Friday, January 31, 2020

Facebook, Tiktok, Twitter tackle coronavirus fake news

Platforms are increasing efforts to block false information as the outbreak spreads and fear grows.

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'Obscene' 18-month delay for DWP complaints

The government department responsible for child maintenance faces criticism for long delays.

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Tesla boss Elon Musk releases electronic dance track

Mr Musk posted a teaser picture of himself in a studio shortly before sharing the track, which he wrote.

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Huduma Namba: Kenya court halts biometric ID over data fears

Judges says data protection laws need to be enacted to safeguard a wealth of sensitive information.

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'I tested my new name at the coffee shop'

For young trans people, giving their new names to the barista can be the start of self-acceptance.

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A Poem For Those Who Dropped The Ball On New Year's Resolutions

A pink donut with sprinkles with a bite out of it.

As 2020 rang in, there were inevitable promises to diet, exercise and save money. Poet Kwame Alexander shares a community poem of audience-submitted couplets inspired by broken New Year's promises.

(Image credit: Malte Mueller/Getty Images/fStop)



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Russia's use of facial recognition challenged in court

Moscow is rapidly expanding its use of live facial recognition technology.

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New PocketGo review: Handheld emulation continues to grow

The New PocketGo (or PocketGo 2) from BittBoy isn’t a replacement for the original PocketGo, it’s an older sibling who’s twice as big and more powerful in many ways. With it, BittBoy continues to iterate on the portable retro gaming emulator, evolving the hardware and allowing for smoother emulation past the 16-bit era.

While the price ($66 from Retromimi) is double that of the original PocketGo, it’s still a terrific value. The New PocketGo is now my go-to recommendation for handheld gaming emulation.

New PocketGo Adam Patrick Murray/IDG

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2 looks and plays great on the New PocketGo.

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AirTV 2 review: Antenna TV and Sling TV merge, with mixed results

The AirTV 2 adds over-the-air channels to Sling TV, but the new hardware fails to fix some old problems.

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EVGA GeForce RTX 2060 KO review: Ray tracing gets affordable

The EVGA GeForce RTX 2060 KO offers something for everybody.

Gamers like you and me get a custom GeForce RTX 2060 graphics card and all its benefits—great 1080p gaming, good 1440p gaming, and real-time ray tracing—for just $300, a full $50 below the RTX 2060’s suggested price. EVGA steals the spotlight in a crucial segment of the market by significantly undercutting its competitors. And Nvidia gets to clear out stock for a different GPU, surprisingly enough, while fielding a headache-free rival to the new $280 Radeon RX 5600 XT.

Okay, maybe AMD doesn’t get anything out of it.

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Best DVR for cord cutters

TiVo vs. Tablo vs. Channel Master vs. Plex: None are ideal, but one might work for you.

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Brexit: What does it mean for my business?

BBC East business correspondent Richard Bond has been answering some of your big Brexit questions.

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The Modern Mocktail: Three Distinctive Nonalcoholic Drink Recipes

These three nonalcoholic cocktail recipes will have your guests asking for another round.

How to make three nonalcoholic cocktails that will have your guests asking for another round. Also, learn some basic tenets of what makes a delicious mixed drink (with or without alcohol).

(Image credit: CJ Riculan/NPR)



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A Poem For Those Who Dropped The Ball On New Year's Resolutions

A pink donut with sprinkles with a bite out of it.

As 2020 rang in, there were inevitable promises to diet, exercise and save money. Poet Kwame Alexander shares a community poem of audience-submitted couplets inspired by broken New Year's promises.

(Image credit: Malte Mueller/Getty Images/fStop)



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Amazon: Christmas sales soar as other retailers struggle

Sales were up 20% over the festive season in sharp contrast to weakness at other retailers.

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Aston Martin: F1 billionaire owner leads rescue deal

Racing Point F1 team co-owner Lawrence Stroll's consortium will inject emergency cash into the carmaker.

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Bank of England: City watchdog looks into pound's jump

The increase has raised questions over whether the decision to keep interest rates unchanged was leaked.

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Thursday, January 30, 2020

Wilbur Ross says Coronavirus could boost US jobs

US commerce secretary Wilbur Ross says firms may bring production back to the US in response to the virus.

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Vaping crackdown costs Juul investor more than $8bn

Marlboro-maker Altria says its stake in Juul is now worth less than a third of what it paid for it.

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Censorship claims emerge as TikTok gets political in India

A TikTok influencer says his videos on Hindu-Muslim unity have triggered censorship on the app.

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What ancient Rome may teach on post-Brexit tourism

As more Britons holiday at home and European visitor numbers fall, could we learn from ancient Rome?

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Brexit: 'You have to be optimistic as a fisherman'

Fishing is set to play a key role in post-Brexit trade negotiations between the UK and EU.

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Making beautiful colours without toxic chemicals

Dyeing clothes uses a lot of water and chemicals, but new tech is drawing on nature for colours.

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HS2: Government review 'advises against cancelling' project

The review, seen by the BBC, advises against cancelling the high speed rail scheme.

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Manufacturers urge clarity on post-Brexit trade

As Britain prepares to leave EU, businesses say the future trading relationship remains unclear.

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'A Castle In The Clouds' Is A Grand Hotel Romp

A Castle in the Clouds, by Kerstin Gier

Kerstin Gier's new young adult novel takes place at a grandly faded resort high up in the Swiss Alps, where young intern Sophie is surrounded by a complex, international cast of characters.

(Image credit: Henry Holt & Company)



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FastestVPN review: A surprising upgrade for 2020

FastestVPN in brief:

  • P2P allowed: Yes
  • Business location: Cayman Islands
  • Number of servers: 250+
  • Number of country locations: 30
  • Cost: $30 per year
  • VPN protocol: IKEv2
  • Data encryption: AES-256-GCM
  • Data authentication: MS-Chap v2 and TLS
  • Handshake: SHA-II
fastestvpnconnected IDG

FastestVPN with an active connection.

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The Not-So-Life-Changing Magic Of Self-Help Books

Cover of the upcoming book How to Be Fine.

