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Category Archives: Technology
White House Denies Report That Part of Its Science And Technology Office Is Empty – HuffPost
Posted: July 3, 2017 at 8:06 am
The White House is denying reports that the one division within the Office of Science and Technology Policy is now completely unstaffed.
CBS News reportedno staff members were left at the offices science division one of four such branches that comprise the OSTP after three employees from President Barack Obamas administration worked their final day on Friday. The OSTP advises the White House on the effects of science and technology on domestic and international affairs, according to its website.
When asked about the alleged vacancies, White House deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told HuffPost on Saturday the report was false.
This is not true, Sanders said in an email. Sadly, someone was more concerned about attacking [President Donald Trump] than getting their story straight.
A White House official familiar with the OSTP told HuffPost that there are 12 staffers currently working in the science division, despite the report that said otherwise. The official, who requested anonymity to discuss the matter, also said there are 35 people total on staff in the OSTP.
The official said the work of previous science division workers had been passed on to new staffers who have expertise in similar areas of study.
The three science division staffers who finished up on Friday includedElle Celeste, who was previously a biomedical and forensic science expert for the White House. The White House official told HuffPost that Fridays departures were a matter of contract expiration.
After departing from the OSTP, Celeste tweeted her final goodbyes, along with a photo of the science division placard with text saying science division out. mic drop.
Kumar Garg, another former OSTP employee who left his job in January, tweeted that Fridays departures mean there are zero people left in the division. He was the OSTPs assistant director for Learning and Innovation when Trump took office in January.
The Trump administration has faced sharp criticism from the scientific community.In April, tens of thousands of people participated in an estimated 600 March for Science events across the country in protest of the administrations stance on various issues.
Trump, who hascalled climate change a hoax orchestrated by the Chinese, has proposed massive budget cutsfor federal programs including the Environmental Protection Agency, NASA, the Department of Energys office of science, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
After Trump revealed his 2018 budget proposal in March, Jeffrey Mervis, science policy reporter for Science Magazine wrotethat it confirms two things that U.S. scientists have long suspected: The new president is no fan of research, and his administration has no overarching strategy for funding science.
The White House has also yet to appoint one of the most influential science roles in federal government,the presidential science adviser, who heads the OSTP. When asked about that vacancy, the White House official familiar with the matter told HuffPost that several very promising candidates for OSTP director are under consideration.
Neither Celeste nor Garg immediately responded to requests for comment from HuffPost.
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3 ways dad limits technology use in his house – Omaha World-Herald
Posted: at 8:06 am
Unless you have lived in a fallout shelter for the last 20 years (it could happen), you are quite aware of the proliferation of technology into our lives.
Right now in our house, there are four laptops, three tablets and five cell phones. Add in the three strategically placed TVs and thats 15 screens for four people. Averaging nearly four screens per person, there is a lot of opportunity for screen time."
This is often what kids will default to.
It's not new information for most parents. I am as guilty as anyone of using the screen as a babysitter for a little while. But as our kids get older, they need to be taught how to manage their time, especially around screens. When we were kids, if our parents wanted us to stop the screen time, they would turn off the TV and tell us to go play. We couldnt carry a screen with us (unless you picked up the 40-pound TV and went looking for an outlet). Now, kids often have a choice of which screen they want. Do they grab the cell phone, the tablet or the laptop? Regardless, they just switch to something different and carry on staring.
Right now Im sure youre asking, Ben, what can I, as a responsible parent, do to thwart this menace to my childs social development? To which I answer, nice usage of the word thwart. But furthermore, there are a few solutions to make technology a useful tool but not the default thought process.
First, limit the time they use screens. That may seem like a blatantly obvious solution, but it can be challenging. Kids are sneaky. Once you go back to your daily routine, they will quickly be back on a screen. And this isnt really a malicious act, they just don't understand that when you tell them to get off the tablet or computer, you mean for the rest of the day. Not just until you look the other way.
Second, give them an alternative they will like (and by give, I mean make them do it). These can include going outside to play, reading a fun book or cleaning their room though that last one may not induce squeals of excitement. Presenting them with an alternative helps the under-developed planning part of their little brains get past what they cant do and see what else is possible.
