Texas runoff elections show stress of coronavirus on states voting system – The Texas Tribune

If the primary runoff elections are a test run for November, cracks are becoming apparent in the state's voting system as it struggles to function under the strain of rampant coronavirus spread.

Early voting is over, and Tuesday is election day in Texas for the low-turnout contests to finalize party nominations for the November general election. In-person voting has generally run smoothly in early balloting, in large part because only a small sliver of registered voters have shown up. But people trying to vote by mail, turning to whats typically a lightly used system to avoid the risks of human contact at polling places, have faced a host of hurdles and challenges that may foreshadow greater disarray come November. The problems are most pronounced for voters with disabilities.

Have you run into hurdles or problems while trying to vote in Texas? We want your help in reporting on those challenges. Learn more.

Angela Wolf, who is blind, tried to vote by mail instead of showing up at an Austin polling place to use an accessible machine like she has in the past. Her application came up mislabeled when she ran it through a screen reader meant to help her fill it out. Its likely she wont be able to independently mark up her paper ballot. A single mom with small children, shell have to break their isolation bubble to get sighted assistance from an adult.

Lisa Jackson felt a personal responsibility to avoid potentially exposing poll workers and fellow voters in Comal County while she waited last week to learn if she had been infected with the virus. After a series of calls, the marketing professional learned her only options were to vote curbside or submit an emergency application for a mail-in ballot. The first still felt too risky for the poll worker; the latter required a signature from her doctor and finding someone willing to pick up and then deliver her ballot while she remained quarantined.

In the small East Texas town of Henderson, Rodney Vallantyne who has been strictly isolating at home sought to vote by mail but had no idea how to go about getting a ballot until receiving a link to the application from a reporter. Its not easy for the 60-year-old to get around; he has a rare form of dystonia and deals with chronic pain. He managed to get his application turned in but then had to consider how to get a stamp in a short time frame. He went as far as calling the local post office hoping it would allow him to leave his ballot in his mailbox with a separate envelope containing the exact loose change needed to cover postage. A postal worker agreed to take care of it for him.

I really took [it] for granted thinking, Oh, yeah, we have accessible voting in Texas. Well that is half true, said Wolf, who teaches at the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired. There are people with multiple disabilities who have the right to vote, but its not accessible.

In Travis County, about 4,600 voters some with disabilities, some 65 and older, many of them drawn to vote by mail for the first time during the pandemic incorrectly filled out their applications to vote by mail for the runoff. They were seemingly tripped up by a series of checkboxes offering separate options to request ballots for all elections in the calendar year, for a party primary and for a runoff. Thousands of voters indicated they wanted a ballot but left unmarked either the runoff box or the one indicating their party. Now, unless theyre willing to vote in person, some will be shut out of their party runoffs.

Its the fault of the form, said Travis County Clerk Dana DeBeauvoir. The form didnt say anything about primary runoff and which ballot to ask for, and voters improvised.

In an era of forced isolation, the accessibility void and information gap surrounding mail-in voting a practice with strict eligibility criteria thats typically used by just a small share of the Texas electorate have translated into electoral barriers for many in the state as more voters seek out the option.

Since the new coronavirus emerged as a threat to Texas voters, the state has been embroiled in a fight over how to safeguard the right to vote during the pandemic. Texas Democrats and civil rights advocates have been unsuccessful in expanding who can qualify for a ballot they can fill out at home and mail in, losing out to Republican leaders opposition in court. Thats left existing rules in place for voters who are 65 and older, those who cite a disability or an illness, and those who will be out of the county theyre registered in during the election period.

But in fielding calls through their voter rights hotline, advocates with Disability Rights Texas say theyve heard from a crush of voters with disabilities in the last month some of whom have even voted by mail before who were confused as to whether they still qualified.

For voters like Wolf with visual impairments, advocates have also been trying to decipher how to guide them through filling out a ballot at home, which requires them to mark it up and sign the flap of the ballot envelope or find a witness to sign it for them. In processing mail-in ballots, a committee of local election officials reviews that endorsement to make sure it matches the signature a voter used on their application to vote by mail.

(That signature verification process is the subject of a federal lawsuit against the state in which plaintiffs allege it is unconstitutional and in violation of federal protections for people with disabilities.)

For those seeking guidance on voting during the pandemic, a review of county election websites by Disability Rights Texas also found that a majority didnt meet basic accessibility functions. Those are just some examples of how the pandemic has exacerbated the hurdles voters with disabilities must overcome to exercise their basic right to vote, said Molly Broadway, a voting rights training specialist for Disability Rights Texas.

If anything, this experience has provided a time to really understand what voters with disabilities are going through on a regular basis, Broadway said. This isnt just a pandemic for them. This is every time theres an election.

Just more than a million voters cast ballots in person or by mail during early voting a turnout rate of about 6.5% of the states nearly 16.4 million registered voters.

While mail-in expansion efforts have been foiled, some counties have still reported a sizable increase in the number of voters applying to vote by mail. In some cases, that was by design. For example, officials in Harris County opted to preemptively send applications for mail-in ballots to all of the voters on their rolls who are 65 and older instead of waiting for voters to request them.

But amid a surge in voters navigating the mail-in system for the first time, Travis County has been grappling with a workaround for voters who filled out their ballots incorrectly. For some, that may ultimately mean voting in person to participate in the runoff.

Among those voters is Austin resident Chuck Russell, a retiree who voted in person during the March primary election but hoped to avoid visiting a polling place during the pandemic. He knew he qualified for a mail-in ballot because hes over 65, but still had to work through several obstacles.

First, he mistakenly believed he could apply online. (He had actually gone through the Texas Democratic Partys portal to fill out an application that would be mailed to him for his signature.) Once he found the hard copy in his mailbox, he had just two days to get it to the Travis County Clerks Office on the deadline day to receive applications. But a week later, he still hadnt received the ballot in the mail. Russell began to worry if hed get it in time to drop it in the mail by election day and considered whether to vote in person before the early voting period ended. (To do so, hed need to surrender the mailed ballot he hadnt yet received or cast a provisional ballot that wouldnt be counted until officials certified he didnt also vote by mail.)

[I] would probably have to go to a voting location to vote in person on Tuesday, which I was trying to avoid in the first place, Russell wrote in an email Thursday evening. Would have been better off not even requesting a mail in ballot and just did early voting like I usually do.

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Texas runoff elections show stress of coronavirus on states voting system - The Texas Tribune

Ensuing recession and major economic downturns – The Financial Express BD

Rassiq Aziz Kabir | Published: July 10, 2020 23:36:52 | Updated: July 11, 2020 22:32:11

Although fundamentally being considered as a global health crisis, the Coronavirus Pandemic is supposed to lead towards a massive economic downturn which according to many experts can overshadow most of the recessions that occurred in the global economy since "The Great Depression".

Economists in general believe that this recession will be unlike any other in the modern economy due to the fact that it will be induced by a global health crisis rather than an unhealthy economy. It is believed that the world economy has already entered a recession because as per the classical concept of recession, an economy is said to be in recession if it experiences downturns over two consecutive quarters in a year and already the first quarter of 2020 which ranged from January to March as a whole has been quite detrimental for the global economy and the next quarters of the year of which no economic information has been available yet are expected to face the adversity as well.

Almost a third of the population of the world has been placed under lockdown which has impacted the economy as a whole as unemployment has been record high in most of the countries of the world. British Economy has sunk by 2.0 per cent from January to March according to The Guardian and in April alone it dwindled by 20.4 per cent. The biggest decline of GDP in the US economy throughout a quarter was 10 per cent in 1950 and it is estimated that the decline will be well over 10 per cent in the quarter following from April to June. This recession following the pandemic is putting an end to the longest standing economic expansion and unemployment that persisted in the United States of America. IMF predicts that almost all of the global economies will be massively affected by the Pandemic which is quite unprecedented because in the past most of the recessions happened to be quite region specific. Bangladesh itself is likely to go through a massive downturn and already a few of the signs have been quite evident. Bangladesh has a huge reliance on remittance sent by workers living and working primarily in the Middle East and Southeast Asian countries like Malaysia and Singapore and to a lesser extent in Europe and North America.

As of last year, remittance represented about 7.0 per cent of our GDP. But as most of the countries where the Bangladeshi workers are currently working have undertaken strict lockdown measures, the remittance is expected to fall to 14 billion dollars this year which is around a 25 per cent decrease from the previous year. This is far from the only crisis that the economy of Bangladesh is facing at this moment. Bangladesh has a huge number of people living below the poverty line which is as high as 53.4 million as per BRAC and the growing GDP in the recent few years actually helped a lot of those people to move out of poverty. But as the Covid-19 crisis has made it quite impossible for the economy to grow, it's been a really hard time for people of this very socio-economic background. People having blue collar jobs are suffering the most throughout the world and the signs of an improving economy are very low. Economists have not ruled out the possibility of a depression if this very situation persists for a long time. Many economists have predicted the economic condition in the future to be as bad as the time of the great depression if not worse. The unemployment during the great depression hovered around 25 per cent in case of most of the countries and it is predicted that this time it will be even worse as the effects are quite self evident in a lot of countries. The global economy has not seen any major recession in this decade, the very last one was the recession caused by the global housing crisis during 2008-2009 but this recession has already been more devastating compared to that one. In the recession of 2009,the peak rate of unemployment that it reached was 10 per cent which was in the month of October, whereas the unemployment rate for this year's April has already been 14.7 per cent in the USA. Again, when it comes to the stock market, the highest per cent of stock value that the market lost was 40 per cent, it has already been 14 per cent in this year's February and is estimated to cross the 40 per cent range very soon. Other than this, the 2008-09 crisis was very specific to some countries of the world and didn't really have an impact on a lot of developing economies. Even a lot of developed economies like Australia didn't have to face the recession. Although the economic growth was quite slow in those countries, it never led to a downturn. But the current situation is entirely different as we can see that almost all the countries in the world have been badly affected by the pandemic. Due to the fact that it hasn't been region specific, it is supposed to wield its influence throughout the world.

