there for my children.”
For Dr Michelle, ARTÉ’s growth isn’t just about scale or revenue—it’s about building something meaningful, even if it demands more from her personally.
“Every time I look at my clinic,” she added, “I see blood, sweat and tears. But I also see that despite everything, we chose to keep going and to build something we could stand behind.” She also hopes her story shows other women that maternity is not a setback to overcome, but a source of strength to draw from.
Since her ex-employer challenged her maternity entitlements, Dr Michelle has engaged lawyers and attended multiple legal meetings.
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As a mother and doctor in an industry built on empowering women, I couldn’t stay silent and accept what felt wrong. That day, I chose to stand for what I believe in.
Dr Michelle Ng
The matter remains unresolved to this day, yet she continues to focus on her patients, her clinic, and inspiring other women to find strength in their own journeys.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: A federal appeals court ruled on Monday that New Jersey gaming regulators cannot prevent Kalshi from allowing people in the state to use its prediction market to place financial bets on the outcome of sporting events.
A three-judge panel of the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 (PDF) in finding that the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has exclusive jurisdiction over the sports-related event contracts that Kalshi allows people to trade on its platform. The ruling marked the first time a federal appeals court has ruled on what has become the central issue in an escalating battle over the ability of state gaming regulators to police the activity of prediction market operators.
Kalshi and companies like it allow users to place trades and profit from predictions on events such as sports and elections. States argue that firms like Kalshi are operating without required state licenses, in violation of gaming laws, including bans on wagers by those under 21. Those states include New Jersey, which last year sent Kalshi a cease-and-desist letter stating that its listing of sports-related event contracts on its platform violated state gambling laws that prohibit betting on collegiate sports. Kalshi sued the state, arguing its event contracts qualify as “swaps,” a type of derivative contract, that under the Commodity Exchange Act can only be regulated by the CFTC, which had granted the company a license to operate a designated contract market (DCM).
A lower-court judge had sided with New York-based Kalshi and issued a preliminary injunction, prompting New Jersey to appeal. But a majority of the judges on the 3rd Circuit panel concluded the Commodity Exchange Act likely preempted state law. “Kalshi’s sports-related event contracts are swaps traded on a CFTC-licensed DCM, so the CFTC has exclusive jurisdiction,” U.S. Circuit Judge David Porter wrote. The ruling was in line with the position advanced in other litigation by the CFTC under President Donald Trump’s administration. The regulator last week sued Arizona, Connecticut and Illinois to prevent them from pursuing what it called unlawful efforts to regulate prediction markets.
Handheld console fans have long praised Nintendo’s Switch Lite for its compact size and low price, but many have wished for a variant that included those fancy premium features without sacrificing portability. Fortunately, Tito from Macho Nacho Productions stepped up and created exactly that type of machine through a series of painstaking modifications that transformed a regular Switch Lite into something far more capable.
The parts selection was the foundation of this entire project, since Tito began with Retro Remake’s Super5 OLED kit, which replaces the stock LCD with a high-quality OLED panel with touch capabilities and HDMI output, which no regular Switch Lite has ever had. The Hall effect joysticks came next, and they are meant to prevent stick drift over time. The transition was completed with an aluminum shell machined to ultra-precise specifications, which replaced the original plastic body and gave the console a solid, high-quality build that appears to be from a high-end electronics brand.
One system, three play modes: TV, Tabletop, and Handheld
Larger, vivid, 7.9” LCD touch screen with support for HDR and up to 120 fps
Putting it all together was a lot easier than Tito expected, but you’ll need to be familiar with the hardware components to feel comfortable. Once you’ve opened up the casing and removed the original screen and control bits, you simply slot in the new OLED assembly and an HDMI enabled board, and the stick drift-proof Hall effect sticks simply go in the places they were meant to occupy, and then the aluminium shell slams on in with no room for error, using the original screws. If you’ve done something like this previously, the entire procedure takes about an hour, and the finished product appears factory fresh on the outside.
