NASA’s Psyche spacecraft launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket on Friday, Oct. 13, 2023, from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This image captures the beginning of the spacecraft’s journey to a metal-rich asteroid of the same name.
The body of the Psyche spacecraft is about the size of a small van, and it’s powered by solar electric propulsion. It has a magnetometer, a gamma-ray and neutron spectrometer, and a multispectral imager to study asteroid Psyche’s composition. The spacecraft will start sending images to Earth as soon as it spots the asteroid.
NEOM, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, October 15, 2023 – The Board of Directors of NEOM, the sustainable regional development taking shape in northwest Saudi Arabia, today announced Leyja, its latest tourism destination, further strengthening and enriching the Kingdom’s ecotourism offering.
Located in NEOM and steeped in history and mythology, Leyja starts from the Gulf of Aqaba coast and its alluring waters in the west, then winds inland to form a magnificent natural valley carved between 400m-high mountains that have been crafted over long centuries by the power of nature and water.
Leyja builds on NEOM’s ongoing commitment to becoming a multi-faceted destination and supports the Kingdom’s efforts to build a strong and sustainable tourism industry under Saudi Vision 2030. Aligned with NEOM’s strategy to designate the majority of its land across its destinations and cities as a nature reserve, 95% of Leyja will be preserved for nature and will combine innovative, ecological design and construction techniques to ensure the development seamlessly blends into the landscape.
Leyja’s three hotels have been intelligently and sensitively designed by world-leading architects to complement the surrounding nature, operate sustainably, and provide distinct experiences. The three properties will offer 120 elegant boutique rooms and suites, split equally with 40 keys at each.
The first property is tailor-made for active adventure. The deconstructed design ascends the walls of the wadi like a staircase, its structure effortlessly tracing the topography with minimal disturbance of the terrain’s natural lines. Its unique location, folded into the cliff top and valley sides, lends itself to those seeking rock climbing and other high-octane experiences in the surrounding area.
The second property rises from the rock to sit prominently at the heart of the wadi’s largest oasis, functioning as an enchanting gateway to discovery and exploration of the valley that continues beyond. The impressive staircase ascending from the canyon to the entrance of the property is a journey of discovery, offering unrivalled views of the valley in all its beauty.
The third property is an immersive wellness retreat that promotes longevity, with a high-tech, reflective façade mirroring the surrounding beauty and valley walls. This allows the wadi’s natural passage through the property’s center, providing visitors with a unique and interactive experience.
Once developed, Leyja will offer an extensive selection of refined experiences and activities, including fine dining and contemporary restaurants presented by world-renowned chefs. Wellness facilities and rooftop infinity-style pools across the three properties are also key features. Extensive guided wadi walks, and enthralling hiking trails set in the valley’s dramatic mountain landscapes await guests, with mountain biking and climbing on offer for those looking for adventure.
Leyja is NEOM’s latest development and follows the announcement of the project’s flagship regions, including Sindalah, its luxury island; THE LINE, a cognitive linear city that represents the future of urban living; Trojena, its year-round mountain destination and the first outdoor ski experience in the GCC region; and Oxagon, the reimagined industrial city and home to advanced and clean industries in NEOM.
For further information on Leyja, please visit the website.
If you’re child is a fan of Disney, then it is most likely that she have seen one or more of these in a movie. The dream to become a Disney princess why not make it true. Gift your child with a selection from these different complete costumes.
“Get ready for some cozy snow-time fun with sisters Elsa and Anna in this cute princess-dress nightgown. Let your dreams take you on exciting adventures through Arendelle! Officially licensed Disney product.”
Become the frosty princess in this cool blue dress. Same with the Bell costume, it has gloves, crown, necklace, and staff. But with an additional hair extension.
“Stunning Chinese traditional outfit princess dress up costume inspired by legendary folk heroine. 3 pieces set include Hanfu style top + Skirt + Belt.”
This mulan dress has the option to choose from the animated or the live action movie.