The global economy is moving towards an imminent collapse and the recovery will not be easy. Many policies have been proposed by economists for a recovery but it is almost unanimously believed that the impact will be quite long-standing, hence the recovery will take a bit of time. But there still is some room for hope, as China, where the inception of the virus took place, has already started opening its factories after controlling the whole scenario to some extent. Other than this, the US stock market has experienced more growth than decline in the past few weeks which is a very positive phenomenon in the face of this recession. Scientists are working on the vaccine for Covid-19 and it has already shown positive results when applied to pigs. It is estimated that if the vaccines are successful on human beings, then the whole crisis would be tackled which will bring the economy back on track. Hence, the only hope that remains for an economic recovery is an efficient and effective handling of the whole Covid-19 crisis.

Rassiq Aziz Kabir is a student of Economics at the University of Dhaka

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Ensuing recession and major economic downturns - The Financial Express BD

We have much to do and plan for – Hillsboro Times Gazette

Two years after the collapse of the Soviet Union (1991), I had a private meeting with Mikhail Gorbachev and his wife, Raisa, in Geneva, Switzerland. It was about a communications platform that the Latin American foundation I was working for had developed for environmental non-profits. His newly established Green Cross International was interested in its novel graphic-user interface. For his pivotal role in trying to change the communist Soviet Union into a market-based social democracy, Gorbachev was both loved and hated. Perestroika (restructuring) and Glasnost (openness) were noble national ambitions, but not well enough planned for in advance.

In modern history, the dissolution of the Soviet Union was a remarkable inflection point. As pivot points go, so was the American Revolution, The Reformation, the Chinese Revolution, The Renaissance, and I would be remiss not to include Galileo, the internet, the industrial and agricultural revolutions and, of course, many more. So where am I going with this?

During periods of disruptive reformation, people often dont realize that they are in it. So, are we in such a period now? No question social media has changed the world. Even in the poorest of countries, people now have access to how the other half lives, whos doing what, and where, to say nothing of advancing people power through media activism. One of the factors that brought about the Protestant Reformation, the Renaissance, and the weakening of the Catholic Churchs dominance in Europe was the printing press. Gutenbergs printing press and the Internets worldwide communications network both provided extraordinary, new popular access to information.

Today, with a confluence of powerful movements and disruptive crises, we may well be in one of those inflection points. The novel coronavirus has knocked the socio-economic world out of kilter, damaging economies, incomes, productivity and labor. Some forms of commerce may never recover. Others will flourish in a new paradigm of things.

Socially, levels of hostility are on the rise. Layered on top of the pandemic, the Black Lives Matters movement has gained enormous traction, combined with the social justice movement to potentially create a tipping point for not only monuments, but sports teams, corporations, labor practices, public health care systems, and also the nations politics and legal system. What will our world be like when we re-emerge from a quarantined existence?

It will take a concerted effort on the part of all Americans to squelch this virus and return to any kind of dynamic equilibrium. If this past week is prologue, things could still get worse. The economy could falter further, infections could rise, more borders could close, and people could get more frustrated and agitated.

If this is a real inflection point in our countrys history, then it seems to me that while we wait for the magic bullet that ends the COVID-19 pandemic, we should be demanding that our countrys leaders plan for what we want our country to do and be when we come out of all this, and that should mean significant historic transitions.

Mr. Gorbachev had the best of intentions and his work with President Reagan to denuclearize the world was evidence of that, along with his Nobel Peace Prize. But the Soviet Union was too far gone. America isnt too far gone, but we have much to do and plan for after we emerge from this dark infectious tunnel.

Bill Sims is a Hillsboro resident, an author, and runs a small farm in Berrysville with his wife. He is a former educator, executive and foundation president.

Bill Sims Contributing columnist

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We have much to do and plan for - Hillsboro Times Gazette

Don’t Compete. Create looks at diversifying the economy – Trinidad News

FeaturesJada LoutooFriday 10 July 2020The documentary features protests from 2015, when Venezuelans living in TT protested the visit of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to Trinidad. -

IT was a five-year labour of love for a group of friends who came together to produce a two-part documentary which examines the impact of the 2014 oil crash on Venezuela and TT.

It is also hoped that the documentary, titled Dont Compete. Create, will become the impetus behind diversification of TTs economy.

The first instalment of the documentary premired in June. The second instalment is in the making and is expected to be released in early 2021.

Don't Compete. Create was written, produced and directed by Javier Forrester and is narrated by Diane Katwaroo.

Aisha Ventour is its director of photography. The friends are all part of WIERA Film Company which is 100 per cent local Forrester said in a recent interview with Newsday.

The 32-minute feature incorporates interviews from economist Dr Roger Hosein, former politician Nicole Dyer-Griffith, trade unionist David Abdulah among others who share their views on the topic highlighted in the documentary.

ADVOCACY: Javier Forrester speaks to students at MIC Institute of Technology at past symposium. -

The long description of the documentary reads: A resilient people at the base of the Antillean island chain face a growing economic storm caused by the very resource that made them a force on the world market.

During this time, a helping hand is reached out to the persevering people of neighbouring Venezuela who are in the midst of a socio-economic crisis caused by the collapse of the global oil market.

In the backdrop of this are escalating tensions between two regional powerhouses in the form of the United States and Venezuela. As Prime Minister Rowley and his Cabinet continue to forge creative and positive ways for the nation to navigate the difficult economic waters, the twin-island Republic must at the same time walk a very fine line in order to preserve peace within its corner of the Americas.

There are also scenes from Venezuela which were shot by the team during a visit to the South American country which, because of the collapse of its oil industry and economy, has left it in a humanitarian, institutional and political crisis.

The team was able to enter Venezuela with a faith-based group on a missionary trip.

When you have a crisis like this in a country, it is only these types of groups that can get into the nooks and crannies of an area to really meet those who are suffering the most, he said.

Forrester said WIERA which stands for West Indies Era Film Company aims to produce short documentaries with a regional flavour to it touching on issues relating to TT and the wider Caribbean.

He said they chose the great oil bust of 2014 which was caused by a price collapse of crude oil prices and saw supplies chasing too little demand because they wanted to highlight the dangers of competing over this volatile resource and the need for creativity in economic diversification.

DON'T COMPETE. CREATE is a two part documentary which advocates for diversification of the economy while examining the impact of the 2014 oil crash on TT and Venezuela. -

This crash led to a serious blow to our undiversified economy which depends heavily on oil and gas, he said.

The documentary features protests from 2015, when Venezuelans living in TT protested the visit of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to Trinidad.

We wanted to use something as a symbol and the protest was it, Forrester said.

Forrester said the team hopes that the documentary will bolster those in power to put diversification on the front burner. Put it there and leave it there. We cannot depend on non-renewable resources and Venezuela is a reminder of that, he added.

As a people we have become comfortable in the non-renewable sector, he said. The documentary is a blue print of sorts for handling a recession and diversification.

It features the steelpan heavily throughout and Forrester said creativity was an important aspect of TT and one which can be tapped into.

It is an example of our creativity as a people. We want for us to tap into this. We have been unable to diversify our economy and creative sector for decades.

We want to show you can join the two concepts together. Creativity can be the answer to our diversification efforts, he said.

He made it clear that the document was non-partisan and is aimed at all administrations, especially future ones.

Pointing to recent rumblings between Venezuela and the United States, Forrester said it is hoped that these could be sorted out soon.

TT is caught in the middle of this battle and it is not good for the region. Trade stability and peace in the region is important, Forrester, who is also an attorney, said.

We applaud the Prime Minister and the Government for successfully steering us through two recessions. The contribution of past Governments, particularly in creating and continuing the Heritage and Stabilisation Fund.

We believe the government has done a lot to point us to diversification. We as a people rested comfortable for six decades but now we need to push towards diversification and making it a reality. Weve had two recessions but collectively, all governments, past and present, put things in place for change to take place.

But, we have been dilly-dallying for too long. Weve enjoyed prosperity but now is the time to seriously put it on the front burner. Realise it and support it, Forrester said.

We could have been where Venezuela is now, he bemoaned.

So far the feedback from the first instalment has been positive, Forrester said.

So far the team has advertised mainly on social media and Forrester said their main audience is young people. He was happy to hear from teenagers who remarked how balanced and non-political the documentary was.

We were told it broke down the complex issue, he said.

This is what we want. We want diversification to play a greater part of the national agenda. It is our call for change because our economy is, in a great way, still undiversified, Forrester said.

The team funded the first part of the documentary out of their own pockets and hopes to get corporate sponsorship so they can complete the second part.

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Don't Compete. Create looks at diversifying the economy - Trinidad News

New Enterprise Ethereum Director Widens Tent to Include Exchanges and DeFi – CoinDesk – CoinDesk

Enterprise Ethereum Alliance (EEA), the business end of the second-largest blockchain, has appointed a new executive director, Daniel C. Burnett.

