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Apple expands developer support and resources

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07 June 2024
UPDATE
Apple expands developer support and resources

Apple is committed to supporting app creators across the globe and helping them do their best work in service of their users. Through a myriad of online and in-person programs, Apple encourages developers to connect directly with experts to receive guidance on their apps and games and explore the latest in Apple tools, technologies, features, and best practices.

Apple has expanded on opportunities for developers to engage with experts, reaching creators and innovators from over 160 countries in 2023. In advance of WWDC24, Apple has also launched additional avenues to reach developers globally, including updated Apple Developer Forums, Pathways, and more.

“It’s an honour and a privilege for our teams to work directly with developers at every stage of their journeys, from students and hobbyists, to budding entrepreneurs and coding professionals,” said Susan Prescott, Apple’s vice president of Worldwide Developer Relations. “We’re always looking for new ways to support this amazing community as they bring their visions to life and push the boundaries of what is possible.”

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Last year, Apple was able to help developers realize their full potential through a variety of learning opportunities. Meet with Apple Experts had nearly 50,000 developer engagements online and in person in 2023. Participants dove into the latest Apple tools and resources to bring their apps to the next level, and connected directly with Apple experts for insight, support, and feedback. Apple Developer Centers in the U.S., China, India, and Singapore have served as homes for a variety of year-round developer engagements, and offer a supportive environment for developers to learn how to grow their businesses and improve their apps. Developers can register for new upcoming sessions, workshops, labs, and one-on-one consultations on an ongoing basis to access support, no matter where they are on their development journey.

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Apple Developer Centers offer a supportive environment for developers to learn how to grow their businesses and improve their apps, no matter where they are on their development journey.

Apple Vision Pro developer labs have enabled developers to experience their visionOS, iPadOS, or iOS apps and games running on Apple Vision Pro. Since their launch in June 2023, the labs have seen over 6,000 visits from developers who worked side by side with Apple experts in Cupertino, New York, London, Munich, Shanghai, Singapore, Sydney, and Tokyo to optimize their apps for the infinite spatial canvas.

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Developers can experience their visionOS, iPadOS, or iOS apps and games running on Apple Vision Pro with Apple Vision Pro developer labs.

Apple Developer Academies and Apple Foundation Programs offer students around the globe the opportunity to explore the essentials of app development and sharpen their coding skills. In 2023, the Developer Academies trained over 1,900 students. Separately, more than 1,800 students went through an Apple Foundation Program. Last year saw the biggest cohort of female students ever in both programs, with women representing 53 percent of students at the Academies and 38 percent of participants of the Foundation Programs.

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Apple Foundation Programs saw the biggest cohort of female students ever, with women representing 38 percent of participants.

Apple Entrepreneur Campis a technology lab that helps entrepreneurs and developers from underrepresented groups create the next generation of cutting-edge apps. Apple hosted another five distinct cohorts in 2023 with founders, engineers, coders, and designers around the world. The program has already supported hundreds of app creators and is celebrating its fifth anniversary this year. Founders and developers who are interested in applying can sign up to be notified about upcoming cohorts.

Ahead of WWDC24 next week, Apple Developer Forumshave been updated, connecting developers with more experts and other developers for timely responses to technical questions, and providing code-level support from Apple engineers. The forums have also been reorganised into a streamlined layout by topics, subtopics, and corresponding tags.

Pathways are simple and easy-to-navigate collections of videos, documentation, and resources that can help developers build great apps and games and empower them to take the first step toward developing for Apple platforms. Since its launch in May, over 40,000 developers have accessed content on Pathways for insights into app design, Swift, SwiftUI, game development, visionOS, and distributing on the App Store.

This year, developers can experience WWDC on YouTube for the first time, in addition to the Apple Developer app and website. Developers can visit the Apple Developer channel to subscribe and explore video sessions from the conference.

Press Contacts

Rob Saunders
Apple
[email protected]
020 7184 1414

Apple Media Helpline
[email protected]
020 3284 6333

This AI Was Not Our AI Dream.

