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Tag: MICE

  • Razer’s Cobra HyperSpeed Is Not Your Standard Gaming Mouse

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    Breaking open the mouse requires only four screws: two covered by one of the mouse’s adhesive feet, and two underneath the removable puck. Covering two of the screws with an adhesive panel limits repairability, since it will slowly lose stickiness over time. After removing the screws, there are two plastic clips up front and two in the back that need to be released. Like any plastic clip, you risk breaking them during disassembly.

    Inside the mouse is a single-sided printed circuit board that houses the sensor, micro switches, and the mouse wheel. The overall design is simple; with replacement parts and some soldering skills, repair should be straightforward. The battery is attached to a removable section on the top shell of the mouse using a rubbery adhesive. This adhesive panel stretches and sticks to itself when removed, making it nearly impossible to reuse with a new battery, but it leaves no residue on the actual plastic of the mouse. A new battery should be easy to install using double-sided tape.

    The Cobra HyperSpeed’s simple internal design has nothing unnecessary, and no added confusion or failure points. While some other models, like the Logitech MX Master 4 or the Razer Basilisk 35K, boast a lot of premium features (with added complexity), it’s always refreshing to see something only as complex as it needs to be.

    Alongside the $100 Cobra HyperSpeed, Razer also offers the $35 Cobra and the $130 Cobra Pro. Compared to the Pro model, the HyperSpeed’s slightly less responsive sensor and scaled-back RGB aren’t huge hits to performance or usability, and the HyperSpeed’s lower weight is a distinct advantage. Compared to the standard wired model, the addition of wireless is a major benefit to both performance and usability. The HyperSpeed’s optical scroll wheel is a definitive improvement over its siblings.

    Overall, this mouse is a solid workhorse for gaming and general browsing. It’s fast, comfortable, and compact. The simple yet robust build will stand up to normal day-to-day use. While it doesn’t push the limits of performance or functionality like some of the more expensive esports-focused mice available today, the Cobra HyperSpeed is a great option for someone who doesn’t need cutting-edge specs but wants a mouse that gets things done.

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    Henri Robbins

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  • Logitech MX Master 4 Review: Haptics Schmaptics, It’s Still the Best Mouse

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    There is no “perfect” mouse. Even Logitech’s long-rumored MX Master 4 and its tried-and-tested blend of form and function won’t be everybody’s everything. A mouse is merely a computer controller, one that should have enough switches and buttons neatly at your fingertips. The older MX Master mice had most of what any productivity-minded wannabe professional required. The new $120 MX Master 4 has one extra feature with a haptic button that could offer a bounty of extra options. If you already have your necessary keyboard shortcuts etched into your brain like the Ten Commandments carved in slate, you’ll find the rumble in your thumb wholly unnecessary.

    Logitech MX Master 4

    There aren’t so many true upgrades, and the Action Wheel may not be all that, but the MX Master 4 is an excellent successor to the best-feeling wireless work mouse.

    • Excellent ergonomic feel
    • Satifsfying haptics
    • Free-spinning and side scroll wheels
    • Works on almost everything
    • Action Wheel has surprising use cases
    • Not enough apps for Action Wheel
    • No compartment for Bolt receiver
    • Bigger and heavier than ever

    The design for Logitech’s “perfect” mouse didn’t need to change. If you’re a proud user of a Logitech MX Master 3 or 3S (the latter retailed for $100 in 2023), and you haven’t worn away the silicone thumbrest with your affections, you don’t need another mouse. Then again, the new MX Master 4 is so nice, so precise, and so feature-rich, I can’t think of another mouse I’d rather drag my cursor around with. The smooth operation on my desk, combined with the near-silent clicks and free-spinning magnetic aluminum scroll wheel, feels as satisfying as it ever did. You simply can’t expect any real upgrades from this mouse. Even with haptics and software features, the MX Master 4 will still be a companion that’s so thick and heavy it will rarely, if ever, leave your desk.

    The same MX Master you know

    © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

    There are a few minimal visual design changes to differentiate the MX Master 4 from the MX Master 3S. Logitech dragged the left and right click below the scroll wheel. That moves the middle “Shift wheel mode” button slightly downward, which swaps from a free-spinning wheel to something more traditional. There’s also a new clear plastic ring around the twin click buttons. There are an additional three programmable side buttons and the lovely side-scrolling wheel that’s handy for both spreadsheets and video editing. The shelf for the thumb sticks out more compared to previous generations, making the MX Master 4 appear even larger than the two-year-old MX Master 3S even though they’re nearly equivalent in stature. There’s one odd thing about the revised design. I was using a MacBook Pro, and the height of the mouse was just enough that the left-click button sat at exactly the height of the opened laptop. This would halt a click, leading to an odd moment of confusion. You can’t call this a flaw, exactly, but just a small thing to note considering just how well it works with the average Mac.

    Logitech Mx Master 4 Review 6
    © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

    The MX Master 4 is a heavy mouse at 150g, and more hefty than the previous version, though it rolls as smooth as a buttered chicken on a water slide over most surfaces. Just like previous iterations, the mouse lacks the long begged-for compartment for the Bolt USB-C receiver. Ignoring ways Logitech could have improved the overall design, it feels ergonomic in a way that’s not completely as extreme as a full vertical mouse. Your hand slides into its shape with the thumb cupped in the cradle of the new textured silicone that doubles as the new haptics button.

    Logitech didn’t want to enhance the base specs to entice buyers. Indeed, the company didn’t boost the polling rate—how often the mouse communicates with the computer—or DPI, the dots per inch that measure accuracy, compared to the MX Master 3S. The MX Master 4 is stuck at a maximum 125Hz polling rate—whether you’re using Bluetooth or the Logitech Bolt USB-C dongle—and a respectable 8,000 DPI. The DPI dictates how well the mouse tracks on various surfaces, and the MX Master 4 routinely proves it’s good for everything, from mouse pads to wood and even glass. That polling rate pales in comparison to the specific gaming mice designed for the most precise experience. For instance, Logitech’s upcoming G Pro X2 Superstrike gaming mouse with its haptic click is based on an 8,000Hz polling rate sensor. Can you still use the MX Master 4 for gaming? It’s a far heavier mouse than any game-specific controller, and it’s hard to exclaim “boom, headshot” when your mouse clicks are as silent as the grave, but you do you.

    I’ve got a rumbly in my thumbly

    Logitech Mx Master 4 Review 4
    © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

    Instead of working out the usual mouse upgrades of better polling rate or DPI, Logitech focused mostly on the new haptics in its new top-of-the-line mouse. The button has a capacitive sensor that doesn’t physically depress, even though it feels like it does when you squeeze it. You’ll now feel a little rumble, depending on your settings. Your thumb might shudder if you move the cursor between two displays, for instance. The haptics belie the most important control change. Logitech hopes you’ll use the new software feature called Action Ring. If you hit the haptic button with your thumb, you can mouse over a ring full of customizable actions. On a Mac, by default the ring brings up options for a Finder window, a shortcut to screenshot the page you’re on or create a note, or summon up AI chatbots (because Logitech still thinks mice need an AI button like its M750).

    To customize the ring, you need to dig into the Logi Options+ app. The interface is minimal and clean. Here, you can also set the level of haptics from minimal to thumb-shuddering. It’s here you can enable multiple different profiles for the Action Ring. Logitech includes one setup for Photoshop (it’s enabled for Adobe’s other apps like Lightroom and Premiere), Zoom, and more. You can look through the applications on your device and set up shortcuts for those apps, or else just create your own. Each action on the ring can also contain multiple folders, in case you want to bury specific actions all from your mouse.

