Tech / Technology

Could humans have babies in space safely? Here’s what we know.

Posted on:

Some scientists seek to solve the potential problems caused by microgravity and cosmic radiation for human reproduction in space.
Baby floating in spaceship

The recently married couple tip their bellhop, drop their suitcases, and breathe out a sigh as they fall back on the bed. They wanted a gramworthy honeymoon, and for a few million dollars, they’ve got it.

Once their initial travel sickness wears off, they’re feeling as frisky as any other newlyweds. Perhaps the only thing that could distract them from the marital act now is that incredible cabin view of infinite space, and the faint reminders of civilization glinting at them from Earth, some 250 miles below.

If space hotels come to fruition in the coming years or more realistically decades, cosmic vacations won’t be a sci-fi fantasy. Even without hotels, longer orbital space flights all but guarantee tourists opportunities to join the 60-miles-high club. It’s the “souvenirs” these couples could bring home that have a few researchers worried — enough to publish a public report on the risks associated with human conception in the future space tourism sector.

Bottomline: No one knows whether babies could be conceived in space without detrimental consequences to their health — there simply isn’t enough research. While professional astronauts likely have a good grasp on why they shouldn’t set out to make a starchild, less-informed travelers might not demonstrate the same level of restraint.

“It’s going to be a very strong magnet for these couples. They’ll want to be maybe in the history books, like, ‘Hey, we created the very first naturally conceived baby in space,'” said Egbert Edelbroek, CEO of the space research company SpaceBorn United and one of the co-authors, “but they shouldn’t want to.”

The paper published in April captured some buzz — even some snickers from late-night host Jimmy Kimmel, who called them “nine very lonely authors” — for broaching a little-discussed issue. Though the intent was to get the burgeoning space tourism sector to think about how to discourage space sex that leads to pregnancy (Not sex altogether, one of the researchers assured Mashable. They’re not prudes.), the topic brings into focus an existential problem: How could humans ever leave Earth in the event of a global crisis if people don’t know how to procreate in space or any other world?

SpaceX founder Elon Musk has said his ultimate vision is to use a fleet of Starships to send 1 million humans to Mars by 2050. But if those pioneers die off because they can’t have children, or healthy children, what’s the point?


“They’ll want to be maybe in the history books, like, ‘Hey, we created the very first naturally conceived baby in space,’ but they shouldn’t want to.”

a family colonizing Mars

Will the first long-duration space journeys involving astronauts and their descendants have to be planned as one-way trips?
Credit: Steven Hobbs / Stocktrek Images via Getty Images illustration

Gravity and radiation levels pose challenges

In spaceflight, humans are exposed to different levels of gravity — sometimes less, sometimes more. Think about those roller coaster warnings at amusement parks prohibiting pregnant people from riding. They’re in part because extra G-forces can lead to premature separation of the placenta from the wall of the uterus.

On the other hand, little or no gravity like on the International Space Station presents its own challenges: For the past 60 years, NASA has been working on how to keep adults healthy in weightlessness. As it is, astronauts are expected to exercise at least two hours a day on a treadmill or stationary bicycle to combat bone and muscle deterioration.

Research also suggests that cosmic radiation, like other sources of radiation, could damage DNA, reproductive organs, and sperm and egg cells. In women, depending on the amount of exposure, that might mean sterility, ovarian failure, and cancer, which may lead to early menopause or death. In pregnancy, the risks could include miscarriage and premature births. For men, too much radiation could also lead to reduced sperm count or sterility, though some scientific findings indicate sperm could be safely stored in space for a time.

When it comes to embryos and fetuses, the news is just as grim. Radiation can cause growth delays, cognitive impairments, deformities, and higher risks of newborn death.

“We’ve got some ideas that there will be quite a lot of negative issues in the development of bones and musculature,” said David Cullen, professor of astrobiology and space biotechnology at Cranfield University in the United Kingdom. “And all these other kinds of things inherently are driven by a combination of genetics, biochemistry, and responses to the local environment. So if you change that local environment, you expect all of those development states to be affected in some way — and, most likely, in a negative way.”

Want more science and tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable’s Light Speed newsletter today.

Startup seeks to make reproduction in space work

The Dutch entrepreneur Edelbroek wants to make human reproduction possible in space by first taking sex out of the equation. His company, SpaceBorn United, may be the first in the world planning space-based research on in vitro fertilization, though it’s hard to know what the often-secretive Chinese government may be doing.

Through a series of missions, the startup wants to conduct experiments observing the effects of partial gravity on embryo development. The company, which has about 30 mostly part-time employees now, would start with animal studies before advancing to human cells. In August, SpaceBorn United partnered with Independence-X, a Malaysian space exploration company, to conduct a suborbital drop test of its re-entry capsule containing biological samples.