Are self-help books actually helpful? That's the question Kristen Meinzer sought to answer in her upcoming book, How to Be Fine: What We Learned From Living by the Rules Of 50 Self-Help Books.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Kristen Meinzer)



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HP Pavilion Gaming Laptop review: Affordable gaming with a few caveats

HP’s Pavilion Gaming Laptop may seem like a relic from years past, given the rise of HP’s Omen line. Granted, the Pavilion line lacks Omen’s “For Gamers, By Gamers” cred, but...well, what’s in a name, really? The Pavilion Gaming Laptop is really just an Omen in disguise, an entry-level peer with mainstream branding.

Variants

The pricing is mainstream, too. The Pavilion Gaming Laptop starts at just $640 for a base Pavilion 15t model on hp.com, with Intel Core i5-9300H and a last-gen GTX 1050. The model we received is essentially HP’s “high-end” unit, the poetically named 15-dk0045cl, a $1,250 version sold at Costco and equipped with an Intel Core i7-9750H, an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 Ti, 16GB of DDR4 RAM, a 256GB M.2 SSD, and a 1TB HDD. It’s a good deal. If you’re not a Costco member, an identical model based on the Pavilion Gaming Laptop 15t at hp.com costs $1,440. The similar Pavilion 15-dk0046nr is available for $1,300 on hp.com with a Core i7-9750H, 12GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD, and a step down in graphics to Nvidia’s GTX 1650. 

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The best smart garage door controllers deliver convenience and peace of mind

Even if you use your garage only as an oversized storage locker, you’ll wonder how you ever got along without a smart controller for your existing garage door opener.

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Cord cutting gear's next frontier: Better sound

Streaming player makers like Roku are looking to home theater audio as the next big thing.

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PG Tips under review as Unilever hails herbal tea

The consumer goods giant says traditional tea sales are slowing as consumers change their habits.

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When Institutions Are Used As Stages, People Lose Trust, Book Argues

A Time to Build: From Family and Community to Congress and the Campus, How Recommitting to Our Institutions Can Revive the American Dream, by Yuval Levin

We now think of institutions less as formative and more as performative, less as molds of our character and more as platforms for us to stand on and be seen, says National Affairs Editor Yuval Levin.

(Image credit: Basic Books)



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Star Wars: The life of a props trainee on set

As spending on UK film and TV production hits a record high, a props trainee describes her work.

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Facebook: Privacy scandals take toll on profits

The firm recorded its first annual decline in profits in at least five years in 2019.

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Most children sleep with mobile phone beside bed

The devices are "dominating" the lives of young people, says research.

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Wednesday, January 29, 2020

Weapon-spotting tech tested by Las Vegas casino

Sensors can be placed discretely in a building's entrance or turnstile creating an invisible fence.

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Coronavirus: Technology giants join China shutdown

Google, Microsoft, and Amazon among the global companies taking action as the deadly virus spreads.

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Coronavirus: Technology giants join China shutdown

Google, Microsoft, and Amazon among the global companies taking action as the deadly virus spreads.

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Transgender flag and women in tuxedos among new emojis

The list of symbols to be released later this year offers more options to represent gender.

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Customers 'overpaid for electricity for years'

The National Audit Office says electricity network firms have been allowed to make excess profits.

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Microsoft's Surface sales near $2 billion, but its Azure cloud business is growing faster

Cloud, cloud, cloud, followed by Office, gaming, Surface and then Windows: By now, Microsoft has laid out its priorities, and the financial results Microsoft reported Wednesday afternoon reflected this.

For consumers, the high point of Microsoft’s fourth-quarter calendar 2019 results was the fact that Microsoft reported $1.98 billion in Surface sales alone—almost, but not quite, making Surface a $2 billion-dollar business. Interestingly, chief financial officer Amy Hood implied that sales could have been higher, referring to unexplained “execution challenges” in the consumer portion of the Surface business.

Overall, Microsoft reported profits of $11.6 billion during the second quarter of its fiscal 2020 calendar, up 38 percent from a year ago, from revenue of $36.9 billion, up 14 percent from the same period. 

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Northern: Three things that went wrong at the rail firm

Why has the network been re-nationalised, and will this fix its problems?

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Tumble in UK car output 'a grave concern', says trade body

A 14% fall in output last year underlines the urgency of an EU trade deal, says the industry's trade body.

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'I was sacked and silenced for being trans'

Leading charity Stonewall lists this year's 'top 100’ LGBT employers in the UK.

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'American Dirt' Publisher Cancels Author Tour After Threats

American Dirt, by Jeanine Cummins

Flatiron Books, publisher of the controversial new novel, has cancelled the remainder of author Jeanine Cummins' book tour after what it called "specific threats" to both the author and booksellers.

(Image credit: Petra Mayer/NPR)



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Wonga borrowers 'to get 4.3% of compensation claims'

Claimants against the payday lender have been told they will receive little in compensation.

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HS2: Chancellor Sajid Javid 'backs project' ahead of crucial meeting

It is understood the chancellor will tell Boris Johnson he supports the London to Birmingham rail link.

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BT to charge people £50 for keeping old wi-fi routers

People will be asked to send their wi-fi router and TV box back at their end of the contract.

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Transport: Translink buys its first hydrogen-fuelled buses

Water is the only exhaust emission from the vehicles built by Ballymena-based firm Wrightbus.

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StubHub told to clean up ticket sales

The Competition and Markets Authority has told ticket resale firm StubHub to make website changes.

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5G: EU issues guidance on 'high-risk' suppliers

Member states have been given until the end of April to draw up security measures for 5G networks.

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Nomad Base Station Stand review: Easily the best-looking wireless charger I've used

Top to bottom, Nomad’s product line consists of high-quality accessories and devices. From its iPhone and Pixel cases to cables and wireless chargers, the common theme is premium. The Base Station Stand is no different. With an aluminum housing and leather pad, it’s clear the moment you unbox it that this wireless charger is a step above the competition when it comes to overall design. Of course, that premium design comes with a premium price tag. 

