Wednesday, January 5, 2022

Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, Google Pixel, CES, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, January 5, 2022

Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, Google Pixel, CES, More: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, January 5, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

CNBC: Global supply chain pressures may have peaked, a new index suggests. “The new metric, called the Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, documents disruptions to supply chains since 1997. The gauge has historically moved around its average. The jump in supply-chain pressures seen during the pandemic blew away past increases in the index, including one in 2011 when a tsunami whacked Japan’s production and a flood in Thailand hamstrung the globe’s ability to produce cars and electronics, according to Fed researchers.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Google fixes bug that stopped some Pixel phones from making 911 calls. “Google has fixed a bug that blocked some people from getting through to 911 when they dialed for help on Pixel smartphones. The problem was confirmed by the web giant last month after a woman described in a viral post on Reddit how the glitch prevented her from reaching emergency services when she thought her grandma was having a stroke.”

USEFUL STUFF

IGN: CES 2022 Schedule, Announcements, and How to Watch. “CES 2022 is surprisingly on track to be an in-person event that’ll run from January 5th to the 8th. The annual tech trade show is still set to be a huge event featuring the latest TVs, automotive tech, laptops, PCs, and a plethora of other gadgets. However, with many major exhibitors like Sony, Samsung, AMD, Intel, Amazon, Google, and Microsoft all pulling out of the show, this will be once again a mostly online show. Of course, that all means it’ll be that much easier for you to keep up with CES 2022 from the comfort of your home, here’s everything you need to know about the upcoming tech conference.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

CNET: Wordle: The wildly popular word game explained. “Wordle took the online world by storm in late 2021, and that momentum doesn’t look close to stopping in the New Year. Never heard of Wordle? You’ve probably seen it on social media recently, particularly if you frequent Twitter. Posts with boxes: Yellow boxes, green boxes, gray boxes.”

The Guardian: Fossil fuel firms among biggest spenders on Google ads that look like search results. “The Guardian analysed ads served on Google search results for 78 climate-related terms, in collaboration with InfluenceMap, a thinktank that tracks the lobbying efforts of polluting industries. The results show that over one in five ads seen in the study – more than 1,600 in total – were placed by companies with significant interests in fossil fuels.”

Independent Wicklow: Online archive for Rathnew Cemetery is near completion. “NEW signs have been delivered and are waiting to be installed as part of the online archives project for Rathnew Cemetery. The online archive will document over 6,500 burial plots and will include a digital map showing each plot and the number of the grave.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: German cartel office examining Google, considering cases involving Amazon, Apple, Meta. “Germany’s cartel office said it had determined that Alphabet and its subsidiary Google met the scale threshold required for it to be subject to the new expanded supervisory powers it has been given to regulate digital companies.”

Meduza: Google reportedly threatens to delete video from U.S.-based blogger after Russian censor flags it as ‘illegal gay propaganda’. “A U.S.-based Russian-language blogger says Google is threatening to delete one of his YouTube posts after Russia’s federal censor flagged it as prohibited content and a Russian court added it to Russia’s Internet blacklist. Court records from late November 2021 confirm that a judge in Vladivostok granted a request by Russia’s media regulator Roskomnadzor to ban a video uploaded to YouTube on June 11, 2019, by a man named Felix Glyukman because the content supposedly violates Russia’s law against ‘gay propaganda.'”

National Post: CBC, Bell among broadcasters urging Ottawa to force Google and Facebook to share revenue: documents. “Some of Canada’s largest broadcasters urged the federal government to force Google and Facebook to share revenue with them, arguing those funds are needed for their beleaguered local TV news operations.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Verge: Colonialism still influences the earth sciences today — and that’s a big problem for research. “Colonialism is so entangled in earth sciences that its ugly legacy still influences research today. Scientists are struggling to undo the damage that colonization has had on their fields, which have been dominated mostly by white men from wealthy nations over the years. The latest evidence is a study published last week that finds that 97 percent of fossil data in a major, global database comes from authors based in North America and Western Europe— indicating that scientists from western nations hold a global ‘monopoly over palaeontological knowledge production.'”

New York Times: Election Falsehoods Surged on Podcasts Before Capitol Riots, Researchers Find. “Researchers at the Brookings Institution reviewed transcripts of nearly 1,500 episodes from 20 of the most popular political podcasts. Among episodes released between the election and the Jan. 6 riot, about half contained election misinformation, according to the analysis.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

University of Waterloo: System recognizes hand gestures to expand computer input on a keyboard. “Researchers are developing a new technology that uses hand gestures to carry out commands on computers. The prototype, called ‘Typealike,’ works through a regular laptop webcam with a simple affixed mirror. The program recognizes the user’s hands beside or near the keyboard and prompts operations based on different hand positions.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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January 5, 2022 at 10:43PM
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Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Photo Editing, Broadband Mapping, TikTok, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, January 4, 2022

Photo Editing, Broadband Mapping, TikTok, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, January 4, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: 2 Easy Ways to Combine Photos on an iPhone . “Performing basic photo editing tasks has always been easy on the iPhone, and this includes combining your photos. As it turns out, there are actually multiple ways to combine photos on an iPhone. Below, we’ll show you some of the ways to put two pictures together on your iPhone or iPad.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Techdirt: Telecom Monopolies Are Exploiting Crappy U.S. Broadband Maps To Block Community Broadband Grant Requests. “Shoddy broadband mapping has generally been a good thing for regional U.S. telecom monopolies, who not only have been allowed to obscure competition gaps (and the high prices and poor service that result), but hoover up an endless gravy train of subsidies and tax breaks for networks that…mysteriously…always wind up half deployed. Our failure to measure deployment success has been painfully, repeatedly exploited.”

Wired: The Creepy TikTok Algorithm Doesn’t Know You. “Like any algorithm, TikTok’s divinatory properties are just the end result of a series of repeated steps. When someone creates a new account, the algorithm targets them with a variety of popular videos designed to test their response to broad categories of content, from viral dances to home repairs, according to a recent Wall Street Journal investigation. When the newspaper set 100-plus bots loose on TikTok, the platform’s ‘rabbit holing’ keyed in on every bot’s preprogrammed interests in less than two hours.”

Chicago Sun-Times: Grants to local community groups will help archive untold history. “[Ahmed Flex] Omar’s story is just one of countless stories about Black Muslims that have gone untold or unnoticed – something he has been working to amplify for the past six years through his Muslim American Leadership Alliance. A new $25,000 grant from the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation is hoping to help the group – and others like it – to move forward.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Bloomberg: No Action Against Google Till Jan. 5, CCI Assures Court. “The Competition Commission of India last week assured the Karnataka High Court that no action will be taken against Google India Pvt. till the next hearing on Jan. 5 regarding a probe initiated by the regulator into the tech giant’s Play store rules.”

City A.M.: Google launches hacker crack down as it snaps up Israeli cybersecurity firm Siemplify for £371m. “Google, also known as Alphabet, has acquired Israeli cybersecurity startup Siemplify for an estimated $500m (£371m), as the giant gears up for the rise in cyber attacks and data breaches. Siemplify has raised $58m (£43m) over four rounds to date, with Israeli VC G20 Ventures the company’s largest shareholder.”

Associated Press: Broward Health hit with data breach on patients, staff. “The Broward Health hospital system on Saturday said it suffered a data breach in October where a hacker accessed personal and medical information of patients and staff. A statement from the hospital said the intruder accessed names, birthdays, addresses, banking information, social security numbers, drivers’ license numbers, patient histories and treatment and diagnosis records, among other information.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

CNET: The misinformation pandemic is out of control, but there’s a fix. “Conspiracy theories and misinformation about QAnon, COVID-19 and 2020 election fraud took a deadly turn in 2021. As bad as things were last year, experts worry it’ll get worse in 2022.”