So far SpaceBorn United has developed a miniature IVF and embryo incubator using microfluidics technology. The prototype hardware, which looks like a CD, has multiple tiny channels that hold sperm and eggs. The disc spins to simulate different loads of gravity while the device automatically impregnates embryos. Now the venture is working with a German company, Atmos Space Cargo, to launch mouse embryos on an orbital test flight by the end of next year, Edelbroek said.

A SpaceBorn United capsule orbiting Earth

SpaceBorn United has developed a miniaturized IVF and embryo incubator using microfluidic technology.
Credit: SpaceBorn United illustration

The logistics of doing these experiments are complicated. Because the team needs to work with freshly harvested female cells, the company must have last-minute access to the rocket payload, making ride-sharing programs unfeasible. The cells only remain fertile for four to six hours.

But private industry will have to lead the way on space reproduction research, he said, because NASA and other government space agencies have onerous political challenges to navigate before engaging in such studies. In the United States, for instance, sex is already a taboo subject. Add on top of that the nation’s complex culture war over reproductive rights, and the hurdles are monumental. Experts say the U.S. space agency isn’t likely to get Congress on board with funding such endeavors.

They “can only work with baby steps — with fruit flies and frog eggs and some rodents — and never, never even speak about doing it with human reproductive cells,” he said.

Astronauts conducting frog experiment in space

While the experiment was largely deemed a reproduction success story in the mass media, tadpoles raised in microgravity were documented as having enlarged heads and eyes in scientific journals.
Credit: Tom Trower / NASA Ames Research Center

Most of the company’s investors are in the fertility sector because of the potential to improve assisted reproductive technology on Earth. They’ve also received interest in collaborating from neophyte spacefaring nations, such as the United Arab Emirates, that may want the prestige of being involved in a first like human embryo conception in space.

In the same vein as the space burial market, SpaceBorn United anticipates there will be affluent customers interested in paying for space-fertilized babies long before humans are even living somewhere beyond Earth.

“We’ve had other suggestions, like space cats and dogs,” Edelbroek said.

SpaceBorn United developing prototype IVF hardware

The prototype hardware, which looks like a CD, has multiple mini channels that hold semen and eggs.
Credit: SpaceBorn United

Ethics of human reproduction research in space

Though the ultimate goal may be to one day make natural conception and childbirth possible in space, doing so won’t be possible anytime soon, said Alexandra Proshchina, a neuroscientist at the Petrovsky National Research Center for Surgery in Moscow.

She and her colleagues have worked on animal reproduction studies in microgravity through several missions organized by the Institute of Biomedical Problems. In the 1990s, they participated in a Russian-Canadian experiment on the BION-10 biosatellite involving clawed frog tadpoles and an 11-day Russian-American experiment on space shuttle Atlantis centered on the development of rat embryos.


“(They) can only work with baby steps — with fruit flies and frog eggs and some rodents — and never, never even speak about doing it with human reproductive cells.”

Then in 2014, along with Rustam Berdiev, a physiologist at the Lomonosov Moscow State University, they performed the world’s first attempt to mate ornate day geckos in spaceflight on the Russian FOTON-M4 satellite, though the lizards died due to difficulties with the mission. The team has since started preparing an orbital experiment involving veiled chameleon embryos, but the project has stalled, in part because of funding challenges, researchers told Mashable.

human embryo gestating

Likely private industry will have to lead the way on space reproduction research because NASA and other government space agencies have political challenges to navigate before engaging in such studies.
Credit: DEA / L. RICCIARINI / De Agostini via Getty Images

During pregnancy, women adapt to changes in body mass, hormone levels, metabolism, and a host of other biological processes that put significant strain on their bodies. Even astronauts at peak fitness get spacesick, said Proshchina, who, along with morphologist Victoria Gulimova, responded to Mashable in writing to overcome translation issues.

“Subjecting pregnant women to such physical stress is not very humane,” Proshchina said. “Moreover, it would be unacceptable to put the baby at risk.”

Even if a baby could be delivered safely in space, scientists know even less about the impacts of the space environment on children and teenagers, said Alex Layendecker, a former Air Force space operations officer with a doctorate in human sexuality. He has recently founded the Astrosexological Research Institute, a nonprofit organization aimed at facilitating studies of sex and reproduction in space.

Cell division is more rapid in children than adults. When ionizing radiation penetrates a human body, it destroys bonds and can lead to cancer. If a child were to develop cancer, it might spread faster in outer space conditions than it would for an adult, he said.

