The best video games to play while self-isolating – The Independent

Forced inside by the danger of coronavirus, where do we turn to for a sense of escape?

The answer, for many, is video games. Gaming statistics have skyrocketed in recent weeks in the US, Verizon reported an increase of 75 per cent since the quarantine began with people increasingly relying on their consoles and computers for diversion.

Even though a lot of people will be content to stick with old favourites such as Fifa, Fortnite or Grand Theft Auto while waiting for the lockdown to end, others may want something a little more off the beaten track.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

This is a list of games that are well worth checking out over the coming weeks, be they lesser-known independent gems such as Kentucky Route Zero or games with particular resonance during the time of self-isolation, like Death Stranding.

Here are 17 games to play while self-isolating...

There are few games more antidotal to the stress of the current global crisis than Animal Crossing. Suffused with good cheer, New Horizons provides you with the perfect(admittedly kid-focused) sense of community while youre stuck inside your house.

New Horizons uses a real-time calendar system to mimic real-world seasonal weather patterns

With everybody stuck inside, it can sometimes feel like society is on the brink of a breakdown. In Cities: Skylines, you can construct your own virus-free metropolitan utopia, with a terrific amount of customisation available.

Theres more than a whiff of The X Files to Remedy Entertainments acclaimed 2019 shooter Control. Playing as Jesse Faden, you must explore the Federal Bureau of Control and defeat a sinister force known as The Hiss. Remedy has always excelled at gunplay, and the action here is thrilling.

This immersive RPG(role-playing game) tells the story of a shambling, drug-addled detective in a sci-fi dystopia who investigates a lynching near a dockworkers union. Inspired by TV series such as The Wire and The Shield, as well as artists such asRembrandt, Disco Elysium is dense and compelling.

In Hideo Kojimas ambitious, spiritual epic Death Stranding, you control a post-apocalyptic deliveryman transporting cargo across treacherous but beautiful landscape. Death Stranding is a game about connection; it speaks so specifically to this age of self-isolation that some players have even started calling it prophecy.

Norman Reedus and La Seydoux in Hideo Kojima's sci-fi epic Death Stranding

Media Molecules Dreams is a brilliant-but-complicated game creation system; self-isolation might just give you the time you need to really get to grips with its impressively detailed workings or to play through the ever-expanding database of content made by others.

No doubt many of us are currently dreaming of escape and freedom; Inside is a game that holds this yearning to its core. Created by the team behind the indie hit Limbo, this puzzle-platform game is even weirder than its predecessor but no less enjoyable.

Spread across five acts, this contemplative, unendingly surprising point-and-click game is nothing short of a masterpiece. Developed and released over the span of a decade, Kentucky Route Zero explores weighty themes of addiction and wage slavery with the pithy postmodernism of a Don DeLillo novel.

Kentucky Route Zero tackles big themes with a solemn musical brilliance

OK, so nobody could argue that Naughty Dogs hugely successful post-apocalyptic thriller qualifies as a hidden gem. But theres never been a better time to revisit The Last of Us, with the sequel just months away and the world outside increasingly resembling Joel and Ellies desperate reality it might even be cathartic.

The classic block-building game has made its educational editions free to download while children worldwide are cooped up without school. But the original version of the game is still a great shout in times of trouble its sublimely peaceful and you can pour countless hours of your time into it.

Nioh took the tricky combat design of the Dark Souls franchise and smoothly transposed it to 17th-century Japan. This years prequel, Nioh 2, is even better: a hard, rewarding action RPG with a great setting and plenty of depth.

Nioh 2 colours its historical Japanese setting with dynamic action and great RPG elements

With a sweeping soundtrack and appealing characters, Ori and the Will of the Wisps sometimes feels like a Pixar film, in all the best ways. But this delightful platformer isnt just for kids as its formidable difficulty suggests.

Strategy game Plague Inc. was removed from the Chinese app store recently, seemingly on grounds of taste, but this virus simulator actually offers a genuine education on the ways viruses are disseminated through society. After a coronavirus-related sales boom, the games creators donated more than 200,000 to help fight the pandemic.

For those looking for something a bit different, Lucas Popes Return of the Obra Dinn is a fantastic puzzle game like no other. You play an insurance salesman investigating a ghost ship; the aim of the game is to identify all the Obra Dinns passengers and crew and determine how they died.

A ship is attacked by a beast from the deep in Lucas Pope's Return of the Obra Dinn

If you feel like you dont have much control over your own life at the moment, you can at least have total dominion over the lives of others, in this sensationally popular simulation game. And as anyone whos played it can attest, the hours fly by at triple speed when The Sims manages to get its hooks into you.

Stellarisputs you in command of a species who have just cracked the science of interstellar travel. If youre looking for a way to kill some serious time, you can hardly do better than this sprawling strategy game, which forces you to juggle diplomacy, exploration and warfare to build the ultimatespace empire.

While a game like Animal Crossing is a great reminder of the pleasures society can bring you, Untitled Goose Game is all about shaking that society up. As a havoc-wreaking goose, you dont know the meaning of the phrase social distancing you honk, peck and flap your way around a small English village, leaving a trail of frustrated farm folk in your wake.

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The best video games to play while self-isolating - The Independent

Who By Fire, Who By Water, Who By COVID-19, And Who Gets My Respirator? – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Photo Credit: Robert Couse-Baker via Flickr

A very distinguished scientist asked me, in the context of comparing the treatment and the statistics of older and younger victims of the coronavirus pandemic: I was wondering if Judaism teaches us that it is worse to lose an old life than a young one. Is seems a form of selfishness that is likely held by an aging population. Can you help me with this?

I enclose my response:

You asked if Judaism teaches us that it is worse to lose an old life than a young one.

First, I must warn you that I am not a rabbi and that everything I will submit to you here is based on my personal learning, as well as on a phone conversation with my own rabbi. We went over the most available sources to answer your question in a satisfactory fashion, but you should know that Judaism teaches a whole lot of things and then turns around and teaches the opposite.

The essential discussion of setting value to a human life appears in Leviticus 27, and it has to do with the need to assign a value to the sacrifice that an individual has vowed to dedicate to the Temple. If a Jewish person makes a clearly defined vow to God to give Him an amount equal to the value of a human being, this persons value must be set as follows: a man between the ages of 20 and 60 is worth 50 silver shekels; a woman, 30 shekels; a child 5 to 20, 20 shekels for a boy and 10 for a girl; a baby one month to 5 years of age, 5 shekels for a boy and 3 for a girl; a person past sixty, 15 shekels for a man and 10 for a woman; and if the person is too poor to be evaluated, a cohen will assign him a value in keeping with his means.

Obviously, the various values above correspond to the price of slaves in the marketplace, and in a culture where ones donation to the Temple depends on his or her price had they been sold for slavery this is quite practical.

Incidentally, this system becomes crucial in evaluating the amount of compensation to be paid to the victim of an injury by the assailant, as our sages have interpreted the rule of an eye for an eye to mean the price of an eye for an eye. And when it comes to setting a price on a lost body part, much as it is done by insurance companies nowadays, we must know the earning potential of the individual in question be it as a wage earner or as a person sold to slavery.

So you can see that the Torah has a sober view of the value of different people. At which point, as it was on the occasion of your radio interview, Jewish law throws a red herring our way.

In tractate Sanhedrin 74., there is a discussion of what must one do if a gentile officer ordered him to turn in a fellow Jew to be killed or suffer death himself. The sages rule that one must accept death rather than turn in another, with the poignant explanation: How can you be sure that your blood is redder than his? His being the fellow Jew wanted by the authorities. And by redder blood, the sages mean being more loved by God. How do you know which one of you God finds more deserving of a violent end?

And, of course, in a situation of duress like that one, every Jew is equal and we dont have the right to prefer one Jewish life over another.

But, as I said (or, actually, my rabbi said), its a red herring.

Because we have a system of comparative values which is based on a third set altogether: holiness. Tractate Horayot 13. teaches:

A priest precedes a Levite; a Levite precedes an Israelite; an Israelite precedes a mamzer; a mamzer precedes a Gibeonite; a Gibeonite precedes a convert; a convert precedes an emancipated Canaanite slave.

The text explains at length this hierarchy, and it all comes down to how close one is allowed to get to the holiest sanctuary at the Temple, where the High Priest sees God eye to eye on Yom Kippur.

From the above set of values, would think that Jewish law is disturbingly reminiscent of the Hindu tradition, with its casts that descend from the Brahmins down to the Untouchables. But then the Mishna throws a monkey wrench in the spokes of the bicycle of tradition and teaches: When do these rules of precedence take effect? In circumstances when they are all equal in terms of wisdom. And the rabbis cite Proverbs 3:15: She (meaning Torah) is more precious than rubies, therefore, they say, a scholar who happens to be a mamzer is higher in value than a high priest who is uneducated.

So weve covered three systems by which Jewish tradition evaluates and compares people. But the Responsa, which by nature is more immediate and can be compared more directly to the context of your inquiry, considers additional values. Rabbi Yitzchok Zilberstein, a prominent posek living in Bnei Brak, suggests that in a dilemma between saving a few severely injured individuals or a large number of more moderately injured, the larger group is prioritized. The IDF Rabbinate determines that the rules of medical triage be applied in saving individuals, based on the severity of their condition juxtaposed with their chances of recovery.

But I am not familiar, and neither is my rabbi, with a Jewish view that says an older person is deserving of a lesser medical or other attention than a younger person based on their age difference alone. For instance, the suggestion that was passed around a week ago in Israel that older persons on respirators would be made to give up their machines in favor of younger patients, is outright abhorrent in my eyes. In such a case, one surely must ask: who told you that your blood is redder than your fellow Jew?

