Sunday, December 26, 2021

India Office Map Catalogue of 1878, Digital Arts Festival, Gamified Productivity, more: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 26, 2021

India Office Map Catalogue of 1878, Digital Arts Festival, Gamified Productivity, more: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 26, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

British Library: Released online: The 1878 India Office map collection catalogue. “The India Office map catalogue of 1878, now released online for the first time on the British Library Shared Research Repository, is a valuable finding aid to one of the world’s most complex and mercurial map collections.”

EVENTS

NoCamels: Digital Arts Festival At Tower Of David Museum To Showcase Impact Of AI On Art. “The art festival, which will hold a hybrid of physical and virtual events from December 27 through the 31st, will give viewers the chance to take in 30 works of art, six original site-specific pieces, nine lectures, 10 live performances, 12 international artists, and 28 Israeli artists. Many of these events will be livestreamed on the Tower of David website.” I went to the livestreaming site. I only saw a Hebrew version but it was easy to both translate and navigate.

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: 6 Gamified Apps to Boost Your Productivity. “Gamified applications are tools that add game elements to your daily tasks to boost engagement and productivity. Adding game elements like reward systems, competition, challenges, or storylines to non-game tasks make them more fun, enjoyable and achievable, empowering you to do more in less time.”

Hongkiat: 10 Websites to Edit Music and Audio Files Online . “If you have infrequent audio editing needs and you’re looking for a quick audio editing tool that works on the fly, then your best choice would be to go for free online audio editors. Here is a collection of the best free online audio editors that allow you to do basic as well as advanced audio editing and recording right in the browser.”

Lifehacker: How to Get Live Subtitles on Your FaceTime Calls. “Have you ever wanted live subtitles during your FaceTime calls? Navi, a companion app for FaceTime, lets you add it on your iPhone, iPad, and your Mac, too. The app makes clever use of Apple’s SharePlay feature to show you live subtitles during your video calls with your friends, yet another good reason to use FaceTime.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Blurry photos are cool now. “Seeing blurry photos on social media is nothing new. Non-tech savvy people who struggle to take good photos have been posting them for years, and they were ubiquitous in the early days of Instagram when phone cameras were far less advanced. But nowadays, people are purposely posting blurry photos to infuse their personal feeds with a certain essence. Rather than serving ‘poor quality photo’ vibes, intentionally posted blurry photos serve ‘I’m having too much fun and living life so fast that a camera can’t even capture me’ vibes.”

Stuff New Zealand: Iwi wants to protect and own their memories with archive partnership. Iwi is a way to describe a particular kind of Māori group. I think in America a similar word would be tribe. “Ngāi Tahu has leased state-of-the-art office and archive space to store its historical papers and research the history of the tribe in a bid to ‘own their own memory’. The iwi has taken out a three-year lease on space in an Archives New Zealand building in Christchurch. The building houses hundreds of boxes of iwi files dating back to the 1940s, with 4000 boxes of files being sorted for possible future storage at the facility.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

New York Times: Last Known Slave Ship Is Remarkably Well Preserved, Researchers Say. “As much as two-thirds of the original structure remains, including the hold below the main deck where 110 people were imprisoned during the ship’s final, brutal journey from Benin to Mobile in 1860. The researchers said it was possible that DNA could be extracted from the sealed, oxygen-free hull, which is filled with silt. Barrels, casks and bags used to stow provisions for the captives could also be found inside, they said.”

Newswise: Are you talking to a chatbot? Would you like to?. “As artificial intelligence and natural language processing advance, we often don’t know if we are talking to a person or an AI-powered chatbot, says Tom Kelleher, Ph.D., an advertising professor in the University of Florida’s College of Journalism and Communications. What matters more than who (or what) is on the other side of the chat, Kelleher has found, is the perceived humanness of the interaction.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Tom’s Hardware: How to Build a Tweeting Weather Bot with Raspberry Pi. “When I first started getting into programming, one of my mentors built a project where he took an image every day, overlaid the current weather, and tweeted it. I remember at the time thinking there was no way I could ever build something that complicated. Fast forward to now, it’s a relatively simple thing to put together – and in my opinion, a great starter project for someone getting involved with programming. So with all those in mind, let’s build a twitter bot that takes a photo every day and tweets it out, using a Raspberry Pi.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 27, 2021 at 01:26AM
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Sunday CoronaBuzz, December 26, 2021: 46 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Sunday CoronaBuzz, December 26, 2021: 46 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES – AREA-SPECIFIC

WPRI: RI health officials ‘concerned’ with lagging K-12 vaccination rates. “The R.I. Department of Health recently launched a new website showing vaccination rates among all eligible public-school students five years and older across the state. The most recently available data shows 48% of students are partially vaccinated and 42% are fully vaccinated. The rates are substantially lower than statewide trends, which is concerning to state health officials.”

UPDATES

Associated Press: Coronavirus dampens Christmas joy in biblical Bethlehem. “The biblical town of Bethlehem marked its second straight Christmas Eve under the shadow of the coronavirus — with small crowds and gray, gloomy weather dampening celebrations Friday in the traditional birthplace of Jesus.”

NBC News: Moviegoers felt a mix of old-fashioned joy, Covid-era anxiety in returning to theaters. “In the face of the omicron variant and renewed anxiety about breakthrough infections, many continue to feel that shuffling into a dark room with a bunch of strangers is too much of a risk, even if some theaters require proof of vaccination. The spread of the variant could spell more troubles for the industry in 2022. The financial hardships of the pandemic weigh heavily on much of the country, too. A night at the movies is a luxury that many simply cannot afford.”

New York Times: The Dreaded Return of the ‘Park Hang’. “‘The whole notion of having to stay away from people again is mind-numbing,’ said Manny Fidel, 29, a video producer who lives in Brooklyn. While he acknowledged the gravity of the current Covid-19 surge in New York City, which has set records for new cases and caused a mad dash for testing, Mr. Fidel also expressed fear that the Omicron variant would reduce social life in New York to its socially distant diminutives: stoop cocktails in puffer coats, long walks with friends to nowhere and a long line of park hangs.”

Houston Chronicle: Despite vaccines, more Texans died of COVID-19 in 2021 than in first year of pandemic . “The first case of COVID-19 in the United States was recorded in February 2020, and the pandemic was declared the following month. The current year began amid a winter surge of infections, which was followed by a rapid rise in vaccinations in the spring that later ebbed. The climbing death toll, public health experts said, is almost entirely driven by people who are unvaccinated. From mid-January through October, just 8 percent of Texas virus deaths were among inoculated residents.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

HuffPost: Anti-Vax Podcaster Reportedly On Ventilator For COVID After Attending Right-Wing Rally. “Podcast network Frog News reported in a message on the right-wing Telegram social media site that Doug Kuzma shared a photo a week ago posing with stores of dewormer Ivermectin and other chemicals after the three-day ReAwaken America event that featured Donald Trump’s short-time national security adviser and felon Michael Flynn. As of Saturday, Kuzma was ‘sedated and on a ventilator;’ he is ‘not conscious,’ noted a Frog News message. ‘Doug needs heavy, heavy prayers,’ the message added.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

WWNY: New York sees largest population loss in history. “New York led the way this year in population loss. The U.S. Census Bureau put that loss at more than 319,000 New Yorkers between July 2020 and July 2021 – the highest of any state in the nation. Percentage-wise, it was 1.6 percent of the state’s population.”