Once you’ve put everything together, the Switch Lite Pro showcases what all of the upgrades can achieve in everyday use. Gamers may now connect the console to a large TV or monitor via normal HDMI and play in docked mode on the big screen, something the base Lite cannot do. The OLED screen has deeper blacks, richer colors, and greater contrast than the LCD it replaced, making the games stand out even in the brightest environments. The touch input allows you to play games that rely on it, while the Hall effect sticks provide silky smooth control that stays precise for years. The aluminum body adds weight and durability without making the device feel clunky, and it stays cool over long sessions thanks to much enhanced heat dissipation.
When compared to the standard Switch Lite, the enhancements make a significant difference. Tito compared the hacked unit to a stock Switch Lite, and the OLED screen was noticeably brighter and more color correct across a variety of titles, even in light surroundings. The blacks are truly black, rather than some dark grey, and the dark scene elements come out. The HDMI output is rock solid at full quality, and switching between handheld and TV modes is a breeze.
Keeping my house clean can feel like an impossible task with a litter-kicking-happy cat and a two-year-old on a mission to throw everything, whether it’s Cheerios or pizza, onto the floor. One of the things that has made it easier, though, is my Shark handheld vacuum. The Shark UltraCyclone Pet Pro Plus is one of our favorite handheld vacuums, and it’s made it easy to clean up messes from both my cat and tiny human without needing to lug my old vacuum out for every mess. If you want a mess-free home for less, check our Shark coupon code.
Get 10% Off Your First Order With a Shark Promo Code
If you’re buying a Shark vacuum for the first time, you’re in luck: you can get 10 percent off right away by signing up for Shark’s emails. You’ll be prompted to put your email in, and will be emailed a unique code for you to use to get 10 percent off your order of a single item. That item doesn’t have to be a vacuum—feel free to snag your own Shark FlexStyle, an air purifier, or even a red light mask.
Get 15% Off $150+ With the Shark Student Discount
If you’re a student, you can get one of the best Shark discount codes regularly available: 15 percent off purchases over $150. In order to get it, you’ll need an account on UNiDAYS, then visit the Shark website through the UNiDAYS portal to get the student discount code.
Give $20, Get a $20 Shark Coupon Code With Referral
If you’ve already had your first order on Shark’s website, all is not lost. You can refer a friend to get them a $20 discount on orders over $100 on Shark’s website. You’ll score a $20 discount for yourself, too, once that referral code is validated, though you’ll need to spend $200 to use it.
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15% Off Shark Espresso Machines
There is nothing better than a nice espresso in the morning. We have a lot of coffee-related opinions here on the WIRED Reviews team, and we have a list of our favorite espresso machines that keep us going every morning. While we’ve gotten used to our bad and boujee lifestyle, these little lifesaving machines can be very, very expensive. But hey, we can’t sacrifice taste for price. And with this Shark espresso machine discount, you won’t have to make any sacrifices. Right now, you can get up to 15% off Shark espresso machines.
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We at WIRED love the Shark Ninja Creami; we called it “almost as good as having your own personal frozen yogurt shop.” (Read our full review here.) With a wide variety of recipes, simple use that’s easy enough for a 7-year-old to operate, and costing thousands less than commercial alternatives, it’s safe to say we are fans here. Check out Shark Ninja’s full catalogue of ice cream makers, including the Ninja CREAMi Scoop & Swirl, which turns virtually anything into soft serve; and the Ninja CREAMi 7-in-1 Ice Cream Maker, which allows you to make every sweet treat with ease at home, from gelato to sorbet to smoothie bowls. Plus, the Ninja CREAMi XL Deluxe 11-in-1 Ice Cream and Frozen Treat Maker, which allows you to make italian ice, frozen yogurt, and more. All of these viral makers are on sale right now, making it the perfect time to indulge in a sweet treat (for less).
