Indian space sector reforms: Will it be a big bang approach? – Outlook India

Indian space sector reforms: Will it be a big bang approach?

Chennai, May 19 (IANS) Space industry experts are divided over whether big-bang changes/reforms proposed in the Indian space sector are going to be incremental.

"This time, the approach is expected to be big-bang, involving restructuring of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)," an industry expert told IANS preferring anonymity.

The restructuring he speaks about is corporatisation of ISRO''s production/operational units so that the private sector can be a co-traveller in ISRO''s space missions and there is a level playing field for them.

The production units of ISRO -- rockets and satellites and the rocket launch centre at Sriharikota and the upcoming one in Tamil Nadu -- should be corporatised so that there is no conflict of interest, the expert said.

Similarly, the satellite payload and data product services too can be hived off into a company. The development of payloads can be done by technology labs, universities and the private sector, the expert added.

According to him, with the strategic space activities with Defence Research Development Organisation (DRDO), Indian space sector can fully focus on commercial aspects with a sectoral regulator.

On May 16, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced that Indian private sector will be a co-traveller in India''s space sector journey and a level-playing field will be provided for them in satellites, launches, and space-based services.

She also said a predictable policy and regulatory environment will be provided to private players.

According to her, the private sector will be allowed to use the facilities of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and other relevant assets to improve their capacities.

Sitharaman said future projects for planetary exploration, outer space travel and others are to be opened up for the private sector, adding there will be a liberal geo-spatial data policy for providing remote-sensing data to tech-entrepreneurs subject to various checks.

"The reform announced is a big bang reform. Already ISRO follows a Government-Owned-Company-Operated (GOCO) model. Many private entities are using ISRO''s facilities in SHAR in Sriharikota such as the solid propellant casting plant. These facilities can be corporatised and put under one public sector unit, New Space India Limited," Vijay Anand, former Financial Advisor, Department of Space and Former Advisor to ISRO Chairman, told IANS.

Pointing out that nearly 90 per cent of the rockets and satellites are fabricated in the private sector and given the complexity of the systems, the design authority, quality assurance, integration and mission planning are with ISRO.

"Barring quality assurance and design authority, in due course industry can form a consortium and take it over. There is such a proposal on which action has been initiated," Anand, who is currently an independent external monitor at Indian Institute of Science and Indian Rare Earth Ltd, said.

According to him, certain facilities and labs can be earmarked for testing by the private sector at a cost. Further ISRO can hand hold, review, transfer technology and others at a price.

"Products from the Indian space industry should be rated to international standards, built to specification rather than built to print and capable of capturing a part of the global market," Anand added.

On the research side, instead of ISRO sponsoring it, it is the industry that should be doing that.

According to Anand, the larger issue is creating a level playing field in the industry.

On the other hand, ISRO will be required because there are sovereign liabilities when it comes to launches, space debris and others.

"This requires a Space Act with rules there under which will prescribe the liabilities, penalties, insurance and safety standards for such activities. In order to avoid a conflict of interest, a space regulatory authority has to be created," Anand added.

India is a signatory to various outer space treaties and the sovereign liability devolves on the Government of India represented by the Department of Space.

He agreed that the strategic aspects of the space are with DRDO and occasionally they do take a launcher or get a satellite contract manufactured.

Dismissing any big bang approach of corporatisation of ISRO''s production and other units, a senior space sector official on the condition of anonymity told IANS: "Already ISRO''s facilities are being used by the private sector."

According to him, the reforms/changes that would be brought in will bring in more clarity and give comfort factors for the private sector.

While welcoming the private participation in the Indian space research activities former Chairman of ISRO Madhavan Nair had told IANS: "However we have to carefully consider some of the policy matters. First of all, there has to be our national space law which will define responsibilities and liabilities."

Nair said there has to be a proper control mechanism to ensure that the sensitive and critical technologies do not fall into the wrong hands.

"In spite of not having a viable aerospace industry in the country, ISRO has taken up initiative to ensure industrial participation in its programmes," Nair said.

According to him, space doesn''t bring large revenues or profits and that how many would take up this challenge is a question.

"Space exploration is still more complex because returns are negative and it is only a long-term investment. The implementation has to be done taking into account sensitivity to international regulations like MTCR (Missile Technology Control Regime) and international space laws," Nair said.

--IANS

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Disclaimer :- This story has not been edited by Outlook staff and is auto-generated from news agency feeds. Source: IANS

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Indian space sector reforms: Will it be a big bang approach? - Outlook India

Space Mining Market To See Strong Growth and Business Scope During 2019 to 2027 | Key Players: Deep Space Industries, Planetary Resources, SpaceFab,…

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Space Mining Market To See Strong Growth and Business Scope During 2019 to 2027 | Key Players: Deep Space Industries, Planetary Resources, SpaceFab,...

$ 260 billion will be invested in space exploration in the coming years – Checkersaga

It seems that there are no great advances, but there are always new ones. Despite the crisis we are experiencing and a certain disillusionment with how the mission to go to Mars is always postponed, the truth is that space exploration plans do not stop and for the next decade there are a good number of missions planned, in the absence of those that are added.

According to data from Aerospace News, in the last decade 52 missions have been carried out with an investment of 167,000 million dollars and, at the moment, there are plans for the next 10 years 130 space exploration missions with a budget of $ 260 billion.

In the data used in the study carried out by Euroconsult, growth is expected to be continuous from year to year with the aim of increase exploration, but also improve orbital infrastructure.

The ties that have brought Space X and NASA together can be a good example of how this sector in which the alliances between the private and the public seem more promising than ever. The benefits of research and service optimization are at the forefront and can be the way to make a profitable area that sometimes does not find all the public funding it seeks.

Further, the hegemony experienced by the United States is losing distance and countries like China, Russia and India are constantly increasing its budget with the idea of also strengthening its image at the international level and presence.

Will the human being return to the Moon or will Mars step on it? It is difficult to figure out what will happen in the next 10 years, but it is clear that the increase in missions and budget ensures a good number of discoveries.

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$ 260 billion will be invested in space exploration in the coming years - Checkersaga

Behind the HYPE: How Hasselblad Became the Camera for Space Exploration – HYPEBEAST

Founded and based in Gothenburg, Sweden, Hasselblad produces some of the worlds most lauded cameras. Used for purposes as far-flung as Karl Lagerfelds Chanel photoshoots and photographing Apollo 11s moon landing, the Hasselblad name instantly evokes images of premium quality, pristine visuals and appealing design. But how did a once-humble Swedish camera company stake out such a lofty place in the world of photography over the last 80 years? How do cameras that cost up to $47,000 USD find favor in an era where everyones a photographer thanks to the ever-increasing potency of smartphone cameras?

From a design standpoint, the brands cameras are beautifully compact and boxy. One of their main differentiators from other manufacturers is the viewfinder, which faces from the top down instead of towards the subject. When you use a Hasselblad, youre looking down rather than looking at the person. It slows everything down, and gives [the photographer] that extra breathing room says Hasselblad photographer Janet Beckman. Tyler Shields seconds Beckmans statements, saying Theres something tangible to the picture, and when you print [the pictures], thats when you see a whole other level to it.

Although Hasselblad was originally established in 1841 and formed its photography division in partnership with Eastman Kodak in the late 1890s, its rise to mainstream prominence started with 1948s 1600F, the worlds first SLR in medium format. Later, Hasselblads 500C line still its most iconic products debuted in 1957. However, the companys defining moment was in 1969, when American astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins Apollo 11 spacecraft was the first to touch down on the moons surface. A 500C accompanied the three astronauts to their otherworldly destination, and captured some of the most iconic photos of the 20th century. This was a byproduct of Hasselblads partnership with NASA, which began in 1962, and aimed to produce lighter, durable cameras that would perform in the uncertain environment of outer space. Back on Earth, the 500C was used to photograph everyone from Jimi Hendrix to the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin.

Later, in the 90s, Hasselblad made history once again with its X-Pan, developed in partnership with Fujifilm. Although it was a standard 35mm camera, it featured the awe-inspiring ability to produced a 65mm panorama photo, nearly twice its size. Moving on to 2016, Hasselblad made history with the X1D the first-ever mirrorless medium format camera. This was followed by the H6D400C, the aforementioned $47,000 USD model. Boasting technical features like a dynamic range of 15 stops for unparalleled agility and unreal quality, the H6D400C makes a strong argument as the finest camera on the market today, and secures Hasselblads position as a paradigm of photographic innovation.

Watch the video above to learn everything you need to know about Hasselblad, and be sure to check out the other videos in our Behind the HYPEseries.

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Behind the HYPE: How Hasselblad Became the Camera for Space Exploration - HYPEBEAST

Google Meet, GoToMeeting, and other Zoom alternatives in video conferencing apps – YourStory

With remote working becoming the new normal due to the coronavirus outbreak, video conferencing and virtual collaboration applications have witnessed exponential growth in the last few months.

Zooms rise is well documented by now. The Silicon Valley startup has become the default virtual meeting platform, earning the label of King of the Quarantine Economy from AdWeek. Its users have grown 30x since the COVID-19 outbreak.

But there are newer applications and tools being rolled out each day. There is consolidation happening as well. Also, several pre-existing cloud conferencing platforms are ramping up their offerings to make the most of the current demand.

YourStory drew up a list of some useful virtual meeting apps that go beyond Zoom.

Until recently, Googles premium video conferencing product Meet was available to G-Suite users only. It meant that only paying customers could start meetings, but anyone could join one.

The internet giant has also re-engineered Meet to make it more secure, easy to access, and reliable. So, anyone can log in to the app with their Gmail account or evenuse Meet directly inside Gmail.

Google claims that since Meet became free in March, its users have increased 30x and three billion minutes of video meetings are being conducted daily.

GoToMeeting has been one of the most-searched meeting tools since the lockdown. Searches in India grew 173 percent in April, reveals online search tracker SEMRush.

The app has been built by Boston-based SaaS startup LogMeIn. It launched in 2016, and has racked up more than five million downloads on Google Play Store.

GoToMeeting also offers features like calendar sync across devices, full band VoIP audio or phone call, screen sharing, hand-off presentation controls for other attendees to view, meeting alerts, and live chats with individual attendees or all participants.

Airmeet is a homegrown virtual meeting and online event platform. The Bengaluru-based startup recently raised $3 million in funding to push its offerings in the aftermath of the pandemic that forced widespread event cancellations.