And third, hide the screen device up someplace high. That one may not seem very fair, but the phrase out of sight, out of mind actually works sometimes. If they dont see the device around the house, they cant absentmindedly grab it. This tactic, by the way, works for us adult-types who may be a little too addicted to screens ourselves.
Ultimately, the best way to help kids recognize how much is too much screen time is to limit our own. Yeah, you may have to stare at one all day for your job, but do you really have to come home and immediately flip on the TV or answer that email on your phone? Dont think your kids arent taking cues from your actions. They watch you just as closely as they watch those screens.
Now go find a screen and turn it off. In the long run, everyone will be better off for it. Its what Im going to do.
Right after I finish this level of Candy Crush on my phone.
Ben Price, a 42-year-old married father of two from Kansas City, Missouri, wrote this guest blog for momaha.com. Outside of being anIT security professional, hespends much of his time in pursuits related to his family, including being a coach, scout leader and kid chauffeur.
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Will Goodbody: What a week in technology – RTE.ie
Posted: July 2, 2017 at 9:09 am
Updated / Sunday, 2 Jul 2017 10:17
There is always a huge amount of interesting stuff going on in the world of technology.
But every so often there is an outstanding period, where we are acutely reminded just how pivotal and far reaching a role technology now plays in our lives, writes RT's Science and Technology Correspondent Will Goodbody.
Last week was one of those periods.
It began last weekend with news that the US government was lodging a Supreme Court appeal against Microsoft's victory in a court case that is crucial to the future of data privacy and cloud computing.
The case revolves around US law enforcement agents efforts, as part of a criminal investigation, to access emails that are being held on a Microsoft server in a data centre in Dublin.
Microsoft not surprisingly has pushed back, arguing even though it is a US based company, the data is not stored in that country and the government does not therefore have the jurisdiction to reach across oceans to access it.
But the US government is not taking the decision of the federal appeals court earlier this year lying down and is to take the matter to the Supreme Court.
The case is hugely significant as it threatens to not only undermine the privacy rights of huge numbers of people, but it also could seriously damage the cloud computing model on which so many services are now based.
After all, if companies and users become nervous that data they have legitimately entrusted to cloud service providers could suddenly become reachable by law enforcers in other jurisdictions without a local warrant, then the proposition becomes irreparably damaged.
Google anti-trust
Just days later on the other side of the Atlantic, came an unrelated significant twist in events for another giant of the global tech sphere.
Google was slapped with a fine of 2.4 billion by the European Commission for breaking laws forbidding anti-competitive practices.
After an exhaustive seven year probe, Europe concluded the internet giant had wrongly used its dominant position in the search market to artificially promote its shopping price comparison service in an anti-competitive manner.
It was a record fine and in the long-term could prove a significant blow to Alphabet, Google's parent, if it chooses to accept the medicine by changing how this and related services work into the future.
But from the perspective of those of us living and shopping in Europe, it also goes to demonstrate just how at the mercy of a small handful of internet based technology services we have become and how we can be easily manipulated.
Most of us now research and buy products online by carrying out a Google search.
The Commission's investigation revealed 95% of all user clicks are on the first page of such search results, with the top generic result getting 35% of all clicks.
And the tendency is even stronger on mobile.
What that means is that we, being the lazy creatures we are, tend to make our buying choices on the first few suggestions we are offered, not taking time to consider that in many cases those suggestions are there because someone may have paid Google for them to be there.
Held to ransom?
Just as the implications of that EU ruling were beginning to sink in, another cyber attack began to sweep the globe.
It seemed to originate in the Ukraine, reportedly in a maliciously compromised software update for a tax package that is widely used there.
It knocked out central bank, shop and airport systems in the country, but quickly spread across continents causing havoc in small and large businesses, including Maersk, Mondelez and Merck.
Initially it appeared to be just another sophisticated form of ransomware, locking the device master file structures until a $300 ransom was paid via Bitcoin.
It had the appearance of another virus released last year called Petya and seemed to exploit some of the same vulnerabilities as "WannaCry", the ransomware that caused chaos globally in May.
But later it began to emerge that this "GoldenEye" malware may have been more about destroying data than earning cash for the hackers.
