Charging the new Apple Pencil may mess with your car key fob

Image: Apple

Angela Moscaritolo

for

PCMag

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Charging a second-generation Apple Pencil may temporarily cause your car key fob to stop working.

As 9to5Mac reports, Apple recently updated this support document, which details how to use Apple Pencil with your iPad or iPad Pro, to warn users about this weird “signal interference” issue affecting its latest stylus.

The second-gen $129 Apple Pencil, released in November, only works with the new 11- and 12.9-inch iPad Pro tablets. To charge it, you simply attach the stylus to the magnetic connector on the right side of your iPad Pro. But don’t charge it near your car key fob.

“If you’re charging your Apple Pencil (2nd generation) with your iPad Pro and your car’s keyless entry device (key fob) is nearby, signal interference might prevent you from unlocking your car with your key fob,” Apple warned.

Fortunately, fixing the problem is pretty simple.

“If this happens, you can simply move your iPad Pro away from the key fob or remove your Apple Pencil from your iPad Pro and store it separately,” Apple advises. “When Apple Pencil is finished charging, any resulting signal interference will cease.”

It’s a minor issue, but may cause some annoyance if you head out with your iPad Pro and Apple Pencil in tow. It might be especially annoying if you often bring the devices to work or school. If you do plan to bring the gadgets along for a ride, try to charge your Apple Pencil ahead of time so you can avoid a scenario where your car key fob won’t work.

    This article originally published at PCMag
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    Watch these 10 robot dogs pull a truck

    By Jack Morse

    When death finally comes for us, will it announce its presence with a roar? Or, perhaps, with nothing at all — letting the permanent silence that follows our eventual destruction speak for itself?

    Boston Dynamics, a company whose main export appears to be unsettling videos of its robotic creations, has offered up one possible answer. Death sounds like 40 robot-dog legs, marching together in unison across a lifeless blacktop parking lot. 

    SEE ALSO: This ‘blind’ robot dog is great for hunting you on a moonless night

    An April 16 video, embedded above, shows 10 of the company’s Spot robots pulling a large truck. The robots work together, like a dog-sled team, and the coordinated thud thud thud of their robot paws will soon no longer be confined to the Boston Dynamics office. 

    “These Spot robots are coming off the production line now and will be available for a range of applications soon,” the company writes in a note accompanying the YouTube video. 

    Oh, joy. 

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    Ex-Texans WR Demaryius Thomas, Patriots Agree to Reported 1-Year, $6M Contract

    Houston Texans wide receiver Demaryius Thomas (87) is introduced before an NFL football game against the Indianapolis Colts Sunday, Dec. 9, 2018, in Houston. (AP Photo/Eric Christian Smith)

    Eric Christian Smith/Associated Press

    Wide receiver Demaryius Thomas will join the third team of his career after the New England Patriots signed him to a contract, the team announced on Tuesday. 

    Per NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, the deal is a one-year contract worth $6 million.

    This comes after the Houston Texans elected to release him this offseason following a torn Achilles. Houston acquired him from the Denver Broncos via a trade in October, and he played seven games for the AFC South club before suffering the injury.

    He also turned himself in to police in February following a car crash in Denver and was charged with felony vehicular assault, reckless driving and no proof of insurance. Rick Sallinger of CBS Denver reported the news, noting he lost control while driving more than 40 mph over the speed limit. 

    Thomas was one of the best receivers in the league during his tenure with the Broncos, making four Pro Bowls and winning a Super Bowl. He topped 1,000 receiving yards five seasons in a row from 2012 through 2016 and tallied double-digit touchdown catches three times in that span.

    He consistently demonstrated the height at 6’3″ to high-point passes in the end zone, the speed to beat defenders in press coverage and the agility to make tacklers miss in the open field.

    However, the Georgia Tech product saw his 1,000-yard streak end in 2017 with 949 receiving yards, and he experienced a significant decline in production in 2018 with 59 catches for 677 yards and five touchdowns split between Denver and Houston.

    There are reasons to worry given the dip in statistical production and the fact he is coming off a serious injury at 31 years old, although James Palmer of NFL Network noted Thomas recovered from a torn Achilles he suffered after his rookie season in just six months.

    It is unreasonable for New England to expect the version of Thomas that was a sure-fire Pro Bowler who would top 1,000 yards every season given his injury status and age, but he adds a veteran presence to the locker room and is playoff-tested with 10 postseason games and two Super Bowl appearances on his resume.

    He also stressed a desire to play in 2019, per Aaron Wilson of the Houston Chronicle: “My main priority right now is getting back healthy. I can still play, man. I’m not thinking about retirement. I just don’t know where it will be.”

    New England gave him that chance, and he will look to add to his postseason appearances on the league’s gold standard.

    Thomas also figures to help make up for the lost production following tight end Rob Gronkowski‘s retirement and could slide right into the starting lineup when he is fully healthy. The Patriots won the Super Bowl last season despite a lack of game-changing wide receivers outside of Julian Edelman, which is a testament to their overall system and the efficiency of Tom Brady under center.

    Brady figures to maximize the talent Thomas still has and gives the veteran another chance at being a productive piece on a Super Bowl contender. 

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    ‘Avengers: Endgame’ directors beg fans #DontSpoilTheEndgame

    “With great power, comes great responsibility.”

    Image: marvel

    By Alison Foreman

    Avengers: Endgame, the final chapter in Marvel’s Infinity Saga, hits theaters in less than two weeks. It’s the culmination of 21 films, dozens of beloved character arcs, and countless hours of creative legwork from the Marvel Team.

    That’s why Endgame directors Anthony and Joe Russo are proactively asking fans to avoid spoiling the film for others after they’ve seen it — a campaign that has #DontSpoilTheEndgame trending on Twitter. 

    The launch of #DontSpoilTheEndgame follows a reported leak of Endgame footage that appeared  online late Monday and sent long-time Marvel fans into an anti-spoiler frenzy

    In an open letter posted to The Avengers‘ official Twitter account on Tuesday, the Russo brothers wrote: 

    To the greatest fans in the world, 

    This is it. This is the end. The end of an unprecedented narrative mosaic spanning eleven years and eleven franchises. 

    For all of you who have been on this journey with us since the very beginning, sharing every high and low with your family, your friends, your classmates, your co-workers. Investing so deeply in every character and storyline. Laughing. Cheering. Shedding tears. Giving so freely of your thoughts and emotions in spirited dialogue, theories, fan art, and fan fiction. Please know that the two of us, along with everyone involved in Endgame, have worked tirelessly for the last three years with the sole intention of delivering and surprising and emotionally powerful conclusion to Infinity Saga. 

    Because so many of you have invested your time, your hearts, and your souls into tese stories, we’re once again asking for your help. 

    When you see Endgame in the coming weeks, please don’t spoil it for others, the same way you wouldn’t want it spoiled for you. 

    Remember, Thanos still demands your silence. 

    As always, good luck and happy viewing…

    The Russo Brothers

    #DontSpoilTheEndgame

    SEE ALSO: ‘Infinity War’ team cracks down on spoilers with creepy hashtag

    The #DontSpoilTheEndgame crusade mirrors the #ThanosDemandsYourSilence campaign for Avengers: Infinity War, also led by the Russo brothers.

    Fans who had Infinity War‘s crushing ending ruined for them, as well as those in favor of anti-spoiler policies in general, have celebrated the Endgame campaign online, pointing out the many good reasons to not spoil the upcoming film.

    In the words of the late Uncle Ben, “With great power, comes great responsibility.” 

    And in the words of everyone else? Don’t spoil the freakin’ movie!

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    Twitter is now able to detect harassment without user reports

    Twitter is slowly fixing one of its biggest flaws.
    Twitter is slowly fixing one of its biggest flaws.

    Image: leon neal / Getty Images

    By Karissa Bell

    Twitter has been slowly getting better at fixing abuse and harassment on its platform — despite a few embarrassing blunders

    Now, the company says it’s finally getting better at addressing one of the most obvious problems: that most harassment isn’t dealt with unless it’s reported by the victim. 

    The company is now detecting more harassment proactively, Twitter said, addressing what has long been one of the company’s most frustrating (and obvious) flaws. 

    SEE ALSO: Twitter secretly verified Jack Dorsey’s mom and thousands of others despite ‘pause’

    “This time last year, 0 percent of potentially abusive content was flagged to our teams for review proactively,” the company wrote in a blog post. “Today, by using technology, 38 percent of abusive content that’s enforced is surfaced proactively for human review instead of relying on reports from people using Twitter. This encompasses a number of policies, such as abusive behavior, hateful conduct, encouraging self-harm, and threats, including those that may be violent.”

    SEE ALSO: Twitter secretly verified Jack Dorsey’s mom and thousands of others despite ‘pause’

    While an important step, that of course means that the vast majority of harassment still isn’t detected by Twitter’s automated system. But it shows the company is actually capable of addressing what’s long been one of its most obvious flaws. 

    Twitter has made other improvements of late, including the ability to add “context” to reports, and changes to prevent spammy accounts from spreading.

    Twitter is testing replies moderation. It lets you to hide replies under your tweets, while providing an option to show the hidden replies pic.twitter.com/dE19w4TLtp

    — Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) February 28, 2019

    Twitter also said it will start testing a new feature in June that lets users opt to hide all replies to their tweets. The feature, which was spotted earlier this year, wouldn’t block people from replying but would allow you to hide them from your view in the app. The goal, according to Twitter, is to make it so users don’t have to rely on blocking and muting in order to keep conversations “healthy.”

    We didn’t, however, get an update on Jack Dorsey’s conversational health project, in which the company is seeking proposal to help it figure out how to measure whether a given conversation is healthy. Presumably, that’s still a work in progress, too.

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    Messi Magic vs Man Utd at Camp Nou

  • Hasan Kınık @unserbahn

    @FCBarcelona Messi heat map in the first half.. https://t.co/nb8k2bxs9o

  • Duncan Alexander @oilysailor

    CL goals in the 2010s:

    Ronaldo + Messi: 196
    Liverpool + Man Utd: 159

  • YouTube: Shirtless Plantain Show @Nigerianscamsss

    Lionel Messi is a demon.

    What in the hell is his problem.

  • Jonas Giæver @CheGiaevara

    Seriously, Lionel Messi just ended Phil Jones.

  • Tim Vickery @Tim_Vickery

    Footballing speed is all about changes of rhythm. Has anyone ever done it like Messi?
    And he sees everything going on around him as well.
    Impossible to explain how good he really is

  • Sam Wallace @SamWallaceTel

    It’s one thing to past Phil Jones twice, but to drop a shoulder and send the ref the wrong way as well is something else #Messi

  • Bayan Fenwick @BayanFenwick35

    Don’t tell me Ronaldo can do the things Messi can ever again.. ✋🏽

  • Tom Williams @tomwfootball

    Starting to wonder whether Jones put that bandage around his head in the hope it would prevent his brain from exploding when Messi ran at him.

  • Ives Galarcep @SoccerByIves

    Live look at Phil Jones after getting abused by Lionel Messi for the better part of 45 minutes: https://t.co/E6Mp19UzBK

  • Seth Michaels @SirSethMichaels

    @FCBarcelona Hey @FIFAcom is #Messi still ranked 5th in the world? https://t.co/4l5mCbwbkS

  • Nick Akerman @Nakerman

    Remember when Modric won the Ballon d’Or and Messi finished 5th?

  • Abdu Dilshan Wasike @WasikeAbdu

    Those who know, know now 🤣

    Messi 2-0 Drake & Team

    #BARMUN #BarcaMUFC #UCL https://t.co/rAZ4H7hZp7

  • M.anifest @manifestive

    I really tire with Messi debates. Aren’t we all seeing the same thing? Man is a football god. Effortless in the flesh.

  • Liam Twomey @liam_twomey

    Messi showing absolutely no regard for the families of United players watching tonight

  • The Spanish Football Podcast @tsf_podcast

    “I think Phil Jones is still looking for the ball” says the commentator on Spanish TV after Messi absolutely terrorizes the United defender

  • United Xtra @utdxtra

    Lionel Messi just sent Phil Jones for a hot dog 💀😭 #mufc

  • Gordon Ramaphosa @Biophonik1

    #BARMUN
    Messi Shoots ⚽⚽⚽🥅

    David de Gea : https://t.co/aLAhQUvz9E

  • LaLiga @LaLigaEN

    9 against Arsenal.
    6 against Man City.
    4 against Man Utd.
    3 against Chelsea.
    2 against Tottenham.

    Messi has now scored 2⃣4⃣ goals against English clubs. 👽 https://t.co/3VpxFsoFyN

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    Messi Magic vs Man Utd at Camp Nou

  • Hasan Kınık @unserbahn

    @FCBarcelona Messi heat map in the first half.. https://t.co/nb8k2bxs9o

  • Duncan Alexander @oilysailor

    CL goals in the 2010s:

    Ronaldo + Messi: 196
    Liverpool + Man Utd: 159

  • YouTube: Shirtless Plantain Show @Nigerianscamsss

    Lionel Messi is a demon.

    What in the hell is his problem.

  • Jonas Giæver @CheGiaevara

    Seriously, Lionel Messi just ended Phil Jones.

  • Tim Vickery @Tim_Vickery

    Footballing speed is all about changes of rhythm. Has anyone ever done it like Messi?
    And he sees everything going on around him as well.
    Impossible to explain how good he really is

  • Sam Wallace @SamWallaceTel

    It’s one thing to past Phil Jones twice, but to drop a shoulder and send the ref the wrong way as well is something else #Messi

  • Bayan Fenwick @BayanFenwick35

    Don’t tell me Ronaldo can do the things Messi can ever again.. ✋🏽

  • Tom Williams @tomwfootball

    Starting to wonder whether Jones put that bandage around his head in the hope it would prevent his brain from exploding when Messi ran at him.

  • Ives Galarcep @SoccerByIves

    Live look at Phil Jones after getting abused by Lionel Messi for the better part of 45 minutes: https://t.co/E6Mp19UzBK

  • Seth Michaels @SirSethMichaels

    @FCBarcelona Hey @FIFAcom is #Messi still ranked 5th in the world? https://t.co/4l5mCbwbkS

  • Nick Akerman @Nakerman

    Remember when Modric won the Ballon d’Or and Messi finished 5th?

  • Abdu Dilshan Wasike @WasikeAbdu

    Those who know, know now 🤣

    Messi 2-0 Drake & Team

    #BARMUN #BarcaMUFC #UCL https://t.co/rAZ4H7hZp7

  • M.anifest @manifestive

    I really tire with Messi debates. Aren’t we all seeing the same thing? Man is a football god. Effortless in the flesh.

  • Liam Twomey @liam_twomey

    Messi showing absolutely no regard for the families of United players watching tonight

  • The Spanish Football Podcast @tsf_podcast

    “I think Phil Jones is still looking for the ball” says the commentator on Spanish TV after Messi absolutely terrorizes the United defender

  • United Xtra @utdxtra

    Lionel Messi just sent Phil Jones for a hot dog 💀😭 #mufc

  • Gordon Ramaphosa @Biophonik1

    #BARMUN
    Messi Shoots ⚽⚽⚽🥅

    David de Gea : https://t.co/aLAhQUvz9E

  • LaLiga @LaLigaEN

    9 against Arsenal.
    6 against Man City.
    4 against Man Utd.
    3 against Chelsea.
    2 against Tottenham.

    Messi has now scored 2⃣4⃣ goals against English clubs. 👽 https://t.co/3VpxFsoFyN

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    A year into Nicaragua crisis, uncertainty and scepticism prevail

    Managua, Nicaragua – Bullet holes still pock the white walls and roof of the church where the Reverend Edwin Roman Calderon sheltered bleeding anti-government protesters last year after police and paramilitary fighters attacked demonstrators in streets of Masaya in western Nicaragua.

    The deadly violence that turned his church into a morgue has ebbed since President Daniel Ortega‘s violent crackdown last April sparked Nicaragua’s worst political upheaval in decades. Despite some hope from recent peace talks, Calderon, 59, who became a target of government harassment and intimidation, said the crisis still has a stranglehold on his country.

    “There’s a lot of pain. There are people in other countries, without a job, mothers who are by themselves suffering lost sons or husbands, people still in prison,” he said.

    As Nicaragua nears the one-year mark since its political turmoil began, pressure from international sanctions and a growing economic crisis has helped push Ortega to accept several key opposition demands in recent weeks. That has included promising to release 640 remaining political prisoners within 90 days and easing repression of protests and free speech.

    But while the former Sandinista rebel issued a statement in March urging “the international community to suspend sanctions” as part of the agreement, UN officials said this week that “the agreements do not appear to have been implemented.”

    Foreign Minister Denis Moncada also recently rejected early elections before those planned for 2021, which the opposition group Civic Alliance said was critical to talks that have since faltered. And just one day after agreeing to respect free speech, police squelched protest and made arrests in Managua, generating scepticism and uncertainty in advance of the anniversary.

    “Ortega feels pressured to step back” from repressive tactics but “not because he wants peace”, said opposition member Madelaine Caracas, who remains in Costa Rica despite Ortega’s promise of safety for returning exiles. “His words can’t be trusted.”

    A year of crisis

    The protests started in April 2018 over a since-scrapped social security reform proposal. But the violent crackdown, which a United Nations report in August said included extrajudicial killings, arbitrary detentions and torture, set fire to long-building discontent with Ortega. 

    The former leftist rebel leader’s last 12 years in office saw economic gains but was increasingly viewed by critics as becoming increasingly authoritarian including consolidating power by getting the courts to allow him additional terms and the national assembly to scrap term limits. He made his wife, Rosario Murillo, the vice president.

    US Senator Marco Rubio, a critic of the regime, said late last month through his press office that sanctions would continue if Ortega “intends to use these negotiations as a farce and opt to continue to violate the rights of Nicaraguans”.

    Meanwhile, signs of crisis remain visible in Nicaragua: Red-and-black Sandinista graffiti reading, “My commander stays” duel with white-and-blue colours of the opposition calling for his resignation. Heavily armed police at times gather along roads to keep protests at bay. Families tend graves of those shot by snipers during protests. In the centre of the colonial city Granada, some hotels were half empty amid a decline in tourism.

    Graffiti supporting Daniel Ortega’s Sandinista National Liberation Front party is painted on a wall in the city of Jinotepe, Nicaragua, where protesters faced arrest and violence in last year’s crackdown on dissent [Chris Kenning/Al Jazeera] 

    Prominent human rights lawyer Julio Montenegro, who represents protesters the government has jailed as “terrorists” and handed some draconian prison sentences, said the crisis has cut a swath of “extreme hardship” through many residents of the hemisphere’s second-poorest nation.

    More than 700 have been imprisoned, 325 killed and nearly 2,000 injured, according to the Inter-American Human Rights Commission. More than 20 police officers also died, a UN report found. Students have been expelled from universities and teachers, doctors and others were fired from jobs in retaliation.

    In addition, an estimated 62,000 fled to other countries including Costa Rica. Caracas is among those living in San Jose, where she said many are struggling to afford food and housing, living in refugee centres or in poor neighbourhoods on the outskirts. Only a fraction have gotten work permits, she said.

    Nicaragua’s government said recently it would implement a programme to guarantee the safe return of exiles who did not face charges or court cases, but opponents dismissed the proposal saying few would trust the government. 

    “If Ortega completely disappears, probably I will return to my country,” said Daniel Reyes, 47, who fled to the United States after he saw his 20-year career as a microbiology professor collapse when he was fired from the Autonomous University of Nicaragua in Leon for demonstrating.

    He hid for months, dodging police and paramilitaries looking for him, before his wife encouraged him to flee to Miami in December. “My family was very scared,” said Reyes, whose visa does not yet allow him to work.

    “It completely changed my situation,” he told Al Jazeera via phone. “And it’s affecting the family, without the income.”

    Ortega has said he’ll allow the International Red Cross to propose a list of prisoners who should be released by mid-May. So far, only a trickle have been released, some to house arrest. Some families with jailed family members are sceptical and say it won’t diminish their opposition to Ortega.