Associated Press: COVID-19 Spike Worsens Africa’s Severe Poverty, Hunger Woes. “Nearly two years into a global pandemic, a new spike in coronavirus cases driven by the omicron variant is once again shuttering businesses, halting travel, reviving fears of overwhelmed hospitals and upending travel and holiday plans in countries around the world. But in Zimbabwe and other African nations, the virus’s resurgence is threatening the very survival of millions of people who have already been driven to the edge by a pandemic that has devastated their economies. When putting food on the table is not a given, worries about whether to gather with family members for the holiday or heed public announcements urging COVID-19 precautions take a back seat.”

Mashable: What will dating be like in 2022?. “Given the ride the last couple years have been, what will 2022 bring us in terms of finding love? Dating experts have a few predictions, including a continued use of virtual dating, a push towards serious relationships for some and non-monogamy for others, and an emphasis on mental health and vulnerability.”

Washington Post: The pandemic has caused nearly two years of collective trauma. Many people are near a breaking point.. “Nearly two years into a pandemic coexistent with several national crises, many Americans are profoundly tense. They’re snapping at each other more frequently, suffering from physical symptoms of stress and seeking methods of self-care. In the most extreme cases, they’re acting out their anger in public — bringing their internal struggles to bear on interactions with strangers, mental health experts said.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

BBC: Omicron: Rising numbers of NHS staff off work because of Covid. “Nearly 19,000 NHS staff were absent for Covid-related reasons on 19 December – up 54% on the previous week. A further 119,789 Covid infections were recorded in the UK on Thursday, setting another new record for daily cases.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

Washington Post: Omicron and children: Pediatric hospitals in parts of U.S. filling fast. “Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania and New York have been hit particularly hard. As of Thursday, there were 1,987 confirmed or suspected pediatric covid-19 patients hospitalized nationally, a 31 percent jump in 10 days, according to a Washington Post analysis. Since the pandemic began, nearly 7.4 million children and adolescents have been infected, with 170,000 more added to that total in the last week alone, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

NBC News: Hospitals in New York region say they’ve run out of antibody treatment for omicron variant. “Major hospitals in the New York region say they have stopped using monoclonal antibody therapies because they have run out of the one treatment that appears to be effective against the omicron variant of the coronavirus, leaving doctors without a vital tool to treat severely ill Covid-19 patients.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CNET: CES 2022: Google latest to drop out over COVID-19, joining Intel, T-Mobile and more. “CES 2022 on Thursday lost Google, the latest company to confirm the cancellation of its in-person plans to be in Las Vegas for the tech trade show and to shift to a virtual presence. The search company and its sister company Waymo join T-Mobile, Intel, Lenovo, TikTok, Meta and many others making such a change over concerns about the uptick in coronavirus cases and the omicron variant.”

Stateline: Western ‘Zoom Towns’ Take Aim at Short-Term Rentals. “Even before the pandemic, the destination towns of the West had a shortage of affordable housing. Limited supply, the remote nature of some of the communities, zoning restrictions and even short construction seasons all contributed. But the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated everything, including the rise of so-called Zoom towns. Freed from physical offices, suddenly people could live, work and recreate in the vacation communities of the West, with few needs beyond a high-speed internet connection to do jobs that formerly required their presence in major cities.”

The Verge: Apple closes several stores due to COVID-19 outbreaks, encourages online shopping. “Over the last couple of weeks, several Apple Stores around the US have closed due to rising COVID-19 infections among staff members, and a report by Bloomberg lists seven locations in the US and Canada that have shut down operations within the last day or so. The Apple Stores listed include Dadeland and The Gardens Mall in Florida, Lenox Square in Atlanta, GA, Highland Village in Houston, TX, Summit Mall in Ohio, Pheasant Lane in New Hampshire, and Sainte-Catherine in Montreal, Canada.”

The Verge: Intel will put unvaccinated employees on unpaid leave. “Intel has reportedly notified employees that anyone who remains unvaccinated will need to get the COVID-19 vaccine or submit an exemption by January 4th. Otherwise, they face being put on unpaid leave, according to The Associated Press and The Oregonian.”

Associated Press: COVID: Airlines cancel dozens of flights over Christmas. ” At least three major airlines have reported canceling dozens of flights as illnesses largely tied to the omicron variant of COVID-19 take a toll on flight crew numbers during the busy holiday travel season.”

European Supermarket Magazine: US Meat Plants Relaxed Some COVID-19 Safety Protocols After Outbreaks: Unions . “Across the country, US meat and chicken plants that reported some of the country’s largest coronavirus outbreaks last year have eased or adjusted protective measures implemented near the start of the pandemic, according to interviews with ten plant employees, union officials and advocates for workers.”

Sky News: COVID-19: At least 4,500 flights around the world cancelled as coronavirus causes travel chaos. “Globally on Christmas Eve there were 2,401 flights cancelled and 10,000 delayed as operators struggled with staff absences. According to the online flight tracker FlightAware.com, 1,779 routes were not scheduled to operate as planned on Christmas Day, with a further 409 down on Boxing Day.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

ProPublica: This Scientist Created a Rapid Test Just Weeks Into the Pandemic. Here’s Why You Still Can’t Get It.. “Irene Bosch developed a quick, inexpensive COVID-19 test in early 2020. The Harvard-trained scientist already had a factory set up. But she was stymied by an FDA process experts say made no sense.”

CNN: Biden to lift travel restrictions on southern African countries that were put in place due to Omicron. “The Biden administration is lifting restrictions on eight southern African countries that were put in place last month after the Omicron variant was first identified in South Africa, two administration officials told CNN.”

Washington Post: Coronavirus outbreak sidelines ship whose crew is fully immunized, Navy says. “A coronavirus outbreak aboard the USS Milwaukee, whose entire crew was ‘100 percent immunized,’ has forced the ship to remain in port after a scheduled stop in Cuba barely one week into its deployment, the Navy announced Friday.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: Covid: Ecuador makes vaccination mandatory for most citizens. “Ecuador has announced that the Covid-19 vaccine will be mandatory for most citizens, saying the measure is needed because of a rise in infections and the spread of variants such as Omicron. The health ministry said there were enough doses to ‘immunise the entire population’. Those with a medical justification will be exempt.”

Reuters: Chinese officials punished over COVID outbreak that led to Xian lockdown. “Officials in the northwestern Chinese city of Xian are facing punishment after a COVID-19 outbreak led to the lockdown of its 13 million residents, authorities said on Friday, as the number of new cases declined. All domestic flights out of Xian and most trains originating from the city scheduled for Friday were cancelled. Officials in Xian, which is famed for its terracotta warriors buried with China’s first emperor, say the outbreak has been traced to the arrival of a plane from Pakistan.”

