Praful Patel: Maharashtra Govt. is helping AIFF with another Centre of Excellence in Navi Mumbai – Goal.com

The President informed that the Maharashtra Government will build a Centre of Excellence in Navi Mumbai on 19 acres of land...

Praful Patel, the President of All India Football Federation (AIFF), informed that the Maharashtra government will be building a 'centre of excellence' in Navi Mumbai on 19 acres of land which would be utilised for the benefit of Indian football.

The AIFF has already undertaken an ambitious centre of excellence project at Rajarhat, Kolkata which is set to be completed in a couple of years' time.

"The Maharashtra government will give us 19 acres of land to set up another centre of excellence. They will build infrastructure and AIFF will be involved in the operations," informed Patel during a webinar hosted by Football Delhi.

TheSenior Vice President of AFC chalked out how efficiently the federation has worked to turn a 100 crore ecosystem to almost a 1000 crore sport in the last decade.

"It was the right decision to host the age group football World Cups. It is a good beginning. If we had this before then our national team could have done much better.Previously, the whole ecosystem would have come to 100 crores and now it has grown exponentially to almost 1000 crores.

"We have come a long way. AFC (Asian Football Confederation) has supported us to the fullest. Even FIFA now understands that Indian football needs to be supported and it needs to have a better standard of football. Dato Windsor (AFC General Secretary) has helped us a lot in solving challenges.

"Unless India and China play at that level globally the money does not come. It has to be commercially successful. We need to professionalize Indian football more. The I-League was the beginning and now The ISL is doing the job. Players are getting paid handsomely and more clubs have come up," elaborated Patel.

The Member of Parliament also stressed on the importance of grassroots football and suggested that five SAI (Sports Authority of India) facilities should be made football-centric to develop the sport across the country.

"We had just one I-League a decade back. Some clubs were floundering and some were doing okay. The ecosystemneeded to be changed. We had no organisedgrassroots programme. The Tata Football Academy was one the only torch-bearer that time and we had so many players coming out from the setup. TFA was ahead of its time. Barring that, there was no structure at all. So these things needed to be changed.If one SAI facility in each zone is made a football-centric facility, then these kids can be put in one facility and then we can provide them with the right inputs without running our resourcesthin.

"Very few people realise what the odds challenges, roadblocks are that we overcome each day to become what we are today. Peoplejudge by how the Indian nationalteam is playing. If the national team plays well peoplestart takingthe sport seriously.We had a long list of things to do. Indian football has done much better in the last 10 years. We came to FIFA rankings 94 last year from 170 odd a couple of years ago. But that's not good enough. The top 50-60 are so competitive that anybody can beat anyone, on their given day. We are far from that level," stated Patel.

The AIFF supremo is set to meet with Sports Minister Kiren Rijiju in New Delhi next week to form a blueprint of setting up five zonal committees. These would be responsible to scout the hidden talent that are spread across the length and breadth of the country.

More:

Praful Patel: Maharashtra Govt. is helping AIFF with another Centre of Excellence in Navi Mumbai - Goal.com

The ultimate guide to yellow daisies: where to plant and what will bloom in late summer – Telegraph.co.uk

No one could say that August is an easy month. If its been too dry the garden lacks energy and zip, like a marathon runner whos hit the 20-mile wall and is wondering where the finish line is.

If its been too wet, the garden dissolves from orderly exuberance into impenetrable jungle. Worse still, every mistake shows. In my case, its too much red crocosmia.

However, the uplifting yellow daisy is about to come to our rescue and produce crisp flowers in a bright colour that suits the silly season perhaps a trifle vulgar at times but extremely enjoyable.

Used properly, yellow runs through the garden like a spinning thread and it leads the eye along paths and through borders better than any other colour.

Shades vary from cool clear-lemon through to gold medallion, but its the warm sunshine-yellows that tend to dominate in August. The earliest arrival to the Second Half of Summer Ball is always Heliopsis helianthoides var. scabra Summer Nights.

This metre-high, dark-stemmed daisy supports a branching head of small yellow flowers, just two inches across. The emerald green foliage has dark veins and each flower has a sizzling, burnished red middle that gets fuzzier as the tiny flowers are pollinated. If you want a suitable forerunner, plant the diminutive daylily Hemerocallis Corky for its dark stems and brown-backed warm-yellow flowers.

Bright yellow is enhanced by dramatic black foliage and the later-flowering black-stemmed aster, Symphyotrichum laeve Calliope, is a self-supporting, September-flowering aster with brooding foliage and thick stems.

Add the fiery nasturtium-red and yellow flowers of Alstroemeria Indian Summer, the best long-flowering alstro Ive ever grown. This has come through searing winters for me, when so many havent. Better still, the dark foliage is equally sumptuous. If youre planting Indian Summer now, add a mulch of compost in late autumn just in case.

Any blend of three or four similar plants always needs a contrast and the dark foliage and fiery flowers could be framed by a foot-high all-green grass, Hakonechloa macra Nicolas. This deciduous grass creates waves of movement and, as temperatures cool, the bright green foliage of Nicolas develops maroon-red flecks. Or add an injection of Oxford-blue and black.

This could be provided by Salvia nemorosa Caradonna, a very useful hardy salvia that retains slender, dark tapers long after the deep blue flowers have dropped. Agastache Blackadder, Blue Fortune and the fluffier Blue Boa will provide vertical bottlebrushes with violet to Cambridge-blue colouring. These aromatic plants are all bee pleasers.

Crocosmia crocosmiiflora Columbus will provide a herringbone of violet-tinted buds that open to rich golden yellow and this shorter crocosmia makes a good front-of-border plant. The sword-like foliage of any crocosmia helps to break up the monotony of mound-forming perennials. Hemerocallis Primal Scream, a substantial pumpkin-orange, could be allowed to cartwheel through your border as well.

Read more from the original source:

The ultimate guide to yellow daisies: where to plant and what will bloom in late summer - Telegraph.co.uk

Hubble telescope captures stunningly clear image of summertime on Saturn – CNN

Hubble captured the image on July 4, when the giant planet was 839 million miles from Earth, according to a statement from NASA released Thursday.

It shows what summertime is like in Saturn's northern hemisphere, which is pointed toward Earth, and a slight reddish haze can be seen over the area.

Scientists say this may be the result of heating due to increased sunlight, which could affect circulation or the ice content of the atmosphere.

Another possibility is that more sunlight leads to changes in how much photochemical haze is produced.

"It's amazing that even over a few years, we're seeing seasonal changes on Saturn," said lead investigator Amy Simon of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.

Look closely at the photo and you'll notice a blue hue at the south pole, which is due to changes in the planet's winter atmosphere.

You can also see two of Saturn's moons in the image: Mimas to the right, and Enceladus at the bottom.

The image is part of a project named Outer Planets Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL), which aims to improve our understanding of atmospheric dynamics and evolution on gas giant planets such as Saturn and Jupiter.

OPAL scientists are looking into weather patterns and storms on Saturn, with various small atmospheric storms noted in this photo.

The picture is also sharp enough to show how the color of certain bands changes slightly each year. Saturn is largely yellow-brown in color due to the fact that the atmosphere is mostly hydrogen and helium with traces of ammonia, methane, water vapor and hydrocarbons.

You can also see Saturn's famous rings in incredible detail.

They consist mostly of pieces of ice, but no one really understands how and when they formed.

Many scientists believe they are more than 4 billion years old, the same age as Saturn itself, but others say they only came into being a few hundred million years ago, when dinosaurs walked the Earth.

In April, Hubble celebrated 30 years in space, during which time its images have contributed to a raft of exciting discoveries.

Hubble has enabled astronomers around the world to study black holes, mysterious dark energy, distant galaxies and galactic mergers.

It has observed planets outside of our solar system and where they form around stars, star formation and death, and it's even spotted previously unknown moons around Pluto.

Not bad for a telescope that was only designed to last 15 years.

CNN's Ashley Strickland contributed to this article.

Continue reading here:

Hubble telescope captures stunningly clear image of summertime on Saturn - CNN

U.S., China must ‘step up’ to lead in the coronavirus crisis or emerging economies may sink, experts say – CNBC

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) waves to the press as he walks with US President Donald Trump at the Mar-a-Lago estate in West Palm Beach, Florida, April 7, 2017.

Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images

Both the U.S. and China have to "step up to the plate" and provide global leadership at a time when the world's poorest countries are in trouble due to the pandemic, said a distinguished economist.

The coronavirus outbreak, which has led to countrywide lockdowns globally, has done "extreme damage" to the global economy, said Raghuram Rajan, a finance professor at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business.

"I think the most important difference is: who has been able to stand?" he said, at a conference organized by Singapore-based bank DBS in late July. Citing data from an International Monetary Fund (IMF) report in June, he pointed out that on average, fiscal and credit measures taken by developed, industrial countries to deal with the pandemic amounted to 20% of gross domestic product.

Among emerging economies, that figure fell to 5%, and for developing economies, or the poorest countries in the world, it is barely a percent, said Rajan, who was a former governor at India's central bank.

"They all face the same virus, but they have had different capabilities of spending money on it ... it is proving very costly across the world," he said.

There's a "huge risk" of emerging markets sinking, Rajan warned. "We're not paying enough attention to it. There's not enough relief How do they come out, well, with limited fiscal resources? Many of those countries their debt to GDP is going to skyrocket, even just from all the damage that has been done from the loss in revenues, from the loss in GDP."

According to the IMF, 45 low-income developing countries have sought emergency financing from the global lender, and public debt has exceeded 48% of GDP on average during the 2020-2021 period, according to the report.

Tharman Shanmugaratnam, a senior minister in Singapore and chairman of the country's central bank, pointed out that most of the growth today or about two-thirds of global growth comes from the emerging world. He was speaking at the same session as Rajan.

It has to come from the two biggest countries in the world China and the United States. Both have to step up to the plate, both have not ... 40 poorest countries in the world clearly ... need more resources to fight the virus.

Raghuram Rajan

Former governor at India's central bank

"When we think about the future of the world economy, it's fundamentally about whether the emerging world is going to continue to emerge, or whether it's going to submerge," said Tharman, who also chairs the Group of Thirty, a global council of economic and financial leaders.

"There is today a very real risk of a submerging world that the gains we made over two to three decades are going to unravel, and we're going to see consequences which are not merely economic, but consequences which are social, which are political and now which are going to be geopolitical," he said.

Limited growth will lead to global ramifications.

"Everything from forced migration, as well as the export of political extremism, will become a reality if we see limited growth, and large numbers of people becoming unemployedeither formally or informally unemployed. Consequences will be faced everywhere in the world" he continued.

The world needs global leadership in order to expand the resources needed for countries that need them most,Rajan said.

"It has to come from the two biggest countries in the world China and the United States. Both have to step up to the plate, both have not ... 40 poorest countries in the world clearly ... need more resources to fight the virus," he said.

Tensions between China and the U.S. escalated further this year over a variety of issues, from the origins of the coronavirus outbreak, to their rivalry over the South China Sea, and the passing of a controversial national security law in Hong Kong.

Rajan added that he hoped the U.S. presidential elections in November will be the "turning point" when both countries can come to a dialogue.

"There is really an enormous role for global leadership here," he said. "It has to be from both sides ... and hopefully other countries, the smaller democracies of the world can push them to come together in some kind of dialogue."

Read more:

U.S., China must 'step up' to lead in the coronavirus crisis or emerging economies may sink, experts say - CNBC

August 2 update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine – Bangor Daily News

The BDN is making the most crucial coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and its economic impact in Maine free for all readers. Click here for all coronavirus stories. You can join others committed to safeguarding this vital public service by purchasing a subscription or donating directly to the newsroom.

Twenty-three more cases of the coronavirus were reported on Sunday, according to state health officials.

Sundays report brings the total coronavirus cases in Maine to 3,958. Of those, 3,535 have been confirmed positive, while 423 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

New cases were reported in Cumberland (5), Hancock (7), Oxford (1), Washington (1), Penobscot (2) and York (5) counties, state data show. Information about where two cases reported wasnt immediately available.

The statewide death toll stands at 123.

Heres a roundup of the latest news on coronavirus and its impact in Maine:

Theres no expectation that all Maine students will return to school buildings full-time in the fall. But just the fact that the state has given the green light for all schools to reopen highlights Maines unique position in the U.S. when it comes to the coronavirus. Matthew Stone, BDN

Decades of disenfranchisement are at the heart of the uneasy choice facing Black voters, one of the Democratic Partys most important voting groups. Widespread problems with mail-in ballots during this years primary elections have added to the skepticism at a time when making Black voices heard has taken on new urgency during a national reckoning over racial injustice. Corey Williams, The Associated Press

As Maines wild blueberry growers step into overdrive to rake and process the states banner fruit over the coming weeks, they are also trying to quickly give coronavirus tests to the migrant workers who come from out-of-state each season to provide the industry with critical manual labor. Charles Eichacker, BDN

Mount Desert Island Hospital said Friday that its only recently recorded its first positive test results in several months, and that its heard from out-of-state visitors who were tested in their home state but didnt receive their results which were positive until they had arrived in Maine. Eesha Pendharkar, BDN

U.S. Sen. Susan Collins blamed Democrats on Friday for not accepting a last-minute one-week extension of $600 in weekly unemployment insurance benefits after the Senate left for the weekend before reaching a deal on a coronavirus aid package. Jessica Piper, BDN

As of Sunday afternoon, the coronavirus has sickened 4,646,691 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 154,744 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

Read the original:

August 2 update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine - Bangor Daily News

Coronavirus in Wisconsin: 922 new confirmed cases, one additional death – Green Bay Press Gazette

There were 922confirmed cases of COVID-19 and one coronavirus-related death statewide, health officials reported Sunday.

The positive cases make up9.6% of the 9,643 tests processed since Saturday, according to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

As of Sunday,337people were in hospitals with known cases of the virus. Of those, 110were in intensive care, according to the Wisconsin Hospital Association.

Over 54,920people have tested positive for the virus; 9,994of reported cases remain active, while 80.1% of people have recovered from COVID-19.

The Department of Health's weekly ratings of county COVID-19 activity were reportedWednesday.Note that ratings are based on a combination of total new cases per 100,000 people over the past two weeks and the percent change in new cases between the past seven days and the seven days before that. Parentheses reflect a change in the activity level from the previous week's rating.

Global cases have surpassed 17.8million, and deaths neared 680,800as of mid-Sunday, according to Johns Hopkins University.More than 4.6million of those cases and 154,750 deaths were in the United States.

Contact Benita Mathew at (920) 309-3428 or bmathew@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @benita_mathew.

Read or Share this story: https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/2020/08/02/coronavirus-update-922-new-confirmed-cases-wisconsin-one-new-death/5567935002/

Link:

Coronavirus in Wisconsin: 922 new confirmed cases, one additional death - Green Bay Press Gazette

The daily coronavirus update: 14 deaths, nearly 1500 new cases announced over weekend – MinnPost

MinnPost provides updates on coronavirus in Minnesota Sunday through Friday. The information is published following a press phone call with members of the Walz administration or after the release of daily COVID-19 figures by the Minnesota Department of Health.

Here are the latest updates from August 2:

Eight more Minnesotans have died of COVID-19, the Minnesota Department of Health said Sunday, for a total of 1,614.

Of the people whose deaths were announced Sunday, one was over 100 years old, two were in their 90s, one was in their 80s, two were in their 70s, one was in their 60s and one was in their 30s. Five of the eight deaths announced Sunday were among residents of long-term care facilities. Of the 1,614 COVID-19 deaths reported in Minnesota, 1,231 have been among residents of long-term care.

Article continues after advertisement

The current death toll only includes Minnesotans with lab-confirmed positive COVID-19 tests.

MDH also said Sunday there have been 55,947 total confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Minnesota. The number of confirmed cases is up 759 from Saturdays count and is based on 15,174 new tests. You can find the seven-day positive case average here.

Since the start of the outbreak, 5,241 Minnesotans have been hospitalized and 302 are currently in the hospital, 149 in intensive care. You can find more information about Minnesotas current ICU usage and capacity here.

On Saturday, MDH reported six deaths and 725 new cases, based on 15,158 new tests. 317 were in the hospital, 149 in intensive care.

Of the 55,947 confirmed positive cases in Minnesota, 48,847 are believed to have recovered.

More information on cases can be found here.