    Logitech Mx Master 4 Review 5
    © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

    I can see how this is useful, though in the weeks I spent using the mouse for work, I only ever hit up the Action Ring when I was trying to get it to work with outside apps. In my day-to-day grind, I have all the necessary keyboard shortcuts down pat. When I’m typing out a new review or getting my text onto Gizmodo.com, I’m not jumping to my mouse first, at least most of the time. What’s the time difference between sliding the cursor down to the Mac’s dock to open up Finder versus hitting a button and then clicking on the shortcut?

    However, if you are using an app with more annoying controls, it can be especially handy. The Logi Marketplace currently houses 39 apps for application-specific controls, though most of them are Adobe apps. You may not make much use of the Action Ring on Spotify or Apple Music, unless you want to pause or play without opening the app first. Take Discord, for example—exchanging audio or mic input and output is annoying to access in the best of times, and having that accessible from the MX Master 4 can be incredibly handy. We’ll have to wait for more apps available in the store to show what the feature is fully capable of.

    Built to last

    Logitech Mx Master 4 Review 9
    © Raymond Wong / Gizmodo

    Logitech claims the MX Master 4 has an optimized antenna placement that results in better connectivity, but the mouse still won’t work outside the usual 30-foot range for both Bluetooth and 2.4GHz connections. The MX Master 4 makes up for it with an “Easy-Switch” button on the bottom of the mouse. You can pair it with up to three devices and hit the button to swap between them. This means you could have it paired with your phone (it’s compatible with iPadOS, iOS, and Android) and two computers. Pressing the switch swaps between each device. The Logi Options+ app also lets you see which devices are paired. Easy Switch was already a positive mark for the MX Master 3S, but it’s made even better thanks to the Action Ring, which lets you swap between devices without flipping the mouse onto its back.

    Battery life among high-end mice is already at the point where most of us won’t be plugging our devices in for months. The MX Master 4 promises a 70-day battery life. I’ve used the mouse for three weeks, nearly every day in the office, and I’ve been incapable of running through its battery just by myself in that time. It came out of the box at a little more than 50%, and by the time I was done writing my review, it was stuck at 45%. Even if the mouse does run out of juice, the MX Master 4 supports quick charging with up to 70% from 3 hours of charging, or up to three hours of use from one minute of charging.

    I won’t stop using the MX Master 4 anytime soon, though that’s because I didn’t already have the MX Master 3 or 3S at home. Logitech didn’t spend time putting real physical hardware upgrades into its new mouse. Unless you have a very specific use case for the Action Wheel, you’ll be perfectly serviced with your older working MX Master mouse. Instead, if you want the best wireless mouse and you’re tired of your old crusty work one, this is easily the best one—still—perfect or not.

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    Kyle Barr

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  • Logitech’s MX Master 4 Is Still the Best Productivity Mouse

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    The loss of soft-touch plastics may seem like a downgrade at first, but I vastly prefer uncoated plastics for long-term use: My MX Master 2S developed unsightly smooth spots on both mouse buttons where the soft-touch coating wore down, and other long-term users have reported the coatings becoming tacky over time.

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    The two primary mouse buttons and the scroll wheel are nearly dead-silent. Despite this, they still have clear feedback with a distinct bump and no mushy feeling. In the ratcheting mode, the mouse wheel has a noticeable bump between each scroll. In the smooth mode, the wheel has just enough resistance to be controlled easily, while still spinning freely.

    The horizontal scroll wheel on the side permanently scrolls smoothly and has significantly more resistance than the primary scroll wheel. This allows for greater control of the wheel and helps protect against accidental scrolling when moving your thumb. Scrolling is incredibly smooth, without any catching or scratchiness, and the ridged texture of the aluminum wheel feels comfortable and easy to manipulate. Clicking the wheel is still fairly loud, like any mouse. The three side buttons and the top button have a muted click, and it’s not disruptive.

    Despite weighing 150 grams, this mouse is easy to glide around a surface. The feet are smooth, sliding easily while still having enough friction for precise control, and the sculpted shape makes it easy to move and lift. While the high weight means it won’t be ideal for competitive, high-intensity gaming, the shape is preferable for longer sessions, whether you’re grinding out dungeons or slogging through spreadsheets.

    The sensor is capable of up to 8,000 dots per inch, but most people will likely leave the sensitivity well below that. I didn’t have any issues with input registration, skipping, or shaking, and the sensor felt incredibly precise on all surfaces, even frosted and transparent glass.

    Gesture Controls and Haptics

    Logitech MX Master 4 Review Productivity Pro

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    The MX Master 4’s gesture controls are one of its most prominent features. These have been featured on every generation of the MX Master line, with only small changes across generations. The gesture control button was previously located on the bottom of the thumb rest, hidden underneath the rubber surface, but has now been moved to a standard button on the side, which I found more comfortable and natural to use.

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    Henri Robbins

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  • Corsair’s New Sabre v2 Pro Gaming Mouse Is Impossibly Light

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    The lack of Bluetooth connectivity is, presumably, for weight savings, but it makes this mouse inconvenient as a travel option. The lack of rigidity already makes traveling with it seem unwise. It’s meant to be kept on a desk.

    The mouse has a total of five buttons: The left and right clicks, the middle click, and the two side buttons, which are mapped to “forward” and “back” by default. There are five built-in sensitivity presets, ranging from 400 to 2,000 dpi. These presets can be adjusted, and the number of presets can be decreased. With the default button maps, you can cycle through the presets by holding down the right click and back button for three seconds. The scroll wheel will flash three times to indicate that the setting has changed. It’s a little convoluted. More importantly, the dpi switch only works if the rear side button is mapped to the “back” key. When I remapped this button to anything else, the combination didn’t work.

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    Corsair recently unveiled its in-browser Web Hub utility, replacing its iCue software for peripheral management. It’s a vast improvement, being easier to navigate and less issue-prone than its predecessor. With the utility, you can easily adjust settings like polling rate, dpi, and button mapping. However, a mouse this simple really doesn’t have much to adjust. I quickly remapped the side buttons, cranked the polling rate to 8,000 Hz, and never needed to use the software again (outside of testing). The only catch is that in-browser management means you need an internet connection, though maybe you have bigger issues if that’s the case.

    The Sabre v2 Pro also includes rubberized “grip tape” stickers, applied to the primary buttons and either side of the mouse. These can improve grip and only increase weight by half a gram, but they don’t make a massive difference in functionality unless you have particularly sweaty hands. More than anything else, it makes the mouse feel softer and provides some added comfort. However, I found that the tape was limited-use. After removing and reapplying it a couple of times, the edges started to peek back when holding the mouse.

    By Any Means Necessary

    Corsair Sabre V2 Pro Ultralight Gaming Mouse Review Impossibly Light

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    This mouse has an ethos of lightness at any cost. It weighs practically nothing, to the point that it feels surreal when you’re holding it. You can easily flex the plastic by squeezing either side of the mouse, and pressing from the top and bottom too hard will cause one of the side buttons to actuate. Pressing hard on the mouse from any side causes a small creaking noise to emit from the shell.

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    Henri Robbins

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  • Switch to an Ergonomic Mouse and Give Your Wrists a Break

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    Other Ergonomic Mice to Consider

    There are several more options on the market to consider. These didn’t cut it as our top picks for one reason or another, but we still like them enough to recommend.

    Razer Pro Click V2

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    Razer Pro Click V2 for $120: The biggest draw of the Pro Click V2 (7/10, WIRED Recommends) is the shape: It’s sleek, refined, and comfortable. Instead of the sharp edges and angles of the Razer Basilisk, the Pro Click V2 has the curves of a normal mouse and is just as comfortable in an office setting as it would be in a gaming setup. And that’s what makes the Click stand out—you can use it everywhere, for everything. The shape is comfortable for regular use, the design is innocuous yet still satisfying, and the mouse has most of the usual trappings of a productivity mouse: An ergonomic shape, dual-mode mouse wheel, multidevice Bluetooth connectivity, and a slot on the underside to store the dongle. At the same time, it has the specs of a gaming mouse: 1,000-Hz polling, 2.4-GHz connectivity, full programmability, rubberized grips on either side, and bright RGB lighting on the underside. The Pro Click v2 also has horizontal scrolling through the mouse wheel, where it can be tilted to either side to scroll left and right. This isn’t quite as quick or intuitive as the MX Master’s thumb wheel, but it’s still nice to have. While it doesn’t match the Basilisk in performance, the Pro Click V2 is more affordable and a professional option that still has the sturdy build quality and responsive sensors Razer is known for.

    Image may contain Computer Hardware Electronics Hardware and Mouse

    Keychron M6

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    Keychron M6 for $70: If you like the design of the MX Master line, but would prefer a more gaming-oriented mouse, the Keychron M6 is a nice alternative. While the M6 doesn’t have Logitech’s advanced gesture controls or soft-touch exterior, it maintains the dual-mode scroll wheel, horizontal wheel, and general ergonomics while adding a 4,000-Hz refresh rate and shaving off almost half the weight of the 3S at only 78 grams. However, some small issues of build quality and a loss of functionality make this a less-than-ideal choice for most users—the dual-mode scroll wheel rattles during use, and the mouse feels lightweight to a fault. The higher-performance model’s wireless receiver requires a USB-C cable to connect to a device, which is a lot less convenient for laptop users compared to the low-profile dongle included with the 1,000-Hz model (and most other mice today).

    Image may contain Computer Hardware Electronics Hardware Mouse Computer Laptop and Pc

    Keychron M4

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    Keychron M4 for $70: While you can realistically transport any of the mice on this list in a backpack or computer bag, I was impressed by just how compact the Keychron M4 is. I could easily slip it into a laptop bag or jacket pocket without any issue, and I even used it as a travel mouse for quite a while. While the shape isn’t great, or even good, ergonomically, I found the claw grip quite comfortable even during prolonged gaming sessions. However, it isn’t good enough that I would recommend it to anyone for daily use on a desktop setup unless they want the lightest mouse possible. The only real complaint I had with this mouse was the dongle: The 4,000-Hz model comes with a receiver shaped like a tiny keyboard with a USB-C port on the back, which meant I needed a cable to connect the receiver and a flat surface to place it on. Meanwhile, the 1,000-Hz model came with a simple USB dongle that could plug into the side of a laptop.

    Image may contain Computer Hardware Electronics Hardware and Mouse

    Logitech Pro X Superlight 2 Dex

    Courtesy of Logitech

    Logitech Pro X Superlight 2 Dex for $140: While this mouse is intended for high-intensity competitive gaming, I found its sculpted shape to be practical and comfortable for any long-term use, and its lightweight (60 grams!), no-frills design was quick and snappy for both spreadsheets and shooters. The mouse felt incredibly sturdy despite its weight, and the 8-kHz polling combined with a 44k-dpi sensor makes it the best-performing mouse on this list. While pricey, the Superlight DEX is a great single-mouse solution for someone who works from home and immediately starts queueing up after clocking out. It has a far more gaming-focused lean than the Razer Basilisk V3, which, while not bad, means you’re making a few more sacrifices to productivity in exchange for gaming performance.

    Image may contain Computer Hardware Electronics Hardware and Mouse

    Logitech MX Vertical

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    Logitech MX Vertical for $120: While this mouse’s size and general shape both feel good for regular use, I found the shape to be a bit uncomfortable to fully grip and lift: A prominent ridge on the back dug into the space between my thumb and index finger, and the shape was just a bit too narrow to get a good hold on. However, the MX Vertical is still comfortable to hold with a looser grip, and it is perfectly serviceable for general office work and browsing, while putting less strain on the wrist than a standard horizontal mouse.

    Image may contain Computer Hardware Electronics Hardware and Mouse

    Logitech Lift

    Photograph: Henri Robbins

    Logitech Lift for $79: As one of the smaller vertical mice on this list, the Lift is just a bit too small. I found it difficult to comfortably grip this mouse for prolonged use, and friends with smaller hands found the same. That said, WIRED reviews editor Julian Chokkattu says his 5’2″ wife uses the Life and finds it perfect for her small hands, so your mileage will vary. Regardless of hand size, a larger vertical mouse is typically more comfortable for most people. It’s worth noting that the Lift is one of the only vertical mice I’ve tested with a left-handed configuration.


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    Henri Robbins

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

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    Male mice sing ultrasonic “love songs” to attract females, which humans cannot hear due…

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  • How the Brain Separates Sneezing From Coughing, According to Mice

    How the Brain Separates Sneezing From Coughing, According to Mice

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    Sneezing and coughing are two different ways of accomplishing the same. One involves the nose and mucus, the other the mouth and mucus, but both are defensive respiratory reflexes designed to expel pathogens and irritants. Since they’re so similar, doctors have generally assumed they both involved a common set of sensory receptors and neural passageways. As new research suggests, this assumption was wrong.

    Indeed, in a new study published in the journal Cell, doctors from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, led by anesthesiologist Haowu Jiang, found that this is not the case, a discovery that could potentially offer relief to cold and allergy sufferers in the future.

    For the study, the researchers opted to trigger tiny, presumably somewhat adorable, sneezes and coughs in mice. They stimulated groups of nasal passage neurons already known to react to various conditions connected to sneezing, such as those dedicated to sensing cold or itching. That allowed them to figure out exactly which sets of neurons were actually involved in triggering a sneeze. They found that, while the tissue lining the nasal passage can be activated by several different sets of neurons, tingling only a single one of those sets—a type of itch receptor called MrgprC11—actually resulted in a sneeze.

    To verify the findings, the doctors infected the poor mice with the flu. In mice where MrgprC11 was deactivated, the mice got sick and coughed, but couldn’t sneeze. When they tried to stimulate tracheal MrgprC11 neurons to generate a cough, they found the trachea did get irritated, but no coughing arose. Instead, coughing was connected to a completely different set of neurons.

    “At the circuit level, sneeze and cough signals are transmitted and modulated by divergent neuropathways,” the doctors wrote.

    The research also resulted in a happy accident. Among some scientists, it’s apparently controversial as to whether mice can actually cough. Some studies have argued they can, a conclusion the Washington University scientists said they confirmed by identifying the audio and respiratory patterns of the tiny sounds. So now we know mice can cough, which is nice.

    It may not seem like a big deal that sneezing and coughing are caused by different mechanisms. Both are essentially the body spewing out microbes and some icky fluids. Jiang and his colleagues acknowledged in the study the need to determine if the pathways discovered in mice have an equivalent in humans. But they expressed hope that their work could lead to the development of new drugs and symptom treatments for respiratory infections and allergies.

    Aside from better relief during flu and cold season, that could reduce unpleasant side effects connected to antihistamines and corticosteroids, such as airway dryness, bleeding, and infections. As any allergy sufferer can attest, that’s nothing to sneeze at.

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    Adam Kovac

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  • ROG Harpe Ace Mini & Strix Impact III: Precision & Versatility

    ROG Harpe Ace Mini & Strix Impact III: Precision & Versatility

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    ASUS Republic of Gamers (ROG) has expanded its lineup of gaming peripherals with two standout devices: the ROG Harpe Ace Mini gaming mouse and the Strix Impact III Wireless mouse. Tailored for both competitive gamers and everyday users, these mice focus on delivering precision, comfort, and practical features without any unnecessary frills.

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    ROG Harpe Ace Mini: Compact Design, Maximum Control

    The ROG Harpe Ace Mini builds on the success of its predecessor, offering a more compact design that caters to various hand sizes and grip styles. Weighing just 49 grams, this lightweight mouse is designed with portability and ease of use in mind, making it a solid choice for gamers who need flexibility during extended sessions.

    The Harpe Ace Mini features a 42,000-dpi ROG AimPoint Pro optical sensor with Track-on-Glass technology, ensuring precise tracking on virtually any surface. This level of accuracy is particularly valuable in fast-paced games where every millimeter of movement counts. The ROG Optical Micro Switches, with a 100-million-click lifespan, provide durability and responsiveness.

    The mouse’s shell is made from innovative bio-based nylon, which contributes to its low weight while maintaining a sturdy build. The smooth matte coating effectively handles sweat and grease, ensuring a firm grip during intense moments. The Harpe Ace Mini also supports ROG SpeedNova wireless technology for low-latency 2.4 GHz connectivity, along with up to 105 hours of battery life, making it a reliable companion for long gaming marathons.

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    Strix Impact III Wireless: Dual Connectivity with a Sleek Design

    The ROG Strix Impact III Wireless takes a different approach, focusing on versatility with dual connectivity options. Gamers can switch between Bluetooth mode, which supports connections to three devices simultaneously, and 2.4 GHz wireless mode for low-latency performance. The new Moonlight White variant brings a sleek aesthetic that fits well with modern setups.

    Designed for flexibility, the Strix Impact III Wireless supports hot-swappable Push-Fit Switch Sockets, allowing users to customize the click force by swapping out compatible mechanical switches. This feature adds a layer of personalization that’s rare in wireless mice within this price range. For power, the mouse can use either AA or AAA batteries, offering up to 618 hours of use in Bluetooth mode and up to 450 hours in 2.4 GHz mode.

    Built for Extended Use and Performance

    Both the Harpe Ace Mini and Strix Impact III Wireless focus on enhancing the user experience with thoughtful design elements. The Harpe Ace Mini’s lightweight build, sweat-resistant coating, and bio-based nylon materials make it comfortable for extended gaming. Meanwhile, the Strix Impact III Wireless offers convenience with dual connectivity options, customizable switches, and long-lasting battery life, making it a versatile option for both work and play.

    In terms of connectivity, both devices feature ROG SpeedNova technology, which ensures stable, low-latency performance crucial for competitive gaming. The Harpe Ace Mini goes a step further with its compatibility with the ROG Omni Receiver, allowing for a single USB connection for both mouse and keyboard, reducing clutter and enhancing convenience.

    Conclusion: Precision and Flexibility in One Package

    The ROG Harpe Ace Mini and Strix Impact III Wireless each bring unique strengths to the table, whether it’s the compact precision of the Harpe Ace Mini or the versatile connectivity of the Strix Impact III Wireless. While pricing and availability details will vary depending on your region, these devices offer a balanced combination of performance and usability without overwhelming users with unnecessary features. If you’re seeking reliable and thoughtfully designed gaming peripherals, these mice provide solid options tailored to both competitive and casual needs. For more details, you can explore their features on the official ASUS website.

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    Al Hilal

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  • Director, Atlas Meetings & Incentives, Elevated to Vice President

    Director, Atlas Meetings & Incentives, Elevated to Vice President

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    Atlas Meetings & Incentives, a division of Atlas Travel that provides meeting, incentive, convention and event (MICE) services to clients of all sizes and industries, has promoted Jennifer Murphy from Director to Vice President, Atlas Meetings & Incentives.

    Murphy has been in the industry for 28 years and with Atlas Travel for 17 years, where she has played a crucial role in driving the growth and success of the Meetings & Incentives team. Her dedication and expertise have been instrumental in developing high-profile programs and strengthening client relationships, especially through the challenges posed by the pandemic.

    “Jennifer’s promotion reflects our utmost confidence in her innovative leadership,” said Lea Cahill, President of Atlas Travel & Technology Group, the parent company of Atlas Travel. “We are thrilled to see her continue to elevate client service standards and spearhead initiatives that will propel our company forward.”

    Murphy has also led the Rewards & Recognition services within the Atlas Meetings & Incentives division, where she has helped introduce tailored strategic program designs, promotional campaigns and client rewards through the Great Escape program.

    “I’m excited to continue servicing our existing clients, procure new prospects and develop more operational efficiencies with my incredible team of event planners that are dedicated to providing top-notch MICE strategic services,” Murphy said. “The pandemic taught me to think differently about how we service our clients and was also an opportunity for me to wear multiple hats and sit on the frontline with both Rewards & Recognition and meeting planning. I look forward to investing this new knowledge into growing the team’s resources, skills and client portfolio.”

    Murphy’s promotion exemplifies Atlas Travel’s ongoing dedication to enhancing company leadership and fostering future growth and innovation in the MICE industry.

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    About Atlas Meetings & Incentives

    Headquartered in Marlborough, MA, Atlas Meetings & Incentives provides top-of-the-line meeting and event services as well as rich company reward and recognition programs to clients of various sizes and industries. Our highly knowledgeable team of expert meeting planners takes the stress out of event production and delivers personalized care every step of the way. Atlas Travel is proud to be a certified Women’s Business Enterprise (WBE) and a Certified B Corporation. For more information on Atlas Meetings & Incentives, please visit meetings.atlastravel.com.

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    Source: Atlas Meetings & Incentives

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  • DC’s Rodent Control Academy has tips for managing infestations – WTOP News

    DC’s Rodent Control Academy has tips for managing infestations – WTOP News

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    D.C. Health’s two-day Rodent Control Academy teaches participants how rodents behave and best practices for managing them.

    Standing in a park across the street from Western Market in Northwest D.C., John Caffo and Jac Winters scrutinized a series of holes next to the concrete sidewalk.

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    At DC’s Rodent Control Academy, tips for managing infestations

    All of the evidence, they concluded, pointed to rat activity. On one side, there’s a wide gap between the ground and the edge of the sidewalk. Nearby, there’s a round hole.

    After taking notes, Caffo and Winters continued to make their way around the park and another nearby, writing down any characteristics that may attract rodent activity: trash cans, litter and water sources, among others.

    The “field trip” near George Washington University’s campus, an exercise with the goal of inspecting rodent infestations, came on the second day of D.C. Health’s two-day Rodent Control Academy. The event, first convened in 2006, teaches participants how rodents behave and best practices for managing them.

    Caffo’s been learning about rodents for years, he said. Winters, a property manager, wanted to learn as much as he could about rats, to make sure they don’t end up in his buildings.

    “They’re smart,” Winters said. “They’re going to find their way in one way or the other, but it’s my job to make sure they don’t get into our building.”

    The seminar is put on by D.C. Health’s Rodent and Vector Control Team and Urban Rodentologist Bobby Corrigan.

    Corrigan said the District is “afflicted with rats” the same way Philadelphia and New York City are.

    The rodents are smart, he said, and know which areas have the best food. Traps or poison are only marginally helpful, according to Corrigan, who said the majority of solutions are tied to environmental management, such as taking out the trash and using the trash can correctly.

    “It’s an animal that can get into a lot of trouble quickly,” Corrigan said. “It can get into ceilings and chewing wires, causing electrical shorts, and if not, worse, even building fires. It’s an animal that can carry bugs on his body that jump off the rats and go to people. … We have to fight back with some really intelligent pathways ourselves.”

    One way to do that, Corrigan said, is understanding the way they behave. It’s one reason Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Lynda Laughlin signed up for the academy. She represents an area in Adams Morgan that’s filled with businesses and restaurants.