AFP: Dutch PM Admits Making ‘Mistakes’ in Covid Communication, Says ‘Failed to Convince People About Basic Measures’. “Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte admitted to making communication ‘mistakes’ in handling the pandemic, in an interview published Friday as his country braced for second Christmas under lockdown.”

Reuters: S.Africa scraps isolation for those without COVID symptoms. ” South Africans without symptoms of COVID-19 will no longer need to isolate or test if they have been in contact with a positive case, the government announced on Friday, saying developments around the virus justified a shift from containment measures towards mitigation.”

BBC: Covid-19: New rules in force for three UK nations. “New Covid restrictions have come into force in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland as the nations try to halt the surge in infections. All three nations have introduced curbs on the hospitality and leisure industry, resumed social distancing rules and put limits on the size of gatherings. Boris Johnson has not announced any further restrictions in England.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

State of California: Governor Newsom Announces New Actions to Protect Californians from COVID-19 . “Governor Gavin Newsom today announced new booster requirements and testing measures to better protect all Californians as the Omicron variant becomes the dominant COVID-19 strain in the nation. The COVID-19 booster requirement for health care workers will mitigate potential staffing shortages while helping to safeguard the state’s hospital capacity and protect the health and safety of Californians.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Route Fifty: More Cities Move to Adopt Vaccine Requirements for Indoor Spaces. “Washington, D.C., Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia are among the places that announced these types of measures in recent days. Other places, including New York City, King County, Washington, where Seattle is located, San Francisco and Los Angeles, already had requirements along these lines in place. The new mandates come as the highly contagious omicron variant of Covid-19 is surging.”

City of New York: Mayor de Blasio Announces Scaled Back New Year’s Eve Times Square Celebration. “Mayor de Blasio today announced details for a scaled back Times Square New Year’s Eve, with additional protections in place to ensure a safe celebration. In addition to requiring proof of full vaccination with valid photo identification and being fully outdoors, attendees will also be required to wear masks. Viewing areas will be filled with fewer people to allow for social distancing.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

NBC News: 3 members of K-pop superstars BTS test positive for Covid-19. ” Three members of the K-pop group BTS on Saturday tested positive for Covid-19 following their return to South Korea from the band’s first pandemic-era concerts in the United States, their management company Big Hit Music said. Rapper RM, 27, and vocalist Jin, 29, were diagnosed with Covid-19 a day after Suga, a songwriter and rapper for the seven-member group, tested positive.”

SPORTS

24/7 Sports: Hawaii Bowl canceled after Rainbow Warriors withdraw, citing COVID-19 cases, transfers and injuries. “The Hawaii Bowl has been canceled after Hawaii was forced to withdraw from the game due to a combination of COVID-19 cases, transfers and injuries, it was announced Thursday night. The game was to pit the Rainbow Warriors against the Memphis Tigers Friday at Clarence T. C. Ching Athletics Complex in Honolulu.”

K-12 EDUCATION

NPR: There’s a surge of mental health issues for kids back for in-school learning. “For kids around the country, this school year was supposed to bring a return to normalcy, ending the isolation and stress of remote or hybrid learning. But halfway through the year, schools and health care providers say they’re seeing a massive rise in students struggling with mental and behavioral health problems. NPR’s Rhitu Chatterjee has the story.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

KABC: USC students will stay remote for now amid omicron surge. “The explosion in COVID-19 omicron cases is leading to the change. Los Angeles County on Friday announced nearly 10,000 new COVID-19 cases in one day, the highest number in 11 months. The spike is driven by the highly-contagious omicron variant, as well as holiday travel and get-togethers.”

HEALTH

BBC: Omicron: Half of colds will be Covid, warn UK researchers. “If you have a sore throat, runny nose and a headache there is a good chance it will be Covid, warn UK researchers. The Zoe Covid study team has been tracking the pandemic using feedback from the general public, and estimates half of people with cold-like symptoms actually have Covid.”

BBC: Parosmia: Coping with distorted smell and taste at Christmas. “Christmas is a cruel holiday for sufferers of Covid-induced parosmia. The condition, which causes smell and taste distortions, can mean tucking into a roast turkey with all the trimmings becomes a nauseating nightmare. But as more research is done and our understanding improves, is there hope for those whose festivities were plunged into repugnant ruin?”

NBC Washington: Long COVID Patients Are ‘Terrified’ of Omicron. “Emerging research about omicron has so far been cautiously reassuring: Despite its ability to spread at a dizzying pace, the illness it causes appears to be milder overall, at least among the vaccinated and those who have received the booster shot. Such encouraging data, however, are meaningless to people with long Covid-19: those who have suffered from its symptoms for months to more than a year following their initial infection.”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

Mashable: Thought virtual watch parties were dead? 2022 would like to have a word.. “I’m not happy that we have to rely on virtual watch party software again and I assume you aren’t either. But if we have to deal with constantly shifting circumstances, it’s good to keep in mind the growing list of digital tools we have at our disposal to make the most of a bad situation. These apps even have utility outside the context of a pandemic, as loved ones can be physically far apart for any number of reasons while still wanting to experience movies together.”

Ubergizmo: A COVID-19 Home Testing Kit Was Hacked To Display Fake Results. “Thanks to technology, we are seeing an increasing number of home testing kits for various diseases that can be uploaded onto our phones and then uploaded online to our doctors, so that they can monitor our health remotely and get the latest information. It sounds convenient, but there is also some danger to that. A good example would be recently, F-Secure researcher Ken Gannon discovered a vulnerability in Ellume’s nasal swab test, which is a home testing kit for COVID-19.”

Texas A&M Today: When Churches Closed, Religious Leaders Turned To Tech. “One Methodist pastor had to lend her own digital camera to the church, which had no digital resources. Another duct taped a borrowed smartphone to a ladder in order to stream a service. An Episcopal priest from Indianapolis described feelings of exhaustion and fatigue, saying that her online services fell flat and ‘wasn’t the job I signed up for.’ They are among the pastors, volunteers and staff members who provided insight into their experiences with technology during the COVID-19 pandemic. Heidi A Campbell, a professor at Texas A&M University who studies media and religion, prepared a report issued last month on their decision-making processes and the sources of tension or challenges they faced.”

RESEARCH

IANS: COVID-19: Booster Shot Protection Fades Within 10 Weeks Against Omicron, says New Study. “While countries are racing to administer booster shots to protect against the Omicron variant of COVID-19, a new study released by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has shown that protection wanes even after taking the third dose of a vaccine within 10 weeks.”

OUTBREAKS

Sentinel & Enterprise: Massachusetts reports highest daily coronavirus case count of pandemic for second straight day. “The daily count of 9,042 new COVID-19 cases is the highest daily case total of the pandemic, breaking Wednesday’s tally of 7,817 cases. The prior record high before this week was Jan. 8’s count of 7,635 cases. The daily average percent positivity has been surging in recent weeks. The average percent positivity is now 7.6%. The rate for Thursday’s report was 8.07%.”

