AAA: Cold weather can temporarily cut EV range by more than 40 percent

https://www.autoblog.com/2019/02/07/aaa-cold-weather-ev-range/

DETROIT — Cold temperatures can sap electric car batteries, temporarily reducing their range by more than 40 percent when interior heaters are used, a new study found.

The study of five electric vehicles by AAA also found that high temperatures can cut into battery range, but not nearly as much as the cold. The range returns to normal in more comfortable temperatures.

Many owners discovered the range limitations last week when much of the country was in the grips of a polar vortex. Owners of vehicles made by manufacturers including Tesla, the top-selling electric vehicle company in the U.S., complained on social media about reduced range and frozen door handles during the cold snap.

“As long as drivers understand that there are limitations when operating electric vehicles in more extreme climates, they are less likely to be caught off guard by an unexpected drop in driving range,” Greg Brannon, AAA’s director of automotive engineering, said in a statement.

AAA tested the BMW i3s, Chevrolet Bolt and Nissan Leaf from the 2018 model year, and the 2017 Tesla Model S 75D and Volkswagen e-Golf. All have a range of at least 100 miles per charge. They were tested on a dynamometer, which is like a treadmill, in a climate-controlled cell.

The automobile club tested the cars at 20 degrees and 95 degrees, comparing the range to when they were tested at 75 degrees Farenheit, according to a report on the study.

At 20 degrees, the average driving range fell by 12 percent when the car’s cabin heater was not used. When the heater was turned on, the range dropped by 41 percent, AAA said.

At 95 degrees, range dropped 4 percent without use of air conditioning, and fell by 17 percent when the cabin was cooled, the study found.

When the temperature tumbled to 20 degrees last week in Hickory, North Carolina, near Charlotte, Jason Hughes noticed the range fall when he drove his Tesla Model 3 on the commute from home to work.

“It would easily use double the amount of power for that 15-mile trip,” said Hughes, who owns four Teslas and runs a business that refurbishes and sells salvaged Tesla parts.

The cars use energy to heat the battery coolant in cold weather, as well as for heating the cabin, Hughes said. Range would take a hit mainly for short trips, and the decrease wouldn’t be as large on longer trips once the battery and cabin are heated, Hughes said.

“It’s definitely an issue,” he said. “If you want to go somewhere far in the cold, you’re going to be using more power.”

Range would be reduced further by extreme cold in northern states, he said.

AAA says electric cars can still be used in extreme climates with a little extra planning. It recommends that drivers heat or cool their cars while still plugged in to a charging station. And obviously, parking the car in your garage overnight is a good idea.

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via Autoblog http://bit.ly/1afPJWx

February 7, 2019 at 08:06AM

Texas Man Dies After Vape Pen Explosion Severs Artery to Brain

https://gizmodo.com/texas-man-dies-after-vape-pen-explosion-severs-artery-t-1832355840

A 24-year-old man in Fort Worth, Texas has died after a vape pen he was using exploded in his face and severed an artery to his brain, according to the Tarrant County Medical Examiner. The incident adds to a growing number of devastating vape explosions.

Read more…

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

February 5, 2019 at 10:36AM

New Material Strengthens Like Muscles, Could Lead to Smarter Prosthetics

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-brief/?p=31560

(Inside Science) — Researchers from Japan have come up with a way to encourage materials to grow stronger over time, like the muscles in our body. The new technique could allow engineers to design adaptable and healable materials for a wide range of applications.
When we lift weights in the gym, the mechanical stress causes our muscle fibers to rip and tear, but this damaging action actually allows the fibers to regrow stronger afterwards. In contrast, nonliving materials such as rubber

via Discover Main Feed http://bit.ly/1dqgCKa

February 5, 2019 at 11:23AM

Gene-Editing Scientist’s ‘Actions Are A Product Of Modern China’

https://www.npr.org/2019/02/05/690828991/gene-editing-scientists-actions-are-a-product-of-modern-china?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

Chinese scientist He Jiankui speaks at a human genome editing summit in Hong Kong on Nov. 28, 2018. He announced an experiment on twins that raised a range of ethical questions and prompted China

Chinese experts say the country’s economic, social and political environment played a major role in shaping He Jiankui, the scientist who led controversial research altering the DNA of human embryos.