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So the idea was/is …

To generate a ton of good enough and mediocre stuffs and potentially misused scam(-ish) materials at scale(-ish), at disproportionately enormous amount of energy, attention, and intellectual hijack to level the playing field on a lower level playing field …

Then …

To create of a lot of validation and verification and distrust based on said ton of good enough and mediocre stuffs and potentially misused scam(-ish) materials at scale(-ish), also at disproportionately enormous amount of energy, attention, and waste …

For what exactly?

citi.io-i-want-ai-to-do-my-laundry-and-dishes

#ai #artificialintelligence #genai #pandorasbox

Of Nuggets And Tenders. To Know Or Not To Know, Is Not The Question. How To Become, Is.

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Join us at GoSwifties.com


It happened truly by accident, that what began as a pure data and analytical indulgence, became something interesting, at least to us here at GoSwifties. We were interested in the art but also the graft of what it takes to succeed in the business of music, films, entertainment, and the like. It always seemed like luck and frivolity but it could not be far from the truth. Hard working people lift celebrities to great heights, largely unseen…

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This is a long read; at least, a long read by recent standards. While this is not an academic or journal document, there will be aspects to it that will echo one.


Objective.

To understand the talent, effort, productivity, and necessities to achieve success in the music business. In doing so, we aimed to create an index or a ranking that is purely data driven and sourced from activities and output of the artists match with the actual engagements of listeners and fans.

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We called it the GoSwifties Hardest Working Artist Index.

Method And Methodology.

While we understood that there are many aspects and considerations to success, notwithstanding the impact of luck, good fortune, being in the right place and the right time, endowments, providence, and other things that lie outside raw effort and talent, this study aimed to normalise these into data that is both available and accessible with minimal constraint and whose analyses will be easier to disseminate in detail.

Shortcuts or simplifications were made, for example, instead of giving weight to rankings, raw statistical count of presence in so called ‘podium’ places ranks of 1-3 all had equal weight. They are all hardworking and talented; in a way, once you are in the top 3, the differences were negligible, and all had 1 index point, so to speak.

There are other possible bases for anchor data and correlations, but we chose the Spotify Top Streams as the main data source for this study. It is a well known and widely accepted source of music popularity and success, and it is also a good source of data for the study of music success.

In the end, it was done out of our own curiosity, for fun, and for the pursuit of knowledge and understanding. We hope you enjoy it as much as we did.

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Our mission is not to promote Taylor Swift or any artist, per se, but to be a nexus or relay for others out there who not only are inspired as a fan, but hopefully feel the calling of being a part of the music business, or any business for that matter, to be a part of the success of others, and to be a part of the success of the business itself.


Data.

We limited our study to the Top 25 Streamed Spotify Artists Of All Time, ending in 15 May 2024. It is understood that things change but the Top 25 has less volatility than the Top 100, and it is easier to manage and analyse.

1. Raw data feeds were cleaned for formatting and consistency, and were then processed for analysis.

2. This baseline was then enhanced by other details relevant to computationally derived playlists per artist called the This Is “Artist” suggested by the Spotify platform, where “Artist” is a placeholder for actual artists, musicians, and others.

3. As an added correlation data set, we lined up relevant YouTube statistics and attributes with the Spotify data, and then processed them for analysis.

4. Raw descriptive statistics and ranking was made from apparent column attributes. But in addition, some basic ratios and indices were computed to give a more nuanced view of the data. For example, the ratio between the number of Likes vs the number of Songs or Followers, or the ratio between the number of Songs vs the number of Followers, or the ratio between the number of Followers vs the number of Songs.

5. Finally, a rudimentary index was computed to give a relative measure of success, effort, and talent based on the raw raking and the computed ratios identified.

The main objective, if not entirely precise, was to gauge relative Yield of Effort and Talent along with present sentiment, interest, and listener or fan base activity.


Results.