BBC: Can fitness apps be as effective as a personal trainer?. “As we start 2022, lots of us will be resuming the battle to lose weight and get fit. A wealth of high-tech fitness apps are now available to help, but are they anywhere near as good as hiring a human personal trainer?”

The Daily Barometer: Regional Class Research Vessel introduces new tool for increasing data science literacy. “The Regional Class Research Vessel program, funded by the National Science Foundation, will enhance public marine and data science literacy by adapting ocean science data for the development of educational programs and exhibits.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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January 5, 2022 at 02:03AM
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Tuesday CoronaBuzz, January 4, 2022: 51 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Tuesday CoronaBuzz, January 4, 2022: 51 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.

UPDATES

BBC: China: Xi’an residents in lockdown trade for food amid shortage. “Some residents under quarantine in the Chinese city of Xi’an have resorted to bartering supplies in recent days, as worries of food shortages continue. Posts on social media show residents swapping supplies and even tech gadgets in exchange for food. About 13 million have been confined to their homes since 23 December, and presently cannot leave to buy food.”

KFGO: Omicron estimated to be 95.4% of coronavirus variants in U.S., CDC says. ” The Omicron variant was estimated to be 95.4% of the coronavirus strains circulating in the United States as of Jan. 1, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Tuesday. The variant has swiftly spread across the country since its detection on Dec. 1, replacing Delta as the dominant strain and sparking a new wave of infections that pushed daily cases near the 1 million mark on Monday.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

CNN: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene says Facebook blocked her account for 24 hours. “The congresswoman reacted to the temporary Facebook ban through her Telegram account, writing, ‘Facebook has joined Twitter in censoring me.’ A spokesperson for Meta, Facebook’s parent company, said Facebook removed one of Greene’s posts about Covid-19.”

Poynter: Claims that six-month Pfizer data show its COVID-19 vaccine causes more illness than it prevents are false. “A headline widely shared on Facebook alleges that Pfizer’s own data show that the company’s COVID-19 vaccine causes more harm than good…. The actual data from Pfizer does not support any such claim.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

WABC: New York adjusts patient intake reporting amid COVID hospitalization surge. “Amid mounting concern over surging hospitalization numbers, the state of New York is adjusting the way patients are admitted. Starting today hospitals have to clarify if patients with COVID came in for COVID symptoms or for something else. That’s because a number of those hospitalized for COVID in the last few weeks only found out they had it after being admitted for a separate issue.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

WLBT: Miss. Pediatricians urge school mask policies, vaccinations amid rise in COVID-19 infections. “As COVID-19 cases surge to record numbers in the state, pediatrician members of the Mississippi Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics (MSAAP) are reiterating their strong recommendation that schools and child care facilities implement school-wide mask policies for staff and students older than 2 years of age, in alignment with guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics, to help keep children and staff in school.”

HCP Live: Gastrointestinal Symptoms Linked to Severe COVID-19 Outcomes in Pediatric Patients. “Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, severe gastrointestinal symptoms has been common in children with COVID-19, but it is unknown what the frequency and clinical outcomes of these gastrointestinal symptoms are and why pediatric patients are impacted more than adults. There have also been studies that show 15% of pediatric patients with COVID-19 present with diarrhea, particularly in infancy. Vomiting (10%) or abdominal pain (8%) also have a higher frequency in school-aged children.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

CBS Chicago: Advocate Aurora Health Sees Hundreds Of Hospitalizations As COVID Cases Increase. “The massive increase in COVID cases is straining the health care system. Across the 26 hospitals in the Advocate Aurora Health System, nearly 1,500 patients are in the hospital right now fighting COVID. That’s double the number from last month and quadruple the number from 60 days ago.”

Denver Post: Omicron hasn’t overwhelmed Colorado hospitals despite “unprecedented” surge, but little capacity is left. “Since the fast-spreading new omicron variant is less severe than the once-dominant delta, Colorado’s current COVID-19 situation is precarious, rather than catastrophic. The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment reported 50,974 new coronavirus infections statewide in the week ending Sunday, a 75% increase over the prior week — and a tally that blows past the state’s single-week record of 37,804 set in November 2020.”

ITV: Covid: Critical incidents declared at several hospital trusts as Omicron hits staff numbers. “Critical incidents have been declared at several NHS trusts in the past five days, with at least 14 hospitals now responding to reduced staff numbers. The Omicron variant of Covid is said to be causing mass absences across a range of industries, with the government forecasting that 25% of workforces could be forced into self-isolation by the fast-spreading strain.”

KFOR: COVID-19 hospitalizations surpass 1,000 in Oklahoma. “Health officials say more than 1,000 Oklahomans were in the hospital on average over the past three days with COVID-19. On Tuesday, data from the Oklahoma State Department of Health shows that the state has had 720,961 confirmed cases of COVID-19 since March of 2020.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

Reuters: Armani to cancel January men’s, haute couture shows due to COVID-19 surge. ” Italian fashion house Giorgio Armani said on Tuesday it would cancel its men’s and haute couture shows scheduled in January due to the surge in COVID-19 infections in Europe. The men’s fall/winter 2022-23 show was due to take place during Milan’s Fashion week while the haute couture runway was expected in Paris.”

INSTITUTIONS

Smithsonian Institution: Smithsonian Announces Modified Schedule for Museums and National Zoo Jan. 5–17. “The Smithsonian is preparing for unprecedented staff shortages in the coming weeks due to the surge in COVID-19 cases. To accommodate these shortages, the Smithsonian museums in Washington, D.C., and the National Zoo will operate on a modified schedule from Wednesday, Jan. 5, through Monday, Jan. 17, reducing the days of operation at some museums and closing two museums during this period.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Reuters: Starbucks says U.S. workers must get COVID-19 vaccine or tests. “Starbucks Corp will require its U.S. workers to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or undergo weekly testing in order to comply with new federal mandates, the company said in an update sent to employees on Monday.”

11 Alive: Metro Atlanta restaurants struggle with staffing shortages amid omicron surge. “Businesses across metro Atlanta are feeling the impact of surging COVID-19 infections as Georgia set pandemic records for new cases back-to-back last week. The unprecedented numbers are forcing restaurants to adapt yet again.”

WFAA: After latest COVID surge, a Dallas bar shuts down for the month of January. “With omicron cases on the rise, a Dallas bar made the decision to shut down for the month of January. The owner of Alexandre’s in Oak Lawn says it’s the right move for his bar and the community.”

Reuters: COVID-19 loss of $44 billion is 3rd largest catastrophe cost to insurers – Howden. “Insured losses of $44 billion from COVID-19 so far represent the third largest cost to insurers of any catastrophe, behind Hurricane Katrina and the 9/11 attacks, insurance broker Howden said on Tuesday.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

NBC News: U.S. reaches 1 million daily Covid cases amid spread of omicron variant. “The United States hit 1 million new Covid-19 cases on Monday, according to data compiled by NBC News, underscoring the threat of the omicron variant as the third year of the pandemic gets underway.”