Either way, the incident once again went to underline just how dependent we are on technology in our everyday lives and how vulnerable we've become to an assault on those systems.
It is fast becoming abundantly clear that cybercrime is starting to pose as big a threat to global security as other far more obvious concerns, like terrorism, political instability and climate change.
It also underlines the need for co-ordinated global action to at least slow down if not stop the criminals and to raise awareness and educate the public and businesses about how to protect themselves as much as possible, even though at times it may seen impossible.
Facebook's milestone
Those frenzied efforts by IT experts everywhere to stop the virus and patch their systems overshadowed another illuminating announcement - this time from Facebook.
Thirteen years after it first launched, the social network now has two billion monthly active users.
The milestone makes Facebook the largest social app in the world (in terms of those regularly logging on).
Two thirds of those monthly users go into the service every day and Facebook has no intention of stopping there.
Two billion using it means there are still five billion who don't and that is the focus of Mark Zuckerberg as he pushes its expansion on into the developing world.
Still, it is a staggering number of people using one internet based service and is another example of how technology is transforming how we communicate.
It might not all be for the good though and Facebook has a great deal of work to do in making the platform a safe, tolerant and pleasant place to be.
But it is astonishing that this number of people are now connected to a service that lets them share news, thoughts and feelings through text, video and icons.
iPhone turns 10
As Facebook marked its milestone on Wednesday, a day later and 15 minutes down Route 101 in California, Apple was having its own celebrations as it marked tenyears since the first iPhone went on sale in 2007.
It is unlikely that when he hopped on to the stage to launch it six months earlier at that year's MacWorld conference, that Steve Jobs could have foreseen what a revolution it would bring in technology.
He introduced it as an iPod, phone and internet communication device.
But since then it has evolved into a camera, a GPS navigator, a video recorder, a mobile wallet, a gaming system, a video player and much more.
We have also seen an entire economy and ecosystem grow up around the concept of apps.
It is not hyperbole to say it kickstarted a reinvention of the phone industry and although it is a word that is frequently overused in tech, the iPhone was the essence of disruption, sending Apple on a trajectory towards stunning financial success.
Some will argue that the culture it has spawned, where heads are more often looking down at phones instead of up at the real world, where work is done everywhere and all the time not just in the office during work hours, and communication is instantaneously reactionary rather than considered, has set us back rather than moved us forward.
But as other events earlier last week also demonstrate, while technology brings us many amazing new opportunities, few things in life are universally positive.
Comments welcome via Twitter to @willgoodbody
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5 Top Technology Mutual Funds for Cutting-Edge Investors – Motley Fool
Posted: at 9:09 am
Investors gravitate to technology stocks because of their exposure to the fast-paced innovative tech sector. Some of the best-known and best-performing stocks of all time have come from the technology industry, and many investors still believe that there's plenty of potential for even bigger gains going forward. Funds with good track records have attracted considerable assets, and that's why the following five technology mutual funds stand out among the elite of the industry.
Data source: Fund providers.
If you want exposure to the top technology stocks, then both the Vanguard and Fidelity technology mutual funds deliver. In both funds, you'll find the stalwarts of the industry among the top 10 holdings, and they make up a relatively large portion of the overall assets of the fund. For instance, more than 40% of the Vanguard fund's assets are tied up in five stocks, and two of those holdings are different share classes issued by the same company. You'll find some companies in adjacent sectors with technology leanings, but for the most part, the Vanguard fund's holdings are squarely within technology. Moreover, with expenses of just 0.10%, the price is right for this index mutual fund.
The Fidelity fund goes a bit further afield, including some companies that aren't strictly tech stocks but that have cutting-edge applications in areas like electric vehicles. You'll pay up for management with this fund, but a greater exposure to companies with a global scope might be worth the extra cost for some tech investors.
Image source: Getty Images.
Two funds from T. Rowe Price make the list, and they have different ways to attack the tech sector. The Science and Technology Fund looks a lot like the Fidelity and Vanguard funds above, with many names from the top ranks of the tech sector. Yet the weightings are much different, with a greater emphasis toward the more innovative companies in the social networking, cloud computing, and internet services industries. You'll also find a greater exposure to high-technology healthcare names, especially those producing cutting-edge medical devices that have had dramatic impacts on the quality and sustainability of healthcare with certain applications. Even with this fund, an international exposure to the sector adds some diversification.