The results were interesting, to say the least. While the Top 25 were all successful, the relative success, effort, and talent were not as clear cut as one would think. Some were clearly more successful, but some were clearly more talented; and some were clearly more hardworking in terms of raw output as Lead or Primary artist while in some situations, collaborations with other artists have a differentiating ingredient to success.

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It is difficult, and almost a disservice to the artistry of the artists, to say that one is more talented than the other, or one is more successful than the other. As a solution to this quandary, we did a simple cutover of the data to give a relative index of success, effort, and talent, and then ranked them accordingly. As long as one gains podium position, sub-ranking within it does not matter. In this way, consistency over time and across different data sets can be normalised and compared.

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An Idea.

We have often wondered about the truths and basis for the honours, awards, and adulations people receive for their works, achievements, and contributions to, well, whatever it is or was doing.

Some are clearly ceremonial, befitting only those entitled with the luck of the draw in life like that of royalty and the privileged or entitled. Others are more apparent within the craft and profession, but with details still largely remaining hidden under a veil of secrecy, like the Nobel Prize, the Oscars, the Grammys, and other similar closed circles.

While it feels we, the people and the common person seem to have had a had in it, in some ways, as a fan or as a consumer, it never really feels we were a part of it, apart from the occasional ‘community awards’ voted through text or sms or calls and what-nots. In the end, it is the fans and the listeners who decide, and it is the fans and the listeners who make the artist successful.


An Award Is Born.

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Perhaps, one of the most useless and unnecessary awards ever conceived, but we thought it was fun and interesting to do. We only called it so, after almost 99% of the effort and analysis and ranking was done. Purely an afterthought, no pretensions, no grandeur, no ceremony, no nothing. Just a simple, plain, and unassuming award, for the fun of it.


Welcome to the GoSwifties.com Power Nuggets Awards!!!

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Taylor Swift! Not Surprised! But Also Surprised! Lots of honest surprise 13s in the data outcomes! 

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We know you have no need for another silly award from us nerds, but Congratulations!

The Winners!

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Summary

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Thank you!

Interested to get a copy of the raw data? Click here to request:

Originally published at: GoSwifties.com

From The Heart of Stockholm To Welcoming City Of Seven Hills

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Join us at GoSwifties.com


Dear Stockholm,

Thank you for the warmth and enthusiasm that filled every moment of our event. Your beautiful city not only hosted our concert but made us feel at home with its incredible spirit and hospitality. We are grateful to have shared this special experience with such a passionate community. The memories of our time together will resonate with us like the sweetest melodies. Tack, Stockholm, for a truly delightful evening!

With heartfelt thanks,

Dean Marc

goswifties.com

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Hello Lisbon,

The excitement is building as we prepare to bring our international concert tour to your enchanting city! We are eager to experience the vibrant energy and rich heritage that Lisbon is known for. Get ready for a night where music, culture, and joy intertwine to create unforgettable memories. We can’t wait to meet you and share the magic that only a live concert can bring. See you soon, Lisbon, for another thrilling chapter of our musical journey!

With anticipation and joy,

Dean Marc

goswifties.com

Originally published at: GoSwifties.com

Stockholm Sounds: From ABBA’s Waterloo to Taylor’s Eras Tour

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Calling all Swifties heading to Stockholm for the Eras Tour! Get ready to be dazzled by not just Taylor’s incredible performance, but also by the rich musical history of this vibrant city. Sweden has a long tradition of producing pop superstars, and ABBA, formed in Stockholm in 1972, is a true legend whose infectious melodies continue to resonate worldwide.

ABBA in 1974 (from left): Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad (Frida), Agnetha Fältskog, and Björn Ulvaeus
ABBA in 1974 (from left): Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad (Frida), Agnetha Fältskog, and Björn Ulvaeus

Waterloo to Dancing Queen: The Legacy of ABBA

Before Taylor Swift took the world by storm, ABBA was conquering charts internationally. This iconic foursome – Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson, and Anni-Frid Lyngstad – blended catchy hooks, soaring vocals, and dazzling production into pure pop gold. Their 1974 Eurovision Song Contest win with “Waterloo” launched them onto the global stage, and hits like “Dancing Queen,” “Mamma Mia,” and “Knowing Me, Knowing You” cemented their status as international superstars.

