Apple Does the Inevitable and Begins Development on Its Own Cellular Modem

https://gizmodo.com/apple-does-the-inevitable-and-begins-development-on-its-1845860711


Photo: Caitlin McGarry/Gizmodo

After bringing processor development in-house with the arrival of its Arm-based M1 chip, Apple has now taken the next logical step by beginning the development of custom-designed cellular modems.

In a recent town hall hosted by Apple senior VP of hardware technologies Johny Srouji, according to Bloomberg Srouji told employees “This year, we kicked off the development of our first internal cellular modem which will enable another key strategic transition,” he said. “Long-term strategic investments like these are a critical part of enabling our products and making sure we have a rich pipeline of innovative technologies for our future.”

By following the development of custom Apple-designed silicon with Apple-designed modems, Apple is looking to bring even more of the components it needs to produce smartphones, tablets, and laptops in-house, expanding upon a strategy that Apple has increasingly embraced over the last decade.

Apple’s big shift to move more and more component design in-house really took off in 2010 with the introduction of the Arm-based A4 chip used in the first iPad and the iPhone 4. Since then, Apple has brought control for even more of its components under its roof including things like the S-series chips used in the Apple Watch, Apple’s line of W-series Bluetooth and wireless chips, and most notably, Apple’s recent transition away from x86-based Intel CPUs to Apple’s own Arm-based chips like the M1.

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The big impetus for Apple’s push to bring cellular modem development in-house is likely due in large part to Apple’s multi-billion-dollar legal battle with Qualcomm over the royalty fees and licensing costs for modems used in iPhones, a war that waged throughout 2018 and 2019. So even though the two tech giants eventually settled their beef and even agreed to a new licensing deal for modems that is set to last until at least 2025, Apple quickly followed up the settlement by purchasing Intel’s smartphone modem division for $1 billion just a few months later.

While it’s unclear when an Apple-designed modem might find its way into an actual retail device, the timeline of Apple’s current licensing deal with Qualcomm gives the company plenty of time to develop its own modems without huge pressure to deliver immediately.

According to Bloomberg, around 11% of Qualcomm’s current revenue is derived from deals with Apple, which means Apple bringing modem development in-house could have some serious implications for Qualcomm’s bottom line in the future.

On the flip side, Apple’s continued embracing of vertical integration has been a huge success over the last ten years, so it’s a safe bet that modems are just the latest component to get the Apple in-house design treatment.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

December 11, 2020 at 10:42AM

Cooked Veggies Are Often More Nutritious Than Raw. Here’s Why

https://www.discovermagazine.com/health/cooked-veggies-are-often-more-nutritious-than-raw-heres-why


While most fad diets restrict the range of foods their followers can eat, the raw food craze takes aim at their preparation — outlawing cooking. Adherents argue that heat kills nutrients and enzymes, stripping the very “life force” from foods. But experts say that more often than not, the opposite is true: Cooking unlocks the health benefits of many plants.

Of course, raw vegetables are plenty good for you. Admittedly some, like potatoes, are seldom eaten that way, while others, like the widespread staple cassava, are highly toxic without careful preparation. Nevertheless, the British Dietetic Association named the raw vegan diet one of five “celebrity diets to avoid” in 2018, noting that many foods are more nutritious after cooking. “The human body can digest and be nourished by both raw and cooked foods,” the association wrote, “so there’s no reason to believe raw is inherently better.”


Read More: How Humans’ Unique Cooking Abilities Might Have Altered Our Fate


Humans have been cooking for about as long as they’ve been human. The process makes food more chewable and easier to digest, allowing extra time and energy for other distinctly human activities. (Many peg it as a key evolutionary factor behind our large brains, compared to other animals.) In vegetables, the heat often renders anticarcinogens and other disease-fighting compounds more readily accessible than they would be in raw form.