Community managers can publish their event details online, manage registrations, and go live from the event through a single interface, without any additional downloads. Users can organise or join meetings on Airmeet through a browser link.

Jitsi Meet is a free, open source, and fully encrypted video conferencing solution. You can host and join meetings even without an account. It offers unlimited meeting minutes, participants, and conferences. Jitsi Meet can also be added to Slack channels.

It has high quality audio and video along with live chat and screen sharing features. You can install the Jitsi Chrome extension to log in to meetings from a browser too.

Jitsi Meet also provides Google Calendar and Office 365 integrations too, which lets you sync meeting invites, schedules, and reminders across devices.

MeetFox is a web-based video solution with integrated scheduling and payment features. It is tailored for 1:1 online meetings between businesses and clients.

Clients who want to meet with business owners can auto-fill their calendars directly. MeetFox also enables service providers to generate instant invoices and receive quick payments by reducing paperwork.

Businesses can also convert website visitors into new clients by adding a MeetFox booking button or a pop-up to their website, social media or email signature.

Reliances JioMeet is an HD video conferencing tool for mobiles and tablets. The app launched in 2018, but an upgraded version was rolled out in March 2020 to capitalise on the growing demand for e-meeting apps.

Users can answer calls in audio or video mode or toggle between modes. The call host has the option to manage participant audio and video feeds using host controls.

They can also selectively disconnect participants or end the entire meeting. JioMeet also provides conference history, and all the meetings are PIN protected.

Chinese internet giant Tencent is the latest to join the virtual meeting bandwagon. It recently launched VooV Meeting, a cloud-based remote conferencing tool for businesses. Conferencing is free for up to 300 members; charges apply post that.

Attendees can host or join meetings with ease anytime, anywhere. The tool is available across iOS, Android, Windows, and MacOS.

Like most remote collaboration tools, VooV Meeting enables real-time screen sharing, instant text messaging, live discussions, HD session recordings, and more.

(Edited by Teja Lele Desai)

How has the coronavirus outbreak disrupted your life? And how are you dealing with it? Write to us or send us a video with subject line 'Coronavirus Disruption' to editorial@yourstory.com

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Google Meet, GoToMeeting, and other Zoom alternatives in video conferencing apps - YourStory

How to use Jitsi Meet, an open source Zoom alternative

So you're sick of Zoom.

Maybe it's the privacy issues, the security issues, or just the whole misrepresenting its encryption thing. Regardless of the specific reason, you know that there has to be a better video-conferencing tool out there, and you're determined to find it. Enter Jitsi Meet.

Much like Zoom, the free and open-source video-chat tool is easy to use and requires little-to-no onboarding. It's also encrypted, and doesn't sell your data. As an added bonus, you don't need an account and you don't need to download anything to start or join a meeting. Oh yeah, and it supports tile view.

Here's what you need to get started.

Starting a call couldn't be easier. To begin, head to the Jitsi call page. Once there, under the "start a new meeting" text, enter your desired meeting name. A quick note here: Make your meeting name unique enough that it will not already be in use (think "FriendsMeetingForBeers482020" instead of "beers"). Then click "Go."

That's it. You've started the call.

However, there is one super important detail you must still do: add a password to the call. This is a straightforward step, and prevents unwanted zoombombers from crashing your call. To add a password right after you've started the call click the "i" icon in the bottom-right corner of the screen.

Add that password.

Image: screenshot / jitsi

Select "add password," and then enter your desired password in the blank field (please do not use "password" as your password). Press enter, and your Jitsi call is now password protected.

Because a video call isn't a video call without other participants, you need to invite them to join you. Jitsi makes this process as easy as sending your friends the meeting URL.

So, in the case of the above example, you would send your friends https://meet.jit.si/FriendsMeetingForBeers482020. You can email, text, or Signal it to them. Also let them know the meeting password.

Then, all your friends have to do is drop that link into their browser of choice (Jitsi recommends Chrome, but in my experience Firefox works just fine), enter the password, and they're good to go.

Protection is sexy.

Image: screenshot / jitsi

As of last month, Jitsi could support up to 75 different callers at the same time. And, unlike Zoom, there is no time limit for calls. So get the entire family on and chat away for hours.

Jitsi offers a host of features that compete directly with paid video-conferencing tools. For starters, you can screen share, record meetings, and switch to tile view.

To switch the call to tile view, once the call has started click the four little boxes in the bottom-right corner. To switch back, click it again.

See it over there? ->

Image: screenshot / jitsi

Jitsi lets you automatically blur your background. This is a neat tool that comes in handy for everything from hiding the fact that you didn't clean your room from your mom to obscuring details of your apartment to strangers.

To enable the blur, select the three vertical dots in the bottom-right corner of your screen. Next, select "blur my background."

Blur baby, blur.

Image: Screenshot / jitsi

To turn this off, hit "disable background blur."

Let's say you want to record a call. Maybe you're preforming an original song for a digital talent show, and you want to be able to look back on it once you've broken free from quarantine to remind yourself that this wasn't a fever dream.

You're in luck! While you need a DropBox account for the next part (you can sign up for a free, "basic" account), Jitsi makes this super easy to pull off. To start a screen recording, once again hit those three vertical dots and then select "start recording." Next, link your Dropbox account to the Jitsi call, and you're good to go.

Sharing a YouTube video with the call is even easier, as there are no accounts of any kind required. After clicking the three dots again, select "share a YouTube video" and then paste the link into the provided field. Click "share" and your fellow callers will see the video right along with you.

We all know that video calls can be awkward, as people tend to speak over each other by mistake. Jitsi offers a fun solution with its "raise / lower your hand" tool.

If you click the hand icon in the bottom-left corner, other call participants will see a tiny hand icon pop up in the upper-left corner of your video. That way, your fellow callers will know that you have something important to say.

Hi! Pick me!

Image: screenshot / jitsi

Perhaps you want share a thought with everyone, but don't want to interrupt to conversation. That's where the chat box comes in. Just to the right of the hand icon, the chat icon opens up a text-based chat box. Chose a name for yourself, type in your message, and hit enter. That's all.

Oh, and because we can't emphasize it enough, please remember to set a password on your call. The fact that you can create your own Jitsi URL is a fun thing that makes meetings easier to share. However, it also makes it easier for randos to guess the URL. A password shuts this down.

Using Jitsi is incredibly easy. Its host of features make it feel like a real competitor to Zoom, and it's free without any call time limits. So the next time your sheltering-in-place friends suggest a video call, send them a Jitsi link. You'll never look back.

WATCH: Zooms newfound popularity is being exploited by hackers during coronavirus pandemic

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How to use Jitsi Meet, an open source Zoom alternative

The world of digital in uncertain times – Bizcommunity.com

With few warning signs, and in a mind-bending and staggering short space of time, the human species, in a fight for survival, has been jolted into a state of isolation and social distancing.

In this article, we will explore some of the digital marketing trends we are learning from other countries and how we should be communicating to maintain brand presence during this period of business unusual.

This hunger for information (and even misinformation at times) has brought on the sharp emergence of video conferencing apps. Facebook has launched Messenger Rooms. We have seen the meteoric rise of Zoom, although questions are being asked around possible security and privacy concerns. Others emerging in the wake of Zoom include, Skype Meet Now, Cisco Webex, Starleaf, Jitsi Meetand yes, Google Hangouts is still around.

Consumer behaviour has also changed rapidly. We are excessively consuming more digital content, all of the time. From streaming services to social media, digital is the new normal as to how we keep in touch and stay informed.

Craig Mawdsley, joint chief strategy officer at AMV BBDO, shared some wise words in a recent article published for Think with Google -

Could we see the emergence of key opinion leaders (KOL) in the future of travel marketing? These are not influencers the likes of Kardashians or Hollywood stars (who influence only in the digital world) but rather thought leaders in a specific area that people trust (inside and outside the world of digital).

Through this power of influence, we are able to deliver on the three Rs of influence marketing - reach, relevance and resonance. Targeted messages to selected audiences, in a tone that is engaging and memorable, leaving a brand mark for the time when we can all travel again.

Some top travel KOLs include Murad Osmann, who has 4.1 million Instagram followers, and The Bucket List Family with 1.7 million Instagram followers. When it comes to industry executives or thought leaders, travel KOLs include Chip Conley, who founded Joie de Vivre Hospitality, a hotel and restaurant company. - Izea Influencer Marketing

Although tourism is one of the hardest-hit sectors in this time of isolation, online marketing, and maintaining a digital brand presence for future clients, is crucial for the long term survival of any travel-related brand.

As the world is turning to digital platforms to stay informed and connected, so should our marketing efforts be focussed on digital marketing to maintain brand awareness for when we can all travel again. Here are some of our recommendations

Start planning now for recovery. Keep investing in marketing.

For now. Stay home. Stay safe. Stay connected.

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The world of digital in uncertain times - Bizcommunity.com

this is how the Facebook alternative to Zoom and Meet works with video calls of up to 50 people – Explica

Facebook has announced the availability for all users of Messenger Rooms, its alternative to group video calls from Zoom, Google Meet and others like Jitsi Meet or HouseParty. The particularity of Messenger Rooms is that will allow video calls of up to 50 people, in which you will not need to have the application installed on PCs and smartphones (except in the case of who creates the call).

In addition, as we have already been able to prove, Messenger Rooms does not require callers to have a Facebook account. They will only have to receive an invitation link on the smartphone or computer and enter a name with which to appear on the call.

It is something important, because installing and logging in is usually one of the causes of so many headaches in many services, and here Facebook has made it very simple.

Create a room (translation of room) in Messenger Rooms it is very simple wherever we want to start the video call. We can do it from the Facebook desktop website, in the Messenger application in Windows, macOS, Android and iOS and from the Messenger website. In all this, and when accepting invitations to enter the video call, Keep in mind that Safari is not valid in macOS, and Chrome is not valid in iOS. On desktop, the feature is only supported by Chromium browsers at this time.

To start a room / video call from the Facebook desktop website (old interface) we will have to go to the chat part (bottom right of the window), where we will find a camera symbol with a +, called Create room, as we see in the image.

You may ask us to log in again, because what the browser does is open a session in Messenger. After starting it, we will appear alone in the call. To add participants, we will have to press the second icon, See participants in the video call. From there we can copy the link, and block the room to not add more participants.

Once we have copied the link, The person we send it to and opens it will see an interface like this one in the image below, where they will not be required to have a Facebook account to join. Only his name, which may be fictitious.

