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Dartmouth teen killed in car crash remembered as ‘a truly unique soul’

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A Dartmouth teenager who was killed in a single-car crash in the town earlier this month is being remembered as “a truly unique soul and a remarkable individual whose contagious character and positive outlook on life made a lasting impact on everyone around him,” according to his obituary.

Nikoles Joseph was killed in a crash near 234 Russells Mills Road on June 15, Dartmouth police said previously. Police responded to the crash shortly before 9:30 p.m. and found him lying unresponsive in the roadway. He was declared dead at the scene.

Nikoles “Big Nik” Joseph was born in Boston on June 13, 2007, according to his obituary. A recent graduate of Dartmouth High School, he “made his mark through his dedication as a three-year athlete on the football team, proudly holding the position of defensive tackle.” He also loved his part-time job at Piezoni’s Pizza in Dartmouth.

“His teammates and coworkers admired not only his skills but also his unwavering support and kindness,” his obituary reads. “He developed a deep appreciation for his role and the connections he made with coworkers and patrons alike. Each day, he arrived with a smile, bringing warmth to the workplace that resonated with everyone around him.”

Joseph’s obituary describes him as “a bright light in the lives of all who knew him, with his vibrant spirit and infectious laughter.” He also had an “unwavering bond” with his close-knit group of friends, with whom he shared both laughter and heartfelt conversations.

“He had a unique ability to uplift those he encountered, leaving behind a legacy of love and kindness that will not be forgotten,” his obituary reads.

Visiting hours for Joseph are scheduled for Tuesday, July 1, from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Dolan Funeral Homes and Cremation Services in Dorchester, according to his obituary. Another visiting hour is set to take place at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church in Mattapan at 9 a.m. the next day, and a funeral Mass is scheduled to follow at the church at 10 a.m.

“As we come to terms with this profound loss, we hold dear the memories of Nikoles and the joy he brought to our lives,” his obituary reads. “He will be deeply missed, but his legacy of love, friendship, and exuberance will live on in our hearts and continue to inspire us every day.”



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OpenAI reportedly ‘recalibrating’ compensation in response to Meta hires

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With Meta successfully poaching a number of its senior researchers, an OpenAI executive reportedly reassured team members Saturday that company leadership has not “been standing idly by.”

“I feel a visceral feeling right now, as if someone has broken into our home and stolen something,” Chief Research Officer Mark Chen wrote in a Slack memo obtained by Wired.

In response to what appears to be a Meta hiring spree, Chen said that he, CEO Sam Altman, and other OpenAI leaders have been working “around the clock to talk to those with offers,” and they’ve “been more proactive than ever before, we’re recalibrating comp, and we’re scoping out creative ways to recognize and reward top talent.”

Over the past week, various press reports have noted eight researchers who departed OpenAI for Meta. Altman even complained on a podcast that Meta was offering “$100 million signing bonuses,” a description that Meta executives have pushed back against internally



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Tiny Turnip and Chance’s Lucky Escape

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It’s hard to believe that Playdate Season Two is almost over already, but here we are in week five with just one more drop of new games left to go after this. In the latest batch, we got the climbing metroidvania, Tiny Turnip, and Chance’s Lucky Escape, a short point-and-click adventure that leans into the absurd. In line with the rest of this season’s games, which have consistently been really solid, they’re both pretty damn fun.

A still from the Playdate game Tiny Turnip showing a turnip with arms and large hand clinging to a moving platform above a layer of spikesA still from the Playdate game Tiny Turnip showing a turnip with arms and large hand clinging to a moving platform above a layer of spikes

Luke Sanderson

Tiny Turnip is one of the standouts of this season for me. It sits at the sweet spot of weird, a bit challenging and extremely engaging, and I could not put it down once I started playing. And the soundtrack absolutely rules.

It’s a metroidvania about an ambitious root vegetable who is reaching for the stars. Literally. The turnip makes a wish, sprouts arms and sets out climbing toward the sky. The subsequent adventure takes place across an unexpectedly huge map and requires a lot of precise, calculated movements as you navigate gaps, moving obstacles and environmental hazards, uncover hidden rooms and collect keys to access locked areas. Ultimately, the goal is to get the crystal vegetables that are scattered around the map so the little turnip’s dreams can come true, but there are also stars to collect for the completionists among us.