Note: This review is part of our roundup of wireless charging pads. Go there for details on competing products and our testing methods for both Android phones and iPhones.

At $99.95, the Base Station Stand costs the same as Nomad’s standard Base Station that’s capable of charging two devices at the same time, thanks to its flat design and quad Qi-compatible wireless charging coils. With the Base Station Stand, you can charge only one device at a time. Still, it features two coils, capable of 10 watts each, making it possible to charge your Android phone or iPhone in either a vertical or horizontal orientation.

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Microsoft issues second 'final' Windows 7 update

The end of support for the ageing operating system turns out to be not quite the end.

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Author Susan Straight Takes Us 'In The Country Of Women'

Author Susan Straight with her three daughters.

In her new memoir, Straight tells the story of the women in her family—her Swiss-German blood relatives and her African American, Indigenous and Creole in-laws who crossed the U.S. to settle in Calif.

(Image credit: Cassandra Barragan)



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Motile M142 review: Ryzen finds a home in this surprisingly good budget notebook

The Motile M142 14-inch notebook PC may be the best budget laptop you’ve never heard of, by a company that understands low prices. That’s because the Motile M142 is Walmart’s house brand, and it’s one that the retailer itself often passes over to promote brand-name PCs. 

Yes, the M142 cuts some corners. At about 6.5 hours, its battery life is comparatively poor. The screen is somewhat dim, and lacks touchscreen capabilities. Given the price, however, it’s a laptop we wouldn’t mind recommending to friends and family with tight budgets.

The M142 has one notable thing going for it: AMD’s mobile Ryzen 3000-series chips. For years, seeing an older AMD A-series chip among the listed specifications meant a lackluster experience. With AMD’s mobile Ryzen, that’s changed. The M142 generally outperforms our current best budget laptop, the Acer Aspire 5 A515-54-51DJ, and for a price that’s about $100 less.

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UK house price growth at 14-month high, says the Nationwide

Prices rose by 1.9% compared with a year ago, but the Nationwide expects property values to be flat in 2020.

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Diachronicles by Giulia Parlato

This article was published in issue #7892 of British Journal of Photography. Visit the BJP Shop to purchase the magazine here.

What part do museums play in shaping our understanding of history? It’s a question that London-based Italian photographer Giulia Parlato has asked herself often in the past few years. “They’re places to learn about the past, and places where objects end up being elevated to a higher status of interpretation. But what happens to the discarded, unrecognised, or lost material culture that is not displayed?” she says. “A museum is tidy, organised and clear. We like to think about time as a linear, horizontal path, but there isn’t such a thing. It’s much more complicated than that.”

Parlato’s new project, Diachronicles, emerged from this thinking, and she started working on it while researching for another work at The Warburg Institute in London. “While I was there I began browsing through the forgery section, and I started to think about the relationship that history has with fiction. In particular, what happens when you disrupt the historical narrative, which is ultimately really fragile, being a fabricated story in itself,” she says.

© Giulia Parlato.
© Giulia Parlato.

As she began shooting, Parlato got in touch with curators at the Regional Archaeological Museum Salinas in Palermo and learned of the story of Dr Savario Cavallari and Gaetano Moschella, an archaeologist and a farmer respectively, who in the mid 1800s produced and sold a series of limestone figures to museums across Europe as Ancient Greek artefacts. Captivated, she began to think of how she could create her own historical fictions in front of the lens. Diachronicles thus features photographs that appear to be presenting an array of artefacts and dioramas when, in fact, none of what we see is what it seems. “It’s all either created by me or friends, uncategorised material, or a forgery taken out from a museum storage space,” she explains.

© Giulia Parlato.

The images were staged in studios in London, on location in Sicily, in museums and in the photographer’s garden, knocked together from objects and set-ups that might just pass as ‘authentic’. Shooting in black-and-white, Parlato wanted the images to have the feel of those from a timeless archival collection, hoping it would lead the viewer

to scour them for evidence. Each of the photographs is titled so as to destabilise the authenticity of what we’re seeing – an image of a museum display cabinet, for instance, is called The Storyteller, “because it’s a condensed space where narratives take place, like the pages of a book”.

© Giulia Parlato.

Parlato has plans to expand the work over time. She will be accompanying an archaeological expedition in Turkey in the summer, and is researching the advanced technologies that museums use to authenticate artefacts. “Even though inaccuracies, scams and fake news have always existed,” she says, “I think that particularly interesting questions can emerge from a body of work about the fragility of historiography right now.”

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Avengers: Endgame - How we made the visual effects

Framestore's Stuart Penn explains the challenges of making Avengers: Endgame.

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Ovo Energy to pay £8.9m for overcharging customers

More than half a million of the firm's customers received energy bills that were inaccurate.

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Tuesday, January 28, 2020

How worried should we be about 'Big Brother' technology?

Why do we fear government surveillance, but voluntarily use technology which monitors our lives?

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Hong Kong stock market takes a tumble on reopen

Coronavirus fears see the Hang Seng Index drop 3% after re-opening following the Chinese New Year break

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How worried should we be about 'Big Brother' technology?

Why do we fear government surveillance, but voluntarily use technology which monitors our lives?

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Coronavirus: Starbucks closes 2,000 Chinese branches

The coffee giant is shutting half of its stores in the country and warns of the outbreak's financial impact.

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Diabetes patients hit by glucose monitor shortage

Healthcare firm Abbott has been forced to apologise for failing to provide enough of the devices.

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AMD soars to record Q4 earnings on Ryzen, Epyc sales

AMD enjoyed a well-deserved victory lap during its earnings call on Tuesday, in which it reported record revenue for the fourth quarter of 2019. There’s an even rosier future ahead: The company said it expects 42-percent revenue growth during the first quarter alone, compared to a year ago.

Interestingly, the real questions surrounding AMD’s future didn’t concern the company’s Ryzen CPU or Radeon GPU businesses—together, the two accounted for the highest quarterly client processor shipments in more than six years, AMD said. Instead, it’s the semi-custom business that analysts wanted to know about: How are the SoCs AMD is providing to the next-gen Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5 expected to fare?