Burnett, who previously worked as a standards architect within Ethereum-focused ConsenSys, wants to widen the EEAs scope beyond banks and blue-chip stocks to include exchanges. Burnett even aims to embrace the brave new world of decentralized finance (DeFi), which has proven to be one of Ethereums major use cases.

We should be seeing the exchanges as members, we should be seeing tooling vendors as members, Burnett said in an interview. It could be something in the API that they have to use for doing trades. If you have a business and if the existence of Ethereum is important to that business, then you should be in the EEA.

Its auspicious timing for Burnetts arrival, given the public Ethereum mainnet turns five at the end of this month, and the EEA is planning a half-day seminar where its 100-plus member organization will go into more detail about its future plans. Outgoing EEA lead Ron Resnick is leaving the group to focus on the InterWork Alliance token initiative.

The EEAs new horizons were also hinted at by John Whelan, chairman of the EEA board of directors and head of digital investment banking at Banco Santander.

Its a good time to broaden the tent for all those businesses using Ethereum tech in all its various facets, whether big companies doing private permissioned, or other businesses beginning to pop up doing DeFi, Whelan said in an interview.

With $2 billion in crypto assets now committed to DeFi, the EEA could perhaps play a role in educating the traditional financial world about possible opportunities, Whelan added.

At some point [DeFi companies] will cross into the realm of mainstream finance, and it may well be that regulators would like to have a single point of contact in the business community and we could imagine the EEA growing into that kind of role as well, Whelan said.

Asked what sort of standards might be applied to the Wild West world of DeFi going forward, Burnett, a director of the IEEE Industry Standards and Technology Organization, said he wouldnt want to speculate.

Personally, I think its not my place. Its not always obvious what is useful as a standard and what is not appropriate, he said.

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

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New Enterprise Ethereum Director Widens Tent to Include Exchanges and DeFi - CoinDesk - CoinDesk

Cameron Winklevoss: Bitcoin (BTC) Has Been Hiding in Plain Sight – Ethereum World News

In brief:

The need for Bitcoin (BTC) and other digital assets has never been clearer than now as The Fed and other prominent global central banks continue on their money printing to cushion their respective economies from the effects of the Coronavirus. Keen investors have already hedged for inflation using Bitcoin (BTC) and precious metals such as Gold.

The Quantitative easing by the US Fed looks set to continue as long as President Trump is in power. Furthermore, there have been murmurs of a possible second stimulus bill by the US Congress that could run into the Trillions.

On the 9th of June, it was reported that the speaker of the US House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, was confident that Congress would pass a second stimulus bill that could run into the Trillions and higher than the May relief package of $3 Trillion.

It is with this background of a possible second stimulus bill, that the Co-Founder of the Gemini Exchange, Cameron Winklevoss, pointed out via Twitter, that the continual money printing could only be hedged by owning Bitcoin (BTC).

He also pointed out that Bitcoin has been in existence for over 10 years as he responded to a comment highlighting the fact that not too many regular investors are aware that they can hedge against inflation using Bitcoin.

One is then left with the question of why the mass adoption of Bitcoin is not at a fever pitch given the current global economic climate.

To begin with, Bitcoin has long had a bad reputation of being a Ponzi or fools gold. Even Warren Buffet once called Bitcoin rat poison square. These harsh words from a legendary investor confirm that not too many people understand the concept of digital money and/or transactions on a peer to peer level.

Secondly, owning and trading Bitcoin requires some technical know-how thus leaving the task to more tech-savvy individuals between the ages of 13 and 35. However, there is hope on the horizon as traditional institutional investors, such as Grayscale, are providing BTC based investment products. Furthermore, the recent direct endorsement of Bitcoin by Paul Tudor Jones has led to many boomers considering Bitcoin as an investment option.

Summing it up, the money printer by the Fed and other global central banks will continue to go Brrrrrr. The continual money printing is surely to cause inflation and Bitcoin will provide the perfect hedge against such a possibility.

Additionally, and as pointed out by Cameron Winklevoss, BTC has been around for over a decadehiding in plain sight. Therefore, it might not be too late to grab a few Satoshis as a hedge against the money printer continuing to go Brrr.

Disclaimer:This article is not meant to give financial advice. Any additional opinion herein is purely the authors and does not represent the opinion of EWN or any of its other writers. Please carry out your own research before investing in any of the numerous cryptocurrencies available. Thank you.

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Cameron Winklevoss: Bitcoin (BTC) Has Been Hiding in Plain Sight - Ethereum World News

Will Tezos Be the Altcoin to Unseat Ethereum on the Crypto Market? – The Daily Hodl

Ever since its then record $232-million ICO (initial coin offering) back in 2017, Tezos (XTZ) has earned a justifiable amount of buzz in the crypto world. But does the Swiss-US joint venture have legs?

First off, its important to understand what makes Tezos stand out among the thousands of cryptocurrencies on the market. XTZ utilizes a proof-of-stake based consensus model, which, unlike Bitcoin and Ethereums proof-of-work models, isnt dependent on mining for its blockchain protocol.

Instead, Tezos employs a more democratic model where all stakeholders have a hand in managing the protocol in what is known as a self-amending blockchain. One of the big takeaways from this model is that it avoids the issue of hard forking into two different blockchains. Hard forking is what caused Bitcoin Cash to break off from Bitcoin, and Ethereum to break off from Ethereum Classic.

In comprehensive terms, Tezos uses a formal, on-chain mechanism for proposing, selecting, testing, and activating protocol upgrades. It results in a uniquely formalized process, in which users have control of what happens to updates, as long as its within the Tezos protocol.

It all adds up to some exciting potential for Tezos, which has generated some major public enthusiasm and investor interest. The Bank of France is testing out a Tezos node, and a tech investment firm called Silicon Valley Coin chose Tezos (noticeably over Ethereum) to tokenize its fund.

XTZ is also making a lot of noise on the STO (security token offering) market, with global investment banks like BTG Pactual, tZERO, and Alliance Investments contributing to a reported $2.6 billion-plus in STOs deployed on the Tezos blockchain.

So, will all this buzz and heightened interest result in Tezos being the next altcoin to go boom? Or is it all just hot air? Check out eToros video to find out more about Tezos and if it has what it takes to rival Ethereum as the no. 2 cryptocurrency on the market.

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Featured Image: Shutterstock/Avesun

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Will Tezos Be the Altcoin to Unseat Ethereum on the Crypto Market? - The Daily Hodl

Why sharding wont solve all Ethereums scalability woes – Crypto News Flash

Sharding is one method that can be used to build more scalable blockchains. Amid the news of Ethereums long-anticipated ETH 2.0 upgrade, sharding now features frequently in the cryptocurrency news. However, not all sharding is created equally.

Although Ethereums sharding proposal will help to solve some of its long-standing scalability issues, its not necessarily a panacea that will bring it up to the same level of newer competitor platforms. These include Polkadot, which has developed a more flexible form of sharding that appears to put it ahead of ETH 2.0 before the upgrade is even implemented.

A standard linear blockchain such as Ethereum in its current state, or Bitcoin, operates in a way that requires every node on the network to process every single transaction in sequence. The security of blockchain derives from its decentralization. The more nodes on the network, the more decentralized the blockchain, and less likely it is that one or more malicious nodes can attack the network.

But this decentralization also creates the scalability challenge. The more nodes need to process transactions, the slower the network can become. For this reason, Ethereum is currently only able to handle about 15 transactions per second.

As a concept, sharding isnt unique to blockchain. Its been deployed in centralized systems for some time now. Essentially, its a partitioning method that can be applied to databases to enable parallel processing, and thus improving speed and efficiency.

So imagine a company has grown to the point that its customer database is so big, its slowing down the server on which it runs. The company decides to carve up the database into smaller pieces, say by geography, and store it on multiple servers to reduce the weight.

In a blockchain context, sharding becomes more challenging, because theres a need to determine which nodes confirm which transactions. Proof-of-stake lends itself better to the concept of blockchain sharding than proof-of-work, because the stake provided by any given node can be linked directly to the value of the transactions theyre allowed to validate. As such, the ETH 2.0 sharding implementation is also dependent on a move to a PoS consensus model.

We can consider a sharded blockchain as a network of multiple chains, known as shards, processing their own transactions and relying on messaging protocols to ensure overall consensus.

Both ETH 2.0 and Polkadot operate based on a central chain. ETH 2.0 runs on Beacon Chain, which communicates with shards via its own proprietary interface. All shards in Ethereum have to use this single interface to communicate with the Beacon chain.

The need to interact in a standardized way also means there are rules about how a shard chain can change state with each block added to the chain. Effectively, every shard in Ethereum has to follow the same rules for adding blocks to be able to interface with the Beacon Chain.

This type of sharding is called homogeneous sharding. You could imagine it using an analogy of the Beacon Chain as a teacher and the shards as students. The interface connectivity rules are the rules governing assignment submission. The teacher and the students can only communicate when they speak the same language. The teacher also requires that every assignment is submitted in the same format and language each time.

Polkadots central chain is called Relay Chain, and the shards are called parachains. Polkadot parachains could be application-specific or be developed for particular characteristics such as security.

Rather than its own proprietary interface, Polkadot uses standard web assembly interface, widely used by developers all over the web. So a Polkadot parachain can operate according to its own rules, providing it can submit its overall state to the Relay chain using the standard interface.

Using the teacher/student analogy again, the teacher can now accept students who speak many different languages, and they can communicate freely. Students are free to write their assignments in their own language and format, as long as they submit them on time.