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Who By Fire, Who By Water, Who By COVID-19, And Who Gets My Respirator? - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

From plagues to Promised Land: Lets build a world of solidarity – Jewish Journal

I remember a conversation with my son, who is 12 and studying for a Bar Mitzvah that is now in a holding pattern. Last year, at Passover, he told me he didnt think it was fair that in order to free the slaves regular Egyptians had to suffer the plagues.

If you didnt think slavery was right, he asked, was your water still turned to blood? What about poor Egyptians? Did they suffer as much, or more?

Carin Mrotz

I think of that question as we watch a modern plague spread. A virus has no regard for wealth or education. A grandmother in the midwest contracts COVID-19; so does an A-list actor on vacation around the world. Millionaires shelter in place; my parents, retired public school teachers, shelter in place.

But while a virus may not discriminate, the effects are and will be felt more by certain people. Some, due to age or other risk factors, are more susceptible, more likely to suffer and even perish. Beyond the direct impacts of illness itself, the costs of a pandemic will be borne disproportionately by those already on the margins.

Small businesses will be hit harder than giant corporations. Low-wage workers, disproportionately women of color, will become unemployed while many of us work from home or use paid time off. Some will be forced to choose between paying for healthcare or rent, though not all of us will have to grapple with this; some wont be able to afford either one.

I attended a dinner with Ruth Messinger, then CEO of American Jewish World Service, shortly after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. She told us, a group of justice advocates, that we must understand how often the impacts of natural disasters arent natural at all. The scale of the earthquakes damages, like those of Hurricane Katrina, was multiplied because of a place and people who by greed or imperialism had been stripped of their ability to withstand devastation.

In New Orleans, the poorest neighborhoods were developed in the areas most likely to flood; while no accurate death toll has ever been taken, the majority of those who died in Hurricane Katrina were black and poor.

In Haiti, the effects of the earthquake were magnified because of mass deforestation for use in industries like coal production, which led to soil erosion, flooding, and a lack of sustainable agriculture, causing poverty and near famine.

In some ways, COVID-19 is like a hurricane, or an earthquake, or a plague: Those most negatively impacted will likely be those furthest from the power to mitigate or to bear the damage.

Had those in leadership taken the disease more seriously, would we have more tests available? Would hospitals be more prepared to treat the afflicted? Had Pharaoh acted sooner, would Egyptians have been spared locusts? Or worse? And today, will those with the most power use their resources to help those most impacted? Or will they protect themselves and their power at their followers expense?

This Passover, we can ask ourselves what we would do to mitigate the suffering of our neighbor. We can ask how support might become solidarity how donating money for medical supplies might translate to a structural fight to make sure everyone has access to healthcare and all workers have paid sick leave.

Ask how donating to an emergency shelter might become a push for rent control. We can remember that once the plagues had ended and the Israelites were freed, a long desert journey was still ahead, the Promised Land yet to be defined, and we can decide what world we will build together.

This is one in a series of pieces on Passover during coronavirus. Read the rest of the series here.

Carin Mrotz is the Executive Director of Jewish Community Action and has been organizing Jews in Minnesota for racial and economic justice since 2004. She is currently sheltering in place with her family at home in Minneapolis.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward.

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From plagues to Promised Land: Lets build a world of solidarity - Jewish Journal

Supercomputer Testing Probes Viral Transmission in Airplanes – HPCwire

It might be a long time before the general public is flying again, but the question remains: how high-risk is air travel in terms of viral infection? In an article for the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC), Faith Singer-Villalobos highlighted new, supercomputer-enabled research that explored how viruses travel and transmit on airplanes.

The new research, which was led by Ashok Srinivasan (a professor of computer science at the University of West Florida), aimed to use pedestrian dynamics models to assess disease spread in airplanes. Typically, pedestrian dynamics researchers have used the Self-Propelled Entity Dynamics model, or SPED, which essentially constitutes a molecular dynamics simulation where the molecules are people and the rules of interaction are social not simply physical. However, like molecular dynamics models, SPED was slow, limiting its utility in urgent situations.

To bridge that gap, the research team developed CALM, loosely short for constrained linear movements in a crowd. CALM, which dropped the molecular dynamics framework of SPED, is targeted at assessing movement in narrow passages and its lighter foundation allow for 90-second runtimes (a 60-fold speedup relative to SPED). The researchers applied CALM to analyze how passengers disembarked on three different airplanes. Because human behavior is unpredictable, they also ran simulations with a thousand different variables, using the distribution of the results to generate distributions of predicted human behavior.

To run their massive quantity of simulations, the researchers turned to TACCs Frontera supercomputer, the worlds fifth largest per the latest Top500 ranking with 23.5 Linpack petaflops. Fronteras 8,008 compute nodes are powered by Intel Xeon Platinum 8280 CPUs and connected by Mellanox HDR100 InfiniBand. Frontera also has two subsystems, both equipped with four Nvidia GPUs per node (Quadro RTX 5000s power one subsystem, while V100s power the other).

Frontera was the natural choice, given that it was the new NSF-funded flagship machine, Srinivasan said. One question you have is whether you have generated a sufficient number of scenarios to cover the range of possibilities. We check this by generating histograms of quantities of interest and seeing if the histogram converges. Using Frontera, we were able to perform sufficiently large simulations that we now know what a precise answer looks like.

The researchers made particular use of Fronteras GPU-driven subsystem, given that CALM had been designed to leverage GPUs. Using the GPUs turned out to be a fortunate choice because we were able to deploy these simulations in the COVID-19 emergency, Srinivasan said. The GPUs on Frontera are a means of generating answers fast.

As for answers, Srinivasan cautions that models arent an exact proxy for real-world cases due to the impact of outlier events, but the simulations expose flaws in the systems and guide best practices.

In our approach, we dont aim to accurately predict the actual number of cases, he explained. Rather, we try to identify vulnerabilities in different policy or procedural options, such as different boarding procedures on a plane. We generate a large number of possible scenarios that could occur and examine whether one option is consistently better than the other. If it is, then it can be considered more robust. In a decision-making setting, one may wish to choose the more robust option, rather than rely on expected values from predictions.

To read the original article discussing this research, click here.

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Supercomputer Testing Probes Viral Transmission in Airplanes - HPCwire

BSC Uses Bioinformatics, AI, and Marenostrum Supercomputer in Fight Against COVID-19 – HPCwire

April 1, 2020 Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC) collaborates in the fight against the coronavirus from different areas: the application of bioinformatics for the research on the virus and its possible treatments, the use of artificial intelligence and natural language processing to analyze the data about the spread and impact of the pandemic and the use of the MareNostrum 4 supercomputer to enable the fight against the coronavirus.

Bioinformatics to search for treatments

From the bioinformatics side, the BSC is an example of how bioinformatics and supercomputers are nowadays an indispensable tool for research centers that have experimental laboratories to accelerate the fight against the coronavirus. Bioinformatics is used for research on the virus and its possible treatments, analyzing the coronavirus genome and its successive mutations, and searching for drugs and immune therapies (antibodies and vaccines).

Genomics

Understanding how the virus has evolved through different epidemics (such as the SARS epidemic in 2003, MERS in 2012, or the current COVID-19) is important because it allows us to understand how it is possible for the virus to pass from one species to another and what changes it has to undergo to make possible this transmission. It sheds light on the virus mode of transmission and the mechanisms it uses to interact with our immune system and the immune system of other species. This is crucial when looking for treatments and for the prevention and prediction of eventual future outbreaks.

This study is carried out on data available in public databases that house genomic sequences of the different virus mutations and animal species. The information is analyzed with computer programs specifically designed for it, some developed in the BSC itself and others by other teams. The processing of these data requires great computational capacity and therefore the high-performance computing resources of MareNostrum 4 supercomputer, hosted and managed by Barcelona Supercomputing Center, are used.

Search for treatments

Another important aspect is the search for treatments against the diseases caused by the coronavirus, including simulations that reproducein silicothe possible routes that can be exploited to attack this virus.

This process is known in research as docking and consists in simulating in the computer the interactions between the virus and the molecules that could be used to make vaccines, antibody treatments or drug treatments.

To carry out this process, the researchers use the knowledge generated in the research of the virus genome, information on the structures of its virus proteins and data on drugs and other inorganic molecules, which are stored in computer libraries that contain millions of chemical compounds and the results obtained in previous experiments, collected over years by the scientific community.

Computer search or drug screening is very helpful in speeding up the process of finding and validating disease treatments and vaccines, as it greatly cuts the time and investment required for the first phase of this research. Any treatment or vaccine that computer models predict may be successful must subsequently be validated in experimental laboratories, animal testing, and clinical research, and refined in constant collaboration between different research participants.

To carry out this work, researchers at the BSC use different computer programs, including the PELE molecular interaction modeling software developed at BSC. This software and the power of the MareNostrum 4 supercomputer enable thousands of computational experiments to be performed optimizing the binding of drugs and proteins in a fast and effective way.

At the BSC, research on the virus and its possible treatments are carried out in close collaboration between the groups of Alfonso Valencia, ICREA researcher, director of the BSC Life Sciences Department and leader of the Computational biology group, Vctor Guallar, also ICREA researcher, head of the Electronic and atomic protein modeling team and maximum promoter of the PELE software and Toni Gabaldn, ICREA researcher and head of the Comparative genomics group. All of them work in cooperation with the BSC operations team, who are in charge of providing them with the computational resources needed.

Currently, there are two projects that channel the research carried out at BSC on the coronavirus and its possible treatments: EXSCALATE4CoV (E4C), funded by the European Commission under the H2020 program, and a collaborative project with the centers of research IrsiCaixa and CreSa-IRTA.

E4C especially emphasizes on basic and applied research to search for drugs while the collaboration with IrsiCaixa and CreSa-IRTA is more focused on the search for immunological therapies supported by genomic research and bioinformatics tools.

