Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Friday CoronaBuzz, August 25, 2021: 55 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Friday CoronaBuzz, August 25, 2021: 55 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Split up more categories and still working on the workflow. Please stay safe. Please get vaccinated. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

UPDATES

Washington Post: Daily vaccination rate is rising among Americans getting their first shot, officials say. “The daily number of people getting their first dose of the coronavirus vaccine has risen by more than 70 percent since mid-July, White House officials said Tuesday. On average, about 450,000 Americans a day are getting their first jab, up from 260,000 a little more than a month ago, Jeff Zients, the White House Covid-19 Response Team coordinator, said in an afternoon briefing.”

WFLA: Bodies stacked to the ceiling as COVID-19 surge creates backlog at Florida funeral homes, crematories. “There’s an influx of bodies like they’ve never seen, worse than the first wave of COVID-19. The area where bodies are stored prior to being cremated is stacked to the ceiling. The staff is working day and night to honor the dead. WESH 2 called 20 funeral homes and crematories and many were too busy to be part of our story. Some were too busy to even talk on the phone. One funeral director said that in a 30-minute period where he talked to his partner, four new cases came in.”

BBC: Covid-19: Northern Ireland’s summer surge figures make for grim reading. “The statistics associated with the coronavirus pandemic in Northern Ireland paint a grim picture. Northern Ireland has the highest infection rate and lowest vaccination rate in the UK. And since the current swell in cases began at the start of July, we have had the highest death rate in the UK.”

MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

KFOR: “Do not take medicine for animals,” Oklahoma stores sold out of horse deworming drug despite FDA warning about consumption. “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning people not to take horse deworming medication to treat COVID-19. It turns out the medicine, Ivermectin, is flying off store shelves in Oklahoma, despite the warning.”

Washington Post: Facebook says post that cast doubt on covid-19 vaccine was most popular on the platform from January through March. “Facebook said Saturday evening that an article raising concerns that the coronavirus vaccine could lead to death was the top performing link in the United States on its platform from January through March of this year, acknowledging the widespread reach of such material for the first time. It also said another site that pushed covid-19 misinformation was also among the top 20 most visited pages on the platform.”

Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: Washington County sheriff confirms use of ivermectin at Detention Center. “Eva Madison, justice of the peace for District 9, said she had been told by a county employee that Karas Correctional Health had been prescribing ivermectin for them. Madison said the federal Food and Drug Administration has warned against using ivermectin to treat covid-19 and said the county should review the situation before approving a budget that includes money for Karas.”

CNET: YouTube says it’s removed 1 million videos for COVID-19 misinformation. “YouTube has since February 2020 removed more than 1 million videos related to ‘dangerous’ coronavirus information, such as false cures or claims of a hoax, Chief Product Officer Neal Mohan said in a blog post Wednesday.”

The Scotsman: Far right website sees upsurge in ‘hateful content’ and Covid-19 disinformation aimed at Scots. “A video-sharing platform which has been reported to regulators for hosting hateful, violent and anti-semitic content is enjoying an upsurge in activity aimed at Scottish audiences, with a spate of posts pushing conspiracy theories and disinformation about the nation’s Covid-19 vaccination programme.” Not YouTube.

MinnPost: On an encounter with Unvaccinated America at the hospital. “While letting my brother take a turn with my mother in emergency, I sat outside the hospital on a very early morning, looking to the nearby Catalina Foothills for reassurance from family gone to the other side that I was doing the right thing. A couple who appeared to be in their late 30s sat at a distance from me and asked if I was with ‘the really elderly lady’ they saw being wheeled into one of the department’s private rooms. I said they probably were speaking about my mother. I expected to hear a perfunctory ‘sorry to hear your mom is sick’ sort of response. Oh no.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Route Fifty: You’ve Been Vaccinated. Now Prove It.. “To get inside the August Wilson Theatre, patrons will need more than their tickets. They’ll also have to present a federal card or use an app on their phone and an ID to prove that they’ve been vaccinated against Covid-19. The extra credentials stem from an order issued earlier this month by New York City Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio requiring anyone eating inside restaurants, working out in gyms or attending movies, concerts and theatrical productions to show proof that they have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine.”

ABC News: As states cancel large events due to delta variant, their economies are taking a hit. “A festival in New Orleans. Concerts in Nashville, Tennessee. A comic book convention in Atlanta. As the delta variant surges across the country, states with low COVID vaccination rates are reeling from a loss in tourism dollars due to large-event cancellations and postponements.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

New York Daily News: Dozens of doctors in Florida take part in symbolic walkout to protest unvaccinated COVID-19 patients . “Nearly 75 doctors in South Florida took part in a symbolic walkout Monday to protest the overwhelming number of unvaccinated coronavirus patients receiving care at their hospital in Palm Beach Gardens.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

KHN: Hot Spots Where Covid Vaccination Lags Push Experimental Antibody Treatment. ” [Joelle] Ruppert and her husband, Michael, 61, who also contracted covid-19, are among thousands of people in the U.S. who in recent weeks have rushed to receive infusions of the powerful antibody cocktails shown to reduce hospitalizations by 70% when given promptly to high-risk patients. The rush has been fueled in no small part by governors in Southern states, where vaccinations lag and hospitalizations are soaring with delta-variant infections. Republican Govs. Ron DeSantis of Florida and Greg Abbott of Texas are among leaders touting the antibody treatments even as they downplay vaccination and other measures that health officials say can prevent illness in the first place.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

Boise State Public Radio: Idaho Is “Dangerously Close” To Crisis Standards Of Care. “Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Director Dave Jeppesen visited a Treasure Valley intensive care unit last weekend. ‘It’s really hard to describe the amount of sadness and suffering that’s occurring there,’ he told reporters during a media briefing Tuesday. Hospitalizations because of COVID-19 in the state are nearing peaks reached last winter, while ICU admissions have already surpassed that point. Like last winter, hospitals are resorting to treating patients in hallways and conference rooms.”