Article continues after advertisement

MDHs coronavirus website: https://www.health.state.mn.us/diseases/coronavirus/index.html

Article continues after advertisement

Hotline, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.: 651-201-3920

Read this article:

The daily coronavirus update: 14 deaths, nearly 1500 new cases announced over weekend - MinnPost

On the First Day of School, an Indiana Student Tests Positive for Coronavirus – The New York Times

One or two confirmed cases in a single classroom would require those classes to close for 14 days, with all students and staff members ordered to quarantine. The rest of the school would continue to operate, but if two or more people in different classrooms in the same school tested positive, the entire building would close for an investigation, and might not reopen for two weeks depending on the results.

In California, where schools in two-thirds of the state have been barred from reopening in person for now, state guidelines call for a school to close for at least 14 days if more than 5 percent of its students, faculty and staff test positive over a two-week period.

Updated July 27, 2020

Chicago, the nations third-largest school district, has proposed a hybrid system for reopening that would put students into 15-member pods that can be quarantined if one member tests positive. School buildings should close if the city averages more than 400 new cases a week or 200 cases a day, the plan states, with other worrying factors like low hospital capacity or a sudden spike in cases taken into account.

In Indiana, where the middle school student tested positive on Thursday in Greenfield, an Indianapolis suburb of 23,000 people, the virus began to spike in mid-June, and the caseload has remained relatively high. This week, Indianapolis opted to start the school year online.

The Greenfield-Central Community School Corporation, with eight schools and 4,400 students, gave families the option of in-person or remote learning. At Greenfield Central Junior High School, which the student with the positive test attends, about 15 percent of the 700 enrolled students opted for remote learning, said Mr. Olin, the superintendent.

It was overwhelming that our families wanted us to return, he said, adding that families needed to be responsible and not send students to school if they were displaying symptoms or awaiting test results. Students are also required to wear masks except when they are eating or for physical education outside, he said and as far as he knew, the student who tested positive was doing so.

Follow this link:

On the First Day of School, an Indiana Student Tests Positive for Coronavirus - The New York Times

Coronavirus in Texas is deadlier for people of color – The Texas Tribune

Correction: On July 30, the state said an automation error caused approximately 225 deaths to be incorrectly added to the overall death count; a subsequent quality check by Department of State Health Services epidemiologists revealed COVID-19 was not the direct cause of death in these cases. The numbers and charts in this story have been updated to account for this error and are current as of July 30.

Texas southernmost county, Cameron, is home to just 1.5% of the states population, but it accounts for nearly 5% of its known COVID-19 fatalities.

Cameron County where 89% of residents are Hispanic and nearly a third live below the poverty line stands out as just one stark example of widespread disparities in COVID-19 outcomes. Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for communities of color and low-income communities.

These disparities, and a wealth of other demographic information, became more apparent this week when new tallying methods at the state health agency revealed a more complete picture of who has died in Texas and where. Trends showing that Black and Hispanic individuals had been disproportionately hit by the virus were clear nationally and apparent in local snapshots, but until earlier this week, the Texas Department of State Health Services limited demographic data had clouded the picture of those disparities statewide.

Hispanic Texans make up about 40% of the states population, but they account for 49% of its known COVID-19 fatalities. Black Texans also appear slightly overrepresented in the fatality toll, representing 14% of fatalities but just 12% of the state population. Texas reported a total of 6,274 fatalities Thursday evening.

By contrast, white and Asian Texans died at lower rates relative to their share of the states population.

Sometimes called the great equalizer, the novel coronavirus has been anything but a deadly reality in a state like Texas, where the Hispanic population is expected to become the largest group in the state by mid-2021.

The disparities should not have been a surprise, said Jamboor Vishwanatha, director of the Texas Center for Health Disparities at the University of North Texas Health Science Center.

What COVID did is essentially shined a bright light on existing disparities, Vishwanatha said, citing disparities in rates of preexisting conditions like diabetes and cardiovascular issues, as well as social factors like income inequality and access to health care. You would expect something like this to happen.

Research has found that higher-paid employees are more likely to have the option to work from home, and that Black and Hispanic employees are less likely to be able to work remotely. In Texas and across the country, front-line employees like janitors, grocery clerks and transit workers are more likely to be women and people of color, an Associated Press analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data revealed.

Thats forced low-income workers and people of color to risk their health at work, exposing them to the virus while others earn a paycheck from home.

Many of these folks, particularly early on, were exposed to the disease, Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, said Wednesday at an event put on by The Academy of Medicine, Engineering and Science of Texas.

Benjamin said a higher prevalence of chronic illnesses like hypertension and heart disease is contributing to disparities.

Geography has also played a role. Many of Texas deadliest hot spots have emerged in communities of color: among immigrant workforces at the meatpacking plants in the Panhandle; in Houston, one of the countrys most diverse cities; and in the Rio Grande Valley, where the population is majority Hispanic.

In general, most deaths have been recorded where most Texans live in big cities like Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, El Paso and Austin. But some counties, like Cameron and Hidalgo in the Rio Grande Valley, are mourning an outsized number of people relative to their population. Both counties are about 90% Hispanic.

Even in bigger urban areas, some whiter, wealthier counties seem to be faring better than poorer counties with more diverse populations. Travis County has some 400,000 more residents than El Paso County but fewer deaths, according to state data. According to census data, Travis County is about half white and a third Hispanic, with a median household income around $76,000 annually; El Paso County is 83% Hispanic, with a median household income around $44,000 annually.

And the virus true death toll is almost certainly higher than reported; for experts, the question is by how much.

The state may be showing a particular undercount in Hidalgo, a majority-Hispanic county in the Rio Grande Valley that is being ravaged by COVID-19. County health officials, using local medical records, report 576 deaths; the state, now relying on death certificates, revised its tally for the county down from over 450 to 312. Local officials said the difference is caused by delays in the issuance of death certificates.

Meanwhile, Vishwanatha said, access to testing has been more limited in communities of color.

Pointing to local data from North Texas, Vishwanatha said there is a disparity between communities of color and white groups not only in chance of getting infected but also in chance of dying from the disease. The gulf is even wider for mortality rate than it is for infection rate.

We are currently facing a critical situation where some of our communities are really suffering. We need to do everything to overcome these disparities. But hopefully this COVID situation has brought out something that we should have been tackling all along how to overcome these chronic health disparities that our communities suffer, Vishwanatha said.

Disclosure: The UNT Health Science Center has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

Read the original:

Coronavirus in Texas is deadlier for people of color - The Texas Tribune

Greg Abbott skipping Republican National Convention to deal with coronavirus – The Texas Tribune

Sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

Gov. Greg Abbott will skip the Republican National Convention later this month in North Carolina as he continues to respond to the coronavirus pandemic in Texas, and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick will instead chair the state's delegation to the scaled-down gathering.

Abbott announced the plan in a letter dated Friday to the national GOP chairwoman, Ronna McDaniel.

"It was an honor being selected to serve as Chair of the Texas Delegation for the 2020 Republican National Convention," Abbott wrote. "However, as we deal with the COVID-19 pandemic, my top priority remains focused on protecting the health and safety of Texans."

Later this month, Charlotte will host the national convention, which has been pared down to delegates' official business due to the pandemic. President Donald Trump initially sought to hold a portion of the convention his renomination acceptance speech in Jacksonville, Florida, but abandoned that plan late last month amid a rise in coronavirus cases there.

The Republican National Committee decided earlier this summer to limit state's in-person delegations to Charlotte to six members an especially significant reduction for Texas, which normally sends over 150 delegates to the national convention.

Patrick, who chairs Trump's reelection campaign in Texas, was already the vice chair of the delegation to Charlotte. The five other delegates who will join him now are Allen West, the new state party chairman; Toni Anne Dashiell and Robin Armstrong, Texas' two RNC members; Deon Starnes, a member of the State Republican Executive Committee; and Adolpho Telles, the chairman of the El Paso County GOP.

Abbott also missed the Republican National Convention in 2016. At the time, he was recovering from severe burns he suffered during a family vacation earlier that summer.

Abbott's letter to McDaniel was first reported by The Dallas Morning News.

The state Republican Party last month held its convention, which went virtual despite a legal battle to hold it in person in Houston as that city experienced a dramatic surge in coronavirus infections. The convention ended up being plagued by technical issues and long delays, so much so that delegates voted to finish their business at a later date. A special party committee has since recommended that the SREC take up the unfinished business at its Sept. 19 meeting.

Read the original post:

Greg Abbott skipping Republican National Convention to deal with coronavirus - The Texas Tribune

The Strange Lives of Objects in the Coronavirus Era – The New York Times

Surfacing

The pandemic has inspired a flurry of new and novel items and given ordinary ones new meanings.

By Sophie Haigney

Illustrations by Peter Arkle

Plastic bubbles that hover over restaurant tables. Rods for contactless elevator-button-pushing. Portable seats that attach to lampposts, for shoppers waiting outside crowd-controlled stores. Dresses with skirts that have a six-foot radius. Podlike enclosures to keep gym-goers separate. A plastic sleeve that enables hugging at nursing homes. Masks in every imaginable form.

A set of new objects has emerged in the last few months to address the new reality of illness, lockdown, social distancing and social protest. Some of these objects are wacky and unrealized speculative concepts that may never see the light of day. Others, like cocktails-in-a-bag, thermometers and all manner of partitions, are already circulating widely. And some arent new at all: familiar household items like bottles of Lysol and rolls of toilet paper, which have taken on new meaning and importance because of scarcity or sudden unusual needs.

Im thinking a lot about what these objects are going to say about the pandemic in the future, said Anna Talley, a masters student in the history of design at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Royal College of Art. Talley and a fellow student, Fleur Elkerton, have compiled an expansive online archive called Design in Quarantine. Some of these objects are whimsical, or a little ridiculous, like an ultra-large distancing crown distributed by a German Burger King in May. Others are the heartbreaking artifacts of illness and mass death, economic collapse and crisis.

Objects can give us an insight into a time period that documents cannot, said Alexandra Lord, chair of the medicine and science division at the Smithsonians National Museum of American History, who is helping to lead the museums Covid-19 collecting task force. As at many museums, curators there are engaging in whats called rapid response collecting, trying to gather material and objects even as the crisis unfolds. The nature of the pandemic has made it difficult to gather physical objects, but Lord and her colleagues have solicited ideas and offers from the public. They are trying to determine what will be crucial to future historians and viewers, even as the crisis continues to unfold.

We as historians like to have hindsight, but we already know certain objects like ventilators will be a crucial part of the story, Lord said. Masks, too, have become symbols of the crisis in their myriad and already-evolving forms: hand-sewn, N95, high-fashion, reusable, disposable.

At the New-York Historical Society, historians have been collecting since mid-March, trying to gather things that tell a specific story about the citys experience. They began making a collecting wish list that included signs about store closures in different languages, bottles from distilleries that were converted into bottles for hand sanitizers, and the blanket of a baby born amid the pandemic.

Theres a white polo shirt that the governor tends to wear when hes been doing his daily press briefings, Louise Mirrer, president and chief executive of the New-York Historical Society, said in May, when Gov. Andrew Cuomo was doing daily briefings. Wed like to have that, and we will ask him for that. (As of publication time, it remains on the wish list).

The New-York Historical Society is also seeking objects that illustrate the personal toll of the pandemic some of which would be difficult to collect now. There are some more sensitive objects that well ask for later, like artifacts from people who have lost friends and relatives, Mirrer said.

Some ordinary objects have transformed into artifacts, either because of the shadow of loss, or simply because of their newfound importance as the crisis continues to shift. Some of the early fads of the pandemic may already feel like relics of the past. Things from April seem old already, said Donna Braden, senior curator at the Henry Ford Museum. It was almost easier to identify those iconic objects early on, and now the crisis has become so fragmented and so pervasive.

The protests in June also marked a significant change, and a major collecting event for history museums. The New-York Historical Society, for instance, has collected a mural depicting George Floyd by the artists Matt Adamson and Joaquin G that covered a boarded-up shoe store in Soho. Theyve also collected protest signs and posters.

Some objects exist at a kind overlap between the protests and the pandemic, records that tell two narratives at once. At the Black Lives Matter protests, many people are carrying signs that reference the fact that Covid-19 is impacting communities of color disproportionately, and that this is all part of this bigger story about systemic racism in the U.S., Lord said.

Some of the objects with which weve become familiar throughout the pandemic have undergone changes or will have renewed meaning during reopenings. Now there are also masks for kids who are going back to school, these Crayola masks that are one for every day, then you put them in a sealable package and wash them, Braden said.

A number of the new designs and proposals might fall into the category of what the architecture critic Kate Wagner describes as coronagrifting: a trend defined by the emergence of cheap mockups of Covid-related design solutions that are substanceless but garner attention on Instagram. Talley and Elkerton, of Design in Quarantine, are conscious that some of the more outlandish designs in their archive might fall into that category. Weve been asked a bit about including quite speculative and conceptual designs from design practices or designers that cant be actualized and maybe are just responding to the pandemic to get the publicity, Elkerton said. For a while we were wondering, Are we actively promoting that by including these things? But were just trying to document what is happening in the design world, and the coronagrifting projects are interesting in themselves.

Theyve also become interested, Elkerton said, in failed designs. As a historian, its often more interesting to find out why something doesnt work or take hold than what does, she said.

There is something both poignant and hopeful in these acts of documentation and collection, in trying to look back at our current crisis through the imagined lens of history. In collecting present objects as artifacts of the future, were imagining that future as a kind of afterward a time and place where this is no longer ongoing, and we can look back.

As historians and curators begin to collect and document, many of us have become engaged in a kind of self-archiving: documenting lockdowns and sicknesses, saving newspaper articles and childrens art projects, building what amounts to pandemic collections. I find it really interesting that people are becoming almost historians of their own lives, Lord said.

We are by definition always living through history, but a crisis like this brings it into relief: We sense the significance of this time for future observers, and have the urge to preserve it.

Surfacing is a biweekly column that explores the intersection of art and life, produced by Alicia DeSantis, Gabriel Gianordoli, Jolie Ruben and Josephine Sedgwick.

View post:

The Strange Lives of Objects in the Coronavirus Era - The New York Times

The state of blockchain in supply chain management today – Information Age

Steve Treagust, vice-president, industries program management at IFS, discusses the role blockchain plays in supply chain management

Blockchain is an increasingly important cog in the supply chain management wheel.

Some organisations associate blockchain with cryptocurrencies or the dark web but not as having relevance for general supply chain operations. Others, however, understand that it can be disruptive technologies that solve logistical problems in complex supply chains among larger groups of organisations.

One example of a visionary team is found in Maersk and IBM, who together launched TRADELens, the worlds first blockchain-enabled shipping solution. More than 90 organisations signed up to take part in this open standard blockchain-driven platform, including more than 20 port and terminal operators and customs authorities in the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Australia and Peru. Added to that list more recently is India where, starting in July 2020, the first trials will begin of the electronic bill of lading. The solution enables organisations to interact seamlessly and securely, sharing real-time access to IoT and sensor data such as temperature control or container weight, as well as providing standardised protocols and processes.

Access to data generated by the Internet of Things (IoT) can be difficult to control, but how can companies go about achieving this safely? Read here

Blockchain today is making halting inroads into settings where trading partners want to share a distributed ledger to facilitate and track transactions. The Farmer Direct Platform, which provides traceability of food products back from farm to fork, is partnering with Smuckers Folgers brand to use blockchain to provide enhanced supply chain visibility to customers. In most manufacturing and industrial supply chain settings, blockchain remains on the horizon however, although it has strong potential to support processes including 3D printing, where it can help enforce intellectual property, supply chain management and the Internet of Things (IoT).

As more sophisticated supply chains go into production with blockchain-enabled supply chains, others may consider whether the technology solves problems for them as well. Theres a lot of buzz around blockchain, but many organisations and individuals still dont really understand where it fits into their technology stack, due in large part to the association with the cryptocurrency use case.

Some data security and trust concerns still exist around the idea of running a mission-critical supply chain in blockchain, although cryptography-secured chains were shown to provide very high levels of security. All these concerns and misunderstandings can be addressed with education. There is nothing that spurs faster learning than having to compete with an organisation already successfully using blockchain to reduce supply chain costs.

While enterprise and supply chain technologists may not trust blockchain yet, it is somewhat ironic that a lack of trust in the banking industry after the 2008 financial crisis was the original incentive for blockchain. In fact, blockchain was born as the channel to deliver Bitcoin, allowing organisations to avoid banks.

Now, a lack of trust in these same digital assets is the main hurdle to mainstream use. There are two addressable elements to improving trust in blockchain. First is education around the value of cryptography and blockchain technology. Second, when others begin to successfully use blockchain, this will also provide a platform for trust.

The ultimate benefit that blockchain brings to supply chain management very much depends on the type and size of the supply chain. I outlined six business benefits of blockchain in a 2017 blog post, including efficiency, auditability, traceability, transparency, security and feedback. Any of these six could be the number one benefit depending on the business and their individual goals.

If I was to pick one benefit that most applies to all supply chains, it would be traceability. Being able to enable a trace of supply at any time during and after the chain has been completed can provide a competitive advantage, allowing organizations to comply with ever-changing regulations and create overall efficiencies.

Kevin Curran, IEEE senior member, security professor at Ulster University and editor of the Journal of British Blockchain Association (JBBA), explains how blockchain has transformed industry and society. Read here

The next step for blockchain in supply chain management is broader adoption. Its not a case of if this will happen, but when. In my opinion, to boost trust and provide stability, organisations must work together to establish trust-based relationships, creating diverse communities intent on delivering positive value from the blockchain ecosystem. This would also require enforceable regulatory control enough to curb the worst of human behaviour in free markets, but not enough to stifle blockchain innovation.

More here:

The state of blockchain in supply chain management today - Information Age

Blockchain as a Service (BaaS) is a term that has been floating around a lot lately – Customer Think

Blockchain as a great facility is expected to play a vital role in information and technology in the coming years. It has started to progress more rapidly because more and more organizations now realize the importance of the blockchain. Moreover, its not easy to implement blockchain for several reasons. Blockchain development services support critical system and hardware necessities to attain a significant decrease in attack vulnerability.

Blockchain as a service supplier like IBM, Microsoft Azure and other top companies have researched BaaS to make blockchain execution easier for the industries whose chief capabilities remain in fields than information and technology. It assists enterprises to emphasis more on the main areas, than to focus on the development space.

Blockchain as a service is a blockchain facility that enables consumers to use cloud-based facilities to progress, use and organize their blockchain applications, operation and smart dealings. BaaS comprises a cloud-based facility that manages performance to keep the structure functional and agile. Its still working on some areas to increase its growth across different businesses:Web development company plans and codes applications for online purpose.Industries and businesses both are eager to execute the blockchain feature due to the technical difficulties in generating, functioning and handling the blockchain structure act as problems to its broad adoption. Blockchain, as a service provides solutions to release companies of the complication of new technology.

A BaaS provider organizes and maintains the blockchain technology and arrangement for a consumer. The customer pays some amount to the BaaS provider for arranging and managing blockchain linked nodes on their concern. A BaaS provider maintains the back-end for the customer and their business. The customerprovides money to the BaaS provider for arranging and handling blockchain connected nodes on their concern. A BaaS worker manages the back-end for the client and their industry. It is the duty of a BaaS operator to make blockchain structure work continuously. A Blockchain worker also takes care of theevents like proper distribution of sources, bandwidth controlling and organizing requirements. By using BaaS procedure, customer can concentrate on more of the main fields and the working of blockchain without worrying about the arrangement issues.

The different method to organize your website on any web hosting provider such as Amazon Services or Azure, and they will handle all maintenance and set-up difficulties.Blockchain as a service performs similarly to the second procedure, thus releasing you from the burden of handling structure of a blockchain application.

Microsoft is one of the first sellers to offer BaaS when it created Azure blockchain services in 2015. They grouped up with the industries to progress Microsoft azure services. The administration purposes of following designers and trades consumers to test with blockchain technology and development. Microsoft Azure BaaS also permits its customers to generate private, public, and association blockchain setting with industry context and bring their blockchain applications to the market. Blockchain App Development Company helps with diverse blockchain platforms to improve business efficiency, effectiveness, and growth.

However, by incorporating the artificial intelligence-based support system, many large companies help its customers understand and execute dispersed ledger technology.

Features of Microsoft Azure

Like other industries, Amazon has also come up with its BaaS facility known as amazon managed blockchain. Amazon managed blockchain is a complete facility that provides its customers to arrange and maintain an accessible network with just a few hit. The amazon managed blockchain assists two famous blockchain expansion contexts, making its simple for the customer to handle both approved and public blockchain systemsthrough a particularcontrolledservice. Therefore, amazon managed blokchain provides you with the procedure to choose the proper sources for your workload.

Features of Amazon Managed Blockchain

The blockchain platform as an administration provided its R3 facilities that offer industries access to the one-click organization of cloud-based nodes.

Maintained R3 platform decreases the organization time of blockchain nodes for a few minutes permits industries, R3 associates and governments to organize the Corda system in just three clicks. Created on the latest release of Corda, designers can advance their private systems for verifying and install CorD applications on the private network. It decreases efforts and sources and provides flexibility over a shorter period. Designersno longer need to concentrate on the management of systems.

Features of R3 Corda Service

R3s unique feature permits designers to function with more than one element at a time.

Smart Agreements Integration

You need a smart deal instrument to combine business ideas into your blockchain solution. Smart deal not only comprises the instructions like typical deals but also applies penalties in case any part breaks the norms. However, the BaaS platforms are enduring; it makes proper testing of smart deals quite complex for designers. It is vital to consider that the BaaS Company offers you the intelligent deal combined with the organization.

Identity Access Management Platforms

An authorized system permits consumers to access precise data or layers. Combining a managed platform will make the blockchain system properly secure, and you will be capable of giving permissions to individuals.

Different Runtimes and Frameworks

Some BaaS workers only assist one kind of enterprise blockchain organization. Guarantee to select a BaaS that offers a wide range of contexts. It will help bring scalability to your enterprise necessities.

Blockchain as the administration is a promising offering that helps industries become flexible solution created on the blockchain technology. SaaS Development Company is an enterprise that organizesa feature and makes it accessible to consumers over the internet.

More here:

Blockchain as a Service (BaaS) is a term that has been floating around a lot lately - Customer Think

Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market Research Report Explores The Trade Trends For The Forecast Amount | 2020 2026 – Owned

The Report Titled On Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market includes Market Size (Production, Consumption, Value and Volume), Upstream Situation, Market Segmentation, Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market Segmentation, Price & Cost And Industry Environment. In addition, the report outlines the factors driving industry growth and the description of market channels. The prime objective of this Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market report is to help the user understand the market in terms of its Definition, Segmentation, Market Potential, Influential Trends, and the Challenges that the Market Is Facing.

The Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market profile also contains descriptions of the leading topmost manufactures/players like (Microsoft, Intel, IBM, R3)which including Capacity, Production, Price, Revenue, Cost, Gross, Gross Margin, Growth Rate, Import, Export, Market Share and Technological Developments.

Get Free Sample PDF (including full TOC, Tables and Figures)of Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services[emailprotected]https://www.researchmoz.us/enquiry.php?type=S&repid=2395728

Scope of Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market:The report affords a basic outline of the Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market report contains definitions, competitive landscape evaluation, segmentations, applications, key providers, market drivers and challenges. The Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Research report presents a complete assessment of the Market and contains a future trend, current growth factors, attentive opinions, facts, and industry validated market data.

On the basis of product, this report displays the sales volume, revenue (Million USD), product price, market share and growth rate of each type, primarily split into-

Public Blockchain Private Blockchain Others

On the basis on the end users/applications, this report focuses on the status and outlook for major applications/end users, sales volume, market share and growth rate of Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services for each application, including-

Fund Transaction Management Real Time Loan Funding Liquidity Management Others

Do You Have Any Query Or Specific Requirement? Ask to Our Industry[emailprotected]https://www.researchmoz.us/enquiry.php?type=E&repid=2395728

Geographically, the report includes the research on production, consumption, revenue, Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market share and growth rate, and forecast (2020-2026) of the following regions:

Key Developments In The Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market:

To describe Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Introduction, product type and application, market overview, Blockchain in Banking and Financial Servicesbmarket analysis by countries, market opportunities, market risk, market driving force;

To analyze the manufacturers of Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market, with profile, main business, news, sales, price, revenue and market share in 2016 and 2020;

To display the competitive situation among the top manufacturers in North America, with sales, revenue and Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market share in 2016 and 2020;

To show the market by type and application, with sales, price, revenue,Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market share and growth rate by type and application, from 2013 to 2020;

To analyze the key countries by manufacturers, Type and Application, covering United States , Canada and Mexico, with sales, revenue and Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market share by manufacturers, types and applications;

Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market forecast, by countries, type and application, with sales, price, revenue and growth rate forecast, from 2020 to 2026;

To analyze the Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market manufacturing cost, key raw materials and manufacturing process etc.

