New story in Technology from Time: Review: BioWare’s Anthem Is Loads of Fun When You Actually Get to Play

My squad mates and I are fighting through the Temple of the Scar, a treacherous dungeon full of skittering bug-men armed with frightening weapons. Wearing a well-armored Javelin — a suit of Iron Man-style armor — I put myself in the line of fire, protecting my friends as they lay down a return volley. I run forward, my shield equipped, and knock down our foes while a teammate flies through the air throwing shards of ice and calling down lightning.

My blood pumps as our coordinated attack makes short work of our enemies. Momentum on our side, we enter the dungeon’s last chamber to face its final boss, Scelos, a massive living tank. He defeats us on our first try, but we decide to give it another go. As my friends fall, I run to resurrect them. But the game breaks. My friends are dead, I can’t help them any longer, and there’s no way for us to finish. Those savage bug-men we had come to kill didn’t end our quest — software bugs did instead.

This is Anthem, BioWare’s new looter-shooter game for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC in which players take control of a mech called a “Javelin” and fly around shooting enemies and looting their gear.

From a gameplay perspective, it’s hard to mess up zipping around in a militarized mech suit, and Anthem nails it. The scenery, sound design, and core gameplay all click to deliver a pleasurable experience wherein you and your friends—or a group of random people—go on missions or explore a beautiful open world. The freedom of soaring through BioWare’s creation is thrilling. Players pick from one of four Javelins, each with a distinct play style: the jack-of-all-trades Ranger, the tanky Colossus, the ninja-like Interceptor, or the spell-casting Storm—and group up with three other people to kill enemies and achieve objectives. As you level up, you can upgrade your Javelin’s weapons, gear, and appearance and take on stronger enemies. It’s like Destiny 2 or Diablo 3 with flying mech suits.

But Anthem’s bursts of fun come in 15 minute chunks interrupted by bugs and bad design. Something as simple as changing weapons (an action that takes literally seconds in competitor Destiny 2) can take upwards of five minutes and several loading screens to accomplish in Anthem. And while BioWare’s storylines have historically been a highlight of the company’s games, Anthem’s narrative constantly interrupts the action. Dragon Age and Mass Effect are remembered fondly because of their stories. Anthem’s plot, a mismash of Star Wars and Dune, falls flat by comparison. In brief: You play as a “Freelancer” tasked with returning the Heart of Rage to stop the Monitor (an agent of The Dominion) from acquiring the Cenotaph and harnessing the power of the Anthem of Creation. If that seems like a lot of nonsensical proper nouns delivered without context, you’re not wrong.

Anthem dropped me into this lore soup in its opening moments, and never let me come up for air. It would be fine if I didn’t have to interact with it so much. Missions, especially early in the game, are brief, often ending in 15 minutes. Once they finish, I’d return to Fort Tarsis—Anthem’s hub—to spend 30 minutes talking to non-player characters, or NPCs. This meant wandering around and chatting when I’d rather be flying around doing battle. I could skip these conversations, but that meant missing in-game rewards and the chance to unlock extra missions. This was doubly frustrating when playing with friends. We’d do a mission, then spend half an hour in silence as we individually wandered Fort Tarsis talking to people. Long sessions of forced downtime is not what I’m looking for in a game that’s fundamentally about flying around in fancy suits and shooting space bugs. That might not be the most heady fare, but it’s what many players likely want from a game like Anthem.

Then there’s the matter of those software bugs. Over the course of 20 hours, the sound cut out five times, requiring me to restart the game. One friend spawned in a dungeon and got stuck behind an invisible door. He was unable to join us for the fight and dropped out of the game for the evening. Twice my friends disconnected from the game and logged back in to find they lost experience and gear.

BioWare, which promised to fix many of Anthem’s bugs, recently released a patch intended to do exactly that. After downloading it, a friend and I jumped into the game and played for a few hours, but stopped when a mission, the second in a three-part quest, failed to register as complete. We returned to Fort Tarsis and my teammate had to sit through yet more conversations and cutscenes. He decided to quit for the night. That’s how most of my Anthem sessions end, and it made it hard to have any fun with the game.

BioWare can, and will, fix Anthem’s bugs. But I don’t know if it can fix Anthem itself. Rocky launches are common — Destiny 2 arrived with game-breaking bugs, and some players spent the opening hours of Diablo III unable to log in. Six months after release, both of those games were in better shape, but they had a better core than Anthem. There’s a hint of a great game here. But even with more stable gameplay, it may prove tough to sing Anthem’s praises.