Child existing in space

Even if a baby could be delivered in space, scientists know even less about the impacts of the space environment on children and teenagers.
Credit: A. Martin UW Photography via Getty Images

In terms of ethics, taking a minor away from the planet, even just for a space cruise, would cross a line, given the lack of data: Children can’t provide informed consent, yet their lives likely would be at a much higher risk of negative impacts, he said.

Whether a human conceived and born in space would be able to adapt to other planets is a looming unknown. It’s not even clear whether such a child could survive on Earth after coming home, said Gulimova, who also works at the Petrovsky National Research Center for Surgery.

Or, would the first long-duration space journeys crewed with astronauts and their descendants have to be planned as one-way trips?

“There are many questions, and many more ground-based and orbital experiments that will have to be carried out, before happy parents on board the spacecraft hear the first cry of the first citizen of the Universe,” she said. 

Tech / Technology

8 burning question we have for ‘Gen V’ Season 2

Posted on:

Prime Video’s “Gen V” has already been renewed for Season 2, which is great because Season 1 left us with several big questions.
Three college students standing in the woods.

After eight episodes of superpowered college shenanigans, memory wipes, and exploded penises, Gen V‘s first season has come to a close.

The good news? The show has already been renewed for Season 2. The bad news? We’ve been left on a pretty intense cliffhanger, with Marie (Jaz Sinclair), Emma (Lizze Broadway), Jordan (London Thor and Derek Luh), and Andre (Chance Perdomo) trapped in some unknown facility. Not only that, but they’re officially on Homelander’s (Antony Starr) bad side, having tried to stop Cate (Maddie Phillips) and Sam (Asa Germann) from killing every non-supe at Godolkin University.

So, what’s next for our new band of supes? And when will we get to see them in action again in Season 2? Here are eight burning questions we have for the future of Gen V.

1. When is Gen V Season 2 coming out?

Two college students at a desk in a large office.

Jaz Sinclair and London Thor in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

There’s no release date yet for Gen V Season 2, meaning we’ll have to wait a while to see Marie and co. again. We can definitely expect it after The Boys Season 4 finishes its run, as The Boys showrunner Eric Kripke told Entertainment Weekly that the finale for Season 4 would feature a “handoff” to Gen V Season 2. The Boys Season 4 doesn’t have a set release date either, but a 2024 release seems likely.

2. Where are Marie, Emma, Jordan, and Andre being kept?

You can’t end a season with our heroes trapped in a doorless room and expect us not to wonder where said room is, right? From the looks of it, Marie and her friends are in some kind of high-tech research facility, but Gen V gives us very few clues as to what it actually is. Could this be the much-dreaded adult facility for wayward supes that Marie has always worried about? Is it a sinister Vought laboratory? Or has Marie’s benefactor Victoria Neuman (Claudia Doumit) pulled some strings to get Marie sent elsewhere? And speaking of Victoria…

3. What is Victoria going to do with Dean Shetty’s supe virus?

A woman in a blue suit standing in a parking garage.

Claudia Doumit in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

Last we saw Victoria in Gen V, she had blown up Dr. Cardosa’s (Marco Pigossi) head and taken off with the virus he and Dean Shetty (Shelley Conn) created to target supes. With both Dr. Cardosa and Dean Shetty dead, Victoria is officially the only person in the world with knowledge of (and access to) the virus. So, what’s next for The Boys‘ resident head-popper? Will she try to destroy the biggest threat to supe-kind? Or will she attempt to weaponize it in some way… perhaps against Homelander? Granted, Victoria is a supe herself, so the latter plan comes with a huge element of risk. But we wouldn’t put it past her to try to engineer an antidote so she can weather the incoming storm.

4. How will Godolkin University recover from Sam and Cate’s massacre?

A young woman in leather gloves in a club.

Maddie Phillips in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

Cate, Sam, and the imprisoned students from The Woods led a wave of carnage across God U’s campus. How will the school and its student body deal with the fallout? Based on the very end of Gen V, we know that Sam and Cate are being hailed as the new Guardians of Godolkin. Does that mean their line of pro-supe and pro-Homelander radicalization will continue to spread? How will that power affect their already fragile mental states? And what was Vought’s thought process when it came to declaring Sam and Cate — the perpetrators of a college campus murder spree who tried to kill several Vought employees — the heroes of the day?

5. Will Emma learn to control her powers in a different way?

A young woman in a sparkling pink dress.

Lizze Broadway in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

Throughout the season, Emma has struggled with the ways in which disordered eating impact her powers: She has to purge food to shrink and binge it to grow. However, in the Season 1 finale, she shrinks without purging. The change comes after a fight with Sam, when he declares she’s not a hero. Suddenly, much to her surprise, Emma finds herself getting small.