The Global Technology Fund goes a step further, casting its net across the globe in search of the best companies with high-technology aspirations. From pure cloud computing and internet services companies to consumer and industrial stocks with the know-how to bring transformative change to their respective industries, the Global fund makes a slightly different play on where tomorrow's leadership in technology will come.
Finally, the Columbia Seligman fund looks a lot different from its peers. Big tech stocks play a much less important role in this fund, with outsized bets on smaller stocks providing some differentiation from the crowd. That has earned the fund a five-star rating from Morningstar, and long-term performance has also been relatively impressive.
The downside of the fund is that it charges a sales load of up to 5.75%, and expenses of 1.35% per year for the Class A shares of the fund are quite high. That means that money will come out of your pocket when you first buy shares and never get invested into the fund at all, instead going directly to your financial professional.
These top technology mutual funds have attracted considerable amounts of assets, and they each take different tacks toward capturing returns from technology stocks. By looking more closely at these five stocks, you'll be able to pick the one that best fits your own particular investing strategy.
Dan Caplinger has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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Self-Driving Car Technology Foiled By Kangaroos – HuffPost
Posted: at 9:09 am
As the inevitable robot takeover looms, its nice to know we have one surprising weapon in our arsenal: kangaroos.
Volvo has confessed that the springy marsupials are throwing off the Large Animal Detection systems being developed for self-driving cars, the Australian Broadcasting Corp. reports.Those systems are meant to make sure the cars avoid animals along the road, such as deer or cattle.
binbeter via Getty Images
But the hopping of the kangaroos is messing with the detection, which uses the ground as a reference point, Volvo Australias technical manager David Pickett told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.
Weve noticed with the kangaroo being in mid-flight ... when its in the air it actually looks like its further away, then it lands and it looks closer, he said.
Originally, Volvo tested out the detection software on moose in Sweden. Researchers have been working on the kangaroo problem for more than a year.
However, Kevin McCann, managing director of Volvo Australia,told The Guardian that researchers would be able to solve the problem before the driverless cars are commercially available in 2020. He noted that any driverless car maker working in Australia would likely run into similar issues.
Any company that would be working on the autonomous car concept would be having to do the same developmental work, McCann said.
The BBC points out that the problem would hardly be a trivial one for self-driving cars in Australia, since kangaroo collusions are a significant problem for regular cars. About 80% of vehicle collisions with animals in Australia involve kangaroos, adding up to more than 16,000 kangaroo-related collisions every year.
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Randolph county berry farm uses new technology to tame crop – Washington Times
Posted: at 9:09 am
STEELEVILLE, Ill. (AP) - David Knop is not scared of risk. Thats why when he looked at the 14 acres behind is home in rural Steeleville he had no problem with planting organic blackberries in hopes for a harvest in the next two years.
Knop, who comes from a background of traditional grain farming in Randolph County, said he had been looking for something to do with the land for some time and when grain prices began to sink in the last few years, he started to think outside the box.
Grain farming is not the best crop to be in, or field to be in right now. Prices are low, Knop said.
Knop said he spoke with a friend who had looked into using Indiana-based Trellis Growing Systems to plant berries, but never pulled the trigger.
Knop said this was the last piece of his puzzle.
After the initial talks and planning phase, Knop has finally been able to put plants in the ground. Now he waits - blackberries take one-to-two years to mature and produce a full harvest.
Looking out at one section of his berry farm hedged by woodland, Knop can already see progress. The tiny blackberry plants that are not yet a month in the ground are already showing fresh growth. Knop said he looks forward to taking his first harvest to market and to having families out for you-pick, opportunities, making another chance for drawing in tourism to the county.
Large-scale berry farms, like the one Knop has started, are not the norm in Illinois, or even the Midwest. Travis Olinske, small fruit crop adviser for Trellis Growing Systems, said the inconsistent winters can put a strain on farmers - at least those using traditional methods. Olinske said it has been the norm for blackberry farmers to grow plants vertically on a hedgerows system. This creates tall, dense rows of brambles that leave themselves exposed to the elements.
