Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2026-01-20 00:46:05| Engadget

Pioneering mathematician Dr. Gladys West has passed away at the age of 95. Her name may not be familiar to you, but her contributions certainly are; West's work laid the foundation for the global positioning system. As you likely know from experience, GPS is now an essential component of industries ranging from aviation and emergency response, as well as ensuring that you get to that dinner date or job interview on time. This morning the world lost a pioneer in Dr Gladys West, she passed peacefully alongside her family and friends and is now in heaven with her loved ones. We thank you in advance for all of the love and prayers you have and will continue to provide pic.twitter.com/FJ3aGfEiHP Dr. Gladys B. West (@DrGladysBWest) January 18, 2026 West was born in 1930 in Virginia. Despite the oppression of Jim Crow laws in the south, she was able to pursue higher education at Virginia State College (now named Virginia State University), obtaining bachelor's and master's degrees in mathematics. In 1956, West was hired at what is now called the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Dahlgren, VA. Her focus during the 1970s and 1980s was creating accurate models of the Earth's shape based on satellite data, a complex task requiring the type of mathematical gymnastics that would make the average person dizzy. Those models later became the backbone for GPS. West worked at the Dahlgren center for 42 years, retiring in 1998. As has been the case with so many of the women, particularly those of color, behind tech and science breakthroughs in the US, West's work went largely uncelebrated for decades. After submitting a short biography of her accomplishments to a sorority function in 2018, members of Alpha Kappa Alpha helped West to receive belated recognition for her contributions. She was inducted into the US Air Force Space and Missiles Pioneers Hall of Fame and honored as Female Alumna of the Year by the Historically Black Colleges and Universities Awards in that same year. The Guardian published an interview with West in 2020 that shared some insights on her journey, including a note that when West was out and about, she favored paper maps over the technology she indirectly helped create.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/dr-gladys-west-whose-mathematical-models-inspired-gps-dies-at-95-234605023.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

LATEST NEWS

2026-01-19 22:30:43| Engadget

ASUS appears to be shifting its business operations away from smartphones. According to translations of recent quotes from Chairman Jonney Shih, the company does not plan to release new phone models in the future. The chairman did not confirm whether smartphones would be completely phased out, but he did acknowledge that possibility. Whatever direction ASUS takes, its existing phones will continue to receive software updates and warranty assistance. Shih suggested that its future plans may include a shift into AI-related projects such as robotics or smartglasses.Previous reports hinted that ASUS would not introduce any smartphones in 2026, but Shih's recent comments indicate that the pause may stretch longer than a year. We've reached out to ASUS for additional comment and will update if the company shares any further information. ASUS had plenty of other updates emerging from CES at the start of the month unrelated to smartphones, such as dual-screen laptops and a pair of gaming smartglasses. So if it does decide to leave that product segment, there will still be other ASUS-branded gear on the market. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/asus-will-not-release-any-new-smartphones-this-year-213043832.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

2026-01-19 22:05:00| Engadget

The UK Gambling Commission has raised concerns that Meta is ignoring advertisements by illegal gambling websites on its platforms. At a conference in Barcelona, the commission's Executive Director Tim Miller criticized Meta's behavior towards advertisements for online gambling on its Facebook and Instagram social networks."Companies like Meta will tell you that they dont tolerate the advertising of illegal sites and will remove them if they are notified about them," Miller's speech transcript reads. "But that approach suggests that they dont know about those ads unless alerted. That is simply false."Meta's internal policy is that gambling sites must be licensed in the markets where their ads run. However, the agency was able to conduct basic searches for advertisers that are not on its GamStop platform, which helps people block themselves from accessing online gambling sites. GamStop integration is required for an operator to receive a UK license. "I would be very surprised if Meta, as one of the worlds largest tech companies is incapable of proactively using their own keyword facility to prevent the advertising of illegal gambling," Miller said. "It could leave you with the impression they are quite happy to turn a blind eye and continue taking money from criminals and scammers until someone shouts about it."This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/uk-agency-questions-metas-policies-for-illegal-gambling-site-ads-210500714.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

20.01Akai's MPC XL groovebox is the most powerful device the company has ever made
20.01Earth is having some issues, so let's enjoy the Webb telescope's new nebula image
20.01Roland's Go:Mixer Studio is an affordable but capable mixer for budding recording engineers
20.01Meta's Oversight Board is looking into transparency around disabling accounts
20.01Adobe unveils new AI-powered video editing tools for Premiere
20.01Rad Power Bikes warehouse catches fire following flammable battery warnings
20.01The UK is mulling an Australia-like social media ban for users under 16
20.01The Morning After: Elon Musk wants a $134 billion payout from OpenAI and Microsoft
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

20.01Bear Radar
20.01Stocks Falling Substantially into Final Hour on Rising Long-Term Rates, Escalating Tariff Uncertainty, Earnings Outlook Jitters, Tech/Transport Sector Weakness
20.01How anti-doomscrolling influencers are combatting social media addiction
20.01Indiana Hoosiers college football championship by the numbers
20.01Netflix beats revenue estimates as subscriber count climbs 325 million
20.01ComEd submits new $15.3B, four-year grid plan to the state to meet increased electric demand
20.01What Makes This Trade Great: POLA and the Power of AI Re-Entry
20.015 reasons why you should laugh more and not take yourself so seriously
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .