With each day, the number of lives impacted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine grows. It's easy to feel helpless watching from afar. Here are 8 organizations that could use your support: wired.trib.al/ts7FvkV 📸: Daniel Leal/Getty 1/11
The Ukrainian Red Cross notably helped victims of the Chernobyl disaster. Now, it's supplying medicine, bedding, food, mental health support, first aid lessons, and other direct assistance to Ukrainians. 2/11
Voices of Children works with psychologists and is committed to helping children who are traumatized by war. Their art therapy program is a safe space where kids can work through complicated emotions and feel supported. 3/11
The brutality of war leaves many soldiers permanently wounded. Revived Soldiers Ukraine is a nonprofit dedicated to assisting injured soldiers through rehabilitation. They help with treatment and transportation fees for medical procedures. 4/11
International journalism can only cover a story so well. If you want to support reporters living in Ukraine, try contributing to The Kyiv Independent. The publication is crowdfunded and relies on Patreon backers for support. 5/11
CARE is a nonprofit originally established to distribute surplus army rations after WW2. Their priority is to distribute everything from food and water supplies to hygiene kits and cash assistance. 6/11
The International Medical Corps works with local staff to offer emergency support across the globe. In Ukraine, they are providing medical help, mental health assistance, services for people impacted by gender-based violence, and pandemic prevention. 7/11
Save the Children assists young people internationally, as well as in the US. They have a relief fund dedicated to helping Ukrainian kids and are also helping refugees who are in Romania. 8/11
Throughout the years, World Central Kitchen has served millions of meals to those in crisis around the globe. It is active in Poland and feeding Ukrainian refugees crossing the border. The organization is also committed to assisting those impacted by climate change. 9/11
To learn more about how you can help these organizations and the people of Ukraine follow the link: wired.trib.al/ts7FvkV 10/11
Subscribe to WIRED and get your first year of print and digital access for just $10 wired.trib.al/9E2tJFL 11/11
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McDonald’s is known for its notoriously broken ice cream machines. But for years, the tiny startup Kytch worked to invent and sell a device designed to fix that problem—only to watch the fast food Goliath crush their business. wired.trib.al/xCwMUWP 1/11
Recently, Kytch filed a long-expected legal complaint against McDonald's, accusing the company of false advertising and tortious interference in its contracts with customers and asking for no less than $900 million in damages. 2/11
The two-person startup's new claims against McDonald's focus on emails the fast food giant sent to every franchisee in November 2020, instructing them to pull Kytch devices out of their ice cream machines immediately. 3/11
It certainly isn’t the biggest year for phones at the Mobile World Congress. Nevertheless, here are some of our favorite picks with a few added surprises. wired.trib.al/iUwcEKw 1/9
TCL dropped the new TCL 30 5G, TCL 30+, TCL 30, TCL 30 SE, and TCL 30 E. (Still with me?). But the big news here is the price point—the most expensive is the 30 5G which is roughly $280 US dollars (€249), and the price continues to plummet down to the 30 E. 2/9
Introducing: the TCL Fold 'n Roll. The name says it all here: This phone is both foldable and rollable, allowing you to both extend the display and shrink it down to size, then close it shut. Remember, this is a concept, so it's unlikely we'll see it for sale. 📸: TCL 3/9
A British man wasn’t prepared for what he received in the mail: A complete top set of false teeth. His teeth. Teeth he hadn’t seen in over a decade. Teeth with a story. wired.trib.al/HxVwAcj 1/8
The gnashers in question belonged to the recipient, Paul Bishop. He hadn’t seen them in 11 years, not since a boozy vacation to Spain. Within a few hours of receiving the unsolicited dentures, he had become a viral news sensation. 2/8
Here’s the scoop—according to Bishop: While celebrating a friend's birthday, he had one drink too many and vomited into a bin. But he didn’t just lose the contents of his stomach; he lost his teeth. That is until he received the mysterious package. 3/8
At the end of 2008, Firefox was flying high. Twenty percent of the 1.5 billion people online were using Mozilla’s browser to navigate the web. Almost 15 years later, things aren’t so rosy. wired.trib.al/JxGvWGw 1/12
In the two decades since Firefox launched, it has been key to shaping the web’s privacy and security. But now the privacy-heavy browser is flatlining. 2/12
The gloomy forecast has left industry analysts and former employees concerned about the browser's future. As one former Mozilla employee says: “They're just going to have to accept the reality that Firefox is not going to come back from the ashes.” 3/12
Every state prohibits driving under the influence of weed, but no state has found a reliable way to sort the stoned from the sober—defaulting primarily to another flawed method of assessment: human judgement. wired.trib.al/1HFLPdc 1/9
Some states have implemented a 5-nanogram-per-milliliter threshold, but cannabis pharmacokinetics are so variable that even if two people share a joint, one person might dip below that level within two hours and the other might stay above it for the rest of the week. 2/9
Stoned driving is therefore one of the biggest unresolved sticking points in the long slide toward legalizing marijuana in the US—a Kafkaesque quandary with no clear solution. 3/9
The seafloor of the central Arctic is a pretty inhospitable place. And it should be: Unlike more productive oceans, few nutrients swirl here thanks to the ice above blocking the light.
But scientists have discovered that indeed, life found a way. wired.trib.al/JPmRxZU 1/10
Thousands of years ago, the peaks of the Arctic's Langseth Ridge hummed with volcanic activity that produced sulfur, which fed tube worms. Or to be precise, the sulfur fed the symbiotic bacteria inside the worms which processed it into energy, sustaining the animals. 2/10
That volcanic activity died out long ago, but there is still life under this sea.
📷: Antje Boetius/Alfred-Wegener-Institut/PS101 Awi Ofos System 3/10