To analyze the industrial chain, sourcing strategy and downstream end users (buyers);

To describe Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market sales channel, distributors, traders, dealers etc.

To describe Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services market Research Findings and Conclusion, Appendix, methodology and data source.

Contact:

ResearchMozMr. Rohit Bhisey,Tel: +1-518-621-2074USA-Canada Toll Free: 866-997-4948Email:[emailprotected]

Browse More Reports Visit @https://www.mytradeinsight.blogspot.com/

See more here:

Blockchain in Banking and Financial Services Market Research Report Explores The Trade Trends For The Forecast Amount | 2020 2026 - Owned

Seasteading a vanity project for the rich or the future …

A white steel pole rises out of the sea off the Caribbean coast of Panama, poking above the waves like the funnel of a sunken steamship. Launched into the water last month, this is no shipwreck, but the base of what will soon become a floating home and, in the eyes of its makers, the first step towards building a brave new post-Covid-19 society, out on the open ocean.

Coronavirus is an opportunity to show the world that what were building is actually going to be very useful in the future, says Chad Elwartowski, in a recent video post from his beachside base in Panama. The Michigan-born software engineer turned bitcoin trader is a leading figure in the seasteading movement, a libertarian group dedicated to building independent floating cities on the high seas. Along with the bunker builders and survivalist preppers, their long-held ambitions have been bolstered by the current global pandemic. No matter if youre scared of the virus or the reaction to the virus, he adds, living out on the ocean will be helpful for these situations.

It is not the first time Elwartowski has attempted to realise his dream of a floating future. In April last year, he and his Thai partner Supranee Thepdet (aka Nadia Summergirl), were forced to flee their first floating home off the coast of Thailand, just moments before it was raided by the Thai navy. They had constructed what they declared to be the first seastead 12 nautical miles from Phuket, but the authorities decided that the six metre-wide fibreglass cabin, perched on top of a floating pole, posed a threat to Thailands sovereignty. It was an offence punishable by life imprisonment or even the death penalty. The couple announced on social media declaring their autonomy beyond the jurisdiction of any courts or law of any countries, including Thailand, said Rear Admiral Vithanarat Kochaseni, adding that they had invited others to join them. We see such action as deteriorating Thailands independence.

After a few weeks on the run, dodging Thai patrol boats and eventually making their way to Singapore, the couple moved to Panama to relaunch their company, Ocean Builders with the financial backer of the project, Rdiger Koch, a retired German aerospace engineer. This event has doubled down our efforts, the group said in a statement, following the Thai ordeal. We can all clearly see that seasteading needs to happen now as tyranny creeps ever more deeply into our governments to the point that they are willing to hunt down a couple of residents residing in a floating house in middle of nowhere.

The coronavirus pandemic has given fringe libertarian groups around the world renewed vigour to pursue their dreams of building autonomous new societies. Government-enforced lockdowns and increased digital surveillance have added fuel to their suspicions of state control, while the suspension of day-to-day norms and the spectre of an economic meltdown have amplified their calls to rethink society. When youre not sure which virus is more contagious, says the slogan of a recent meme made by Americans for Liberty, shared on Elwartowskis Facebook page. Covid-19, or those fine with complete government control.

The sentiment lies at the core of the seasteading community, a disparate group that has grown since 2008, when the Seasteading Institute was founded in San Francisco by Patri Friedman. The self-styled anarcho-capitalist (and grandson of Nobel prize-winning economist Milton Friedman) was working as a Google software engineer when he managed to attract funding from PayPal billionaire Peter Thiel to set up the institute. In a founding statement, they described its goal as being to establish permanent, autonomous ocean communities to enable experimentation and innovation with diverse social, political, and legal systems. Thiel was nothing if not confident: The nature of government is about to change at a very fundamental level, he proclaimed.

A new kind of government arises, born in Earths last free places, fated to advance the human frontier

Seasteading represents the ultimate Silicon Valley approach to governance, conceiving society as a technology that can be hacked and innovated upon as simply as an operating system. It is predicated on the idea that government regulation stifles innovation, and therefore the route to a better world can only be found by unleashing a new generation of start-up societies that are forced to compete for citizens in a free market of ideologies. Dont like the rules of your current micro-nation? Simply move to another one. We will give people the freedom to choose the government they want, said Friedman, instead of being stuck with the government they get. Its boosters see it as the route to salvation; its critics say it would lead to an apartheid of the worst kind.

Progress has been bumpy. Thiels donations soon dried up, and Friedmans plans never got much further than launching Ephemerisle a waterborne version of the Burning Man festival, staged in the Sacramento River delta near San Francisco, where rival floating pontoons compete for the attention of soggy partygoers. He has since moved his focus away from the water, recently launching a company to develop experimental cities on dry land instead. But the Seasteading Institute continues without him, headed by author and self-appointed seavangelist, Joe Quirk.

Nearly half of the worlds surface is unclaimed, says Quirk, who published a book on seasteading in 2017, with the ambitious subtitle: How floating nations will restore the environment, enrich the poor, cure the sick, and liberate humanity from politicians. In an introductory video, he describes the planets oceans as a sort of research and development zone where we could discover better means of governance, and says that seasteading could provide the technology for thousands of people to start their own nano-nation on the high seas, giving people opportunities to peacefully test new ideas about living together. The most successful seasteads, he says, will become thriving new societies, inspiring change around the world.

So far, his own attempts dont bode particularly well for the future of floating utopias. In January 2017, after years of technical feasibility studies and political negotiations, the Seasteading Institute signed a memorandum of understanding with the government of French Polynesia to build the first seasteads in its territorial waters. The designs, developed by Dutch architects Blue21, looked like a high-end resort in the Maldives, depicting a series of villas linked by an undulating green landscape. It was all to be magicked from the waters by an initial coin offering, a form of crowdfunding through selling tokens of a new cryptocurrency, all the rage among the tech community in 2017. Were going to draw a new map of the world with French Polynesia at the centre of the aquatic age, Quirk declared.

The choice of location was strategic. Comprised of almost 120 dispersed low-lying islands and atolls, French Polynesia is at severe risk of suffering devastating consequences from even the slightest rise in sea level. It also happens to boast the worlds largest exclusive economic zone, an area of sea that can stretch for 200 nautical miles from a territorys coastline, over which it can claim exclusive economic rights. At five million square kilometres, French Polynesian waters span an area as large as the landmass of the entire European Union, making it an ideal place to experiment with novel forms of aquatic jurisdiction. In theory.

We explained to the Polynesians how having a quasi-autonomous area nearby was a good thing, says Tom W Bell, professor of law at Chapman University in Orange County, California, who drew up the legal agreement for the project. Look at Monaco, or Hong Kong or Singapore special jurisdictions create a lot of growth outside their borders. In his book, Your Next Government? From the Nation State to Stateless Nations, Bell traces the projected evolution of a seastead. It would begin like a coral polyp, he writes, protected by a countrys territorial waters, where it would start to generate economic activity, enriching its environment and attracting still more life, before breaking free to start a new autonomous life on the open ocean. Ultimately, he imagines seasteads nurtured by different host nations congregating in mid-ocean gyres, sheltered within floating breakwaters. A new kind of government arises, he writes, born in Earths last free places, fated to advance the human frontier.

The reality didnt quite pan out that way in the South Pacific. There wasnt a perfect alignment of interests, says Marc Collins Chen, former minister of tourism of French Polynesia, who co-founded the company Blue Frontiers with Quirk to realise the project. The government was looking for something to address sea level rise and environmental degradation, whereas the Seasteading Institute was more about autonomy. He says that the prospect of a tax-free enclave held little appeal for the locals, given that Polynesians dont pay income tax anyway. One Tahitian TV host compared the situation to the evil Galactic Empire in Star Wars imposing on the innocent Ewoks, while secretly building the Death Star. The libertarian position didnt help either. As Collins Chen puts it: Its very difficult to ask for government support when your narrative is that you want to get rid of politicians. In retrospect, Bell agrees: They already had a beautiful paradise in French Polynesia. The local community wasnt very enthusiastic about the project, and I get it. They didnt need strangers coming in and ruining their view.