Getting around in this game is fun. For a normal climb, you use the crank to move the turnip’s arms individually, pressing B to hold onto grabbable surfaces and switch hands. But as you progress, you pick up more abilities so the turnip can move in other ways too, like curling its arms in to roll, swimming, jumping, etc. These maneuvers generally involve launching the turnip in some way — out of water or slingshot-style between walls, for example — and it’s awesome.

I love the way this game uses the crank and it really is just a blast to play.

A still from the Playdate game Chance's Lucky Escape showing an anthropomorphized dog standing next to a car in a parking lot, with text below that reads A still from the Playdate game Chance's Lucky Escape showing an anthropomorphized dog standing next to a car in a parking lot, with text below that reads

Goloso Games/Julia Minamata

There are a few things you need to know about Chance, “the luckiest dog in the world”: 1) he’s about as unlucky as he is lucky and 2) he’s not a bad guy, he just steals cars and robs banks sometimes! He’s also some sort of henchman for the dog mafia. In Chance’s Lucky Escape — a super short, point-and-click puzzle adventure game that plays out over six chapters — you have to help Chance get out of bind after bind as he tries in vain to get to his meeting with The Boss, Snowball, while also evading police.

The game is described as being “inspired by 80s cartoons and absurdist comedy films,” and it definitely captures those vibes. Every scenario Chance ends up in is completely ridiculous. Figuring out how to get Chance out of the messes he’s found himself in, like getting stuck in the sewers after falling into an open manhole or trying not to drown while tied to a chair underwater, requires a bit of thinking and creativity. But none of the puzzles are prohibitively hard, which keeps things feeling light and silly.

At the very beginning, you’re informed that you’ll need to employ the crank, microphone and even the accelerometer at some points, which was handy knowledge in moments where I felt briefly stuck after clicking on every clickable item and still getting nowhere. When in doubt, just start trying weird things and something’s likely to work (The Whiteout, from a few weeks ago, prepared me well for this).

As I said earlier, this one’s pretty short, but it’s just the right length to pick up on your lunch break. I could totally see this being a series and would happily dive back into Chance’s misadventures if ever new episodes in his saga were to be made.



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Galaxy Z Flip 7 looks a bit thinner in latest leaked image, but is it?

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Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip 7 is already going to be a big upgrade for its improved outer display, but it seems the device is also set to adopt a thinner overall profile based on the latest leaked image.

Posted in the latest newsletter by Evan Blass (@evleaks), this new image of the Galaxy Z Flip 7 doesn’t really show anything super new. We can see the star attraction, the bigger cover display, as well as the striking new blue color variant.

What caught our eye here is the thinner-looking design of the Flip 7, which wasn’t really expected.

The positioning of the device makes it look thinner, and we’re pretty sure that’s not just our imagination. If you look at the SIM tray here and compare it to the Galaxy Z Flip 6 (below), you can see that there’s less space between the top and bottom of the tray and the end of the Flip 7’s frame. Unless Samsung oddly made that tray thicker, this means that Flip 7 is going to be thinner.

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That would be great news, as the Galaxy Z Flip series (and most flip phones, for that matter) has yet to focus on a thinner folded profile like the book-style foldables have.

It’s hard to say if this is true, though. Multiple previous leaks have narrowed down the thickness of the unfolded Galaxy Z Flip 7 as 6.84mm (or rounded to 6.9mm), which is right at the same dimension as Flip 6. It’s not unprecedented for these leaks to be wrong, and there was a huge mistake made in early Flip 7 leaks, but we wouldn’t bet on this device actually being thinner just yet.

Still, the thought of that upgrade is pretty enticing…


Samsung has reservations open now for the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7, with a $50 credit when you pre-order and up to $1,150+ in savings. Reservations are free, and there’s no obligation to actually buy a device if you sign up, but there’s no other time you can get that $50 credit (which can go towards Galaxy Watch 8), 3x reward points, and other perks.


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Rock Hall of Fame band scraps retirement plans: ‘There’s just a lot of forward movement’

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Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees and iconic 1970s band Foreigner recently decided to scrap plans to retire, citing what bassist Jeff Pilson described as “forward movement.”