CBS News: COVID-19 cases continue to spike, leading to shortages of ICU beds and problems for schools. “Intensive care unit beds are in short supply as coronavirus cases continue to spike across the country, fueled by the Delta variant. The nation saw a 14% jump in the number of COVID-19 cases caused by the highly contagious strain, according to the CDC. ICU beds in Tennessee are in such high demand that one unit had to be converted from cardiac care. A tented field hospital was built alongside the University of Mississippi Jackson. ”

INSTITUTIONS

Library of Congress: As the Library Sleeps. “Have you wondered what the Library was like when the buildings were nearly empty during the first months of the pandemic? During the Library’s extended closure beginning in March 2020, a team of volunteers from the Conservation Division monitored our historic buildings for leaks, environmental changes, and threats to collection safety. This post describes how we adapted to protect the Library’s collections from harm while the storage areas remained unoccupied.”

Portland Press Herald: Maine State Music Theatre cancels shows after deluge of refunds. “Maine State Music Theatre is canceling its fall schedule at the Westbrook Performing Arts Center, after next month’s run of the musical ‘Jersey Boys,’ because of poor ticket sales. Curt Dale Clark, the theater’s artistic director, attributed the cancellation to controversy over the theater’s decision to require ticket-holders to show proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test, as well as people’s general concerns about the virus.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Washington Post: Carnival Cruise to require vaccination proof for all passengers 12 and over. “Carnival Cruise Line is tightening its vaccine mandate beginning this week, announcing that vaccination will be required for all passengers except children under 12 and adults with medical conditions that prohibit inoculation. The move came Sunday, three days after the Bahamas issued an emergency order barring cruise ships from entering the country’s ports beginning Sept. 3 unless all passengers over 12 have gotten the shots. An exception is made for those with medical issues that preclude inoculation.”

AP: Disney Reaches Vaccination Agreement With Union Workers. ” Florida’s Walt Disney World will now require union employees as well as non-union and salaried workers to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 to keep their jobs at the theme park. The deal was reached Monday with a union coalition, shortly after the Pfizer vaccine earned full Food and Drug Administration approval.”

New York Times: Offices Dangle Beehives and Garden Plots to Coax Workers Back. “Office workers who were sent home during pandemic lockdowns often sought refuge in nature, tending to houseplants, setting up bird feeders and sitting outdoors with their laptops. Now, as companies try to coax skittish employees back to the office and building owners compete for tenants when vacancy rates are soaring, many have hit on the idea of making the office world feel more like the natural world.”

UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

Global News: U.S. extending land border restrictions with Canada, Mexico for another 30 days. “Canadians won’t be able to drive into the United States for vacation for another month, American officials say. A spokesperson with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) told Global News Friday America’s land and ferry crossings with Canada and Mexico will be closed until at least Sept. 21.”

New York Times: About 89% of Rental Assistance Funds Have Not Been Distributed, Figures Show. “The $46.5 billion rental aid program created to pay rent accrued during the pandemic continues to disburse money at a slow pace, as the White House braces for a Supreme Court order that could strike down a new national moratorium on evictions.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: Covid: Antibody tests offered to public for first time. “Antibody tests are to be widely offered to the UK public for the first time in a new programme that aims to find out more about how much natural protection people have after getting coronavirus. The government scheme will offer tests to thousands of adults each day.”

Yahoo News Singapore: Singapore won’t reach COVID herd immunity: Lawrence Wong . “Singapore will not reach herd immunity in the pandemic despite its high COVID-19 vaccination rate, said Finance Minister Lawrence Wong on Thursday (19 August). ‘The path towards being a COVID resilient nation is going to be a long and hard slog. Even with very high vaccination rates, we are not going to reach herd immunity, where the outbreak just fizzles out,’ Wong warned during a virtual multi-ministry taskforce conference.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Washington Post: How the U.S. vaccination drive came to rely on an army of consultants. “When Gavin Newsom outsourced key components of California’s vaccine rollout to the private sector during the pandemic’s darkest days last winter, the Democratic governor promised the changes would benefit the most vulnerable. His ‘number one’ reason for handing the reins to Blue Shield of California, an Oakland-based health insurance company, was ‘equity’ — delivering vaccine doses to those at greatest risk, many in communities of color, he said in February. But the $15 million contract with Blue Shield, plus another $13 million for McKinsey, did not deliver on that promise, according to state and county officials, as well as public health experts.”

Washington Post: Some Nebraskans outraged at state’s recruiting ad for unvaccinated nurses: ‘It feels insulting to the profession’. “When Abbey Klein opened her mailbox on Monday, she found a postcard from the state of Nebraska advertising nursing jobs with bonuses as high as $5,000. Klein, a registered nurse who lives in Omaha, said she had received similar ads from the state in the past. But something stood out on this card. Bold letters inside a bright box read: ‘No mandated COVID-19 Vaccination.’ The message was under a photo of smiling health-care workers.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

CNN: So many people in this Texas town got Covid-19 that the school district shut down and then the city essentially closed. “It seemed that just about everyone in Iraan knew someone who was fighting Covid-19. During a two-week span this month, 119 people were tested for the virus and 50 tested positive, according to Iraan General Hospital CEO Jason Rybolt. That’s a 42% positivity rate.” The population of the town is about 1200.

Gambit: From bars to the Saints game, New Orleanians take new COVID 19 vaccination rules in stride. “A week into new proof-of-vaccination and masking rules, the constitution remains firmly in place and normal New Orleanians are going about their daily lives — all while showing their vaccination cards to bartenders, restaurant hosts and Superdome security staff.”

Miami Herald: ‘The numbers don’t lie.’ COVID hits Miami’s justice system with deaths, staff shortages. “… in Miami-Dade jails, officials now say they may be extending shifts to help deal with the rising number of staff members — and inmates — who have been infected with or been exposed to COVID-19 in the latest surge in South Florida. As of Friday, 136 employees were home quarantining. That’s in addition to 188 inmates in the jail system who are positive with COVID, the department said.”

