All posts tagged: Logging

The real cost of logging the boreal forest may be buried in the soil

The real cost of logging the boreal forest may be buried in the soil

From space, the boreal forest appears as a near-continuous pine-green band stretching across the Northern Hemisphere, just beneath the Arctic — from Europe through Russia and Asia, and again across Alaska and Canada. Up close, the forest resolves into a patchwork of species. Conifers like spruce, pine, and fir dominate, while deciduous trees such as birch, aspen, and poplar appear in warmer regions. It is easy to imagine the boreal as distant, austere, and resilient: rows of looming trees growing slowly over long winters and short summers. The numbers reinforce that sense of scale and endurance. The boreal covers roughly 17% of Earth’s land surface and stores about one-third of the carbon held in forests worldwide. While some of this carbon is stored in the boreal’s large trees, much of it lies below ground in soils, where cold, waterlogged conditions slow how quickly fungi and bacteria decompose organic matter, allowing it to accumulate over centuries. Today, industry and forest managers are converting large areas of this forest into managed stands, harvesting trees for lumber and …

Windows has been logging your app install and uninstall history for years — and it tells more than you’d think

Windows has been logging your app install and uninstall history for years — and it tells more than you’d think

It’s easy to go down the rabbit hole of guesswork when your computer has a performance dip or certain apps stop behaving as you expect. That’s often because you don’t realize there’s a clear way to find the problem. However, that’s not always true — you may not realize that Windows logs most of the answers you need by default. The Event Viewer is one of the most powerful troubleshooting resources. It’s so robust that you may feel discouraged from digging into it. But buried somewhere within this tool are time-stamped records of app installations and uninstallations that span weeks, months, and sometimes longer. This little detail is often enough for most Windows troubleshooting. Windows has been logging installs all along It lives in the Event Viewer, not where most people look Afam Onyimadu / MUO Windows Event Viewer is a detailed activity log. It has one particularly useful section for troubleshooting: Windows Logs -> Application. Unfiltered, this section holds thousands of background services, app events, and system activity entries. This very dense list may …

New Garmin Training Features (2026): Nutrition Tracking, Lifestyle Logging, and More

New Garmin Training Features (2026): Nutrition Tracking, Lifestyle Logging, and More

Food logging can be done in a few ways. You can search for items in a provided database, scan barcodes from packaging, or use your camera and AI-based analysis to determine what you’re about to eat. I tested this feature during a holiday and experienced some of the inconsistencies with the food identification. For simpler items like eggs, fruit, and cheese, the camera-based logging worked well. As soon as meals became more complex, lighting to take photos wasn’t bright enough, or the AI analysis had limitations seeing what was exactly in a salad. It started to become more frustrating. This logged data should also feed into Garmin’s Active intelligence feature to offer insights and make recommendations based on your intake and even timing of meals. However, my personalized insights remained focused on telling me about my training and sleep trends. The information is at least nicely presented on the watch. You have the added ability to log food there as well, with most recent items displayed to make that easier to do. But trying to …

What Is ‘Deadzoning’? The 2026 Travel Trend All About Logging Off For Real

What Is ‘Deadzoning’? The 2026 Travel Trend All About Logging Off For Real

We’ve all seen it: the person at the airport gate loudly telling their boss their Wi-Fi isn’t strong enough for video calls, clearly pretending to be stuck at home. Or that friend who, between bottomless mimosas at brunch, is furiously tapping out Slack messages. Welcome to the modern vacation: gate-checked by remote work. Thanks to flexible schedules and “work-from-anywhere” policies, we technically can work from anywhere — even while on vacation. And yet that freedom has become a trap. Why bother using PTO when you can save it and fire off emails from a New York hotel room or an Airbnb on a bachelorette weekend? The result: We’re traveling more than ever, but actually vacationing less than before. AleksandarNakic via Getty Images Opting to travel and not be highly accessible to work is growing in popularity. Between lagging Wi-Fi, comped breakfast buffets with unanswered Slack threads, and the ever-present fear of looking unproductive, we’re realizing that something has to change. Welcome to 2026, the year we all start “deadzoning.” What is ‘deadzoning’? Despite catching flights, …

A French Navy officer accidentally leaked the location of an aircraft carrier by logging his run on Strava

A French Navy officer accidentally leaked the location of an aircraft carrier by logging his run on Strava

A French Navy officer went for a run on the deck of the Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier and uploaded his workout to Strava, inadvertently leaking the location of the nuclear-powered warship as it heads to the Middle East. First reported by French newspaper Le Monde, the story is not an anomaly — this popular fitness tracking app has proven to be a privacy nightmare before. By default, accounts on the social fitness app are set to public, publishing your route any time you log a workout. Strava data has previously been used to locate military bases around the world. In 2024, Le Monde uncovered French President Emmanuel Macron’s whereabouts by searching for the Strava accounts of his bodyguards, who uploaded public workout data while traveling with him. An anonymized graphic from Le Monde showing the run in questionImage Credits:Le Monde (opens in a new window) Macron had publicly announced the carrier’s deployment, so its movement through the Mediterranean was already known. But obviously, the French military is still put at serious risk when an …

Logging off: Kids’ social media ban now feels almost certain | Politics News

Logging off: Kids’ social media ban now feels almost certain | Politics News

The House of Lords has backed a ban on under-16s using social media. Peers passed an amendment to the government’s Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, which is currently making its way through parliament. Lords debate as it happened – politics latest The amendment says within 12 months of the act passing, social media sites must be required to use “highly effective” age checks to make sure no under-16s can become users. With peers having backed the ban, the government will have the chance to overturn it in the Commons – but that’s looking increasingly tricky. The prime minister was initially opposed to such an outright ban, but pressure from opposition parties and his own backbenchers has softened his government’s position. One Labour MP told Sky’s political reporter Faye Brown there was “no way” the government could whip the Parliamentary Labour Party against it, which could trigger another welfare-style rebellion. Earlier this week, the government announced it was consulting on a ban for under-16s, with the block imposed by Australia potentially acting as inspiration. You need …