“There’s just a lot of forward movement, and the band is incredibly excited,” Pilson told Billboard recently. The musician announced the band would transition lead singer duties from member Kelly Hansen to guitarist Luis Maldonado.

The band — known for his such as “I Want to Know What Love Is” and “Cold as Ice” — kicked off a farewell tour in the summer of 2023. The band saw increased demand after being inducted into the Hall of Fame last October.

“What started off as being a farewell tour now ended up being Kelly’s last tour and (the band) moving forward,” Pilson told Billboard.

Earlier this year, Hansen decided to skip the band’s tour dates in South America and Canada, leaving singing duties to Maldonado, who joined the band in 2021.

Hansen replaced the band’s original singer, Lou Gramm, in 2005, and explained the band’s reasons for a farewell tour two years ago:

“The time has come. We have more or less lived our lives on the road for almost eighteen years. We have always strived to give you our best and we intend to finish this the same way,” Hansen said at the time.

“Foreigner has a brilliant and increasingly demanding catalogue of songs to sing and I refuse to give them less than they deserve,” he continued. “So, we’re going to finish strong. I want to make it very clear how grateful and appreciative we are to our audiences all over the world who have supported this band. I’m sure there may be occasions when we’ll do some special appearances, but I think the time is coming for us to live off the road. Thank you all so much!”

Pilson told Billboard that there are no hard feelings within the band and that Hansen “deserves to have a wonderful life.”

He added that Maldonado stepping up to the mic came as somewhat of a surprise.

“Luis really had no intention of this,” Pilson said. “He was trying to talk Kelly into staying. And when it became clear Kelly really wants to live a life now … Luis just stepped up and, oh my God, that voice came through.”

Hansen said he’d step down after the band’s current U.S. leg of the tour, with the final dates planned for Oct. 10-11 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, according to Billboard.



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Meta reportedly hires four more researchers from OpenAI

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Looks like Meta isn’t done poaching talent from OpenAI.

Earlier this week, TechCrunch reported that Meta had hired influential OpenAI researcher Trapit Bansal, and according to The Wall Street Journal, it also hired three other researchers from the company.

Now The Information is reporting four more Meta hires from OpenAI: Researchers Shengjia Zhao, Jiahui Yu, Shuchao Bi, and Hongyu Ren.

This hiring spree comes after the April launch of Meta’s Llama 4 AI models, which reportedly did not perform as well as CEO Mark Zuckerberg had hoped. (The company was also criticized over the version of Llama that it used for a popular benchmark.)

There’s been some back-and-forth between the two companies, with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman suggesting that Meta was offering “$100 million signing bonuses” while adding that “so far, none of our best people” have left. Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth then told employees that while senior leaders may have been offered that kind of money, “the actual terms of the offer” were more complex than a simple one-time signing bonus.



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Tesla shows off its first fully autonomous delivery to convince us its self-driving cars work well

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Tesla’s robotaxi service may have had some early hitches, but the company said it just successfully delivered a car autonomously. Using the same robotaxi technology, Tesla showed the delivery process of a Model Y from its Gigafactory Texas in Austin to a customer with a roughly 30-minute journey as seen in a video posted on X. Unlike the robotaxi service launch last week, the automated delivery had no safety monitor, nor anyone behind the wheel. Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, also posted on X that the delivery didn’t have any “remote operators in control at any point.”

The trip covers navigating through everything from the Gigafactory Texas’ parking lot to city streets, even managing to handle the highway without any incidents. This delivery comes just after Tesla’s rollout of its robotaxi service in Austin, with Musk promising that the “first Tesla that drives itself from factory end of line all the way to a customer house is June 28.” While impressive, it’s not the first time that a fully autonomous car has used the highway, since Waymo started allowing its employees access to self-driving rides on Los Angeles freeways earlier this year.

Tesla’s competing robotaxi service hasn’t been without its hiccups. As seen in a 10-mile trip posted on X, the Model Y using the robotaxi software struggled to make a left turn and corrected its course by entering the other side of the road briefly. In another launch day video, the robotaxi was seen braking hard twice after encountering police cars with their lights on, even though none of the emergency vehicles were on the road. The robotaxi pilot program has caught the attention of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which said that it reached out to Tesla for more information about these incidents. On top of the robotaxi concerns, recent demonstrations showed Tesla’s Full Self-Driving software failing to stop for a school bus’ flashing lights and stop signs, as well as for kid-sized mannequins who dart into the road.