“This Two-Piece outfit set includes a beautiful off shoulder belly dance crop top, a pant with elastic band and a Jasmine wig for kids. Girls blue classic princess dress up costume outfit. Put you in the world of role play”
“Get the most out of your shopping with an Amazon Prime membership! Sign up now to enjoy free one-day delivery, unlimited streaming, exclusive deals, membership perks and more. Sign up today to enjoy a 30-day free trial and if you’re a student enjoy up to 6 months free trial. Click here to signup now! 👉 https://amzn.to/46Jm3AX”
The NASA mission, a project with deep roots at MIT, is setting course for a metallic space rock that could be the remnant of a planetary core like our own.
Jennifer Chu | MIT News MIT News (https://news.mit.edu/2023/psyche-journey-ancient-asteroid-begins-1011)
NASA’s Psyche spacecraft is seen in early 2022 at the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The mission has deep MIT roots: Its principal investigator is MIT alumna and former professor Lindy Elkins-Tanton ’87, SM ’87, PhD ’02, while its deputy principal investigator is Benjamin Weiss, an MIT professor of planetary science. The magnetometer science team is also based at MIT.
Credits:Image: NASA/JPL-CaltechTechnicians begin to retract one of the two solar arrays attached to NASA’s Psyche spacecraft.
Credits:Image: NASA/Kim ShiflettThis illustration depicts NASA’s Psyche spacecraft. It is a van-sized spacecraft with wing-like solar panels.
Credits:Image: Peter Rubin, and NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASUMembers of NASA’s Psyche team stand in front of the main structure of the spacecraft (in black), at Maxar Technologies, where the spacecraft was built, in early 2020. MIT team members shown are Ben Weiss (third from right), Jodie Ream (fifth from right), and Rona Oran (sixth from right).
Credits:Image: Courtesy of the researchersThe mission will arrive at Psyche sometime in 2029, where it will spend another 26 months orbiting and surveying the space rock, analyzing its surface composition, mapping its gravity, and measuring any magnetic field that it might possess. To interpret whatever magnetic field the magnetometer does pick up from Psyche, the MIT team has developed a “library” of simulated magnetic field patterns.
Credits:Image: Courtesy of the researchers
If all goes well, a NASA mission with extensive connections to MIT will soon be headed to a metal world.
Psyche, a van-sized spacecraft with winglike solar panels, is scheduled to blast off aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket tomorrow at 10:16 a.m. Eastern Time. Psyche’s destination is a potato-shaped asteroid by the same name that orbits the sun within the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
Astronomers suspect that the asteroid Psyche, which is about the size of Massachusetts, is made mostly of metal. If that’s the case, the asteroid could be the exposed core of an early, infant planet that might hold clues to how the Earth’s own metal-rich core formed.
“It’s a puzzle. And you have to not only figure out how the pieces fit together, but you have to figure out what the pieces are,” says MIT Research Scientist Jodie Ream, who helped in the magnetometer’s design.
After it launches from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, the Psyche mission will embark on a six-year interplanetary journey. In 2026, the spacecraft will approach Mars, where the planet’s gravitational pull will slingshot the spacecraft out to the asteroid. The mission will arrive at Psyche sometime in 2029, where it will spend another 26 months orbiting and surveying the space rock, analyzing its surface composition, mapping its gravity, and measuring any magnetic field that it might possess.
Scientists at MIT are leading Psyche’s magnetic field and gravity studies. And, the mission as a whole has a history that traces back to MIT. Psyche’s principal investigator is MIT alumna and former professor Lindy Elkins-Tanton ’87, SM ’87, PhD ’02, now a professor at Arizona State University, while its deputy principal investigator is Benjamin Weiss, an MIT professor of planetary science. In her role as mission PI, Elkins-Tanton, who is also vice president of the ASU Interplanetary Initiative, is leading a team including longtime MIT colleagues on the first mission to a metal world.
“Being able to undertake fundamental exploration of a new kind of world is a thrill and a privilege beyond anything I had envisioned for my life,” Elkins-Tanton says. “But the best part of it is helping to create and support a huge team of people who are all on this journey together.”