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Will the Bank of England cut interest rates?

Some think the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee will seek a cut on Thursday to help lift the economy.

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Apple 'closely monitoring' coronavirus

The outbreak has clouded the firm's forecast for the upcoming quarter.

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Zap! How microwaves and electricity are killing weeds

Electricity and microwaves are being used to kill weeds as alternatives are sought to chemicals.

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CEO Secrets: Wipro boss on taking the 'risky path' at work

Abidali Neemuchwala, boss of the global Indian IT firm Wipro, shares his CEO Secrets.

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Apple 'closely monitoring' coronavirus

The outbreak has clouded the firm's forecast for the upcoming quarter.

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How Warcraft III accidentally became a great Lord of the Rings game

Warcraft III: Reforged releases today. We may never get a Warcraft IV, but at least III and its expansion The Frozen Throne are finally getting some love: A refined user interface, more detailed units and buildings, native 4K support, and so on. It’s been a while since I’ve played either campaign, and I’m looking forward to revisiting it. Arthas’s downfall is still one of Blizzard’s best storylines, and I’m excited to see it fully redone.

Blizzard’s authored story is the smallest portion of my love for Warcraft III though. I played it for years, and what kept me coming back is an element that was incredibly important at the time, but rarely discussed now: Warcraft III was one of the best Lord of the Rings games. Maybe the best.

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Huawei: Is it a security threat and what is its role in UK 5G?

Is Chinese tech giant Huawei really a security risk, and what is its role in the UK's 5G network?

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Keeping your phone safe from prying eyes

A hack which stops people going through your phone when you want to show them something.

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The silenced YouTube stars of Indian-administered Kashmir

Kashmiri Kalkharabs, a popular Kashmiri YouTube channel, has been forced into silence since August.

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Documenting life on India’s disappearing islands

Sushavan Nandy experienced the devastating effects of flooding first hand, as a child living in Jalpaiguri in North Bengal, India. Due to repeated floods in the 1990s, he and his family were forced to leave what remained of their home and relocate to Calcutta. “It not only affected the landscape and our property, it affected our human lives and relationships,” says Nandy, who was reminded of these struggles during an assignment in the Sundarbans, a cluster of low-lying islands in the Bay of Bengal, spread across India and Bangladesh. 

There, rising waters caused by climate change is slowly drowning its coastal communities, and recognising the same disruption that Nandy experienced as a child, the photographer decided to begin a long-term personal project.

© Sushavan Nandy.
© Sushavan Nandy.

Ebbing Away of Identity with the Tides is shot over the course of three years, during repeated visits to the Mousuni, Ghoramara and Sugar islands. Nandy, who works as a freelance news photographer covering climate change, felt it was important to connect with the locals before shooting, and used their personal stories to guide his image-making process. 

Although the work is rooted in documentary traditions of chronicling events and everyday life, the images themselves are left open to interpretation. The landscapes are melancholic, the portraits feel disconnected, and the lack of captions are intended to draw the viewer’s attention towards the emotion that these images and their context evoke. “They’re not a direct way of showing climate change in pictures,” says Nandy, “but they show how it is destroying lives, childhoods, and homes”.

sushavannandy.wordpress.com

© Sushavan Nandy.
© Sushavan Nandy.



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Meet The Designer Who Makes 'Mrs. Maisel' Look So Marvelous

In the second season of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Midge (Rachel Brosnahan) visits the Catskills. Costume designer Donna Zakowska says this outfit "in the boat with a funny lampshade hat" was among her favorites.

Donna Zakowska has already won two Emmys for her work on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel -- and two of her costumes are in the Smithsonian. Now, she's up for an award from the Costume Designers Guild.

(Image credit: Amazon Studios)



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Banks asked to explain 40% overdraft rates

The City watchdog says most banks have set "very similar prices" under the new rules.

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Monday, January 27, 2020

Airbus reaches deal to settle corruption probe

Reports say the aircraft maker could end up paying fines of more than £2.5bn.

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Coronavirus: Facebook staff told to avoid China travel

The social media giant has become the first big American company to tell its employees not to travel.

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Examining the effects of Brexit on a Worthing pharmaceutical firm

Once the UK leaves the EU, new drugs will have to be tested here and in Europe.

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£500m fund to restore Beeching rail cuts goes ahead amid criticism

The transport secretary is to unveil the first two railway lines to receive funding to restore rural services.

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Twitter and Facebook accounts for 15 NFL teams hacked

The American football teams were targeted by a group that said the accounts had lax security.

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Watchdog queries impact of £46m 'Get Ready for Brexit' campaign

The £46m publicity blitz did not leave people "significantly better prepared", says the NAO.

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Huawei 5G verdict is a decision with few good options

The government is due to decide on Tuesday whether to ban Huawei from the UK's 5G networks.

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Huawei 5G verdict is a decision with few good options

The government is due to decide on Tuesday whether to ban Huawei from the UK's 5G networks.

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Insurer Aviva apologises to mistaken Michaels

Several thousand customers receive an apology from Aviva after they were all wrongly called Michael.

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Northern Rail: Your tales of 'atrocious' service

Commuters and business owners in one village express their frustration about rail disruption.

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Sainsbury's pledges £1bn to cut emissions to zero by 2040

The retailer says it can hit "net zero" by 2040 with action on food waste, packaging and water use.

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The man teaching 300 million people a new language

Luis von Ahn is the founder and boss of Duolingo, the world's most popular language learning app.

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Meadowhall facial recognition scheme troubles watchdog

Regulator calls for inspections after details of police tie-up with Meadowhall scheme emerge.

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Twitter and Facebook accounts for 15 NFL teams hacked

The American football teams were targeted by a group that said the accounts had lax security.

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Don Cameron: The Scot shaping the history of hot air balloons

Don Сameron built western Europe's first modern hot air balloon and is now the market leader in special-shaped creations.