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When to Save the Most With a Shark Promo Code
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A new NYT Connections puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Monday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Connections hints and answers for Monday, April 6 (game #1030).
Good morning! Let’s play Connections, the NYT’s clever word game that challenges you to group answers in various categories. It can be tough, so read on if you need Connections hints.
What should you do once you’ve finished? Why, play some more word games of course. I’ve also got daily Strands hints and answers and Quordle hints and answers articles if you need help for those too, while Marc’s Wordle today page covers the original viral word game.
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SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Connections today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
Article continues below
NYT Connections today (game #1031) – today’s words
(Image credit: New York Times)
Today’s NYT Connections words are…
ONE
BATTLE
AFTER
ANOTHER
WILD
GAME
IN
MATCH
NIGHT
CLASH
DOWN
LOW
NEITHER
WILLING
EITHER
CONTEST
NYT Connections today (game #1031) – hint #1 – group hints
What are some clues for today’s NYT Connections groups?
YELLOW: Games
GREEN: Fully committed
BLUE: Vague selections
PURPLE: Add a word that rhymes with “wife”
Need more clues?
We’re firmly in spoiler territory now, but read on if you want to know what the four theme answers are for today’s NYT Connections puzzles…
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NYT Connections today (game #1031) – hint #2 – group answers
What are the answers for today’s NYT Connections groups?
YELLOW: COMPETITION
GREEN: ON BOARD
BLUE: WORDS FOR UNSPECIFIED CHOICES
PURPLE: ____LIFE
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO SEE THEM.
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NYT Connections today (game #1031) – the answers
(Image credit: New York Times)
The answers to today’s Connections, game #1031, are…
YELLOW: COMPETITION BATTLE, CLASH, CONTEST, MATCH
GREEN: ON BOARD DOWN, GAME, IN, WILLING
BLUE: WORDS FOR UNSPECIFIED CHOICES ANOTHER, EITHER, NEITHER, ONE
PURPLE: ____LIFE AFTER, LOW, NIGHT, WILD
My rating: Easy
My score: Perfect
In Saturday’s Connections game the tiles ‘let’, ‘sleeping’, ‘dogs’ and ‘lie’ became the group “let sleeping dogs lie” so ONE, BATTLE, AFTER, ANOTHER could very well have been a group in honor of the brilliant award-winning movie of the same name, rather than a red herring.
I decided not to risk it and instead linked BATTLE with MATCH, CLASH, and CONTEST and pressed submit, happy that I had not fallen for this most obvious of traps.
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With eight tiles left I was uncertain about any connection, so took a gamble with EITHER and NEITHER — and then, thinking that they sounded like vague selections, picked ANOTHER and ONE. And just like that I’d completed a game in difficulty order for the second day in a row.
Yesterday’s NYT Connections answers (Monday, April 6, game #1030)
YELLOW: EVENTS WITH DANCING BALL, HOEDOWN, HOP, RAVE
GREEN: INTEREST CLAIM, CONCERN, SHARE, STAKE
BLUE: COMPONENTS OF WHAC-A-MOLE HOLES, MALLET, MOLE, TIMER
PURPLE: MUSICALS WITH LAST LETTER CHANGED CAROUSER, EVITE, OLIVES, WICKET
What is NYT Connections?
NYT Connections is one of several increasingly popular word games made by the New York Times. It challenges you to find groups of four items that share something in common, and each group has a different difficulty level: green is easy, yellow a little harder, blue often quite tough and purple usually very difficult.
On the plus side, you don’t technically need to solve the final one, as you’ll be able to answer that one by a process of elimination. What’s more, you can make up to four mistakes, which gives you a little bit of breathing room.
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It’s a little more involved than something like Wordle, however, and there are plenty of opportunities for the game to trip you up with tricks. For instance, watch out for homophones and other word games that could disguise the answers.
It’s playable for free via the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.