A Shared Stage: Influences and Inspiration

While Taylor Swift and ABBA may seem like artists from different eras, there’s a fascinating connection. Taylor herself has cited ABBA as a musical influence, particularly their ability to craft unforgettable melodies and weave storytelling into their songs. Both artists understand the power of pop music to connect with listeners on a deep emotional level.

A Timeless Legacy: ABBA in Stockholm Today

ABBA’s music continues to captivate audiences. Their songs are featured in hit movies like “Mamma Mia!” and inspire tribute bands around the world. For a truly immersive experience, Swifties can visit the ABBA Museum in Stockholm, an interactive journey through the group’s history, complete with costumes, instruments, and behind-the-scenes stories.

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A City That Breeds Music Legends

Stockholm isn’t just a beautiful city; it’s a breeding ground for musical talent. Seeing Taylor Swift perform there allows you to connect with the city’s rich musical heritage. Who knows, maybe you’ll be inspired to write your own song while strolling through the same streets that inspired ABBA’s timeless hits!

So, Swifties, get ready to belt out your favorite Taylor Swift anthems in Stockholm. But don’t forget to take a moment to appreciate the city’s musical legacy and the legendary Swedish pop group ABBA who paved the way for future generations of superstars.

Originally published at: GoSwifties.com

Airbus to establish Tech Hub in Japan

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Paris, 23 May 2024 – Airbus has announced plans to establish a Tech Hub in Japan. The new initiative is designed to develop partnerships in the country to advance research, technology and innovation in aerospace and push boundaries to prepare for the next generation of aircraft. The new Airbus Tech Hub, coordinated from Tokyo, will focus on three key research areas, including the development of new materials, decarbonisation technologies, robotics and automation.

The launch of the Airbus Tech Hub is supported by the Japanese and French governments and was announced during Viva Technology 2024 in Paris. The event is one of the world’s largest technology exhibitions and this year features Japan as the country of honour.

In attendance were representatives from the Japan Embassy in France, the French Directorate-General for Civil Aviation (DGAC), the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO), and Airbus.

“We welcome the establishment of Airbus Tech Hub in Japan. Based on technologies from Japan, we can contribute to the international community by working together to address social issues such as the decarbonisation of the aviation industry, and we hope that Airbus Tech Hub in Japan will play an important role in this,” said Yoshio Ando, Deputy Chief of Mission, Minister, Embassy of Japan in France.

“We believe that Airbus Tech Hub in Japan will bring together aerospace professionals to create a collaborative environment that reinforces cooperation aimed at building a robust future aviation ecosystem,” said Ravo Randria, Senior Manager cooperation Americas, Japan DGAC.

“We are proud to have launched the Airbus Tech Hub in Japan in close partnership with DGAC and METI. Airbus sees Japan as a key country for future partnerships. The launch of the Airbus Tech Hub reflects our commitment to building further on our presence in the country.” said Sabine Klauke, Chief Technology Officer Airbus.

The Airbus Tech Hub in Japan is part of a global network developed by the European manufacturer, with similar ventures already launched this year in Singapore and the Netherlands. The Tech Hubs aim to foster collaboration among Airbus global R&T teams, industry leaders, local research communities, industry, and academic institutions, creating strong communities pushing boundaries in aerospace technology and preparing the future of aviation.

To find out more about Airbus’ presence at VivaTechnology, visit this page (https://www.airbus.com/en/vivatech).

GoSwifties, Beneath And Beyond Celebrity, A Delayed Prelude.

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I can barely remember how, how it all began, but on one coffee drunken afternoon, while the usual polycrisis ran, which world has turned normal, AI doom and wars, pandemic and its scars, we thought … what is out there that can still inspire, well, inspiration?

Bolt of lightning or revelation, Taylor Swift.