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The best laptops: Premium laptops, budget laptops, 2-in-1s, and more

2020 looks like it’s going to be a great year for laptops. We have AMD and Intel battling it out on the CPU front, new mobile discrete GPUs enabling thinner, lighter, and faster gaming laptops, and battery life that won’t quit. Check out the latest reports from CES below, and stay tuned for new models we bring in for review. 

Latest laptop news and reviews

We just returned from CES with a slew of mobile news, and we reviewed HP’s Elite Dragonfly, a corporate laptop that’s not boring. Here’s the latest: 

  • AMD’s Ryzen 4000 mobile CPUs announced at CES will likely be the biggest laptop news of 2020. After years of underwhelming chips, the new generation will offer 7nm efficiency and more cores. With 100 laptops ready to rock the new CPUs, the industry is clearly behind AMD on this one. What we don’t know is how battery life will play out, as that’s been an Achilles heel for AMD in the past. Read our full story
  • We also saw one of the first 5G laptops at CES, Dell’s Latitude 9510. Dell even provided a teardown to show the challenge of fitting all the antennas 5G requires into a mobile PC. Most likely the first 5G laptops will be on the higher end, where users can absorb the design cost. (The rest of us can hope for affordable dongles.) Read our full story
    hp elite dragonfly 3 Gordon Mah Ung

    The HP Elite Dragonfly is a corporate laptop with classy looks, tons of features, and all-day battery life.

    To read this article in full, please click here



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Black wallpaper bug from Windows 7's 'final' update will get fixed

Windows 7 may have gone end-of-life earlier this month, but Microsoft’s preparing a postmortem patch to fix a bug introduced in what was supposed to be the final update.

After installing the KB4534310 update on Patch Tuesday, many users complained that their wallpaper turned black. While some forum-goers were quick to grab their torches and pitchforks, convinced it was a last second-middle finger to lingering Windows 7 users, that’s not the case whatsoever. It’s a bug, and Microsoft’s readying a fix for it despite Windows 7 being out of support.

To read this article in full, please click here



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BBC red button protest ahead of switch-off

A petition organised by a charity for blind people asks for the BBC to roll back their decision.

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UK to decide on Huawei 5G ban

The government is expected to make a decision about the Chinese technology giant on Tuesday.

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UK to decide on Huawei 5G ban

The government is expected to make a decision about the Chinese technology giant on Tuesday.

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Davos 2020: How do we get more female leaders?

We asked a number of top Davos attendees how to boost the number of women in leadership roles.

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Amigo: Sub-prime lender puts itself up for sale

The sub-prime loans company has faced scrutiny from the regulator and complaints from customers.

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How to create Excel macros and automate your spreadsheets

Excel macros are like mini-programs that perform repetitive tasks, saving you a lot of time and typing. For example, it takes Excel less than one-tenth of a second to calculate an entire, massive spreadsheet. It’s the manual operations that slow you down. That’s why you need macros to combine all of these chores into a single one-second transaction.

Excel macros: Tips for getting started

We’re going to show you how to write your first macro. Once you see how easy it is to automate tasks using macros, you’ll never go back. 

First, some tips on how to prepare your data for macros:

  • Always begin your macro at the Home position (use the key combination Ctrl+ Home to get there quickly).
  • Use the directional keys to navigate: Up, Down, Right, Left, End, Home, etc., and shortcut keys to expedite movement.
  • Keep your macros small and focused on specific tasks. This is best for testing and editing (if needed). You can always combine these mini-macros into one BIG macro later once they’re perfected.
  • Macros require “relative” cell addresses, which means you “point” to the cells rather than hardcode the actual (or “absolute”) cell address (such as A1, B19, C20, etc.) in the macro. Spreadsheets are dynamic, which means they constantly change, which means the cell addresses change.
  • Fixed values and static information such as names, addresses, ID numbers, etc. are generally entered in advance and not really part of your macro. Because this data rarely changes (and if it does, it’s just to add or remove a new record), it’s almost impossible to include this function in a macro.
  • Manage your data first: Add, edit, or delete records, then enter the updated values. Then you can execute your macro.

Why starting with mini-macros is easier

For this example, we have a store owner who has expanded her territory from a single store to a dozen in 12 different major cities. Now the CEO, she’s been managing her own books for years, which wasn’t an easy task for a single store, and now she has 12. She has to collect data from each store and merge it to monitor the health of her entire company.

To read this article in full, please click here



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Anger over Presidents Club clothing range

The charity that closed down after a groping scandal has had its name revived to sell dresses.

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Amazon Echo Studio review: Not quite the best smart speaker, but a fantastic value

The more-expensive Google Home Max delivers higher fidelity, and Sonos has the better multi-room ecosystem, but Amazon’s best Echo shouldn’t be overlooked.

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Roborock S5 Max review: Precision water control sets this robot vacuum/mop hybrid apart

New mopping options--and powerful suction--make this a complete cleaner.

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IceGiant says its giant cooler can even tame AMD's giant Threadripper

CPUs may be getting smaller, but they’re not actually getting any cooler. Between AMD’s 32- and 64-core Threadripper CPUs, and Intel’s Core X chips, modern high-end desktop CPUs are producing more heat than ever dreamed of 10 years ago.

To address the heat, most high-end PCs use expensive and complex custom liquid cooling to hit peak performance, or self-contained all-in-one liquid coolers.

Enter IceGiant and its air cooler, based on the old concept of a thermosiphon. The company says it can outperform conventional air coolers and compete with liquid coolers. Before we dive deeper, though, we’ll review the current state of PC cooling.

To read this article in full, please click here



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Shares and oil tumble on coronavirus fears

Worries over the virus' spread hit financial markets, with London's FTSE 100 down more than 2%.

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Dos Santos: Whistleblower named a Football Leaks author

Man behind football revelations named a Luanda Leaks whistleblower about Africa's richest woman.

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What can you use instead of Google and Facebook?

More and more companies are promising privacy online and an alternative to the big internet firms.

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Firms urged to crack down on office football chat

A management body says sports chat excludes women and is a 'gateway' to more laddish behaviour.

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Coronavirus: Companies tell workers 'stay at home'

The moves come after the Chinese government extended the Lunar New Year holiday by three days.