It should be mentioned that the image and sound quality is acceptable, although for example it does not cancel noise as well as Zoom nor does it have Meet video quality. Options like screen sharing work very well. From the Messenger desktop application the process is very similar.

Once we create the room (for what a Facebook user is needed), the interface is similar to the one created from the web. To share the link, you need to press the option See participants in the video call. Obtaining the link should be easier and more intuitive, as we will see that it is on the smartphone, since there is a large blue button with great prominence once we start the room.

To start the process from the mobile, the only option we have seen for the moment is from the Messenger app. The Facebook application in principle is also capable of doing this, but the function is only available in the United States.

Unlike what happens on the desktop, on smartphones at the moment we can not share screen, something that would be really useful these days of confinement to help older people to learn about the functions of their smartphone or to solve problems with their equipment.

In general, in the absence of problems of being available to all users in all versions, Messenger Rooms seems like a great alternative to everything we knew. You will not have a host problem when you are on the platforms you are on, and above all, you can see its use very much when integrating with WhatsApp, as is already being seen in the beta version of the latter.

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this is how the Facebook alternative to Zoom and Meet works with video calls of up to 50 people - Explica

The African Utopia at the End of the COVID-19 Tunnel – Africanews English

In 1990, when Cameroon's football team did the unthinkable and beat Argentina in the World Cup, the proportion of the world's population living below the poverty line was 37.1 per cent. Fast-forward 35 years later to 2015, following a global adoption of the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), this figure now stands at 9.6%.

The concept of a universal benevolent dictator a classic assumption in beginner economic courses to escape the complexities of real-world decision-making such a person would no doubt have said The world is doing infinitely better!

But on the contrary, the world has not been doing as well as it should. The fact is, there have been warning signs all along.

The proportion of people living below the poverty line in sub-Saharan Africa in 2015 was an astonishing 41%, about the same as the global rate of extreme poverty in 1981.

On October 17, 2018, the then President of the World Bank Group, Jim Yong Kim, presented a report titled Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2018: Piecing together the Poverty Puzzle. With rigorous data but in a simple and direct way, the report clearly indicated that global conditions were not in place to bring the rate of extreme poverty below 3%by 2030.

The most alarming case in point was, where even in the most optimistic of scenarios, the poverty rate would continue to be in double digits.

The report was a pitcher of cold water in my state of mind. But it was not the first time Jim Yong Kim had jolted me. A few years earlier in 2015, in Lima, Peru, at the Annual Meetings of the IMF and the World Bank, during a panel moderated by Femi Oke, the British journalist of Yoruba descent, Jim Yong Kims projections caught my attention. In attendance were Peruvian President Ollanta Moises Humala Tasso; Ban Ki-Moon, UN Secretary General; Christine Lagarde, IMF Managing Director; and Justine Greening, UK Secretary of State for International Development. For 90-minutes, they spoke eloquently about the type of partnerships that would be needed to make Agenda 2030 a reality; the international cooperation that would be deployed; the necessary financing mechanisms and formulas; and the creativity and citizen action required.

Gathered in this august venue, the guardians of the global architecture responsible for eradicating poverty spoke convincingly and articulately about the world of tomorrow. Collectively, they concluded that by 2030, we would end up, to quote Oscar Wilde, in a country called Utopia. The Road to Lima was a party.

But barely three years later as 2018 dawned, the same global architecture presented us with a new story: The end of Utopia.

In December 2019, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched its Human Development Report titled Beyond Income, Beyond Averages, Beyond the Present: Human Development Inequalities in the 21st Century. As with the World Bank, the conclusion was straightforward and clear: While humanity is progressing, something is just not working in our globalized society. A new generation of inequalities, beyond basic capabilities, is emerging and threatens to render people living in developing countries obsolete in the future.

Combining the alarming 2018 World Bank report with the no less alarming 2019 UNDP report, the picture is not one of optimism: not only was the aspiration to eradicate poverty by 2030 not going to be met, but a new inequality gap was opening up as well.

These challenges had previously been the focus of the World Economic Forum Regional Strategy Group (WEF RSG), of which I had had the privilege of being a member.

One of the ideas behind the WEF RSG was very simple and irrefutable: Africa must leapfrog into the Fourth Industrial Revolution or risk being left behind inexorably.

In 2019 as well as in previous years, several countries, including Equatorial Guinea, my country, made important policy decisions to define and prioritize national development aspirations in alignment with the UN's Agenda 2030 and the African Union's Agenda 2063. Additionally, to take advantage of the Fourth Industrial Revolution we scaled up our investments in ICT and technology and in developing the capacity of our youth. And then, COVID19 arrived!

In just a few short months the world has changed. When we return to normal, it will be a new normality and a brave new world.

COVID19 is an existential crisis. It is severely testing Africa's social, economic and political resilience. In a post-COVID19 world, the continent's leaders will therefore have to rethink many prior assumptions and find new balances for individual and collective behavior.

What I am absolutely certain of is that opportunities will emerge. Innovative minds previously imprisoned by institutional inertia and interest groupswill rise to the challenges that we collectively face.

What will the brave new world post-COVID19 look like in Africa? The African Development Bank estimates that Africa will lose between 35 and 100 billion dollars due to the fall in raw material prices caused by the pandemic. The World Economic Forum estimates that global losses for the continent will be in the order of $275 billion.

There is a real risk therefore that Africas inequality gap will worsen in the coming years.

Ever since the virus crossed the continent's borders, regular bilateral and multilateral consultations among African finance ministers have philosophically revolved around the need to rethink our multifaceted responses to COVID19 and other future threats that have equal or greater potential for disruption.

Today, African States are developing strategic and in-depth approaches to human development, regional integration, digitalization, industrialization, economic diversification, fiscal and monetary policies, and international solidarity. In short, they are rethinking the causes of the continent's underdevelopment and coming up with feasible solutions. The outcomes will undoubtedly be good for Africa and for all humanity.

To better understand the scenarios before us, there are three sparks that could light a flame in the brave new world that is before us:

This last note has triggered another debate: the necessary industrialization of Africa, to transform and add value to the continent's vast and valuable raw materials.

Many African countries have already been deprived access to COVID19 essentials. Excessive global demand has relegated Africa to the

But there is much reason for optimism. African leaders recently lauded artemisia annua tonic that Andry Rajoelina, President of Madagascar, presented to the world as Africas solution to COVID19 .

Our enthusiasm as Africans, is rooted in wounded self-esteem. For way too long, we have been victims of marginalization. The power to regain our dignity has too often been stripped away. Today, nestled in the souls of all Africans is an unshakable faith that the most important resource that Africa needs in order to rise up, is none other than Africans themselves.

No one will help us if we do not help ourselves. Africa is no longer asking to be taught how to fish. Africa is already rowing towards the utopia enunciated in the UNs Sustainable Development Goals and the Africa Union's Agenda 2063.

In spite of dire predictions and narratives, humanity always has a way of ending up in that country called utopia. Africa is humanity.

*Cesar A. Mba ABOGO is the Minister of Finance, Economy and Planning of Equatorial Guinea and Member of the Regional Action Group for Africa of the World Economic Forum.

Africanews provides content from APO Group as a service to its readers, but does not edit the articles it publishes.

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The African Utopia at the End of the COVID-19 Tunnel - Africanews English

Documentary Spaceship Earth resurrects stranger-than-fiction story of utopian Biosphere 2 experiment – ABC News

If you thought spending a month indoors binge-watching Netflix and ordering delivery was some sort of gruelling quarantine ordeal, imagine being sealed inside a giant glass terrarium in the Arizona desert with seven other people for two years, all while operating a self-sufficient farming project and managing a working replica of the Earths ecosystem.

That's just what happened back in September 1991, as a group of researchers set out to inhabit a project called Biosphere 2 a self-contained structure of glass Aztec-style pyramids and sci-fi domes that housed an ecological experiment to test the potential sustainability of life on other planets.

It was the mother of all iso projects, a utopian vision that seemed as such visions often do like a combination of wild-eyed scientific endeavour and idealistic, otherworldly cult.

This unusual episode of relatively forgotten pop culture history is captured in the new documentary Spaceship Earth (named for the phrase popularised by futurist Buckminster Fuller, a key inspiration for the project), which uses a wealth of archival footage and new interviews with the "biospherians" to tell a story of technology, art and environmentalism working in inspired synchronicity until their eventual unravelling at the hands of utopia's great foe, humanity itself.

Director Matt Wolf is drawn to eccentrics that tend toward (sometimes unlikely) genius, as evidenced in Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell (2008), a tribute to the late experimental pop musician, or Recorder: The Marion Stokes Project (2019), which chronicled how one woman's 30-year obsession with videotaping television led to her becoming a key custodian of the late 20th-century news cycle.

In Spaceship Earth, he finds perhaps the perfect subject for his fascination: visionary experimenters whose futurism had roots in the counterculture, theatre and the arts.

Of course, to an outside world fed by the prejudices of mass media, it had all the trappings of a potential cult.

From the film's opening shots of the biospherians in their quasi-futuristic attire looking less like intrepid explorers than the hapless henchman of some 90s-kids-TV villain through the early sequences locating the project's hippy-adjacent genesis in late 60s San Francisco, it's tempting to draw an easy thread connecting spaced-out, self-proclaimed visionaries and apocalyptic cult delusion.

But as Spaceship Earth demonstrates early on, this was a movement that took countercultural ideas and pushed them towards tangible progress, conceiving of projects that were committed to transforming humanity's vision for the future.

The group coalesced around John Allen, a systems ecologist who was less a guru than a kind of visionary frontiersman, closer to a fedora-hatted traveller from a Philip K Dick novel than some be-robed charlatan of the type that the counterculture specialised in cranking out.

Allen's Synergia Ranch and its Theater of All Possibilities attracted like-minded artists and futurists, whose energy soon focused on what they saw as the impending ecological disaster facing a resource-depleted planet.

The movement's peculiar combination of theatre sports and scientific entrepreneurship might scan as a precursor to 21st-century tech company culture, but seen here in grainy, hand-held 16mm footage, it's as though the troupe from Jacques Rivette's Out 1 were training for space colonisation images that Wolf splices together to resemble dispatches from an alternate history of a better future.

Allen and his colleagues speak with admiration for Douglas Trumbull's Silent Running (1972), another radical, post-60s sci-fi imagining in which Bruce Dern communes with plants inside a biodome cruising into deep space.

But as the group's finance VP Marie Harding is quick to point out, the Theater of All Possibilities wasn't a commune but a corporation.