(Image credit: Anthony Wallace/AFP/Getty Images)

via NPR Topics: News https://n.pr/2m0CM10

February 5, 2019 at 12:12PM

Why Xbox Live Coming To Nintendo Switch Isn’t Surprising

https://www.gamespot.com/articles/why-xbox-live-coming-to-nintendo-switch-isnt-surpr/1100-6464821/

Yes, you read that right. Microsoft has announced plans to bring Xbox Live to Nintendo Switch, iOS, and Android, with more details coming in a GDC talk next month. The company says bringing the network to more consoles will "enable game developers to connect players between iOS, Android, and Switch in addition to Xbox and any game in the Microsoft Store on Windows PCs."

Until the publisher reveals more at GDC, we’re not entirely sure what the move will involve, precisely. What we do know is Microsoft wants us to take our Xbox profile, including our Achievement history, friends list, clubs we’re in, and more, to every screen–even rival consoles.

That ties into a wider recent Microsoft strategy to get its services on as many devices as possible. Gone are the days when it only wanted you to buy an Xbox One to be your "all-in-one" entertainment solution; now the company wants you to buy a Switch and play with your Xbox friends on it. Trying to pressure everyone into buying a Windows Phone didn’t work–and was costly, thanks to the $6.2 billion (£4.7bn) acquisition of Nokia. Now, Microsoft Office runs on iOS, with a subscription fee for professional use. Instances like ex-CEO Steve Ballmer calling open-source OS Linux a "cancer" are in the past; instead, current chief executive Satya Nadella declares the company’s "love" for Linux. It only makes sense for this platform-agnostic approach for Microsoft as a whole to involve Xbox. Sure enough, it’s possible to play a huge selection of Xbox games on PC with Play Anywhere, and taking Xbox Live to other platforms seems a natural next step.

"I think if you get so focused just on hardware sales at this point, as gamers, we lose sight of what’s going on around the console business," Xbox boss Phil Spencer told GameSpot in 2017. "Console’s important. I love the console space, but it’s part of the gaming business, it’s not total.

"I look at those in aggregate, and so it’s not actually about how many Xbox One Xs do I sell, or how many Ss do I sell, or even how many of one individual game that I sell. I look at, are we growing the number of people who have a relationship with Xbox in some way? [It] could be an Android customer in China playing Minecraft, but that’s a person who’s connected to our platform who’s able to use Mixer, who’s able to connect to Xbox Live, meet their friends online. That’s really the metric for growth right now."

Ultimately, the real metric for growth is money. Microsoft’s latest financial report states the company’s revenue has increased 12%. Profit has increased by 18%. The company’s share prices have tripled in the five years since Nadalla took over and began implementing this collaborative strategy.

In that sense, it seems an obvious move to bring Xbox Live to other consoles and to mobiles: it gets the Xbox brand to, potentially, an additional 2 billion devices by Microsoft’s calculations. Nintendo in particular are the gateway to gaming for millions of children around the world–Sony Worldwide Studios president Shuhei Yoshida once said the games industry "needs Nintendo to be very successful" for this very reason. Those children will soon possess not only a gateway, but a direct pathway to the Xbox ecosystem.

Children will soon possess not only a gateway, but a direct pathway to the Xbox ecosystem

But there’s an elephant in the room: Sony is, thus far, not mentioned anywhere in Microsoft’s plans for Xbox Live expansion. Whether that’s because the PlayStation-maker wasn’t asked, or because it didn’t agree with Microsoft’s collaborative strategy, isn’t clear. What is clear is that the Japanese company has been less willing when it comes to joining forces than its competitors: it resisted the temptation of cross-play, for example, for many years, saying the PS4 was the best place to play and that’s the end of it. It finally succumbed to the pressure, but only in Fortnite at first, and only in beta form.

What’s odd is that Sony was once the frontrunner in this space: Portal 2 on PS3 allowed cross-play with PC players through Steam. More PlayStation games have allowed limited cross-play functionality since then, but only Fortnite and Rocket League allow full cross-play between PS4 and Xbox One. At least that’s some sign of progress, though, and if Xbox Live on Switch is a success, more pressure will mount on Sony to follow suit and allow Microsoft’s service on to PS4.

When I was growing up, the thought of playing Call of Duty or FIFA with my other-console-owning friends was a mere dream. With Microsoft’s plans to bring Xbox Live to competitors’ consoles, that dream is a step closer to becoming reality.

"When you look at Twitch and you look at Steam, look at PUBG, look at Minecraft," says Spencer. "People on Minecraft on Switch are playing with people on an iPhone. They don’t own a Windows machine or an Xbox, but they own our game, and they’re using Xbox Live across multiple devices. That’s what gaming in the future’s about, right?"

via GameSpot’s PC Reviews http://bit.ly/2mVXxXH

February 5, 2019 at 01:16PM