The additional flexibility of heterogeneous sharding means that Polkadot can interact with chains that want to use their own finalization process, using bridge parachains. So Ethereum could connect to a bridge parachain and run on Polkadot. However, Ethereums homogeneous sharding means the compatibility doesnt work both ways.

Polkadot is already live on the first version of its mainnet, launched in May 2020, and work is now underway on the next phase. The ETH 2.0 roadmap is still yet to launch the first version, and it will be another two years or more before the project achieves full implementation.

A further challenge of Ethereums plan to implement sharding is that Ethereum is already an operational blockchain, with thousands of dApps and tokens operating on it. The ETH 2.0 upgrade is being implemented as an entirely new blockchain ecosystem using homogeneous sharding. At some point, the current Ethereum blockchain will get merged into the ETH 2.0 architecture.

This will involve a certain amount of risk for the operators of Ethereum dApps and tokens, which is already starting to become apparent. The advantage of a newer implementation such as Polkadot is that the project has been able to design its roadmap and build activities to accommodate sharding from the very beginning.

Polkadot has also developed an open-source framework called Substrate. This allows anyone to implement a parachain using an out of the box configuration, or customize particular features according to their requirements. Users can choose a programming language that suits their existing programming skills, rather than having to learn Ethereums Solidity programming language.

The Ethereum 2.0 upgrade has been a long time in the making, involving a long research phase with several delays to development. The challenge with such a long implementation period is that it allows other, more agile development teams to start scooting ahead. The risk now for Ethereum 2.0 is that it may become outdated before it even gets off the ground.

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Why sharding wont solve all Ethereums scalability woes - Crypto News Flash

Assembly passes 2nd amendment ‘sanctuary’ ordinance – kdll.org

The assembly approved an ordinance Tuesday night that reaffirms its support for Americans right to bear arms.

The ordinance repeats some of the language from the Second Amendment to the federal Constitution, which protects Americans rights to keep and bear arms. Sponsored by borough mayor Charlie Pierce and assembly members Jesse Bjorkman, Norm Blakeley and Kenn Carpenter, the main change in the ordinance is to declare the Kenai Peninsula Borough a Second Amendment Sanctuary. That term comes from a national political movement by gun advocates pushing local governments to pass laws saying they wont enforce state or federal gun laws, which gained significant attention in Virginia earlier this year.

Bjorkman said he wanted to see the ordinance passed as it was because of threats to the Second Amendment in the state. He didnt specifically list any legislation, but one introduced in 2019House Bill 62would implement a red flag law in Alaska, allowing courts to issue temporary protective orders allowing firearms to be removed from individuals who pose a threat to themselves or others.

"There are bills being filed that people would like to be passed that would remove a bit of due process, that would remove some peoples rights," he said. "Thats a fact. As people see their second amendment rights being threatened, they want to take action, and they want folks to take action at all levels of government."

Assembly member Hal Smalley and assembly president Kelly Cooper both offered amendments hedging some of the vague language, particularly on what a second amendment sanctuary is. Smalleys amendment was defeated, but Coopers ultimately passed, clarifying that the borough does not have police powers nor authority over the cities police departments nor authority to regulate firearms, and defining that the sanctuary means what is specifically outlined in the ordinance.

Smalley said hes a lifelong hunter and supports the second amendment, but is bound to anyway as a public servant.

"I do not believe and I do not see see where my second amendment rights are under any attack," he said. "Our oath of office requires us to support and defend the second amendment rights. Its required. The definition or the issue of a sanctuary city and looking at that which was sent out to us, we are not allowed to defy federal and state laws."

Cooper said she is a gun owner as well but didnt like the vagueness of the language, especially in line with the boroughs existing powersthe other examples of local governments that have passed these sanctuary laws have been cities and counties, many of which have their own police departments.

"I just think that its important that we and its responsible of us to clarify what our authority is," she said. "Yes, we do support the second amendment. No, we do not have that authority. We need to make sure people in our communities understand that so we do not have misuse or misrepresentation of the language that we pass. So I would ask for your support, and I would also ask that we encourage firearm safety training."

Written public comments were split, but the majority of comments given during the meeting Tuesday opposed the ordinance, with concerns about what would happen if the borough saw an increase in gun violence and wanted to take action. As a second-class borough, the Kenai Peninsula doesnt have police powers. A vote could change that, but voters have rejected the borough establishing police services before, such as in Nikiski in 2015.

The amended ordinance states that the assembly will oppose any laws that would unconstitutionally restrict gun ownership and, within its powers, wont use its resources to unlawfully restrict the ability to bear arms. The ordinance is uncodified, which means its not within the boroughs regular code of laws like planning, roads, et cetera.

Alaska actually already has a law that exempts certain firearms and accessories from federal legislationthe Alaska Firearms Freedom Act, signed by former governor Sean Parnell in 2010 and updated in 2013. That law states that any firearms or accessories manufactured in the state and that stay in the state are exempt from federal regulation.

Reach Elizabeth Earl at eearl@kdll.org.

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Assembly passes 2nd amendment 'sanctuary' ordinance - kdll.org

LETTER: Different view of the Second Amendment – The Daily News of Newburyport

To the editor:

This letter is in response to Daniel Dearborns letter of July 3. Mr. Dearborn states that the Second Amendment recognizes the unalienable right of the citizen to bear arms without limitation, exception, or exemption.

Really? That language does not appear in the Second Amendment but is simply Mr. Dearborns interpretation. It is ironic that later in his letter he does quote the exact language that reads, A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

Why does he ignore the language regarding a militia?

For the first 200 years of our republic, the prevailing attitude of the courts was that the Second Amendment was a collective right, belonging to state militias, as codified in United States v. Miller in 1939, and not an individual right.

It was not until 2008 in the case of District of Columbia v. Heller that the individual right to bear arms was upheld by the Supreme Court headed by Justice Roberts and passed by a conservative court by a 5-4 margin. However, even that conservative majority concluded the right to bear arms was not without limitation, contradicting Mr. Dearborn's assertion.

How did we get to this point regarding the intent of the Second Amendment? In the 1970s, special interests, including the NRA and other gun proponents, began to propagate the argument that the Second Amendment was an individual right.

Over time, these efforts have been successful in changing the views of the public, legislators and even judicial appointees. That these interests have been successful in reshaping the argument is regrettable.

In 1991, retired Supreme Court Justice Warren Burger (a conservative appointed by President Nixon) stated that the idea that the Second Amendment provided an individual right to bear arms is one of the greatest pieces of fraud I repeat the word fraud on the American public by special interest groups that I have ever seen in my lifetime.

Amen, brother.

Things have only gotten worse since then. However, with a Biden victory in November, the conservative majority on the Supreme Court can, eventually, be overturned and sanity in the form of legitimate, sensible gun control laws, based on the original intent of the Second Amendment, with limitation, exception and exemption, can become a reality.

StevenBell

Amesbury

We are making critical coverage of the coronavirus available for free. Please consider subscribing so we can continue to bring you the latest news and information on this developing story.

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LETTER: Different view of the Second Amendment - The Daily News of Newburyport

Letter to the Editor | Opinion – Moscow-Pullman Daily News

Legal action against militias

Theres a mistaken belief that the Second Amendment protects everything militia. But laws in every state make it clear that they do not. The U.S. Supreme Court underlined this in the 2008 case, Columbia v. Heller, which made it clear on one hand that gun ownership is an individual right, but on the other hand that the Second Amendment does not prevent the prohibition of private military organizations. (Drug prohibition backfired, so be careful, here.)

Armed white men have shown up at Black Lives Matter demonstrations across the Inland Northwest, including Spokane, Coeur dAlene and Sandpoint, reports columnist Shawn Vestal in the Spokesman Review (June 24). He says, All around the white rural West, armed self-appointed militia dudes have risen up in opposition to the call for civil rights and police reform around the death of George Floyd, disrupting peaceful protests, glowering at people with cardboard signs, declaring themselves defenders of America.

Property tax patriots who are directed into racist activity should be wary of their leadership.For your state, search: Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection, search private military activity is prohibited, then download the first result: Prohibiting private armies

ICAP wants officials to know they have legal authority they might not know they have to protect American freedom marchers. ICAP offers pro bono legal assistance if officials want it. And ICAP wants the public to know of these laws in case they want their leaders to use them.

Heres my ask. Next time theres a hint of militant action against a planned protest in Pullman, I ask that Mayor Glenn Johnson and Police Chief Gary Jenkins dont scare the merchants, protesters and city staff. Rather, I ask that they advise the militias that their presence would invite legal action, per Washingtons constitution and tax codes.

Originally posted here:

Letter to the Editor | Opinion - Moscow-Pullman Daily News

Pete Sessions, Rick Kennedy to face off for Texas Congressional District 17 in November election – KVUE.com

Pete Sessions and Rick Kennedy will face each other for Texas Congressional District 17 seat in the November general election.

AUSTIN, Texas Pete Sessions and Rick Kennedy won their respective July runoff elections and will face each other in the November general election, vying for the Texas Congressional District 17 seat.

Pete Sessions defeated Renee Swann in the Republican runoff, and Rick Kennedy beat David Jaramillo in the Democratic runoff.

The districts incumbent, U.S. Rep. Bill Flores a Republican chose in Sept. 2019 not to run in the 2020 election. Flores is currently serving his fifth term representing the 17th Congressional District after he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2010.

The 17th district covers part of North Austin and Pflugerville, and Waco and College Station.

A look at the Democratic candidate for Texas Congressional District 17:

According to his official campaign website, Kennedy believes healthcare should be reformed, specifically by creating a public option to achieve universal coverage.

Additionally, Kennedy said he stands for immigration reform, climate change action and making higher education more affordable. He suggested implementing a universal pre-kindergarten class and investing in vocational programs.

Kennedy released the following statement following his victory in the primary runoff election:

To the people of Congressional District TX17, thank you for this victory tonight. Im thrilled to have the honor of taking the next step in representing you in the US House.

My work starts tomorrow and so I extend this request to all citizens of this congressional district--please reach out to me with your ideas, concerns & needs. Visit rickkennedyforcongress.com for contact info.

This stance reflects the very reason the US House was established more than 230 years ago, which was revolutionary then and, I regret to say, is still revolutionary today. So Ill say it another way to be clear: I want to hear from you so I can best represent you--not the establishment, not big money, not dark money, not a particular party, not the president.

To David Jarmillo, and to primary candidate William Foster III, thank you for running principled, issues-oriented campaigns. I sincerely hope you stay in the political arena; our country needs people of your caliber & passion. Whatever you decide to do next, I wish you both the best.

We have work to do. Lets get going!

A look at the Republican candidate for Texas Congressional District 17:

Sessions is a graduate of Southwestern University who was born, raised and now lives in Waco. Sessions is a pro-life conservative who says, according to his campaign website, he is dedicated to fighting to put the Trump Public Charge Rule a rule to reduce the number of non-citizens on welfare into law. He is also a lifetime member of the Texas Rifle Association. His campaign website says Sessions is also pro-second amendment, pro-family and pro-farmer and rancher.

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Second Amendment Protects the Right to Carry Arms Outside the Home – FPC – AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

Second Amendment Protects the Right to Carry Arms Outside the Home FPC

U.S.A. -(AmmoLand.com)- Today, Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) and Firearms Policy Foundation (FPF) announced the filing of an important brief in the en banc rehearing of Young v. Hawaii in support of the right to bear arms. The brief is joined by several professors of Second Amendment law, the Cato Institute, Madison Society Foundation, California Gun Rights Foundation, Second Amendment Foundation, and Independence Institute. The brief is available online at FPCLegal.org.

The issue before the en banc Young court is whether the Second Amendment protects the right of law-abiding citizens to openly carry firearms outside the home. In 2016, an en banc panel of the Ninth Circuit held that the Second Amendment does not protect the right to carry a concealed firearm. Thus, a three-judge panel in 2018 held that the Second Amendments right to bear arms must protect the right to openly carry a firearm. An en banc panel of the court will now reconsider the open carry issue.

The Founders words and actions make indisputably clear that they intended to protect the right of law-abiding citizens to bear arms outside the home through the Second Amendment, said FPC Director of Research and brief author, Joseph Greenlee. In the brief, we articulate the founding-era understanding of the Second Amendments text, demonstrate that the right to carry arms was virtually unrestricted throughout the colonial and founding eras, provide a summary of laws mandating the carrying of arms outside of military service (for example, to attend church and to travel), and provide examples of Americas most influential founders carrying as part of their ordinary lives.

About Firearms Policy Coalition

Firearms Policy Coalition (www.firearmspolicy.org) is a 501(c)4 grassroots nonprofit organization. FPCs mission is to protect and defend constitutional rightsespecially the right to keep and bear armsadvance individual liberty, and restore freedom.

About Firearms Policy Foundation

Firearms Policy Foundation (www.firearmsfoundation.org) is a grassroots 501(c)3 nonprofit public benefit organization. FPFs mission is to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States and the Peoples rights, privileges, and immunities deeply rooted in this Nations history and traditionespecially the inalienable, fundamental, and individual right to keep and bear arms.

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Second Amendment Protects the Right to Carry Arms Outside the Home - FPC - AmmoLand Shooting Sports News

The influencers of pandemic gardening – Engadget

Espiritu is behind Epic Gardening, the hugely popular, multiplatform gardening social media presence. At age 32, the San Diego-based gardener has laid down roots in YouTube (660,000 subscribers), Instagram (221,000), TikTok (523,000), even Pinterest, and his follower count easily crests 2 million across them. Thanks to a mix of advertising revenue and brand deals -- Espiritu is the official American purveyor for Australian raised-vegetable-bed brand Birdies, for example -- Epic Gardening is his full-time job.

A cornerstone of Espiritus appeal is that hes self-taught. He first began gardening in 2011, after graduating with a business degree: He had been paying his bills through playing online poker and planted his first seeds as a hobby. By 2016, he left his role as a founding member of publishing startup Scribe Media to pursue Epic Gardening full time. His style is easygoing, knowledgeable and approachable. His recent series tackles beginner mistakes like Starting Your Garden in The Wrong Place and Planting at the Wrong Time. Hes made most of these mistakes himself.

It started when I noticed there wasnt really gardening information that speaks to an average human being, Espiritu said. Theres all of this jargon -- like deadheading your roses [pruning a dead bloom to encourage new growth] -- and we don't know what that means when we're just starting out. We need someone to speak to us in plain English, on a platform that we actually consume, not the county extension office website or a Master Gardener website. (The Master Gardener program is a national system for basic horticulture training.)

He added, Those are great sources of information, if you're already in the game -- but these people aren't in the game.

These months of sheltering in place have been boom times for urban-gardening influencers. Amateurs have flocked to the hobby, and Espiritus following has grown astronomically. It's like 150,000 in a month, Espiritu told me, of his YouTube following, and it took me five years to get my first 100,000. Hes had to post a disclaimer on his Instagram Stories, explaining hes getting too many questions, in comments and DMs, to adequately answer all of them. His blog, started in 2013, has crested 1 million views per month. When we first spoke over the phone, in late March, he was packing hundreds of signed copies of his urban-gardening book. As of mid-June, Espiritu had bought a new home, with the intention of turning it into an Instagram-worthy homestead.

This all goes back to the pandemic. While most of the panic buying is around survivalism -- toilet paper, frozen foods, canned beans -- seeds have also been selling wildly, The New York Times has reported. Though the food supply chain is stable, its difficult not to feel the nippings of anxiety when grocery shopping. In this kind of environment, the idea of producing ones own food can offer an enviable illusion of control.

The idea of farming as a respite from the hamster wheel of late-stage capitalism is hardly new. Toiling with the land can sound like liberation for a generation consigned to a nine-to-five until death -- even as that idealized version of farming is far from the truth. The fantasy plays out in games like Stardew Valley (which has sold more than 10 million copies), where you leave your big-city job to work on your grandfathers land. Ideas of agrarian self-sufficiency also litter the American imagination historically, with victory gardens -- personal gardens meant to divert stress from the agricultural system -- emerging during World War I and II.

Ive also noticed this trend anecdotally. Friends who had been disinterested in gardening have begun growing basil, mint, rosemary. During an early March trip to Target in Los Angeles, I noticed the seed display had been moved by the checkout, suggesting you might casually consider growing an entire plant the same way youd buy a last-minute pack of gum. When I returned to that Target in April, the edible side of the display had been ransacked of everything but a few potato-seed packets. The ornamental section, plied with images of beautiful flowers, was fairly untouched.

There is a bump in sales for all garden centers, seed companies and growing-related products, Brijette Romstedt, owner of San Diego Seed Company, wrote to me, due to the insecurity people are feeling due to the pandemic. There is much to be insecure about: Were relying on fashion houses and perfumers to produce PPE and hand sanitizer.

Social media presences like Epic Gardening have become vital entry points for first-timers -- many of whom are quarantined in an apartment or a parents home, have limited space to grow and have never done it before. Yet gardening influencers also present a specific irony: Tending to soil requires deep patience while social media is a factory of instant, aggressive gratification.

I just did a video about the things you can grow in under a month, though there's not that many, Espiritu said. And the questions have become a lot more basic. People are like, Why didn't my lettuce grow, why is it looking bad. I tell them, That's because it's only been alive for two weeks.

Newer urban-gardening accounts have rapidly gained followers, using the pandemic as a vehicle for growth. YouTube videos of low-effort tutorials, like regrowing green onions by sticking them in a glass of water, have gained serious traction, though some of them arent useful. Yes, you can regrow like twentysomething different types of common vegetables, Espiritu explained. But what you get is unexpected. If you're regrowing your carrot tops you don't get carrots -- you get greens, which no one's going to eat.

Growing something you can eat is more complex than admiring how quickly your green onions regenerate, especially if youre starting with a seed. Considerations include hardiness zone (climate regions where certain plants thrive), container type, pest control, to name a few. But its easier to get hooked on the beautiful gardening inspo of Instagram and other platforms, where the time between planting and harvesting appears to be just a few seconds.

Its not a fast field, Espiritu said. He had recently released a TikTok video of his five-level vertical garden of green beans and strawberries, brimming with leaves. Thats 45 days of growing.

Instagram is designed to monetize the time you spend on it, regardless of accuracy. Its easy to smash that follow and fall down a wormhole of unrealistically beautiful people, places or potatoes. My explore tab feeds me triptychs of dewy plants and dewier faces, and Im debased enough to admit it doesnt not work for me.

Nick Cutsumpas -- who competed in Netflixs The Big Flower Fight -- runs farmernicknyc, a Brooklyn-based houseplant consultant account. He says hes more invested in sustainability and agriculture but found those passions less grammable. Youve seen the people on Instagram who have these amazing homesteads, right? he explained. It only looks that way for maybe two or three months. If I took a picture of my garden in December it would get three likes, because there's nothing there.

