

News
With Apple Fitness Plus, you can now listen to music during your running workouts
Always on the lookout for the evolution and improvement of the services it offers, Apple continues to develop various categories of applications, made available to its users, for optimal use of the Apple Watch.
Moreover, introduced in 2020 on the market, the Apple fitness + is now one of the latest inventions integrating the list of programs updated by the brand, which seeks at all costs to retain and retain its customers. This application offers subscribers several ways to exercise, both indoors and outdoors.

Apple Fitness + promises better user experience
The innovators of this health program did not skimp on resources and ideas during its design. They have shown both creativity and originality. Previously, the program already contained programs with sports coaches for each type of training, such as HIIT, yoga, treadmill. But with the new version, following the addition of the audio running function, Apple promises a much better user experience when jogging outdoors.
This option aims to help you push your limits by motivating you whatever your level of sport, whether you are just an amateur or a fan of running. Music is also included in the pack to give you maximum well-being while cruising the miles.
Apple continuously in the adoption of a strategy that is profitable for it
As with Apple Arcade, Apple Music and Apple TV +, you should know that Apple Fitness is also chargeable. The monthly subscription is $ 9.99 while the annual subscription is $ 79.99. In addition, for any purchase of the Apple Watch, since December 2020, a three-month trial of Fitness + will be granted to users so that they can benefit from the service for free on their device. At the same time, current Apple Watch owners are entitled to one month of free use before the monthly or annual subscription kicks in.
The service has also just been available in around fifteen countries at the start of 2022, such as Russia, Brazil and Saudi Arabia. However, for now, the workouts are only available in English.
.

Electric Cars
BMW breaks new iPhones. iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max NFC module fails due to wireless charging in car

While Apple promises to fix the overheating problem of the new iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max, without reducing performance, another problem has emerged with the company’s new products. It turned out that BMW cars can actually break smartphones.
Several owners of Bavarian cars have already reported that the NFC module in their new iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max has failed. This happens after smartphones are charged via wireless charging in the car.
During charging, smartphones go into data recovery mode. A reboot helps return the devices to working condition, but the NFC modules do not restore functionality. In particular, the Could Not Set Up Apple Pay error appears in the Wallet app.
In some cases, owners have already replaced their smartphones at Apple stores, but it is not yet clear what the cause of this problem is. So far, complaints have only come from owners of older new Apple products, which suggests that the problem may be related to overheating.
News
Astronomers have captured the light of a spatial web connecting galaxies

Such images reveal valuable information about how galaxies form and evolve, and help track the location of elusive dark matter, which makes up about 80% of the mass of the Universe.
In 2014, astronomers captured the first image of the cosmic web based on the radiation from a quasar, an object billions of times more massive than our Sun and considered one of the brightest objects in the Universe. In 2019, another study used data from young, forming stars to provide a proxy for the cosmic web. Now, astronomers have directly captured its light at a distance of 10 to 12 billion light years away.
According to cosmological models, more than 60% of the hydrogen created after the Big Bang approximately 13.8 billion years ago collapsed and formed spatial structures, which in turn collapsed and formed the cosmic web of filaments that we see today – threads of cosmic matter consisting from dust and gas. These filaments connect galaxies and enable their growth and star formation. Although this is just speculation, previous research has also suggested that galaxies form where these filaments intersect.
To take the latest image of intersecting filaments, the team used data from the telescope. Keck, installed at the observatory on the Mauna Kea volcano in Hawaii. The device is configured to detect radiation from hydrogen, which is the main component of the cosmic web. The resulting 2D images were then combined into a 3D map based on the detected radiation emanating from the cosmic web.
To notice these faint emissions, the team first had to deal with the problem of light pollution. The dim light of the cosmic web can easily be confused with the light of the Hawaiian sky, atmospheric aurora, and even the light of our Milky Way.
So the team decided to take photographs of two different parts of the sky at different distances. The scientists then took the background light from one image and subtracted it from the other, and vice versa. As a result, only the web’s filament network remained, as simulations predicted in 2019.
Images like those produced in the new study can help scientists better understand how galaxies form and evolve over eons.
News
The mass of the Milky Way turned out to be 5 times less than previously thought

One way to determine the mass of a galaxy is to study its rotation curve, measuring the speed of the stars in the galaxy depending on their distance from the galactic center. The speed at which a star rotates is proportional to the amount of mass in its orbit, so using the rotation curve of a galaxy, you can plot the distribution of the mass function over the radius and get an idea of the total mass of the galaxy. Scientists have measured rotation curves for several nearby galaxies, such as Andromeda, so they know the masses of many galaxies very accurately.
But because we’re inside the Milky Way itself, we don’t have a good view of the stars throughout the galaxy. There is so much gas and dust towards the center of the galaxy that we can’t even see the stars on the far side. So instead, scientists measure the rotation curve using neutral hydrogen, which emits faint light at a wavelength of about 21 centimeters. This is not as precise as measuring stars, but it still gave a general idea of the mass of our galaxy.
Astronomers also studied the movements of globular clusters rotating in the halo of the Milky Way. From these observations, the best estimate of the Milky Way’s mass is about one trillion solar masses, with small uncertainties.
This new study is based on the third dataset from the Gaia spacecraft. It contains information on the positions of more than 1.8 billion stars and the movements of more than 1.5 billion stars. Although this is only a fraction of the estimated number of stars in our galaxy, which is between 100 and 400 billion, it is a large enough number to calculate an accurate rotation curve.
That’s exactly what the team of scientists did. The resulting rotation curve is so accurate that the team was able to determine Kepler’s law for the outer region of the Milky Way, where the velocities of stars begin to decline, consistent with Kepler’s law, since virtually all of the galaxy’s mass is closer to the galactic center.
Kepler’s Law allows the team to place a clear upper limit on the mass of the Milky Way. And what they found was quite surprising. The best fit to the data estimated the mass at about 200 billion solar masses, a fifth of previous estimates. The absolute upper limit for the Milky Way’s mass was 540 billion solar masses, which means the Milky Way is at least half as large as previously thought. And given the known normal matter in the galaxy, this means that the Milky Way contains significantly less dark matter.
-
News4 days ago
The Firefox browser now has a built-in page translator that works even without the Internet
-
Electric Cars4 days ago
“We have a huge problem,” Volkswagen and Audi plants around the world shut down
-
News5 days ago
110 inches, 8K, 240 Hz and more than 40 thousand backlight zones. Hisense TV UX unveiled – one of the most advanced TVs in the world
-
Laptops7 days ago
Apple, Samsung, Dell and HP exhaled: India, under US pressure, changed its mind about banning the import of laptops