Law .com: ‘An Alarming Surge of COVID-19’: Central District of California Halts Jury Trials for 3 Weeks. “The U.S. District Court for the Central District of California on Monday suspended jury trials through Jan. 24, citing “an alarming surge of COVID-19 cases,” including inside its own courthouses. ‘Given the increased rate of transmission of COVID-19 in the Central District of California due to the Omicron variant, conducting jury trials would place court personnel, attorneys, parties, and prospective jurors at undue risk,’ according to the order, which warns the suspension ‘may be extended as necessary.'”

Dayton Daily News: U.S. Sen Rob Portman announces breakthrough COVID case. “U.S. Sen Rob Portman announced Tuesday that he tested positive for COVID-19.”

Reuters: CDC to clarify COVID-19 testing guidance for ending quarantine – U.S. surgeon general. “The U.S. Centers for Disease Control will issue a clarification on the role of COVID-19 testing related to a shortened five-day quarantine period for those testing positive for the virus, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said on Tuesday.”

Washington Post: Congress’ doctor wants ‘maximal telework’ amid virus surge. ” Congress’ top doctor urged lawmakers Monday to move to a ‘maximal telework posture,’ citing ‘unprecedented’ numbers of COVID-19 cases at the Capitol that he said are mostly breakthrough infections of people already vaccinated.”

King5: Reports: Biden to double purchase of Pfizer COVID-19 pills, US will buy 20 million. “The Biden administration plans to double the U.S. government’s order for Pfizer’s antiviral COVID-19 pill, with the new order set up for 20 million treatment courses, according to reports.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Reuters: Israeli study finds fourth dose of COVID-19 vaccine boosts antibodies five-fold – PM Bennett. “A fourth dose of COVID-19 vaccine boosts antibodies fivefold a week after the shot is administered, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said on Tuesday, citing preliminary findings of an Israeli study.”

Reuters: Sweden sets new daily COVID-19 case record as fourth wave mounts. “Sweden set a new daily record for COVID-19 cases, registering 11,507 cases on Dec. 30, health agency data showed on Tuesday as a fourth wave of the virus mounted across the country.”

Reuters: Swedish King and Queen test positive for COVID-19. ” Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia have tested positive for COVID-19, the palace said in a statement on Tuesday. ‘The King and Queen, who are fully vaccinated with three injections, have mild symptoms and are feeling well, given the circumstances,’ the palace said in a statement.”

BBC: Yuzhou: Second Chinese city forced into Covid lockdown. “China has put a second city into total lockdown after just three asymptomatic Covid cases were discovered. Yuzhou – which has a population of 1.1 million – saw its transport system shut down and all but essential food stores closed overnight. It follows a similar lockdown in Xi’an, where 13 million have been confined to their homes since 23 December.”

STATES / STATE GOVERNMENT

WCNC: NC sets new COVID-19 case record over the holiday weekend. “According to data from the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, North Carolina has set a new COVID-19 case record over the holiday weekend, reporting nearly 20,000 new infections on New Year’s Day. The two-week average daily case rise is nearing 10,000, marking a new record surge in cases for the state.”

Daily Leader: MS Chief Justice issues emergency court order regarding COVID-19. “Mississippi Supreme Court Chief Justice Mike Randolph has issued an emergency order extending the time for COVID-19 safeguards in all courts and giving individual judges discretion to postpone jury trials scheduled through Jan. 14.”

New York Attorney General: Attorney General James Issues Warnings to EZ Test NY and Keep Health Safe to Stop Misrepresenting Turnaround Times for COVID-19 Test Results. “New York Attorney General Letitia James yesterday issued two warning letters to two companies facilitating coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) testing — EZ Test NY (a Brooklyn-based collection center) and Keep Health Safe (a Fort Lee, New Jersey-based collection center) — for not meeting promised turnaround times for test results.”

WJLA: Hogan issues state of emergency after COVID surge, National Guard deployed for test sites. “Maryland Governor Larry Hogan has ordered a 30-day state of emergency, citing a 500% spike in hospitalizations over the last few weeks. The governor said the decision was made in light of the recent COVID-19 case surge and its variants. Hogan said the next 4-6 weeks will be the toughest on Marylanders, even implying that hospitalizations related to the coronavirus could reach 5,000.”

Greater New Milford Spectrum: Lamont: Connecticut schools to stay open despite record COVID surge. “Gov. Ned Lamont and other top state officials on Tuesday voiced their unwavering commitment to in-person learning for students despite an unprecedented surge in COVID infections and recent school closures and delays. Lamont, along with the state’s education and public health commissioners, attempted on Tuesday to instill confidence in parents and educators as they reiterated their commitment to in-person learning.”

Mississippi Free Press: Mississippi Begins 2022 Awash In COVID-19, Hospitalization Data Mixed. “Omicron continues to wash over Mississippi unrestrained, driving increased case counts and hospitalizations. But data from the University of Mississippi Medical Center support early hopes that the disease may have a milder course of disease in aggregate, but not for every individual.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

The Record: CDTA busses equipped with air-purification system to fight COVID. “[Capital District Transportation Authority] is continuing to take important steps to keep employees and customers safe during the COVID-19 pandemic. In CDTA’s latest effort, all buses are now equipped with a commercial-grade air purification system that uses Photohydroionization® Cell (PHI-Cell®) technology to clean the air, the organization announced in a press release.”

Dallas Morning News: Nearly 200 Dallas police and Fire-Rescue workers quarantined in latest COVID-19 surge. “Close to 200 Dallas police and fire workers are quarantined after testing positive for COVID-19 as cases of the omicron variant surge, according to both departments Monday. More than three-quarters of the infected first responders, 155, are Dallas Fire-Rescue workers. It’s the highest number of fire staff out at one time, said Jason Evans, a Fire-Rescue spokesman.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Times and Democrat: South Carolina resident gets ‘second chance’ after COVID-19. “Monsherrie Brown considers herself a walking miracle after surviving a near-fatal struggle with COVID-19. She says the medical personnel at the Regional Medical Center saved her.”

NPR: 700 sheep and goats were arranged in the shape of a syringe to encourage vaccinations. “Tasty bits of bread did the trick for about 700 sheep and goats to join Germany’s drive to encourage more people to get vaccinated against COVID-19. The animals were arranged on Monday into the shape of a roughly 330-foot syringe in a field at Schneverdingen, south of Hamburg. Shepherd Wiebke Schmidt-Kochan spent several days practicing with her animals, news agency dpa reported.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

WSOC: Whoopi Goldberg tests positive for COVID-19. “The actress, comedian and talk show host missed Monday’s episode of ‘The View,’ with co-host Joy Behar saying Goldberg has mild symptoms.”

Entertainment Tonight: Jimmy Fallon Talks Testing Positive for COVID, Says Daughters Got It Too. “Jimmy Fallon is opening up about testing positive for COVID over the holidays. After sharing a photo to Instagram of himself sitting in a testing room at NBC on Instagram, Fallon also discussed the experience during Monday’s The Tonight Show. The 47-year-old late night host tested positive for the virus on the first day of the network’s holiday break.”

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

Daily Beast: California Deputy DA Who Fought Vaccine Mandate Dies Abruptly After Falling Ill With COVID at Age 46. “A deputy district attorney and up-and-coming Republican political star in California’s Orange County has died abruptly after telling friends she contracted COVID-19. Kelly Ernby, a presumed candidate for the state Assembly in 2022, was only 46 years old. According to the Los Angeles Times, she fell ill shortly after speaking out against vaccine mandates at a rally organized by Turning Point USA on Dec. 4.”