The popularity of urban gardening during the pandemic has allowed Cutsumpas to post more agricultural content, like germinating seeds in his bedroom. (Hes also taking courses at the New York Botanical Gardens and has partnered with Greensulate, a green roof company, to convert the rooftop of a Staten Island building into a garden.)

But the majority of his content still plays to what attracts eyeballs. I hate the term influencer, Cutsumpas explained, invoking images of bikini-clad women in far-flung locales. Its a bit hypocritical when Cutsumpas also flaunts his abs in front of a plant for World Naked Gardening Day. If this is what it takes for someone to be inspired to buy more plants, eat more plants, follow my account and pick up sustainability tips, then I am 100 percent OK with that, Cutstampas said. But I get it: Instagram favors the thotty.

Contrast this with the Master Gardener program -- also known as Extension Master Gardener, or EMG. This national program was created in Washington State in 1972 to address the public lack of knowledge about gardening. The program is often tied to universities: The EMG website has every state universitys program listed. Though course load varies by state, becoming certified might require a semester of studies and some 40 hours of volunteering, along with an open-book final. The program isnt meant to confer academic mastery. Instead it gives laypeople a ground floor of horticultural knowledge and a scientific approach thats way more effective than Googling alone.

People bring in a plant sample or email a photo to the extension office Master Gardener desk, said Signe Danler, instructor of the EMG program at Oregon State University (OSU). The Master Gardeners on duty that day might say, You've got aphids, if its obvious. If it's more complicated, there's a library and lots of online resources. If necessary, they can bump it up to the university level and have a pathology test done. Under normal circumstances, Master Gardeners also run demonstration gardens and tables at farmers markets to field questions.

I was interested in gardening from a very young age, said Danler. I gardened when I was in my teens, and I started gardening in planter boxes as soon as we bought our first house, my husband and I, back in 1981. Though Danler took community college courses in horticulture in the late 80s, she waited until her youngest child was in high school before pursuing a bachelors at OSU. Thanks to encouragement from an advisor and a scholarship, Danler went on to complete her masters; OSU hired her soon after.

Over the phone, Danler cracked jokes that make starting out as a gardener feel more approachable. I emphasize with my students, expect to kill plants, Danler said. Obviously, you don't wanna kill your vegetables every year, or you don't get anything to eat. But when you've been doing it as long as I have -- Ive killed hundreds of plants. That's just part of the learning process.

Like farming influencers on Instagram, OSU has seen a recent spike in urban-gardening interest, especially after making its courses free to the public. Its urban-vegetable-gardening module had 34,000 students in mid-April -- compared to the usual size of a dozen students. Danler said that there were so many signups in the first weekend the system crashed.

Danler is suspicious of urban-gardening influencers -- or more precisely, suspicious of solutions that are peddled without scientific rigor. There are definitely people presenting themselves as authorities and handing out information thats plain wrong, Danler explained. For example, people may think, If I make a home remedy, itll be safer than something I buy at the store. But you can harm plants, you can do permanent damage to your soil, you can harm other animals.

Danler has been working hard to diversify her student base, put more of OSUs courses online and make the program more accessible. When she teaches the home horticulture certificate course, which has the same training, the same classes but doesnt require volunteer hours, she gets far more students, from more-diverse backgrounds.

Unfortunately, EMG requirements can weed out folks who might otherwise be interested. A 2016 demographic study found that Master Gardener volunteers were primarily white women educated, retired, and of economic means. Their mean age was just under 65 years old.

I took a store-bought potato -- and I knew nothing about farming potatoes -- and I just stuck it in the dirt. Fanny Liao, the gardener behind Instagram account fansinthegarden, said. It was winter time, and I didn't know that it was going to be slow-growing because there's no sun. It took about six months for that plant to grow. I thought, It's pretty, I'm going to get a pound or two of potatoes, it will be awesome. I dug it up, and I got one. It was smaller than my fist.

Liao, who is based in Los Angeles County, began gardening for the first time in December 2017 and started her account in order to photo-journal for [her] mental health. Liao knew nothing about gardening when she started, and this entry-level focus helped her reach over 11,000 followers as of July, despite having less than 5,000 followers at the start of the pandemic. She intends to keep her platform open to beginners, and with a smaller following shes less likely to get bogged down with questions.

Liao has no intentions of changing her strategy to attract more followers -- though it helps that her account already adheres to the Instagram aesthetic. Despite her story of the solitary potato, her feed boasts vibrant harvests, like a handful of radishes in an ombre from white to fuschia or carrots that look like theyre hugging. I take images that are appealing, because it shows people yes, you could grow this, Liao said. When people see it, they're like, What variety is this or How long does it take from seed to harvest?

Rather than seek formal educational programs -- or online extension courses -- Liao has relied on advice from other gardeners on social media, and a healthy dose of trial and error. She credits much of her learning to Epic Gardening, and to CaliKims YouTube and Instagram. Gardening is a never-ending learning process, Liao said. I'm not an expert in this field, so I'm going to leave it for the experts to answer the technical questions like Kevin [Espiritu] does. If you're asking me what's the ratio of soil that I need to put into the amendment? That's not something that I know.

Her success is just one example of the way Instagram has democratized access, diversifying the pool of urban-gardening educators. This pool includes Espiritu, who is half Filipino and half white, and someone like Timothy Hammond, a Black urban gardener based in Houston, Texas, who runs bigcitygardener on Instagram. He started bigcitygardener in April 2017 to try and make gardening accessible and related to everyone. Liao has become well-known enough that she inspired another Asian American woman -- Northern California-based friend Alex Hisaka, who runs forestlandfarmer -- to start her own gardening Instagram account.

I felt comfortable asking Liao novice questions like what grows fastest (lettuce and radish) and whether I can expect to grow enough basil to make pesto (Ill need to prune aggressively for basil to be bushy enough), questions asked in earnest at the end of the interview, after wed shaken off our formalities. I wanted to hear from the woman who spent six months nurturing a single potato -- so embarrassingly off target from her ambitions, comparable to the three months I spent doting over 10 basil seeds, whose yield provided me with a sprinkle of garnish for a grocery store frozen pizza rather than the pesto of my dreams.

Danler plays in a different league from the influencers -- one that takes in mind the health of the soil over time and its larger environmental impact, one a beginner might eventually aspire to.

It can be hard for experienced folks like myself to remember just how much there is to know, Danler said after I shared Espiritus videos with her. All of his information is correct. I like his low-key, straightforward style. He's addressing that level of basic knowledge, and doing it well.

Despite this gulf, when I asked her for advice for first-time gardeners, she echoed the same sentiments as every influencer I spoke to: Don't get too bogged down. Gardening should be first and foremost something that you enjoy. It should feed your soul.

This is easy to forget, thanks to the gig economy, which has recast hobbies as side hustles, narrowing their value into what can be monetized or used to build a social media audience.

But posting my own plants to Instagram has only ever offered me a cheap, momentary thrill. It is the slower, unanticipated joys of growing that have actually been nourishing: watching an orchid send out roots, seeking footholds and future lives in the humidity of the air; watching a Pilea peperomioides sprout new limbs, living up to its nickname, friendship plant, when I gift these cuttings to others. Eating my basil was a separate, individual delight from actually growing it. I checked its progress every morning like a parent marking their childs height on the door frame.

Regardless of qualification or skill, my favorite instructors have been the ones who remind me of the joys of growing for the sake of growing. TikToker Garden Marcus captures this ethos best. Watching one of his most popular videos about propagating pineapple is like taking a shot of sunlight.

The steps are simple: Cut the top off, put it in water until it sprouts roots, plant it in soil and water it. Marcus reflects on the pineapples hes rooted over the years -- this method of propagating doesnt produce new pineapples, instead the top grows more leaves -- and zooms in on a lizard that lives in one of the older bushes. He likes to feed the plant the water it was rooted in, a move with no particular utility, just a warm human impulse. And yes, he also regrows the tops of his carrots.

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The influencers of pandemic gardening - Engadget

Micronation – Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Micronations are countries started by one or a group of people which is not noticed by the United Nations. These countries are mostly used in people's heads, or on the internet.

People make micronations for lots of reasons. Some are to show they do not like their main country (for example the United Kingdom), or if they want to make money, or to use it as a place for themselves.

Here is a list of some Micronations;

Republic of Dolmatovka (2014).

Some micronations play in competitions.

The biggest football organisation for micronations is known as the MFA (Micronational Football Association), founded by Joe Foxon in 2009. It has 13 micronations from 7 countries as members. It makes a competition every 4 years called the MFA World Cup for all the micronations in the world to play in. The first World Cup will be in Southern England in 2013.

Every year there is a chess competition for micronations to play in. It is played on the computer and in the first year, 3 micronations took part.

Every year there is a singing competition called the MicroVision Song Contest. Micronations make a song and put it on the internet, and then other micronations vote for the best song. The winner then makes the next one.

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Micronation - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The albatrosses who catch pirates on the high seas – BBC News

As a result, the albatross data had unintentionally revealed the potential extent and scale of illegal fishing in the Southern Ocean.

Its difficult to imagine a human patrol boat being able to cover enough area to efficiently track illegal fisheries. But each wandering albatross could potentially cover the same area of ocean as a boat, and when its logger detects a fishing boat with its AIS turned off, it can relay that information to the authorities, who can alert nearby vessels to investigate.

Data collection on this scale would not only improve our ability to detect and manage illegal fisheries, but also to identify high risk areas for conservation. This would help conserve fish stocks, protect albatrosses and other seabirds, and manage the marine ecosystem as a whole.