New story in Technology from Time: China’s Huawei Unveils New 5G Folding-Screen Phone

(BARCELONA, Spain) — China’s Huawei unveiled a new folding-screen phone on Sunday, joining the latest trend for bendable devices as it challenges the global smartphone market’s dominant players, Apple and Samsung.

Huawei revealed its Mate X phone on the eve of MWC Barcelona, a four-day showcase of mobile devices, as the company battles U.S. allegations it is a cybersecurity risk.

The device can be used on superfast next-generation mobile networks that are due to come online in the coming years.

Device makers are looking to folding screens as the industry’s next big thing to help them break out of an innovation malaise, although most analysts think the market is limited, at least in the early days.

The Mate X is the answer to a question Huawei faced as it sought to satisfy smartphone users’ demands for bigger screens and longer battery life, said Richard Yu, CEO of its consumer business group.

“How can we bring the more big innovation to this smartphone industry?” Yu said at a glitzy media launch.

The Mate X will sell for 2,299 euros ($2,600) when it goes on sale by midyear. That’s even more than Samsung’s recently revealed Galaxy Fold, priced at nearly $2,000.

The Mate X’s screen wraps around the outside so users can still view it when it’s closed, unlike the Galaxy Fold, which has a screen that folds shut. Unfolded, the Mate X’s screen is 8 inches diagonally, making it the size of a small tablet.

Yu said Huawei engineers spent three years working on the device’s hinge, which doesn’t leave a gap when shut.

“No matter how innovative and technology-advanced the new device is, it will take a lot more time for a critical mass of consumers to experience the benefits of foldable phones and 5G technology,” Forrester analyst Thomas Husson said. Huawei still “has to find its own brand voice to differentiate from Samsung and Apple and stop acting as a technology challenger.”

Huawei Technologies is trying to raise its profile in the fiercely competitive smartphone market. Almost everyone with a smartphone has heard of Apple and Samsung, the top device makers, and Google, the power behind Android’s pervasive software.

Huawei, a Chinese company with a name many people in the West don’t know how to pronounce (it’s “HWA-way”), wants to join the market’s upper echelon.

It’s getting close. Samsung was the No. 1 smartphone seller for all of last year, followed by Apple, according to research firm International Data Corp. Huawei came third, though in some quarters it took second place, IDC data showed.

The company stealthily became an industry star by plowing into new markets, honing its technology, and developing a line-up of phones that offer affordable options for low-income households and luxury models that are siphoning upper-crust sales from Apple and Samsung in China and Europe.

But Huawei’s products are few and far between in the U.S. The scarcity stems from long-running security concerns that the company could facilitate digital espionage on behalf of China’s government. Washington has been lobbying European allies to keep its equipment out of new 5G networks.

The cloud over Huawei also includes U.S. criminal charges filed last month against the company and its chief financial officer, Meng Wanzhou, who U.S. prosecutors want to extradite from Canada. They accuse her of fraud and say the company stole trade secrets, including technology that mobile carrier T-Mobile used to test smartphones.

Huawei is making its push at a time that both Samsung and Apple are struggling with declining smartphone sales amid a lull in industry innovation that is causing more consumers to hold on to the devices until they wear out instead of upgrading to the latest model as quickly as they once did.

The company sells high-priced smartphones as well as an extensive range of cheaper models priced from $200 to $600 that offer a good camera and other features most consumers want, analysts said.

But Huawei wouldn’t be where it is today if it had been content focusing merely on China and other Asian markets.

The company took a huge step forward several years ago when it began pouring millions into promoting its brand and building partnerships in major European markets such as Germany, France, Britain, Spain and Italy. Research firm Gartner estimates it now sells about 13 percent of its phones in Europe.

As for the U.S., Huawei can only make so much headway as long as the government is casting the company as a cyber-villain, said Gartner analyst Tuong Nguyen.

“Brand building is a long-term exercise, but it’s going to be especially difficult in the U.S. because of the way they have branded all of China,” he said. “The barriers in the U.S. are just getting more difficult.”

New story in Technology from Time: Watch SpaceX Launch the First Private Lunar Lander Mission

SpaceX is launching its first private moon landing mission on Thursday 8:45 pm Eastern time.