    She stressed the value of buying the right type of equipment, and “don’t do it cheap. Take a little bit of time to invest and fix the holes in your doorway,” Laughlin said.

    Those taking part in D.C.’s Rodent Control Academy inspect a park for signs of infestation. (WTOP/Scott Gelman)

    But, the syllabus for the seminar called humans’ challenges with rodents “a forever war,” she said, so, “It’s just about if we can keep at bay the growing population, because they’re never gonna go away.”

    Maxine Linthicum Davis, one of Amtrak’s senior health specialists for the southeast region, said she attended to try and “get ahead of the game.” She’s expecting some of the guidance to be helpful as Union Station gets revamped.

    At a different park near 21st and I Streets, she leaned over a fence to take a picture of a hole hidden between bushes. Now that she’s observed rat tendencies, she’s planning to tell her colleagues the company needs rodent-proof door sweeps for gaps under doors.

    “Sometimes I see things just like, ‘Wow, that’s pretty incredible,’ how they can go underneath the platform and end up from one side to the opposite side of the block type of deal. It’s pretty incredible,” Caffo said.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Scott Gelman

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  • The Best Mouse (and Mousepad) for Every Kind of Gamer

    The Best Mouse (and Mousepad) for Every Kind of Gamer

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    Picking a gaming mouse is a very personal endeavor. Everyone’s hands are different, everyone’s preferences and needs are different, and we all play different games. That’s why we’re lucky to live in the golden age of gaming mice, with major manufacturers pouring engineering muscle into one-upping one another. The result is a market loaded with high-quality yet relatively inexpensive mice.

    We’ve tested quite a few, and while we can’t tell you precisely which mouse is right for you—you may prefer wired or wireless, more or fewer buttons—we have a variety of recommendations. These are the best gaming mice for every kind of gamer we can think of, plus a couple of mousepads for good measure.

    Be sure to also read up our other buying guides, like the Best Gaming Headsets, Best Wireless Gaming Headsets, and Best Keyboards, for more gear recommendations.

    Updated April 2024: We added the Razer Viper V2 Pro, Corsair Scimitar Elite Wireless, and Corsair M75 Wireless, and removed the Razer Viper Ultimate and Razer Lancehead.

    Special offer for Gear readers: Get WIRED for just $5 ($25 off). This includes unlimited access to WIRED.com, full Gear coverage, and subscriber-only newsletters. Subscriptions help fund the work we do every day.

    Looking for a Great Mouse? Look at Your Palms

    One aspect to consider when shopping for a mouse is its size. I used to use Logitech’s G305 until I realized it’s way too small for my palm size—I was forcing myself to grip it a certain way and was straining my wrist in the process. Not good. This also depends on how you hold your mouse. Are you using your whole palm? Just your fingertips? Or are you using it claw-style, with your fingertips and bottom of your palm touching the mouse?

    I recommend measuring the distance from the tip of your middle finger to the bottom of your palm, then finding a mouse that’s roughly the same length. You can do this with your hand’s width too to make sure the mouse you’re buying isn’t too wide or too narrow. Rocket Jump Ninja has a nifty tool that lets you input your measurements and spits out mouse recommendations based on your hand size. Razer has a handy guide too, but it only recommends Razer-made mice. By measuring your hand, you can enjoy a much more comfortable gaming experience. That’s how I found out that Logitech’s G604 is the best size for me—my wrist says thank you. —Julian Chokkattu

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    Eric Ravenscraft, Jaina Grey

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  • Inhalable Lung Cancer Drug Delivery Performs Well, Study Suggests | High Times

    Inhalable Lung Cancer Drug Delivery Performs Well, Study Suggests | High Times

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    In a twist of irony, a powerful drug that battles lung cancer might be delivered safer via inhalation versus surgery, injection, and other invasive methods, a new study suggests.

    Researchers associated with Columbia University observed rat models and determined that a new inhalable lung cancer treatment is capable of delivering localized immunotherapy to difficult-to-treat tumors.

    Lately researchers have been looking for a safe and non-invasive alternative to current approaches to tackling cancerous tumors that require direct injection of immunomodulators into the tumors. But when cancer is found in the lungs, it is typically hard to reach and treat with drugs by direct injection.

    Researchers believe that a potent drug that fights cancer might be better delivered via inhalation in order to battle lung cancer. The study was published recently in Nature Nanotechnology and online Jan. 11, showing how nanobubbles containing a powerful drug could be administered via inhalation to provide a safer delivery route. 

    Medscape reports that researchers demonstrated that nanobubbles can deliver potent immunotherapy directly to tough-to-treat lung cancer tumors via inhalation. Researchers suspect that exosomes, also known as extracellular vesicles (EVs), could be the key to the next step in lung cancer treatment.

    “Exosomes work like text messages between cells , sending and receiving information,” said lead researcher Ke Cheng, PhD, professor of biomedical engineering at Columbia, who has been working with stem cells and exosomes for over 15 years. “The significance of this study is that exosomes can bring mRNA-based treatment to lung cancer cells locally, unlike systemic chemotherapy that can have side effects throughout the body. And inhalation is totally noninvasive. You don’t need a nurse to use an IV needle to pierce your skin.”

    The study could help move research forward by allowing for the therapeutic uses of exosomes, inhalable treatments for lung conditions, and the safe delivery of powerful interleukin-12 (IL-12) immunotherapy.

    Researchers have known about IL-12’s abilities to fight cancer for decades, but early human trials lead to serious side effects and several deaths. Researchers are now trying new delivery methods that target tumor cells without affecting healthy tissue. The research team’s new approach involves inserting mRNA for IL-12 into exosomes.

    “One of the advantages of exosomes is that they are naturally secreted by the body or cultured cells,” he noted. “They have low toxicity and have multiple ways of getting their message into cells.”

    The scientists borrowed an approach that captured public attention during the pandemic: Using messenger RNA, which directs cells to make proteins for tasks — including boosting immune response.

    In the study, researchers developed inhalable extracellular vesicles loaded with IL-12 mRNA to battle lung cancer and bolster systemic immunity in mice with tumors. IL-12 mRNA was loaded into human embryonic kidney cell-derived exosomes (HEK-Exo) through electroporation, yielding IL-12 mRNA-loaded exosomes (IL-12-Exo). 

    When inhaled by mice with lung tumors, IL-12-Exo outperformed IL-12 mRNA-loaded liposomes (IL-12-Lipo)n and minimized systemic toxicity. These inhaled IL-12-Exo promoted

    immune activation, systemic immunity, and immune memory, culminating in lung tumor suppression and heightened resistance against tumor recurrences.

    Lung Cancer and Smoking

    Human trials could launch within five years, and help put an end to the devastation that lung cancer causes each year. 

    Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death overall and among both men and women. (The second leading cause of cancer death is prostate for men and breast for women.) In 2021, 134,592 people died from lung cancer, or 22% of all cancer deaths. In the United States, cigarette smoking is linked to about 80% to 90% of lung cancer deaths. 

    However, even the Lung Cancer Society notes that while it is not risk-free as it involves combustion, cannabis smoke is not as carcinogenic as tobacco smoke. NORML explains this very well: THC and CBD, the two most popular cannabis active ingredients, are non-carcinogenic and demonstrate anticancer properties in vivo and in vitro. Nicotine—in stark contrast—promotes the development of cancer cells and their blood supply. In addition, cannabinoids stimulate other biological activities and responses that may mitigate the carcinogenic effects of smoke.

    People who smoke cigarettes are 15 to 30 times more likely to develop lung cancer or die from lung cancer than people who do not smoke. Even smoking a few cigarettes a day or on occasion increases the risk of lung cancer.

    Even if you don’t smoke anything, or only vape, you’re still not off the hook, depending on how hazardous areas are that you live in.

    People also get lung cancer from radon, and they usually have no control over the undetectable radioactive gas caused by the natural decay of traces in uranium in rocks and the soil. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)  estimates that radon causes about 21,000 lung cancer deaths each year. 

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    Benjamin M. Adams

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  • Nicole Kidman To Star, Justin Kurzel To Direct ‘Mice;’ Aussie Package Produced By Blossom, Bruna Papandrea’s Made Up Stories & Thirdborn

    Nicole Kidman To Star, Justin Kurzel To Direct ‘Mice;’ Aussie Package Produced By Blossom, Bruna Papandrea’s Made Up Stories & Thirdborn

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    EXCLUSIVE: The team behind Nine Perfect Strangers and The Undoing — Blossom Films and Made Up Stories – have put together another solid film that Nicole Kidman will star in for director Justin Kurzel.

    They’ve teamed on a feature film adaptation of Mice, a debut novel by Gordon Reece. The producers will partner with the production company Thirdborn, made up of Kurzel, Shaun Grant and Nicole O’Donohue. Grant will write the script; he and Kurzel teamed for the Cannes-winning Nitramand and the upcoming TV series The Narrow Road to the Deep North.

    Blossom Films’ Kidman and Made Up Stories’ principal Bruna Papandrea will produce alongside Blossom’s Per Saari, Made Up Stories’ Steve Hutensky and Jodi Matterson and Thirdborn’s Kurzel and Grant. Jeanne Snow of Made Up Stories will exec produce with Thirdborn’s Nicole O’Donohue and Harriet Warner.

    In Mice, Shelley and her mother are pushed to their limits, confronting their moral convictions and the line between right and wrong in the face of bullying, violence, and fear. The novel was published by Viking in the U.S. and Macmillan in the UK in 2011.

    Said Blossom and Made Up Stories in a statement: “We were so taken with Gordon’s book – it is one of those stories that gets under your skin and stays there. We have been a fan of Justin and Shaun’s work for a long time and we are thrilled we have found the perfect story to come together on. We are so excited to be bringing this collaboration into the world.” 

    Said Thirdborn: “We are thrilled to partner with Made Up Stories and Blossom Films to bring Gordon Reece’s terrifying novel, Mice, to the screen.  It is exciting to be developing a horror story and to have the opportunity to work with Nicole in this genre.”

    Said Reece: “The thought of an actress as staggeringly gifted as Nicole Kidman teaming up with Australia’s most daring and original director on the adaptation of Mice is hugely exciting. I’ve no doubt their collaboration is going to make for electrifying cinema that we’ll be talking about for years.”

    Reece is repped by Debbie Golvan of Golvan Arts Management and Intellectual Property Group; Kurzel is Kate Richter of HLA Management, CAA and Sloane Offer; Grant is represented by Kathryn Fleming of the Fleming Agency.

    Blossom Films and Made Up Stories are currently shooting The Last Anniversary for Binge, and recently started principal photography on season 2 of Hulu and Prime Video’s Nine Perfect Strangers, both are adaptations of Liane Moriarty bestselling novels.

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    Mike Fleming

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  • This Helpful Mouse Is a Fairytale Forest Friend Come to Life

    This Helpful Mouse Is a Fairytale Forest Friend Come to Life

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    Breaking news: Tiny mouse tidies Welsh man’s shed every night after dark! Helpful fairytale animal friends à la Snow White and Cinderella really do exist! And maybe there’s one in a shed near you!

    The good news came to us when Rodney Holbrook, who fortunately enough happens to be a wildlife photographer, noticed that someone, or something, was coming in and tidying up his shed overnight. Curious about this apparently helpful poltergeist Holbrook set up a camera only to discover a real-life Disney movie was playing out in his shed.

    Though Holbrook’s initial discovery was a particularly odd food storage solution—food he’d put aside for the birds repeatedly turning up in a pair of old shoes he was keeping in the shed—the camera soon revealed some much more helpful rodent housekeeping.

    The little mouse who lived in his shed would come out at night and gather together every small, stray object he could find, from corks to clothes pegs to nails, only to tidy them away neatly in the tray on Holbrook’s workbench. Delighted by his little assistant, Holbrook took to leaving out different objects to see if the mouse would tidy them away too, which of course he did because he’s a perfect angel mouse from whom we could all learn a thing or two!

    Holbrook has christened his little friend “The Welsh Tidy Mouse” telling the BBC that “He moved all sorts of things into the box, bits of plastic, nuts and bolts. I don’t bother to tidy up now, as I know he will see to it. I leave things out of the box and they put it back in its place by the morning. Ninety-nine times out of 100 the mouse will tidy up throughout the night.” OK, I’ll take twenty of them, please.

    The best part of all this is that Holbrook’s Welsh Tidy Mouse isn’t the first! It turns out that there was another case back in 2019, where a cute little mouse friend kept “tidying” Steve McKears’ loose screws and other small metal items away into (unfortunately) a birdseed box. Well, he was trying! He had the spirit of helpfulness even if he didn’t have quite the right execution.

    The fact that this has happened twice now, and been caught on camera, has implications. There might be legions of helpful little shed mice out there, just waiting to find their Cinderellas and keep your house/shed tidy in exchange for just a small handful of birdseed. This world is beautiful.

    (via The Guardian, featured image: Disney)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Siobhan Ball

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  • Study: CBD’s Anti-Inflammatory, Neurological Benefits Could Provide Alzheimer’s Relief | High Times

    Study: CBD’s Anti-Inflammatory, Neurological Benefits Could Provide Alzheimer’s Relief | High Times

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    Cannabidiol, or CBD, is known and widely used for a wide array of potential benefits, including pain relief, sleep, stress and anxiety relief, its anti-seizure properties — the list goes on. While the non-psychotropic cannabinoid already boasts a number of positive effects, could preventing and alleviating Alzheimer’s disease be among them? 

    According to a new study, the prospects are looking strong.

    By 2050, the number of people over the age of 65 with Alzheimer’s could grow to a projected 12.7 million, according to the Alzheimer’s Association, underscoring the need to explore potential options to alleviate or prevent the disease. Currently, there are no cures for Alzheimer’s, though some medications can provide relief and mitigate symptoms.

    Alzheimer’s is progressive disease characterized by changes in the brain, resulting in distorted and lost memory along with other important mental processes over time.

    So where exactly does CBD fit in? Researchers from China Pharmaceutical University took a closer look at the neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory mechanisms of the cannabinoid in their study titled “Assessing Cannabidiol as a Therapeutic Agent for Preventing and Alleviating Alzheimer’s Disease Neurodegeneration,” published in the journal Cells.

    They found that CBD may enhance cognitive function and offer protection against the protein Aβ1–42, a biomarker associated with the onset of Alzheimer’s. ​​Aβ42 is also related to other similar conditions and symptoms like mild cognitive impairment and vascular dementia.

    CBD’s Anti-Inflammatory, Neurological Benefits and Alzheimer’s

    Authors note that CBD may specifically work against Alzheimer’s, given the role that neuroinflammation plays in ongoing synaptic and neuronal damage. CBD is already well known for its anti-inflammatory properties, so researchers conducted experiments on mice to model Alzheimer’s disease using Aβ1–42. They also utilized an RNA-seq analysis to further understand some of the actions CBD may have to offer when it comes to Alzheimer’s.

    Ultimately, they found that CBD did not cause significant damage or cell death. Instead, CBD appeared to counteract cognitive and memory impairments induced by Aβ1–42.

