The details are both grisly and strangely surgical: corpses found under the open sky with their eyes plucked out, tongues removed and private parts excised—all extracted with the utmost precision and leaving not a drop of blood.
Reports of such unexplained mutilations, carried out on both humans and animals, have baffled investigators for decades, leading to speculation about whether the perpetrators might be otherworldly beings conducting biological experiments on earth’s inhabitants. While scores of reports have emerged from U.S. western and midwestern states detailing mysterious bloodless animal mutilations, human cases have been far less common—and often much sketchier in their documentation.
And here's another article:
UFO sightings in North America jumped to nearly 6,000 in 2019 - ABC News
There was a rise in the number of North Americans who looked up into the sky in 2019 and found something that didn't look like a bird or a plane.
Peter Davenport, who runs the independent organization that's based in Davenport, Washington, said he couldn't explain why more people called about seeing flashing white lights, fireballs, disc-shaped objects or other oddities in 2019.
"One of the mysteries of ufology is there is a fluctuation in the number of reports over the years," he told ABC News in a phone interview. "Some years it's been low, but it's gotten higher recently."
Elon Musk: 'UFO on a stick' will connect people to Starlink internet - Business Insider
But there remains an open question of how, exactly, anyone will connect to SpaceX's next-generation satellite internet network.
During a press call earlier this year, Musk described a computer-powered antenna terminal that would look like "a small to medium-size pizza."
The addition of a steering motor, according to Musk's tweet, suggests electronic switching alone is not enough to maintain a reliable connection to satellites in typical use cases.
SpaceX's 'UFO on a stick' may turn Starlink customers into key assets - Business
What Musk did not say is how, exactly, early adopters will actually send and receive data — whether it's information about financial markets halfway around the world, or streaming video of "The Bachelor" on a Hulu server farm — using satellites moving around Earth at 17,000 mph, and in a dizzying variety of paths called orbital planes.
And here's another article:
PS5 and Xbox Series X are coming, but these PCs are trying to fill the gap - The Verge
Every January, PC gaming companies get a full week during CES to show us the latest and greatest in new processors, graphics cards, monitors, and everything else that's been cooking for the last year or longer. Normally, the PC industry gets to do this without its console counterpart encroaching on its turf. It's a place for discussions about totally unfettered gaming performance and the kinds of ludicrous hardware you could buy if money was no concern. But this year is a bit different.
US navy confirms UFOs recorded by pilots are real – The Mail & Guardian
The spokesperson for the United States navy's deputy chief of naval operations for information warfare, Joseph Gradisher, has confirmed to Time magazine that the videos recorded by its pilots showing a series of unidentified flying objects (UFOs) and released to the public are, in fact, real.
These videos, which show what the navy prefers to refer to as Unidentified Aerial Phenomena, were sourced from the US department of defence, and were initially reported on in the New York Times in December 2017 as being part of the department's Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Programme, which monitored and documented UFO activities from 2007 to 2012.
Alienware's Concept UFO prototype imagines a gaming PC that's shaped like a Nintendo Switch - The
Alienware is best known for its beefy gaming laptops and preconfigured desktop rigs, but at CES 2020, the company showed off a wild new prototype, the Concept UFO. It's a full Windows 10 gaming PC, shrunken down into a form factor very similar to a Nintendo Switch — complete with detachable controllers and a dock to hook it up to a TV or monitor.
The Concept UFO consists of four pieces: there's a main "head" unit, which has an eight-inch, 1200p display; the battery; and all the processing and graphic hardware. There are two controllers, which attach through an enjoyably solid magnetic rail system.
Dell's foldable devices at CES 2020: Duet, Ori, and UFO | IT World Canada News
Dell recently granted a press tour of its innovation labs at New York, showcasing a number of prototype foldable and convertible devices that debuted at CES 2020.
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Dell's concept duet is Dell's take on a foldable, book-like PC. The dual displays are joined in the center with a 360-degree hinge. This looks very similar to the Microsoft Duo announced at the Microsoft event.
Since it's a prototype, Dell was understandably scarce on details, not delving further into its specs, price range, and release date. It's also unconfirmed if it will run Windows X, Microsoft's new operating system with enhancements to dual-displays.
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