While the finale doesn’t unpack that moment further, this shrinking incident hints at development to come for Emma. Perhaps her powers aren’t just linked to her eating, but to her sense of self. Sam’s words cut pretty deep, after all — maybe enough to make Emma feel tiny. This moment suggests that Emma’s self-hatred can have a similar effect to her purging food, although relying on self-loathing would be just another painful method of controlling her powers. Still, here’s hoping Emma can use this one instance to unlock a less detrimental way of accessing her abilities. Little Cricket really deserves a break.

6. Will Andre have to stop using his powers entirely?

A father and son having a discussion.

Sean Patrick Thomas and Chance Perdomo in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

As chaos rages on God U’s campus, Andre is dealing with an existential threat of his own. His father, Polarity (Sean Patrick Thomas), has undergone a major health crisis. As a doctor tells Andre, every time Polarity uses his powers, he experiences a micro-tear in his neural pathways, leading to severe brain damage. The only way to prevent further problems is for him to stop using his powers altogethers.

Given the news, Polarity wants Andre to take up his mantle. However, it seems as if Andre is already facing some brain damage symptoms himself. Will he keep using his powers even though they risk harming him? Or will he join his father in hanging up the figurative cape? Maybe there’s a third option: Could the mysterious facility where Andre is being held hold a key to curing his and his father’s condition?

7. What’s next for Gen V‘s romantic pairings, like Marie and Jordan?

Two college students kissing.

Jaz Sinclair and Derek Luh in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

Part of Gen V being a college-set series means it delivers lots of college relationship drama. Marie and Jordan forged a romantic connection throughout the season, as did Sam and Emma. Meanwhile, it turns out that Andre and Cate had been hooking up behind Luke’s (Patrick Schwarzenegger) back for a while. How will these relationships fare in Season 2?

Based on the finale, not well! Sam and Cate’s radical pro-supe actions have alienated them from Emma and Andre, and given their bloody actions, it looks like reconciliation — if at all possible — is a long way off. Marie and Jordan are doing much better, having come down on the same sides of the God U conflict. But will their relationship be able to withstand whatever is going to happen to them in the strange new laboratory?

8. What was Billy Butcher doing at Godolkin?

Gen V featured several cameos throughout its first season, but it was saving its two biggest for last. First up was a disappointing appearance by Homelander, followed not long after by a mid-credits scene featuring none other than Billy Butcher (Karl Urban) himself. We see him exploring the abandoned Woods — but why? What will he do with his knowledge of Vought’s secret pet project? Guess we’ll find out in The Boys Season 4.

Gen V Season 1 is now streaming on Prime Video.

Tech / Technology

Black Friday fitness deals 2023: Fitbit, NordicTrack, Garmin, more

Posted on:

Ahead of Black Friday 2023, brands like Fitbit, NordicTrack, Garmin, and beyond are all discounting some of their top fitness tech — from fitness watches to stationary bikes. Upgrade your health routine with these sweet savings today.
Fitness tech from brands like Fitbit, BowFlex, Echelon, Garmin, and NordicTrack overlaid on a pinkish-orange background

Whether you need a handy fitness watch to help you on your fitness journey or are itching to finally splurge on a smart fitness mirror, these pre-Black Friday deals are sure to impress.

Best fitness deals for Black Friday 2023:

Best Fitbit deal

Fitbit Luxe

$79.95 at Amazon
(save $50)

The Fitbit Luxe fitness watch with a light-colored band overlaid on a light background


Best fitness equipment deal

NordicTrack Smart Rower

$1,030.75 at Amazon
(save $568.25)

NordicTrack Smart Rower with a touchscreen overlaid on a white background


Best dumbbells deal

BowFlex SelectTech 1090 Dumbbells

$599 at BowFlex
(save $200)

A set of BowFlex SelectTech 1090 dumbbells overlaid on a white background


Best smart fitness mirror deal

Echelon Reflect 40-inch mirror

$799.99 at Echelon
(save $779.51)

The Echelon Reflect 40-inch fitness mirror with a woman mid-run displayed on it

Since so many Black Friday deals tend to revolve around gaming, laptops, and other tech, fitness buffs might feel a bit left out. If you’re someone who goes on 6 AM runs each morning, is obsessed with things like fitness mirrors, and puts wheatgrass in your smoothies, retailers like Amazon see you and hear you and are here to provide you with some pre- Black Friday deals on top fitness tech. It’s a lot of discounts to parse through, so let us help you out — with our picks of top Black Friday 2023 fitness deals below.

Best Fitbit deal


Fitbit Luxe

Our pick: $79.95 at Amazon (save $50)



Why we like it

The Fitbit Luxe is the essence of cute and functional in one package. It provides fitness lovers with 24/7 heart rate tracking and trends, tells them how long they spent in “active zones,” monitors sleep, and even provides a lineup of stress management tools. With a free six-month trial of Fitbit Premium, you can explore an even broader range of this watch’s capabilities. It will soon become something a trusted fitness pal you never take off your wrist.