OH THAT’S SO NICE

Washington Post: A man strung Christmas lights from his home to his neighbor’s to support her. The whole community followed.. “Kim Morton was home watching a movie with her daughter when she received a text from her neighbor who lives directly across the road. He told her to peek outside. Matt Riggs had hung a string of white Christmas lights, stretching from his home to hers in the Rodgers Forge neighborhood, just north of the Baltimore city line. He also left a tin of homemade cookies on her doorstep. The lights, he told her, were meant to reinforce that they were always connected despite their pandemic isolation.”

OPINION

The Mary Sue: Dear TV Shows, It’s Very Weird to Watch You Pretend Like COVID-19 Is Over. “When these characters talk about the pandemic in the past tense and eat in crowded indoor restaurants and sit shoulder to shoulder at a children’s music recital without a mask in sight, that is—outside of a few major cities that still have enforced mandates—what is happening all across the country. It is very hard to separate that infuriating reality that we all have to deal with daily from that of the show, where this behavior is supposed to be perfectly fine and safe.”

RELIGION

NPR: For some secular Jews, their pandemic hobby has been learning Yiddish. “From noshing to schmoozing to schlepping, many Americans know a handful of Yiddish words. But outside of ultra-Orthodox Judaism, few people actually speak Yiddish as a language. And yet, Deena Prichep reports the pandemic has created a wave of new Yiddish learning.”

CoronaBuzz is brought to you by ResearchBuzz. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



December 26, 2021 at 08:20PM
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Russia & Ukraine Genealogy, Niche Music, British Museum, more: Sunday ResearchBuzz, December 26, 2021

Russia & Ukraine Genealogy, Niche Music, British Museum, more: Sunday ResearchBuzz, December 26, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Find Lost Russian & Ukrainian Family: New Ukrainian database breaks down a brickwall on Christmas morning. “For years, I have heard my grandmother’s brother was named after a brother who died as a baby. No one could tell me when this child was born, except he was born before 1927. On Christmas morning, I discovered a new database from the City of Kyiv archives. The archives has indexed more than 190,000 birth records for 1919-1936 here. Yes, it is in Ukrainian but it is a very simple database.” The site includes clear instructions for using the database even if you can’t read Ukrainian.

Boing Boing: A guy accidentaly made a gigantic repository of niche music. “A decade ago, when Spotify was two years old in the UK and had just become available in the US, Chris Johnson started a musical discovery project called TAPEFEAR. He ‘created a script to find new music on niche music sites, cross reference Spotify to see if it was available to stream,’ according to a Reddit post, and besides a bit of occasional tinkering, he largely forgot about it. In total, Johnson says the script ran for a decade amassing 42,000 songs.”

This is from earlier in December but the video I saw for it is so astounding I feel I must include it. The Drum: Vice Media highlights disputed artifacts in British Museum with interactive campaign. “Vice Media has created a campaign to highlight the origin of 10 disputed artifacts that are currently in the British Museum. The campaign, called ‘The Unfiltered History Tour’ and conceptualized together with Dentsu Webchutney, is focused on artifacts including Summer Palace (China), Gweagal Shield (Australia) and Amaravati Marbles (India). The stories of these artifacts will be told through an interactive mobile site and a 10-episode podcast series featuring experts from the homelands of these objects.”

EVENTS

Genealogy’s Star: Looking forward to RootsTech 2022 Virtual. “RootsTech 2022 is coming faster than you expect. This year it is 100% virtual and 100% free (if you already have an internet connection and a device to connect). I am involved as an ‘Influencer.’ I guess my perception of reality should begin adapting to linguistic changes. Most of my time during RootsTech from the 28th of February to the 5th of March is going to be spent helping people around the world with their genealogical questions.”

USEFUL STUFF

Los Angeles Times: A beginner’s guide to cryptocurrency. “The hype surrounding cryptocurrencies may be inescapable, but that doesn’t mean people understand how they work or why some of their values have gyrated so wildly. Here are some of the basics to help bring you up to speed. Do not interpret any of this as an endorsement of cryptocurrencies, which are not particularly useful today as currencies nor reliable as investments.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Wall Street Journal: TikTok Diagnosis Videos Leave Some Teens Thinking They Have Rare Mental Disorders . “When teens watch TikTok videos and decide they have a mental-health affliction—even if they’re really only suffering from adolescence—it can pose a treatment challenge and cause frayed family relationships. Psychologists say there are things parents should and shouldn’t do when confronting their self-diagnosing teen, which I’ll discuss below. For its part, TikTok, owned by Beijing-based ByteDance Ltd., is implementing changes that could minimize streams of single-topic videos.”

Associated Press: Russia blocks website of group that tracks political arrests. “A Russian organization that tracks political arrests and provides legal aid to detainees said Saturday that government regulators blocked its website, the latest move in a months-long crackdown on independent media and human rights organizations.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Stars and Stripes: Congress extends deadline to replace Pentagon oversight reports. “The fiscal 2020 National Defense Authorization Act had required that the documents, called Selected Acquisition Reports, be terminated after fiscal 2021. The new fiscal 2022 NDAA retains the termination mandate but extends the deadline by two years. Meanwhile, the Pentagon is working on a replacement reporting system that would make the information available in a database in real time instead of in quarterly or annual reports. But the new system is not yet ready, and its proposed elements are not clear to the congressional Armed Services committees, whose new NDAA requires reports from the Pentagon about the forthcoming system.”

If This Be Treason: Italian Courts Find Open Source Software Terms Enforceable. “In a first-time ruling by Italian courts on open source licensing, a software vendor has lost a civil case for failing to comply with open source license requirements.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

CNET: 5 trends to shake the world in 2022: Predictions for the year ahead. “Even before the momentous events of 2020 and 2021 shook up the planet, the tectonic plates of culture, society and technology were already shifting and reshaping the world. The pandemic took those changes and accelerated them, exacerbated them, and in some cases, threw them into chaos. As we speed into 2022, one question remains: where are we headed next?”

Harvard Business Review: Research: How AR Filters Impact People’s Self-Image. “New research suggests that AR apps designed to let customers virtually try on makeup or other products can have a significant, negative impact on psychological wellbeing. Moreover, that impact can vary widely depending on the customer. While people with lower baseline levels of self-esteem may feel better about themselves after using an AR filter, those with higher pre-existing self-esteem are more likely to feel worse about themselves after using AR.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

The Verge: Today I learned that the Death Star is the size of the Olympic Peninsula. “Park My Spaceship is the simple, extremely amusing app I didn’t know I needed. It allows you to superimpose to-scale images of notable spacecraft from sci-fi shows and movies over Google Maps. That’s it. It’s great. You can check to see if Serenity would fit in your backyard or if the Millennium Falcon could land in your neighborhood park.” Not new, but new-to-me. Good morning, Internet…

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December 26, 2021 at 06:35PM
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Saturday, December 25, 2021

SAIEE Africa Research Journal, Overdrive Libby App, Discord Events, more: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 25, 2021

SAIEE Africa Research Journal, Overdrive Libby App, Discord Events, more: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 25, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