Artificial intelligence to analyze the spread and social impact of the pandemic

BSCs High Performance Artificial Intelligence (HPAI) research group collaborates with UNICEF and IBM on a project that aims to analyze the socioeconomic impact of the virus locally and globally, with an emphasis on social distancing. The goal is to find impact indicators, patterns and statistics that serve the UN and local authorities to take better and faster measurements. The group that carries out the project is currently made up of about 40 people from eight different countries, and focuses on the cases of three cities: New York, Tokyo and Barcelona. HPAI leads the case of Barcelona.

The same team of BSCs artificial intelligence experts collaborates with Mexican researchers and other researchers at the center in the creation of a data collection and analysis system to assist in decision-making to deal with COVID-19, which expansion is found there, still at a fairly early stage. The project is carried out in collaboration with Mexico City, Nuevo Len and Jalisco: http://dash.covid19.geoint.mx/

MareNostrum 4 and users support

The MareNostrum 4 supercomputer, which despite the current circumstances is still in full operation, provides the necessary computational capacity to accelerate ongoing investigations against the coronavirus.

The BSCs Department of Life Sciences is using it for its own research, but the center also made it available to research teams or external entities that need high-performance computing for their research against the coronavirus.

The BSC Operations Department provides support in the use of the MareNostrum 4, both to internal and external researchers.

About BSC

Barcelona Supercomputing Center-Centro Nacional de Supercomputacin (BSC-CNS) is the national supercomputing centre in Spain. The center is specialised in high performance computing (HPC) and manage MareNostrum, one of the most powerful supercomputers in Europe, located in the Torre Girona chapel. BSC is involved in a number of projects to design and develop energy efficient and high performance chips, based on open architectures like RISC-V, for use within future exascale supercomputers and other high performance domains. The centre leads the pillar of the European Processor Project (EPI), creating a high performance accelerator based on RISC-V. More information:www.bsc.es

Source: Barcelona Supercomputing Center

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BSC Uses Bioinformatics, AI, and Marenostrum Supercomputer in Fight Against COVID-19 - HPCwire

OLCF and Summit Supercomputer Join the COVID-19 High Performance Computing Consortium – HPCwire

March 31, 2020 The Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility and the Summit supercomputer have joined forces with other U.S. Federal agencies, industry, and academic leaders to provide access to the worlds most powerful high-performance computing resources in support of COVID-19 research through the COVID-19 High Performance Computing Consortium.

The Consortium is a unique private-public effort spearheaded by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, the U.S. Department of Energy and IBM to bring together federal government, industry, and academic leaders who are volunteering compute time and resources on their world-class machines.

Learn more and submit a research proposal:https://www.ibm.com/covid19/hpc-consortium

About the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility

The Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility is charged with helping researchers solve some of the worlds most challenging scientific problems with a combination of world-class high-performance computing (HPC) resources and world-class expertise in scientific computing.

Source:Katie Bethea, Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility

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OLCF and Summit Supercomputer Join the COVID-19 High Performance Computing Consortium - HPCwire

Coronavirus Massive Simulations Completed on Supercomputer – UC San Diego Health

A coronavirus envelope all-atom computer model is being developed by the Amaro Lab of UC San Diego on the NSF-funded Frontera supercomputer of TACC at UT Austin. Biochemist Rommie Amaro hopes to build on her recent success with all-atom influenza virus simulations (left) and apply them to the coronavirus (right). Credit: Lorenzo Casalino (UC San Diego), TACC

Scientists are preparing a massive computer model of the coronavirus that they expect will give insight into how it infects in the body. They've taken the first steps, testing the first parts of the model and optimizing code on the Frontera supercomputer at the University of Texas at Austin. The knowledge gained from the full model can help researchers design new drugs and vaccines to combat the coronavirus.

UC San Diegos Rommie Amaro is leading efforts to build the first complete all-atom model of the SARS-COV-2 coronavirus envelope, its exterior component.

Rommie Amaro, Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego.

If we have a good model for what the outside of the particle looks like and how it behaves, we're going to get a good view of the different components that are involved in molecular recognition, said Amaro, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry.

Molecular recognition involves how the virus interacts with the angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptors and possibly other targets within the host cell membrane.

The coronavirus model is anticipated by Amaro to contain roughly 200 million atoms, a daunting undertaking, as the interaction of each atom with one another has to be computed. Her team's workflow takes a hybrid, or integrative modeling approach.

We're trying to combine data at different resolutions into one cohesive model that can be simulated on leadership-class facilities like Frontera, Amaro said. We basically start with the individual components, where their structures have been resolved at atomic or near atomic resolution. We carefully get each of these components up and running and into a state where they are stable. Then we can introduce them into the bigger envelope simulations with neighboring molecules.

On March 12-13, the Amaro Lab ran molecular dynamics simulations on up to 4,000 nodes, or about 250,000 processing cores, on Frontera at the Texas Advanced Computing Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Amaro's work with the coronavirus builds on her success with an all-atom simulation of the influenza virus envelope, published in ACS Central Science, in February 2020. She said that the influenza work will have a remarkable number of similarities to what they're now pursuing with the coronavirus.

The NSF-funded Frontera supercomputer of the Texas Advanced Computing Center at UT Austin is ranked #5 fastest in the world and #1 for academic systems, according to the November 2019 Top500 rankings. (Credit: TACC)

It's a brilliant test of our methods and our abilities to adapt to new data and to get this up and running right off the fly, Amaro said. It took us a year or more to build the influenza viral envelope and get it up and running on the national supercomputers. For influenza, we used the Blue Waters supercomputer, which was in some ways the predecessor to Frontera. The work, however, with the coronavirus obviously is proceeding at a much, much faster pace. This is enabled, in part because of the work that we did on Blue Waters earlier.

According to Amaro, these simulations will provide new insights into the different parts of the coronavirus that are required for infectivity.

And why we care about that is because if we can understand these different features, scientists have a better chance to design new drugs; to understand how current drugs work and potential drug combinations work. The information that we get from these simulations is multifaceted and multidimensional and will be of use for scientists on the front lines immediately and also in the longer term, Amaro explained. Hopefully, the public will understand that there's many different components and facets of science to push forward to understand this virus. These simulations on Frontera are just one of those components, but hopefully an important and a gainful one.

Click on the following track to listen.

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Coronavirus Massive Simulations Completed on Supercomputer - UC San Diego Health

BSC uses bioinformatics, AI and supercomputer in the fight against the coronavirus – Science Business

Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC) collaborates in the fight against the coronavirus from different areas: the application of bioinformatics for the research on the virus and its possible treatments, the use of artificial intelligence and natural language processing to analyse the data about the spread and impact of the pandemic and the use of the MareNostrum 4 supercomputer to enable the fight against the coronavirus.

Bioinformatics to search for treatments

From the bioinformatics side, the BSC is an example of how bioinformatics and supercomputers are nowadays an indispensable tool for research centres that have experimental laboratories to accelerate the fight against the coronavirus. Bioinformatics is used for research on the virus and its possible treatments, analysing the coronavirus genome and its successive mutations, and searching for drugs and immune therapies (antibodies and vaccines).

Genomics

Understanding how the virus has evolved through different epidemics (such as the SARS epidemic in 2003, MERS in 2012, or the current Covid-19) is important because it allows us to understand how it is possible for the virus to pass from one species to another and what changes it has to undergo to make possible this transmission.. It sheds light on the virus mode of transmission and the mechanisms it uses to interact with our inmune system and the inmune system of other species. This is crucial when looking for treatments and for the prevention and prediction of eventual future outbreaks.

This study is carried out on data available in public databases that house genomic sequences of the different virus mutations and animal species. The information is analysed with computer programs specifically designed for it, some developed in the BSC itself and others by other teams. The processing of these data requires great computational capacity and therefore the high-performance computing resources of MareNostrum 4 supercomputer, hosted and managed by Barcelona Supercomputing Center, are used.

Search for treatments

Another important aspect is the search for treatments against the diseases caused by the coronavirus, including simulations that reproducein silicothe possible routes that can be exploited to attack this virus.

This process is known in research as "docking" and consist in simulating in the computer the interactions between the virus and the molecules that could be used to make vaccines, antibody treatments or drug treatments.

To carry out this process, the researchers use the knowledge generated in the research of the virus genome, information on the structures of its virus proteins and data on drugs and other inorganic molecules, which are stored in computer libraries that contain millions of chemical compounds and the results obtained in previous experiments, collected over years by the scientific community.

Computer search or drug screening is very helpful in speeding up the process of finding and validating disease treatments and vaccines, as it greatly cuts the time and investment required for the first phase of this research. Any treatment or vaccine that computer models predict may be successful must subsequently be validated in experimental laboratories, animal testing, and clinical research, and refined in constant collaboration between different research participants.

To carry out this work, researchers at the BSC use different computer programs, including the PELE molecular interaction modelling software developed at BSC. This software and the power of the MareNostrum 4 supercomputer enable thousands of computational experiments to be performed optimizing the binding of drugs and proteins in a fast and effective way.

At the BSC, research on the virus and its possible treatments are carried out in close collaboration between the groups of Alfonso Valencia, ICREA researcher, director of the BSC Life Sciences Department and leader of the Computational biology group, Vctor Guallar, also ICREA researcher, head of the Electronic and atomic protein modeling team and maximum promoter of the PELE software and Toni Gabaldn, ICREA researcher and head of the Comparative genomics group. All of them work in cooperation with the BSC operations team, who are in charge of providing them with the computational resources needed.

Currently there are two projects that channel the research carried out at BSC on the coronavirus and its possible treatments: EXSCALATE4CoV (E4C), funded by the European Commission under the H2020 program, and a collaborative project with the centres of research IrsiCaixa and CreSa-IRTA.

E4C specially emphasises on basic and applied research to search for drugs whilethe collaboration with IrsiCaixa and CreSa-IRTA is more focused on the search for immunological therapies supported by genomic research and bioinformatics tools.