But… We were not huge fans. We were not Swifties.

I was once the Chief Swiftie (as in the primary nerd), for a technology company that had “Swift” in its name. But that was 20+ years ago. We are in awe of celebrities, larger than life, so to speak. But respect, we reserved for raw talent meeting hard work, grit, kindness, and virtues one aspires to have.

We were 100% certain that Taylor has no need for another of these coverage …

Potatoes, nay, Onions peeled, layers layers layers.

There was more to it. Something Beneath and Beyond Celebrity guides the battlecry or the quiet determination of this place. GoSwifties. Impetus. Motive Action. Kinetic Pursuit. Go Go Go…

It was a little coincidence that we mainly used Go along with Python for engineering work.

If only code were songs … transcending space, time, and economic purpose, echoing from and into the human spirit … For along with the arts, code that drives that modern world we believe is as close as one gets to alchemy and magic.

So this is us. Late have we become Swifties.

But not for the usual reason. For us, Taylor, with our utmost admiration and respect, is 1% of what makes it magic, if by magic you mean the things you do not understand that makes something happen.

To be continued … A lightbulb or match strike lit a few days ago, aimless in the beginning, but surprisingly fun in the end … I guess …

Originally published at: GoSwifties.com

MIT Researchers Discover The Universe’s Oldest Stars In Our Own Galactic Backyard

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Caption:MIT astronomers discovered three of the oldest stars in the universe, and they live in our own galactic neighborhood. The stars are in the Milky Way’s “halo” — the cloud of stars that envelopes the main galactic disk — and they appear to have formed between 12 and 13 billion years ago, when the very first galaxies were taking shape.
Credits:Image: Serge Brunier; NASA

Jennifer Chu | MIT News (https://news.mit.edu/2024/mit-researchers-discover-universes-oldest-stars-in-galactic-backyard-0514)

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Caption:Researchers hold a binder full of data about stars that they have collected over the years, including star brightness over time. From left to right: Ananda Santos, Casey Fienberg, and Anna Frebel. Credits:Image: Courtesy of the researchers

MIT researchers, including several undergraduate students, have discovered three of the oldest stars in the universe, and they happen to live in our own galactic neighborhood.

The team spotted the stars in the Milky Way’s “halo” — the cloud of stars that envelopes the entire main galactic disk. Based on the team’s analysis, the three stars formed between 12 and 13 billion years ago, the time when the very first galaxies were taking shape.

The researchers have coined the stars “SASS,” for Small Accreted Stellar System stars, as they believe each star once belonged to its own small, primitive galaxy that was later absorbed by the larger but still growing Milky Way. Today, the three stars are all that are left of their respective galaxies. They circle the outskirts of the Milky Way, where the team suspects there may be more such ancient stellar survivors.

“These oldest stars should definitely be there, given what we know of galaxy formation,” says MIT professor of physics Anna Frebel. “They are part of our cosmic family tree. And we now have a new way to find them.”

As they uncover similar SASS stars, the researchers hope to use them as analogs of ultrafaint dwarf galaxies, which are thought to be some of the universe’s surviving first galaxies. Such galaxies are still intact today but are too distant and faint for astronomers to study in depth. As SASS stars may have once belonged to similarly primitive dwarf galaxies but are in the Milky Way and as such much closer, they could be an accessible key to understanding the evolution of ultrafaint dwarf galaxies.

“Now we can look for more analogs in the Milky Way, that are much brighter, and study their chemical evolution without having to chase these extremely faint stars,” Frebel says.

She and her colleagues have published their findings today in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS). The study’s co-authors are Mohammad Mardini, at Zarqa University, in Jordan; Hillary Andales ’23; and current MIT undergraduates Ananda Santos and Casey Fienberg.

Stellar frontier

The team’s discoveries grew out of a classroom concept. During the 2022 fall semester, Frebel launched a new course, 8.S30(Observational Stellar Archaeology), in which students learned techniques for analyzing ancient stars and then applied those tools to stars that had never been studied before, to determine their origins.