IEEE Spectrum: Access South Africa’s Leading Research Journal’s Entire Collection. “The full archives of the SAIEE Africa Research Journal—some issues dating back more than 100 years—are now available in the IEEE Xplore Digital Library. The open-access quarterly journal from the South African Institute of Electrical Engineers publishes peer-reviewed articles on research in IEEE’s fields of interest.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Good E-Reader: New Overdrive Libby app update offers enhanced accessibility options . “OverDrive said they have introduced some changes to the Libby app that are aimed at making it more accessible to all users, including those with visual, motor, or cognitive deficiencies. The company said they have taken inputs directly from those with visual defects – low vision to even blind individuals – thanks to their association with Fable to ensure the updates introduced to the Libby app makes it even more accessible to those with special needs.”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: How to Create and Attend Discord Events . “Discord is a great place to gather your friends to chat about games, school, and everything else. But what if you want to schedule everyone to meet at the same time? For that, you can use Discord events. We’re going to explain everything you need to know about Discord events, including how to set them up.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

EdSurge: The Surprising History of Google’s Push to Scan Millions of Library Books. “It seemed like the beginning of a new era, when scholars and the public could make new connections and discoveries in the kind of mass digital library that had previously been the stuff of science fiction. But it soon became clear the actual plan would turn out to be far more controversial than its organizers probably ever imagined. On this week’s EdSurge Podcast, we tell the story of this ambitious book-scanning effort that sparked an epic legal battle among publishers, authors and technologists. Somehow, it’s a story that seems largely forgotten.” I don’t see a transcript link, but there’s a decent-sized article.

New York Times: That Fun TikTok Video? It’s Actually an Ad.. “Ever since young Americans began their exodus from commercial television to streaming services and social media, advertisers have searched for the digital equivalent of home shopping channels, a place online where users might engage with ads rather than just quickly clicking past them. Now, they think they’re closer to finding this holy grail of marketing, and it doesn’t look anything like QVC.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Politico: Potential DOJ suits against Apple and Google delayed amid budget woes. “The Justice Department is still months away from deciding whether to sue Apple or file a new suit against Google over antitrust concerns, two people familiar with the discussions said — a question facing new financial complications after the collapse of President Joe Biden’s social spending bill.”

Mashable: ‘Extremely disturbing’: TikTok sued by content moderator for psychological trauma. “Candie Frazier, who works as a contracted content moderator, filed a class action lawsuit in federal court on Thursday against TikTok and its parent company, ByteDance, for psychological trauma. Frazier alleges she developed anxiety, depression, and PTSD as a result of the highly regimented 12-hour shifts in which she would watch a stream of videos containing ‘animal cruelty, torture, suicides, child abuse, murder, beheadings, and other graphic content.’ Troubling videos also discussed conspiracy theories, holocaust denial, political misinformation, and other destabilizing content.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Mercury News: Google hopes dragonscale solar will take wing at Silicon Valley sites. “Google is betting that dragonscale solar panels on its canopy campuses in Mountain View could bolster the tech titan’s efforts to generate green energy. The search giant has been installing the solar panels, whose moniker derives from how the scales of a dragon might look, on its two new Mountain View campuses that both have an eye-catching design.”

CNET: NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope just launched: What’s next?. “Webb is set to travel 1 million miles (1.6 million km) from Earth over the next six months and begin orbiting the sun at the vital-for-the-mission second Lagrange point. Once that happens, Webb will begin sending back images of the universe. But these won’t be mere intergalactic photos.”

Washington Post: Is artificial intelligence about to transform the mammogram?. “[Regina] Barzilay had spent years researching the AI specialty known as natural-language processing, which applies algorithms to textual data. Those skills, she realized, might be put to a different use: predicting cancer. She decided to shift her research. That choice is now bearing fruit. Barzilay, 51, and a student protege have built an AI that seems able to predict with unprecedented accuracy whether a healthy person will get breast cancer, in an innovation that could seriously disrupt how we think about the disease.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 26, 2021 at 02:11AM
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James Webb Space Telescope, Robocalls, Clubhouse, more: Saturday ResearchBuzz, December 25, 2021

James Webb Space Telescope, Robocalls, Clubhouse, more: Saturday ResearchBuzz, December 25, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNN: The James Webb Space Telescope has successfully launched. “It’s a moment that has been decades in the making. The James Webb Space Telescope, NASA’s premier space observatory of the next decade, successfully launched on Christmas morning. The telescope lifted off atop an Ariane 5 rocket from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana at 7:20 a.m. ET.”

CNET: Robocalls are still out of control — and aren’t likely to stop in 2022. “Since a peak in March 2021 when Americans got 4.9 billion robocalls, Stir/Shaken has helped curb the number of robocalls, according to YouMail, a company specializing in blocking robocalls. In November that figure was down to 4.1 billion calls for the month, YouMail said. Still, the volume of robocalls is rising again, and Americans are getting more than they did in November 2020, when 3.8 billion robocalls set phones ringing and buzzing.”

MakeUseOf: How to Enable Live Captions on Clubhouse. “The wait is over. Clubhouse has finally launched a long-awaited live captions feature. If you prefer to read live captions instead of listening to audio while out in public, or if you’re deaf or hard of hearing, this feature will be especially helpful to you.”

USEFUL STUFF

Poynter: These 6 tips will help you spot misinformation online. “Here are six tools and techniques you, your friends (or enemies) and family can use to make a dent in the false information flowing on the internet today.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Google’s Santa Tracker isn’t just a holiday treat, it’s also made Google better . “The Santa Tracker originally launched in Dec. 2004, and has been continuously updated by Google’s team ever since. It’s gotten big features, like new coding games and voice assistant integration, and small ones, like a mask for Santa to protect himself and others during the pandemic. And according to the official Google blog, the developers behind each update have found that working on the Santa Tracker is not only a fun holiday tradition, but useful for overall Google service development, too.”

New York Times: TikTok Made Them Famous. Figuring Out What’s Next Is Tough.. “This year, the app’s biggest stars — Charli and Dixie D’Amelio, Noah Beck, Addison Rae and others — leapt from the phone screen to other platforms in the pop culture universe, with mixed results.”

BBC: Climate change: Small army of volunteers keeping deniers off Wikipedia. “Wikipedia has for so long been plagued by climate change denial. But a group of dedicated volunteers around the world is working tirelessly to keep the deniers at bay.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Moscow Times: Russia Fines Google, Meta Record $125M for Banned Content. “Russia has slapped tech giants Google and Meta with record penalties totaling over $125 million for repeated failure to remove banned content, state media reported Friday. The fines mark the first time Russia has imposed a fine based on a company’s turnover and comes as Moscow amplifies pressure on foreign internet platforms, which it says regularly fail to take down content in compliance with Russian law.” This is wild. Russia hits Silicon Valley firms with fines regularly, but usually they’re $100K USD or so.