Liberating Antioxidants

Cooked tomatoes, for example, exude more lycopene, an antioxidant that gives red and pink fruits and vegetables their color. “It’s bound to the cell wall, and during the cooking the high temperature releases it,” says Rui Hai Liu, a food scientist at Cornell University. The same is true for carrots and beta-carotene, the antioxidant responsible for yellow and orange pigment in fruits and vegetables. One study found that beta-carotene was 20 percent more accessible in cooked carrots, and even more so after cooking with olive oil.

One 2007 study compared the effect of different cooking techniques on antioxidants in carrots, zucchini and broccoli. The researchers found that steaming and boiling, when compared to frying, best preserved the compounds (some dietitians even recommend drinking the water as well). All three cooking methods increased antioxidant levels compared with the raw veggies. “Our findings defy the notion that processed vegetables offer lower nutritional quality,” they wrote.

Liu notes that the outcome of cooking varies from plant to plant: “It really depends which vegetable you’re talking about.” Raw broccoli, for example, retains more cancer-preventing isothiocyanates than cooked (though other studies show blanching and briefly steaming don’t harm the compounds much).

In many cases, though, cooking only raises the bioavailability of nutrients, or the extent to which they can take effect within the body. A 2010 study compared three groups of women following, respectively, an average Western diet, a wholesome nutrition diet and a raw food diet. The researchers wanted to see if beta-carotene intake and absorption differed among them. Although the raw food dieters consumed about a third more of the compound than the women in the wholesome nutrition group, the latter absorbed about a third more.

As nutritional medicine popularizer Michael Greger writes, “It’s not what you eat — it’s what you absorb.” You can gorge yourself on raw carrots all day, but if your body can’t make use of their phytochemicals efficiently, what’s the point?

Variety of Veggies

As for the charges against cooked food, many scientists think they’re overblown. It’s true that cooking takes its toll on a meal. Heat deactivates or reduces the activity of enzymes in food, and it can also destroy a significant percentage of vitamin C in vegetables. But Roger Clemens, a food scientist at the University of Southern California, says we don’t use those enzymes for digestion. Rather, “our bodies are wonderfully made,” and produce all the enzymes they need. Vitamin C, meanwhile, is widely available, so a decrease in some meals isn’t necessarily a big deal so long as people get more elsewhere.

Raw vegetables are undoubtedly healthy. But critics note that for many people, it’s difficult to sustain a diet composed solely of uncooked food. What’s more, it’s less appealing, and that means most people will abandon it sooner or later. On the other hand, if cooking makes nutritious food taste better, they’ll gobble it down. “The best way to get your greens,” Greger writes, “is in whichever way you’ll eat the most of them.”

Liu agrees. “Some people like to eat stir fry, some people like to eat salad,” he says. “I think it depends on your personal preference.” And in the end, he adds, too much nutritional nitpicking is probably counterproductive. All that time fixating on the healthiest way to prepare each individual plant could be better spent following a simpler approach: “Just eat more vegetables,” he says — larger servings, more servings and, importantly, more variety. “The maximum nutrition comes from eating everything, not just raw and not just cooked.”

via Discover Main Feed https://ift.tt/2rbDICG

December 11, 2020 at 12:06PM

Boeing’s tanker drone completes first flight with refueling pod

https://www.engadget.com/boeing-mq-25-tanker-drone-flies-with-refueling-pod-160152881.html

Humans might not have much involvement in mid-air refueling before long. Boeing has flown a test version of its MQ-25 tanker drone with a refueling pod attached for the first time, taking it one step closer to topping up military aircraft. The 2.5-hour flight showed that the autonomous drone’s aerodynamics were sound with the wing-mounted pod it’s expected to carry much of the time.

The test drone, T1, is a precursor to an “engineering development” model that will take Boeing one step closer to a finished vehicle.

This could be a crucial machine. The US Navy ultimately hopes to order more than 70 MQ-25 drones that will take over the fuel tanker role F/A-18 Hornet fighters have had to serve. The robotic aircraft should not only free those jets for their intended combat roles, but spare human pilots from having to fly a routine and often mundane mission. While that could lead to fewer pilots overall, it could also help keep people out of harm’s way.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

December 11, 2020 at 10:09AM