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Galaxy Z Fold 7 leak shows thin profile, hole punch camera

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Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7 is quickly approaching its launch date, with the foldable breaking cover yet again this weekend with a new image showing off the thin design from a new angle, as well as reiterating the return of a hole punch camera.

Leaker Evan Blass (@evleaks) shared an image of the Galaxy Z Fold 7 via a newsletter, showing off the device from an angle we’ve not really seen yet. The half-unfolded Galaxy Z Fold 7 is shown with a relative close-up on the buttons.

This pretty clearly shows that the foldable is a lot thinner than its predecessor, with the fingerprint sensor/power button barely having enough room. The camera array also doesn’t look as thin in this image as it did in prior leaks.

The other thing we can see here helps to confirm a detail of past leaks. The under-display camera has vanished. That is to say, the hole punch selfie camera is back on the inner display. The placement remains the same, halfway down one half of the display, and it doesn’t seem any bigger. What’s notable, though, is that this is the first time we’ve seen a hole punch camera on a Samsung Galaxy Z Fold device in a long time. Galaxy Fold and Galaxy Z Fold 2 used hole punch cameras, but everything since 2021’s Galaxy Z Fold 3 has leveraged an under-display camera.

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Why the change? It’s thought that a patent from Apple may be the reason, as the company’s upcoming foldable may end up using the tech and, in turn, lead to potential legal issues for Samsung.

But in any case, this is good news as far as quality goes, as Samsung never really figured out how to get around the limitations of this tech at the expense of the camera’s quality.


Samsung has reservations open now for the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7, with a $50 credit when you pre-order and up to $1,150+ in savings. Reservations are free, and there’s no obligation to actually buy a device if you sign up, but there’s no other time you can get that $50 credit (which can go towards Galaxy Watch 8), 3x reward points, and other perks.


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Trump’s tax and spending cuts bill clears key Senate vote as Republicans race to pass it by July 4

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By LISA MASCARO, KEVIN FREKING and JOEY CAPPELLETTI Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans voting in a dramatic late Saturday session narrowly cleared a key procedural step as they race to advance President Donald Trump’s package of tax breaks, spending cuts and bolstered deportation funds by his July Fourth deadline.

The tally, 51-49, came after a tumultuous session with Vice President JD Vance on hand if needed to break the tie. Tense scenes played out in the chamber as voting came to a standstill, dragging for hours as holdout senators huddled for negotiations. In the end, two Republicans opposed the motion to proceed to debate, joining all Democrats.

It’s still a long weekend of work to come.

Republicans are using their majorities in Congress to push aside Democratic opposition, but they have run into a series of political and policy setbacks. Not all GOP lawmakers are on board with proposals to reduce spending on Medicaid, food stamps and other programs as a way to help cover the cost of extending some $3.8 trillion in Trump tax breaks.

Ahead of the expected roll call, the White House released a statement of administrative policy saying it “strongly supports passage” of the bill that “implements critical aspects” of the president’s agenda. Trump himself was at his golf course in Virginia on Saturday with GOP senators posting about it on social media.

“It’s time to get this legislation across the finish line,” said Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D.

But as the day dragged, billionaire Elon Musk lashed out, calling the package “utterly insane and destructive.”

“The latest Senate draft bill will destroy millions of jobs in America and cause immense strategic harm to our country!” the former top Trump aide said in a post.

The 940-page bill was released shortly before midnight Friday, and senators are expected to grind through the hours of all-night debate and amendments in the days ahead. If the Senate is able to pass it, the bill would go back to the House for a final round of votes before it could reach the White House.

With the narrow Republican majorities in the House and Senate, leaders need almost every lawmaker on board in the face of essentially unified opposition from Democrats. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky voted against.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York said Republicans unveiled the bill “in the dead of night” and are rushing to finish the bill before the public fully knows what’s in it. He is expected to call for a full reading of the text in the Senate, which would take hours.