K-12 EDUCATION

Belleville News-Democrat: Southwest Illinois schools adapt to COVID surges, including return to remote learning. “Some school districts in the metro-east are changing their learning plans as students return from winter break, to curb the spread of COVID from the omicron variant and travel over the holidays. New daily COVID case numbers in Illinois are at an all-time high, according to data from the Illinois Department of Public Health, and every county in the state is considered to have high transmission.”

Fayetteville Observer: Cumberland County Schools to continue in-person learning despite rise in COVID cases. “Classes in Cumberland County Schools will continue in person as planned this week, following that recommendation from Superintendent Marvin Connelly Jr.”

WHDH: More than 1K Boston Public Schools teachers, staff call out sick on district’s first day of classes after holiday break. “More than 1,000 Boston Public Schools teachers and staff members called out sick Tuesday on the district’s first day of classes following the holiday break. A total of 461 teachers, about 1,000 staff members, and 52 bus drivers phoned in with an illness, according to BPS Superintendent Brenda Cassellius.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WKRC: NKU pushes back beginning of spring classes due to COVID surge. “Northern Kentucky University is delaying its spring semester due to the surge in COVID-19 cases in the Tri-State. Classes will now begin on Tuesday, Jan. 18. Faculty are also encouraged to include fewer in-person activities in their classes.”

Austin American-Statesman: University of Texas reports record-high COVID-19 case count amid omicron surge. “The University of Texas reported a record high number of COVID-19 cases among students, staff and faculty on Monday. UT reported 108 positive COVID-19 student cases and 25 faculty and staff cases on Monday, according to the university’s COVID-19 dashboard. All tests were administered on Monday.”

HEALTH

Burnley Express: Thousands injured by unusual activities during Covid lockdowns. “DIY, new pets and playground equipment were behind many of the hospitalisations, according to analysis of the figures by the PA news agency. Cases of people getting struck by lightning also rose dramatically, while there were hundreds of cases caused by people falling out of trees.”

Inform NY: Expired COVID-19 tests could skew results. ” The year 2022 has kicked off with another major surge in coronavirus cases. Because of this, doctors say testing is as crucial as ever. ‘The only way to know for certain if you’ve got a cold or the flu or COVID-19 is to be tested,’ said Dr. Brad Fuller with Central Ohio Primary Care. But there is something to look out for on those at-home tests: expiration dates.”

ABS-CBN News: ‘Flurona’: COVID, flu co-infections not unusual, expert says. “A co-infection with the influenza virus and coronavirus is not unusual, a health specialist said Monday, after Israel reported its first case of the ‘flurona’ infection in a pregnant woman.”

RESEARCH

Pharmacy Times: Study Shows Cancer Patients Overlooked in COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout. “A new study found that approximately two-thirds of the United States failed to prioritize patients with cancer for COVID-19 vaccinations, despite recommendations from the CDC, according to a study presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America.”

Medical Xpress: COVID-19 and PTSD: Assessing the pandemic’s toll on mental health. “Illness, grief, job loss, social isolation, uncertainty, and other pandemic-driven stressors have contributed to an increase in psychological distress on an unusually wide scale. As researchers and clinicians continue to grapple with the psychological fallout from COVID-19, a growing body of literature has examined the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the general public.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

CBS 12: Man accused of orchestrating $4.2M COVID relief fraud scheme. “Federal prosecutors say a South Florida man tried to obtain more than $4.2 million in COVID-19 relief funds by filing false loan applications. Court records show that 27-year-old Valesky Barosy made his first appearance last week in Fort Lauderdale federal court.”

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



January 5, 2022 at 12:14AM
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Colorado Peace Officers, Digital Spaces, Online Privacy, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, January 4, 2022

Colorado Peace Officers, Digital Spaces, Online Privacy, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, January 4, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Colorado Attorney General: New state database launched to provide public transparency on peace officer certification, training compliance, and misconduct. “The Colorado Peace Officer Standards and Training Board has launched a new database that allows the public to access information regarding an officer’s state certification, compliance with training requirements, and employment status. The public database is required under law enforcement accountability legislation the Colorado General Assembly enacted in 2020 and 2021.”

I’m not really sure where to put this so I’ll file it under New. Hyperallergic: The Getty, Google Arts, & Banana Craze Create Three Online Shows Worth a Visit. “In my search for online exhibitions with compelling presentations and content, I have recently become apprised of three shows that take advantage of the digital medium to display words and images (only one show contains sounds in these examples) in ways that I wouldn’t quite be able to experience IRL. They do all share a basic approach: to use visual and historical examinations of an object or objects to discuss how it has come to be and how the forces that acted upon it might resonate in our own current moment.”

USEFUL STUFF

CNET: You can stop Google tracking by changing these settings. “Do you use any of Google’s apps? If so, you’re probably being tracked. Even if you turned off location history on your Google account, you’re not completely in the clear yet. While disabling that setting sounds like a one-and-done solution, some Google apps are still storing your location data.”

MakeUseOf: 5 Effective Habit Tracker Apps and Tools to Stick to Your New Year’s Resolutions. “Some say a habit takes 21 days, others say it takes 66 days, and some studies even say it requires 36 weeks. The one thing everyone agrees upon is that consistency is key to building a new habit. Habit trackers have shown to be useful for that, especially when they show you the amount of effort you’ve put in so far, compelling you to put that effort again when you’re feeling demotivated.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Stone County Enterprise: MDAH Launches Family Genealogy Fellowships . “The Mississippi Department of Archives and History (MDAH) will award fellowships of up to $2,000 to support individuals hoping to locate information related to their family history using resources available at MDAH. The fellowships are a part of a year-long initiative in 2022 to expand understanding of the Great Migration and its impact on Mississippi and the nation.”

CNN: India is investigating a fake website that offered Muslim women for sale. “The Indian government says it is investigating a website that purported to offer Muslim women for sale, the second time in less than a year that a fake online auction of this kind has sparked outrage in the country.”

Route Fifty: New York City Tests Blockchain for File Storage. “New York City is testing out the decentralized web by putting open data on Filecoin, an open source, decentralized file storage network. Working with Protocol Labs, an open source research, development and deployment laboratory, and the Filecoin Foundation, New York City will store and maintain data on demographics, air quality and legal notices on the network — at no cost for at least the next five years.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Politico: Amazon and Google deploy their armies to thwart antitrust bills. “Amazon and Google are mobilizing a powerful force to counter Congress’ increasing appetite for corporate trust-busting — the throngs of business owners and ordinary users who have made the tech giants a part of their daily lives.”

New York Times: Are Apple AirTags Being Used to Track People and Steal Cars?. “Privacy groups sounded alarms about the coin-sized location-tracking devices when they were introduced. Now people are concerned those fears are being realized.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: Scientists Settled a Century-Old Family Drama Using DNA From Postcards . “MyHeritage, the DNA testing company, announced in 2018 that it would be jumping into the business of commercial artifact testing. An Australian company, Totheletter DNA, was founded in 2018 to offer DNA testing of artifacts ‘from your passed loved-ones to enhance your genealogical research’ for a cost of over $2,000. But what was once envisioned as an explosion in artifact testing has petered into more of a slow burn.”

The Guardian: Your attention didn’t collapse. It was stolen. “Social media and many other facets of modern life are destroying our ability to concentrate. We need to reclaim our minds while we still can.”

The Verge: Podcasters Are Letting Software Pick Their Ads — It’s Already Going Awry. “Wherever there’s a website, there can be a targeted ad, and now wherever there’s a podcast, there’s the potential of inserting a targeted ad, too. Whichever company can make that transition happen the fastest, across the most shows, and with the best data, could not only recoup all those millions of dollars in acquisition costs but make more on top of them. The industry is sprinting toward this programmatic advertising future. However, there are some obstacles along the way, and podcasters are already running into them.” Good morning, 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!