In the last decade, however, Olinski said his company devised a new way that will allow farmers to get consistent yields year-to-year - music to the ears of producers like Knop.
This new system trains plants to grow along low-lying wires. Plants are staggered every five feet with new plants growing along this length and being rotated down, or trained to root themselves again in the ground not far from where another plant is located. Olinske said this system of using low-profile trellises allows plants to be covered during cold winters, which is not always possible for hedgerows that can be five to seven feet tall. This combats one of the biggest issues berry farmers have in the Midwest - winter damage. Olinske said it is the hope that this method will bring berry production from the coasts to the Midwest and Knops operation is a good start.
Keeping costs low is key to success in farming and Olinske said with an operation Knops size this will be a big challenge.
The biggest thing that is going to be his make or break is how he manages his labor, Olinske said. Olinski said labor can also be a killer for berry farmers, but with their system of growing, the blackberry blossoms grow in one direction - either the east or the north to protect the fruit from sun scalding - making harvesting that much easier. He said pickers only have to work one side of the row and because the trellises are so small, workers do not have to search deep within a plant to find fruit cutting down in labor costs.
Knop admitted this kind of farming is new to him, but he likes a good challenge - he said he always does his homework before jumping in. However, he admitted having Olinske to work with directly has been incredibly helpful. Olinske has been there to help him every step of the way from building his irrigation system to putting plants in the ground - even with helping go through the hoops of getting his organic certification from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Olinske said Knops venture is unique in a lot of ways. It is one of only a scant few berry farms in Southern Illinois and is certainly the biggest he knew of. Knop said he hopes the organic certification will also help set him apart. He said it also just seems to be the right thing to do and he hopes it will inspire others in the area to plant consumer-ready crops like fruits and veggies, but maybe even to step up and go organic.
Maybe this will change things around here. Maybe other people will start, Knop said, adding that there is a lot of ideal farm land for berry farming.
Theres a lot of ground like Ive got thats not the best for raising corn, he said.
___
Source: The (Carbondale) Southern Illinoisan, http://bit.ly/2uiovMg
___
Information from: Southern Illinoisan, http://www.southernillinoisan.com
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Report sheds light on value of two-year engineering technology degree – My Edmonds News
Posted: at 9:09 am
Mel Cossette (Photo courtesy Edmonds Community College)
A recent national report co-authored by Edmonds Community Colleges Mel Cossette asserts that U.S. innovation will require the production and retention of workers skilled in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math).
The purpose of this report was to shed light on the relatively underappreciated roles and contributions of engineering technicians and technologists, said Mel Cossette, executive director and principal investigator of the National Resource Center for Materials Technology Education (MatEdU) and coauthor of the report, Engineering Technology Education in the United States. MatEdU, a National Science Foundation Advanced Technological Education funded center, is housed at Edmonds Community College.
The report presents and analyzes the findings and recommendations in four areas: the nature of engineering technology education, supply and demand, educational and employment pathways, and data collection and analysis.
According to Cossette, the focus has been on four-year degrees in engineering; however, two-year community and technical colleges are graduating excellent technicians in engineering technology.
The report makes the following comparison: If engineers are viewed as being responsible for designing the nations technological systems, then engineering technicians and technologists are the ones who help build and keep those systems running.
The demand for trained engineering technicians is high because it takes a support team with many technicians to support one engineer, Cossette said.
Edmonds CC offers Engineering Technology associate degrees in Materials Science Technology, Manufacturing and Materials Science Technology, and Robotics and Electronics, and certificates in Aircraft Electronics Technician and Basic Electronics.
Many potential technician students are not aware of interesting and rewarding careers as engineering technicians, Cossette wrote in Educational Pathways for Engineering Technicians, an article for the National Academy of Engineerings publication The Bridge (Summer 2017 edition) and co-authored with colleague Daniel Hull.
They may not also know that U.S. two-year colleges offer relatively low tuition and strong opportunities for technician graduates to enter the workforce at annual starting salaries exceeding $50,000.