“While most of our classes are taught from the ground up, this class immediately put us at the frontier of research in astrophysics,” Andales says.

The students worked from star data collected by Frebel over the years from the 6.5-meter Magellan-Clay telescope at the Las Campanas Observatory. She keeps hard copies of the data in a large binder in her office, which the students combed through to look for stars of interest.

In particular, they were searching ancient stars that formed soon after the Big Bang, which occurred 13.8 billion years ago. At this time, the universe was made mostly of hydrogen and helium and very low abundances of other chemical elements, such as strontium and barium. So, the students looked through Frebel’s binder for stars with spectra, or measurements of starlight, that indicated low abundances of strontium and barium.

Their search narrowed in on three stars that were originally observed by the Magellan telescope between 2013 and 2014. Astronomers never followed up on these particular stars to interpret their spectra and deduce their origins. They were, then, perfect candidates for the students in Frebel’s class.

The students learned how to characterize a star in order to prepare for the analysis of the spectra for each of the three stars. They were able to determine the chemical composition of each one with various stellar models. The intensity of a particular feature in the stellar spectrum, corresponding to a specific wavelength of light, corresponds to a particular abundance of a specific element.

After finalizing their analysis, the students were able to confidently conclude that the three stars did hold very low abundances of strontium, barium, and other elements such as iron, compared to their reference star — our own sun. In fact, one star contained less than 1/10,000 the amount of iron to helium compared to the sun today.

“It took a lot of hours staring at a computer, and a lot of debugging, frantically texting and emailing each other to figure this out,” Santos recalls. “It was a big learning curve, and a special experience.”

“On the run”

The stars’ low chemical abundance did hint that they originally formed 12 to 13 billion years ago. In fact, their low chemical signatures were similar to what astronomers had previously measured for some ancient, ultrafaint dwarf galaxies. Did the team’s stars originate in similar galaxies? And how did they come to be in the Milky Way?

On a hunch, the scientists checked out the stars’ orbital patterns and how they move across the sky. The three stars are in different locations throughout the Milky Way’s halo and are estimated to be about 30,000 light years from Earth. (For reference, the disk of the Milky Way spans 100,000 light years across.)

As they retraced each star’s motion about the galactic center using observations from the Gaia astrometric satellite, the team noticed a curious thing: Relative to most of the stars in the main disk, which move like cars on a racetrack, all three stars seemed to be going the wrong way. In astronomy, this is known as “retrograde motion” and is a tipoff that an object was once “accreted,” or drawn in from elsewhere.

“The only way you can have stars going the wrong way from the rest of the gang is if you threw them in the wrong way,” Frebel says.

The fact that these three stars were orbiting in completely different ways from the rest of the galactic disk and even the halo, combined with the fact that they held low chemical abundances, made a strong case that the stars were indeed ancient and once belonged to older, smaller dwarf galaxies that fell into the Milky Way at random angles and continued their stubborn trajectories billions of years later.

Frebel, curious as to whether retrograde motion was a feature of other ancient stars in the halo that astronomers previously analyzed, looked through the scientific literature and found 65 other stars, also with low strontium and barium abundances, that appeared to also be going against the galactic flow.

“Interestingly they’re all quite fast — hundreds of kilometers per second, going the wrong way,” Frebel says. “They’re on the run! We don’t know why that’s the case, but it was the piece to the puzzle that we needed, and that I didn’t quite anticipate when we started.”

The team is eager to search out other ancient SASS stars, and they now have a relatively simple recipe to do so: First, look for stars with low chemical abundances, and then track their orbital patterns for signs of retrograde motion. Of the more than 400 billion stars in the Milky Way, they anticipate that the method will turn up a small but significant number of the universe’s oldest stars.

Frebel plans to relaunch the class this fall, and looks back at that first course, and the three students who took their results through to publication, with admiration and gratitude.