January 4, 2022 at 08:24PM
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Monday, January 3, 2022

Modern Design, Scanner Apps, Web Surfing, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, January 3, 2022

Modern Design, Scanner Apps, Web Surfing, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, January 3, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Drexel University: Drexel Unveils ‘Museum of Where We Are’ Exhibition of Design History Students’ Work. “Joseph Larnerd, PhD, assistant professor of design history in the Westphal College of Media Arts & Design, started his ‘The Museum of Where We Are’ online project as a way to continue facets of hands-on learning in his ‘ARTH 300: The History of Modern Design’ class after all University coursework went remote in spring 2020 due to the pandemic. He had students select an object from their current place of residence, and over the course of the term, conceptualize and research a label for that object like one would find in a museum.”

USEFUL STUFF

Mashable: 5 of the best free scanner apps for iPhone and Android. “It’s a rarity to find a peer with a printer, let alone a scanner. As technology evolves, it seems like the scanner is going the way of the fax machine, slowly but surely slipping into oblivion. That is, until you’re moving apartments, applying for a loan, or doing your taxes, and, all of a sudden, you need one of those ancient technologies and don’t have access to one. Thankfully, there are a few apps for that.”

MakeUseOf: How to Access Websites That Won’t Load: 5 Methods to Try. “Have you ever clicked on a link or bookmark and instead seen an error page? It can be extremely frustrating when a site won’t load, so is there a trick you can use to access a busy website with heavy traffic? Do you know how to open a crashed website? What if it contains blocked content? Fortunately, there are a few ways to access web pages that won’t otherwise load.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Techdirt: Gaming Like It’s 1926: Join The Fourth Annual Public Domain Game Jam. “Happy new year everyone — and happy public domain day! That’s right: as of today, works from 1926 are now officially in the public domain in the US, and that means it’s time for the latest public domain game jam: Gaming Like It’s 1926, presented by Techdirt and Randy Lubin of Diegetic Games. Just like in past years, we’re calling on game designers of all stripes and levels of experience to create games that make use of, or are based on, material from newly-public-domain works.”

New York Times: A Vatican Library Shortens the Distance Between Its Works and Its Scholars. “Some of the texts at the [library of the Pontifical Oriental Institute], which over the years swelled to some 200,000 works, have just been digitized, and will soon be at the fingertips of a global audience — no voyages or ladders needed. The first digitized versions will be available to the public in mid-2022, the product of a charitable initiative that connected the institute with technology companies in the United States and Germany.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: Morgan Stanley to pay $60 mln to resolve data security lawsuit. “Morgan Stanley (MS.N) agreed to pay $60 million to settle a lawsuit by customers who said the Wall Street bank exposed their personal data when it twice failed to properly retire some of its older information technology.”

Bloomberg: U.S. catches Kremlin insider who may have secrets of 2016 hack. “In the days before Christmas, U.S. officials in Boston unveiled insider trading charges against a Russian tech tycoon they had been pursuing for months. They accused Vladislav Klyushin, who’d been extradited from Switzerland on Dec. 18, of illegally making tens of millions of dollars trading on hacked corporate-earnings information. Yet as authorities laid out their securities fraud case, a striking portrait of the detainee emerged: Klyushin was not only an accused insider trader, but a Kremlin insider.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Bleeping Computer: University loses 77TB of research data due to backup error. “The Kyoto University in Japan has lost about 77TB of research data due to an error in the backup system of its Hewlett-Packard supercomputer. The incident occurred between December 14 and 16, 2021, and resulted in 34 million files from 14 research groups being wiped from the system and the backup file.”

Washington Post: Artificial intelligence is restoring lost works by Klimt, Picasso and Rembrandt. Not everyone is happy about it.. “Gustav Klimt’s 1900 painting ‘Philosophy’ might have been remembered as a pivotal artwork. Made at a turning point in the artist’s career, it was vividly colored, dramatically composed — even provocative in its blatant nudity and unflinching emotion. But in 1945, the work was destroyed in a fire and essentially lost to history. For decades, only black-and-white photographs of ‘Philosophy’ existed. Now, thanks to artificial intelligence, we can see the work in full color. But does the re-creation really look like the original? Does it even look like a Klimt?” 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!



January 4, 2022 at 03:39AM
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Monday CoronaBuzz, January 3, 2022: 56 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, January 3, 2022: 56 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.

UPDATES

New York Times: With Omicron’s Rise, Americans Brace for Returning to School and Work. “In two short weeks, as the year closed out, the Omicron variant drove coronavirus case counts to record levels, upended air travel and left gaping staffing holes at police departments, firehouses and hospitals. And that was at a time many people were off for the holiday season. Now comes Monday, with millions of Americans having traveled back home to start school and work again, and no one is sure of what comes next.”

CNET: Free at-home COVID tests: Where are they?. “We’ll share what we know now, and will continue to update this story as we learn more details, including when the federal reimbursement program starts and exactly how it will work.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Snopes: Did Betty White Say She Got COVID Booster 3 Days Before She Died?. “When beloved American actor and comedian Betty White died at the age of 99 on Dec. 31, 2021, no specific cause of death was immediately made public, though police said she appeared to have died from natural causes. With the COVID-19 pandemic still a major public health concern, social media rumor-mongers were quick to invent a specific cause of death out of whole cloth: White, they claimed, died just three days after supposedly receiving a COVID-19 vaccine booster shot on Dec. 28.”

Poynter: No, public health officials aren’t passing off the common cold as the omicron variant. “In February 2020, as the earliest COVID-19 cases cropped up in the U.S., the late conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh told his listeners there was no need to worry. ‘The coronavirus is the common cold, folks,’ he said, pushing a false claim that would soon be repeated widely online. Nearly two years later, and after millions of people have died worldwide from the coronavirus and its variants, social media users are still taking up the refrain.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Washington Post: In coronavirus-hit Mexico, many women are ‘determined to not have babies’. “Everyone knew the pandemic would bring death. Edith García Díaz thought it would also bring birth — lots of birth. As a state health official, she worried the crisis would impede access to contraceptives, leading to a rise in pregnancies…. But as the data trickle in, one state after another has reported the opposite tendency. Births in Mexico dropped 11 percent in the first six months of this year compared with the same period in 2020, according to preliminary Health Ministry data.”

Los Angeles Times: Car crash deaths have surged during COVID-19 pandemic. Here’s why. “It was a tally that shocked the experts: 38,680 deaths on U.S. roadways last year, the most since 2007, even though pandemic precautions had dramatically reduced driving…. He was wrong. The latest evidence suggests that after decades of safety gains, the pandemic has made U.S. drivers more reckless — more likely to speed, drink or use drugs and leave their seat belts unbuckled.”

Florida Politics: COVID-19 pandemic is still keeping women in Florida from the workforce. “According to a report from the Hamilton Project, before the pandemic, women were having a historic moment in labor. Between December 2019 and February 2020, there were more women in the workforce than men, and women had overtaken men in the workforce during a period of job growth for the first time.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

The National News: Arrests and clashes as thousands protest against Dutch Covid measures. “Thousands of protesters defied authorities and gathered in the Dutch capital Amsterdam on Sunday to oppose coronavirus restrictions, leading to clashes and arrests. ‘This is Holland! Power to the people!’ chanted one protester. The demonstrators rallied in one of the city’s main squares, despite Dutch authorities banning the protest beforehand.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

ABC 15 Arizona: Embry Health to request help from Governor Doug Ducey amid record-breaking COVID-19 test surge. “Embry Health CEO Raymond Embry said he plans to send a letter to Arizona Governor Doug Ducey requesting that he mobilize the National Guard to help support Embry and other COVID-19 testing companies across Arizona. Embry said his company is seeing a record-breaking surge in testing. He anticipates they will hit 30,000 patients to be tested across the state Monday. Just two weeks ago, Embry Health’s previous testing record was 18,000 patients in one day.”