Lifehacker: How to Tell If eBay, Amazon, and Facebook Marketplace Items Are Stolen. “These spaces operate more like virtual flea markets—except without the option of inspecting the items (in person) yourself. For this, and other reasons, it’s not uncommon for stolen goods to end up for sale on these sites. In fact, according to the National Retail Federation, what it refers to as ‘organized retail crime’ (ORC) currently costs retailers an average of $700,000 per $1 billion in sales, and roughly 75% of retailers surveyed in 2020 saw an increase in ORC that year alone. So how do you tell what’s legitimately (and legally) being sold or resold, and what’s hot? Here are a few red flags to look out for when shopping at online marketplaces.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Route Fifty: White House AI Initiative Launches Public Research Support Tools. “A new section of resources intended for artificial intelligence researchers was launched last Friday by the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Office, with a goal of providing easy access to data sets and testbed environments for AI application training.”

UK Government: Social media influencers and counterfeit goods Executive summary. “The main aim of this study was to determine whether social media influencers have a meaningful impact on the intentions of female adults to purchase counterfeit goods. The study found that deviant SM influencers exert a significant influence as trusted others, prompting 10% of respondents to purchase counterfeit goods across a wide range of product sectors.”

CNN: This holiday, let’s stop this social media pretending. “This holiday season, I have a simple wish. Innovators gave us great digital tools to smooth out wrinkles and erase blemishes. We can lighten and brighten every snapshot and social media can give us powerful ways to connect with friends and family near and far. But we don’t need a photo filter for real life. Real life is messy. In fact, that’s what makes it interesting, challenging and fun. So starting in 2022, can’t we end the great pretend and share who we really are?” Good morning, Internet…

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December 25, 2021 at 06:57PM
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Thursday, December 23, 2021

Thursday CoronaBuzz, December 23, 2021: 41 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Thursday CoronaBuzz, December 23, 2021: 41 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES – MEDICAL/HEALTH

CNET: Google now gives free COVID test and vaccine details at a glance. Here’s what to do. “Google added new COVID-19 features to its search tool on Wednesday for mobile users. The features can help you quickly find free testing locations and places to get vaccines for kids (and adults). You can also select specific vaccine brands: Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson.”

Inside Medicine: Breaking News: 62 US counties likely at or over 100% hospital capacity. “Circuit breakers” may be needed in those areas.. “The result is a county-level and state-level map that indicates exactly which areas have already exceeded hospital capacity, and identifies ones that are poised overflow if they remain above the thresholds that we calculate for the next 5-10 days. In other words, for every county and state, we can tell officials how many new coronavirus cases can be ‘tolerated’ without being at high risk of hospitals overflowing 1-10 days later.”

UPDATES

Associated Press: To grandmother’s house or no? Omicron disrupts holiday plans. “For the second year in a row, the ever-morphing virus presents would-be revelers with a difficult choice: cancel holiday gatherings and trips or figure out ways to forge ahead as safely as possible. Many health experts are begging people not to let down their guard.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Vice: People Got Sick at a Conspiracy Conference. They’re Sure It’s Anthrax.. “A group of unvaccinated people who attended a huge conspiracy conference in Dallas earlier this month all became sick in the days after the event with symptoms like coughing, shortness of breath, and fever. Instead of blaming the global COVID pandemic, however, the conspiracy theorists think they were attacked with anthrax.”

Valley News: Valley Regional Hospital targeted over man’s COVID treatment. “Valley Regional Hospital this week boosted security after it received threatening telephone calls regarding a patient under its care, the Claremont hospital said in a news release Thursday. The announcement came after Valley Regional became the target of a social media campaign when the family of a patient being treated there for COVID-19 called upon the hospital to respond to their demands for alternative treatment.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

The Mainichi: Friction between humans, crows declines amid pandemic in Japan. “The relationship between crows and humans in Japan’s cities has long been a contentious one. For one, it is not uncommon to see the contents of garbage bags strewn across sidewalks on pickup days after the big black birds have had at them, looking for food. But crow-human friction has decreased during the coronavirus pandemic, possibly because people are paying less attention to the birds, one expert says.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

Washington Post: In highly vaccinated New England, hospitals are under unprecedented strain as coronavirus surges. “Interviews with 10 hospital leaders across the region revealed a grave picture. Executives at smaller and midsized hospitals said that it has become exceedingly difficult to secure care at higher-level facilities in the region and they worry that delays in transferring patients could have life-threatening consequences. Several said they were discussing whether they might need to implement standards for rationing care.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

Anglican Ink: Covid concerns prompt National Cathedral to cancel Christmas Day services — Christmas Eve services unchanged. “Like you, we are watching the spread of COVID-19 and the omicron variant with equal measures of fatigue and wariness. I imagine that you, too, are asking what this variant means for upcoming Christmas gatherings and what steps each of us can take to protect our friends and families. The health and safety of our extended Cathedral community is our highest priority. In these anxious times, nothing else is more important. However, nearly two years into this pandemic, we have the tools, practices and valuable experience that allow us to gather safely and responsibly.”

The Street: Cancel(ing) Culture Is Back as Covid Omicron Surges. “Despite the Covid vaccines, everything from in-person classes for students to Broadway musicals to sporting events to New Year’s Eve celebrations and global conferences are being scaled back or canceled this holiday season.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Business Insider: An Amazon worker says the company has shortened employee breaks because the pandemic is ‘supposedly’ over even though new cases continue to pop up. “Amazon warehouse employees at two facilities in the Chicago area have walked off their jobs just days ahead of last-minute Christmas deliveries. The workers were demanding higher wages and longer break times, according to a video from Amazonians United Chicagoland — a group representing local Amazon workers — posted to Facebook.”

Reuters: Employer must face worker’s lawsuit over husband’s Covid death — California court. “A California candymaker must face a lawsuit by an employee who says she caught Covid-19 at work and gave it to her husband, resulting in his death, a state appeals court held on Tuesday, upholding what appeared to be the first ruling allowing a worker’s lawsuit against an employer over a family member’s Covid death.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

Air Force Magazine: As Uniform Shortage Looms, Some BMT Grads Go With Fewer Service Dress Items. “Supply chain shortages are affecting availability of the Air Force’s service dress uniforms, leading the department to announce Dec. 21 that it has started temporarily issuing fewer uniform items to certain graduates of basic military training.”

Washington Post: Supreme Court sets special hearing for Biden’s vaccine rules for health-care workers, private businesses. “The Supreme Court on Wednesday night announced it will hold a special hearing next month to consider challenges to the Biden administration’s pandemic efforts affecting millions of workers, a nationwide vaccine-or-testing requirement for large employers and a separate coronavirus vaccine mandate for health-care workers.”

Reuters: Large holiday gatherings in U.S. not safe even if boosted, Fauci says. “Americans vaccinated and boosted against COVID-19 can be with family over the holidays but attending large gatherings is not safe, even for those who received a booster dose, top U.S. infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci said on Wednesday. ”

New York Times: Biden Promised 500 Million Tests, but Americans Will Have to Wait. “President Biden promised Americans he is making 500 million coronavirus tests available free of charge, but help is at least weeks away — if not longer — for anxious Americans facing a surge of new virus cases.”