Bankrolled in part by billionaire Texas oil scion and eco-sympathiser Ed Bass, the group took a necessarily capitalist approach to funding their designs, and as the 80s wore on, with its high tech advances in space travel and boom economy, their plans would come to encompass a vision for developing extraterrestrial colonies in space an eco utopia that seemed to herald the best of what business, technology and ecology could achieve in tandem.

Under the imprimatur of Space Biosphere Ventures, the team set about construction of Biosphere 2 on land in Oracle, Arizona between 1987 and 1991 at a cost of some $150 million and curiosity surrounding the project would turn its launch into a national media event.

It even had in one of the film's more surreal interludes a Golden Girl, Rue McClanahan, introducing it to viewers at home.

Wolf, as he loves to do, conjures this expectant atmosphere with so much gloriously bled-out analogue video footage, overlaid with the familiar yapping of 90s media pundits that would almost feel nostalgic if it werent tainted by the ghosts of early 24-hour news cycle sensationalism.

As he proved in Recorder and his underseen youth chronicle Teenage (2014), Wolf is attentive to the aesthetics of cultural ephemera, pausing to linger on peripheral fashion, the occult-like vector graphics of current affairs broadcasts, or showing a group of black kids in Afro-centric t-shirts wondering why the biodome containing a self-proclaimed "ethnically diverse" group didn't have any provision for "brothers in space".

In these heady moments, Spaceship Earth recalls the anticipatory montages of last year's wondrous Apollo 11 just with more acid wash and hypercolour.

Meanwhile, sequences showing the early stages of life inside the biosphere the farming, the oceanic aquarium, the far-flung technology of video calls connecting occupants to the outside are set to the appropriate strains of Talking Heads' This Must Be the Place, aligning the biospherians with another eccentric American utopian, David Byrne.

But as with all dreams,reality, and human pettiness, inevitably intrudes. (It's telling that no-one interviewed seems to recall the bummer ending to Silent Running.)

"It won't work," says one random bystander interviewed for a TV vox pop. "People are too mean."

While the media do their bit to dismiss the project as "eco entertainment" at best, and a cult at worst, problems with rising carbon dioxide levels, issues with public transparency and inter-project bickering conspire to give the naysayers the fuel they need, and Biosphere 2 gradually turns into a proto reality-TV house with outside observers wondering wholl last the duration inside.

By the time the eight biospherians emerge from their terrarium, it's a different world one in which their vision has been called into question, and a Goldman Sachs banker by the name of Steve Bannon has been put in charge of administering the project, with a view to turning short-term profits.

It's a depressing moment, for sure, but the project has something approaching a hopeful ending, as many of the original members convene on the Synergia Ranch looking for all intents like the cast of Cocoon awaiting their benign alien transport or at least for SpaceX to give them a well-earned ride to the stars.

It may have been a flawed experiment, even a visionary folly, but as Allen says at one point, "it's all theatre".

Spaceship Earth is screening on DocPlay, which offers a 30-day free trial.

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Documentary Spaceship Earth resurrects stranger-than-fiction story of utopian Biosphere 2 experiment - ABC News

Drive-In Concerts Are A Thing In New Hampshire, How About CT? – i95rock.com

As venues continue to find workarounds to allow a safe space for entertainment, the concept of Drive-In concerts is gaining traction.

The first Drive-In concert was in Denmark at the beginning of the month.and sold out 500 cars worth of space in minutes. Now, a New Hampshire concert venue has taken the concept to the U.S. The Tupelo Music Hall in Derry, NH has announced a series of drive-in concerts. Their first concerts happened over the weekend with Country artist Jimmy Lehoux, and they also sold out both shows. Future shows at the New Hampshire venue include some friends of ours, like former Utopia bassist and solo artist Kasim Sultan, guitarist Gary Hoey, and Beatles-inspired power pop band The Weeklings.

The way it works is that your $75 ticket gets you two parking spaces, one for your car and one for the adjacent space to allow for social distancing. It is not intended for tailgating or mingling, and walking around to visit friends is discouraged. The venue's liquor license does not allow for outside sales and you can't bring your own booze either. Lower cars will be parked in the front rows and bigger vehicles in the back to attempt to give everyone a decent view. There is a big PA set up and the shows are also broadcast to your car on a low-powered FM signal.

If Drive-through concerts were to happen in Connecticut, would you go? I think I would, at least once to check it out. Obviously you would need a venue with a giant parking lot and understanding neighbors. But the New Hampshire venue seems to have come up with a well-thought out plan that allows music fans to get back to seeing live music.

See the article here:

Drive-In Concerts Are A Thing In New Hampshire, How About CT? - i95rock.com

Literature and Epidemics: In Death, Some Geniuses Sang of Life – The Citizen

On a moonless dark night in ancient Mathura, the ascetic Upagupta sleeping in a garden grounds woke suddenly to the rhythm of anklets and the rude light of a lamp focused on his face.

It was the enchanting Vasavdatta famous courtesan of the Kingdom of Mathura. Walking through the garden on her way to a tryst, she was attracted by Upaguptas handsomeness and requests him to come to her house.

She tells him this hard ground is not the place for him to sleep. The Buddhist monk replies that when the time comes, he will come to her himself.

This is the opening of the poem Abhisaar (journey to a tryst) by Rabindranath Tagore. The poem sketches a very realistic picture of what happened to people suffering through epidemics in ancient times.

Abhisaar, regularly staged in many adaptations in India and abroad, is only a curtain of the literary world and on lifting it we find how poets, storytellers and novelists have portrayed what they saw in their own lifetime while surviving pandemics and plagues.

Just four years before Abhisaar was born in 1900, the Black Death had ravaged the Bengal Province and other parts of the British Raj.

Tagore, however, is not the only literary figure who has made wordly sketches of the mass frenzy and psychological trauma the world faced at different junctures of history. The Decameron of Boccaccio, New Atlantis by Francis Bacon, and Utopia by Thomas More are some of the best examples of the plague literature of Europe.

Utopia (1516) merits a special mention as it talked of an ideal society free from epidemics. A world free from epidemics may be a Utopia but efforts can really be launched in India and other parts of the world to, at least, safeguard the humanity from its curse through preventive measures.

But it is now time to explain to you the mutual intercourse of this people, their commerce, and the rules by which all things are distributed among them. As their cities are composed of families, so their families are made up of those that are nearly related to one another

If an accident has so lessened the number of the inhabitants of any of their towns that it cannot be made up from the other towns of the island without diminishing them too much (which is said to have fallen out but twice since they were first a people, when great numbers were carried off by the plague), the loss is then supplied by recalling as many as are wanted from their colonies, for they will abandon these rather than suffer the towns in the island [of Utopia] to sink too low.

Let us wander further in the wonderland of literature, to Rajlakshmi O Srikanta, a very famous Bengali film based on the novel Shreekanta by Saratchandra Chattopadhyaya.

Like Vasavdatta and Upagupta, the story of it revolves round the vagabond Srikanta and the courtesan Rajlaxmi.

In the movie we find scenes of the epidemic in Bengal province that broke out about a century ago. Some tally with actual scenes of what has been happening during the Covid-19 attack in India.

In one such a very touching scene, Srikanta is shown suffering from high fever with signs of the disease and is brought to a kothi or palace by none other than Rajlaxmi.

Srikanta was a vagabond renouncing all earthly riches and Rajlaxmi, a tawaif (dancer), was rich and strikingly beautiful. He had nothing. She had everything. Something like Vasavdatta and Upagupta the monk.

Incidentally, Saratchandras first wife Shanti and their one-year-old son died of the plague in Rangoon (Yangon, Myanmar) during his Burmese days. No wonder he could express the pathos of losing someone very close through Rajlaxmi O Srikanta.

Some family members of Geoffrey Chaucer, the English writer of the Canterbury Tales, also died of the Black Death (bubonic plague) when it hit Europe in 1348. About eight years old when the epidemic struck London, Chaucer could never forget the scenes of people suddenly falling dead in the London streets.

From a modernised rendering by John Nicolson (1900)

Believe it or not, the outbreak of epidemics in the past gave new trends to literature, creating new genres, forwarding very revolutionary thoughts and novel ideas.

Before we deal with Boccaccios Decameron which shows how the plague shook peoples faith in the Papal authority of Rome, let us see what the monk Upagupta replied to Vasavdatta refusing her entreaty to move to her home.

Much to Vasavdattas dismay and displeasure, the monk says the time is not yet ripe. When the time comes, I myself will come to you without invitation, he tells her.

Now back to the Decameron to see how it brought about a new trend in international literature. Boccaccios thematic plot was simply unique for his time and place. The book recounts 100 tales told by a group of seven young women and three young men who reach an empty house in Florence while fleeing from the Black Death of 1348.

These 100 stories depict all shades of human life: lust, love, sacrifice, avarice and who knows what else?

The plague literature of Europe also sometimes brought in new ideology. Take New Atlantis, written by Francis Bacon around 1626. It may surprise you that it talked about quarantining sailors to protect the imaginary island of Bensalem from contamination. What Bacon suggested in 1627, the world has done time and again, including in 2020: lockdowns to contain infection.

Incidentally, Bacon died of pneumonia in 1626 which then used to take the form of epidemics in Europe. New Atlantis was published posthumously.

The book describes an imaginary land named Bensalem, home of the people of lost Atlantis, where the scientific temperament was so high that the state had created a scientific institution to conduct such researches as creating submarines, wind turbines and hearing aids.

Incidentally, a township named Bensalem also exists in the USA but it has nothing to do with Bacons Bensalem.

Now, what are our Vasavdatta and Upagupta doing?

After being rebuked, the courtesan is shocked as people always oblige whatever she commands. But this penniless monk refuse her? She leaves the scene and proceeds on her abhisaar: tryst.

What happened to them will be dealt with later, let us have a glimpse of what Daniel Defoe wrote about the epidemic describing actual scenes from memory in A Journal of the Plague Year published in 1722.

Defoe gave graphic details of The Great Plague of London in 1665. He had been five years old then and wrote whatever little he remembered of it and all that he heard from his elders. He also used eyewitness accounts of the event.

This book, written as an authentic record of the plague in 1722 and not a fictional account at all, attained fictional status after about 60 years. Has this ever before happened in the literary history of the world?