A magnetic moment
Scientists have hypothesized that Psyche may represent a case of planetary arrested development. While Earth and other rocky planets continued to accumulate material around their metal-rich cores some 4.5 billion years ago, Psyche may have met an untimely end, sustaining multiple collisions that blew off its rocky surface, leaving behind a naked metallic core. That core, scientists believe, could retain the elements that also formed Earth’s center.
“This will be the first time we’ve sent a mission to a body that is not mostly rock or ice, but metal,” Weiss says. “Not only is this asteroid potentially a metal world, but asteroids are building blocks of planets. So Psyche could tell us something about how planets formed.”
The seeds of a mission to explore an asteroid like Psyche were planted during a chance conversation between Weiss and Elkins-Tanton in 2010 at MIT. At the time, Elkins-Tanton was a professor in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, and had just finished teaching for the day.
“As she was passing by my office, I said, ‘Hey, do you have a minute?’” Weiss recalls.
Weiss was studying samples of Allende, a meteorite that fell to Earth in 1969 as a shower of fragments. The samples appeared to be magnetized, but also curiously unmelted. Weiss wondered how such a body could have become magnetized without any sign of the melting and churning that typically produces magnetic fields in space.
Having just lectured on the topic of melting cores and planet formation, Elkins-Tanton offered an idea: When a planet first forms, it is little more than an accumulation of unmelted rock and dust. As more material smashes into the infant planet, the collisions jostle the innermost regions, producing a melted, churning core, surrounded by unmelted material. The molten, swirling core could spin up a magnetic field, that could imprint upon a planet’s outer, unmelted layers.
Perhaps, the two realized, Allende’s magnetized, unmelted fragments came from the outer layer of a planetismal, or early planet, that harbored a melted, magnetic core. If that were the case, then perhaps other meteorite fragments are also remnants of early, differentiated planets.
“Hearing Ben talk about his shocking discovery of magnetism in the Allende meteorite, and then immediately having a mental model of the physics and chemistry of formation that could have led to that, was just a moment of pure joy,” Elkins-Tanton says of their realization.
She and Weiss wrote up their ideas in two 2011 papers. Then, the engineers came knocking.
“Lindy got a call from JPL (NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory),” Weiss says. “They’d read the paper and said, ‘This is really cool. Is there a way you could test this idea, that you could partially melt bodies, and magnetize meteorites?’”
The call set off a series of brainstorming back-and-forths that eventually developed into a mission concept: to send a spacecraft to explore an ancient planetary core. The asteroid Psyche, they realized, was their best shot, as it’s relatively close to Earth and has shown signs of metal-rich, core-like content.
An asteroid’s field
In 2017, the team’s proposal for a mission to Psyche was greenlit as part of NASA’s Discovery Program. Elkins-Tanton, who had since moved to ASU, became head of the mission, while Weiss; Maria Zuber, MIT’s E.A. Griswold Professor of Geophysics and vice president for research; and others at MIT joined the mission’s science team. Together, the scientists and engineers at JPL planned out the hardware that a spacecraft would need in order to determine whether Psyche is a metal-rich core.
Psyche principal investigator Lindy Elkins-Tanton ’87, SM ’87, PhD ’02 (left) poses with Psyche science team member Maria Zuber, MIT’s vice president for research and a professor of geophysics.
They decided on three instruments: a magnetometer that will look for signs of an ancient magnetic field that could be imprinted in Psyche’s surface layers; a pair of cameras that will take images and spot any visual signs of metal on Psyche’s surface; and a gamma-ray and neutron spectrometer that will measure the asteroid’s emissions of neutrons and gamma rays. These measurements can tell scientists whether and which metallic elements lie on its surface.
The spacecraft will also carry a communications system, which will mainly be used to send data and receive commands in the form of radio waves. A science team led by Zuber will also use the system to carry out a gravity study. The team will analyze the radio waves as the spacecraft orbits the asteroid, to see how they and the spacecraft are influenced by the asteroid’s gravitational pull. These analyses will help the scientists map Psyche’s gravity field, which can then determine the asteroid’s mass and how likely that mass is made of metal.
The magnetometer investigation is led by Weiss and involves others at MIT. The instrument was designed and built by researchers at the Technical University of Denmark. The team worked with JPL engineers to refine the magnetometer’s design, which consists of two sensors installed on an arm-like boom — a configuration that will help the instrument pick up any magnetic signal from the asteroid itself, amid the “noise” from the spacecraft, its solar panels, and its surroundings.