CNN: Concert celebrating New York City’s comeback cut short by severe weather ahead of Hurricane Henri. “Thousands of people celebrating the return of New York City at a concert in Central Park were interrupted by severe weather ahead of Hurricane Henri’s anticipated Sunday landfall. Some of music’s biggest names descended on the Great Lawn at New York City’s iconic Central Park for the ‘We Love NYC: The Homecoming Concert’ on Saturday to perform for a vaccinated crowd of 60,000.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Washington Post: Even LDS leaders are struggling to get Mormons vaccinated against the coronavirus. “Less than half of eligible residents of Utah, where members constitute a majority of the population, are fully vaccinated, placing the state in the lower half of the nation. One study revealed that 33 percent of Mormons were vaccine hesitant, with another 17 percent refusing the vaccine altogether. This skepticism, despite encouragement from LDS leaders in the typically hierarchical religion, stems from Latter-day Saints’ embrace of political and religious conservatism in the wake of World War II.”

Tallahassee Democrat: COVID: Tallahassee ER doctor ousted from hospital after promoting $50 mask opt-out letters. “An emergency room physician who charged $50 for opt-out letters to Leon County parents who don’t want their kids to wear masks in school has been removed from Capital Regional Medical Center following a social media outcry for his ouster.”

WHAS: One-time vaccine skeptic recounts his fight against COVID. “Ethan Koehler contracted the virus in July and says he sees things differently after sharing anti-COVID and anti-vaccine messages on social media.”

People: Slipknot’s Corey Taylor ‘Devastated’ After Testing Positive for COVID-19: ‘I’m Very, Very Sick’. “Slipknot singer Corey Taylor has contracted a breakthrough case of COVID-19 that’s made him ‘very, very sick.’ The musician, 47, was forced to call off his upcoming appearance at a Michigan pop culture convention this weekend after testing positive for the coronavirus, Rolling Stone reports.”

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Vaccinated Henry County teacher who died of COVID-19 loved education, family. “[Walter] Kearse, 36, died August 13, one of a growing number of so-called breakthrough cases among people vaccinated against the disease but infected nonetheless as the highly infectious delta variant ravages the country. ‘Please man, take care of y’all selves,’ he said in a Facebook video posted Aug. 3 from a bed at Piedmont Fayette Hospital. In the post an oxygen tube is strapped to his nose and his voice is labored as he tries to speak.”

WSB TV: 29-year-old father, Georgia corrections agent dies of COVID-19. “A 29-year-old father and special agent with the Georgia Department of Corrections has died of COVID-19, his family reported Saturday. Nick Boutwell, of Perry, Georgia, died Friday after battling the virus for over a month. His 1-year-old daughter, Rylee, was hospitalized but recovered.”

OPB: Patient with COVID dies waiting for ICU bed in Roseburg. “A patient with COVID-19 died on Wednesday while waiting for an intensive care unit bed at Mercy Health Hospital in Roseburg. The medical center said the patient was in its emergency department and the ICU was full with other COVID-19 patients. Hospital officials had expanded the ICU to other floors but were unable to find space for the patient.”

K-12 EDUCATION

ProPublica: A Boy With an Autoimmune Disease Was Ready to Learn in Person. Then His State Banned Mask Mandates.. “For families whose children are too young to be eligible for vaccinations, the delta surge has once again left many parents weighing the risks of in-person learning, especially in states that are bucking federal recommendations to impose universal masking in schools. Some families have reluctantly shifted back to virtual instruction. Others have pulled their children out of the public school system altogether, opting for home-schooling. But for families like the Gambrels, the stakes are exponentially higher. Children like Jayden, with complex health conditions, often are among those most in need of direct, specialized instruction that can only be delivered in person. Those same health conditions can also put children like Jayden at higher risk of infection and illness.”

NBC News: What Missouri schools learned the hard way about rapid Covid testing. “The spread of the delta variant has mired communities in emotional fights about how to safely send children — most of whom are unvaccinated — back to classrooms, particularly in states like Missouri, which has been bedeviled by a high aversion to mask mandates and low vaccination rates. As classes begin, once again schools must weigh testing and other strategies to limit Covid-19’s spread — potentially without a deep supply of test kits available.”

K-12 EDUCATION – FLORIDA

Washington Post: More than half of Florida’s students now go to schools mandating masks in defiance of DeSantis. “More than half of Florida’s students are now enrolled in public school districts with mask mandates despite threats of sanctions from the administration of Gov. Ron DeSantis (R), who decreed that only parents can decide whether their children wear masks. On Tuesday night, two school districts — in Orange and Indian River counties — approved mandates to try to stop the spread of the delta variant of the novel coronavirus. They joined eight other districts that recently moved to require a medical exemption from a doctor to opt out.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WRAL: UNC identifies COVID cluster in residence hall, the second cluster this month. “At least five students in the Avery Residence Hall have tested positive for COVID-19. This is the second confirmed COVID-19 cluster connected to UNC so far this semester. University officials said in an effort to respect students’ privacy, they would not be sharing any additional details about the cluster.”

HEALTH

Poynter: What are the legit medical exemptions for vaccine mandates?. “There is no single list that every employer or business will accept to exempt a person from a vaccine mandate, but there are some more I want to cite. Philadelphia Inquirer reporter Tom Avril wrote a bang-up piece on this issue that I used as a launchpad for this item. Here are some conditions and scenarios that people or health care professionals commonly cite when seeking a medical exemption.”

PsyPost: Mindfulness meditation training reduces the negative emotional impact of COVID-19 news exposure. “Ample research supports the use of mindfulness meditation for better mental health, but it was unclear whether these effects would hold true in the context of COVID-19 with prolonged quarantine and related stressors. In our study, we found that a regular dose of mindfulness practice every day for 10 days provide a buffer against the negative impact of COVID-19 news consumption.”

Healthline: How the ‘Sunday Scaries’ Have Become Worse During COVID-19. “More than half of working people in the United States report experiencing the ‘Sunday scaries,’ a phenomenon in which people experience stress or anxiety on a Sunday before the coming workweek. A LinkedIn survey of 3,000 Americans found that 66 percent of respondents said they felt anxious or stressed on Sunday. In addition, 41 percent said the COVID-19 pandemic has either caused the Sunday scaries or made them worse.”