CBS Philly: COVID-19 Surge Forces Main Line Health To Pause All Elective Surgeries, Procedures For 2 Weeks. “Main Line Health has announced it is pausing all elective surgeries and procedures for the next two weeks. Officials say they made the decision in order to make room for the surge in COVID-19 patients and to make sure there is enough staffing.”

Local 10: Staffing shortage amid COVID surge shuts down labor and delivery unit at Holy Cross Health. “Staffing shortages at a South Florida hospital amid the surge in COVID-19 cases has forced the shutdown of an entire department there. The rise in infections also has local officials opening new testing sites in South Florida.”

NBC New York: NJ COVID Hospitalizations Up Another 10%, Now at May 2020 Levels. “COVID-19 hospitalizations in New Jersey spiked another 10% over the weekend, quickly rising to levels last seen in the first week of May 2020. As of Saturday, 4,715 people were hospitalized in the state with the virus, a net increase of 441 people from the prior day. (Hospital data is a day in arrears on the state’s dashboard, so the Saturday total was posted early Monday morning.)”

WSB Atlanta: Georgia could see 40,000 daily COVID-19 cases in next two weeks, model projects. “More than 3,300 people are currently hospitalized with COVID-19 in Georgia hospitals, compared to less than 1,000 at the end of November. More than 1,000 Georgians have been hospitalized with COVID-19 in just the last week.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

Bangor Daily News: More local farmers relying on social media to help survive the pandemic. “Maine farmers aren’t strangers to social media, but the pandemic made the need for a robust and responsive social media presence even clearer for many of them. Farming organizations over the past few years have offered more social media training, and Maine’s farmers have reaped the benefits.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

US Department of Defense: Statement by Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III on COVID Status. “I tested positive this morning for COVID-19. I requested the test today after exhibiting symptoms while at home on leave. My symptoms are mild, and I am following my physician’s directions. In keeping with those directions, and in accordance with CDC guidelines, I will quarantine myself at home for the next five days. ”

PR Newswire: Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Takes Multiple Actions to Expand Use of Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine. “Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration amended the emergency use authorization (EUA) for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine to: * Expand the use of a single booster dose to include use in individuals 12 through 15 years of age. * Shorten the time between the completion of primary vaccination of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine and a booster dose to at least five months. * Allow for a third primary series dose for certain immunocompromised children 5 through 11 years of age.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Reuters: Botswana’s president in isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 . ” Botswana’s President Mokgweetsi Masisi is in mandatory self- isolation after testing positive for COVID-19 in routine testing, a government spokesperson said on Monday.”

Associated Press: How will pandemic end? Omicron clouds forecasts for endgame . “Pandemics do eventually end, even if omicron is complicating the question of when this one will. But it won’t be like flipping a light switch: The world will have to learn to coexist with a virus that’s not going away. The ultra-contagious omicron mutant is pushing cases to all-time highs and causing chaos as an exhausted world struggles, again, to stem the spread. But this time, we’re not starting from scratch.”

Reuters: UK’s Johnson will ‘continue on same path’ in tackling COVID. “British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the right measures were in place to tackle the surge in COVID-19 cases caused by the Omicron variant given the high levels of vaccination in the country.”

Reuters: “We will not yield,” French lawmaker says after death threats over COVID vaccine pass. “French lawmakers said on Monday they would not be cowed by death threats that dozens of them received over a bill that will require people to show proof of vaccination to go to a restaurant or cinema or take the train. The new law, which would remove the option of showing a negative test result instead of having the jabs, has the backing of most parties and is almost certain to be passed by the lower house in a vote late on Monday or early Tuesday.”

BBC: Covid: Scotland hits record number of new cases. “A further 20,217 people have tested positive for Covid-19 in Scotland, the highest daily figure of the pandemic. The Public Health Scotland figures are the first to be published in 2022 – after the last tranche released on 29 December also showed record cases.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Tap Into Morristown: NJ First Lady Tammy Murphy Tests Positive for COVID. “While Mrs. Murphy is said to be ‘asymptomatic’, the Governor and First Lady tested themselves due to a recent contact with an individual (a non-family member) in their home. Governor Murphy and the rest of the family have tested negative, and they will continue to test regularly in the coming days according to his office.”

Iowa Public Radio: Health officials ask Iowans to report at-home COVID-19 test results to health department. “Public health officials are asking Iowans who test positive for COVID-19 using an at-home rapid test to report the results to their local health department. The demand for at-home testing has increased as the highly transmittable omicron variant drives a spike in new infections. But local health officials say unlike the tests that are run through the State Hygienic Lab or hospitals and clinics, at-home test results aren’t reported to public health officials.”

Salt Lake Tribune: How Spencer Cox navigated the COVID pandemic during his first year as Utah governor. “On the last day of August 2021, 1,677 Utahns tested positive for the coronavirus. Nearly 500 of Utah’s hospital beds were filled with COVID-19 patients, with about 50 new patients hospitalized each day. Lines at test sites were so long that patients were relieving themselves in bushes. Thirteen Utahns had died from the coronavirus one day earlier. That was the day Gov. Spencer J. Cox stopped doing regular public updates focused on the pandemic.”

WVPE: Coronavirus: State reports 12,000+ cases in one day, Holcomb ‘blindsided’ by Rokita comments. “Indiana reports more than 12,000 new COVID-19 cases in a single day. State health officials raise the alarm about Indiana’s overwhelmed hospitals. And Gov. Eric Holcomb said he was ‘stunned’ by Attorney General Todd Rokita’s comments saying he ‘doesn’t believe any numbers any more.’ ”

9 News NBC: 18th Judicial District suspends jury trials due to COVID. “The 18th Judicial District in Colorado is suspending jury trials and moving to remote operations due to high COVID-19 case counts. On Dec. 30, Chief Judge Michelle Amico issued the order that is effective from Jan. 3 through Jan. 28.”

WDTV: WVa officials warn of message scam over COVID vaccine status. “West Virginia health officials are warning residents to ignore spam text messages concerning their COVID-19 vaccine status. The Department of Health and Human Resources said it has received reports of people receiving messages asking them to validate their driver’s license through the Division of Motor Vehicles in partnership with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Hays Post: Kansas City Mayor and family test positive for COVID. “Mayor Quinton Lucas reported on New Year’s Eve he had tested positive for the virus despite being vaccinated and receiving a booster dose.”

The Morning Call: LANTA cancels bus routes Monday due to COVID absences; Allentown School District also facing transportation woes. “LANTA is canceling some bus trips Monday because many drivers are out sick with COVID-19, the transportation agency said…. The cancellations are only for Monday, the authority said, though further decisions are made on a day-to-day basis.” LANTA is the bus service for Allentown, Pennsylvania.