NASA’s Psyche team will measure the asteroid’s magnetic field using a magnetometer. This instrument is composed of two identical high-sensitivity magnetic field sensors located at the middle and outer end of a 6-foot (2-meter) boom on the spacecraft. The magnetometer team is based at MIT and Technical University of Denmark. Video: NASA
To interpret whatever magnetic field the magnetometer does pick up from Psyche, the MIT team has developed a “library” of simulated magnetic field patterns.
“Space is filled with magnetic fields coming from planets, our own sun, and the solar wind,” says MIT Research Scientist Rona Oran. “Our simulation library will allow us to examine different scenarios, so that when we get to Psyche, we’ll use those tools to derive the asteroid’s actual, real field.”
In fact, the team will have many chances to refine the library, and their understanding of the magnetic fields around the spacecraft, as it makes its way to the asteroid. Soon after Psyche launches, engineers will turn on the magnetometer, which will then continuously measure the magnetic fields around the spacecraft, throughout its journey. These data will regularly downlink to JPL and be transmited to two data processing centers at MIT, where Oran, Weiss, and others will use the data to hone their understanding of what they might find around the asteroid itself.
“This is the first time our group has led a science investigation on a spacecraft,” Weiss says. “Once the mission launches, we’re on the hotseat to run this. It’s a big responsibility, and also incredibly exciting.”
Reprinted with permission of MIT News (http://news.mit.edu/)
Stanford will co-lead one of eight new Microelectronics Commons regional innovation hubs in an effort to accelerate new semiconductor technologies.
Stanford University, along with the University of California, Berkeley, will lead the California-Pacific-Northwest AI Hardware Microelectronics Commons Hub (Northwest AI Hub), one of eight Microelectronics Commons regional innovation hubs awarded by the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD). The Northwest AI Hub will receive $15.3 million in funding this year, part of a total package of $238 million awarded to all eight innovation hubs across the country.
The Northwest AI Hub, which includes more than 40 members from academia, government laboratories, and industry, will receive $15.3 million in funding this year. (Image credit: iStock/BlackJack3D)
The hub awards, the largest to date under the CHIPS and Science Act, were announced in September by Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks.
The Northwest AI Hub leadership includes H.-S. Philip Wong, professor of electrical engineering, and Subhasish Mitra, professor of electrical engineering and of computer science, both at Stanford University’s School of Engineering; and from UC Berkeley, Tsu-Jae King Liu, dean of the College of Engineering and professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences, and Sayeef Salahuddin, professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences. The hub includes more than 40 other members from academia, government laboratories, and industry.
“Northern California and the Pacific Northwest are hotbeds of artificial intelligence hardware research and development advances,” says Wong, the Willard R. and Inez Kerr Bell Professor in the School of Engineering at Stanford University and director of the Stanford Nanofabrication Facility. “Our Hub partners cover the entire value chain of semiconductors, from materials, devices, to exploratory data analysis and chip design, packaging, as well as system prototyping and testing. Additionally, Stanford’s shared nanofabrication facilities will be a valuable resource to the Microelectronics Commons both for advancing technologies that have broad societal impact and for developing STEM talents.”
“The Microelectronics Commons network of prototyping facilities is a major investment by the U.S. Department of Defense to accelerate the lab-to-fab transition of new semiconductor technologies,” says Liu, the Roy. W. Carlson Professor of Engineering at UC Berkeley. “I’m excited to see the Berkeley NanoLab serve the nation as a facility for prototyping artificial intelligence hardware systems and workforce development, and Berkeley researchers collaborate with partners in academia and industry to tackle key challenges for advancing AI hardware technologies.”
Partner institutions of the Northwest AI Hub include: Oregon State University (Lead PI: Tom Weller) University of California, Davis (Lead PI: S. J. Ben Yoo) University of Hawaii (Lead PI: Jeffrey Weldon) University of Washington (Lead PI: Maria Huffman) Western Digital Corporation (Lead PI: Tom Boone)
In the past, Halloween costumes were mainly of Ghosts, Witch, Werewolf and Dracula. It just happened that it changed throughout the years. Now the range of theme and costumes extends up to comic books and super heroes.