    Researchers administered Aβ1–42 to the mice, which were then put to the Morris water maze test. This test is often used to assess spatial learning, cognitive functions and memory in rodents.

    Those mice treated with Aβ1–42 took longer to complete the maze, indicating increased cognitive issues. After being treated with CBD, it took mice significantly less time to escape, implying better cognitive function. CBD also helped to combat the negative impacts Aβ1–42 had on learning over a five-day period.

    Additionally, researchers looked at the navigation patterns of mice, concluding that CBD had the potential to boost spatial memory among Alzheimer’s models. 

    Promising Findings Show the Need for Expanded Research

    “Our findings suggest CBD’s efficacy in moderating microglial and astrocytic activation, offering anti-inflammatory benefits that protect synaptic function and alleviate AD-associated cognitive deficits,” authors note. “Our data support CBD’s potential therapeutic role in countering AD-related neuroinflammation.”

    Along with demonstrating CBD’s ability to counteract certain cognitive impairments caused by Aβ1–42, researchers said the study left them with “invaluable insights” surrounding CBD’s role in modulating critical genes within the inflammatory reaction, “underscoring its robust anti-inflammatory potential.”

    They also note that the equivalent dose for humans from the study is about 115 mg of CBD, which would make it a viable oral supplement. Still, researchers reference that the potential role of CBD in combating Alzheimer’s “remains conspicuously absent from contemporary guidelines.”

    “Our research substantiates CBD’s efficacy in either preventing or mitigating the effects of AD. Thus, future formulations of CBD supplements might be strategically positioned to include indications for AD prevention and alleviation, expanding its therapeutic repertoire,” the study concludes.

    Alzheimer’s and Cannabinoids: An Emerging Field of Research

    While it may still be limited in the grand scheme, the exploration of cannabinoids and Alzheimer’s isn’t brand new. Denver-based MedPharm Holdings received funding in 2022 to move forward to study cannabinoids as they relate to neuropharmacology, specifically Alzheimer’s.

    Other research has noted the “promising” potential that cannabinoids like CBD hold when it comes to Alzheimer’s and dementia-related symptoms, specifically citing findings in rodent models showing the effect of cannabinoids in reducing amyloid plaque deposition and stimulating hippocampal neurogenesis.

    A Toronto-based biotech company is also researching the potential of new pharmaceutical formulations of the psychedelic drug Dimenthyltryptamine (DMT).

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    Keegan Williams

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  • Someday, You Might Be Able to Eat Your Way Out of a Cold

    Someday, You Might Be Able to Eat Your Way Out of a Cold

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    When it comes to treating disease with food, the quackery stretches back far. Through the centuries, raw garlic has been touted as a home treatment for everything from chlamydia to the common cold; Renaissance remedies for the plague included figs soaked in hyssop oil. During the 1918 flu pandemic, Americans wolfed down onions or chugged “fluid beef” gravy to keep the deadly virus at bay.

    Even in modern times, the internet abounds with dubious culinary cure-alls: apple-cider vinegar for gonorrhea; orange juice for malaria; mint, milk, and pineapple for tuberculosis. It all has a way of making real science sound like garbage. Research on nutrition and immunity “has been ruined a bit by all the writing out there on Eat this to cure cancer,” Lydia Lynch, an immunologist and a cancer biologist at Harvard, told me.

    In recent years, though, plenty of legit studies have confirmed that our diets really can affect our ability to fight off invaders—down to the fine-scale functioning of individual immune cells. Those studies belong to a new subfield of immunology sometimes referred to as immunometabolism. Researchers are still a long way off from being able to confidently recommend specific foods or dietary supplements for colds, flus, STIs, and other infectious illnesses. But someday, knowledge of how nutrients fuel the fight against disease could influence the way that infections are treated in hospitals, in clinics, and maybe at home—not just with antimicrobials and steroids but with dietary supplements, metabolic drugs, or whole foods.

    Although major breakthroughs in immunometabolism are just now arriving, the concepts that underlie them have been around for at least as long as the quackery. People have known for millennia that in the hours after we fall ill, our appetite dwindles; our body feels heavy and sluggish; we lose our thirst drive. In the 1980s, the veterinarian Benjamin Hart argued that those changes were a package deal—just some of many sickness behaviors, as he called them, that are evolutionarily hardwired into all sorts of creatures. The goal, Hart told me recently, is to “help the animal stay in one place and conserve energy”—especially as the body devotes a large proportion of its limited resources to igniting microbe-fighting fevers.

    The notion of illness-induced anorexia (not to be confused with the eating disorder anorexia nervosa) might seem, at first, like “a bit of a paradox,” says Zuri Sullivan, an immunologist at Harvard. Fighting pathogenic microbes is energetically costly—which makes eating less a very counterintuitive choice. But researchers have long posited that cutting down on calories could serve a strategic purpose: to deprive certain pathogens of essential nutrients. (Because viruses do not eat to acquire energy, this notion is limited to cell-based organisms such as bacteria, fungi, and parasites.) A team led by Miguel Soares, an immunologist at the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, in Portugal, recently showed that this exact scenario might be playing out with malaria. As the parasites burst out of the red blood cells where they replicate, the resulting spray of heme (an oxygen-transporting molecule) prompts the liver to stop making glucose. The halt seems to deprive the parasites of nutrition, weakening them and tempering the infection’s worst effects.

    Cutting down on sugar can be a dangerous race to the bottom: Animals that forgo food while they’re sick are trying to starve out an invader before they themselves run out of energy. Let the glucose boycott stretch on too long, and the dieter might develop dangerously low blood sugar —a common complication of severe malaria—which can turn deadly if untreated. At the same time, though, a paucity of glucose might have beneficial effects on individual tissues and cells during certain immune fights. For example, low-carbohydrate, high-fat ketogenic diets seem to enhance the protective powers of certain types of immune cells in mice, making it tougher for particular pathogens to infiltrate airway tissue.

    Those findings are still far from potential human applications. But Andrew Wang, an immunologist and a rheumatologist at Yale, hopes that this sort of research could someday yield better clinical treatments for sepsis, an often fatal condition in which an infection spreads throughout the body, infiltrating the blood. “It’s still not understood exactly what you’re supposed to feed folks with sepsis,” Wang told me. He and his former mentor at Yale, Ruslan Medzhitov, are now running a clinical trial to see whether shifting the balance of carbohydrates and lipids in their diet speeds recovery for people ill with sepsis. If the team is able to suss out clear patterns, doctors might eventually be able to flip the body’s metabolic switches with carefully timed doses of drugs, giving immune cells a bigger edge against their enemies.

    But the rules of these food-illness interactions, to the extent that anyone understands them, are devilishly complex. Sepsis can be caused by a whole slew of different pathogens. And context really, really matters. In 2016, Wang, Medzhitov, and their colleagues discovered that feeding mice glucose during infections created starkly different effects depending on the nature of the pathogen driving disease. When the mice were pumped full of glucose while infected with the bacterium Listeria, all of them died—whereas about half of the rodents that were allowed to give in to their infection-induced anorexia lived. Meanwhile, the same sugary menu increased survival rates for mice with the flu.

    In this case, the difference doesn’t seem to boil down to what the microbe was eating. Instead, the mice’s diet changed the nature of the immune response they were able to marshal—and how much collateral damage that response was able to inflict on the body, as James Hamblin wrote for The Atlantic at the time. The type of inflammation that mice ignited against Listeria, the team found, could imperil fragile brain cells when the rodents were well fed. But when the mice went off sugar, their starved livers started producing an alternate fuel source called ketone bodies—the same compounds people make when on a ketogenic diet—that helped steel their neurons. Even as the mice fought off their bacterial infections, their brain stayed resilient to the inflammatory burn. The opposite played out when the researchers subbed in influenza, a virus that sparks a different type of inflammation: Glucose pushed brain cells into better shielding themselves against the immune system’s fiery response.