Artificial intelligence to analyse the spread and social impact of the pandemic

BSCs High Performance Artificial Intelligence (HPAI) research group collaborates with UNICEF and IBM on a project that aims to analyse the socioeconomic impact of the virus locally and globally, with an emphasis on social distancing. The goal is to find impact indicators, patterns and statistics that serve the UN and local authorities to take better and faster measurements. The group that carries out the project is currently made up of about 40 people from eight different countries, and focuses on the cases of three cities: New York, Tokyo and Barcelona. HPAI leads the case of Barcelona.

The same team of BSCs artificial intelligence experts collaborate with Mexican researchers and other researchers at the centre in the creation of a data collection and analysis system to assist in decision-making to deal with COVID-19, which expansion is found there, still at a fairly early stage. The project is carried out in collaboration with Mexico City, Nuevo Len and Jalisco:http://dash.covid19.geoint.mx/

MareNostrum 4 and users support

The MareNostrum 4 supercomputer, which despite the current circumstances is still in full operation, provides the necessary computational capacity to accelerate ongoing investigations against the coronavirus.

The BSCs department of Life Sciences is using it for its own research, but the center also made it available to research teams or external entities that need high-performance computing for their research against the coronavirus.

The BSC Operations Department provides support in the use of the MareNostrum 4, both to internal and external researchers.

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BSC uses bioinformatics, AI and supercomputer in the fight against the coronavirus - Science Business

UAH researchers and the world’s fastest supercomputer join the fight against the COVID-19 virus – alreporter.com

The number of people applying for unemployment in Alabama continues to skyrocket amid the COVID-19 outbreak, but there are fewer people handling those claims this month than last.

The Alabama Department of Labor closed an office in Birmingham and let some workers go earlier this month. That staffing shortage, coupled with an onslaught of new claims, has slowed the time its taking to process them, one worker told APR.

Approximately 74,056 people filed unemployment claims during the week that ended March 28, according to the departments preliminary data. That was far more than had ever been filed for any week going back to 1987, when the U.S. Department of Labor began keeping data on weekly unemployment claims.

Where we would have alerted a claimant that it would take two to three weeks, now the verbiage is, as soon as administratively possible, the employee at the department told APR by phone Saturday. The person asked not to be identified as theyre still employed with the state.

Its currently taking between six and seven weeks to process claims, the worker said, and people who have applied are expressing concern over the long wait.

Its an issue, the worker said.

The employee said workers at the now-closed Birmingham office were called into a meeting on Feb. 18 and told the office would close for good on March 13. Anyone who wanted to continue working for the department had to report to the Montgomery office on March 16, the worker said, or they would be considered to have quit.

In a response to APRs questions, Alabama Department of Labor spokeswoman Tara Hutchison wrote that Eleven employees found other positions in a career center or tax office, three employees resigned in lieu of transferring, two are retiring, and six conditional employees were separated.

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There was no discussion in that Feb. 18 meeting of the novel coronavirus or the possibility of mass filings, the workers said. There was discussion of what might happen if another recession hit, the person said, but administrators didnt have a plan for that.

China informed the World Health Organization about the novel coronavirus on Dec. 31. President Donald Trump on Jan. 31 banned foreign nationals entry into the country if they had traveled to China within the last two weeks.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention there were 18 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the U.S. as of Feb. 18, the day workers were told the Birmingham office would be closing.

A day after the Feb. 18 meeting at the Birmingham office Irans COVID-19 breakout began.

By March 8, eight days before workers were ordered to show up to the Montgomery office, Italy ordered a lockdown of 60 million residents. Three days later the World Health Organization classified COVID-19 as a pandemic.

By March 13, the day the Birmingham office closed, there were 2,611 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the U.S.

The worker said just 15 of the 37 employees made the move to the Montgomery office, and those who did are faced with an overwhelming workload and are spending hours each day doing jobs that others had done before the move. All but one of the 15 adjudicate claims, the person said, meaning they process them and determine whether the person should receive unemployment benefits.

Hutchison told APR that the decision to close the Birmingham office was made because of funding and budget issues.

The Unemployment Insurance programs budget has been cut repeatedly for several years. The buildings rental and overhead costs were eliminated by transferring those employees to the Montgomery Call Center, Hutchison said in the message.

The worker questioned, however, why the department waited until a month before the planned closure to inform the staff, and expressed concern that there

As you know, we are taking in remarkable numbers of new claims due to COVID-19. There was no way to know at the time that this situation would occur. We are working constantly to improve service, and one of those ways is by reutilizing those employees who transferred to other positions, and having them accept claims, Hutchison said. We are also looking to bring back those conditional employees who have separated, if they havent found other work. Additionally, the federal government is providing increased funding to assist with staffing issues.

The Birmingham office was already short-staffed enough to have been allowing staff there overtime pay to handle existing claims, the employee said.

This just added just a whole new level, the person said.

The workers said staff at the department want the public to know that they care and are working hard to get claims processed as quickly as possible.

We want to make sure that were doing the job right. We want to make sure that were following guidelines that weve had in place all throughout our employment with how to do these claims, the person said. If the public knew that, that would be great.

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UAH researchers and the world's fastest supercomputer join the fight against the COVID-19 virus - alreporter.com

Researchers Join Forces to Investigate the Airborne Transmission of Coronavirus Using a Supercomputer – SciTechDaily

The first situation to simulate is of someone coughing indoors. Photo: Petteri Peltonen / Aalto University

The researchers are using a supercomputer to carry out 3D modeling and believe that the first results will be obtained in the next few weeks.

The project includes fluid dynamics physicists, virologists, and biomedical engineering specialists. The researchers are using a supercomputer to carry out 3D modeling and believe that the first results will be obtained in the next few weeks.

Aalto University, the Finnish Meteorological Institute, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and the University of Helsinki have brought together a multidisciplinary group of researchers to model how the extremely small droplets that leave the respiratory tract when coughing, sneezing or talking are transported in air currents. These droplets can carry pathogens such as coronaviruses. The researchers will also use existing information to determine whether the coronavirus could survive in the air.

Dozens of researchers are involved, ranging from fluid dynamics physicists to specialists in virology, medical technology, and infectious diseases. The project was launched based on a proposal put forward by Janne Kuusela, Chief Physician at the Essote Emergency Clinic run by the South Savo Joint Authority for Social and Health Services.

For the modeling work, the researchers are using a supercomputer that CSC Finnish IT Center for Science Ltd has made available at very short notice.

Under normal conditions, researchers may have to queue for many days to start their simulations on CSC machines. There is no time for that now, so instead, we are permitted exceptionally to start straight away, says Aalto University Assistant Professor Ville Vuorinen, who is leading the cooperative project.

The division of work for the project is clear. Aalto University, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland and the Finnish Meteorological Institute will carry out the 3D airflow modeling together with the droplet motion. The task of the virology and infectious diseases specialists is to analyze the implications of the models for coronavirus infections. The research group is working closely with the physicians at Essote and infectious diseases specialists from the Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare.

The first situation to be simulated is that of a person coughing in an indoor environment. The boundary conditions, such as the air velocity, are specified in order to ensure that the different models produced are comparable and that it is possible, for example, to assess the necessary safety distances between people.

One aim is to find out how quickly the virus concentrations dilute in the air in various airflow situations that could arise in places such as a grocery store, says Vuorinen.

Visualising the invisible movements of viral particles is very important in order to better understand the spreading of infectious diseases and the different phenomena related to this, both now and in the future, he adds.

Researchers believe that the high computing capacity and close, multidisciplinary cooperation will mean that the first results will be obtained already in the next few weeks.

CSC Finnish IT Center for Science Ltd is prioritizing the provision of computing capacity and expert assistance for research aimed at combating the COVID-19 pandemic. If you are working directly on a pandemic research project, please contact[emailprotected].

I fully encourage other researchers to do research on the coronavirus epidemic as it is really time to roll up the sleeves. Within the space of just a few hours, we have put a team together and started research immediately, says Vuorinen

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Researchers Join Forces to Investigate the Airborne Transmission of Coronavirus Using a Supercomputer - SciTechDaily

The beauty and comedy of Muhammad Ali and Rocky Marcianos 1969 computer fight – The Independent

It started out as a bit of fun, two unbeaten heavyweight champions in the ultimate fantasy fight at a time when the heavyweight divisions best boxer was in exile, and the top contenders were biffing and bashing each other in virtual obscurity.

A smart, sharp advertising ducker and diver called Murray Woroner decided to find a super computer and put in all the data for the best 16 heavyweights in history. This was a glorious mash-up of Fifties science fiction with enough Sixties farce to make it a psychedelic success.

Woroner used height, record, weight, reach, hand, calf and a dozen other ridiculous measures of a fighters raw facts; it was an understandable comedy and Muhammad Ali was beaten by a man called Jim Jeffries and a Hollywood party boy called Max Baer beat Jack Johnson. The winner was Rocky Marciano no shock there - retired since 1955, still adored and idolised by the American public.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

Alis lawyers were going to sue and there was a burst of publicity. Heck, they had taken the mans title, taken away his living, taken away his greatness and then Big Jim, an old-school racist, had whupped him and Rocky, who had cast a shadow of doubt over Alis career, had once again stolen the limelight and walked away with all the glory. It was too much, it was a sporting criminal act.

The solution was simple: fight!

Muhammad Ali and Rocky Marciano act out their fight in the gym(YouTube)

Marciano and Ali had a press conference in the early part of the summer of 1969 to launch their fight. It was civil and Marciano pulled Alis wife, Belinda, over at the end and advised her in private to tell him to give up his quest to be the heavyweight champion again. Tell him to stop torturing himself, he said. She replied: He won it in the ring, and hell lose it in the ring. It was an odd tender moment, a heartfelt message from the retired icon. Ali and Marciano liked each other.