A Falcon9 rocket will take off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida and carry an Israeli spacecraft that seeks to measure the magnetic field of the moon as the spacecraft lands, according to The New York Times.

The Beresheet robotic lunar lander—created by the nonprofit SpaceIL and Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), Israel’s largest aerospace and defense company —would be the first privately built spacecraft to reach the moon.

The U.S., Russia and China have all passed by or orbited the lunar surface before, but none have made a soft landing and taken photos, as this mission plans to do, TechCrunch reports.

It will take eight weeks to get to the moon. Once the spacecraft lands, which is expected happen sometime in April, the mission will only last a few days as the electronics are not designed to handle the rising surface temperatures from the sun, according to the Times.

If the mission succeeds, it could unlock information the moon’s iron core.

The mission was originally intended for Google’s Lunar Xprize, a competition designed to encourage privately funded groups to send robotic landers to the moon. But it ended without a winner, pushing groups like SpaceL to pursue missions independently, Space reports.

Watch the mission unfold live here.

 

New story in Technology from Time: Nintendo of America’s Reggie Fils-Aime Is Retiring After Almost 13 Years at the Helm

Nintendo of America President and Chief Operating Officer Reggie Fils-Aime will retire after almost 13 years at the helm.

Doug Bowser will succeed Fils-Aime as president on April 15, the video-game maker said Thursday in a statement. Bowser currently oversees sales and marketing at Nintendo, which includes efforts to promote the Switch console. The Switch has been met with weak demand as the Kyoto-based company struggles to expand the system beyond a core user base.

“Inside and outside our company, Reggie is known as an exceptional leader,” Nintendo Co. President Shuntaro Furukawa said in the statement. “We are also pleased to have such an able successor ready to step into that role.”

Bowser joined Nintendo in 2015 after working at Electronic Arts Inc. and Procter & Gamble Co. And he has another, perhaps more unique qualification, to lead the company: Bowser happens to be the name of the spiked yellow antagonist in Nintendo’s hit “Mario” gaming franchise.

New York-traded shares of Nintendo Co. climbed as much as 6.2 percent in New York.

New story in Technology from Time: Trump Wants ‘5G’ and ‘Even 6G’ Wireless Technology ‘As Soon As Possible.’ What’s He Talking About?

President Donald Trump on Thursday said he wants U.S. companies to more quickly implement what’s called 5G wireless technology, the latest and greatest tech when it comes to mobile broadband.

“I want 5G, and even 6G, technology in the United States as soon as possible,” tweeted Trump, who went on to imply the U.S. was falling behind due to policies preventing the adoption of wireless technology from companies abroad. While 6G doesn’t yet exist, 5G is just starting to be deployed around the U.S. and elsewhere.

Here’s what to know about 5G technology and its status in the U.S.

What’s 5G, and What Does Trump Mean By 6G?

5G is simply the name given to the next generation in wireless cellular technology. Like the jump from 3G to 4G, 5G will bring with it considerably faster speeds, lower latency, and increased support for more devices. Compared to 4G LTE, the wireless cell technology used in smartphones today, 5G promises speeds up to 100 times faster and a response time up to 20 times faster.

5G promises to unleash a wave of new technologies that could benefit from its blazing-fast speeds and low latency. Smartphone owners will be able to stream games lag-free and watch 4K content with zero buffering. Autonomous vehicles could use 5G’s lower latency to respond quickly to changes in traffic and communicate with other connected equipment. And since 5G will be capable of helping low-power devices communicate with one another as coverage grows over the next decade, it could enable all sorts of new smart home tech, too.

As for this 6G technology Trump is talking about? While that will most likely be the name given to the next logical step in the advancement of cellular technology, no such standard has been defined, and any talk of G6 is purely theoretical at this point — we’re only just starting to deploy 5G, after all. That isn’t to say it’s not being thought of; research on the merits and potential uses for 6G (also known as “6Genesis”) is being conducted at Finland’s University of Oulu, for instance. Still, with an estimated debut in 2030, don’t hold your breath.

Unfortunately, you probably can’t take advantage of any 5G speeds yet because there are so few 5G networks and devices available for consumers. Right now, Verizon has a version of 5G providing homes with high-speed wireless connectivity, though it’s only available in a handful of cities. The company announced shortly after Trump’s tweets that it’s planning to expand mobile 5G coverage to over 30 cities this year. AT&T has mobile 5G service in a variety of cities as well, though users can only take advantage of it with a 5G hotspot at the moment. T-Mobile and Sprint will roll out 5G service sometime this year, they say. Some other services are advertised as a form of 5G, but that’s pretty much just marketing hype.