Let’s just say that Halloween has become one big excuse to wear costumes. Here are some that are popular to children.
With Spider-Man and Hulk, why not include Iron Man to include another member of the avenger. Perfect if you are aiming for Marvel super hero theme with your children.
“Get the most out of your shopping with an Amazon Prime membership! Sign up now to enjoy free one-day delivery, unlimited streaming, exclusive deals, membership perks and more. Sign up today to enjoy a 30-day free trial and if you’re a student enjoy up to 6 months free trial. Click here to signup now! 👉 https://amzn.to/46Jm3AX”
The Nobel Prizes for 2023 are being announced between 2 and 9 October.
Scientific discoveries that led to the development of effective mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 were among the prize-winning efforts.
From medicine to literature, here’s what you need to know about the 6 awards this year.
In May 2023, the World Health Organization declared the end of COVID-19 as a global health emergency. The pandemic claimed more than 6.9 million lives in three years.
The speed with which vaccines against the virus were produced was unprecedented. At the time of writing, more than 13.5 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered and more than 70% of the global population has received at least one dose.
Now two scientists whose research led to the development of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 mRNA vaccines have been awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine, the first laureates to be named this year.
Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
Hungarian scientist Katalin Kariko and her US colleague Drew Weissman met in the queue for the photocopier in 1998 – and went on to work together.
In 2005, they overcame a major hurdle in the use of messenger RNA (mRNA) technology, developing “nucleoside base modifications”, which stop the immune system from launching an inflammatory attack lab-made mRNA.
“We couldn’t get people to notice RNA as something interesting,” Weissman said. “Pretty much everybody gave up on it.”
Kariko is a former senior vice president and head of RNA protein replacement at German biotech firm BioNTech, which developed an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine with Pfizer.
“The laureates contributed to the unprecedented rate of vaccine development during one of the greatest threats to human health in modern times,” said the Nobel Assembly of Sweden’s Karolinska Institute medical university.
What is a Messenger RNA vaccine?
Image: Pfizer
0 seconds of 1 minute, 28 secondsVolume 90%
Nobel Prize for Physics
It may be possible to detect traces of disease more easily in future, thanks to the work of three scientists who were awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics.
Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne L’Huillier literally shone light on the movement of electrons inside atoms and molecules, something previously thought impossible.
The trio created ultra-short pulses of light that can give a snapshot of changes within atoms, providing a tool that could help with the detection of disease molecules in blood samples.
“The ability to generate attosecond pulses of light has opened the door on a tiny, extremely tiny, time scale and it’s also opened the door to the world of electrons,” said Eva Olsson, from the Nobel Prize in Physics Selection Committee.
Nobel Prize for Chemistry
Three Nobel Laureates in Chemistry 2023 are also recognized for pioneering work on a tiny scale – in nanotechnology – creating particles so small their properties are determined by quantum phenomena.
In the 1980s, Alexei Ekimov achieved size-dependent quantum effects in coloured glass via copper chloride nanoparticles. Louis Brus later proved this in fluid-suspended particles, while in 1993, Moungi Bawendi improved quantum dot production for practical use.
Quantum dots, luminescent nanoparticles made of semiconducting materials, are now used in everything from computer monitors and TV screens to LED lamps and the latest techniques for mapping biological tissue.
“In terms of size, it has the same relationship to a football as a football has to the size of Earth,” explained the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in a recent X (formerly Twitter) post.
Nobel Prize for Literature
Jon Fosse, one of the world’s most performed playwrights, has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
The versatile Norwegian’s work includes everything from plays and novels, written in a pared-back minimalist style, to poetry collections, essays and children’s books.
There have been more than 1,000 different productions of his plays, while his work, written in “new Norwegian”, has been translated into 40 different languages.
Image: Twitter/@NobelPrize
Among them is the Septology series of three books: The Other Name (2019), I is Another (2020), and A New Name (2021).