Early editions of the index were a tabbed notebook. “I still have some of the original versions of it,” Boyer says. “You would go through, laboriously, by hand, turning the pages, and it would say ‘see page 27,’ like one of those find-your-own-ending books, and then you would put in a phone call, because the last section in the Antivenom Index was the home phone numbers of zookeepers.”
In 2006, Boyer and Steven Seifert, then a medical toxicologist at the University of Nebraska, partnered to bring the index online, where it remains today. Now, nearly 90 zoological organizations list their wares.
When Chris Gifford was bitten by his deadly green mamba, he was lucky to receive antivenom from South Carolina’s Riverbanks Zoo.
Courtesy of Chris Gifford
Gifford, the North Carolina man, had been comparatively lucky, as only one of his mamba’s fangs had pierced his skin. By the time he reached a nearby hospital, Gifford’s hand was swelling and creeping paralysis was causing his eyelids to droop. The Antivenom Index was activated, and South Carolina’s Riverbanks Zoo, about 200 miles to the southwest, had the antivenom he needed. Just 30 minutes after the mamba’s bite, Gifford was struggling to breathe as the paralysis started to affect his diaphragm.
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“It feels like you’re drowning,” he says.
Keepers at the Riverbanks Zoo packed 10 vials of antivenom on ice and sent them on a helicopter. Just as Gifford’s timer hit the six-hour mark, the hospital began administering the first of the vials. “Almost immediately, I could feel myself breathing,” Gifford says. He left the hospital some two days later.
If you’re bitten by a venomous snake in the northeastern United States, odds are good that you’ll be treated with vials of antivenom nestled in a refrigerator in the back room of the Bronx Zoo’s reptile house. The zoo collaborates with the nearby Jacobi Medical Center, whose dedicated snakebite response team makes it a rarity among US hospitals.
Inside the refrigerator are boxes, bins, and bags of the delicate glass vials that are often the difference between life and death. Shelves are lined with jars full of antivenom for Indian species and the North American coral snake, and lavender cartons with images of a poised king cobra. In all, the Bronx Zoo stocks 25 different antivenom varieties, many of which are polyvalent, meaning applicable to multiple species.
Waymo’s driverless taxis are making their way to London, starting with a pilot this month (April 2026), with a full launch coming in September, but what does that mean for the UK’s capital?
Will the city’s notoriously difficult-to-drive streets become a chaotic mess of robot carnage? Well, hopefully not — in fact, if the London experience is anything like the Waymos I’ve ridden in San Francisco, it might be the Uber replacement you’ve been waiting for.
These robocabs might even make London’s streets a bit safer.
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Article continues below
(Apologies for the over-enthusiastic start to the video)
Waymo has been operating its robotaxis for years and, as of March 2026, has 3,000 vehicles in its fleet — so it knows how to make the rider experience smooth.
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The Waymo app is essentially the same as Uber or Lyft; you choose where you want to go and be picked up from, request a ride, and wait for your car to arrive.
In some ways, I’ve found Waymo easier because when the car arrives, it flashes your initials on top of the vehicle — meaning you don’t have to do the awkward dance of cross-checking license plate numbers.
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To unlock the car, you have to push a button in the app, so no random person can get in before you. Once everyone is in and has their seat belt on, you just push a button in the car to set it off.
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When you arrive at your destination, Waymo will let you know and park somewhere safe. It’ll also give some safety guidance, like checking for traffic before opening your door into the road — yes, it’s obvious, but if you’re coming from a party or a long day at work, a safety reminder is handy to ease the mental load.
(Image credit: Waymo)
It’s easy, but is Waymo safe?
The whole user experience is superbly smooth, and that’s true for the ride as well.
Driving is inherently risky — more risky than many of us realize —, but according to Waymo itself, the company’s vehicles have 91% “fewer serious injuries or worse crashes,” 83% “fewer airbag deployment crashes,” and 82% “fewer injury-causing crashes” than regular human drivers.