RESEARCH

BBC: Covid infection protection waning in double jabbed. “Researchers say they are seeing some waning of protection against Covid infections in double-jabbed people. The real-world study includes data on positive Covid PCR test results between May and July 2021 among more than a million people who had received two doses of Pfizer or AstraZeneca vaccine.”

NewsWise: Clinical trial shows testing saliva for COVID-19 is as reliable as nasal swab. “In a real-world trial, a team of clinician-researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) have demonstrated that tests of self-collected saliva provided comparable results to tests performed by trained healthcare professionals using NP swabs. The researchers concluded that saliva tests detect 93 percent of COVID-19 infections in an outpatient setting.”

CNNWire: CDC study shows COVID vaccine less protective against delta but still reduces risk by two-thirds. “Vaccine effectiveness against COVID-19 infection dropped from 91% to 66% once the delta variant accounted for the majority of circulating virus, according to a study published Tuesday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ‘While we did see a reduction in the protection of the Covid-19 vaccine against the Delta variant, it’s still two-thirds reduction of risk,’ lead author Ashley Fowlkes, an epidemiologist for CDC Covid-19 Emergency Response, told CNN on Tuesday.”

NewsWise: Early COVID-19 vaccine campaign in US prevented 140,000 deaths. “The early COVID-19 vaccination campaign in the U.S. prevented nearly 140,000 deaths and 3 million cases of COVID-19 by the second week of May, according to a new study. As a result of early vaccination efforts, the average state experienced five fewer deaths from COVID-19 per 10,000 adult residents. The study estimates the number of lives saved during the first five months of the vaccination campaign in each of the 50 states and Washington, DC.”

NewsWise: Treating newly infected COVID-19 patients with plasma from COVID survivors demonstrates no significant benefit, study finds. “A new study published by the National Institutes of Health found that COVID-19 convalescent plasma did not prevent disease progression in an at-risk group of COVID patients when administered within one week of their symptoms. The trial, which was stopped in February 2021 due to lack of efficacy based on planned interim analysis, analyzed data from 450 patients who visited emergency departments with laboratory-confirmed COVID diagnoses and symptoms that began within a week.”

OUTBREAKS

Sky News: COVID-19: Almost 5,000 coronavirus cases investigated after Cornwall music and surf festival. “Almost 5,000 coronavirus cases are suspected to be linked to a surf and music festival in Cornwall. Health officials have launched an investigation after it emerged 4,700 people had tested positive for COVID-19 following Boardmasters near Newquay earlier this month.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

Business Insider: An Alabama man who called himself the ‘vaccine police’ told pharmacists at a Missouri Walmart that they will be ‘executed’ if they continued giving COVID-19 shots. “A man, who calls himself the ‘vaccine police,’ entered a Walmart in Springfield, Missouri to put staff ‘on public notice,’ telling pharmacists they could be ‘executed’ if they carry out COVID-19 vaccine shots, according to reports.”

WTSP: Woman who said she had COVID and coughed, spit on food at grocery store sent to jail. “The woman accused of purposely coughing on fresh food inside a grocery store was sentenced on Tuesday in Luzerne County. We still didn’t know much about COVID-19 at the time when Margaret Cirko purposely coughed and spit all over the food displays inside a Gerrity’s supermarket in Hanover Township while saying, ‘I have the virus, now you’re all going to get sick.'”

OPINION

Miami Herald: Has DeSantis muzzled Florida’s top doc? Rivkees, a pediatrician, silent as kids get COVID | Editorial . “Where in the world is Florida’s surgeon general — a pediatrician, no less — as COVID numbers spike for kids in Florida? We may have trouble summoning up his face, but Dr. Scott Rivkees was named to the top medical job in the state by Gov. Ron DeSantis in April 2019.”

CNN: Conservative radio host’s Covid death should prompt others to end vaccine lies. “Sadly, for the Valentine family, Phil won’t come back home. I sincerely was rooting for him to recover, as a fellow radio host and human being. I hoped that if Phil followed through on his promise to encourage his conservative listeners to get vaccinated, it could have saved countless lives. The question now, though, is: Will other conservative media outlets, from Fox News to local radio hosts, honor Valentine’s memory by finally stopping spewing misinformation about the vaccine?”

POLITICS

NBC News: Delivery of full Arizona ‘audit’ report delayed after Cyber Ninjas test positive for Covid. “Arizona Republicans will only receive a partial draft of findings from their partisan review of 2020 ballots on Monday after three people from the private company leading the so-called audit tested positive for Covid, state Senate President Karen Fann said in a statement.”

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August 26, 2021 at 01:18AM
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Freedmen’s Bureau Records, Japan Cultural Expo, Australia Paralympians, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 25, 2021

Freedmen’s Bureau Records, Japan Cultural Expo, Australia Paralympians, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 25, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

BusinessWire: Ancestry® Adds New Freedmen’s Bureau Collection that Enables Family History Discoveries for Descendants of Formerly Enslaved People (PRESS RELEASE). “Today, Ancestry® spotlights an important, yet often overlooked, part of American history by unveiling the world’s largest digitized and searchable collection of Freedmen’s Bureau and Freedman’s Bank records. This addition of more than 3.5 million records can help descendants of previously enslaved people in the U.S. learn more about their families. The collection can enable meaningful family history breakthroughs because it is likely the first time newly freed African Americans would appear in records after Emancipation, as many enslaved people were previously excluded from standard census and federal documents.” The collection is free to access.

New-to-me, from TimeOut Tokyo: 3 exhibits to check out for free at the new Japan Cultural Expo online museum. “With a theme of ‘Humanity and Nature’, the Japan Cultural Expo kicked off in 2019 in the lead-up to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games to promote Japanese culture through events across the country. Many of the events had an online component as well, so existing footage from the multi-year festival has been combined with some brand new content, and made available for free on the Japan Cultural Expo Virtual Platform.”

Canberra CityNews: Artsday / Collection celebrates paralympians. “WITH the Paralympic Games on screens this week, the National Film and Sound Archive has released a new curated collection celebrating the stories behind some of Australia’s finest athletes allowing viewers to relive or discover the victories of Australian paralympians, from 1994 to now.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

ZDNet: Trello adds new free features, introduces new tier for small businesses. “Trello, the Atlassian-owned project management and collaboration tool, announced on Tuesday that it’s offering more capabilities for free and introducing a new tier for small businesses. The expansion comes as Trello marches towards its goal of reaching 100 million users and serving as the ‘command center’ for all of your productivity tools.”