What’s Taking 5G So Long?

For a wireless provider to build a 5G network, it needs access to a wide array of wireless spectrum, the use of which is largely government-regulated. Since 5G relies on both very high and very low wireless frequencies, carriers are gearing up to cover the gamut. They’re spending billions on purchasing the rights to these frequencies either through buying companies that already holding the rights, or by bidding on spectrum bands auctioned off by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in an effort to speed up 5G deployement. “By making more spectrum available, promoting the deployment of wireless infrastructure, and modernizing our regulations—the three components of the FCC’s 5G FAST plan—we’ll ensure that American consumers reap the substantial benefits that will come from the next generation of wireless connectivity,” said FCC Chairman Ajit Pai in a Jan. 24 statement after concluding the first spectrum auction for 5G wireless service. Still, spectrum is a limited resource, and it’s taking time and money for wireless companies to get the spectrum they need for 5G.

There’s also the problem of equipment. Trump’s suggestion the U.S. is “blocking out currently more advanced technology” isn’t exactly wrong. Two Chinese companies, Huawei and ZTE, manufacture 5G wireless equipment that American companies like Verizon or AT&T could use to build out their 5G networks. But security official and other experts have warned that the companies’ equipment could provide the Chinese government with a way to spy on American citizens and companies. In fact, through the recent signing of the National Defense Authorization Act, Trump himself has explicitly banned government use of telecommunications equipment from companies like Huawei and ZTE. The U.S. government is even pressuring allies to block Chinese-made 5G equipment, though some, like Germany, aren’t listening. In addition, a recently introduced bipartisan bill is seeking to prevent Huawei and ZTE from supplying U.S. wireless carriers with equipment.

“Chinese telecommunications firms like Huawei represent a growing threat to American national security,” said Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-WI) who introduced the Telecommunications Denial Order Enforcement Act. “As state-directed enterprises, they ultimately report to the Chinese Communist Party and will be employed where and whenever possible to undermine American interests and those of our allies.”

All this is to say most Americans could be waiting longer for true 5G service to arrive in their neck of the woods.

New story in Technology from Time: A Hacker Took Over the Tampa Mayor’s Twitter and Sent a Fake Ballistic Missile Warning and Bomb Threat

A hacker took over the Twitter account for the mayor of Tampa, Fla., sending out a fake bomb threat to Tampa International Airport along with a claim that there was a ballistic missile headed to the Tampa area.

Police said they are searching for whoever was behind the hacking of Mayor Bob Buckhorn’s Twitter account early Thursday. The hacked tweets, along with all of Buckhorn’s previous, genuine tweets, were deleted around 9 a.m. – more than five hours after the hacker took control.

One message, sent to Tampa International Airport, read: “I have hidden a bomb in a package somewhere…Looking forward to seeing some minorities die.”

The Tampa Police Department said the threats are not credible.

Once the hack had come to light, the Communications Director for the Mayor and the City of Tampa released the following statement to local media:

“Earlier this morning we noticed someone hacked Mayor Buckhorn’s twitter account, this was clearly not Mayor Buckhorn. Upon noticing the hack we immediately began investigating these reprehensible tweets. We will work with our Tampa Police Department as well as all investigators to figure out how this breach was made. We urge residents to change their passwords and continue to alert officials when they see an unlikely change in account activity. We are working with law enforcement to investigate all threats made by this hack.”

Twitter said it has been in touch with the mayor’s office and shared tools to enhance the security of the account.

The City of Tampa, meanwhile, said it was investigating the “reprehensible tweets”.

Hackers also used Buckhorn’s Twitter account to tweet racist, sexist and pornographic content.

In one tweet, users were encouraged to follow PewDiePie – a social media star whose fans have hacked the Wall Street Journal, as well as tens of thousands of printers around the world, in recent months.

The Indian music label and movie studio T-Series is close to overtaking PewDiePie as the world’s most popular YouTube channel, which has led some PewDiePie fans to mount stunts to attract new subscribers. Both accounts have more than 86 million subscribers.