I saw Clay fight and he is probably the fasted heavyweight of all time, said Marciano, still favouring the Clay name over Ali. I will fight him the same way I fight everybody else. I will get low, get him in a corner and stay in close.

No man in the history of boxing or now can corner me, replied Ali. That is a big gamble. Its science fiction talk.

They shook hands and the fight was on.

Nobody cared about Joe Frazier defending Alis old heavyweight title in Houston against a man called Dave Zyglewicz. That fight ended in one round, just 96 seconds Zyglewicz had started to box after answering an advert in a paper seeking young boxers. It was an odd boxing landscape back then.

Marciano went back to the gym, locked the door, lost fifty pounds and had a super toupee made. He was 45 and had not been in the ring since 1955. Ali also went back to the gym, got in shape and perhaps dyed his hair for the first time. He was 27, had not fought for over two years and he suddenly looked a lot older. The kid was gone, lost in the government-imposed exile. The fighting martyr was paying a price, make no mistake.

Woroner designed a fight, found a studio and for three days they went behind closed doors and fought. It was not a computer fight, it was a fight. They fought 75 one-minute rounds, shirts off, new shorts on, gum shields in, boots on. Marciano was Alis shortest opponent and Ali was Marcianos tallest opponent. They were both undefeated at that point: Rocky was 49-0 and Ali was 29-0. The red sauce was everywhere, fake blood all over the place. The cameras rolled, the carnival was in town. It was a glorious spectacle.

There are parts of the fight that are impressive, the movement from both with Marciano cutting the ring down and Ali slipping and landing jabs. There is action, one up from a dance and one down from a hard spar the toupee never moved and Ali clipped the offending hairpiece several times. It is a lot better than it should have been Marciano is really trying, gritting his teeth and Ali is having to work hard at times; they pull their punches, but there are moments when they are in good positions. It is not the comedy fight that many expected and it resembles a high-quality technical spar. The ketchup helps keep it funny, forget their smiles.

Woroner filmed so many different endings; both win by stoppage or cuts and on points. The fighters and their entourages had no idea how it would end, no idea what the directors final cut would be. It was a deep mystery. They finished the fight sequences and Woroner then talked about ingesting the fight into a super-super computer to get the result.Butthen Marciano died in a plane crash in the summer of 1969. He would never know the result. His family spoke in confidence to Woroner, mindful of Rockys reputation. Thankfully, there was not a rush to screen the film during the Marciano mourning moment and it was not released until 1970.

And this is where it gets a little crazy.

In the American version, screened in January of 1970, Marciano knocks out Ali in round 13. They filmed several knockout rounds. However, there was a problem with that ending in Britain and when 11 million people sat down to watch the fight on the BBC there was a different ending. Ali wins on cuts, the sauce was not wasted, the hairpiece was not ruffled well, we never saw it being swept clean off Rockys head and that is a blessing.

There is an odd footnote and it is claimed that the fight inspired a young actor and screenwriter called Sylvester Stallone hey, thats what he said! Stallone watched it, loved the juxtaposition of styles, ages and it set in motion an idea. The Chuck Wepner and Ali fight, which is generally credited with being Stallones source for his movie, came after. Damn, he might just be right: The real Rocky does move and look at times like Wepner, the cinema Rocky.

The 1969 computer fight is still better than all of the virtual garbage, the fantasy fights - currently replacing the real fights - that are circulating. The Ali and Marciano fight should be a comedy, but in all its grainy beauty there is a strange dignity and that might just be the oddest thing about it.

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The beauty and comedy of Muhammad Ali and Rocky Marcianos 1969 computer fight - The Independent

New Docuseries About the World’s Top Industrial Supercomputer – GZERO Media

Over the past decade or so, the European Union has weathered the global financial crisis, a migrant crisis, and the rise of populist nationalism. Sure, it's taken its fair share of bumps and bruises along the way, but the idea of a largely borderless Europe united by common democratic values has survived more or less intact.

Then came the coronavirus. The global pandemic, in which Europe is now one of the two main epicentres, is a still-spiralling nightmare that could make those previous crises look benign by comparison. Here are a few different ways that COVID-19 is severely testing the 27-member bloc:

The economic crisis: Lockdowns intended to stop the virus' spread have brought economic activity to a screeching halt, and national governments are going to need to spend a lot of money to offset the impact. But some EU members can borrow those funds more easily than others. Huge debt loads and deficits in southern European countries like Italy and Spain, which have been hardest hit by the outbreak so far, make it costlier for them to borrow than more fiscally conservative Germany and other northern member states. In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, this imbalance nearly led the bloc's common currency, the Euro, to unravel.

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New Docuseries About the World's Top Industrial Supercomputer - GZERO Media

The ins and outs of high-performance computing as a service – TechCentral.ie

HPC services can meet expanding supercomputing needs, but theyre not always better than on-premises supercomputers

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Electronics on missiles and military helicopters need to survive extreme conditions. Before any of that physical hardware can be deployed, defence contractor McCormick Stevenson Corp. simulates the real-world conditions it will endure, relying on finite element analysis software like Ansys, which requires significant computing power.

Then one day a few years ago, it unexpectedly ran up against its computing limits.

We had some jobs that would have overwhelmed the computers that we had in office, said Mike Krawczyk, principal engineer at McCormick Stevenson. It did not make economic or schedule sense to buy a machine and install software. Instead, the company contracted with Rescale, which could sell them cycles on a supercomputer-class system for a tiny fraction of what they would have spent on new hardware.

McCormick Stevenson had become an early adopter in a market known as supercomputing as a service or high-performance computing (HPC) as a service two terms that are closely related. HPC is the application of supercomputers to computationally complex problems, while supercomputers are those computers at the cutting edge of processing capacity, according to the National Institute for Computational Sciences.

Whatever it is called, these services are upending the traditional supercomputing market and bringing HPC power to customers who could never afford it before. But it is no panacea, and it is definitely not plug-and-play at least not yet.

From the end users perspective, HPC as a service resembles the batch-processing model that dates back to the early mainframe era. We create an Ansys batch file and send that up, and after it runs, we pull down the result files and import them locally here, Krawczyk said.

Behind the scenes, cloud providers are running the supercomputing infrastructure in their own data centres though that does not necessarily imply the sort of cutting-edge hardware you might be visualising when you hear supercomputer. As Dave Turek, vice president of technical computing at IBM OpenPOWER, explains it, HPC services at their core are a collection of servers that are strung together with an interconnect. You have the ability to invoke this virtual computing infrastructure that allows you to bring a lot of different servers to work together in a parallel construct to solve the problem when you present it.

Sounds simple in theory. But making it viable in practice required some chipping away at technical problems, according to Theo Lynn, professor of digital business at Dublin City University. What differentiates ordinary computing from HPC is those interconnects high-speed, low-latency, and expensive so those needed to be brought to the world of cloud infrastructure. Storage performance and data transport also needed to be brought up to a level at least in the same ballpark as on-prem HPC before HPC services could be viable.

But Lynn said that some of the innovations that have helped HPC services take off have been more institutional than technological. In particular, we are now seeing more and more traditional HPC applications adopting cloud-friendly licensing models a barrier to adoption in the past.

And the economics have also shifted the potential customer base, he said. Cloud service providers have opened up the market more by targeting low-end HPC buyers who couldnt afford the capex associated with traditional HPC and opening up the market to new users. As the markets open up, the hyperscale economic model becomes more and more feasible, costs start coming down.

HPC services are attractive to private-sector customers in the same fields where traditional supercomputing has long held sway. These include sectors that rely heavily on complex mathematical modelling, including defence contractors like McCormick Stevenson, along with oil and gas companies, financial services firms, and biotech companies. Dublin City Universitys Lynn adds that loosely coupled workloads are a particularly good use case, which meant that many early adopters used it for 3D image rendering and related applications.

But when does it make sense to consider HPC services over on-premises HPC? For hhpberlin, a German company that simulates smoke propagation in and fire damage to structural components of buildings, the move came as it outgrew its current resources.

For several years, we had run our own small cluster with up to 80 processor cores, said Susanne Kilian, hhpberlins scientific head of numerical simulation. With the rise in application complexity, however, this constellation has increasingly proven to be inadequate; the available capacity was not always sufficient to handle projects promptly.

But just spending money on a new cluster was not an ideal solution, she said: In view of the size and administrative environment of our company, the necessity of constant maintenance of this cluster (regular software and hardware upgrades) turned out to be impractical. Plus, the number of required simulation projects is subject to significant fluctuations, such that the utilisation of the cluster was not really predictable. Typically, phases with very intensive use alternate with phases with little to no use. By moving to an HPC service model, hhpberlin shed that excess capacity and the need to pay up front for upgrades.

IBMs Turek explains the calculus that different companies go through while assessing their needs. For a biosciences start-up with 30 people, you need computing, but you really cant afford to have 15% of your staff dedicated to it. Its just like you might also say you dont want to have on-staff legal representation, so youll get that as a service as well. For a bigger company, though, it comes down to weighing the operational expense of an HPC service against the capacity expense of buying an in-house supercomputer or HPC cluster.

So far, those are the same sorts of arguments you would have over adopting any cloud service. But the opex vs. capex dilemma can be weighted towards the former by some of the specifics of the HPC market. Supercomputers are not commodity hardware like storage or x86 servers; they are very expensive, and technological advances can swiftly render them obsolete.

As McCormick Stevensons Krawczyk puts it, Its like buying a car: as soon as you drive off the lot it starts to depreciate. And for many companies especially larger and less nimble ones the process of buying a supercomputer can get hopelessly bogged down. Youre caught up in planning issues, building issues, construction issues, training issues, and then you have to execute an RFP, said IBMs Turek. You have to work through the CIO. You have to work with your internal customers to make sure theres continuity of service. Its a very, very complex process and not something that a lot of institutions are really excellent at executing.