UNC University Libraries: University Libraries releases 21-Day Racial Equity Challenge syllabus. “Libraries and library workers interested in examining racism, bias and inequity have a new tool to do so. The University Libraries at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has released the syllabus of its recent 21-Day Racial Equity Challenge focused on libraries and archives. The syllabus is the work of the University Libraries’ IDEA (inclusion, diversity, equity and accessibility) Council.” The syllabus is available as a Creative Commons licensed PDF. A lot of the resources in it are freely available, though some are specific to UNC libraries.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Register: WEB@30: The Register pokes around historical hardware of the WWW . “Double-u, double-u, double-u. ‘The World Wide Web is the only thing I know of whose shortened form takes three times longer to say than what it’s short for,’ as the great Douglas Adams once said. But for those who fancy eyeballing exhibits from acoustic couplers and coffee-cams to dot-matrix printers and cartoon badgers in the venerable author’s home town, WEB@30 Cambridge is well worth a look.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Wired: 38M Records Were Exposed Online—Including Contact-Tracing Info. “MORE THAN A thousand web apps mistakenly exposed 38 million records on the open internet, including data from a number of Covid-19 contact tracing platforms, vaccination sign-ups, job application portals, and employee databases. The data included a range of sensitive information, from people’s phone numbers and home addresses to social security numbers and Covid-19 vaccination status.”

Herald-Tribune: Lawsuit claims Florida failed to craft criminal database. ” A lawsuit filed Tuesday claims Florida officials failed to comply with a new law requiring creation of a public database tracking how justice is delivered across the state – which advocates say is key toward exposing racial disparities in criminal sentencing. The American Civil Liberties Union of Florida sued in Broward County Circuit Court, naming as defendants the county’s clerk of court and sheriff, along with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and Corrections Department.”

AP: Biden to tackle cybersecurity with tech, finance leaders. “President Joe Biden is meeting Wednesday with top executives from some of the country’s leading technology companies and financial institutions as the White House works to enlist the private sector’s help in firming up cybersecurity defenses against increasingly sophisticated attacks.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

CNET: Waymo launches Trusted Tester shuttle program in San Francisco. “Waymo recently took the opportunity to show off a little by publishing some images of what its fifth-generation Driver AI sees while navigating a public road. It turns out that those images were just a prelude to Tuesday’s announcement that Waymo will be offering its shuttle service in San Francisco, but not everyone can use it.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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August 25, 2021 at 11:44PM
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China Mythology, Australian Theatre History, Museum of Black Joy, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, August 25, 2021

China Mythology, Australian Theatre History, Museum of Black Joy, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, August 25, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

China Daily: Online art exhibition presents Chinese mythologies. “An online art exhibition titled The New Classic of Mountains and Seas shows 124 contemporary works based on original Chinese myths and legends.” I took a quick look. In English and Chinese with quite a nice design. There’s a bit of load time but I thought it was worth it.

Noise 11: The Production Company Documents Its Australian Theatre History Online. “Now The Production Company website documents it all from the very first show ‘Mame’ in 1999 through to the final season in 2019 with included David Bowie’s final project with the Australian premiere of ‘Lazarus’ (and to date the only Australian production of ‘Lazarus’). It was an incredible output.”

Black Enterprise: A Museum Celebrating Black Joy Brings A Healing And Powerful Perspective Of The Black Experience. “The digital Museum of Black Joy is open in Philadelphia. It is an affirming exhibit by curator and creator Andrea Walls. The 57-year-old is a Pushcart Prize-nominated poet. She began studying photography in 2018 and launched what’s called the ‘borderless exhibition’ on the first day of January 2020. She noticed stories involving Blackness were often about struggles and violence rather than jubilation.”

EVENTS

Library of Congress: Library of Congress National Book Festival Announces Schedule of Events. “The 2021 Library of Congress National Book Festival will feature more than 100 authors, poets and writers in a range of formats — all celebrating the festival theme, ‘Open a Book, Open the World.’ The 2021 virtual festival programs will roll out over 10 days in an extended schedule Sept. 17-26.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: 8 Ways to Make Everything on Your iPhone Easier to See. “If you frequently find yourself wishing for larger text or icons on your phone, you’re not alone. Some people prefer microscopic font sizes but others want large, bold text everywhere. Luckily, there are things you can do to make text more readable—and everything else easier to see—while using your iPhone.” A slideshow, but good tips.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Boing Boing: Youtube removes video of woman playing harp with a distortion pedal because it “endangers children”. “Last week, Emily Hopkins ruled Youtube for a day after attaching a roaring distortion pedal to her harp and performing enchanting and extremely hardcore melodies thereof. YouTube removed it citing its ‘child endangerment’ policy.”

Rest of World: Forget emoji, the real Unicode drama is over an endangered Indian script. “The effort to digitize the Tulu script is a small slice of a much larger worldwide problem. Like many languages around the world, Tulu might soon disappear: UNESCO identifies it as one of 192 languages from India that are ‘in danger.’ Globally, 40% of the over 7,000 languages spoken by humanity are at risk. In the last century, hundreds have gone extinct, taking with them stories, cultural traditions, ethnic identities, and a bounty of other information from the past. One way to preserve a language is to ensure it’s digitized, so that its speakers can continue expressing themselves as technology evolves.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

ReviewGeek: EA Makes Its Best Accessibility Gaming Tech Available to All Developers. “EA is opening the patents for five of its accessibility technologies, which are useful for both gaming and general software design. Any person or business can use these technologies for free, and EA has even open-sourced some code to make adoption and adaptation easier. Most of EA’s accessibility tech revolves around colorblindness and low vision.”