KFOR: COVID-19 closes food pantry in Norman. “Residents who are in need in Norman may go without help after an outbreak of COVID-19 at a local food pantry. On Dec. 31, Food and Shelter announced that its main pantry staff and volunteers had all been infected with COVID-19.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

San Antonio Express-News: ‘The odds were not in his favor’: San Antonio man survives COVID-19 but pays a price. “Albert Bañuelos could sense the darkness. In his delirium, he saw things he doesn’t like to talk about. He doesn’t want to remember. ‘I had to get out of there,’ said Bañuelos, 43. ‘Your brain is on, but it’s playing a trick on you.’ He contracted the delta variant of the coronavirus in early September and was admitted to Methodist Hospital Northeast in Live Oak. As he struggled to breathe, doctors placed him in a medically induced coma. Machines pumped medicine into his body. For 4½ days, Bañuelos breathed through a tube inserted into his trachea and attached to a mechanical ventilator.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

MetalSucks: David Lee Roth Cancels Two Farewell Shows Due to Covid-19 Case in His Band. “David Lee Roth canceled the first two shows of his planned Las Vegas ‘farewell’ residency due to a case of Covid-19 in an unnamed member of his backing band.”

SPORTS

SwimSwam: Research Shows No Covid-19 Spread Between Tokyo Athletes, Local Residents. “The Japanese Government released a study that confirmed there was no spread of COVID-19 between Tokyo athletes and the local population. Genomic sequencing research confirms that positive cases among athletes and Japanese residents were unrelated. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) cited this data to highlight the success of the coronavirus countermeasures that were implemented.”

K-12 EDUCATION

News 12 New Jersey: Some school districts switch to remote learning due to COVID-19. “Schools across the Hudson Valley are returning to classes today but students in certain districts will be doing so via remote learning. Yonkers Public Schools, New Rochelle schools and the Ossining Union Free school district are going virtual for its return from the holiday break.”

WFSB: Handful of CT schools closures, delays due to COVID, staffing shortages. “Several school districts announced closures or delays for Jan. 3 because of COVID-related staffing issues or transportation problems. Region 14, Enfield, Stratford, and Stonington public schools were closed on Monday. Other districts, such as Bethany, Danbury, New Fairfield, and Shelton posted two hour delays.”

WCVB: 155 Boston public school teachers, staffers test positive for COVID-19 in last 2 days, Supt. Dr. Brenda Cassellius says. “More than 150 Boston Public Schools teachers, staffers and administrators have tested positive for COVID-19 in the last two days and the district and city are making plans to keep classes in session. As of Monday morning, Boston Superintendent Dr. Brenda Cassellius said 155 teachers and school staffers have reported positive COVID-19 tests — a number that is expected to rise.”

San Diego Union-Tribune: How school counselors are helping children cope during COVID. “Many students returned to school campuses full time this year with trauma in tow. Many had struggled with distance learning, suffered through mental health issues and endured social isolation and challenges at home due to the pandemic. The job of helping students recover fell largely to school counselors, a chronically understaffed profession tasked with tending to students’ social, mental and academic needs.”

Associated Press: Milwaukee schools going virtual due to staff COVID-19 cases. “Wisconsin’s largest school district, Milwaukee Public Schools, will transition to virtual instruction beginning Tuesday because of an increase in staff testing positive for COVID-19.”

NBC Chicago: Thousands of COVID Tests ‘Invalid’ as CPS Prepares to Return From Winter Break. “Thousands of COVID tests for Chicago Public Schools students and staff members have been deemed ‘invalid’ as the district prepares for a return to classrooms following the winter break. With cases across the state and within the district surging, CPS reported 35,590 tests were completed between Dec. 26 and Jan. 1, but 24,843 were ruled ‘invalid,’ according to data posted on the district’s website.”

Patch Detroit: Detroit Schools Pause Return, Announce COVID-19 Testing Changes. ” Detroit Public Schools canceled all classes Monday through Wednesday due to COVID-19 concerns, and said it will update information for Thursday and Friday on Wednesday, superintendent Nikolai Vitti said in a statement.”

WTTW: CTU Members to Consider Walk Out This Week as COVID-19 Cases Spike. “As Chicago Public Schools students and staff returned Monday from winter break amid an ongoing spike in COVID-19 cases, members of the Chicago Teachers Union are planning a vote that could lead to an unauthorized walkout later this week. The CTU’s membership and House of Delegates will vote this week to decide whether to continue working in-person or to begin working remotely as of Wednesday as concerns about student and teacher safety grow.”

The Journal (Ireland): ‘Sinister’: Anti-lockdown groups sharing database of school principals’ contact details. “ANTI-LOCKDOWN GROUPS are sharing a large database containing information on the principals of nearly every primary school in the country, urging people to contact them to probe their views on vaccinations and mask wearing.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WCHS: Marshall to require COVID testing, mask wearing for all students. “Marshall University officials said the school will test all on-campus students at the start of the semester for COVID-19 – regardless of vaccination status – and masks will be required in all university buildings. The school said in a news release Friday that the student testing policy is being implemented due to increased community spread of COVID-19.”

HEALTH

WVIR: UVA Health doctors encourage upgrading your masks with omicron. ” As the omicron variant continues to spread, many experts are advising you to upgrade your mask. More drug stores around Charlottesville are selling them, which is why doctors are encouraging you to get your hands on one. ‘The big thing is they’re more widely available now,’ Dr. Bill Petri with UVA Health said. ‘Early on, N95 or KN95 masks were being reserved for health care professionals.’ Petri says now, since they are accessible, they’re being recommended and encouraged for everyone.”

Mother Jones: Desperate Patients Are Shelling Out Thousands for a Long Covid Cure. Is It for Real?. “When Owen came down with Covid-19 in April 2021, he felt lucky to get away with a mild case. After a few days of a runny nose, he returned to his regular routine, including long sessions at the gym. But three weeks later, Owen, who was 25 at the time and working as an art director in Manhattan, began to have trouble breathing. It got so bad one day that he collapsed in his kitchen. Later, at the emergency room, doctors searched for a cause but could find none, so they sent him home. That was only the beginning of Owen’s ordeal.”

Montana Public Radio: COVID-19 was the leading killer of Native Americans in Montana last year. “According to a review of death certificates by the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, deaths among American-Indian and Alaska Natives spiked 36 percent in 2020 compared to the previous five years, largely due to COVID-19. The analysis shows the rate of COVID deaths among American Indian and Alaska Native people in Montana was also over double that of Indigenous people across the entire country.”

RESEARCH

Laboratory Equipment: Study: Metabolic Conditions Increase Ventilation Risk by 45% in COVID-19 Patients. “Patients hospitalized with COVID-19 who had a combination of high blood pressure, obesity, diabetes, or other conditions associated with metabolic syndrome were at much higher risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and death, according to an international study published in the medical journal JAMA Network Open.”

The Malaysian Reserve: Sinovac booster effective for Sinovac primary recipients. “PRELIMINARY results from an ongoing study have shown that Sinovac vaccine booster can activate cellular immunity against Omicron variant, in subjects who previously received two doses of the vaccine as primary series. The study is being carried out by the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (UC) and led by Professor Dr Alexis M Kalergis, director of Immunology and Immunotherapy Millennium Institute.”

NewsWise: A potential at-home COVID-19 test is just as good as laboratory PCR tests, according to preclinical data. “Researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago have designed a high-quality assay that can be used in at-home tests for rapid COVID-19 screening. Results from an early preclinical study suggest that tests with the new assay may be just as reliable as the laboratory-based molecular tests — called PCR tests — used by hospitals for clinical diagnostics.”