The people showed a great concern at this, and began to be alarmed all over the town, and the more, because in the last week in December 1664 another man died in the same house, and of the same distemper. And then we were easy again for about six weeks, when none having died with any marks of infection, it was said the distemper was gone; but after that, I think it was about the 12th of February, another died in another house, but in the same parish and in the same manner.

This turned the peoples eyes pretty much towards that end of the town, and the weekly bills showing an increase of burials in St Giless parish more than usual, it began to be suspected that the plague was among the people at that end of the town, and that many had died of it, though they had taken care to keep it as much from the knowledge of the public as possible. This possessed the heads of the people very much, and few cared to go through Drury Lane, or the other streets suspected, unless they had extraordinary business that obliged them to it

This increase of the bills stood thus: the usual number of burials in a week, in the parishes of St Giles-in-the-Fields and St Andrews, Holborn, were from twelve to seventeen or nineteen each, few more or less; but from the time that the plague first began in St Giless parish, it was observed that the ordinary burials increased in number considerably.

There is also a feverish account of the plague ravaging towns in north Africa and west Asia in the 1340s, in the Moroccan jurist Ibn Battutas account of his travels through the known world. He wrote in 1348 that:

Early in June we heard at Aleppo that the plague had broken out at Gaza, and that the number of deaths there reached over a thousand a day. On travelling to Hims I found that the plague had broken out there; about three hundred persons died of it on the day that I arrived. So I went on to Damascus, and arrived there on a Thursday. The inhabitants had then been fasting for three days; on the Friday they went out to the mosque of the Footprints, as we have related in the first book, and God eased them of the plague. The number of deaths among them reached a maximum of 2,400 a day.

Thereafter I journeyed to `Ajaln and thence to Jerusalem, where I found that the ravages of the plague had ceased. We revisited Hebron, and thence went to Gaza, the greater part of which we found deserted becuse of the number of those who died there of the plague. I was told by the qdi that the number of deaths there reached 1,100 a day. We continued our journey overland to Damietta, and on to Alexandria. Here we found that the plague was diminishing in intesity, though the number of deaths had previously reached a thousand and eighty a day. I then travelled to Cairo, wehre I was told that the number of deaths during the epidemic rose to twenty-one thousand a day.

It is now time to return to Upagupta.

Seven months have glided by since Upagupta refused Vasavdattas request. It is the month of Chaitra and in Mathura the festival is underway. All the people seem to be happy except one! Vasavdatta. In fact, she has little sense of anything at all as she has been swallowed up in an epidemic.

But from Mathura we venture now briefly to the Algerian port city of Oran, and see how Albert Camus thematically gave new direction to some literature by using epidemics as a theme.

In 1947, Camus The Plague appeared in bookshops in Europe and around the world. It is one of the immortal pieces of the existentialist genre. It basically deals with the condition of human being under the siegelike condition caused by an epidemic.

Its poignant depiction of mental trauma, be it a medical doctor or a fugitive escaping from the claws of law, were most wonderfully sketched with the Algerian Muslim city of Oran (then under French occupation) acting as the backdrop.

The novel tries to portray death as the biggest equator, which does not care to discriminate between rich and poor. Naturally, there is nothing called glorification of power: physical beauty, social status, money, political power.

True, in the spring, when the epidemic was expected to end abruptly at any moment, no one troubled to take another's opinion as to its probable duration, since everyone had persuaded himself that it would have none.

But as the days went by, a fear grew up that the calamity might last indefinitely, and then the ending of the plague became the target of all hopes. As a result copies of predictions attributed to soothsayers or saints of the Catholic Church circulated freely from hand to hand.

The local printing firms were quick to realize the profit to be made by pandering to this new craze and printed large numbers of the prophecies that had been going round in manuscript.

Finding that the public appetite for this type of literature was still unsated, they had researches made in the municipal libraries for all the mental pabulum of the kind available in old chronicles, memoirs, and the like. And when this source ran dry, they commissioned journalists to write up forecasts, and, in this respect at least, the journalists proved themselves equal to their prototypes of earlier ages.

It is time to return one last time to the courtesan Vasavdatta in Mathura. Before the small pox had attacked her, she was the kingdoms star, with everybody wanting to be by her side.

What happened to her after the epidemic struck?

One day as Mathuras people celebrated the Chaitra Utsav or festival, Upagupta was moving carelessly outside the citys walls. Suddenly he saw a womans body covered with pox and discarded by the townspeople for fear it would infect them.

It was Vasavdatta! Upagupta, who had once refused to go to her house, took charge of her saying: The time of our togetherness has come, Vasavdatta!

An abhisarika nayika (the trysting heroine type)

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Literature and Epidemics: In Death, Some Geniuses Sang of Life - The Citizen

What Sundar Pichais long-term hardware commitment means for the Pixel – The Verge

Last week, I wrote about Googles somewhat confounding hardware strategy in the wake of a report about internal conflict from The Information. But I did something else right after that: I interviewed Google and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai on The Vergecast with Nilay Patel.

The whole interview is worth a listen, of course. Pichai is in charge of one of the most important tech companies in the world, and Big Tech has taken on such an outsized role in our lives that its only natural that its taking on an outsized role in the coronavirus response. We spoke to Pichai about that and also about the recent report about Googles flagging diversity efforts.

And he definitely made fun of me for being obsessed with RCS Chat before getting into his thinking on Googles communication apps. So give it a listen; its in our feed.

But here in this newsletter, I want to zoom in on Pichais responses about Googles hardware division because I do think theyre illuminating not in a sharp, spotlight kind of way but in a soft glow on the horizon kind of way. Not to belabor the metaphor, but when it comes to Googles hardware efforts, theres a bit of a darkest before the dawn vibe.

I asked specifically about the Pixel, but Pichai wanted to put it in a larger context. Im quoting the beginning of his answer in full here because I think it contains the seeds of the rest of our discussion:

The last couple of years have been a major integration phase for us because weve combined our Google hardware efforts with Nest. We absorbed the mobile division of HTC. So its been a lot of stitching together. And we have a wide product portfolio, too. So its definitely been a building phase. Were super committed to it for the long run. Hardware is hard. And it definitely has components, which take real time to get it right, thinking about underlying silicon or display or camera or any of those tacks. And so we are definitely investing in it, but that timeline. I think weve made a lot of progress.

Pichais not wrong that the hardware division under Rick Osterloh has had a lot of corporate distraction. The HTC mobile division was acquired in 2017. Osterloh has said the first phone to fully come out of that division was the Pixel 3A. And Google made the public announcement that it was reabsorbing Nest from Alphabet almost one year ago.

So, fair. Theres been a lot going on. But if theres a getting in your own way and squandering an opportunity example worthy of a canonical Harvard Business Review case, Googles handling of Nest is it. You would think that a company as big and multifaceted as Google (to say nothing of Alphabet) would be able to walk and chew through an internal merger at the same time.

One of the reasons that its been frustrating to watch the Pixel struggle to catch on is that smartphones seem like a solved problem. Thats obviously an oversimplification at best, but companies big and small crank out Android phones at a dizzying pace every year hell, every week. Youd think Google Google! could figure it out.

Hardware is hard, Pichai says. It is. And just adding more engineers and resources doesnt necessarily make it easier. Still, explanation isnt absolution, and I think Googles hardware division could have done more over these past few years.

All that history is what it is. Whats most important about the exchange is when Pichai answers the question I posed last week in this newsletter: what is Google hardware for? It turns out that, as with many things in tech, what you think is the obvious answer turns out to be the obvious answer. Or three answers, as it happens. Emphasis mine below:

So for me, three reasons. One is to drive computing forward. The second is we really guide our ecosystem. Pretty much everything weve done well, you can go all the way back and Androids early days, Samsung Galaxy Nexus, which we worked together, was a pivotal phone. Nexus 7 in the tablet world. I can point to Chromebooks all along, we did our original hardware to kind of bootstrap it. And I look at areas maybe where we havent done opinionated [work] maybe [smart]watch is a good example where we havent. And then you can see its tough to guide an ecosystem to what your vision of it is, just building the underlying platform.

So I think thats the second reason. And third is to really build a sustainable hardware business. I think all of it is important, and thats how I think about it. And Im excited. Rick [Osterloh] and team, working closely with Hiroshi [Lockheimer] and team, they have that long-term view. So were pretty committed to it.

If youve been watching Googles hardware efforts over the years, there is just so much you could unpack here. The admission that Google squandered its first-mover advantage in smartwatches. The fact that the first two reasons are the exact reasons Google created the Nexus program before the hardware division existed. The idea that Google needs to do opinionated work (which Id distinguish from just trying to make the flat-out best thing possible).

Finally, theres the part of the original quote where Pichai looks ahead, talking about components which take real time to get it right, thinking about underlying silicon or display or camera or any of those tacks. Later, he adds: Because some of the deeper efforts we are putting in will take three to four years to actually play out. And when they come in, I think Im excited about how they will shape where we are going.

When I think about investments that will take three or four years to actually play out, I wonder what they might be, especially in the phone space. Maybe this is just wishful thinking, but to me, theres only one Android component that really fits the bill: the processor.

As I said before, Android smartphones are practically a commodity. A big part of the reason for that is so many of them just use Qualcomms processors. That means, every year, a lot of Android phones have new capabilities that are defined by whatever Qualcomms new chips are capable of.

Google is in the same boat as every other Android manufacturer in that regard. But a custom chip would mean Google could potentially differentiate its products more not just phones but Chromebooks, too.

In April, Axios reported on just such a chip codenamed Whitechapel. Its reportedly being manufactured by Samsung and may arrive as soon as next year. Google has demonstrated some capability in chip design before, by the way: it has created machine learning tensor processing units (so-called TPUs) for servers and imaging processing chips for its phones.

Is that what Pichai was hinting at? No idea! But whatever he was referring to, it does seem clear that we are still at least a year (or three or four) away from those investments coming into fruition. In the meanwhile, I think Google is going to need to show a little more momentum.

Google reportedly put out a survey recently that suggested the price of the upcoming Pixel 4A would be $349, undercutting the competition by fifty bucks. It also suggested that this years flagship Pixel 5 might not try to compete at the ultra-premium tier (i.e., phones that cost $1,000 or more). Both ideas strike me as smart.

When I asked Pichai how much time he personally spends thinking about hardware, he noted that he had a meeting that morning looking at next years hardware portfolio. I jokingly asked him if there was anything he wanted to tell us from that meeting.

He replied, You guys are going to figure it out anyway.