New story in Technology from Time: A Foldable Smartphone, AirPod Rivals, and More. These Are the 4 Biggest Things Samsung Just Announced

During its annual Unpacked event on Wednesday, Samsung unleashed a bounty of new smartphones and other gadgets, including a pricey foldable phone called the Galaxy Fold, the Galaxy Buds (a rival to Apple’s wireless AirPod earbuds), and the Galaxy Fit, a fitness band.

Here are the four biggest announcements from Samsung’s 2019 Unpacked event.

The Samsung Galaxy Fold

Samsung Galaxy Fold

Samsung opened the Unpacked event by introducing a new smartphone design — though one it had been teasing since last year.

Called the Samsung Galaxy Fold, the device is a folding smartphone that opens and closes like a book. On the outside “cover” is a 4.6-inch display, while inside, when opened, you can use the 7.3-inch Infinity Flex display as a singular massive screen to multitask, watch video, or do whatever else you normally would on your smartphone. Apps can switch between the smaller and larger display without interruption, and the six (yes, six) cameras on the Galaxy Fold will ensure you’re always able to snap a photo.

Samsung says the Galaxy Fold will be available in the second quarter of 2019 on T-Mobile and AT&T, starting at $1,980.

A Quartet of Galaxy S10 Smartphones

Samsung Galaxy S10
Justin Sullivan—Getty ImagesThe new Samsung Galaxy S10e, Galaxy S10+ and the Galaxy S10 smartphones are displayed during the Samsung Unpacked event on February 20, 2019 in San Francisco, California.

One of the worst-kept secrets when it comes to smartphone launches, Samsung finally announced its Galaxy S10 line of devices. In case you weren’t already confused by Samsung’s growing catalog of smartphones, the S10 line includes four different models: The Galaxy S10e, Galaxy S10, Galaxy S10+, and Galaxy S10 5G.

The $749.99 Galaxy S10e is the cheapest of the four, and the most compact of the bunch. The S10e features a 5.8-inch screen, two rear cameras, and a front-facing camera that looks like the S10e had a run-in with a hole punch machine. The camera, embedded in the corner of the display, helps maximize screen size and eliminate the dreaded notch.

The $899.99 Galaxy S10 packs more features into a slightly larger device. The 6.1-inch screen features the same front-facing camera on the S10e, while its triple-camera setup on the rear allows for wide-angle, ultra wide-angle, and 2x optical zoom images.

The $999.99 Galaxy S10+ features a 6.4-inch display, larger than the previous Galaxy S9+. It also has the same triple-camera setup on the rear as the Galaxy S10, but on the front is a pair of cameras allowing for depth-sensing selfies and facial recognition for unlocking your device. It also supports up to 1.5TB of storage, even more than some laptops.

Samsung, in its push to promote faster 5G wireless broadband technology, also announced the Galaxy S10 5G, the only S10 device to support 5G speeds. In keeping with its status as a mobile powerhouse, the S10 5G features not three but four rear cameras, with the extra one functioning as a depth sensor for adjustable portrait mode images and improved augmented reality experiences. It also has a gigantic 6.7-inch display, and 256GB of internal storage (though it’s lacking a microSD slot, present in every other S10 variant).

Hidden below the screen in the Samsung Galaxy S10, S10+, and S10 5G is an ultrasonic fingerprint sensor. Able to create a 3D scan of your finger, the sensor is more secure than earlier capacitive sensors, Samsung says. And since it’s underneath the screen, you won’t notice it when you’re not using it. According to Samsung, certain screen protectors may alter the effectiveness of the ultrasonic fingerprint sensor; the company is working with manufacturers to create screen protectors designed for the S10 line.

You’ll be able to purchase three of the four S10 devices beginning March 8, with the S10 5G debuting exclusively on Verizon “for a limited time in the first half of 2019,” and on other carriers this summer. The Galaxy S10, Galaxy S10+, and Galaxy S10e will be available in four different colors, with two additional colors available when purchasing the 512GB or 1TB Galaxy S10+ variants.

Galaxy Buds Will Take On Apple’s AirPods

Samsung Galaxy Buds
Justin Sullivan—Getty ImagesThe new Samsung Galaxy Buds are displayed during the Samsung Unpacked event on February 20, 2019 in San Francisco, California.

Samsung’s third attempt at truly wireless earbuds, the $129.99 Galaxy Buds are the company’s best-looking iteration yet. The Galaxy Buds, made in collaboration with Samsung subsidiary AKG, feature ambient sound support, meaning you can stay aware and attentive to your surroundings even with your earbuds in. With built-in Bixby support, you can use the Galaxy Buds to issue commands to Samsung’s voice assistant.