More early Black Friday fitness tracker and smartwatch deals

Fitbit

Garmin

Samsung

Google

Best fitness equipment deal


NordicTrack Smart Rower with a touchscreen overlaid on a white background

Credit: NordicTrack


Our pick: NordicTrack Smart Rower

$1,030.75 at Amazon (save $568.25)



Why we like it

The NordicTrack Smart Rower is your solution to crushing those fitness goals without ever leaving your home. Paired with an iFIT membership, this rowing machine gives access to 26 digital resistance levels (which are auto-adjusted depending on the workout), a 22-inch HD touchscreen that makes Studio Classes and Global Workouts come to life, and full-body training options you can do off the rower. NordicTrack’s innovative SpaceSaver design also allows this smart rower to fold in half. Plop it in your closet when you’re done and unfold with ease whenever you’re ready for another sweat sesh.

More early Black Friday fitness equipment deals

Best dumbbells deal

Why we like it

This dumbbell set from BowFlex is gonna inspire you to start pumping iron in no time. Each dumbbell can be adjusted to weigh between ten and 90 pounds (which replaces 17 whole sets of weights). The set as a whole is compatible with the JRNY app — which can motion-track your form and provide real-time suggestions, keep a tally of your reps, and so much more. Keeping fit doesn’t have to be complicated; this seems to be the motto BowFlex had in mind when engineering these dumbbells.

More early Black Friday dumbbell deals

Best smart fitness mirror deal

Why we like it

The Echelon Reflect is a personal trainer and stylish decor item at the same time. The mirror can be mounted flush to any wall, is Bluetooth compatible, gives you detailed stats on your heart rate during workouts, and offers a vast variety of on-demand and live classes via the Echelon Fit app. Its interactive features are sure to take your health to the next level. Note that the mirror isn’t touchscreen, but this shouldn’t stop you from taking full advantage of all it has to offer.

More early Black Friday smart fitness mirror deals

Tech / Technology

Black Friday Fitbit deals: Save on Sense 2 and more

Posted on:

Fitbit models like the Luxe, Inspire 2, and Sense 2 are already on sale ahead of Black Friday 2023.
Three Fitbit watch models overlaid on a green and yellow background

Listen up, fitness folks: Despite the fact that we still have (almost) a solid month left before Black Friday 2023, top Fitbit models are already on sale at multiple retailers Check out our top picks below:

Best Fitbit deals for Black Friday 2023:

Our top pick

Fitbit Luxe

$79.95 at Amazon
(save $50)

The Fitbit Luxe fitness watch with a light-colored band, over a white background


Budget pick

Fitbit Inspire 2

$58.40 at Amazon
(save $21.55)

The Fitbit Inspire 2 with a black band, over a white background


Upgrade pick

Fitbit Sense 2

$198.04 at Amazon
(save $51.91)

The large-screened Fitbit Sense 2 watch over a white background

It’s beginning to look a lot like… Black Friday 2023, which means retailers from Amazon to Best Buy to Walmart are already dropping some satisfying savings on top products. If you’ve been wanting to invest in a high-quality Fitbit for a while (either as a self-care purchase or to treat your loved ones), but have been nervous about some of the models’ prices, today’s your lucky day.

If you treat holiday shopping just as seriously as you do your health, this might be a fine time to start checking people off the Christmas list by purchasing some of these top Fitbits currently on discount. Below are all the best Fitbits you can get on sale today — as a little “soft launch” into holiday sales.

Our top pick


Fitbit Luxe

$79.95 at Amazon (save $50)



Why we like it

The Fitbit Luxe fitness watch model is the perfect middle ground between a feature-packed Fitbit and one that looks slim/cute on your wrist. The watch provides fitness lovers with 24/7 heart rate trends, tells them how long they spend in “active zones” during workouts, monitors sleep, and even offers a lineup of stress management tools. With a free, six-month trial of Fitbit Premium, you can explore an even broader range of the Fitbit Luxe’s capabilities. What can be better than having a trusty little fitness pal that doubles as attention-grabbing eye candy?

Budget pick


Fitbit Inspire 2

$58.40 at Amazon (save $21.55)



Why we like it

The Fitbit Inspire 2 proves that you don’t need to dish out more than $60 for a fitness watch that will check all the boxes. One of the cool features of this watch is the Daily Readiness Score, which tells you if you’re ready to seize the day with exercise or should instead take it easy. The watch also tracks your daily activity (steps, distance, calories burned, etc.) and your nightly activity both (time spent in light, deep, and REM sleep). As an added bonus, the tracker is swim-friendly — something all the water signs out there are sure to appreciate.