Apple details its plan to safely reopen retail stores

Apples supply chain is making safety changes to protect workers in response to the pandemic

Apple to launch a new iPad and a new iPad mini with bigger screens, says Ming-Chi Kuo

Facebooks Giphy acquisition sounds antitrust alarms in Congress

The FBI successfully broke into a gunmans iPhone, but its still very angry at Apple. Apples response statement included. It is as cogent and ethically clear as the FBIs is manipulative and dissembling. (Very, in both cases.)

Disney streaming chief Kevin Mayer resigns to become TikTok CEO. Passed over to become the CEO of Disney, hes moving on. If you were looking for a sign that TikTok wants to be a little more legit here in the US and tamp down the worries over its Chinese ownership, this one is big and glowing and neon.

Microsoft: we were wrong about open source. I feel like at least half of Microsofts last decade has been Haha whoops! That was dumb and/or mean. Lets try again to do it right this time. And it is working.

Logitechs new Circle View camera comes with built-in privacy controls. It looks nice, and its fascinating to see that it ONLY works with HomeKit and therefore Apple products it even uses iCloud for storing clips. Its almost like Apple asked Logitech to make a camera it would be comfortable selling in its stores as a privacy-focused option.

Logitech has added a pair of nice privacy features to the camera, too. The first is simple: the camera can be tilted downward to face its base so that you can easily block it from seeing anything. The second addition is a hardware button on the back that lets you shut off the camera and microphone so nothing is being monitored

Edison Mail rolls back update after iOS users reported they could see strangers emails. Forthwith, a comprehensive list of cloud services I feel comfortable granting full access to my email account:

1. The original email provider, e.g. Gmail or Outlook.

End of list.

Microsoft Surface Go 2 review: dont push it. In case you missed it, my review from last week.

Gigabyte Aero 15 review: works hard, plays hard. Monica Chin reviews and is impressed. However:

The big question is whether you need this kind of power. An OLED screen, a 45-watt H-series processor, and a cutting-edge GPU are certainly cool things to have. But they also cost a chunk of change, and youre paying in hours of battery life as well.

TCL 10 Pro review: premium looks, budget performance

Jon Porter reviews TCLs attempt to get its own brand recognized and sought-after in the US. Despite the companys long history of making phones, it feels a little bit too much like a first attempt.

How to buy refurbished gadgets. Great overview from Cameron Faulkner. I fully endorse refurbs so long as you can buy them from a store you can go back to if you have problems. I always look for a refurb option now when Im buying electronics.

Samsung and Xiaomis midrange phones dominate Android bestsellers list in Q1 2020. When I reviewed the Galaxy A51, I essentially said that if you care about a big, nice screen above all else, this phone should appeal to you even if its a touch slow and the camera is a touch disappointing. Clearly, a lot of people care about a big, nice screen above all else: it was the worldwide best seller last quarter.

Makes me wonder if this years iPhone SE is going to end up feeling like more a misstep than I would have guessed.

How Alphabets smart city echoed a failed sci-fi utopia in Minnesota. Adi Robertsons interview really shows how utopias keep trying to do similar things over and over.

Or the idea of modularity, thats something people were going crazy for in the 60s with megastructures. Eventually MXC was going to have a megastructure where youd just have a frame for your main structure and you could plug in units based on what you needed, so it would be constantly shifting. I saw similar kinds of language in Googles proposal as well. So these are relatively old ideas, we just havent found a way to actually do them yet.

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What Sundar Pichais long-term hardware commitment means for the Pixel - The Verge

Letter to the Editor – The Pioneer

King Obama

The new revelations concerning the unmasking of General Flynn, during the days before the transition from the Obama administration to the Trump presidency lead one to consider motivations. As I thought of why would the unmasking be important just days before the inauguration, it is very possible that then President Obama had big plans.

Truth and reality no longer matter in the Democrat party; the accusation would be enough.

If Flynn could be tagged as a Russian asset, it would be just a small step to sully the reputations of President-elect Trump, his running mate Mike Pence, the liberal news media would say, surely Mike knew that Trump was also a Russian asset, so he would be declared dirty along with some or all of the transition team. Keep in mind that accusations, especially against Republicans is all you need, proof is not relevant or needed.

This would give Obama his opportunity: he would then step up to "save" the country from foreign infiltration; he would stay on as president; postpone the inauguration so there can be an aggressive, extensive, extremely long, investigation; Marshall law is put in place, then the Trump election could be declared null and void; and "plans" for a new honest and pure election would take place in the future, way in the future, probably never to occur.

Obama gets what he has always wanted -- unlimited power, King Obama, and we become the communist "utopia" he envisions. What is the one thing that kept him from following through with his plans, Trump votes, he feared their reaction, I believe that his fear was prudent.

William "Charlie" Carpenter

Big Rapids

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Letter to the Editor - The Pioneer

CESAR A. MBA ABOGO: The African Utopia at the End of the COVID-19 Tunnel – Red Pepper

In 1990, when Cameroons football team did the unthinkable and beat Argentina in the World Cup, the proportion of the worlds population living below the poverty line was 37.1 per cent.

Fast-forward 35 years later to 2015, following a global adoption of the UNs Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), this figure now stands at 9.6%.

The concept of a universal benevolent dictator a classic assumption in beginner economic courses to escape the complexities of real-world decision-making such a person would no doubt have said:The world is doing infinitely better!

But on the contrary, the world has not been doing as well as it should. The fact is, there have been warning signs all along.

The proportion of people living below the poverty line in sub-Saharan Africa in 2015 was an astonishing 41%, about the same as the global rate of extreme poverty in 1981.

On October 17, 2018, the then President of the World Bank Group, Jim Yong Kim, presented a report titledPoverty and Shared Prosperity 2018: Piecing together the Poverty Puzzle.With rigorous data but in a simple and direct way, the report clearly indicated that global conditions were not in place to bring the rate of extreme poverty below 3%by 2030.

The most alarming case in point was, where even in the most optimistic of scenarios, the poverty rate would continue to be in double digits.

The report was a pitcher of cold water in my state of mind. But it was not the first time Jim Yong Kim had jolted me.

A few years earlier in 2015, in Lima, Peru, at the Annual Meetings of the IMF and the World Bank, during a panel moderated by Femi Oke, the British journalist of Yoruba descent, Jim Yong Kims projections caught my attention. In attendance were Peruvian President Ollanta Moises Humala Tasso; Ban Ki-Moon, UN Secretary-General; Christine Lagarde, IMF Managing Director; and Justine Greening, UK Secretary of State for International Development.

For 90-minutes, they spoke eloquently about the type of partnerships that would be needed to make Agenda 2030 a reality; the international cooperation that would be deployed; the necessary financing mechanisms and formulas; and the creativity and citizen action required.

Gathered in this august venue, the guardians of the global architecture responsible for eradicating poverty spoke convincingly and articulately about the world of tomorrow. Collectively, they concluded that by 2030, we would end up, to quote Oscar Wilde, in a country called Utopia. TheRoad to Limawas a party.

But barely three years later as 2018 dawned, the same global architecture presented us with a new story: The end of Utopia.

In December 2019, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched its Human Development Report titledBeyond Income, Beyond Averages, Beyond the Present: Human Development Inequalities in the 21st Century. As with the World Bank, the conclusion was straightforward and clear: While humanity is progressing, something is just not working in our globalized society. ]

A new generation of inequalities, beyond basic capabilities, is emerging and threatens to render people living in developing countries obsolete in the future.

Combining the alarming 2018 World Bank report with the no less alarming 2019 UNDP report, the picture is not one of optimism: not only was the aspiration to eradicate poverty by 2030 not going to be met, but a new inequality gap was opening up as well.

These challenges had previously been the focus of the World Economic Forum Regional Strategy Group (WEF RSG), of which I had had the privilege of being a member.

One of the ideas behind the WEF RSG was very simple and irrefutable: Africa mustleapfroginto the Fourth Industrial Revolution or risk being left behind inexorably.

In 2019 as well as in previous years, several countries, including Equatorial Guinea, my country, made important policy decisions to define and prioritize national development aspirations in alignment with the UNs Agenda 2030 and the African Unions Agenda 2063. Additionally, to take advantage of the Fourth Industrial Revolution we scaled up our investments in ICT and technology and in developing the capacity of our youth. And then, COVID19 arrived!

In just a few short months the world has changed. When we return to normal, it will be a new normality and abrave new world.

COVID19 is an existential crisis. It is severely testing Africas social, economic and political resilience. In a post-COVID19 world, the continents leaders will therefore have to rethink many prior assumptions and find new balances for individual and collective behavior.

What I am absolutely certain of is that opportunities will emerge. Innovative minds previously imprisoned by institutional inertia and interest groupswill rise to the challenges that we collectively face.

What will thebrave new worldpost-COVID19 look like in Africa? The African Development Bank estimates that Africa will lose between 35 and 100 billion dollars due to the fall in raw material prices caused by the pandemic. The World Economic Forum estimates that global losses for the continent will be in the order of $275 billion.

There is a real risk therefore that Africas inequality gap will worsen in the coming years.

Ever since the virus crossed the continents borders, regular bilateral and multilateral consultations among African finance ministers have philosophically revolved around the need to rethink our multifaceted responses to COVID19 and other future threats that have equal or greater potential for disruption.

Today, African States are developing strategic and in-depth approaches to human development, regional integration, digitalization, industrialization, economic diversification, fiscal and monetary policies, and international solidarity. In short, they are rethinking the causes of the continents underdevelopment and coming up with feasible solutions. Theoutcomeswill undoubtedly be good for Africa and for all humanity.

To better understand the scenarios before us, there are three sparks that could light a flame in thebrave new worldthat is before us:

This last note has triggered another debate: the necessary industrialization of Africa, to transform and add value to the continents vast and valuable raw materials.

Many African countries have already been deprived of access to COVID19 essentials. Excessive global demand has relegated Africa to the

But there is much reason for optimism. African leaders recently laudedartemisia annuatonic that Andry Rajoelina, President of Madagascar, presented to the world as Africas solution to COVID19.

Our enthusiasm, as Africans, is rooted in wounded self-esteem. For way too long, we have been victims of marginalization. The power to regain our dignity has too often been stripped away. Today, nestled in the souls of all Africans is an unshakable faith that the most important resource that Africa needs in order to rise up, is none other than Africans themselves.

No one will help us if we do not help ourselves. Africa is no longer asking to be taught how to fish. Africa is already rowing towards the utopia enunciated in the UNs Sustainable Development Goals and the Africa Unions Agenda 2063.