The Canadian Press: Conservatives delete ‘Willy Wonka’ ad from Twitter after copyright complaint. “The Conservative party has deleted an ad mocking Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau from Twitter after a copyright infringement claim was made against it. The ad, which was released on Friday, depicted Trudeau’s face pasted on top of an image of a bratty character from classic children’s film ‘Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.'”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: Are These the Hidden Deepfakes in the Anthony Bourdain Movie?. “WHEN Roadrunner, a documentary about late TV chef and traveler Anthony Bourdain, opened in theaters last month, its director, Morgan Neville, spiced up promotional interviews with an unconventional disclosure for a documentarian. Some words viewers hear Bourdain speak in the film were faked by artificial intelligence software used to mimic the star’s voice.”

CNET: Trump’s tweets blocked for election misinformation still spread to other sites. “NYU researchers analyzed tweets from Trump that Twitter flagged for misinformation between Nov. 1, 2020, and Jan. 8, 2021. They also identified public posts on Facebook, Instagram and Reddit that contained the same message as the Trump tweets. While limiting engagement with Trump’s tweets did curb its spread on Twitter, the same messages were posted more often on Facebook, Instagram and Reddit than tweets that just included a warning label or weren’t restricted, researchers found.”

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

Penn State News: New tool could help authors bust writer’s block in novel-length works. “Authors experiencing writer’s block could soon have a new way to help develop the next section of their story. Researchers at the Penn State College of Information Sciences and Technology recently introduced a new technology that forecasts the future development of an ongoing written story.” Good morning, Internet…

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August 25, 2021 at 05:32PM
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Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Facebook, Apple Maps, iCloud Photos, More: Tuesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 24, 2021

Facebook, Apple Maps, iCloud Photos, More: Tuesday Evening ResearchBuzz, August 24, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Facebook test brings voice and video calling back to main app. “Facebook is bringing voice and video calling back to its main mobile app, according to a Monday report from Bloomberg. The features have been absent from the main mobile app since 2014, when Facebook moved them into its separate Messenger app. The features reportedly began appearing for some users on Monday as part of a test.”

MacRumors: Apple Expands Native Maps Rating and Review Feature to the U.S.. “Apple appears to be expanding on the native Apple Maps review functionality that it first introduced in iOS 14, allowing ‌Apple Maps‌ users in the United States the option to review places of interest, restaurants, and other locations.”

USEFUL STUFF

Lifehacker: How to Organize All Your iCloud Photos. “One of the great things about iCloud is that you can store lots of pictures. One of the bad things about iCloud is that you can store lots of pictures. Here are some tips to help you back up and organize all your thousands of photos without doing too much sifting through memories of Halloween 2017.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Well UNC: Carolina Performing Arts announces ‘Southern Futures’. “Southern Futures at CPA will produce new works, collaborations and research on social justice, racial equity and the American South. The organization has named Grammy and MacArthur Award-winning musician Rhiannon Giddens to a three-year research residency at the core of the initiative, beginning in spring 2022. Giddens will focus on discovering and sharing cultural artifacts and local histories that challenge entrenched narratives and monolithic thinking on topics central to Southern Futures, a collaborative initiative of the College of Arts & Sciences, University Libraries, Carolina Performing Arts and The Center for the Study of the American South.”

British Library: The Backstory to Digitising the Barbados Gazette. “Today is the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition. Today also sees the launch of the second crowdsourcing task of the Agents of Enslavement project. To coincide with these two events we are delighted to share this guest post by Dr Lissa Paul, a literary scholar at Brock University who specialises in children’s literature and Caribbean literary studies.”

CNN: Irish tech firm helps kids’ voices be heard. “While personal artificial intelligence (AI) assistants are becoming increasingly integrated in our everyday lives, they are just one use of voice tech — and are primarily designed for adults. Irish tech startup SoapBox Labs wants that to change. The Dublin-based firm has developed speech recognition technology designed specifically for children — and it’s already in use across a range of applications, from toys to education apps.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Ubergizmo: Hacker That Stole $600 Million In Cryptocurrency Has Returned All Of It. “As some of you might have heard, about $600 million worth of cryptocurrency was stolen from the Poly Network not too long ago. However, in an interesting twist, the hacker who stole it returned half of it. Some speculated that it was due to the difficulty of unloading stolen crypto, while the hacker claimed that it was always their intention to return it. That being said, an update from Poly Network has revealed that the full amount that was stolen has since been returned to them.”

9to5Mac: Apple already scans iCloud Mail for CSAM, but not iCloud Photos. “Apple has confirmed to me that it already scans iCloud Mail for CSAM, and has been doing so since 2019. It has not, however, been scanning iCloud Photos or iCloud backups. The clarification followed me querying a rather odd statement by the company’s anti-fraud chief: that Apple was ‘the greatest platform for distributing child porn.'”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Data Center Knowledge: What Has to Happen for Quantum Computing to Hit Mainstream?. “If you stretch the timeline of quantum computing onto the timeline of IBM computers, we’re somewhere between the vacuum-tube-powered machines of the 1940s and the models built on transistors, integrated circuits, and silicon of the 1960s. And we’re much closer to the former.”

AFP: ‘Always there’: the AI chatbot comforting China’s lonely millions. “After a painful break-up from a cheating ex, Beijing-based human resources manager Melissa was introduced to someone new by a friend late last year. He replies to her messages at all hours of the day, tells jokes to cheer her up but is never needy, fitting seamlessly into her busy big city lifestyle. Perfect boyfriend material, maybe — but he’s not real.” Good evening, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



August 25, 2021 at 05:18AM
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Ben Grosser Digital Art, Asia Pacific Climate Change, GPO, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 24, 2021

Ben Grosser Digital Art, Asia Pacific Climate Change, GPO, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, August 24, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Illinois News Bureau: Illinois artist Ben Grosser’s solo show imagines ‘Software for Less’. “A University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign professor of new media in the School of Art and Design, the co-founder of the Critical Technology Studies Lab at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications and a faculty affiliate with the School of Information Sciences and the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory, [Ben] Grosser makes artwork that provides alternative ways of experiencing software and considers its cultural, social and political effects, how it changes our behavior and who it benefits.”