    “What the government wants from the talks is more air” to remain in power, said Juana Lesage, whose three sons remain in prison since last summer after marching in the city of Jinotepe, south of Managua. 

    A Nicaraguan family cycles on street outside of Masaya, Nicaragua, where the government’s violent crackdown on anti-government protests last year left a city divided by opponents and supporters of President Daniel Ortega [Chris Kenning/Al Jazeera]

    The government has not yet reopened shuttered media outlets including 100% Noticias channel and the publication Confidencial, despite indications they would be allowed under the agreements.

    Alvaro Navarro, a journalist for the online publication Articulo 66 and a former staffer at Confidencial, recalled how he’d been caught in gunfire and faced threats during an interview in a small newsroom set up in an unmarked building with high security.

    “The media that were confiscated are still closed. Two journalists remain imprisoned for their work. The journalists who are still resisting and carrying out our work are under threat,” he said. “Ortega has not fulfilled any point related to freedoms and human rights.”

    ‘The goal is not to get to 2021’

    Amid the unrest and political uncertainty, Nicaragua’s economy shrank by nearly four percent last year and that could a reach seven-to-11 percent decline in 2019, according to a projection by the Nicaraguan Foundation for Economic and Social Development. 

    Vidal Reyes, a construction worker who fought the Contras during the 1980s, said his once steady work sanding concrete on foreign-funded buildings has all but stopped.

    That has made the loss of his stepson who died last May – he believes at the hands of pro-government forces after attending a protests – all the more difficult. Like thousands of others, the struggle and despair have increased his desire to see Ortega step down.

    “A real Sandinista knows the evil (Ortega) is doing is not right,” he said. 

    Last month, the first protests erupted in Managua since they were outlawed last fall. Called by the National Blue and White Unity movement, they ended with more than 100 arrests and attacks by paramilitary groups. Since then, smaller, shorter student protests are still popping up around the capital of Managua. And more are planned this week.

    Before the one-year anniversary, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on Tuesday in a statement that she was “concerned that the protests planned for later in the week may trigger another violent reaction” and urged government restraint.

    Ultimately, “pressure from international governments” driven partly by continuing protests, could help force Ortega to agree to early elections despite promises of electoral reforms, said Marlen Chow, a 69-year-old sociologist and former Sandinista revolutionary who is now an opposition figure after two arrests. “The goal is to not get to 2021,” she said.

    The unrest, Caracas believes, has pushed Nicaragua into new territory where residents are less willing to accept corruption or injustice and see civil protests as a way to achieve change.

    “We broke our silence and raised our voices to injustice, killing and corruption,” Caracas said. Since then, “Nicaragua’s people have changed, we’re not the same any more.”

    Still, the crisis last left lasting scars. In Masaya last month, Calderon sat in a rocking chair on a patio at his residence that adjoins the church. He recalled the fighting last spring and summer, including the so-called “Operation Cleanup” in July which saw arrests and deaths, and confrontations with police leaders in the square outside.

    Edwin Roman Calderon stands outside his church in Masaya, Nicaragua, where he sheltered bleeding anti-government protesters last year after police and paramilitary gunmen attacked them during a violent crackdown on dissent [Chris Kenning/Al Jazeera]

    Other Catholic leaders such as Silvio Baez the auxiliary of Managua, have called out what they view as human rights violations. Calderon said his effort to support his community has meant being followed by paramilitaries revving menacingly on motorcycles and being falsely accused of crimes.

    “I’ve been a priest of 29 years. In the last year, I feel like I grew up. I am more conscious to reality,” said Calderon, who sees hope in the dialogue agreements but fears elections won’t be free and fair.

    If Ortega does actually allow full protests, he said, “He would see the streets don’t belong to him. They belong to Nicaragua.”

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    Waymo’s new app lets you hail a self-driving car—but don’t get too excited just yet

    If you were hoping to hail a self-driving car from Waymo, you better live in the Phoenix area — and be prepared to wait even after downloading the app.

    The Waymo app is now available on the Google Play app store for the first time, but it’s not like Uber or Lyft, mostly because once you download it you have to join a waitlist. Only after you’ve been accepted can you start ordering rides. The pricing for rides in the Phoenix area is apparently similar to rides on other ride-sharing services.