In spite of dire predictions and narratives, humanity always has a way of ending up in that country called utopia. Africa is humanity.

Cesar A. Mba ABOGO is the Minister of Finance, Economy and Planning of Equatorial Guinea and Member of the Regional Action Group for Africa of the World Economic Forum.

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CESAR A. MBA ABOGO: The African Utopia at the End of the COVID-19 Tunnel - Red Pepper

Television adaptation of Little Fires Everywhere: Small change, in fact – World Socialist Web Site

Television adaptation of Little Fires Everywhere: Small change, in fact By Joanne Laurier 18 May 2020

The eight-episode series Little Fires Everywhere, created by Liz Tigelaar, premiered on Hulu on March 18. It is based on the 2017 novel, a New York Times bestseller with the same title, by Celeste Ng.

The web television miniseries, set in the late 1990s, focuses on several families and individuals in Shaker Heights, an affluent, integrated suburb of Cleveland, Ohio, who come into sharp conflict with one another. The television adaptation places even greater emphasis in particular on race and race relations, and the so-called blind spots of white America.

As this may already indicate, the series is driven by a muddle-headed and confused notion about whats wrong with the US. The fact it is being aired in the midst of a pandemic that has seen tens of millions lose their jobs, in the greatest economic and social crisis since the Great Depression, makes the self-absorbed and trivializing tendencies of Little Fires Everywhere stand out all the more sharply.

Elena Richardson (Reese Witherspoon) considers herself a paragon of American womanhood, someone who, with considerable finesse and skill, balances her duties as mother, wife, part-time journalist (for the local paper) and pillar of the community. While she has not fulfilled her dream of becoming a big-city newspaper woman, her life is otherwise what she intended and designed it to be.

The elite town of Shaker Heights unofficial motto is: Everything should be planned out by doing so you could avoid the unseemly, the unpleasant and the disastrous. (The introduction to each episode includes the newspaper headline: Shaker Heights is a dream town come true).

With overbearing efficiency, Elena runs her household of four teenagers: Ivy League-bound Lexie (Jade Pettyjohn), athletic Trip (Jordan Elsass), sensitive Moody (Gavin Lewis) and artistic Izzy (Megan Stott). Elenas affluent lifestyle results from the successful career of attorney-husband Bill (Joshua Jackson).

But a hyper-organized manner of life does not allow room for problems, or children who are out of synch, such as her youngest Izzy, who is gay, rebellious and considered by her mother to be a misfit.

Generally speaking, everything is apparently sunny and smooth-sailing in Shaker Heightsonly a short distance from traumatically deindustrialized Clevelanduntil an African-American art photographer, Mia Warren (Kerry Washington) and her teenage daughter Pearl (Lexi Underwood) rent Elenas second house. (The novel does not specify Mias ethnicity).

Believing Mia has money troubles, Elena offers the newcomer the position of house manager in her domicile. Oddly, Mia accepts, but only to keep tabs on daughter Pearl who is enamored with Elenas brood, mansion and overall opulent way of life. As the relationship between Elena and Mia begins to sour, the latter says sarcastically: White women always want to be friends with their [black] maids.

Specifically, the pair go to war when a custody battle erupts over the fate of a Chinese infant. Out of the proceeds from the sale of one of her most prized photographs, Mia finances the attorney for the babys biological mother, Bebe Chow (Huang Lu), who, suffering from poverty and postpartum depression, has left the infant outside a fire station.

Elena wholeheartedly sides with friend Linda McCullough (Rosemarie DeWitt) and her husband who were handed the child by the authorities and are proceeding with an adoption. Elenas husband Bill is the lawyer for the McCulloughs (as he explains, somewhat regretfully, People like Bebe Chow dont win.).

It is a court battle whose outcome tears Elenas world apart.

The series purports to be a kind of report on the moral state of America. But how realistic and deep-going is it? There are recognizable situations and human beings, but one feels the presence of an ideology and agenda throughout. To far too great an extent Little Fires Everywhere is congealed upper middle class lecturing.

Many of the pivotal sequences are colored by the presence of this aggressive outlook. The series creators are not making a work about life, but rather a film based on their schemas about life.

This renders the narrative in many places improbable. The guiding conception behind the series seems to be that white people are afflicted with the virus of racism. Despite the latters best intentions, this prejudice resides in the recesses of the white soul. To dramatize this false and reactionary notion requires unconvincing plot manipulations.

The suburban utopia of Shaker Heights is turned upside down by the arrival of Mia and Pearl (hints of Nathaniel Hawthornes The Scarlet Letter), whose ethnicity and bohemianism create friction, gossip and worse. But, according to the 2000 Census, Shaker Heights was 59.9 percent white and 34.1 percent black. Its not clear that Mia is or does anything to merit the commotion she generates.

For her part, when Mia is not scowling or crying, or threatening to do one of those two things, her righteousness in relation to the white population is simply assumed. The series takes Mias moral superiority as its starting point, something it would actually need to prove dramatically. This is the equivalent of Believe women. In fact, Mias behavior is largely cold and disdainful, and she suffers from vast doses of self-pity.

Bebe too feels awfully sorry for herself. But this is not typically how people in such circumstances, who are a hundred times tougher and more resilient than the series writers imagine them to be, respond to adversity.

And then there is Lexie. Her boyfriend Brian (SteVont Hart) is African American, but her supposedly hidden racism surfaces when she takes advantage of Pearl by stealing the latters essay and appropriating it for her entrance into Yale. Even worse, she uses Pearls name as her own at an abortion clinic. The creators stack the deck against her.

In turn, Brian accuses Lexie of not truly seeing him as a black man. For Brian, as well as Mia, colorblindness does not existor rather claiming a lack of prejudice is one of the surest proofs that the claimant is a secret bigot! According to the former, Lexie stole a black girls story ... you stole her discrimination as your own.

Furthermore, despite Elenas pretentions, when push comes to shove, she stands with her race and her class. The viciousness with which both she and her friend Linda treat Bebe Chow is the primary reason that Elenas house suffers a fiery fate.

Little fires abound everywhere. They are less fires than narrative implausibilities. It makes no sense, for example, that two middle class kids, Lexie and Brian, should have unprotected sex; that Bebe Chow should hysterically crash a baby shower, throwing herself into a crowd of people; that Elena, the model mother, should treat Izzy so miserably; that book club members should be scandalized by reading The Vagina Monologues; that the college-bound Richardson offspring end up performing the most unlikely anti-social act. These are only a few of the unrealistic and unbelievable momentsas though someone were trying, hurriedly and carelessly, to cram something that doesnt fit into a bureau drawer.

It is also telling that the series creators, including Witherspoon and Washington, both executive producers, consider the tepid and half-thought out incidents earthshaking. This, in a country that has experienced tremendous shocks and trauma, including the emergence of an elite possessing unimaginable wealth, endless war and threats of even more catastrophic wars and the relentless drive toward authoritarianism over the past 20 years. Not so much little fires as small change.

The series advances a host of essentially petty bourgeois perceptions about race, gender, sexual orientation, unorthodoxy versus respectability, repression and intolerance versus free-spiritednessall for the supposed benefit of the benighted American people. This is an effort by moneyed, insulated Hollywood celebrities, people for whom the devastating economic conditions of every section of the working class in nearby Cleveland mean very little compared to the questions of cultural appropriation, white fragility, intersectionality, marginalization, etc.

In an interview with Hollywood Reporter, series creator and showrunner Liz Tigelaar explains: Its that theme of the show, I think its like, how can we know who we really are if were too afraid to look at ourselves? Its the whole beginning of The Vagina Monologues and looking at your own vagina. If were not willing to look at the parts of us that kind of scare us to look at, how can we really see ourselves? ...

Who shes [Elena] really struggling with is herself. She is not comfortable that she had prejudice and acted because of it. But that spark is this whole series ... If it were today she would have voted for Obama.

What can one say? The entire set of unquestioned assumptions with which Tigelaar and her collaborators set out, including the belief that voting for the war criminal and enemy of the working class Obama is a tell-tale indicator of political progressiveness, lies at the heart of the problems when it comes to Little Fires Everywhere. Someone needs to light a large blaze fire under these people, sooner rather than later.

We need you to help the WSWS and ICFI make 2020 the year of international socialist revival. We must expand our work and our influence in the international working class. If you agree, donate today. Thank you.

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Television adaptation of Little Fires Everywhere: Small change, in fact - World Socialist Web Site

Demolition Man’s Handshake Explained: How It Predicted The Future – Screen Rant

The future setting of Demolition Man seems ludicrous at first, but certain predictions like the touchless high five are more accurate than expected.

Real life is now one handshake closer to the future shown inDemolition Man. The 1993 sci-fi action filmfollows John Spartan (Sylvester Stallone), a gruff and tough police officer awakened from cryosleep in the utopian San Angeles of 2032 after being convicted for blowing up the building where a group of hostages were held byterrorist Simon Phoenix (Wesley Snipes) 36 years prior. His mission isto recapture the criminal in a city governed by strict puritan laws where the police force is unfamiliar with threats bigger than profane language andinnocuousdeeds.

Some of these "crimes" arerecited to Spartan byLieutenant Lenina Huxley (Sandra Bullock) the moment he wakes up: cigarettes, alcohol, meat, caffeine, contact sports, cursing, and even intimate contact are all banned by law. Thisidealistic society isconcocted byDr. Raymond Cocteau (Nigel Hawthorne), the man who led the city to seek an aseptic approach to life. Unfortunately for him, his plan to eliminate the last underground resistance to his pristine utopia goes off the rails when Huxley and Spartan figure out his intentions, on top of losing control of the pawn he brought from the past to achieve it Simon Phoenix.

Related:What To Expect From Demolition Man 2

Not all of the crimes predicted byDemolition Manseem too egregious now, though, 27 years after the film's release. When Huxley first arrives at the police department building, she greetstwo police officers with a quick circular hand motion, similar to an incomplete high five. The salute is carried out so casually that it's obvious it has replaced the handshake. Minutes later, when Huxley remotely locates Phoenix after his escape, officer Erwin (Rob Schneider) exchanges the same gesture with fellow officer Alfredo Garca (Benjamin Bratt) as a sign of celebration.