BusinessWorld: UN ESCAP launches risk and resilience database for Asia Pacific. “THE UN ECONOMIC and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UN ESCAP) has announced the launch of an online portal to track various hazard hotspots as well as climate adaptation efforts across the Asia Pacific region, featuring up-to-date information from over 50 countries including the Philippines.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Google Blog: Experience the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics with Google and YouTube. ”
While some of the Tokyo 2020 Games are over, others are just beginning: The Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games are right around the corner. And just like earlier this summer, there are few ways you can enjoy the action from home.”I think they mean “a few” and this is an unfortunate typo…

GPO: GPO Makes Available Statute Compilations In USLM XML Format. “The U.S. Government Publishing Office (GPO) and its legislative data partners in the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate have made Statute Compilations available in USLM XML format. This new format makes documents easier to use, read, and download. The public can access the compilations on GPO’s trusted digital repository govinfo, the one-stop site for information published by the Government.” USLM stands for United States Legislative Markup. You can read the schema user guide here.

Ubergizmo: WhatsApp Launches Public Beta Program For Its Desktop App. “The app already has betas for its mobile apps on iOS and Android, but now according to WABetaInfo, it seems that WhatsApp is also working on bringing its public beta program for its desktop app as well.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Wired: On Roblox, Kids Learn It’s Hard to Earn Money Making Games. “ROBLOX has become a video game titan, in recent years dominating the world of kids’ gaming and earning $454 million in revenue last quarter alone. A new report argues that success is built on exploiting young game developers, many of them children, who are making content for the game.”

Washington Post: In China’s blossoming live-streaming scene, new stars take root: Succulents. “The thick, fleshy plants have been growing in popularity in China for nearly a decade, but only recently collided with live-streaming in e-commerce, a $60 billion industry that got a massive boost during the pandemic. Hundreds of thousands of people are logging on daily to admire these vegetating celebrities, oohing as chattering hosts turn and twirl them around, showing off blushes of new color, entire centimeters of growth, or — what a treat! — some velvety new leaves.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

10 Boston: New Hampshire Town Loses $2.3M in Taxpayer Money to Cyberattack. “Peterborough, a town of just over 6,000 residents, is located in southern New Hampshire, about 35 miles west of Manchester. [Tyler] Ward and [Nicole] MacStay said town officials learned on July 26 that the ConVal School District, which serves Peterborough and eight other surrounding towns, had not received its monthly $1.2 million transfer form the town.”

The Conversation: The more video streaming services we get, the more we’ll turn to piracy. “We now have more than a dozen ‘subscription video on demand’ services to choose from, with many dozens more options available worldwide to anyone with a VPN to get around geoblocks. But all this competition isn’t actually making things easier. It’s likely all this ‘choice’ will see more of us turning to piracy to watch our favourite films and televisions shows.” Or maybe finding something else to watch? Just an idea.

OTHER STUFF I THINK IS COOL

BBC: JMW Turner painting goes on display for first time since 1833. “A Turner painting of Malmesbury Abbey in Wiltshire has gone on public display for the first time in nearly 200 years. The watercolour is being shown at the town’s local museum, as part of a scheme to encourage people back to small museums and heritage sites. Other objects going on display around the UK include a 160-million-year-old crocodile, a rare Bronze Age sword and the original Jolly Fisherman painting.” Good afternoon, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



August 24, 2021 at 11:26PM
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Backstop Your Google Alerts With Bing News RSS Feeds

Backstop Your Google Alerts With Bing News RSS Feeds
By ResearchBuzz

Oh to be Odin. That guy didn’t need any Internet monitoring tools. He had Huginn and Muninn, his ravens, who flew around the world and brought him information. But I don’t have ravens, so I rely on things like curated Twitter lists and RSS feeds and Google Alerts.

Using several tools for information curation isn’t to be flashy or complicated. It’s to make sure that I’m looking in all the corners of the Internet for useful news and resources. Of course there will be some overlap with my results, but I see that as a good sign: it means my coverage is thorough.

But when I lose one of my curation sources it puts a serious crimp in my information flow. When Nuzzel shut down, I had to build out more alerts and RSS feeds to work around that loss.  And now Google Alerts is acting flaky; I’ve gotten only a few Google Alerts in the last three days.

Google Alerts surfaces a lot of news for me. What am I to do? I can’t just sit around and wait for it to be fixed. I need an alternative.

There aren’t huge numbers of news search engines anymore since the Facebook / Google juggernaut has kind of flattened everything. But good news: there’s still Bing News. And better news: it has RSS feeds!

This afternoon I figured out how to take my Google Alerts and turn them into Bing News RSS feeds. It takes several steps but they’re not complicated. If you don’t have a ton of Google Alerts it won’t even take you that long.

Here we go!

Grab your Google Alerts List

Start by going to https://www.google.com/alerts . It’ll show you a list of Google Alerts that looks something like this:

Yes, I have 176 Google Alerts, though some of them are searches I’m trying to get right for a Patreon patron.

Google has a data export service called Google Takeout, but as far as I can tell it does not allow export of Google Alert data. So we’ll have to do this the sloppy way.

Right-click on your Google Alerts page and choose Save As… and just save the whole HTML file. You should end up with an HTML file in your Downloads folder that looks something like Google%20Alerts%20-%20Monitor%20the%20Web%20for%20interesting%20new%20content.html .

Now we need to winkle out the meat of the file – all those useful Google Alerts.

Get The Good Stuff and Clean It Up

Open Google Drive and choose New, then Google Docs. DO NOT choose File Upload because you’ll get a screen full of garbage.

Once you’re on a blank Google Docs page, choose File -> Open, and upload your Google Alerts HTML file.

Once you’ve uploaded the file, it’ll look unformatted and gunky but that’s okay, we’re gonna make it look nice. You’ll get some Web page stuff at the top, and some Web page stuff at the bottom, and your Google Alerts in the middle. They’ll be in a list that looks like this:

Highlight and copy just the list of Google Alerts.

Give Your List a Scrub, Part One: Review, Remove, and Possibly Add

Paste the list of your Google Alerts into the text editor of your choice. If you have a lot, you might need to go through them and remove anything you don’t want to reproduce in Google Alerts. In my case I took out several marginal alerts and a few I wanted to tweak with Bing’s syntax before I tried them. If you only have a few Google Alerts you won’t have to do a thorough once-over, but give your list a quick glance and see if there’s anything you want to adjust or even alerts you want to add (just put them at the end of your list, with a new line for each one.)