Swedish Academy member Anders Olsson said Fosse’s work “touches on the deepest feelings that you have, anxieties, insecurities, questions of life and death … It has a sort of universal impact”.
Nobel Peace Prize
Imprisoned Iranian women’s rights activist Narges Mohammadi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on 6 October.
Mohammadi is currently serving multiple prison sentences in Tehran that add up to 12 years, for crimes including propaganda against the state.
She is the deputy head of the Defenders of Human Rights Center, an NGO led by Shirin Ebadi, who won the Peace Prize exactly 20 years ago.
Image: Twitter/@NobelPrize
Berit Reiss-Andersen, head of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said: “This prize is first and foremost a recognition of the very important work of a whole movement in Iran, with its undisputed leader, Narges Mohammadi.”
The announcement comes a year after Mahsa Amini died in police custody for allegedly flouting the Islamic Republic’s dress code for women.
At the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting in Davos, Iranian-British actress Nazanin Boniadi joined a panel session Women’s Rights in Iran – What Next?
Boniadi spoke to Radio Davos about the female-led revolution in Iran, saying: “Iranian women have managed to galvanize Iranian society at large to understand the intersectionality of gender equality and any other basic human right.”
Nobel Economics Prize
This year’s Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel has been awarded to Harvard Professor Claudia Goldin for “having advanced our understanding of women’s labour market outcomes”.
Goldin provided the first comprehensive account of earnings and labour market participation for women across the centuries, collecting more than 200 years of US data, explains the Nobel Prize. Her work has helped build an understanding of historical changes in the gender gap – but also the causes of the gaps that remain.
Image: Twitter/@NobelPrize
Her work showed that female labour market participation didn’t have an upwards trajectory across the period, but instead declined with the onset of the Industrial Revolution, before rising again as the modern services economy started to grow. She also offered explanations for the earnings gap that remains and the role of the contraceptive pill.
“Understanding women’s role in the labour is important for society. Thanks to Claudia Goldin’s groundbreaking research we now know much more about the underlying factors and which barriers may need to be addressed in the future,” says Jakob Svensson, Chair of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences.
By: Kate Whiting (Senior Writer, Forum Agenda) Originally published at: World Economic Forum
Construction on THE LINE, Oxagon, Sindalah and Trojena is moving forward quickly
NEOM already has 3,000 + employees and 60,000 + construction workers
Major infrastructure projects including roads, utilities and a hospital are already built
US$2 billion to be invested in the Port of NEOM , with the first advanced container terminal opening in 2025
US$6.1 billion raised to build the world’s largest Green Hydrogen plant at NEOM by 2026
US$5.6 billion invested in building 10 residential communities to house 95,000 people
The construction of NEOM is now well underway, with significant development achieved since the last progress film was shared with the world in January 2023.
Now, the second progress film reveals rapid advancements in the destination’s key regions, bolstered by large-scale investments and supported by market-leading partners, and talent from more than 90 countries.
Major infrastructure completed
Footage reveals construction progress at THE LINE, Oxagon, Sindalah and Trojena – with major infrastructure projects such as roads, utilities and a hospital already built.
The video captures plans for the $2 billion development of the Port of NEOM, which is already underway, with the first new advanced container terminal set to complete in 2025, representing a significant upgrade to the terminal that is already operational. As well as the world’s largest green hydrogen plant, which will be operational in 2026 under the NEOM Green Hydrogen Company.
NEOM sets new standards
NEOM will offer the best international standards in relation to tax, the regulatory environment and commercial law. It will offer unparalleled connectivity and a strategic location at the crossroads of global trade. NEOM will redefine business, livability and conservation – creating a future where people and the planet can thrive together.
This video is the latest film in an ongoing series showing key milestones and progress in the development of NEOM. Sign up to our newsletter and follow NEOM on social media for further updates.
Watch the full film here (https://www.neom.com/en-us)
Watch the January progress film here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SwQAwpTaX4)
Nano is a text editor for Linux, a default in Ubuntu. It is a simple editor, unlike VI. It might not be as powerful, but for simple things like editing configuration files, it does the job well.