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Air India: Can the national carrier finally find a buyer?

The Indian government has said it will sell its entire stake in the loss-making national airline.

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Any Answers: Michael Stripe

Michael Stipe began photographing as a teenager, and never really stopped, even after REM achieved worldwide fame in the late 1980s. Two years ago he published Michael Stipe: Volume 1, presenting a small fraction of the huge collection of diaristic images he’s amassed.

Stripe recently followed up with a critically acclaimed second book, Our Interference Times: A Visual Record, published by Damiani. Below, he reflects on his past, present and future.

I recall being photographed when I was two years old, when I had scarlet fever. The photographer kept asking me to smile, but I was so hot with fever, and the sweater I was wearing was so uncomfortable. And I was really hallucinating wildly. His head kept getting bigger and smaller while I tried to feebly smile.

I have been taking photographs since I was a teenager. Mostly, I took portraits of friends. And self-portraits. I have always been primarily visual. It felt completely natural then, as it does now, to gravitate towards photographing my life.

I studied art at the University of Georgia. I learned to trust my instinct. Write drunk, edit sober. Don’t worry too much about the archive: if it’s worth saving, someone will save it.

With the success of REM, I was mentally and emotionally overwhelmed. I like being overwhelmed; it’s a state that I thrive within.

I personally produced or oversaw every aspect of visuals and art direction for the entire 31 years that we were an active band. I still oversee the archive and new releases.

Music and my visual work most definitely overlap. For me, music – at least good or great music – is completely visual. Both are very powerful mediums that can combine to create incredible tension, release, catharsis, and beauty.

There is one photograph that has had a profound effect on me. It’s by Peter Hujar of a man with an erect penis, called Seated Nude, Bruce de Sainte Croix from 1976. I saw it the first time I came to NYC in a small group show, and I had never seen nudity and sexuality shown with such grace and objectivity.

I think that truth rather than intimacy is the mark of a successful photograph. Intimacy is important, but truth is vital.

I once said that a portrait does not have to be a face. Meaning, details of a person’s body, life, or environments can sometimes be as strong, and tell as much of a story, as a face shot. I try to encourage new ways of showing humanity – our vast contradictions, our beauty and chaos.

In Michael Stipe: Volume 1, 35 photographs from 37,000 were selected. It was actually a task I left to my collaborator, artist Jonathan Berger. I helped guide his final choices, but he was looking for a queer narrative that has run through my entire canon of work.

The most significant photograph in the book is a portrait of my sister Lynda and our friend Ané. It’s when I was using a 6×6 film camera, and there’s just a different formalism to that format than my usual work. It makes me step back and examine my eye and how I interpret space and light.

It sucks balls to be an American right now. It’s an embarrassment.

I split my time between two cities. Berlin is a great release, and a breather from the intensity of NYC. It has its own intensity, but the pace is much more human… and in a way, artist scaled. There’s a lot of room there for serious thought and reflection. In NYC, it’s often simply reaction rather than reflection.

Our Interference Times is my new book. It references and hopefully spotlights this intense transitional phase we are in right now, and helps show a different way of seeing through it into what I believe to be a very optimistic future. We just have to endure a lot of shit during the transition and believe strongly in ourselves to make it through. I truly believe that we will make it.

I’m working on the next book of photographs. It will be mostly portraits. I’m cataloguing video work, and preparing that to be shown in conjunction with the photo-based work. Separate to that I am working on a single installation piece about Roy Cohn [the disgraced American lawyer best known for his persecution of alleged communists and gay men during the McCarthy era]. I’m also writing and recording new music. I’m really excited about where this is all going and how it’s shaping up.

damianieditore.com



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Sunday, January 26, 2020

Billie Eilish Sweeps Grammys In Ceremony Clouded By Controversy And Mourning

Billie Eilish, who swept the four major categories at the 2020 Grammy Awards, accepts her trophy for Song of the Year, for "Bad Guy."

In a night when Eilish, the youngest artist to win Album and Record of the year, might have otherwise been the whole story, the Recording Academy could not quite put it its recent scandals behind it.

(Image credit: Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images)



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Almost 10,000 retail jobs lost this year

Tough competition on the UK High Street means there are more job losses to come, say insolvency specialists.

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Fibre-laying tools aid rural broadband rollout

Openreach turns to machinery to speed up the rollout of fibre in rural areas.

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Deepfake technology: Can you spot what's real?

Do you think you can tell what is real and fake? BBC presenter Radzi Chinyanganya tries out the latest techniques.

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Would Greta Thunberg generation play with these toys?

Toymakers are far from ditching cheap plastic figures, but is the industry moving to more sustainable products?

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Brexit day 50p coin unveiled by Chancellor Sajid Javid

It comes after the original batch of coins had to be melted down when the Brexit deadline was extended.

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Para-swimmer Grace Harvey speaks about walking in a robotic suit

Para-swimmer Grace Harvey reveals the mixed emotions she had after walking for the first time in a robotic suit.

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Brexit: Zero tariff, zero quota aim for trade talks, says Barclay

The prime minister will set out trade talk details in a speech next month, says the Brexit secretary.

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'This Isn't New': Questions For Tochi Onyebuchi, Author Of 'Riot Baby'

Tochi Onyebuchi

Tochi Onyebuchi's slim, devastating novella follows a young man born amidst the chaos of the 1992 Rodney King riots — and his sister, whose terrifying magical powers can't protect him from racism.

(Image credit: Christina Orlando)



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British Steel: Rival bidder on standby if Jingye sale fails

Turkish giant Cengiz is "ready to bid" if UK government rescue talks with Jingye fall through.

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'Processed Cheese' Is Hard To Love — But Easy To Admire

Processed Cheese, by Stephen Wright

Stephen Wright's new novel is a darkly funny satire of American consumer culture, set in a Day-Glo alternate reality that's unsettlingly close to our own. It's an exhausting but unforgettable read.

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HS2: Cabinet minister has 'gut feeling' rail project will be cleared

Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay tells the BBC he believes the high-speed rail project will go ahead.

