Earthworms are thriving in Martian(ish) soil

A Dutch scientist found two baby earthworms wriggling around in soil that is supposed to replicate the surface of Mars. But we’re still pretty far away from gardening on the red planet.

For now, scientists don’t have access to real Martian soil. So Wieger Wamelink, biologist at Wageningen University, bought a simulation from NASA at a hefty $2,500 for about 220 pounds (he created a crowdfunding campaign to help with the costs). The U.S. space agency fetched that dirt from a volcano in Hawaii and the Mojave desert, then sterilized it to copy the lifeless Martian environment. Wamelink and his research team then put the simulation soil through a Martian colony scenario. They were enthusiastic when they added adult worms that not only survived, but reproduced. “That was way beyond what we expected,” says Wamelink.

The discovery that earthworms could survive on the red planet would be thrilling. These underrated annelids are crucial to a healthy ecosystem on Earth. They’re living super-composters, eating dead plants and pooping out productive soil. If human colonies could breed them, their crops would fare better.

But the process of recreating a stranded Matt Damon scenario is not all that scientific for the time being. After receiving the soil from NASA in 2013, Wamelink planted a variety of seeds. To his delight, tomato, wheat, cress, field mustard, and a wild plant called stonecrop grew. He checked that batch for heavy metals, but put a roughly equal amount of plants back into the soil to imitate what would have happened without human intervention. After that first year, he started putting the actual plants back into the soil, but also added pig slurry as a stand-in for human feces.

Future Martians probably wouldn’t do this, according to Andrew Palmer, a biology professor at the Florida Institute of Technology. “It’s highly unlikely we will put feces in agriculture of any kind in the soil,” he says. “Human feces are a horrible vector for disease, and I don’t know how many pigs will be on Mars.”

But the dangers from spreading human poop—diarrhea, typhoid, cholera, polio and hepatitis—don’t compare to perchlorate, which the Phoenix Mars Lander found in Martian soil in 2007. This compound, which humans sometimes put in propellants and packaging, affects the thyroid and lungs. Martians would need to get rid of this substance before planting anything in the soil, and other space missions that collect larger soil samples may bring back news of other less-than-delicious substances.

No soil on Earth is a perfect replica of Martian stuff. And like the dirt on our own planet, it’s not uniform. Just as the white sand of the Amazon river basin is completely different from the limestone-rich clay in Spain, Mars has a varying geology, and probably a corresponding dirt diversity that humans have not begun to explore. And all the dirt on Earth has had some sort of life stumble into it at some point, even in the relatively barren areas where NASA collects Mars simulation soil. Plants can use the chemical remains of this past life to grow more easily. “There’s going to be trace amounts of organic matter,” says Palmer. “That footprint is going to be different on Mars.”

Scientists have only elemental analyses on a limited amount of Martian soil. Palmer says he hopes to someday have a molecular analysis of dirt from different areas of Mars, perhaps collected by humans. He says that research estimating how much food humans will be able to grow on Mars is crucial to creating preliminary budgets for future manned missions. So while these wormy experiments might not be enough to prove we’ll be able to live off the land, they’re still important. “We’re getting better,” he says. “You start imperfect and you refine and refine and refine.”

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Waze adds hands-free navigation to keep your eyes on the road

Waze has a number of measures to reduce distractions and keep your eyes on the road ahead, but there has been one inescapable distraction: you usually have to touch the screen to get things done. That’s a problem, especially in areas where distracted driving laws make it illegal to poke at your phone while on the move. It shouldn’t be a problem for much longer. Waze’s latest update includes a hands-free navigation option that lets you handle most tasks using only your voice. Say "OK, Waze" and you can navigate to a destination or report a traffic jam without losing focus.

Also, Waze is now one of the few navigation apps that acknowledges the two-wheeled motoring crowd. There’s a new motorcycle mode that can route you through roads too narrow for cars, gives bike-appropriate ETAs and refines paths based on input from other motorcyclists. While the experience is otherwise largely the same, this could make all the difference if it shaves a minute or two off your ride and makes sure you arrive on time.

This update will also be important if you regularly take advantage of special lanes to zip through traffic. Waze is now billed as the first navigation app to explicitly support high-occupancy vehicle lanes, potentially saving you gobs of time if you’re carpooling or otherwise eligible. HOV support is available in 22 states plus three major Canadian cities (Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver), with more on the way.

Source: Waze

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Ajit Pai blames Cher and Hulk actor for ginning up net neutrality support

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US singer and actress Cher poses on October 10, 2013 in Paris.

Internet users have made it clear to US telecom regulator Ajit Pai that his proposal to scrap net neutrality rules is unpopular with the masses. But with two weeks left before the Federal Communications Commission votes to eliminate net neutrality rules, Pai today blamed actress/singer Cher and other celebrities for boosting opposition to his plan.

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This firm is coughing up $21 million in unpaid overtime

One of Japan’s top ad agencies plans to pay millions of dollars to its workers for unpaid overtime.

The company, Dentsu, became the focus of international attention after Japanese authorities said last year that the suicide of one of its employees was caused by overwork. Since the outcry over that case, Dentsu has been trying to improve life for its workers and repair its reputation.

One of its latest moves is to set aside 2.4 billion Japanese yen (more than $21 million) to compensate employees for any “unregistered time” they’ve worked over the past two years, the company said.

The decision was made after employees were asked in a survey to discuss their working hours from April 2015 to March 2017, a spokesman said Wednesday. Although it’s common in Japan for employees to clock their hours, Dentsu staffers would previously write off some of their overtime as personal development tasks or “self-training” for which they wouldn’t be paid, he said.

Related: Japanese reporter died after clocking 159 hours of overtime

The company declined to say how many employees were owed money.

Japan is known for a stringent work culture with demanding hours and a deference to the company. A government study published last year found that one in five workers is at risk of working themselves to death.

The country has even coined a term for the problem: karoshi means death by overwork from stress-induced illnesses or severe depression.

Matsuri Takahashi, the 24-year-old Dentsu employee who killed herself, had worked about 105 hours of overtime the month before her death in late 2015, according to authorities. The uproar over the circumstances of her death led Dentsu’s president and CEO to step down earlier this year.

Related: CEO resigns after overworked employee commits suicide

The reckoning has also prompted corporate Japan to try to promote a better sense of work-life balance. Some companies have started to adopt a four-day work week, and the government has launched a campaign called “Premium Friday,” which encourages workers to leave early every last Friday of the month.

After Takahashi’s suicide, Dentsu was charged with violating Japan’s labor laws, and it lowered the maximum amount of overtime allowed to 65 hours a month.

In a plan released this summer, the agency promised to create “a new Dentsu,” acknowledging a “lack of consideration for employees’ well-being” and an “excessive disciplinary code.”

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Pokemon Go Probably Contributed To 100,000 Car Accidents And $2 Billion In Damage

Augmented reality games are entertaining and intriguing because of the fact that they interact with the real world, but that also means that we should be prepared for some real-world consequences. A new study reveals that one of the most popular AR games ever–Pokemon Go–has contributed to a lot of car accidents and property damage.

The study was produced by researchers at Purdue University, who focused on police reports from Tippecanoe County, Indiana, to look at the effect the game had on driving behavior and accidents. The results were striking: controlling for a variety of different variables, the study finds that $500,000 in damage, 37 injuries, and 2 fatalities from car wrecks can be attributed to the Pokemon Go craze. Further reinforcing the evidence, the game’s effect weakened as time wore on and the userbase dwindled.

When the team scaled up the results to estimate the effect on the entire United States, it’s even more shocking. Although this data isn’t as good as the Tippecanoe County data–it is, after all, extrapolative–it’s nonetheless a decent estimate of what the effects have been. The researchers argue that the game helped cause an increase of over 140,000 accidents, 250 fatalities, and $2-7 billion in economic costs.

Whatever your thoughts on Pokemon Go, it can’t be denied that the game had a huge impact on society, at least for a few months. And, as we are discovering, its AR gameplay had some unfortunate consequences. After all, along with causing car accidents, the game has the distinction of also being utilized and exploited in Russia’s disinformation campaign.

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