As ocean sentinels, it turns out that albatrosses have a unique ability to collect the data needed for their own conservation.

--

Samantha Patrick is a senior lecturer in marine biology at the University of Liverpool.

This articleoriginally appearedon The Conversation, and is republished under a Creative Commons licence.This is also why this story does not have an estimate for its carbon emissions, as Future Planet stories usually do.

--

Join one million Future fans by liking us onFacebook, or follow us onTwitterorInstagram.

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India-China conflict: A move from the Himalayas to the high seas? – The Interpreter

Last months clash between Indian and Chinese troops in Ladakh was the most significant conflict between the two countries since 1967. Despite signs of a partial tactical pullback in some places, there is considerable risk of further confrontations and even escalation along the disputed border. Some have been urging the Indian government to respond to Chinas moves in the Himalayas by placing pressure on Beijing in the Indian Ocean. What are Indias options and how likely is it to take such actions?

The Indian Ocean holds a particular place in the India-China strategic relationship. In almost every dimension, whether it be economic, nuclear or the conventional strategic balance along the Line of Actual Control in the Himalayas, India is probably at a considerable strategic disadvantage to China. Only in the Indian Ocean, which includes Chinas vital energy routes from the Persian Gulf and Africa, does India have the upper hand.

This has important implications for the strategy dynamic. Decades ago, prominent US Sinologist John Garver argued that in the event of a conflict between the two countries, India might be tempted to escalate from the land dimension, where it may suffer reverses, to the maritime dimension, where it enjoys substantial advantages, and employ those advantages to restrict Chinas vital Indian Ocean trade.

In strategic jargon, the Indian Ocean represents interior lines for India where the Indian Navy is close to its own bases and logistics and exterior lines for China, where its navy is operating with limited logistical support, away from home. Strategists tell us that you should meet your adversary in your own interior lines and their exterior lines. (That is the reason the Indian Navy is far from keen to get into any confrontation with China in the South China Sea.)

Short of all-out war, or perhaps an Indian Ocean equivalent of the Cuban Missile crisis, any attempt to interfere with trade would be subject to massive pushback from countries around the world.

This vulnerability gives the maritime dimension of the relationship a special significance. For example, the 2012 Non-Alignment 2.0 report by leading Indian strategic thinkers advocates that India should leverage potential opportunities that flow from peninsular Indias location in the Indian Ocean as part of an asymmetric strategy towards China.

These considerations have driven the Indian Navy to adopt a strategy of building its naval capabilities near the Indian Ocean chokepoints, particularly around the Malacca Strait, to create an implicit threat of interdiction of Chinas sea lines of communication. The navy considers that its previous threats of blockade made against Pakistan in several previous conflicts had a significant impact.

Indeed, in the aftermath of the Ladakh clashes in June, the Indian Navy was placed in a heightened state of alert and reportedly deployed additional ships to sea, although it is not clear precisely where. In recent weeks, Indian naval commentators have suggested that while India would have a difficult time imposing a blockade on Chinese shipping, it should nevertheless consider interdicting Chinese tankers as they pass near Indias Andaman and Nicobar Islands, or otherwise deter, delay or divert shipping traffic to and from China.

Others have also noted the potential for Washington to move its carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt into the Malacca Straits/Bay of Bengal area to deter any serious escalation of conflict in the Himalayas. (Which, incidentally, would be an interesting replay of President John F. Kennedys decision to send the carrier USS Kitty Hawk to support India during the 1962 Sino-Indian war.)

This has not gone unnoticed in Beijing. According to Chinas Global Times, the PLA Navys Southern Theatre Command (which has responsibility for Chinas operations in the Indian Ocean) responded with naval drills in the South China Sea on 18 June.

Putting aside all this sabre-rattling, what are the realistic options for India (or others) to pressure Chinas trading routes in the Indian Ocean?

In fact, some naval analysts are deeply sceptical of the ability of any navy to impose a distant blockade of China in the Indian Ocean. Short of inspecting every ship which would be a huge task how could a blockade identify those that are actually headed to Chinese ports? What is to stop ships being rerouted in transit, a common event even in normal times? Even if a blockade could be successfully imposed, could China obtain sufficient energy supplies from other sources (which currently includes an epic 73 million barrels of oil reserves floating off the coast of China)? Just as importantly, what is to stop China retaliating with its own blockade or interdictions?

Even more important than these practical considerations, the political and diplomatic costs to India would be enormous. Short of all-out war, or perhaps an Indian Ocean equivalent of the Cuban Missile crisis, any attempt to interfere with trade would be subject to massive pushback from countries around the world including from Indias most important strategic partners.

In short, the Indian Navy might (or might not) have the capability to block Chinese trade through the Indian Ocean, but would Beijing take the threat seriously?

This article is part of a two-year project being undertaken by the National Security College on the Indian Ocean, with the support of the Department of Defence.

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India-China conflict: A move from the Himalayas to the high seas? - The Interpreter

A different Life: a West End family’s adventures on the high seas – The Westender

Living the Life

Four years ago, weekends started with coffee and breakfast at the West End markets or a walk along the river to Southbank. Three days a week I cycled over Highgate Hill to work while my partner, Justin, dropped the kiddies at childcare, on my days off I met friends in The Froggy Park or attended Toddler Storytime at the West End Library. On the surface we were the typical young family negotiating a work-life balance. We were busy and tired.

Friends would ask, Now you have kids are you going to buy a house in the suburbs? But why leave West End? We loved our community. One evening I sat on my balcony trying to feed a child in tantrum mode, to keep calm I watched the active commuters cycling home along Riverfront Drive or Brisbane Ferries shuttling workers home up river. At that moment my neighbour walked past looking up and I waved sheepishly, embarrassed by the noise. Five minutes later, the same neighbour walked through my door and joined me on my balcony with wine and bubbles, I could have cried with relief. We shared a drink and laughed ignoring the now quiet toddlers captivated by bubbles. So to answer the question about leaving West End, I answered vaguely, not just now, never elaborating. But we were planning to leave our beloved home because we had a secret: an alternative plan for our life.

Love West End, miss West End. But leave we did. Not for the burbs, but for a life unknown. We eventually told our friends that wanted to live on a sailboat. A boat? With tiny kids? Is it safe? WHY?!

In June 2016, after selling or giving away almost everything we owned, we quit our good jobs, bundled the remaining items into our car and drove south to visit family and to practice living in a small space. We borrowed my Mums caravan and went camping in a Victorian winter. Ahhh, think of the FREE TIME, I thought. Having forgotten in the euphoria of departure that looking after two toddlers in an unknown, unbounded space is a full time job. Despite spending most of our time running after toddlers, we had fun and learnt how to live together. Three months later, we felt ready to take the next step and move our family to Malaysia where we would try living on Justins parents boat.

Before the boat would be ready for us to live on, it required some work, so we found a little house on a little Island near a marina. For two months, Justin and his parents worked full time on the boat while I embraced child care. Looking after young kids alone in a foreign country was tough, I couldnt even work out how to feed us. I had no car, two toddlers and the nearest shop was 500m away. Unfortunately, not eating wasnt an option so I went shopping.

Off down the road I traipsed with toddlers in the midday heat past the rice paddies and buffalo. The shop: dark skinny aisles piled high with yet-to-be-stacked goods; the air thick with humidity and the smell of onions left too long; two toddlers playing hide and seek; and me, trying to read ingredient lists in Malaysian Bahasa. I remember the first thing I made resembling a meal chicken stir-fry with sweet soy and noodles it felt like a pivotal victory in the battle Family vs Adventure Unknown. Things got easier and there was a pool at the marina, so most afternoons we would make the 45 minute journey. The pool was our happy place, and we swam and splashed away our afternoons. One afternoon at the pool, a wonderful thing happened. Another boat child arrived. Suddenly, I wasnt the only crazy mum, I didnt feel so alone. We bonded while running after toddlers in a swimming pool and were still friends to this day. Eventually the boat was ready for us and the next big adjustment loomed boat life!

We moved onto the boat, trading rice paddies and buffalo for waves and fish and pointed the boat north toward Thailand. Justins parents planned to jump off in Phuket a week later. We swam in turquoise water, learnt to handle the boat and revelled in our new cruising life. Bliss. On the last day to Phuket we had light wind, so Justin put the engine on. Moments later the 30 year old engine turned its last. Kaput. A week into our adventure afloat it was over. Back on land, I looked for a place to live while Justin and his parents looked for a boat yard to haul out and replace the engine. Again I was alone caring for kids in a new country. Justin and his parents worked hard in the sweltering Thai heat and humidity to dismantle the boat and organise a new engine. Nothing happens quickly and a month into our Thai visa, encompassing Christmas and New Years in Phuket, we were ready to try again.

With the boat and shiny new engine back in the water, Justins parents departed. Alone now, we headed across the large bay to visit friends living an alternative life and there we spent an idyllic afternoon on a quiet beach drinking beer together. From that beach every possibility lay in front of us. But right in front of us, we could see trip boats ferrying tourists to a dazzling sandy island, and we thought, why not go there? We can go for free! The sandy island was a little exposed being almost covered at high tide, but newbie confidence had our anchor up and the next morning. As we arrived at the tiny little island, I looked windward to see a line of cloud and rain inbound. I assumed, wrongly, that we had time to drop and dig in the anchor. With the anchor barely touching the bottom, boof, the wind started pushing us toward a cliff. Newbie confidence was quickly replaced with newbie panic. Abort abort! Up came the anchor, back to our safe little beach. Lesson one in becoming-a-sailor: know your limits, assess the risks, dont be afraid to accept a lesser option. Slowly we learnt our lessons while simultaneously learning to find food in every bay and give kids daily exercise. During the evenings we poured over charts and researched places to visit. One particular island group called us further north: wild and remote with superior snorkeling. The Surin Islands were several days sail along the open coast. If we could get there, we would know we could do anything, but we had no pilot guide and little experience, still we decided to try.