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Boeing 777X: World’s largest twin-engine jet completes first flight

The 777X test flight comes after Boeing's 737 Max plane was grounded following two fatal crashes.

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Saturday, January 25, 2020

The rapid rise of 'Buy now, pay later'

Deals allowing customers to spread payments interest-free are increasing but charities warn of building debts.

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Memorial benches: 'A quiet reminder of people gone, but not forgotten'

Dedicated benches can be a place of solace, but may only be temporary and costs can be prohibitive.

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Coronavirus: Could it damage the global economy?

Inevitably, it will have economic consequences. But how severe and how far will they spread?

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'Franchise' Tracks The Rise And Role Of Fast Food In Black America

Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America, by Marcia Chatelain

History professor Marcia Chatelain's new book tracks what she calls the hidden history of the relationships between the struggle for civil rights and the expansion of the fast food industry.

(Image credit: Liveright)



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UK's best High Street is Welsh valleys town Treorchy

Treorchy has been praised for a thriving community - bursting with independent businesses.

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Fresh Air Weekend: Journalist Detail 'A Very Stable Genius'; Actor Tim Roth

A Very Stable Genius, by Philip Rucker and Carol Leonnig

Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker reflect on the Trump presidency. Ken Tucker reviews Marcus King's solo album, El Dorado. Roth discusses his new film, The Song of Names.

(Image credit: Penguin Press)



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Harry and Meghan: Hagan Homes apologises over housing ads

Hagan Homes says its homes "fit for part-time royalty" campaign was intended to be "light-hearted".

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Pain Drives The Creation Of A Sanctuary In 'Remembrance'

Remembrance, by Rita Woods

Rita Woods' ambitious novel spans 200 years and multiple storylines — it's a complex story of loss and survival that doesn't always work. But Woods creates memorable characters readers can relate to.

(Image credit: Forge Books)



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Brexit: US 'wants to reach trade deal with UK this year'

The US's treasury secretary says he is "optimistic" a deal can be reached with the UK this year.

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'Interior Chinatown' Puts That Guy In The Background Front And Center

Interior Chinatown, by Charles Yu

Charles Yu's new novel follows a TV actor who often gets stuck playing generic Asian men. Yu says he was inspired by shows that set episodes in Chinatown — but keep Asian actors in the background.

(Image credit: Beth Novey/NPR)



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Overwatch and Call of Duty leagues move exclusively to YouTube

Activision Blizzard esports leagues are moving from Twitch to YouTube.

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Fraud victims 'failed' as criminals 'operate with impunity' - report

A review into the handling of fraud cases finds forces have "not kept pace" with the rise in cases.

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'Night Theater' Is An Intriguing But Uneven Drama

Night Theater, by Vikram Paralkar

Vikram Paralkar's novel takes place over one eventful night at a clinic in a small Indian village, where three murdered people confront a doctor; if he can treat their wounds, they'll live again.

(Image credit: Beth Novey/NPR)



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Friday, January 24, 2020

Home sellers risk losing money over quick sales

Trading Standards warns homeowners to be careful when using quick-sale estate agents.

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Facebook and YouTube moderators sign PTSD disclosure

Content moderators review hundreds of disturbing images each day for social media sites.

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Watch Dogs Legion: Click goes inside the post-Brexit game

In a world first, Marc Cieslak interviews the creator of Watch Dogs: Legion inside his own game.

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Latinx Critics Speak Out Against 'American Dirt;' Jeanine Cummins Responds

American Dirt, by Jeanine Cummins

Latinx writers and critics are speaking out against Jeanine Cummins' new book American Dirt, calling its depiction of the migrant experience inauthentic and harmful. We asked Cummins to respond.

(Image credit: Petra Mayer/NPR)



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Rolls-Royce plans mini nuclear reactors by 2029

The firm says it plans to build up to 15 of the mini reactors, which can be delivered by a lorry.

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Just Eat merger probe 'shocking and unwarranted'

A key investor reacts angrily to news of a competition inquiry into the planned £5.9bn deal.

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Could feathers inspire plane wing design and other news

BBC Click's Paul Carter looks at some of the week's best technology stories.

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Thursday, January 23, 2020

Sonos CEO says speakers will work 'as long as possible'

The company said it was sorry for the confusion caused by plans to stop sending updates to legacy speakers.

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China's travel industry counts cost of coronavirus

Airlines and hotels are having to pay out refunds to tourists affected by the deadly outbreak.

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Say it with Text Layouts

  Using our design templates is a fast and easy way to get a pro look for whatever you’re designing. Our text layouts work just the same, but you’ll start with text rather than images. And since they’re created by our hotshot designers, text layouts will give you the headstart you need to make fab designs in a flash, regardless […]

The post Say it with Text Layouts appeared first on PicMonkey Blog.



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Tinder to add panic button and anti-catfishing tech

The move comes after criticism over the lack of safety issues offered by dating apps.

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Tinder to add panic button and anti-catfishing tech

The move comes after criticism over the lack of safety issues offered by dating apps.

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John Stumpf: Ex-Wells Fargo boss pays $17.5m to settle charges

John Stumpf has also been banned from working for US national banks after a fake accounts scandal.

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Tesco to ditch plastic-wrap for multipack tins

Supermarket giant says the change will remove 350 million tonnes of plastic from the environment.

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'I have to live on $1,175 a year'

Brazil's army of fruit workers speak of struggling with low pay and dangerous working conditions.

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What can you use instead of Google and Facebook?

More and more companies are promising privacy online and an alternative to the big internet firms.

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The best gaming headsets: Reviews and buying advice

The next great peripherals war is being waged over your ears. After every company on the planet put out a gaming mouse and then a mechanical keyboard, they turned their attention to headsets. So many headsets.

We know you don’t want to scroll through every single headset review when all you want is a simple answer: “What’s the best gaming headset I can buy with my hard-earned dollars?” This page holds the answers you seek, no matter what your budget is.

We’ll keep updating our recommendations as we look at new products and find stronger contenders. 

Updated 1/23/20 to include our review of the Sennheiser GSP 370, a wireless headset that lasts for weeks on a single charge. See the bottom of this article for links to all of our headset reviews.