“It’s been awesome to work with three women undergrads. That’s a first for me,” she says. “It’s really an example of the MIT way. We do. And whoever says, ‘I want to participate,’ they can do that, and good things happen.”

This research was supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation.

Reprinted with permission of MIT News (http://news.mit.edu/)

Fuel Your Eras Tour Fun: Must-Try Swedish Foods for Swifties in Stockholm

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Come over at GoSwifties.com


Calling all Swifties heading to Stockholm for the Eras Tour! You’re in for a treat – not just with Taylor’s incredible show, but also with the amazing culinary scene Stockholm offers. Here’s a guide to must-try Swedish foods that will keep you energized and singing along all night long:

Fika Like a Local

Kanelbullar (Cinnamon Buns)


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kanelbullar, Cinammon ROll

These gooey, spiral-shaped buns are practically a Swedish national treasure. Grab one at a cozy cafe for a classic fika (coffee break) experience. They’re the perfect pick-me-up before a long day of exploring or waiting in line for the concert. Bonus points if you find one with a hidden pearl sugar center!

Princess Cake

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Princess Cake

This vibrant cake is a feast for the eyes and the taste buds. Layers of sponge cake are filled with jam, custard, and whipped cream, all topped with a marzipan crown. It’s the perfect treat for a celebratory pre-concert dinner with your fellow Swifties.

Savory Swedish Delights

Swedish Meatballs

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Swedish Meatballs

You can’t visit Sweden without trying their iconic meatballs! These savory delights are typically served with mashed potatoes, lingonberry jam (a tart and tangy counterpoint), and creamy gravy. They’re a hearty and comforting option, perfect for fueling up before belting out your favorite Taylor anthems.

Smörgåstårta (Sandwich Cake)

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Smörgåstårta

Don’t let the name fool you – this isn’t a cake in the traditional sense. It’s a layered open-faced sandwich masterpiece, often featuring various meats, cheeses, seafood, vegetables, and spreads. It’s a delightful and visually stunning option for a picnic lunch in a park between sightseeing adventures.

Sweet Treats on the Go:

Semla (Shrove Tuesday Bun)

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Semla

While you might not be visiting during Shrove Tuesday (Fettisdagen), bakeries often sell these seasonal buns year-round. Imagine a sweet roll filled with almond paste and whipped cream – a decadent and delicious on-the-go snack.

Kladdkaka (Sticky Chocolate Cake)

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Calling all chocolate lovers! This gooey, flourless cake is a must-try. It’s a bit like a brownie on steroids, perfect for sharing with a friend or two after the concert.

Bonus Tip

Don’t forget to stay hydrated! Water is always a good choice, but for a refreshing twist, try fläder saft (elderflower cordial), a traditional Swedish drink made from elderflower blossoms.

There you have it, Swifties! With these delicious Swedish treats in your belly, you’ll be ready to conquer Stockholm and sing your heart out at the Eras Tour. So grab a fika, explore the city’s culinary delights, and get ready for an unforgettable Swedish adventure!

Originally published at: GoSwifties.com

Stockholm Guide for the Swifties: Get Ready for It in Swiftholm!

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Dear Paris,

Thank you from the bottom of our hearts for the incredible embrace you have given us. Your streets sang with us, and your lights danced to our rhythm. We are eternally grateful for the magical moments we have shared, enriching our community and leaving us with memories that will be cherished forever. Your charm and splendour made every note resonate more deeply. Merci, Paris, for a concert and a community experience that surpassed our wildest dreams!

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With love and gratitude,

Dean Marc

goswifties.com

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Hello Stockholm,

Get ready to catch the wave of excitement as we bring our international concert tour to your vibrant city! We cannot wait to feel the energy of Stockholm, to explore your rich culture, and to make unforgettable memories together. Prepare yourselves for a night of spectacular music, unity, and joy. We are thrilled to meet you and share the magic that only live music can offer. See you soon, Stockholm, for an epic continuation of our journey!

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With anticipation and excitement,

Dean Marc

goswifties.com

Originally published at: GoSwifties.com