Upgrade pick


Fitbit Sense 2

$198.04 at Amazon (save $51.91)



Why we like it

Closely resembling an Apple Watch, the Fitbit Sense 2 is the brand’s most advanced watch yet. You’ll see that reflected in all it can do for you — including tracking things like altitude changes, blood oxygen levels, ECG, duration of sleep stages, skin temperature, and beyond. With over 40 exercise modes, this watch is ideal for runners, skiers, stand-up paddleboarders, and everyone in between. Plus, the Sense 2 basically functions like a phone. You can take calls on it, use Google Maps, tap-to-pay, receive Gmail notifications…you get the point. Score this fantastic buy today, while it’s $50 off.

More early Black Friday Fitbit deals

Tech / Technology

This $169 device can put your iPhone in a reboot loop. Here’s what you can do.

Posted on:

A tiny $169 device can send iPhones and other phones into a reboot loop. There’s no immediate fix, but you can take precautions.
Flipper Zero

A tiny device can be used to put your iPhone, and perhaps Android phones as well, into an endless reboot loop — and while there is a way to mitigate the attack, it’s far from ideal.

The device is called Flipper Zero and is typically used for penetration testing, meaning security experts use it to test another device’s wireless security. It’s not exactly obscure; it can easily be bought online for $169 in the U.S. or €165 in Europe.

Described as a “portable multi-tool for pentesters and geeks in a toy-like body,” Flipper Zero can interact with various types of wireless systems, including garage door remotes, TVs, NFC readers, RFID readers, and Bluetooth devices.

The device has been around since 2020 (we actually covered it back then), but Ars Technica and TechCrunch have recently highlighted how Flipper Zero can be used to essentially incapacitate an iPhone by sending an endless flurry of Bluetooth requests. On the victim’s iPhone, these could look like a request to connect with a TV, which keep popping up until the phone eventually reboots. This is not a new type of attack, but Flipper Zero is cheap, small, portable, and makes it a lot easier to do.

Security researcher Jeroen van der Ham said he experienced this attack himself. He then set out to replicate it himself in a controlled environment, and he managed to crash an iPhone, though the attack only fully worked on iPhones running iOS 17 or newer.

Here’s the problem: You cannot permanently deny these types of request on an iPhone. You can deny the connection, but the requests will keep popping up. The only thing you can really do at this point is to turn Bluetooth off completely, but then your wireless headphones and other Bluetooth accessories will be disconnected from your iPhone, which is hardly ideal. Note that you cannot just switch Bluetooth off in the Control Center; you have to turn Bluetooth off in the phone’s Settings to mitigate the attack. Van der Ham says he contacted Apple about the issue but did not hear back from the company.

There are reports saying that Flipper Zero can be used to perform a similar attacks on other devices, such as Android phones and Windows devices, though it’s unclear whether it can be used to crash them. Additionally, Android phones do have an option to turn off notifications for Bluetooth connection requests making this a lot less of a nuisance.

Tech / Technology

‘Nyad’ Review: An exciting drama buoyed by Annette Bening and Jodie Foster

Posted on:

Netflix’s “Nyad,” starring Annette Bening and Jodie Foster, hits familiar biopic beats but works nonetheless. Review.

Formulaic at first glance, the feel-good sports drama Nyad hits every beat you’d expect, but it nails some of them with enough precision that it becomes a rapturous experience. Co-directed by married couple Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi (the Oscar-winning team behind the rock-climbing documentary Free Solo), it tells the real story of a renowned long-distance swimmer coming out of retirement, chronicling her herculean attempts — alongside her team of friends and experts — to push the limits of the human body and spirit by completing an arduous 80-hour swim from Cuba to Miami.

Buoyed by a stellar ensemble, the movie just about conquers its shortcomings in the story department. When Nyad isn’t distracted by biopic conventions, it’s a surprisingly effective procedural about a complicated endeavor, supported by lifelike, multidimensional performances that help it transcend its appearance as a run-of-the-mill “inspirational” Hollywood hagiography.

Unfortunately, when it drops the ball, its flaws are especially noticeable, as it becomes suddenly reliant on a traumatic backstory in ways that, at best, feel narratively misplaced. However, thanks to its unyielding focus on physical strain and suffering — it’s the aquatic Passion of the Christ — it maintains enough stakes and sporadic intensity to get by.

What is Nyad about?

Annette Bening in "Nyad."