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Intel reports record fourth quarter as it ramps up 10nm chips and tamps down supply issues

Intel reported unexpectedly stellar fourth-quarter results on Thursday, while it continues to chart a path toward increasing wafer supply and transitioning into the first iteration of its 10nm process technology. 

The numbers were outstanding: Intel reported a record fourth-quarter revenue of $20.2 billion, up 8 percent from a year ago. Intel also posted fourth-quarter profits of $6.9 billion, up 9 percent. Intel’s revenue outlook for the first quarter is $19 billion, slightly higher than a year ago.

Intel’s Client Computing Group reported $10 billion in revenue, up 2 percent from a year ago. Intel’s Data Center Group was the real star, however, as revenue grew 19 percent to $7.2 billion.

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HS2 risks not priced in at the start, say auditors

No-one took full account of how complex the project was going to be, says the spending watchdog.

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Tesco chief executive on getting rid of multi-wrap plastic use

Tesco chief executive Dave Lewis on the plan to ditch the plastic wrap on tinned food.

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Co-op faces equal pay claims from shop workers

More than 400 claimants have launched an equal pay action against the supermarket chain.

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Bosses set out immigration priorities after Brexit

Industry groups band together to call for flexibility for skilled workers to enter the UK.

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Sonos boss says speakers will work "as long as possible"

The speaker company said it was sorry for the confusion but did not announce plans to revise its plans.

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Best password managers: Reviews of the top products



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Sonos changes tack on “legacy” hardware

Older hardware still won’t get new software features after May, but operating them won’t prevent firmware updates for new hardware.

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Actress Annabella Sciorra Testifies That Harvey Weinstein Raped Her

Actress Annabella Sciorra described in detail the alleged assault by Harvey Weinstein during his trial on Thursday.

She is the first of six women expected to testify at his trial that Weinstein raped or sexually assaulted them. "I said, 'No, no,' but there was not much I could do at that point," Sciorra said.

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Apple says losing Lightning port will create waste

Some members of the European Parliament want all phone-makers to adopt a universal port.

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Killer plague game tops charts amid coronavirus

Strategy game Plague Inc has become the bestselling app in China, eight years after its release.

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Isabel dos Santos: Banker found dead in Lisbon

Nuno Ribeiro da Cunha managed the account of oil firm Sonangol, once chaired by Africa's richest woman.

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Twitter demands AI company stops 'collecting faces'

Clearview's database is used by more than 600 world law-enforcement agencies to identify suspects.

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Morrisons supermarket axes 3,000 managers in huge shake-up

The supermarket says it will create 4,000 hourly-paid roles as part of a major restructuring.

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Davos secret ranking: I'd love to see where I am

Reports suggest the conference categorises its most elite delegates numerically from one to seven.

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Freedom or Death: Revisiting an archive of conflict, tragedy, and struggle

When Gideon Mendel left South Africa in 1990, three years before the official end of Apartheid, he left a huge archive of transparencies and negatives in storage. “I was leaving quite a hectic, chaotic situation,” says the London-based artist, who began working as a news photographer in the 1980s, documenting the often violent and distressing scenes during the final years of a system of institutionalised racial segregation. Removing what he thought of as “important” photographs, Mendel packed the rest of his images into a couple of boxes and left them with a friend.

In 2016, 25 years later, Mendel learned that the top inch of one the boxes had been water-damaged. Coincidentally, the photographer had been working on a long-term project about climate change and flooding called Drowning World. Within it is a series that draws on an archive of more than 1,000 water-damaged photographs gathered on journeys through flooded communities. “I was already attuned to the effects that water can have on photographic emulsions,” says Mendel, describing these effects as “radioactively charged”. Thinking there could be something interesting in this forgotten work that he had packed away and neglected decades earlier, he decided to revisit the memories.

Mealtime at an orphanage in Hillbrow, Johannesburg, October 1989. © Gideon Mendel.

“It does feel important, and it feels emotional,” says Mendel, about the process of looking back on images from an important time in not only his development as a photographer, but a time of huge political and social unrest in his home country. “With very little experience I was thrown into intense, dangerous and violent situations. No one spoke about stress or trauma, you just had to deal with it,” he says. “A lot of people said as long as you had a camera in front of you, nothing could affect you. But I think I was quite deeply affected.”

These images, many seen for the first time, are now presented in Mendel’s latest photobook, Freedom or Death. Split into three parts, each section is categorised by a different process of intervention. The first section presents the series of water-damaged negatives, which, for Mendel, speak about the fragility and malleability of memory, unintentionally moulded and distorted by the inevitable cycle of nature and time. 

Pollsmoor March. © Gideon Mendel and Marcelo Brodsky courtesy ARTCO Gallery.
KTC Squatter Camp. © Gideon Mendel and Marcelo Brodsky courtesy ARTCO Gallery.

The second section is a collaboration with Argentinian artist and human rights activist Marcelo Brodsky, who writes and draws on Mendel’s photographs to enhance their historical narrative. The images in this section focus on objects that are symbolic of conflict and repression: stones, teargas, wooden guns, and the sjambok — a heavy rubber whip used by the police.

The images in the third section are derived from press prints made during Mendel’s time as a news photographer for agencies including Magnum, AFP and Network Photographers. Mendel digitally merged the front and reverse of the prints, creating a superimposed combination of image, text, and markings.

© Gideon Mendel.
© Gideon Mendel.

Each process of intervention has a different effect, but they all return to the idea of reframing the narrative. Through this attempt to re-engage with these documents of history — a history of conflict, tragedy and struggle — Mendel was also able to re-engage with his own memories. “I’ve come to realise that to some extent I was packing away those traumas within myself, like how I packed away the boxes,” he reflects. “Unpacking it has been an important process for me.”

Freedom or Death by Gideon Mendel is published by GOST. The book launch will take place at UCL in London on 28 January 2020. The work will also be shown at ARTCO’s new gallery in Cape Town from 15 February 2020.



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Wednesday, January 22, 2020

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