01. Nano stands for …
Nano is an acronym for “Nano’s ANOther editor”. Which is inspired by Pico.
02. How to install nano
Ubuntu and Debian
sudo apt install nano
CentOS and Fedora
sudo yum install nano
03. Basics
Opening nano
Can execute it without any parameters. This opens an editor in a buffer. You can interact with, but you would need to write to a file in order persist it in the disk.
nano
Write to a file
After adding content you can save your work by using the shortcut `Ctrl + O` or `Command + O`.
Indicate the name of the file. Remember that when you opened the editor? It will be written in the same directory where `nano` was executed. Press enter after setting the file name.
Exit the editor
To exit from the editor, use the shortcut `Ctrl + X` or `Command + X`
View the file created using the `ls` command. Or read it using `cat`.
Opening a file
If a file is not yet existing, it will create a new one.
nano another greetings.txt
04. Shortcuts
Help
Opens the complete list of shortcuts using `Ctrl + G` or `Command + G`
Search or `Ctrl + G` or `Command + G`
Useful when searching for configuration files.
Type the text to search and press Enter. Pressing enter multiple times, will skim through the file and find the next occurrence.
05. Opening a file with different options.
Show line numbers
nano /path/to/file -l
`l` or `–linenumbers`. Sometimes you already have a copy of a file in your local machine. For example a settings.json and you need to update this configuration quickly on your development environment. If you know the line number, it’s easier to find it.
Having backups
nano /path/to/file -B
`-B` or `–backup` will save the previous version of the edited file with ‘~’ at the end. This is not like a versioning system, but it’s a good safeguard when dealing with configuration files.
Nano is an efficient editor and it does it job well. In most cases when you’re just visiting a server and making some tweaks, it will be sufficient.
In the vast halls of our collective conscience, a truth reverberates, unspoken yet glaringly present. He stands there, a paradox in flesh and bone, professing values whilst skillfully subverting them with each policy enacted, each luxury indulged. This is a tale not of ignorance but a strategic, wilful manipulation of a nation’s trust and democracy’s foundations.
The Unspoken Reality.
A dark comedy plays out on the political stage, where the whims of one man eclipse the needs of the many. His journey to power, untouched by the voting intentions of the public, is no secret. The narrative is spun, re-spun, and embellished, but underneath, the truth lingers, potent and omnipresent: His ascent is unearned, his leadership, unchosen.
Juxtaposition of Morals.
Amidst the rubble of cancelled infrastructure projects and the despair of those whose lives are derailed by ruthless immigration policies, he sails smoothly in a sea of privilege and unrestricted power. His moral compass, publicly paraded, never wavers in its hypocrisy, meticulously crafting policies that eschew empathy and uphold a hidden agenda.
Cowardice Cloaked as Leadership.
The disconnection between proclaimed values and actions is neither accidental nor oblivious. It’s a tightly woven web of deceit, worn with a sinister grace by a man who is anything but out of touch. His actions, merciless and calculated, amplify a narrative that feigns ignorance while executing a meticulously plotted demise of democratic values.
A Sordid Dance of Deception.
It’s a dance observed by all yet challenged by none – a macabre performance where ethics are slaughtered at the altar of political gain. The puppeteer, aware and utterly present, pulls the strings with a cruel precision, crafting a landscape where dissent is squashed, and silence becomes the anthem of the oppressed.
The Resilient Whisper of Truth.
Amidst the orchestrated chaos, the truth persistently whispers, echoing through the corridors of online forums, overheard in hushed conversations, and witnessed in weary, knowing glances. It’s a resilient, unabating murmur, a reminder that while the puppeteer plays, the audience, though silent, is not entirely beguiled.
Awakening from the Charade.
The unspoken is powerful, yet its potency is nullified in silence. In acknowledging the deliberate, corrosive actions of a leader unabashedly aware of the destruction sown, the first seeds of resistance are planted. It’s a call to action, not to further the narrative of a witless leader, but to expose the calculated machinations of a man fully cognisant of the suffering scribed by his hand. As the whisper of truth crescendos into a collective roar, it’s here the real challenge begins: dismantling the charade and reweaving the tattered remnants of our democratic story.