Credit: Netflix

In August 1978, a 28-year-old Diana Nyad tried and failed to become the first woman to swim from Havana to Key West, a media spectacle the movie relives in its opening scenes using archival news footage. Most biopics relegate their real-life videos and photographs to their closing credits, but this introduction through the lens of reality helps draw a straight line between the younger version of Diana — who would go on to retire a year later — and the fictionalized version we follow who is in her early sixties, played by Annette Bening.

The curt, sour-faced Diana tends to keep most people at a distance, except for her best friend, Bonnie Stoll (Jodie Foster). The duo dated decades ago but have now become each other’s most important confidants. Bonnie also tries to play wing-woman to Diana, though given the former swimmer’s penchant for directing the flow of the conversation towards her past achievements, this seldom works out. Now 60, Diana drifts through life, unable to find a new purpose as she relives the glory days in the back of her mind — until it hits her. Cuba-to-Miami was the one mountain she was never able to climb. So now she’s going to try again.

Undeterred by every naysayer (including Bonnie, who eventually joins up as her personal trainer), Diana begins reacquainting herself with long-distance swims while planning for the event. Together, they attempt to rope in sponsors, lifeguards, health experts and, most importantly, a navigator to captain a small vessel alongside her as she swims, in order to keep her on course. Back in ’78, she first attempted the feat while swimming in a lengthy shark cage, but now she also wants to be first person to complete the route without one, which experts deem nearly impossible even for athletes at their physical peak.

The film does skirt around some of the real details of this achievement — major ones, like the fact that the route had in fact been completed once before, by Walter Poenisch in July of ’78 — and while movies shouldn’t necessarily be beholden to reality, there’s an iffiness surrounding this particular case. Julia Cox’s screenplay is based on Diana’s 2015 memoir Find a Way, but the athlete herself has proven to be a problematic source on occasion. There’s even an entire website dedicated to debunking and fact-checking her claims, though you wouldn’t clock any of this controversy from the movie, which, if anything, treats Diana as too honest (often gratingly so, to those around her).

At the very least, one has to wonder if the filmmakers didn’t leave valuable dramatic material on the table by not contrasting Diana’s late-in-life drive to complete the swim despite her naysayers with the fact that the real Diana had once smeared Poenisch, who was 64 at the time of his swim, for being too old to complete the route himself. (Poenisch is never mentioned in the film.) Despite Chin and Vasarhelyi’s background in documentary filmmaking, little in their approach to Nyad suggests a search for the truth beyond the confines of the script — the film’s chronology is presented objectively, its subject’s perspective never questioned — though as first-time feature filmmakers, it’s hard to imagine they’d have had much room to futz with Netflix’s vision for a straightforward, feel-good story. 

Regardless, even as a dramatization of true-ish events peppered with lies and embellishments, it proves effective in its portrayal of its central relationship. If there’s one thing Bonnie knows about her best friend, something she loves and hates about her in equal measure, it’s that she won’t take “no” for an answer. So, it’s off to the races, so to speak, as Diana attempts to defeat time, the elements, and the best version of herself from over 30 years ago.

Nyad is a tale of friendship told with great performances.

Annette Bening and Jodei Foster in "Nyad."


Credit: Netflix

While its title hints at one woman’s journey, Nyad is really a story about relationships. Diana is undoubtedly driven, but her unyielding focus lives somewhere between stubbornness and narcissism in a strange way that makes her magnetic. She butts heads constantly with Bonnie, and with her no-nonsense ship captain John Bartlett (Rhys Ifans), but her stern individualism is also responsible for bringing people together through a shared vision of the impossible, as though it were a tale of creative partnership.

As Diana, Bening is sharp-tongued in a way where you aren’t quite sure how self-aware she is. Does she not know that she comes off like a jerk, or does she just not have the time to care? Either way, her abrasiveness is almost always amusing, and it goes hand-in-hand with the tireless physical and emotional ambition that lures people into her orbit. With eyes that dart around the room, and a voice that seems to boom from somewhere deep within her, as though each sentence were a bold proclamation, Bening’s impatient conception of Diana keeps the movie feeling quick and propulsive, even in its handful of languid moments.

Foster’s performance perfectly compliments Bening’s. As Bonnie, she likes to take a beat or two (or ten) before diving headfirst into Diana’s seemingly crazy schemes. With a combination of caution and enthusiasm, she both pulls Diana back from the many ledges on which she finds herself while also helping her push past her limitations, as though Diana were a proxy through whom Bonnie could vicariously live and transcend her own fears of aging and obsolescence. Together, the delightful lesbian duo make a platonic movie partnership for the ages, as they propel Nyad forward through its many scenes of planning, chit-chat, confrontations, and candid confessions of intimate fears.