    SEE ALSO: It looks like Waymo is about to expand its self-driving taxi service

    Waymo One, which is run by Google, has only been available for the past few months to about 400 “Early Riders,” or approved service users who give feedback about the rides. With the app now available, it looks like more people will be able to experience the robo-rides, although it’s not on Apple’s App Store yet. (Waymo said it’s working on an iOS app, but it hasn’t determined a release date.)

    Waymo didn’t say how people on the waitlist would be approved.

    We took a look at the app on an Android device and applied for the waitlist — but since we’re located in California, it doesn’t seem likely we’ll get approved. An email confirming we made it on the waitlist explained, “To make sure everyone gets the best possible experience, we will roll out access gradually.”

    Waymo in the Google Play store.

    Waymo in the Google Play store.

    Image: mashable

    Now we wait.

    Now we wait.

    Image: MaShable

    Waymo launched its ride-share service back in December, but has yet to make it fully public or expand beyond the Phoenix area where its modified Chrysler Pacifica minivans have been testing for the past few years. The cars include safety operators in the front seats, so they’re not fully autonomous yet.

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    After Notre-Dame blaze, GoFundMe for historically black churches destroyed by arson gets attention

    The Greater Union Baptist Church, in Opelousas, Louisiana, is one beneficiary of a GoFundMe to aid historically black churches recently destroyed by arson.
    The Greater Union Baptist Church, in Opelousas, Louisiana, is one beneficiary of a GoFundMe to aid historically black churches recently destroyed by arson.

    Image: Gerald Herbert/AP/REX/Shutterstock

    By Rebecca Ruiz

    Within hours after firefighters extinguished the catastrophic blaze at Notre-Dame Cathedral, people around the world had already pledged hundreds of millions of dollars to rebuild the historic site. That included commitments from French businessman François-Henri Pinault, the L’Oreal cosmetics company, and Apple CEO Tim Cook, who said the Silicon Valley company would make a donation. 

    The massive financial support for Notre-Dame prompted journalist Yashar Ali, who has nearly 400,000 followers on Twitter, to point people toward another worthy cause: rebuilding three historically black churches in Louisiana that were recently destroyed by arson.

    “The rebuild of Notre Dame will be well funded,” Ali wrote in a tweet. “In the past month, three historically black churches in Louisiana were destroyed by a racist arsonist. He has been charged with hate crimes, but these churches need your help. Please join me in donating[.]” 

    Ali linked to a GoFundMe launched April 10 by the Seventh District Baptist Association, a nonprofit religious organization to which the three gutted churches belong. Ali said he donated $1,000 to the campaign. 

    The rebuild of Notre Dame will be well funded.

    In the past month, three historically black churches in Louisiana were destroyed by a racist arsonist. He has been charged with hate crimes, but these churches need your help. Please join me in donating https://t.co/gj1BcNsGpu

    — Yashar Ali 🐘 (@yashar) April 16, 2019

    The churches served as the “spiritual homes of generations of black families” for more than a century, according to the New York Times

    Authorities charged a 21-year-old son of a Louisiana deputy sheriff with arson and hate crimes; he pleaded not guilty. 

    SEE ALSO: People around the world are raising money for Notre-Dame

    The GoFundMe had received attention and donations, including from former New Orleans Saints player Benjamin Watson, but contributions surged Tuesday morning. Soon after Ali’s first tweet, he said that GoFundMe would match $1,000 donations to the campaign. 

    Actress Busy Phillips and Late Night host Seth Meyers said they made $1,000 contributions. At the time of this story’s publication, the campaign had raised $347,000 of its $1.8 million goal. 

    The Seventh District Baptist Association said donations would be disbursed equally amongst the churches to aid with rebuilding as well as replacing items like pews, sound systems, and musical instruments. 

    In a video update posted to the GoFundMe campaign Tuesday, Gerald Toussaint, pastor of one of the affected churches, expressed his gratitude for the financial support. 

    “I can’t thank you enough,” he said. “If I had 10,000 tongues, I couldn’t thank you enough. God bless you.” 

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