Over the next 40 years, the world is expected to build 230bn square metres in new construction. This could be a way to accommodate that growth

Collins Chen has since moved to New York, where he has established a new company to develop further plans for floating cities, this time stripped of any libertarian tax-dodging ideology. I realised that the real future for these sorts of projects has to be closer to cities, he says. They have to be an extension of an existing citys infrastructure, they need to be run by the mayor, and they have to pay their taxes as opposed to being enclaves for the wealthy.

His plan, titled Oceanix City, has been designed in slick Ted Talk style by Bjarke Ingels, the Danish architect beloved of Silicon Valley tech companies. His twinkling animations depict a floating world of interlocking hexagonal islands, where power is harvested from waves and the sun, where residents live on a diet of seaweed and fish, and where marine life is regenerated by artificial reefs. If this floating city flourishes, said Ingels in a presentation, it can then grow like a culture in a petri dish. On a screen behind him, the floating hexagons multiplied until they took up an area more than three times the size of Manhattan, a vision of low-density suburbia sprawling virulently across the sea.

Over the next 40 years, the world is expected to build 230bn square metres in new construction, says Collins Chen, the equivalent of adding one New York City every month. This could be a way to accommodate that growth, without the devastating effects of land reclamation or deforestation. He says part of the appeal is the ability to reconfigure the urban form according to changing needs, in a process of drag-and-drop city building. You could literally float one a city block away and put a different one in its place, when the need for a new school, hospital or university arose.

Remarkably, their sci-fi scheme has won the support of the United Nations sustainable development arm, UN-Habitat, which hosted a round table discussion for the project in April 2019. As global heating accelerates, sea levels rise and more people crowd into urban slums, floating cities is one of the possible solutions, said UN-Habitats executive director, Maimunah Mohd Sharif.

Back in Panama, the notion that floating habitats could be an inclusive solution to global housing need seems a long way off, to put it mildly. Despite the countrys coronavirus lockdown, the Ocean Builders team has been at work throughout, laying the foundations for a factory that will soon house the largest 3D printer in Central America, ready to produce what their website touts as the worlds first 3D-printed, smart floating home with an underwater room wrapped in an eco restorative 3D-printed coral reef yours for between $200,000 to $800,000 (160,000 to 640,000).

In light of the global pandemic, were really focusing on making the homes feel like a kind of lifeboat, says the companys CEO, Grant Romundt, who worked on the Freedom Ship project in Florida in the 1990s, an aborted plan to build a mile-long cruise ship for 40,000 people, topped with a runway. They should be a safe place to escape to and be totally energy independent, with solar panels on the roof, water desalination on board, waste collection by drone, and aeroponic systems to grow your own food.

Designed by Koen Olthuis of Dutch architecture practice Waterstudio, the plans for the luxury SeaPods look like a row of gigantic motorbike helmets on poles, sticking up out of the sea in pearlescent shades of blue, green and grey. We wanted to have something that was very futuristic looking, very clean and flowing, says Romundt. I didnt want to have a 90-degree corner anywhere in the house. I think thats bad feng shui. The interiors recall supersized sanitaryware, envisaged as white, wipe-clean worlds of free-flowing surfaces, echoing retro-futuristic visions of streamlined space capsules. The similarity is no accident: for company founder, Rdiger Koch, seasteading is merely a stepping stone for trialling exploits in space. He has long harboured plans to build a cable launch loop to propel payloads into space without rockets, and he sees the ocean as the perfect launchpad. There are almost only large open spaces at sea, he told German regional newspaper, Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, and you need them to make sure that nothing goes wrong and nobody is hit by possible flying parts.

Romundt insists that the company is merely building floating holiday homes, which will be registered as boats under the Panama flag for legal purposes, and likely operate on a timeshare basis. That would give you the slow adjustment period, he says, then more of an economy would start to build as more people come requiring more services, and it would start to self-perpetuate and grow.

For Bell, the ultimate goal is to see such floating communities raise their own flags in the open ocean. Right now, a self-flagged seastead would have effectively no status at all in international law, he says. The coast guard would show up, assume you were either a pirate or a floating meth lab, and tow you right back in to shore. But if seasteaders can say they have enough people and a big enough territory, and start flagging themselves, thats when things will start to get interesting.

And if they fail? Thats the marvellous thing about seasteads, says Quirk. If a government fails, theres nothing much the people who live there can do about it, but if seasteads fail, they simply disassemble and go away seeing all those bitcoin dollars sink into the sea just as quickly as they were conjured.

Read more from the original source:

Seasteading a vanity project for the rich or the future ...

Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Growth, Trends and Value Chain 2019-2025 – Owned

Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market 2018: Global Industry Insights by Global Players, Regional Segmentation, Growth, Applications, Major Drivers, Value and Foreseen till 2024

The report provides both quantitative and qualitative information of global Animal Stem Cell Therapy market for period of 2018 to 2025. As per the analysis provided in the report, the global market of Animal Stem Cell Therapy is estimated to growth at a CAGR of _% during the forecast period 2018 to 2025 and is expected to rise to USD _ million/billion by the end of year 2025. In the year 2016, the global Animal Stem Cell Therapy market was valued at USD _ million/billion.

This research report based on Animal Stem Cell Therapy market and available with Market Study Report includes latest and upcoming industry trends in addition to the global spectrum of the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market that includes numerous regions. Likewise, the report also expands on intricate details pertaining to contributions by key players, demand and supply analysis as well as market share growth of the Animal Stem Cell Therapy industry.

Get PDF Sample Copy of this Report to understand the structure of the complete report: (Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, Chart) @ https://www.researchmoz.com/enquiry.php?type=S&repid=2638488&source=atm

Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Overview:

The Research projects that the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market size will grow from in 2018 to by 2024, at an estimated CAGR of XX%. The base year considered for the study is 2018, and the market size is projected from 2018 to 2024.

Segment by Type, the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market is segmented intoDogsHorsesOthers

Segment by Application, the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market is segmented intoVeterinary HospitalsResearch Organizations

Regional and Country-level AnalysisThe Animal Stem Cell Therapy market is analysed and market size information is provided by regions (countries).The key regions covered in the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market report are North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, Middle East and Africa. It also covers key regions (countries), viz, U.S., Canada, Germany, France, U.K., Italy, Russia, China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam, Mexico, Brazil, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, UAE, etc.The report includes country-wise and region-wise market size for the period 2015-2026. It also includes market size and forecast by Type, and by Application segment in terms of sales and revenue for the period 2015-2026.Competitive Landscape and Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Share AnalysisAnimal Stem Cell Therapy market competitive landscape provides details and data information by players. The report offers comprehensive analysis and accurate statistics on revenue by the player for the period 2015-2020. It also offers detailed analysis supported by reliable statistics on revenue (global and regional level) by players for the period 2015-2020. Details included are company description, major business, company total revenue and the sales, revenue generated in Animal Stem Cell Therapy business, the date to enter into the Animal Stem Cell Therapy market, Animal Stem Cell Therapy product introduction, recent developments, etc.The major vendors covered:Medivet Biologics LLCVETSTEM BIOPHARMAJ-ARMU.S. Stem Cell, IncVetCell TherapeuticsCelavet Inc.Magellan Stem CellsKintaro Cells PowerAnimal Stem CareAnimal Cell TherapiesCell Therapy SciencesAnimacel

Do You Have Any Query Or Specific Requirement? Ask to Our Industry [emailprotected] https://www.researchmoz.com/enquiry.php?type=E&repid=2638488&source=atm

Some important highlights from the report include:

You can Buy This Report from Here @ https://www.researchmoz.com/checkout?rep_id=2638488&licType=S&source=atm

The Questions Answered by Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Report:

And Many More.