This is all thanks to the tri-sensor technology used by Waymo cars. They rely on cameras, radar, and LiDAR to create an incredibly accurate 360-degree map of everything around the vehicle — including pedestrians, obstacles, other cars, cyclists, trams, road signs, basically everything.
It’s a heck of a lot more data and understanding than we humans with just our two eyes can provide, and we also have to contend with a few blind spots while we drive. So it’s no wonder that Waymo is much safer.
Now, you might see some driverless vehicles have worse safety records, but that tends to be for rivals who rely solely on cameras and AI. Cameras alone aren’t yet as accurate as a system with LiDAR and radar, as the technology seems to be more prone to error due to environmental interference — for example, cameras, like our eyes, can struggle in fog, whereas the triple sensor setup doesn’t.
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From my own experience, I felt perfectly safe inside the Waymos I rode in — the driverless car drove smoothly, merged with the right balance of caution and confidence, and stuck to the speed limit.
(Image credit: Myriam Joire)
What about my privacy?
Lastly, let’s touch on privacy. In some ways, Waymo is more private than a regular Uber or cab, as while the vehicle has mics, the company says they’re only switched on when you’re speaking with support — otherwise they’re muted.
However, there are internal cameras on all the time inside the car’s cabin — with social media full of stories of folks who didn’t realize.
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Remember, other people have to use these taxis, and if Waymo catches you doing stuff you shouldn’t be — including trying to drive the car — you’ll get in trouble, which could see your account penalized or suspended entirely. So don’t be weird.
Treat it like a driver is in the car with you, and I’m sure your rides will be smooth.
Apple’s supply chain partners have been warned that mass production of iPhone Fold components could be pushed back if current setbacks aren’t overcome. “More time is needed.”
iPhone Fold runs into snags in production testing
The iPhone Fold has been rumored since Samsung foldables first hit the market in 2019. Even though the expensive category never grew out of a select niche, vocal Apple fans have hoped for such a product from the company for years. It seemed that 2026 would finally be the year Apple unveiled an iPhone Fold, but that hope may be misplaced. According to a report from Nikkei Asia, Apple’s supply chain has been warned of a potential mass production and shipment delay. Rumor Score: 🤯 Likely Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
According to Telegram CEO Pavel Durov, the Kremlin’s increasing efforts to control and censor the global internet are causing widespread problems for Russian users. The Russian-born entrepreneur confirmed that Telegram is now banned in the country, yet more than 50 million Russians continue to use it daily via VPNs. Read Entire Article Source link
You’re never safe when you’re working for Trump. That much was obvious in Trump’s first term, when he fired Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, National Security Advisor John Bolton, and FBI Director James Comey. They were all fired for the same reason: failing to be completely loyal to Trump.
This time around even die-hard MAGA loyalists are being fired. DHS head Kristi Noem was dismissed from her position, despite being the enthusiastic figurehead of anti-migrant cruelty Trump definitely wanted in that position. Now, she’s cooling her heels and watching the dust settle on her political hopes as the doesn’t-sound-made-up-at-all “Special Envoy for the Shield of the Americas.”
In recent weeks, Ms. Bondi tried to shore up her position by moving more aggressively against investigative targets singled out by Mr. Trump, including the former Obama official John O. Brennan and a former White House aide, Cassidy Hutchinson, whom the president has accused of lying about his actions on Jan. 6, 2021, according to officials briefed on the effort.
It is not entirely clear if any specific action or event finally tipped the balance for Mr. Trump, who had been reluctant to fire senior officials to avoid reprising the chaotic turnstile personnel turnover of his first administration.
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But with the dismissal of Ms. Noem and now Ms. Bondi, that might be changing. His calculus appears to have shifted after the quick confirmation of Markwayne Mullin as Ms. Noem’s replacement.