New York Times: Beneath a Covid Vaccine Debacle, 30 Years of Government Culpability. “Washington has rejected plans to revamp vaccine preparedness for decades and repeatedly paid a price. The Biden administration is at a similar crossroads.”

ABC News: Private jet firms are soaring in popularity after big COVID-19 bailouts. Were they a ‘handout to the wealthy’?. “Lingering health concerns about commercial air travel during the COVID-19 pandemic have fueled a boom in private jet travel, a trend that has led to fresh scrutiny of the industry’s taxpayer bailout — which some critics are calling a ‘handout to the wealthy.'”

Politico: Biden Justice Department reverses on returning federal convicts on home detention to prison. “Under intense pressure from criminal justice reform advocates, the Justice Department has reversed a Trump-era legal opinion that could have required several thousand federal convicts to return to prison from home confinement if the Biden administration declares an end to the pandemic-related national emergency.”

CNN: Outgoing NIH director says Trump and other Republicans pressured him to endorse unproven Covid-19 remedies and to fire Fauci. “Dr. Francis Collins, whose last day as NIH director is Sunday, told CBS News that he got a ‘talking to’ by Trump, but that he held his ground and would have resigned if Trump made him endorse remedies for Covid-19 that were not based in science.”

Washington Post: FDA authorizes Merck’s anti-coronavirus pill, a second treatment option. “Federal regulators authorized a second pill to treat covid-19 Thursday, adding another at-home treatment option to help keep high-risk people out of the hospital. Doctors have clamored for easy-to-use medications throughout the pandemic, but the new drug, molnupiravir, has had an uneasy reception because of its modest efficacy and potential safety risks. Some experts say another tool will be helpful as the omicron variant, which is resistant to other key treatments, surges. But others say they would be hesitant to use the drug.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Reuters: France reports near-record 84,272 new coronavirus cases. “France on Wednesday reported 84,272 new COVID-19 infections in the last 24 hours, coming close to its all-time high of almost 87,000 cases in November 2020.”

The Guardian: Covid self-isolation cut to seven days with negative test in England. “From Wednesday, new guidance will enable the 10-day self-isolation period for vaccinated and unvaccinated people in England who have tested positive for coronavirus to be reduced by three days if they get the all-clear from lateral flow tests.”

Reuters: China’s Xian Locks Down Its 13 Million Residents as COVID-19 Cases Rise. ” Rising COVID-19 infections in China’s city of Xian have spurred a lockdown of its 13 million residents, with stretches of highway eerily bare on Thursday, as many people queued in the cold to get their noses swabbed at testing sites.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

State of New York: Governor Hochul Signs Legislation to Improve State Response to COVID-19 Pandemic. “Governor Kathy Hochul today signed a package of legislation that will improve New York’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. This legislative package will take a major step forward in the State’s efforts to increase vaccination rates and study the effects this pandemic has had on our economy and health care system.”

Local 10: Florida pulls pro-vaccination television ads, replacing with spots that don’t mention vaccines. “State sponsored commercials promoting COVID-19 vaccinations have been pulled from Florida’s airwaves. The new ads that replaced them make no mention of the vaccine. Spots are produced by the Florida Department of Health, which then disseminates them to stations around the state. Direction for the new ads come straight from the top, Governor Ron DeSantis, and the change has been noticeable.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

CNBC: An ER doctor wants to use ‘circuit breakers’ to slow the spread of Covid. Here’s how that would work. “Dr. Jeremy Faust, an emergency medicine physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and an instructor at Harvard Medical School, told Jim Cramer on “Mad Money” that local governments should use real-time data to identify ‘circuit breakers’ that trigger targeted restrictions and keep hospitals from being overrun.”

CNN: North Carolina police chief placed on unpaid leave for telling officers about ‘clinic’ to obtain Covid-19 vaccination cards without getting the shots. “A North Carolina police chief has been placed on unpaid leave and probation for telling officers about a ‘clinic’ that would issue them a Covid-19 vaccination card without actually receiving the shot, local officials said.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Washington Post: How one health reporter cut through the noise on omicron. “I talked this week with [Dan] Diamond, who joined The Washington Post early this year from Politico, about his experience covering covid from the very beginning. I was intrigued after reading a Facebook post of his that went viral, a simple yet fact-packed message summarizing the knowledge and perspective that he’s been sharing with friends and family. (It has since been turned into a story that The Post published online Tuesday.) He wrote it partly to counter some misperceptions he kept seeing repeated on social media.” (The post from Dan Diamond is here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2021/12/21/holiday-advice-omicron-family/ . It’s non-paywalled.)

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

Mediaite: Trump Pushes Back on Candace Owens Undermining Vaccine: ‘People Aren’t Dying When They Take the Vaccine’. “[Donald] Trump joined the Daily Wire host for a wide-ranging interview, which was released on Wednesday, in which the two pushed various conspiracy theories surrounding the riot in the U.S. Capitol on January 6th. But the issue of vaccines came up and the former president continued to tout the efficacy of the vaccines in a manner that will likely encourage some of the vaccine-hesitant and eventually save lives.”

SPORTS

CBS Philly: Philadelphia Eagles Head Coach Nick Sirianni Tests Positive For COVID-19. “Philadelphia Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni has entered COVID-19 protocols after testing positive for the virus Wednesday, the team said. Sirianni, who was feeling symptomatic, will continue to conduct his responsibilities remotely and remains hopeful to return by Sunday when the Eagles play the New York Giants.”

HEALTH

USA Today: Uncounted: Inaccurate death certificates across the country hide the true toll of COVID-19. “Nationwide, nearly 1 million more Americans have died in 2020 and 2021 than in normal, pre-pandemic years, but about 800,000 deaths have been officially attributed to COVID-19, according to the CDC data. A majority of those additional 195,000 deaths are unidentified COVID-19 cases, public health experts have long suggested, pointing to the unusual increase in deaths from natural causes. An investigation by Documenting COVID-19, the USA TODAY Network and experts reveals why so many deaths have gone uncounted: After overwhelming the nation’s health care system, the coronavirus evaded its antiquated, decentralized system of investigating and recording deaths.”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

Recode: Omicron is outpacing delta on social media, too. “People talked about omicron six times as much as delta on major social media platforms in the weeks after each of the strains emerged.”

RESEARCH

Oxford Mail: University of Oxford blueprint for millions of vaccine doses. “UNIVERSITY of Oxford researchers have published a blueprint for making millions of doses of a new vaccine within 100 days. The university’s vaccine manufacturing research team says the new methods could enable clinical trials within 60 days of identification of a new virus.”

New York Times: Omicron Infections Seem to Be Milder, Three Research Teams Report. “While the new research is heartening, experts warn that the surge coming to many countries still may flood hospitals with Omicron cases, simply because the variant spreads so much more easily than previous versions of the coronavirus.”

Washington Post: Remdesivir can help keep unvaccinated, high-risk people with covid-19 out of hospitals, study finds. “The antiviral drug remdesivir can help keep unvaccinated people at risk of severe covid-19 out of hospitals, according to a study that found the treatment reduced hospitalization and death by 87 percent when given soon after diagnosis.”

