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Razer has unveiled two new iterations of its Pro Click mouse with an eye toward comfort. The Pro Click V2 is a standard mouse model, while the Pro Click V2 Vertical Edition is the first vertical mouse design from the company. More and more peripheral manufacturers are offering vertical designs, which can be a more ergonomic mouse option, particularly if you experience discomfort when spending long stretches at a computer. The Pro Click V2 Vertical Edition has eight programmable buttons and promises a battery life of up to six months. It has a 71.7 degree tilt, so a user holds it in a handshake-like grip, which can reduce strain for long use sessions. There's also a support on the base that aims to cut down on wrist friction. This model retails for $120. The standard Pro Click V2 model costs $100. It has an additional ninth button but its battery life is only up to 3.5 months. It has a slight angle of 30 degrees for a more natural grip. RGB lighting has long been a hallmark of Razer's products, and whether you love it or love to hate it, that colorful visual signature is present on both mice. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/accessories/razer-has-a-vertical-mouse-now-183226307.html?src=rss
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The joint ESA and NASA Solar Orbiter mission has delivered a stunning new image of the Sun and its corona. The sun-observing satellite originally launched in 2020, and besides making the Sun look cool, the data it's captured has impacted things like our understanding of solar wind. Today's photo shows off the spun-sugar-like particles caught in the magnetic field of the Sun's atmosphere, the dark "filaments" of cooler material weaving their way in between and bursting active areas that emit solar flares. The ESA says the photo is technically a composite of 200 separate images taken with the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager, around 77 million km from the Sun. The EUI allows the traditionally unobservable parts of the Sun's atmosphere or corona to be visible in photographs. ESA & NASA/Solar Orbiter/EUI Team, E. Kraaikamp (ROB) Solar Orbiter has regularly provided a clear look at our closest star, and even offered insights into Venus as it made its way to its current position observing the Sun. For more details on the image, and interactive labels explaining the different regions of the Sun, check out the ESA website. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/can-i-offer-you-a-nice-image-of-the-sun-in-these-trying-times-181135043.html?src=rss
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Meta is finally acknowledging that Facebooks feed is filled with too many spammy posts. In an update, the company says it plans to start cracking down on some of the worst offenders. Facebook Feed doesnt always serve up fresh, engaging posts that you consistently enjoy, the company writes. Were working on it. Specifically, Meta says it will lower the reach of creators that share posts with "long, distracting captions as well as posts with captions that are irrelevant or unrelated to the shared content. These accounts will also no longer be eligible for monetization. Likewise, the company says its taking more aggressive steps to combat spam networks that coordinate fake engagement. This includes making comments from these accounts less visible, and removing Facebook pages meant to inflate reach. Meta is also testing a feature that allows users to anonymously downvote comments in order to flag them as not useful. The update comes as Meta is trying to revamp Facebook to make it more appealing to young adults. The company recently brought back a tab for friends content, in an update Mark Zuckerberg described as making the platform more like OG Facebook. Notably though, Metas update doesnt mention one of the more persistent forms of engagement bait thats emerged on Facebook over the last year: AI slop. The phenomenon, which has been extensively documented by 404 Media, involved bizarre, often nonsensical AI-generated images like the now infamous Shrimp Jesus that serve little purpose other than to farm engagement for people trying to make money on or off Facebook. These spammers are often aided by Facebooks own algorithm, which boosts the posts, researchers have found. AI slop and engagement bait arent the only types of low-quality posts that have overwhelmed users Facebook feeds in recent years. I regularly see posts from pages that seem to do nothing but screenshot old Reddit posts from r/AITA, or recycle old news about celebrities I dont follow or particularly care about. Metas reports on the most widely-viewed content on its platform regularly feature anodyne posts that are engineered to rack up millions of comments, like those that ask users to comment amen or solve basic math equations. Posts like that may not fit neatly into Metas latest crackdown, though its unlikely many Facebook users are actually enjoying this content. The company does note its also trying to elevate the creators that are actually sharing original content, including by cracking down on accounts that steal their work. But given how much easier it is to make AI slop than good original content, it could be a long time before Meta is able to get Facebooks spam problem under control.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/meta-finally-acknowledges-that-facebook-has-a-major-spam-problem-175304372.html?src=rss
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