Bondi’s head may have been destined for the chopping block months ago, when Trump (in what appeared to be a personal message accidentally posted on main) berated Bondi for not doing all the impossible stuff he wanted done right now, like engaging in vindictive prosecutions that were (1) obviously vindictive, and (2) didn’t have enough evidence to support the hallucinatory charges dreamed up by Trump and his DOJ enablers.
Nothing has improved since then. Lots of prosecutors have left the DOJ, refusing to engage in Trump’s overt politicization of the department. Others have been dismissed for the same reason. A handful of handpicked prosecutors have been sidelined by judges because they were never formally appointed. And grand juries are frequently refusing to buy what the government’s selling, terminating prosecutions before they can even get off the ground.
Not that we should expect anything better (or more ethical) from her replacement. Todd Blanche is a true Trump loyalist. But he’s taking over a DOJ that’s short on experience, long on MAGA loyalty, and whose reputation has been completely destroyed by this administration and its actions.
The stuff Bondi failed to get done will continue to not happen. Anyone stepping into this position should know it’s only going to be temporary. The president who thinks he’s a king will continue to see courts stifle his worst impulses. Changing the name on the letterhead isn’t suddenly going to make vindictive, politically motivated prosecutions any more legal or feasible.
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But I don’t have any sympathy for anyone being shit-canned for failing to satisfy the whims of a megalomaniac who thinks he’s a king, rather than a temporarily elevated politician. They’re far more than merely complicit. They’re fully supportive of destroying America and its institutions to usher in a new age of white Christian nationalism. So, fuck ’em. They got what they deserved.
On day six of its mission, Artemis II is closing in on the far side of the moon. Meanwhile, the historic journey has not been without fascinating and curious stories, from the images and videos that its four crew members have shared with the world to the inevitable unforeseen events—including a tricky toilet situation.
A few hours before the crew begins its lunar flyby, here’s how things are going on Artemis II.
When Will They Reach the Far Side of the Moon?
While Artemis II won’t actually land on the moon (that won’t happen until Artemis IV), that does not make this mission any less compelling. Once the Artemis II astronauts finish flying over the dark side of the moon, they will have the historic distinction of being the humans who have traveled the farthest from Earth.
They will also test all the systems needed for future lunar missions, validating life support, navigation, spacesuits, communications, and other human operations in deep space.
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But when are they supposed to reach this far-off point? First, the Orion capsule reached what is known as the moon’s “sphere of influence” on Sunday night. This is the point where the moon’s gravitational force is stronger than the force of the Earth.
At present, Orion is circling the moon. Once the capsule is on the dark side of the moon, approximately 7,000 kilometers from the surface, communications with Earth will be interrupted. For six hours, they will be able to view the far side of the moon, something no human being has ever seen with their own eyes—not even the astronauts of the Apollo program, as this region of the moon was always too dark or difficult for them to reach.
That six-hour flyby of the dark side of the moon is expected to begin Monday, April 6, at 2:45 pm EDT and 7:45 pm London time.
After that, the capsule will use the moon’s gravity to propel itself back to Earth. Splashdown, when the astronauts reach Earth, is scheduled for April 10 in the Pacific Ocean, not far from the coast of California, the 10th day of the mission.
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Remember that you can follow the live broadcast of the Artemis II mission from NASA’s official channels.
What Has Happened so Far?
Since its successful launch on April 1 from Kennedy Space Center, the Artemis II crew has shared several spectacular photos, such as the featured image in this post, which shows mission specialist Christina Koch looking down at Earth through one of Orion’s main cabin windows.
This incredible photo of a Earth, taken on April 2, went viral on social media, referencing the famous “Blue Marble” image captured by the Apollo 17 astronauts in 1972.
View of Earth taken by astronaut Reid Wiseman from the window of the Orion spacecraft after completing the translunar injection maneuver on April 2, 2026.Photograph: Reid Wiseman/NASA/Getty Images
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