Samsung says the Galaxy Buds will last up to six hours when streaming music, with its case adding another seven hours of battery life to the mix. That case also supports wireless charging, and can draw power from your S10 device using Samsung’s most intriguing addition to the S10 line. If you play your cards right, you might never have to plug in your Galaxy Buds. More on that below…

Samsung PowerShare Will Rescue Your Dying Devices

Samsung

Samsung’s wireless PowerShare is perhaps the most intriguing feature found in the Galaxy S10 lineup, letting you charge Qi-compatible devices wirelessly using the back of your S10 device. Every S10 supports Wireless PowerShare, but the bigger the device, the more power you’ll have at your disposal. With phones like the S10+ and S10 5G boasting hefty batteries, you’ll be able to use your device to give your friend’s Qi-compatible smartphone a little juice to get through the day, or recharge your Galaxy Buds while you’re eating lunch. It’ll even charge iPhones supporting wireless charging, like the iPhone 8 or XS Max.

New story in Technology from Time: Samsung’s New Galaxy Fold Smartphone Opens and Closes Like a Book

Samsung opened its annual Unpacked event on Wednesday with a novel surprise: the Samsung Galaxy Fold, the company’s first foldable smartphone.

The Samsung Galaxy Fold opens and shuts like a book, and features two displays: a 4.6-inch display on the front cover of the Galaxy Fold you can use when it’s closed, and a much larger 7.3-inch “Infinity Flex” display you can use when you open the device. Inside is an octa-core processor, 12GB of memory, and 512GB of built-in storage. There’s a battery inside each half of the device, and support for wireless PowerShare for wirelessly charging Qi-compatible devices, including other smartphones.

That internal 1536×2152 Infinity Flex display is seamless, and will let you run up to three apps at a time. There are six cameras on the Samsung Galaxy Fold: one on the front, two on the inside, and three on its rear. An internal folding mechanism hidden in the Galaxy Fold’s spine ensures a smooth and consistent opening and closing for “hundreds of thousands” of folds, according to Samsung. On the Galaxy Fold’s side is a fingerprint sensor placed where you’d naturally rest your finger while holding the device.

Like its new S10 devices, the Galaxy Fold runs Android 9.0 Pie. Thanks to what Samsung is calling App Continuity, users can easily transition from the smaller display to the larger one while using compatible apps without losing their work or progress. According to Samsung, apps like WhatsApp, Google Maps, and Microsoft Office all support App Continuity, with more on the way.

With four different colors to choose from — black, silver, green, and blue — Samsung’s Galaxy Fold will be available on April 26, in both 4G LTE and 5G versions. Pricing starts at $1,980.

New story in Technology from Time: No, There Isn’t Really An ‘Anti-LGBT’ Emoji. Here’s What People Are Actually Seeing

Multiple reports have emerged recently concerning the existence of an “anti-LGBT” emoji showing a rainbow flag emoji and the “no” symbol. Shared by Twitter user mitchell, the shocking combination — along with their claim to have discovered it “in Apple’s code” — certainly drew some attention, with many referring to the character combination as an unfortunate glitch.

But it’s not a “glitch” per se — it’s more of an unfortunate implementation of the standards that govern how text is displayed on our device. You might not even see it, depending on which device you’re using. Either way, no smartphone maker has purposefully chosen to offer an “anti-LGBT” emoji on their device.

The reason you can see symbols like the “no sign” ⃠, your favorite emoji, accents in a French city name, or Japanese kanji on an online storefront, is the Unicode Standard, created by the Unicode Consortium. Its members include individuals as well as major corporations like Apple, Facebook, and Microsoft. Unicode provides a standard way to represent text in multiple languages, symbols, and emoji by assigning each character — emoji included — a unique identification number that can be displayed by the font installed on your device.

For the officially designated “international prohibition sign,” that identification number is U+20E0. The “no symbol” ⃠ itself is categorized in Unicode as a “combining character,” meaning it’s designed to overlay the preceding character. You’ve probably seen combined characters before, like the acute accent combination in “Pokémon,” or the umlaut combination in the German word “schön.”