The report on the global Animal Stem Cell Therapy market covers 12 sections as given below:

Go here to read the rest:

Animal Stem Cell Therapy Market Growth, Trends and Value Chain 2019-2025 - Owned

Boehringer Ingelheim acquires GST to strengthen its stem cell capabilities in Animal Health – Business Wire

INGELHEIM, Germany--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Boehringer Ingelheim, a market leader in animal health, has acquired Global Stem cell Technology (GST), a Belgian veterinary biotech company. GST is dedicated to the research, development and production of evidence-based, regenerative medicines (stem cell therapies) used to treat orthopedic and metabolic diseases in animals. Boehringer Ingelheim already entered into a partnership with GST in 2018; in 2019, the companies launched Arti-Cell Forte in Europe.

Arti-Cell Forte is testimony to the innovation strength that lies within both companies. It is the first-ever stem cell product in the veterinary world granted marketing authorization by the European Commission. The acquisition and integration of GST will accelerate the development pipeline of Boehringer Ingelheim while maintaining its focus on setting new standards of care for animals.

Collaboration with external partners plays an essential role in helping us expand our portfolio. After two years of a very successful partnership, we have decided to acquire GST. We are convinced that its expertise in the field of state-of-the art stem cell products will help us bring even more innovative solutions to our customers, shares Jean-Luc Michel, Head of Global Strategic Marketing, Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health.

Boehringer Ingelheim wants to lead a new wave of innovation in the veterinary field. This ambition is a natural fit with GSTs management, staff and vision. From the very beginning we aimed to change the veterinary field, a role we will continue to play as a new R&D division within Boehringer Ingelheim, says Jan Spaas, CEO of GST.

This decision is fully aligned with our recently refocused strategic direction. Stem cell research areas and regenerative medicine offer an exciting potential for the next wave of innovation we are actively pursuing. In addition, strengthening external partnerships to accelerate our innovative efforts and growth is one of the key elements of our strategy, adds Eric Haaksma, Head of Global Innovation at Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health.

The companies did not disclose the financial terms of the deal.

For references and notes to editors, please visit:

http://www.boehringer-ingelheim.com/press-release/boehringer-ingelheim-acquires-global-stem-cell-technology

Intended audiences:

This press release is issued from our Corporate Headquarters in Ingelheim, Germany and is intended to provide information about our global business. Please be aware that information relating to the approval status and labels of approved products may vary from country to country, and a country-specific press release on this topic may have been issued in the countries where we do business.

Continued here:

Boehringer Ingelheim acquires GST to strengthen its stem cell capabilities in Animal Health - Business Wire

Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy Market Shares, Strategies and Forecast Worldwide, 2018 to 2028 Bulletin Line – Bulletin Line

Fact.MR, in its recently published market research report, provides an in-depth analysis of the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market included the anticipated growth pattern of the market over the forecast period (2019-2029). A detailed assessment of the various micro and macro-economic factors that are likely to shape the course of the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market over the next decade is enclosed in the report. The study suggests that the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market is expected to register a CAGR growth of XX% over the forecast period primarily driven by factors including factor 1, factor 2, factor 3, and factor 4.

Further, the methodical and systematic approach adopted by the analysts while curating the report ensures that the data in the report is insightful, relevant, and a valuable tool for our clients to gain a competitive advantage in the current and future market landscape.

Request Sample Report @ https://www.factmr.co/connectus/sample?flag=S&rep_id=1001

Competitive assessment

The competitive assessment included in the report throws light on the business strategies incorporated by leading market players operating in the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market. The comprehensive study provides a birds eye view of the business operations of top-tier market players along with relevant graphs, figures, and tables.

Regional analysis

The regional analysis section touches upon the market scenario in the various geographies worldwide and the factors that are projected to influence the market dynamics in each region. The impact of the economic and political policies of different countries in each region is discussed in the report in detail.

End Use study

The report bifurcates the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market on the basis of end-use and tracks the Y-o-Y growth of each end use segment.

Competitive landscape

Request Methodology On This Report @ https://www.factmr.co/connectus/sample?flag=RM&rep_id=1001

Important questions answered in the report:

Why Choose Fact.MR?

Ask analyst about this report at https://www.factmr.co/connectus/sample?flag=AE&rep_id=1001

Read the rest here:

Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy Market Shares, Strategies and Forecast Worldwide, 2018 to 2028 Bulletin Line - Bulletin Line

FDA Approves Tafasitamab-cxix in Combination With Lenalidomide for the Treatment of DLBCL – Pharmacy Times

FDA Approves Tafasitamab-cxix in Combination With Lenalidomide for the Treatment of DLBCL

A humanized Fc-modified cytolytic CD19 targeting monoclonal antibody, tafasitamab-cxix received accelerated approval based on overall response rate (ORR). Continued approval may be contingent upon verification and description of clinical benefit in a confirmatory trial(s).

Globally, DLBCL is the most common type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in adults. The aggressive disease is characterized by rapidly growing masses of malignant B-cells in the lymph nodes, spleen, liver, bone marrow or other organs, and about 1 in 3 patients do not respond to initial therapy or relapsing thereafter.In the United States, approximately 10,000 patients are diagnosed with relapsed or refractory DLBCL who are not eligible for ASCT, each year.

The FDA approval was based on data from the MorphoSys-sponsored Phase 2 L-MIND study, an open label, multicenter, single arm trial of tafasitamab-cxix in combination with lenalidomide as a treatment for adult patients with relapsed or refractory DLBCL. Results from the study showed an ORR of 55% (primary endpoint), including a complete response (CR) rate of 37%, and a partial response rate (PR) of 18%. The median duration of response (mDOR) was 21.7 months (key secondary endpoint).

Warnings and precautions for tafasitamab-cxix included infusion-related reactions (6%), serious or severe myelosuppression including neutropenia (50%), thrombocytopenia (18%), and anemia (7%); infections (73%), and embryo-fetal toxicity. Neutropenia led to treatment discontinuation in 3.7% of patients. The most common adverse reactions ( 20%) were neutropenia, fatigue, anemia, diarrhea, thrombocytopenia, cough, pyrexia, peripheral edema, respiratory tract infection, and decreased appetite.

The FDA previously granted Fast Track and Breakthrough Therapy Designation for the tafasitamab-cxix and lenalidomide combination in treatment of relapsed or refractory DLBCL. FDA.

Tafasitamab-cxix is expected to be commercially available in the United States shortly, according to MorphoSys and Incyte, which plan to co-commercialize this therapy in the US. Incyte has exclusive commercialization rights outside the US.

REFERENCE

FDA Approves Monjuvi(tafasitamab-cxix) in Combination With Lenalidomide for the Treatment of Adult Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma (DLBCL) [news release]. Planegg & Munich, Germany, and Wilmington, DE; July 31, 2020: MorphoSys and Incyte.https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200731005497/en.

Read the original post:

FDA Approves Tafasitamab-cxix in Combination With Lenalidomide for the Treatment of DLBCL - Pharmacy Times

Ozzy Osbourne: I was convinced I was dying during nightmare health year – Martinsville Bulletin

Ozzy Osbourne was "convinced" he was dying amid his year plagued with health setbacks.

The 'Crazy Train' hitmaker suffered a nightmare year in 2019 which saw him endure several medical issues including a fall, neck surgery, an infection in his hand, and hospitalization for the flu.

And at the start of 2020, he revealed he had been diagnosed with Parkinson's - which is a brain disorder that leads to shaking, stiffness, and difficulty with walking, balance, and coordination - for which he later had stem cell treatment to try and ease the symptoms.

Discussing his year of ill health, Ozzy said: "I'm not back to 100 percent. I'm about 75 percent there, but it's such a slow recovery. Spine surgery is bad news, man. I've been in such a bad state with pain; I'm still having a lot of pain.

"There was a point I was convinced that I was dying. I was in that much discomfort and pain and misery. I thought they were all hiding it from me. I remember saying to Sharon, 'You've gotta level with me. Is it worse than you're making it out [to be]?' She says, 'No.' ... I've dropped all the medication for pain now."

And despite his health woes, the 71-year-old rocker is itching to get back on stage as soon as the coronavirus pandemic - which has forced all concerts to be cancelled - has passed.

He added in an interview for SiriusXM: "I cannot wait [to get on stage], but I was talking to Tony Iommi the other day, and he was saying with the way it's going with this coronavirus, indoor shows will be a thing of the past."

More:

Ozzy Osbourne: I was convinced I was dying during nightmare health year - Martinsville Bulletin