The Scotsman: Study has revealed why children are more protected from severe Covid than adults. “The innate immune response of children is better at fighting coronavirus, which might help explain why they are less likely than adults to become seriously ill from the disease, new research suggests.”

OUTBREAKS

Miami Herald: Second Royal Caribbean ship has COVID-19 outbreak and is denied entry to Curacao and Aruba. “In a second coronavirus outbreak in less than a week, 55 fully vaccinated crew members and passengers on Royal Caribbean’s Odyssey of the Seas ship that set sail Saturday from Fort Lauderdale have contracted the pandemic disease, the cruise line confirmed late Wednesday.”

BuzzFeed News: Several People Who Attended A Midterm Strategy Event For Democrats In South Carolina Tested Positive For COVID. “Multiple people who attended midterm strategy meetings in South Carolina hosted by a subgroup of the Democratic National Committee have tested positive for COVID-19. Between 5% and 10% of the nearly 300 attendees were infected, BuzzFeed News has learned from two people briefed on the matter.”

Al Dia Music: COVID-19 infections confirmed at Bad Bunny concerts. “Last weekend, Bad Bunny performed live for the first time since beginning of the pandemic in Puerto Rico. At least 80,000 people attended at the Hiram Bithorn stadium, and at least 176 of them have now tested positive for COVID-19, according to the Puerto Rico Department of Health.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

WBHM: Prison visits are back in the Gulf States. Many have not seen loved ones for nearly 2 years. “For over a year, more than 70,000 people incarcerated in Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi were not able to visit with their loved ones, impacting both the prisoners and their family members. The Alabama Department of Corrections was one of the last states in the country to reinstate in-person visitation for family and loved ones, holding off until Dec. 4. Louisiana and Mississippi began allowing family visits in October and November.”

New York Times: Virus cases spike in New York City jails, where less than half of detainees are vaccinated.. “According to a letter sent by the outgoing Correction Department commissioner, Vincent Schiraldi, the coronavirus positivity rate has jumped drastically in the last several days among incarcerated people, only 38 percent of whom are fully vaccinated. Among city residents, 71 percent are fully vaccinated.”

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December 23, 2021 at 10:27PM
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Kentucky Tornado Relief, Saint Catherine’s Monastery, Freespeech, more: Thursday ResearchBuzz, December 23, 2021

Kentucky Tornado Relief, Saint Catherine’s Monastery, Freespeech, more: Thursday ResearchBuzz, December 23, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

WPSD: Gov. Beshear launches new tornado relief resources website. “On Wednesday, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear officially launched a new website to better assist those impacted by the deadly Dec. 10 tornadoes. The website will provide Kentuckians with information from several state assistance programs, including how to apply for unemployment, health care coverage, food assistance, driver’s license replacement and long-term housing.”

Jerusalem Post: Post six-day war footage of Egyptian Monastery made public by Israel’s national library . “Some 1,600 Christian manuscripts and numerous photographs and film footage from after the Six Day War are now available for free public viewing, the National Library of Israel (NLI) has announced. The documents were originally archived at Saint Catherine’s Monastery in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula. Founded by Justinian I over 1,500 years ago, the monastery is home to the oldest functional library in the world.”

CNN: A Texas teen couldn’t speak with his sister, so he created an app to give her a voice. “Archer Calder spent his childhood unable to talk with his younger sister, Della, his only sibling. Della has Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome, a rare genetic condition which affects her ability to eat, move and speak…. Archer began using his coding abilities to develop a web-based application called Freespeech. The site can be accessed from any device — phones, tablets and computers — with internet access. The simple website lets users program buttons with images of their choice to represent words. When clicked, the word is sounded out loud.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

RFI: France opens secret archives from Algeria’s war of independence. “France has opened its judicial and police archives relating to court cases and investigations into Algeria’s war against French colonisation – 15 years earlier than planned. Thursday’s announcement from the Ministry of Culture involves opening all ‘public archives produced in the context of cases relating to acts committed in connection with the Algerian war between 1 November 1954 and 31 December 1966’.”

CNET: Google now gives free COVID test and vaccine details at a glance. Here’s what to do. “Google added new COVID-19 features to its search tool on Wednesday for mobile users. The features can help you quickly find free testing locations and places to get vaccines for kids (and adults). You can also select specific vaccine brands: Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson.”

Engadget: How a ‘robot lawyer’ could help you get unbanned from social media. “The new service, which is included with DoNotPay’s $36 monthly subscription, offers users an alternative to emailing companies’ help center bots or wiring appeals that may never get answered. Instead, DoNotPay asks users for information about what happened to them, and sends a letter to the relevant company’s legal department on their behalf.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Times of Israel: Greek Jewish archives stolen by Nazis returned after nearly 80 years. “The Greek Jewish community is celebrating the return of a trove of manuscripts and community documents that the Nazis stole nearly 80 years ago. The Central Board of Jewish Communities in Greece (KIS) announced in a statement earlier this month that Russia, which was in possession of the archives, had agreed to return them to their Mediterranean origin, after a diplomatic process supported by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis.”

WWBT: Books, cloth envelope & coin found in Robert E. Lee monument time capsule. “134 years of history is uncovered as members of the Department of Historic Resources open a box believed to be the time capsule placed inside the Robert E. Lee monument in 1887. The team started their work to open the lid of the lead box on Wednesday morning. The box took nearly four hours to remove from the 1,500-pound granite block it was found in within the tower of the pedestal where Robert E. Lee’s statue once stood.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Washington Post: Unhappy about privacy laws? One teen showed how to force change.. “Social media platforms’ power to collect, manipulate and exploit personal information alarms many who think they should own the rights to their images and data about their personal lives and preferences. But, as they often do, laws and court decisions are lagging behind these privacy concerns. Yet a teenager’s lawsuit more than a century ago demonstrates how one determined person can enlist government aid in privacy protection and provides a blueprint for these seeking changes today.”

Security Week: Research: Simulated Phishing Tests Make Organizations Less Secure. “A large-scale, long-term phishing experiment conducted in a 56,000-employee organization has come to a startling conclusion: Those simulated phishing tests commonly seen in corporate user-education campaigns are actually making things much worse.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Analytics India: Interesting Algorithms Released By Google AI In 2021. “Google AI aims to apply AI to products and domains that will make AI accessible to all. To fulfil this mission, the tech giant conducts cutting-edge research to bring out innovations helpful to society. This year, too, we saw many such models and algorithms from Google. Though not possible to focus on all, let us take a look at some of the interesting innovations that came from Google AI this year.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Tom’s Hardware: Nostalgic Raspberry Pi Radio Tunes to Music From Past Decades. “The Raspberry Pi makes an excellent gift on its own, but getting one in a custom Time Machine Radio is remarkably fulfilling. This holiday, a maker known as Byte-rider created a custom Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W-powered radio for his father. This custom radio has a professional design and clean finish that we think looks fantastic. There is a dial on one side that can tune into different decades. The Pi reads this input to play only music from the selected decade.” Good morning, Internet…

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December 23, 2021 at 08:27PM
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