Once you choose to go down the services route for HPC, you will find you get many of the advantages you expect from cloud services, particularly the ability to pay only for HPC power when you need it, which results in an efficient use of resources. Chirag Dekate, senior director and analyst at Gartner, said bursty workloads, when you have short-term needs for high-performance computing, are a key use case driving adoption of HPC services.

In the manufacturing industry, you tend to have a high peak of HPC activity around the product design stage, he said. But once the product is designed, HPC resources are less utilised during the rest of the product-development cycle. In contrast, he said, when you have large, long-running jobs, the economics of the cloud wear down.

With clever system design, you can integrate those HPC-services bursts of activity with your own in-house conventional computing. Teresa Tung, managing director in Accenture Labs, gives an example: Accessing HPC via APIs makes it seamless to mix with traditional computing. A traditional AI pipeline might have its training done on a high-end supercomputer at the stage when the model is being developed, but then the resulting trained model that runs predictions over and over would be deployed on other services in the cloud or even devices at the edge.

Use of HPC services lends itself to batch-processing and loosely coupled use cases. That ties into a common HPC downside: data transfer issues. High-performance computing by its very nature often involves huge data sets and sending all that information over the internet to a cloud service provider is no simple thing. We have clients I talk to in the biotech industry who spend $10 million a month on just the data charges, said IBMs Turek.

And money is not the only potential problem. Building a workflow that makes use of your data can challenge you to work around the long times required for data transfer. When we had our own HPC cluster, local access to the simulation results already produced and thus an interactive interim evaluation was of course possible at any time, said hhpberlins Kilian. Were currently working on being able to access and evaluate the data produced in the cloud even more efficiently and interactively at any desired time of the simulation without the need to download large amounts of simulation data.

Mike Krawczyk cites another stumbling block: compliance issues. Any service a defence contractor uses needs to be complaint with the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), and McCormick Stevenson went with Rescale in part because it was the only vendor, they found that checked that box. While more do today, any company looking to use cloud services should be aware of the legal and data-protection issues involved in living on someone elses infrastructure, and the sensitive nature of many of HPCs use cases makes this doubly true for HPC as a service.

In addition, the IT governance that HPC services require goes beyond regulatory needs. For instance, you will need to keep track of whether your software licenses permit cloud use especially with specialised software packages written to run on an on-premises HPC cluster. And in general, you need to keep track of how you use HPC services, which can be a tempting resource, especially if you have transitioned from in-house systems where staff was used to having idle HPC capabilities available.

For instance, Ron Gilpin, senior director and Azure Platform Services global lead at Avanade, suggests dialling back how many processing cores you use for tasks that are not time sensitive. If a job only needs to be completed in an hour instead of ten minutes, he said, that might use 165 processors instead of 1,000, a savings of thousands of dollars.

One of the biggest barriers to HPC adoption has always been the unique in-house skills it requires, and HPC services do not magically make that barrier vanish. Many CIOs have migrated a lot of their workloads into the cloud and they have seen cost savings and increased agility and efficiency and believe that they can achieve similar results in HPC ecosystems, said Gartners Dekate. And a common misperception is that they can somehow optimise human resource cost by essentially moving away from system admins and hiring new cloud experts who can solve their HPC workloads.

But HPC is not one of the main enterprise environments, he said. Youre dealing with high-end compute nodes interconnected with high-bandwidth, low-latency networking stacks, along with incredibly complicated application and middleware stacks. Even the filesystem layers in many cases are unique to HPC environments. Not having the right skills can be destabilising.

But supercomputing skills are in shortening supply, something Dekate refers to as the workforce greying, in the wake of a generation of developers going to splashy start-ups rather than academia or the more staid firms where HPC is in use. As a result, vendors of HPC services are doing what they can to bridge the gap. IBMs Turek said that many HPC vets will always want to roll their own exquisitely fine-tuned code and will need specialized debuggers and other tools to help them do that for the cloud. But even HPC newbies can make calls to code libraries built by vendors to exploit supercomputings parallel processing. And third-party software providers sell turnkey software packages that abstract away much of HPCs complication.

Accentures Tung said the sector needs to lean further into this in order to truly prosper. HPCaaS has created dramatically impactful new capability, but what needs to happen is making this easy to apply for the data scientist, the enterprise architect, or the software developer, she said.

This includes easy to use APIs, documentation, and sample code. It includes user support to answer questions. Its not enough to provide an API; that API needs to be fit-for-purpose. For a data scientist this should likely be in Python and easily change out for the frameworks she is already using. The value comes from enabling these users who ultimately will have their jobs improved through new efficiencies and performance, if only they can access the new capabilities. If vendors can pull that off, HPC services might truly bring supercomputing to the masses.

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The ins and outs of high-performance computing as a service - TechCentral.ie

Argonne’s Researchers and Facilities Playing a Key Role in the Fight Against COVID-19 – HPCwire

By mid-March, researchers from around the country had usedAPSbeamlines to characterize roughly a dozen proteins from SARS-CoV-2, several of them with inhibitors.

The fortunate thing is that we have a bit of a head start, said Bob Fischetti, life sciences advisor to theAPSdirector. This virus is similar but not identical to theSARSoutbreak in2002, and70structures of proteins from several different coronaviruses had been acquired using data fromAPSbeamlines prior to the recent outbreak. Researchers have background information on how to express, purify and crystallize these proteins, which makes the structures come more quickly right now about a few a week.

One of the research teams performing work on SARS-CoV-2includes members of the Center for Structural Genomics of Infectious Diseases (CSGID), which is funded byNIHs National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). The team is led by Karla Satchell from Northwestern University and Andrzej Joachimiak of Argonne and the University of Chicago. Other members involved in the work include Andrew Mesecar from Purdue University and Adam Godzik from the University of California, Riverside. They have usedAPSbeamlines19-ID-D, operated by the Argonne Structural Biology Center, supported by theDOEOffice of Science, and21-ID, operated by the Life Sciences Collaborative Access Team, a multi-institution consortium supported by supported by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and the Michigan Technology Tri-Corridor.

Another group, led by M. Gordon Joyce at the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Inc. (HJF) at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) is studying antibody and antiviral compounds. They are using beamline24-ID, which is operated by the Northeastern Collaborative Access Team, which is managed by Cornell University and seven member institutions.

According to Fischetti, the breakneck pace of collaborative science with one common essential goal is unlike anything else he has seen in his career. Everything is just moving so incredibly fast, and there are so many moving pieces that its hard to keep up with, he said.

Fischetti compared finding the right inhibitor for a protein to discovering a perfectly sized and shaped Lego brick that would snap perfectly into place. These viral proteins are like big sticky balls we call them globular proteins, he said. But they have pockets or crevices inside of them where inhibitors might bind.

By using the X-rays provided by theAPS, scientists can gain an atomic-level view of the recesses of a viral protein and see which possible inhibitors either pre-existing or yet to be developed might reside best in the pockets of different proteins.

The difficulty with pre-existing inhibitors is that they tend to bind with only a micromolar affinity, which would require extremely high doses that could cause complications. According to Fischetti, the research teams are looking for an inhibitor that would have a nanomolar affinity, enabling it to be administered as a drug that would have many fewer or no side effects.

This situation makes clear the importance of science in solving critical problems facing our world, saidAPSDirector Stephen Streiffer. X-ray light sources, including theAPS, our sisterDOEfacilities, and the light sources around the world, plus the researchers who use them are fully engaged in tackling this dire threat.

Computing theCOVID-19crisis

Researchers can accelerate a significant part of inhibitor development through the use of supercomputing. Just as light sources from around the world, including the Diamond Light Source in the United Kingdom, have banded together to solve SARS-CoV-2protein structures, so too have the top supercomputers turned their focus to the challenge at hand.

As part of theCOVID-19High Performance Computing Consortium, recently announced by President Trump, researchers at Argonne are joining forces with researchers from government, academia, and industry in an effort that combines the power of16different supercomputing systems.

At Argonne, researchers using the Theta supercomputer at the Argonne Leadership Computing Facility also a DOE Office of Science User Facility have linked up with other supercomputers from around the country, including Oak Ridge National Laboratorys Summit supercomputer, the Comet supercomputer at the University of California-San Diego, and the Stampede2 supercomputer at the Texas Advanced Computing Center. With their combined might, these supercomputers are powering simulations of how billions of different small molecules from drug libraries could interface and bind with different viral protein regions.

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Argonne's Researchers and Facilities Playing a Key Role in the Fight Against COVID-19 - HPCwire

Mobile vs. Desktop Poker: What’s the Best Option for You? – Poker News Report

Since the majority of poker players are now staying at home due to the coronavirus, we could expect an increase in online poker activity. Even people who are not into poker are considering to take up different hobbies while theyre staying at home.

Many of them are having these important questions in mind should one play poker on a PC or mobile device?

The truth is both have some advantages and disadvantages, so lets take a look at them in this article. Read on!

Playing poker on your desktop computer is the original way to play online poker. The good news is that you dont need some sort of a super-computer to play poker on the web. Any device thats not older than a decade should do just fine since poker platforms do not really require you to have a cutting-edge spec in your PC.

What many see as the main advantage of PC online poker over its mobile version is the ability to act quickly. Playing the game on the big screen, using a keyboard and a mouse, can help you a lot with this. You will have a nice overview of the game, and you will even be able to play several tables at the same time if you want.

Many professional players enjoy multi-tabling on platforms where it is allowed. They play several games at the same time to maximize their efficiency. While some people might not see this as very practical, others see it as a great way to get the most out of fish.

Mobile online poker has been getting popular for the past couple of years. The mobile gaming industry in general nowadays is continuously growing, as mobile technology is rapidly improving.

We are now able to play some games on our phones that were couldnt even play on our desktop computers more than a decade ago. In other words, our phones have become our pocket computers.

One of the reasons why people love playing mobile poker is that they can do it anywhere and anytime. If you like playing games on the go, this is a great opportunity to install some of the available poker platforms and enjoy mobile poker.

For example, you can play a short cash game session while youre waiting for your transport, or youre waiting in line for something. Thats the beauty of mobile poker.

On the other hand, the main disadvantage of mobile poker is the inability to multi-table. A small screen is a huge opponent to online poker professionals, as it is also impossible to implement bots that help with the game.

Therefore, no matter how good our phones get, were still going to have that physical barrier of phones being too small for a complete online poker experience.

Now that the coronavirus is making you stay home, the only logical choice is to play the game on your PC.

However, once youre able to go out, mobile poker might be a valuable option, especially if you dont want to play it professionally. If your goal is to have fun and play poker from time to time, using your mobile device is a completely valid option.

Yet, if you want to focus on online poker and aim to become a pro, then youll have to accept the fact that playing on PC is the only way to do it right now. You will maybe have to buy an additional monitor, once you start getting into the swing of things.

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Mobile vs. Desktop Poker: What's the Best Option for You? - Poker News Report

Plenty of fish in the Seychelles – Grist

Its Wednesday, April 1, and the Seychelles is protecting a California-sized swath of ocean.

Foreigners may know the tiny island nation of the Seychelles for its glamorous turquoise waters, private islands, and occasional royal honeymooners. As of last week, it can also stake its reputation on protecting 154,000 square miles of ocean, about 30 percent of its waters.

In 2015, the East African island nation agreed to a debt-for-nature deal in which the Nature Conservancy bought $21 million of the Seychelles foreign debt in exchange for a pledge to create serious marine protections. The new marine protected areas (MPAs) will safeguard biodiversity as well as fish stocks, and protect giant tortoises, manatee-like dugongs, several shark species, and coral reefs.

The 13 new MPAs announced last week are a mix of strictly protected waters and regulated areas where certain economic activities may be allowed. Monitoring such extensive areas will be challenging in the latter case in particular, and the nation will likely need additional financing to set up effective monitoring. One idea the government is considering is levying a $10 nature tax on each tourist. Regardless of these challenges, the commitment is a definitive step in the right direction for a country that protected just 0.04 percent of its waters eight years ago.

Sierra Garcia

Need-to-know basis

A joint NPR and PBS investigation found that the plastics industry aggressively promoted recycling starting in the late 1980s, despite knowing that the vast majority of their products could not or would not be recycled. The strategy helped the industry improve its public image, stave off plastic bans, and churn out more and more of its products for decades.

A research station in Antarctica just had its first heat wave on record, Australian climate researchers say. The wave was documented at the Casey Research Station in East Antarctica between January 23 and 26, when maximum temperatures reached 48.6 degrees F, a new record.

Indigenous communities across the country are facing the coronavirus pandemic with limited resources, but the Trump administration just made things harder for a tribe in Massachusetts by revoking its land rights. The Bureau of Indian Affairs notified the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe late last week that it plans to remove its more than 300 acres from federal trust and eliminate its reservation designation.

Zoya Teirstein

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Plenty of fish in the Seychelles - Grist

Seychelles extends protection to marine area twice the size of Great Britain – Mongabay.com

Seychelles, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean famous for its turquoise waters, giant tortoises and wondrous birds, has extended protection to 400,000 square kilometers (154,000 square miles) of its seas, an area twice the size of Great Britain. The move fulfills the countrys long-standing pledge to safeguard 30% of its marine waters.

Seychelles marine ecosystem is the foundation that the economy is built upon, with fisheries and tourism being the primary pillars of our economy, President Danny Faure said on March 26 at the signing of a decree that created 13 new marine protected areas (MPAs). The people of Seychelles have a direct dependence on our ocean resources for food security and livelihoods.

The terrestrial area of the Seychelles 115 islands is only about 460 km2 (180 mi2), about three times the size of Staten Island in New York City, but the countrys exclusive economic zone (EEZ) spans 1.37 million km2 of ocean, twice the size of Texas. The challenge for the country is to prevent the unsustainable exploitation of its biodiversity, which it projects as its biggest selling point to the world.

The declaration of new MPAs was facilitated by a debt-for-nature deal proposed by the U.S.-based NGO The Nature Conservancy (TNC). The scheme came on the back of the 2008 financial crisis, when the Seychelles government was unable to pay back its foreign creditors, defaulting on its sovereign debt. Debt restructuring aims at avoiding default by changing the terms of repayment. The agreement with TNC allowed the country to free up $21.6 million in foreign debt, provided it ramped up protection of its marine resources and took climate adaptation measures.

While debt-for-nature schemes have been used before to protect terrestrial ecosystems, most notably in Latin America and the Caribbean, this is the first for marine areas. Nearly half of Seychelles new MPAs will be no-take zones, where economic activity such as fishing, mining or drilling will not be allowed. In the other half, called Zone 2, economic activities will be allowed, subject to regulation.

The island republics marine biodiversity is threatened by overexploitation, pollution generated inland, habitat degradation because of offshore oil exploration and extraction, as well as rising sea temperatures.

The hope is that the expansion will safeguard the habitats and nesting sites of endangered turtles, the last remaining population of dugongs in the Indian Ocean, preserve coral reefs, and also allow the country to invest in making the fisheries sector more sustainable.

Among the expected beneficiaries of these efforts are shark species. Shark fishing is an ancient practice in Seychelles, where till the 1940s, there were frequent sightings of hammerhead sharks (belonging to the family Sphyrnidae) and tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier)*.

Sharks have a strong cultural importance in Seychelles, and I think that marine protected areas are a critical tool for shark conservation locally, said James Lea, CEO of Save Our Seas Foundation, a Swiss group that works extensively in Seychelles. Lea added that there is indirect evidence to suggest that MPAs help shark species. Aldabra Atoll has been protected since the 1980s and has an abundance of marine life, including sharks. Blacktip reef sharks [Carcharhinus melanopterus] and sicklefin lemon sharks [Negaprion acutidens] in particular are thriving there, he said.

The Aldabra Atoll, the worlds second-largest coral atoll and a UNESCO world heritage site and special reserve, is arguably a success story in terms of conservation. It is home to the largest population of giant tortoises in the world, as well as more than 300 other species of animals and plants. The reserve extends into the sea, 1 km (0.6 mi) from the shore. Its remote location and long history of protection have combined to keep it safe.

A new MPA has now been designated around the atoll, whose boundaries extend to Tanzanias EEZ to the west and Madagascars EEZ to the south. It is one of five MPAs that are no-take zones.

Until 2012, only 0.04% of Seychelles marine territory was part of its MPA network. Under the debt-for-nature deal, reached in 2015, the government announced the first round of expansion in 2018, when 210,000 km2 (81,000 mi2) of marine areas were designated MPAs.

Convincing fishers and hoteliers

Expanding Seychelles MPA network is a very important and major first step in the conservation of Seychelles biodiversity, but it is only the first step, Rabia Somers and Vanessa Didon, from the Marine Conservation Society Seychelles, said in a statement to Mongabay. The conservation of Seychelles biodiversity ultimately depends on multiple factors, such as enforcement, public-private partnerships, and innovative management models.

The announcement was finalized after consultations, more than 200 of them, over six years to decide which areas will be protected and to what extent. The main challenge for the government and conservation NGOs was to convince people who rely on marine resources that the new protections would benefit them. Buy-in from the fisheries sector, both small-scale and large-scale, and the tourism industry will be crucial for the MPAs to work, experts said.

With its many privately owned island resorts, Seychelles often hosts the rich and famous, and sometimes even royalty. Prince William and Kate Middleton honeymooned on one such retreat on North Island; George Clooney and Amal Clooney also vacationed in Seychelles after their wedding.

The environment is core to the tourism product they offer, Wilna Accouche from the local NGO Green Island Foundation told Mongabay. They have to make sure that that the tourism activities do not damage the environment.

The NGO helped to get the marine area off another private island, Denis Island, designated as a protected area. While convincing hoteliers that they should conserve the most attractive features of their resorts is easy, Accouche said that getting them to recognize that their inland activities affect marine ecosystems is more challenging. This includes the discharge of waste, construction activity, and reclamation projects to create artificial islands.

Fishing communities maintain they are not solely to blame for the loss of marine species. Recreational fishing is common and unregulated in Seychelles. Marine stocks are also affected by rising sea temperatures and water pollution.

According to Accouche, a big problem in the effective management of marine areas is the mistrust between fishing communities and the government. For years, fishers have grappled with restrictions being imposed from the top. The conservation objectives of the new MPAs will only be achieved if fishers believe it is in their best interests to comply with restrictions, she said.

To minimize the new protections impact on fishing communities, some NGOs like Marine Conservation Society Seychelles work with communities to create temporal protected areas (TPAs) that will permit some activity during parts of the year. Seychelles beaches serve as seasonal nesting sites for green turtles (Chelonia mydas) and hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata). TPAs restrict certain activities during certain critical time periods and also mitigate threats faced by sea turtles during the nesting and hatching season; poaching of nesting females and disturbance of nests and emerging hatchlings, Somers and Didon from the Marine Conservation Society Seychelles said.

Enforcing the new protections

Regulating activities in Zone 2 of the recently announced MPAs, where activities are allowed but subject to regulation, will be more difficult, experts said.

The National Information Sharing and Coordination Centre (NISCC) in Seychelles, together with other agencies, has been monitoring the countrys EEZ and surveilling MPAs. The agency will implement a five-year marine spatial plan that will be rolled out next year, covering not just the MPAs but the entire EEZ of Seychelles

The five-year plan would include using more innovative methods to monitor MPAs, such as satellites and drones, said Leslie Benoiton, who heads the NISCC. The plan will also focus on developing human resources and capacity for overseeing MPAs and educating and sensitizing communities, he said.