We started inching our way north, stopping in manic Patong to run the gauntlet of tourists and ladyboys to buy food. We met other cruisers coming south who gave us maps and advice. We didnt realise it, but as a family sailing with young kids we stood out among the grey nomads: others were looking out for us. Along the way we found white sandy beaches shared only with seagulls. We discovered Thailand without tourists. We connected with other boat families and went to a full moon party in a bar built of flotsam. And we dropped anchor at the magical Surin Islands! We snorkelled with baby sharks, sat in the luminous aqua water and had fishes nibble at our toes, we climbed rocks and spied clown fish peeking out from anemones. We were happy drunk on life, our success and possibilities. Sadly though, the clock was ticking on our Thai visa. Good things really cannot last forever. Crash bang reality. Now we needed to make a big decision. With the wet season coming, what should we do next? We sat down late one night, looked at each other and asked the question are we ready to give this up? NO!

We began boat hunting, in the Mediterranean.

We hired a house for a month in La Coruna on the north west coast of Spain, where we spent days exploring a new culture and nights researching boats. After two months and another move to visit Justins family in Scotland, the right boat turned up in Southern France. She was a fixer upper, but affordable. Justin and his Dad flew down to have a look: she was a keeper, but required a couple of months of work before she could be launched. So, for the third time in a year, Justin was working full time on boat maintenance and I plunged back into full-time childcare. Alone, I moved myself, the kids and ALL our possessions to France, where at the end of a twelve hour day, I hired a car and learnt to drive on the other side of the road. As I crashed into a new bed that night after nearly no sleep for two days, I yearned for simple life of work, childcare and weekends. I felt alone, I speak no French and I had no internet. One night my son stopped breathing. I tried to call an ambulance, but I didnt know the number, my address, how to say respiratory distress and didnt even have phone reception anyway. Fortunately he was OK, but I was shaken to the core. Another important lesson learnt: plan for the unexpected. This wasnt the adventure I signed up for, but the boat was paid for, there was no going home now.

In the year since we left Australia, nearly half was spent on boat work. I look back on it as one of tough times, but also one of discovery, hope and optimism. The savings went down fast, but now we had our own floating home and we were the masters of our destiny! Or so we thought.

We launched Dizzie on 13 October 2017, just in time for winter storms in the Mediterranean to make sailing a potentially precarious activity. By October, holiday makers have retreated back to their colder northern homes and full time sailors retreat into a marina. So as soon as we started sailing, we stopped! We chose a marina with other boat-kids, in a little town at the bottom of Sicily. I didnt know it at the time, but it was exactly what we needed: to be surrounded by sailors more experienced, to be still and connect to a place.

The kids joined the state preschool five mornings a week where no one spoke English, Justin worked flat out on Dizzie and I embraced learning Italian.

Learning a new language was something for me, an accomplishment that I could own. Being a boat Mum, meant that everything I did was for the kids or the boat. I was used to working hard and owning the satisfaction of achievement. Now I was working hard and had nothing to show for it, it was wholly unsatisfying. Turns out this is a very common feeling among boat Mums. My confidence plummeted. All I did was cook and clean (which I wasnt doing entirely successfully). Learning to speak Italian gave me something of my own as an achievement. I needed it for self-confidence and to communicate with the preschool teachers. After six months of a delightful winter shared with wonderful families and salty sailors, we were ready FINALLY to realise our dream of sailing and living on our own boat. FINALLY, nearly two years after quitting our West End life, we were on the cusp of living our dream.

We left, said sad farewells (in broken Italian) to preschool, threw the dock lines and headed out into the open sea. Our first stop was a day trip to Malta and we had champaign sailing, but before we even had the chance to see the historic capital city bad weather chased us back to Sicily. Here we waited for better weather in a big safe harbour beside the captivating city of Siracuse. One month into the five month sailing season it felt like all we did was wait for good sailing weather, or run from bad weather. and it was still too cold to swim. I felt deflated: for more than a decade Id had a goal and now I had none. If you aim to climb a mountain, you plan, prepare, practice, you do it. You stand on the top, you raise your arms in the cold wind and cheer, you look down at where youve come from and realise an amazing achievement. There is resolution, completion, and acknowledgement. Well. we had reached our summit and there was nothing there. No-one gave me a high-5 and said, You worked hard! You made it! I looked on from my proverbial mountain and all I saw was more path, not up, not down, just onward into the mist. When I realised why I felt so down, I was able to grow past it and start enjoying life for what it was. Life is brief, the world is fascinating, and I have the front row seat to watch my kids grow. I saw the roses in the mist.

Im happy to say that since arriving in Greece two years ago, we have now found our groove. We travelled from Greece through the Med, across the Atlantic Ocean to South America and the Caribbean. Our lifestyle gives us the opportunities that other travel lacks. We rummage for the best apples with everyone else in the markets, we explore ancient ruins, but delve deeper into the issues of modern culture, we catch buses with the residents and avoid cruise ship days because we can. We boat-school in the morning and become free spirits in the afternoon. We are in tune with planetary rhythms; we eat dinner at sunset, marvel at the fish life on a new moon, feel the temperature drop before the rain comes.

Its not an easy life, but its never boring and we are living it together.

Lynita and family are currently in Martinique and will be heading south in another week or so.

All images by Lynita Howie

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A different Life: a West End family's adventures on the high seas - The Westender

Louis Vuitton Menswear is taking to the high seas for SS21 – i-D

Ever since the shadow of coronavirus first started to creep up on us during the AW20 womenswear shows in Paris and Milan, questions have proliferated on just how fashion houses could go about showing their work at this time -- packing coughing guests tight next to one another for hours on end is not, after all, a savvy move during a global pandemic.

As weve seen during this most recent couture week, the overwhelmingly favoured option for debuting collections has been the fashion film. And with the first-ever Paris Fashion Week Online kicking off today, were sure to see the mediums reign continue, for this season at least.

At Louis Vuitton, however, a quick online flick isnt all well be seeing. They are indeed part of the official Paris Fashion Week Online calendar, showing a creative film at 14:30 CEST. This is, however, simply the introduction to an itinerant series of events that will see Louis Vuittons Message in a Bottle -- the title of Virgil Ablohs SS21 collection for the house -- travel the world.

Shot at Louis Vuittons Maison de Famille at Asnires, just outside Paris, tomorrows screening will see movers packing up Louis Vuitton shipping containers and loading them onto a barge, which sails down the River Seine and leaves Paris, according to a release. It isnt just the collection that youll find on board: on it, a colourful crew of animated characters called Zoooom with friends are hiding as stowaways.

After a month at sea, the shipment will dock in Shanghai, where a full-scale Louis Vuitton SS21 Mens runway show will take place on August 6th. Later in the year, therell be a third event in Tokyo, with further possible stops on the collections world tour to be announced.

As for the collection itself, itll be an extensive offering of around 80 looks, comprising new looks made from recycled material, looks repeated from the AW20 collection, looks freely created by the studio during the lockdown using recycled material, and new looks created from existing ideas.

Louis Vuittons proposed showcasing model is certainly future-forward, capitalising on the universal accessibility of film, while quenching a thirst for live runway shows. Its also a clever move at a time when border restrictions around the world prevent the full roster of typical show attendees from descending upon the industrys traditional centres en masse. Who knows, if Louis Vuittons proposal is anything to go by, we may just be entering an era in which, rather than going to see the shows, the shows come to you.

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Louis Vuitton Menswear is taking to the high seas for SS21 - i-D

Skull & Bones Reportedly Rebooted Into an Ongoing ‘Live’ Game – Push Square

Remember Skull & Bones? Ubisoft announced a nautical open world game about pirates on the high seas, with Assassin's Creed's naval combat serving as a base for the action. It sounded like a winner, and we were pretty interested to see how it turned out. Unfortunately, the game has been delayed multiple times since its debut at E3 2017. Most recently, we heard the game will be skipping next financial year, meaning it won't release until mid-2021 at the absolute earliest.

However, the game is apparently still alive. A new report from VGC has the latest on the seafaring adventure, and it seems development veered into rocky waters. The project has reportedly been rebooted after failed attempts to make the game a "premium box" open world, akin to Far Cry or Watch Dogs.

This is according to anonymous development sources, who are also saying Skull & Bones is becoming a "live" game. As VGC writes, the title will contain a persistent world, featuring "quests, characters and storylines that will drastically evolve and change over time". Apparently, Fortnite's "live storytelling" aspects have been a big influence. It sounds like the game will end up in the same waters as Microsoft's Sea of Thieves -- a live, online multiplayer ocean full of pirates that evolves through seasonal updates.

Elisabeth Pellen, writer and director of cel-shaded shooter XIII, has taken over as creative director after Justin Farren moved to another studio.

So, Skull & Bones is still happening, but it's taking on a completely different format. Instead of a big open world blockbuster like Ubisoft's other games, it's becoming a persistent online experience. Here's hoping it's shipshape whenever it comes to shore.

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Skull & Bones Reportedly Rebooted Into an Ongoing 'Live' Game - Push Square