    There’s not yet one unifying principle to explain these differences. But they are a reminder of an underappreciated aspect of immunity. Surviving disease, after all, isn’t just about purging a pathogen from the body; our tissues also have to guard themselves from shrapnel as immune cells and microbes wage all-out war. It’s now becoming clear, Soares told me, that “metabolic reprogramming is a big component of that protection.” The tactics that thwart a bacterium like Listeria might not also shield us from a virus, a parasite, or a fungus; they may not be ideal during peacetime. Which means our bodies must constantly toggle between metabolic states.

    In the same way that the types of infections likely matter, so do the specific types of nutrients: animal fats, plant fats, starches, simple sugars, proteins. Like glucose, fats can be boons in some contexts but detrimental in others, as Lynch has found. In people with obesity or other metabolic conditions, immune cells appear to reconfigure themselves to rely more heavily on fats as they perform their day-to-day functions. They can also be more sluggish when they attack. That’s the case for a class of cells called natural killers: “They still recognize cancer or a virally infected cell and go to it as something that needs to be killed,” Lynch told me. “But they lack the energy to actually kill it.” Timing, too, almost certainly has an effect. The immune defenses that help someone expunge a virus in the first few days of an infection might not be the ones that are ideal later on in the course of disease.

    Even starving out bacterial enemies isn’t a surefire strategy. A few years ago, Janelle Ayres, an immunologist at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, and her colleagues found that when they infected mice with Salmonella and didn’t allow the rodents to eat, the hungry microbes in their guts began to spread outside of the intestines, likely in search of food. The migration ended up killing tons of their tiny mammal hosts. Mice that ate normally, meanwhile, fared far better—though the Salmonella inside of them also had an easier time transmitting to new hosts. The microbes, too, were responding to the metabolic milieu, and trying to adapt. “It would be great if it was as simple as ‘If you have a bacterial infection, reduce glucose,’” Ayres said. “But I think we just don’t know.”

    All of this leaves immunometabolism in a somewhat chaotic state. “We don’t have simple recommendations” on how to eat your way to better immunity, Medzhitov told me. And any that eventually emerge will likely have to be tempered by caveats: Factors such as age, sex, infection and vaccination history, underlying medical conditions, and more can all alter people’s immunometabolic needs. After Medzhitov’s 2016 study on glucose and viral infections was published, he recalls being dismayed by a piece from a foreign outlet circulating online claiming that “a scientist from the USA says that during flu, you should eat candy,” he told me with a sigh. “That was bad.”

    But considering how chaotic, individualistic, and messy nutrition is for humans, it shouldn’t be a surprise that the dietary principles governing our individual cells can get pretty complicated too. For now, Medzhitov said, we may be able to follow our instincts. Our bodies, after all, have been navigating this mess for millennia, and have probably picked up some sense of what they need along the way. It may not be a coincidence that during viral infections, “something sweet like honey and tea can really feel good,” Medzhitov said. There may even be some immunological value in downing the sick-day classic, chicken soup: It’s chock-full of fluid and salts, helpful things to ingest when the body’s electrolyte balance has been thrown out of whack by disease.

    The science around sickness cravings is far from settled. Still, Sullivan, who trained with Medzhitov, jokes that she now feels better about indulging in Talenti mango sorbet when she’s feeling under the weather with something viral, thanks to her colleagues’ 2016 finds. Maybe the sugar helps her body battle the virus without harming itself; then again, maybe not. For now, she figures it can’t hurt to dig in.

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    Katherine J. Wu

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  • Incheon Songdo Becomes One-Stop MICE Service With International Conference Complex Zone

    Incheon Songdo Becomes One-Stop MICE Service With International Conference Complex Zone

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    Incheon Metropolitan City, Republic of Korea, is emerging as a hub city in Northeast Asia. The reason is that Incheon comes into the limelight as the fastest gate way city to Korea and a beneficiary of the government’s economic development policy. In particular, along with the completion of Incheon Songdo International Conference Complex Zone (ICCZ), Incheon is strengthening its position as a core city of the MICE (Meeting Incentives Convention Exhibition) industry.

    Press Release


    Jan 9, 2023 09:00 EST

    Incheon Metropolitan City, Republic of Korea, is emerging as a hub city in Northeast Asia. The reason is that Incheon is coming into the limelight as the fastest gateway city to Korea and a beneficiary of the government’s economic development policy. In particular, along with the completion of Incheon Songdo International Conference Complex Zone (ICCZ), Incheon is strengthening its position as a core city of the MICE (Meeting Incentives Convention Exhibition) industry. 

    Incheon is only 28 km away from Seoul, the capital of Korea, and thanks to this geographical advantage, both the air and sea routes are available, providing an optimal transportation environment. Incheon has secured a traffic network in all directions, such as the Incheon Port, the Incheon subway line, and the Incheon International Airport. Currently, Incheon is connected to 52 countries, 88 airlines, and 173 cities. Thanks to these advantageous points, Incheon continues to grow by building various industrial and logistics complexes, tourism and leisure complexes and new residential complexes, expanding expressways and increasing educational and cultural facilities.

    Furthermore, Incheon won the title of the safest city in the world in 2016 by the global statistics website ‘Numbeo’. This is thanks to the 24-hour monitoring smart city system, and Incheon is able to provide the safety service in all areas, including traffic, crime prevention, and disasters. Also, there is a specialized hospital for foreigners, so emergency medical services can be provided regardless of where patients come from.

    Smart MICE is also a big strength of Incheon. Smart MICE is substantialized by more than 219 advanced Internet of Things (IoT) data-collecting sensors to collect and analyze the flow of tourists throughout Incheon, including tourist areas. This is used as basic data for the development of the MICE industry. Moreover, real-time monitoring solutions are in operation through state-of-the-art information-collecting sensors and environmental information-collecting devices. The core idea is to highlight the merits of the MICE industry by constructing a systematic control system with an immediate response. Smart digital signage platforms also contribute to the development of the MICE industry, such as indoor multimedia, KIOSK, outdoor rotating media board, bus information terminal, and a guide robot ROMI.

    In 2018, Incheon established the Five-Year Plan for fostering and promoting the Incheon Songdo International Conference Complex Zone. Incheon has been promoting the complex district project with an emphasis on creating an ecosystem for the MICE industry and building infrastructure. Accordingly, the ICCZ has been in the spotlight as a specialized district to foster the international conference industry, which will lead the MICE industry in Incheon. Accommodation, shopping, and cultural facilities are concentrated around Songdo Convensia, providing one-stop service to international conference participants.

    In the ICCZ, there are new and fascinating venues like Art Center Incheon, mega shopping malls like Hyundai Premium Outlet, and Songdo Triple Street, tourism accommodations like Sheraton Grand Incheon Hotel, Oakwood Premier Incheon, Orakai Songdo Park Hotel, Holiday Inn Incheon Songdo Hotel, Songdo Sky Park Hotel, and Songdo Central Park Hotel, proving Incheon’s competitive edge in attracting international conferences.

    Incheon is also showing its determination to prepare an institutional basis and systematic approach for fostering the Incheon-specific international conference industry in the future. Incheon aims to lead the growth of the MICE industry of Korea through these efforts. 

    A promotional video about ICCZ can be found on YouTube.

    Link to Promotional Videohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdRCIOSeWEg

    Link to ICCZ (English) Website: https://cvb.visitincheon.or.kr/icb/main.do?langCode=en

    Source: Incheon Tourism Organization

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