A technology-intensive approach, however, will come at a cost.

The funds secured through the debt-for-nature deal might not be enough to guarantee protection. To effectively manage such an extensive MPA network would require somewhere between $75 and $106 per square kilometer every year, according to an estimate from Seychelles Conservation and Climate Adaptation Trust (SeyCCAT), the entity created to channel the funds freed by the debt deal to the Seychelles government. At the top end of that range, the cost to effectively manage the massive swath of area now under protection would cost about $42 million a year.

Though the Seychelles government also sets aside funds for marine management, it is not nearly enough, so it is seeking grants and loans to secure the MPAs. To ensure effective coordination between the multiple agencies involved in overseeing the now-complete MPA network, the government is establishing a new body, the Seychelles Ocean Authority. It is also considering imposing an environmental levy of $10 on tourists a small price to pay for those seeking solace in a country where you can literally book your own slice of beach.

(Banner Image: One of the small rocky islands that make up the Seychelles archipelago. Image courtesy The Ocean Agency)

Malavika Vyawahare is a staff writer for Mongabay. Find her on Twitter: @MalavikaVy

FEEDBACK: Use this form to send a message to the author of this post. If you want to post a public comment, you can do that at the bottom of the page.

[* Editors note: The article has been updated to clarify the kind of shark species that were sighted off the Seychelles coast.]

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Seychelles extends protection to marine area twice the size of Great Britain - Mongabay.com

The Brief: Small and growing business liquidity and stabilization, Seychelles’ debt-for-conservation swap, development-finance relief, tools for…

Greetings, Agents of Impacts!

Emerging market fund managers scramble to keep enterprises and entrepreneurs afloat. As the global economic slowdown and local lockdowns that come with the COVID pandemic shut down capital flows, thousands of otherwise viable and growing businesses around the world are being forced to pivot, pause, furlough or fire and shutter. A generation of entrepreneurs is worrying they will run out of cash; the ecosystem of emerging market capital providers that has financed their growth is scrambling to help them survive. The advice everyone is getting is shorten your cash-conversion cycle or delay payments to your suppliers. Well, thats easier said than done, saysBrendan Mullenof Secha Capital in South Africa. The real risk is that companies here will not get the funding they need in time, saysAmanda Cottermanof EquaLife Capital in Nairobi. AddsLaurie Spengler, who is working with theCollaborative for Frontier Financeto identify ways to meet needs for revenue substitution, employment retention, supply-chain transactions and other financing, There is growing recognition that small businesses urgently need cash to continue operations.

A rush of liquidity may be crucial to mitigating a broad-based domino effect. Many of these fund managers are investing in exactly the solutions that we need right now and in the future: health, climate, water and sanitation, says Catalyst at LargesSuzanne Biegel. Our main goal is keeping companies teams intact, and helping them position themselves for the bounce-back when this is all over, adds Blue Haven InitiativesLauren Cochran. Even cash flow-positive, pro-social companies positioned to do well in the pandemic have been caught in the global downdraft. In Nigeria, personal-hygiene products companyWemyis struggling to manufacture enough diapers, feminine products and sanitary wipes, which have beenselling out as customers prepared fortwo-week shutdown. Our supply chain has been disrupted massively, says Aruwa Capital ManagementsAdesuwa Okunbo Rhodes, an investor in Wemy. Its definitely a challenging time.

Keep reading, Emerging market fund managers scramble to keep enterprises and entrepreneurs afloat by Jessica Pothering on ImpactAlpha.

Seychelles debt-for-conservation deal paves the way for more blue bonds. Four years ago, the Seychelles government signed a deal withThe Nature Conservancyto refinance sovereign debt at a discount in return for protecting 30% of its oceans. TNC raised grants and loans to pull off the $21.6 million deal. Last week, the Indian Ocean archipelagomade goodon its promise, announcing Marine Protection Areas that will protect 158,000 square miles of water and habitat while allowing for low-impact economic activities like tourism (see,Rising Tides: Debt-for-Nature Swaps Let Impact Investors Finance Climate Resilience).

Vickers Venture Partners raises $200 million for sixth fund.The Singapore-based early stage venture firm istargeting$500 million to invest in global deep tech ventures, including existing portfolio companies. In January, Vickers led an $11 million Series A round for U.K.-basedEmergex, which is working on a COVID-19 vaccine. Other portfolio companies include bio-plastics makerRWDC Industries, regenerative medicine firmSamumed, and geothermal energy producerEavor.

Singapores OB Asset Management debuts SDG fund for retail investors.The United Sustainable Credit Income Fund lets individuals invest in the RobecoSAM SDG Credit Income Fund alongside high-net worth and institutional investors. The fundinvestsin green bonds and companies making progress towards the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals.

Abu Dhabi plans Gulf regions first social impact bond.Abu DhabisMaan Authority for Social Contributionand local real estate developerAldar Propertieswill develop the bond, which will be the first pay-for-success bond among the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council. Aldar will also invest AED 2 million ($545,000). Social impact bonds are a game-changer for how we think about the delivery of social programmes,saidSalama Al Ameemi, the director general of Maan. The backers didnt specify which social challenges the bond will target.

How development finance leaders can help emerging market economies survive the COVID-19 crisis. As the pandemic unfolds in emerging markets, governments facing liquidity challenges and limited abilities to borrow will struggle to respond to the pending economic crisis. Development finance institutions already are taking action. TheInternational Finance Corp.has announced $8 billion in lending to help clients cover banks payment risks, replenish capital to pay bills and wages, and share banks risks in serving small and medium-sized enterprises (see,African Development Bank issues a record $3 billion social bond). More capital will be needed, write DalbergsEdwin Macharia, Jesse Baver, Kusi HornbergerandRachna Saxenain a guest post onImpactAlpha. To ensure financial relief reaches small businesses, workersand the self-employed, the Dalberg team calls on development finance leaders to coordinate liquidity facilities, focus financing on the most vulnerable, and expedite deals.

New tools to help investors assess and share impact.The Positive Impact Initiative of theU.N. Environment Programme Finance Initiativereleased theCorporate Impact Analysis Toolto help banks and investors understand the impact performance and potential of their clients and investee companies. The initiative also released thePortfolio Impact Analysis Tool for Banksto guide banks through an analysis of their portfolios. Investor networkToniic, in partnership withIMP+ACT Alliance, a sister initiative to theImpact Management Project, launchedTracer, a platform to help Toniic members share and compare information on impact investment goals, performance and outcomes.Share this post.

The World Economic Forumislookingfor a head of impact measurement and managementBlackstoneseeksa vice president ofmeasurement and reportingfor its Strategic Partners Blackstone Impact Asset Management group in New York Beeck CentersLisa Hallishostingthe first of a two-part virtual workshop on impact management tools and frameworks on Thursday, April 9 We Care SolarsLaura Stachelis leading a virtualSkoll World Forum panelon Scaling Clean Energy Solutions for frontline health clinics, with representatives from Sierra Leone, Liberia and Zimbabwe, on Tuesday, March 31 at 12pmET / 5pm London via Zoom (see,Cost-effective response to COVID-19: Light every health clinic in Africa and south Asia).

Thank you for reading.

Mar. 31, 2020

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The Brief: Small and growing business liquidity and stabilization, Seychelles' debt-for-conservation swap, development-finance relief, tools for...

Cabinet Business – 1 April 2020 – News – Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

01 April 2020 | Cabinet Business

President Danny Faure today chaired a special meeting of the Cabinet at which the Cabinet was briefed on the status of the national strategy against the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cabinet was briefed on the global situation of the outbreak and updated on the 10 local positive cases as well as the status of the quarantine.

Cabinet was also informed of the new testing strategy being implemented. The plan for use of the isolation and quarantine facilities in the event of an increase in cases was also discussed along with the need for additional equipment.

Cabinet was also briefed on the prevailing maritime security risks especially as it concerned movement of fishing vessels and yachts in our territorial waters. Cabinet discussed the measures in place to protect the elderly in the Homes.

Cabinet was updated on the status of the construction of the new Isolation Centre on "Ile du Swet" in the South East of Mah whichwill be completedthis month.

Cabinet was also briefed on the donations from private individuals and companies as well as logistics to receive incoming cargo from South Africa and Dubai.

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Cabinet Business - 1 April 2020 - News - Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

President Faure briefed on security measures in place in response to COVID-19 outbreak – Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles

31 March 2020 | State House

President Danny Faure visited the Seychelles Coast Guard (SCG) Base and the Seychelles Police Headquarters this afternoon, following the announcement of new security measures and currently being implemented in the country following the COVID-19 outbreak.

The President announced a series of enforcement measures last week on Friday 27 March, focused on strengthening the countrys borders, restricting public gatherings and minimising social contact in an effort to prevent the spread of the coronavirus in the community.

President Faure first visited the Seychelles Coast Guard Base located at Perseverance where he attended a special briefing at the Maritime Operations Centre (MOC). He received an aperu of the Seychelles Peoples Defence Force (SPDF) Joint Operations Set up for COVID-19. He was briefed on the coordination operation and viewed various demonstrations on the Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) systems and ongoing activities. The session also demonstrated the daily routine and maritime security interventions to secure the countrys borders both by air and sea.

The President also attended a meeting at the Central Police Headquarters in Victoria. Present for the meeting was Seychelles Police Senior Management as well as key members of the COVID-19 Police Operations Centre set up specifically for the public health emergency.

During the meeting the Head of State was briefed of the mode of operation of the command centre, assets and equipment available and the ongoing strategy to ensure the measures announced in light of the COVID-19 situation are being respected by the public. The police reaffirmed their commitment to more effectively discharge their duties and ensure the population follows the new regulations in place.

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President Faure briefed on security measures in place in response to COVID-19 outbreak - Office of the President of the Republic of Seychelles