Rounding out the leading cast is Ifans, whose weary but straight-shooting navigator John butts heads with Diana even more than Bonnie. Where Bonnie has a lifetime of tact in her arsenal, which she molds to Diana’s specific needs and idiosyncrasies, John is a newcomer to their dynamic, and he’s also tasked with the safety of his entire crew as they navigate stormy weather. He rises to meet Diana’s obstinance head-on because it’s a matter of life or death, in more ways than one. In especially stormy conditions, throwing in the towel is a life-saving decision, but pushing forward in the face of possible doom is, ironically, the most life-affirming thing he can do as a member of Diana’s team.

The film also has a key fourth performance, isolated from the aforementioned three, which stands out just as brightly: Anna Harriette Pittman as a teenage version of Diana, who appears in flashbacks. The young actress is tasked with emotionally delicate material, and she handles it with immense assuredness. But while these glimpses into the past are initially exacting, they end up scattered in a way that works against the entire film.

Nyad‘s filmmaking struggles (but ultimately works).

Annette Bening in "Nyad."


Credit: Netflix

Cox’s screenplay features an early flourish that Chin and Vasarhelyi bring to life with momentous passion and energy. When Diana is in the initial stages of blazing her new path, she steps back into a swimming pool for the first time in decades. With each stroke, Nyad flashes back to formative moments from Diana’s childhood, as opening credits appear across the screen. Not only is this an economic way to tell an entire backstory while framing Diana’s swim as a new beginning — the opening titles mark the official “start” of the film — but the act of swimming connects Diana to her past, and to a part of her identity from which she had perhaps closed herself off.

Were this a mere gimmick isolated to the opening credits, it would’ve swiftly served its purpose, but these flashbacks continue to reappear at inopportune moments, usually when Diana is in the water. On paper, the recurrence of these scenes seems to draw a connection between water and Diana’s past, but as memories, they don’t entirely make sense as a repeating facet of her journey.

For one thing, events where the teenage Diana experiences success have the golden haze of recollections, but this gilded texture doesn’t change in any meaningful way when the movie’s flashbacks begin to focus on traumatic experiences, like her sexual assault at the hands of her swim coach. Pittman shoulders the weight of this difficult subplot with a thoughtful depiction of self-doubt, but the way these flashbacks appear as the film goes on becomes increasingly arbitrary and mechanical. In the present, Diana will be focused on the task at hand, with little by way of Bening’s performance to suggest that these memories have much bearing on her in a given moment, and even less by way of the movie’s editing to create a fluid emotional connection between any two past and present scenes.

In fact, when this trauma from decades prior does finally rears its head, Diana convincingly asserts that it’s something she no longer thinks about, despite the movie framing it as an all-encompassing event that defines her. This denial is something that could, in theory, be called into question, as an armor Diana builds around herself, but the result is far too straightforward for such a reading. That this assault is an aspect of Diana’s life she’s written and spoken about at length seems reason enough to include it in the film, but it’s handled without the kind of craft and care that might’ve made it feel in tune with the rest of the film. 

It’s the center of a major disconnect between the filmmaking and writing that’s never resolved; everything from the editing to Bening’s performance suggests that Diana’s unyielding focus on her mission leaves little room for anyone else in the present, let alone a monster from her past. And yet, this element of her backstory prods constantly at the movie’s fabric, as a recurring reminder for the audience but seldom (if ever) a reminder for Diana herself. So, when she eventually claims she hasn’t thought about it in years, the movie itself gives us no reason to doubt her. It becomes a horror far too easily dismissed

As it happens, there’s no dearth of trauma or suffering in the present during Diana’s journey (which her story of assault ought to have either been tied to in some way, or dropped entirely). In fact, it’s during the most arduous hurdles along Diana’s swim that the movie takes on occasional abstract qualities, as though her delirium after several sleepless days in the water had somehow infected the camera too. It’s beautiful and dangerous, representative of both the powerful ocean and the film itself. Nyad breathes with an increasing vitality the closer Diana gets to the Florida coast, recalling the intensity the directing duo brought to their Thai cave rescue documentary The Rescue.

The camera never shies away from her cracked lips or inflamed skin when she’s spent hours in the seawater, and it doesn’t shy away from her wrinkles, either  — or Bonnie’s, for that matter. It’s a movie in which age is both obstacle and strength, and it allows Bening and Foster to play their ages gracefully, as actresses in their sixties. Whatever it struggles to say about bravery in the face of wounds from decades past, it manages to say tenfold about the way its characters choose to live now. Nyad builds to exuberant emotional crescendos that feel straight out of the schmaltzy Hollywood biopic playbook, but these scenes transcend cliché thanks to the emotionally resonant performances at their core.  

Nyad was reviewed out of NewFest 2023. It opened in limited release on Oct. 20 and premieres on Netflix Nov. 3.