Unicode allows fonts to either use pre-made combined characters or rely on the standard’s rules for combining characters. That means there is no pre-made “anti-LGBT” flag, only one that appears when your device applies the character combining rules to the text you just entered. Depending on your device’s font, how it displays character combinations, and which Unicode characters it supports, you’ll either see the combined symbol rendered properly, misaligned, or simply as two characters next to each other. Seeing square boxes or dots instead of the emoji and characters you were expecting? That means whatever font you have installed doesn’t support the larger array of Unicode characters.

In Apple’s macOS, you can see the list of supported Unicode characters by hitting Control-Command-Space and selecting the character viewer icon next to the search field. For Windows 10 users, you can search for the Character Map in your Start menu to see a list of Unicode characters you can choose from, though they won’t necessarily be displayed in your chosen font, and may still require you to to install optional font packs to boost the number of supported characters.

We’ve reached out to the Unicode Consortium as well as Apple and Microsoft for more information and will update accordingly.

New story in Technology from Time: STEM Careers Are Even Harder On Parents Than We Thought, Study Finds

The future, as anyone who has sought career counseling in the last 20 years knows, is in STEM. Good jobs in science, technology, engineering and math are plentiful, the common wisdom goes, as opposed to falling opportunities in media, factory work and retail. But a new study suggests that STEM careers might be particularly tough for at least one category of employee: parents.

Almost half of new mothers and a quarter of new fathers leave full-time STEM careers after adopting or bearing a child, and do not return by the time the child starts school, the study found. While mothers generally leave within the first three years of their first child’s arrival (42%), the fathers stick it out a little longer, with only 15% leaving in the same time period, rising to 23% by the time the child is eight.

The study, which was published in the Proceedings of National Association of Sciences on Feb. 18, is the first systematic, longitudinal examination of the paths of STEM professionals who become parents, and how those paths diverge according to gender. It examined the career trajectories of more than 4,000 scientists and engineers who were employed full-time in a STEM field in 2003 and compared those who had at least one child between 2003 and 2006 with those who remained childless until 2010.

One of the prevailing theories on the gender gap in wages is that it is caused in part by women taking time off to raise families, moving to part-time employment, or declining to uproot a family to get experience in a field office. However, while the differences in this study were striking, they weren’t as surprising as the impact of parenthood in general on STEM careers.

“We were startled by the size of the attrition rates for both new mothers AND new fathers,” wrote Erin Cech, an assistant professor in sociology at the University of Michigan, and one of the study’s authors, in an email. “This indicates to us that navigating caregiving responsibilities alongside STEM careers is not just a ‘mothers’ problem,’ but a STEM workforce problem.”

Overall, the study found 28% of those who become parents leave full-time STEM employment within seven years. Some of them move to part-time employment, while others find work in different fields. Men (18%) were more likely than women (12%) to find another line of work. Almost 15% of mothers left the workforce entirely, and more than 10% stayed in STEM part-time, while very few fathers pursued either of those options.

Interestingly, although engineering and computer science are considered to be especially unfriendly to women, it was what are generally perceived to be the more “female-friendly” life sciences — medicine and biology — where women had the hardest time sticking out. Cech is not quite sure why, but notes that women left the life sciences at just as high a rate as they did engineering.

Of course, STEM industries have a reputation of burning out all employees, no matter who they are, but the study found that 49% of parents, and 71% of new mothers, who left STEM for another line of work cited family as the reason for the switch. Moreover, while hard work is a prerequisite for many careers in the trades and the professions, STEM is a level above. Its culture reveres the ability and willingness to put shoulder-to-wheel at all times.

Qualitative research suggests that the combination of expectations for long work hours with STEM’s cultural expectation of ‘ideal workers’ who put their STEM work above personal responsibilities like caregiving, [make it] particularly challenging for professionals with children,” writes Cech. (“Ideal workers,” according to Cech’s research, are those who put work at the top of the list of their priorities and organize their lives around it.)

The researchers, Cech and Mary Blair-Loy, a sociology professor at University of California, San Diego, call for the usual structural changes that would help new parents be both good employees and good parents, like paid family leave and more flexible work policies, including a measure of schedule control. But they also call for cultural change, particularly in the STEM industry’s with-us-or-agin-us attitude toward parents. While the big tech companies often have family-friendly leave policies, the authors suggest that those with offspring are sometimes regarded as second class citizens upon their return. STEM leaders, they write, need “to confront cultural beliefs that STEM professionals with caregiving responsibilities are less valuable and less committed to their professional work than their colleagues.”