For more information about Edmonds CCs degrees, go to edcc.edu/etec.
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WH refutes reports that Science and Technology office unstaffed – The Hill
Posted: at 9:09 am
An official from the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) told The Hill the department's science division is staffed, despite a report saying the last three employees of the division left last week.
However, an OSTP official told The Hill there are currently 35 employees in OSTP, and 12 employees in the department's science division, adding that the division is organized and divided differently under the Trump administration compared to the Obama administration.
"Science division out. Mic drop, former OSTP assistant director for biomedical and forensic sciences Eleanor Celeste said on Friday in a tweet.
science division out. mic drop. pic.twitter.com/RoYTJqLoXa
"By COB today, number of staffers in White House OSTP's Science Division = 0, Obama era OSTP staffer Kumar Garg tweeted on Friday.
By COB today, number of staffers in White House OSTP's Science Division = 0. https://t.co/o4dsn4y3hO
There were more than 100 employees in OSTP during the Obama administration.
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Volvo admits its self-driving cars are confused by kangaroos – The Guardian
Posted: July 1, 2017 at 9:09 am
Kangaroos are responsible for about 90% of collisions between vehicles and animals in Australia although most are not serious. Photograph: Paul Kane/Getty Images
Volvos self-driving car is unable to detect kangaroos because hopping confounds its systems, the Swedish carmaker says.
The companys Large Animal Detection system can identify and avoid deer, elk and caribou, but early testing in Australia shows it cannot adjust to the kangaroos unique method of movement.
The managing director of Volvo Australia, Kevin McCann, said the discovery was part of the development and testing of driverless technology, and wouldnt pose problems by the time Volvos driverless cars would be available in 2020.
Any company that would be working on the autonomous car concept would be having to do the same developmental work, he said. We brought our engineers into Australia to begin the exercise of gathering the data of how the animals can move and behave so the computers can understand it more.
Earlier this month, Volvos Australian technical manager, David Pickett, told the ABC the troubles had arisen because their cars object detection systems used the ground as a reference point.
This meant a kangaroos hopping was making it difficult to judge how close they were.
When its in the air, it actually looks like its further away, then it lands and it looks closer, he said.
McCann added: Autonomous cars are a continuing development. A driverless car does not yet exist, and developing technology to recognise kangaroos is part of that development.
We are developing a car that can recognise kangaroos, he said.
Volvos detection system was designed in Sweden, where it was tested in areas populated with moose, before trials at a nature reserve in Canberra revealed the problem with kangaroos.
Kangaroos cause more accidents than any other animal in Australia the marsupials are responsible for about 90% of collisions between vehicles and animals although most are not serious.
A spokeswoman for Robert Bosch Australia, which develops component technology for driverless cars, said their system could theoretically recognise kangaroos.
Although it hasnt been tested in a kangaroo-specific environment, there was an instance where black swans were interfering, and so they had to build into the car the ability to recognise animals, Amy Kaa said.
Volvo plans to release its first autonomous cars by 2020 and has pledged zero fatalities or serious injuries from all its cars by that time.
The whole development process has to take in as many variations of conditions as possible, McCann said. Its a fairly drawn-out process. We dont even refer to it specifically as kangaroo detection, its what we call small animal detection.
The carmaker offers now semi-autonomous features in its S90 and XC90 models, which it says give a taste of the future of autonomous driving.
The cars can automatically maintain a safe distance from the vehicle in front, and spot potential collisions in urban environments. McCann said a feature called run-off road assist would keep passengers safe in near-collisions.
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Volvo admits its self-driving cars are confused by kangaroos - The Guardian
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The Biggest Loser: Micron Technology Slumps 5.1% – Barron’s
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Barron's | The Biggest Loser: Micron Technology Slumps 5.1% Barron's With DRAM margins exceeding 50%, we believe that it is increasingly evident that MU is catching up to competitors from a technology perspective. As this trend is better understood, we believe that MU will finally see some multiple expansion. We are ... Why Micron Technology, American Outdoor Brands, and Cara Therapeutics Slumped Today Micron Technology Gets Slew Of Price-Target Hikes, But Shares Fall Micron: Potential For Future Multiple Expansion |
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