Give Your List a Scrub, Part Two: Remove Formatting, Alphabetize, and Add Line Breaks

After you’ve removed all Google Alerts you don’t want to include and added any you want to keep, go to https://www.textfixer.com/tools/remove-duplicate-lines.php . Paste your list in the top box and choose Alphabetical Sort. (You don’t have to, but it’s easier if you have lots of alerts to review them in alphabetical order.) Click the Remove Duplicate Lines button and you’ll get a cleaned up, alphabetized list of your Google Alerts. Copy that list.

You’re not quite done with your list. If you tried to copy it to Google Sheets the way it is, you’d get all your Google Alerts in the same line and that won’t work for making RSS feeds. You need to add line breaks. Lucky for you the TextFixer people have you covered. Go to https://www.textfixer.com/tools/add-line-breaks.php . Copy your list to the top box and choose Convert line breaks to paragraph breaks.

Copy your newly line-break’d list. Now we can get serious.

Make a Google Sheet

Go into Google Docs and create a new blank Google Sheet, then copy your cleaned up, line-break’d list to the first column.

Get rid of those blank lines in about two seconds by clicking Data -> Sort Sheet by Column A, A→Z .

Let’s look at what we have. We have a Google Sheet full of your Google Alerts, alphabetized. Now we’re going to get our Bing News URL, encode our queries, and concatenate the queries and the URLs into RSS feeds. It sounds complicated but it’s easy thanks to Google Sheet functions.

Setting Up the Bing URL

Select the first two lines of the sheet, right-click and choose Insert 2 Above. Your sheet should look like this:

We’re going to use that first row as a staging area for our Bing News URL. Here’s what a basic Bing News search RSS feed looks like, with QUERY taking the place of our actual query.

https://www.bing.com/news/search?q=QUERY&format=rss

To make our RSS feeds, we need to be able to combine the beginning of the URL with our Google Alerts query, then add the &format=rss at the end to get it as RSS. To do that we need to split the URL into parts.

Put this part of the URL in cell A1:

https://www.bing.com/news/search?q=

And put this part in cell B1:

&format=rss

With the Bing News URL broken up into parts, we’re just about ready to concatenate our RSS feeds. But we need to do one more thing – encode!

Encode your Google Alerts

It’s possible that your Google Alerts are all numbers and letters and don’t have any pesky symbols like ” or ( in them at all. But mine aren’t! When special characters like ” or ( appear in URLs, they can break the URL’s functionality or make the search engine respond in a weird way. We need to make sure that Bing News can read our queries, so we need to encode them.

Go to cell B3 on your spreadsheet and enter =ENCODEURL($A3) . The ENCODEURL part will change the characters in your query to make them more acceptable to a search engine (and also might make them look weird to your eyes.) After you’ve entered it, use the dragging tool on the lower left part of the cell B3 (it’s the blue block in the lower left corner that you see after you click on a cell) to click-and-drag all the way down column B until you’ve generated encoded text for all your Google Alerts. Here’s what mine looks like.

We’ve got our Bing News URL set up, and our queries encoded, so let’s make some RSS feeds!

Make A Bunch of RSS Feeds Instantly and Feel Like a Wizard

Go to cell C3 and enter this: =CONCATENATE($A$1,$B3,$B$1)

This is telling Google Sheets “Take the first part of the Bing News URL, then add my query, then add the last part to make it an RSS feed.” Hit enter and you’ll have an RSS feed in that cell! You can even copy it and open it in your browser, though it won’t be nicely formatted since it’s an RSS feed.

Use the dragging tool again to drag that formula all the way down to the end of your Google Alerts. Here’s what my page looks like with a fresh list of URLs. Now you’ve got all your Google Alerts as Bing News RSS feeds!

But does that mean we have to enter each of the feed URLs separately into an RSS feed reader? No way. I am far too lazy to want to do that. We’re making an OPML file. An OPML file is a file used by RSS readers to import a bunch of feeds at once.

Whip Up an OPML File

Copy that list of URLs. Then take it to https://opml-gen.ovh/ . This is a very basic site: there’s a text box into which you paste your list (remove the example URLs first). Click Generate and it should immediately drop a file in your downloads called subscriptions.xml.

(Warning: this site does no error checking! Make sure you paste in a list of URLs and ONLY a list of URLs or you won’t have a valid OPML file. This tool will create an XML file for anything, as I found out when I typed in some of the lyrics to The Trolley Song.)

Import Your OPML file

Now that you’ve got a bunch of RSS feeds, where should they go?

You may have an RSS feeder you already like. In that case you should be able to find an Import OPML option and add the feeds to your existing list. On the other hand, maybe you want to keep them separate and only use them when Google Alerts is misbehaving. I’m going to walk through adding an OPML list to Feedly ( https://feedly.com/ ), a popular RSS reader.

For the purpose of this example I’m assuming you have a Feedly account. If you don’t, go ahead and set that up. Once you’re logged in, go to https://feedly.com/i/organize/me . That’ll show your feeds and give you a IMPORT OPML button. Click it.

Feedly will ask you to upload a file and after that will start importing your content. As each feed is added it’ll get a checkmark. Even with my bunch of feeds it only took a few minutes.

And voila! Your Google Alerts are now Bing News RSS feeds.

If your Google Alerts are basic and don’t use a lot of special syntax, you should be good to go; you now have an alert system that’ll watch for news even when Google Alerts isn’t cooperative. Unfortunately I use LOTS of syntax in my Google Alerts, so I suspect I’ll have to review and adjust the feeds until I’m getting a flow of information that I like.

But adjusting a flow is a million times better than not having the flow in the first place. And who knows? Bing News might point me to some sources I didn’t know about before.

When you read news stories about search engines and news searching, it seems like all you hear about is Google. But there are other sites to access news (like Bing) and there are definitely other formats to consume the news, like RSS. Take advantage!



August 24, 2021 at 06:45PM
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