Make-or-break moment for GOP

The weekend session could be a make-or-break moment for Trump’s party, which has invested much of its political capital on his signature domestic policy plan. Trump is pushing Congress to wrap it up and has admonished the “grandstanders” among GOP holdouts to fall in line.

The legislation is an ambitious but complicated series of GOP priorities. At its core, it would make permanent many of the tax breaks from Trump’s first term that would otherwise expire by year’s end if Congress fails to act, resulting in a potential tax increase on Americans. The bill would add new breaks, including no taxes on tips, and commit $350 billion to national security, including for Trump’s mass deportation agenda.

But the cutbacks to Medicaid, food stamps and green energy investments, which a top Democrat, Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon said would be a “death sentence” for America’s wind and solar industries, are also causing dissent within GOP ranks.

The Republicans are relying on the reductions to offset the lost tax revenues but some lawmakers say the cuts go too far, particularly for people receiving health care through Medicaid. Meanwhile, conservatives, worried about the nation’s debt, are pushing for steeper cuts.

Tillis, who said he spoke with Trump late Friday explaining his concerns, announced Saturday he cannot support the package as is, largely because he said the health care changes would force his state to “make painful decisions like eliminating Medicaid coverage for hundreds of thousands.”

After setbacks, Republicans revise some proposals

The release of that draft had been delayed as the Senate parliamentarian reviewed the bill to ensure it complied with the chamber’s strict “Byrd Rule,” named for the late Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va. It largely bars policy matters from inclusion in budget bills unless a provision can get 60 votes to overcome objections. That would be a tall order in a Senate with a 53-47 GOP edge and Democrats unified against Trump’s bill.

Republicans suffered a series of setbacks after several proposals, including shifting food stamp costs from the federal government to the states or gutting the funding structure of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, were deemed out of compliance with the rules.

But over the past days, Republicans have quickly revised those proposals and reinstated them.

The final text includes a proposal for cuts to the Medicaid provider tax that had run into parliamentary hurdles and objections from several senators worried about the fate of rural hospitals. The new version extends the start date for those cuts and establishes a $25 billion fund to aid rural hospitals and providers. Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who had opposed the cuts, vowed “to do everything I can” to make sure the reductions never go into effect.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has said that under the House-passed version of the bill, some 10.9 million more people would go without health care and at least 3 million fewer would qualify for food aid. The CBO has not yet publicly assessed the Senate draft, which proposes steeper reductions.

Top income-earners would see about a $12,000 tax cut under the House bill, while the package would cost the poorest Americans $1,600, the CBO said.

SALT dispute shakes things up

The Senate included a compromise over the so-called SALT provision, a deduction for state and local taxes that has been a top priority of lawmakers from New York and other high-tax states, but the issue remains unsettled.

The current SALT cap is $10,000 a year, and a handful of Republicans wanted to boost it to $40,000 a year. The final draft includes a $40,000 cap, but limits it for five years.

Many Republican senators say that is still too generous. At least one House GOP holdout, Rep. Nick LaLota of New York, had said that would be insufficient.

Trump’s deadline nears

House Speaker Mike Johnson, who sent his colleagues home for the weekend with plans to be on call to return to Washington. But as the Senate draft was revealed, House GOP support was uncertain. One Republican, Rep. David Valadao of California, said he was opposed.

___

Associated Press writers Ali Swenson and Matthew Daly contributed to this report.



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Authors call on publishers to limit their use of AI

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An open letter from authors including Lauren Groff, Lev Grossman, R.F. Kuang, Dennis Lehane, and Geoffrey Maguire calls on book publishers to pledge to limit their use of AI tools, for example by committing to only hire human audiobook narrators.

The letter argues that authors’ work has been “stolen” by AI companies: “Rather than paying writers a small percentage of the money our work makes for them, someone else will be paid for a technology built on our unpaid labor.”

Among other commitments, the authors call for publishers to “make a pledge that they will never release books that were created by machine” and “not replace their human staff with AI tools or degrade their positions into AI monitors.”

While the initial letter was signed by an already impressive list of writers, NPR reports that another 1,100 signatures were added in the 24 hours after it was initially published.

Authors are also suing tech companies over using their books to train AI models, but federal judges dealt significant blows to those lawsuits earlier this week.



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