OUTBREAKS

New Zealand Herald: Covid 19 Delta outbreak: Six cases linked to Auckland’s Pelican Club. “Six people linked to an adult entertainment club in Auckland have tested positive for Covid-19. Health officials have revealed multiple exposure events at Pelican Club on Auckland’s Eden Terrace across several different dates.”

Gaston Gazette: Gaston County’s COVID cases up 163.8%; North Carolina cases surge 332.7%. “New coronavirus cases leaped in North Carolina in the week ending Sunday, rising 332.7% as 79,289 cases were reported. The previous week had 18,324 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.”

ABC 7: LA County reports nearly 45,000 new COVID cases over weekend. “Los Angeles County reported nearly 45,000 new cases of COVID-19 this weekend, an alarmingly high number in light of the typical delays in weekend reporting. Officials reported 23,553 new cases for Saturday and another 21,200 positive tests for Sunday after a one-day record of 27,091 new infections were reported Friday.”

BBC: Covid-19: At least 120 outbreaks in care homes in Northern Ireland. “At least 120 care homes in Northern Ireland were dealing with Covid-19 outbreaks over the weekend, NI’s Public Health Agency (PHA) has said. As Omicron cases rise, the Western Trust has suspended visits to its care homes and hospitals. Independent care homes provide their own guidance.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

WSAW: Family courts navigate COVID-19 vaccine disagreements. ” Courts are having to mediate new disputes between divorced parents as the COVID-19 vaccines are approved for younger populations. They are seeing disagreements between the parents on whether shared children should get the shot. In the case of separation or divorce, parents have to come to a custody agreement as to whether one parent gets sole custody making decisions for the children or if it is shared. This can impact issues such as non-emergency medical treatments, what school the child goes to and religion.”

Spanish News Today: Seventy Americans busted at New Years Eve orgy in Barcelona. “People across Spain naturally choose to ring in the New Year in a variety of ways, but a large group of US citizens raised eyebrows when they were discovered partaking in an orgy in the Barcelona town of Lliçà d’Amunt. The sex party, involving around 70 guests, was uncovered when two participants got lost and tried to enter another nearby property.”

OPINION

Nature: Two years of COVID-19 in Africa: lessons for the world. “Since the 1960s, when many African countries gained independence, the continent has largely depended on the outside world for its health-security commodities: diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines, as well as personal protective equipment and other medical supplies. The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed how easily international cooperation and multilateral agreements can dissolve, especially in the face of a global crisis — and just how vulnerable this dependence leaves Africa.”

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



January 3, 2022 at 09:29PM
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18th Century Scotland, North Carolina Newspapers, Hungary Photography, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, January 3, 2022

18th Century Scotland, North Carolina Newspapers, Hungary Photography, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, January 3, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

The Herald: Digitising old Court of Session records reveals fascinating detail of Scottish life. “The case between Lieutenant William Stewart of the Impress Service at Greenock and James Graham, described in the papers as ‘a negro, residing in Glasgow, who had been born into the business of a seaman’ has been uncovered as part of a cross-Atlantic project to unravel thousands of legal documents. The papers, spanning 75 years from 1759 to 1834, include litigation and testimony documents, letters, wills, business contracts, bankruptcy details and other evidence gathered by lawyers of the time in an effort to prove their cases.”

DigitalNC: New Newspaper, The Pamlico News, Now Available. “The paper was first published in the late 1960s as The Pamlico County News, but in 1977 the paper’s name was changed to The Pamlico News. The newspaper is still published under this name today. Published weekly in Bayboro, North Carolina, the paper focuses on local and broader North Carolina news including topics on community history, events and festivals, citizen accomplishments, education, and more.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Budapest Times: Hungary’s family photo album on better display. “The online repository of 156,000-and-growing Hungarian photos taken from 1900 to 1990 and now posted in the Fortepan digital archive has been running a weekly article in a blog named Heti Fortepan for the past year, and now an English edition has been launched under the translated title Weekly Fortepan.”

USEFUL STUFF

Popular Science: Your guide to better online security in 2022. “Here at Popular Science, we understand the struggle and have dedicated a large portion of our coverage to helping you navigate the labyrinthine portfolio of profiles and cookie crumbs you’ve scattered across the web. As a gift to you, we’ve bundled together many of our most useful stories for quick access as we roll into the new year. You may have made other resolutions for 2022, but few will protect you as much as ensuring your security practices are up to snuff.”

Mashable: How to make your Gmail account self destruct, and why you really should. “As we move through life there are few things that we truly take with us. A family heirloom, perhaps. Your loved ones, if you’re lucky. And, more and more frequently, one of those things happens to be an email account steadily filling up with personal correspondence, bills, medical records, and embarrassing moments from your past. And thanks to the modern wonder of cloud computing, that collection will likely long outlast you. Unless you set your entire Google account to self destruct after your death — which, thanks to Google’s Inactive Account Manager, you can do.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Lincolnite: Campaigners’ anti-nuke dump banners (and skeleton!) put on map in Google surprise. “Campaigners fighting a nuclear storage facility in Theddlethorpe have been given an unexpected boost after the latest Google Maps Streetview update included images of their banners – and even a skeleton scarecrow. The images, captured in November 2021 according to Google, include Hallowe’en Scarecrow competition victor Maggie Loy’s winning entry.”

The Guam Daily Post: Passion project preserves treasure trove of Guam history. “The Sinajana Mayors office has embarked on a mission to preserve a part of Guam’s history, after it came across a box of photographs dating back to the 1940s. The box had been passed down several times before curiosity led the Sinajana Mayor’s office to open it. Inside the box a treasure trove of Guam’s history was discovered.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CNET: Washington state to require internet service disclosure when selling house in new year. “It’s hard to imagine home life without the internet, particularly amid the coronavirus pandemic. Now a law going into effect in Washington state is acknowledging that. Starting in the new year, home sellers in Washington will be required to share their internet provider on signed disclosure forms that include information about plumbing, insulation and structural defects.”

Yahoo News: CBP launches review of secretive division that targeted journalists, lawmakers and other Americans. “U.S. Customs and Border Protection is conducting a review of a secretive division that uses some of the country’s most sensitive databases to investigate the travel and financial records and personal connections of journalists, members of Congress and other Americans not suspected of any crime.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Wired: Crime Prediction Keeps Society Stuck in the Past . “In Discriminating Data: Correlation, Neighborhoods, and the New Politics of Recognition, digital media scholar Wendy Hui Kyong Chun argues that the most common methods used by technologies such as PredPol and Chicago’s heat list to make predictions do nothing of the sort. Rather than anticipating what might happen out of the myriad and unknowable possibilities on which the very idea of a future depends, machine learning and other AI-based methods of statistical correlation ‘restrict the future to the past.’ In other words, these systems prevent the future in order to ‘predict’ it—they ensure that the future will be just the same as the past was.”

The Conversation: Take a Closer Look: How More and More Students Are Catching the Citizen Science Bug. “Taxonomy was once the domain of white-coated scientists with years of university training. While this expertise is still important, everyday Australians are increasingly helping to identify species through citizen science apps. Rapid advances in smartphone and tablet cameras are helping to popularize this activity. Biodiversity researchers are calling on citizen scientists to contribute data to fill information gaps, identify species declines and inform management decisions. And young researchers – some as young as infant school children – are stepping up to help.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

New York Times: 2022 Is Full of First Steps to the Moon. “Robotic missions to Mars and advances in space tourism dominated the space activities of 2021. But in 2022, the moon is likely to stand out, as companies and governments launch various moon-bound spacecraft.” good morning, Internet…

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January 3, 2022 at 06:29PM
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