This non-touchhandshake is a result of the future's aversion tophysical contact. When Huxley wants to get intimate with Spartan and surprises him with the concept of "VR sex," she explains to him that"the rampant exchange of bodily fluids was one of the main major reasons for the downfall of society."So, it is implied that besides the fictional "GreatEarthquake" of 2010 the spread of illnessdrastically changed society in the early twenty-first century,resulting ina statewide (and presumably worldwide) restructuring. Just 12 years before the film's setting, the real-life coronavirus pandemic is driving out acts of physical contact like handshakes and high fives due to their high transmission rate of infection.

Demolition Mancontinues the tradition of the many '80s sci-fi films that has successfully predictedthe future in some way or another. FromArnold Schwarzenegger getting into politics to smoke-free laws, the movie accurately picked up some clues of the era toportray real-life events.Now that the film'ssetting is getting closer, and with a Demolition Mansequel in the works,anewnotion of the future will bring more interesting predictions that may set a fictional precedentfor what lies ahead.

More:Demolition Man: How Do The Three Seashells Actually Work?

Star Wars Theory: The First Jedi Was A Skywalker

Nicolas Ayala is a screenwriter, photographer, and model with a passion for blockbusters and big-screen adaptations. He's been writing movies since he got his first crayon and continues to do so in his final year of Film Production at university. An extensive immersion in the behind-the-scenes of a couple dozen projects has let him see films in a new light and talk about his experiences around the web. When not writing or dreaming about writing, he's probably cosplaying, directing goofy films, creating comic books, studying ancient mythology, learning new languages or producing music that your hips can't stop dancing to.

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Demolition Man's Handshake Explained: How It Predicted The Future - Screen Rant

Travel startups look to find new stars among the industry-wide layoffs – PhocusWire

The headlines are full of layoffs, furloughs and hiring freezes across the travel and hospitality industry, as companies take steps to survive the coronavirus crisis.

Most recently, Airbnb announced it was laying-off 25% of its workforce, Tripadvisor said it will cut up to 900 employees and Uber slashed its customer support and recruitment headcount by 3,700.

The World Travel and Tourism Council estimates 100 million jobs will be lost in the travel sector, with the organization saying in late-April that a million jobs were being lost each day.

It can be hard to find light at the end of what seems like a long, dark tunnel but any companies that do have the budget to hire are likely to have their pick of a talented, experienced group of people.

Some startups, such as those that have received funding recently, have made some hires, while others are looking at how they might take advantage of the talent out there.

A month ago, Steve Jackson, CEO of tours and activities platformToristy, was thinking about how to secure funding to hire a B2B sales person, saying at the time:It may sound mad given the current circumstances and the fact we have very little finance for 2020, but if I can figure out a way, Id love to do it because I am guessing there is talent that wouldnt otherwise be available.

Candor, a company specializing in salary negotiations, agrees.It is running a live, user-generated tally of companies in all sectors that are hiring, have hiring freezes in place or have announced lay offs.

The company says any brands that hiring will have their pick of the best candidates.

Fast forward a month and Jackson says hes in the process of hiring. Hes hopeful of being able to finalize the recruitment of an ex-Tripadvisor employee as well as potentially giving some freelance work to someone who used to work for Klook.

Both are pretty senior in what I need. What I have discussed is pretty lucrative but relies on them selling so if we pulled in a good pilot we could pay an attractivecommission as a projectfee from the first three months of revenues which with the right pilot could be a lot for the sales person.

Jackson is also hopeful of being able to hire a further person in Finland, as a result of pre-existing government funding that is not related to COVID-19.

Finally, access to a startup fund in Finland, known as ELY, might provide a further financial boost to the company.

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Travel startups look to find new stars among the industry-wide layoffs - PhocusWire

Key dates: When will destinations around the world reopen to tourism? – Telegraph.co.uk

On May 10, the Prime Minister announced the easing of lockdown restrictions in the UK, with a planned reopening of hotels, holiday parks and tourist attractions on July 4.

This has coincided with similar rule relaxations across Europe, and a number of key dates being announced in regards to global tourism. Slovenia became the first European country to call an end to its pandemic (and lockdown) yesterday, Greeces hospitality businesses are now set to reopen on May 25, and Italy will be lifting restrictions on international arrivals on June 3.

While the UK government continues to warn that British nationals should avoid all but essential travel, and most countries still have restrictions on international arrivals, these measures are a promising sign of the global return to normality. We may not be able to go on any holidays abroad just yet, but when we do, many countries will be ready and waiting with open arms.

Below, weve put together a calendar with the current confirmed dates of when countries around the world will be reopening.

On May 17 the central European nation became the first European country to end its pandemic. Late Sunday, the Slovenian government announced the gradual opening of its borders and easing of its quarantine restrictions. Restaurants and bars have also begun to reopen.

The countrys hospitality industry is taking its first steps to welcoming back tourists, though accommodation with more than 30 rooms, spa centres and swimming pools remain closed.

Nearby, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have removed travel restrictions to create a Baltic travel bubble, which Estonian Prime Minister Juri Ratas called another step toward normal life.

Peru's borders are set to reopen on May 24, but this could well be extended given the nation has the second-highest number of coronavirus cases in South America, standing at over 50,000. The Peruvian government did announce gradual reopening plans on May 3, however.

The US Embassy in Peru reported that the first stage of the four stage plan has just begun, which allows restaurants to reopen for pickup and delivery. Hotels have also been allowed to open at lower capacity and tourist transportation services have started up again.

Greeces hospitality businesses are set to reopen on May 25, in a bid to expedite the countrys return to normality. Tourism is one of the main revenue sources for the country and as such the recent Covid outbreak has weighed heavily on its economy.

Five hundred of the countrys beaches reopened on May 16, with social distancing in place, and was said to be a dress rehearsal for tourists arriving into the country, which is expected to happen from July onwards.

Hotels and other forms of tourist accommodation will be allowed to reopen in Austria on May 29, though this will largely be geared towards incoming German visitors. Austria and Germany, which have had similarly low coronavirus infection and death rates, announced May 14 that they had agreed to reopen their shared border on June 15, allowing travel between the two nations.

Restaurants, bars, cafes, churches and some museums were reopened with social distancing measures in place on May 15, and the Austrian government shared plans to start allowing seated cultural events of up to 100 people in two weeks' time. This will increase to 1,000 people from August 1.

President Ivan Duque closed Colombian borders to international travellers in mid-March, with a planned reopening for May 30 - this may be extended however. The country's quarantine is set to last until at least May 25, with travel between regions highly restricted.

Hotels will be able to open across Portugal from June 1, alongside bars, nightclubs, shopping centres and gyms.

This is part of a three-stage plan to lift the countrys lockdown, which started on May 4. Small shops, hairdressers, beauty salons, car dealerships and book shops were allowed to open first, while larger stores, restaurants, museums and coffee shops followed on May 18, though are still under capacity restrictions.

In Madeira, a gradual reopening began on May 9. Beaches were the first to open, with Porto Santo beach opening on May 10. All other beaches opened on May 15, museums and galleries opened on May 14 and restaurants, cafes and terraces opened on May 18.

Unfortunately, an official date for the reopening of Portugals borders to international visitors hasnt yet been confirmed.

All international flights have been suspended until 1 June, with cruise ships banned until 30 June. Hopes are high this June 1 date may stick -the island's current 8pm to 5am curfew was relaxed slightly on 4 May, and will be ended on 24 May. Restaurants are still only open for takeaway but going to the beach and other open-air businesses is now possible.

Some Mexican states, including Quintana Roo home to the tourist mecca of Cancun plan on reopening to outside visitors on June 1. Several 'critical' industries, including tourism, were permitted to begin reopening by Mexico's president, Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador, on May 17.

The country is also planning a major tourism campaign with the slogan, 'Mexico needs you', but any return will depend on the reopening of the regions air hubs in Cancun, Cozumel and Chetumal. Arrivals to Mexico are advised that enhanced screening procedures will be in effect.

The small island off the coast of Africa worked hard to keep coronavirus at bay, shutting its international airport and banning cruise ship arrivals in mid-March.The airport remains closed, but a reopening date is currently set for June 1.

Those craving a taste of Italy had cause to celebrate on May 16, when the Italian government announced that the country will lift its restrictions on overseas arrivals on June 3. Tourists will once again be welcomed, and the 14-day quarantine period for arrivals will end.

Unfortunately, Britons may find themselves unable to take advantage of Italys hospitality. The Foreign Office is still advising against all but essential travel to Italy, a stance that will invalidate most insurance policies, while hotels, restaurants and attractions have not yet reopened.

Like France, lockdown restrictions are beginning to ease, with the countrys beaches beginning to re-open over the weekend.

Parts of the Caribbean have decided to begin to reopen tentatively to international tourism from early June.St Lucia and Antigua are initially opening to the American market, with flights from the US due to recommence on June 4. It is hoped British holidaymakers will start visiting the islands again later, in July.

Visitors will be required to provide proof of a negative Covid-19 test taken within 48 hours of boarding the plane, but crucially there will be no need to quarantine on arrival in St Lucia.

Hotels will be certificated by the island's Department of Health and Wellness to meet Covid-19 protocols before they will be permitted to reopen.

Germany has a worldwide travel warning in place until June 14 ruling out all unnecessary leisure trips abroad, but it is hoped talks with European Union partners this week will help enable an easing of that stance. It has previously been reported that the country is aiming for free travel within Europe after the travel warning expires in mid-June.

Iceland's prime minister, Katrn Jakobsdttir, recently announced plans to reopen the country's borders to tourists by June 15. Visitors to the country will be able to avoid a 14-day quarantine by taking a free COVID-19 test upon arrival at the airport; those who test negative will be able to enjoy the country at leisure.

In an official statement, it was said that travel restrictions would be eased "no later than June 15, 2020, while from May 15 some professionals arriving in Iceland including scientists, filmmakers, and athletes will be eligible for a modified quarantine."

May 1 saw Costa Rica - which never really shut down entirely - easing its restriction, allowing theatres, cinemas, hair salons, gyms and athletic centres to reopen under reduced hours and strict guidelines.A ban on foreign tourists was originally set to go on until May 15, but has now been extended until June 15.

Though the Central American country of Belize only currently has 18 reported cases of coronavirus, its borders will remain closed to all visitors until at least June 30. Some restrictions for residents are already being eased however, with all transport for essential workers and essential purposes now resumed. Restaurants (delivery and take-out only), banks and pharmacies have also begun to reopen.

Thailandis one of the first countries around the world to be exiting lockdown, and has already been a leader in what the future of travel may look like: hotel staff are being trained in deep-cleaning, plexiglass shields have been erected in restaurants, and local performances now feature face shields as well as intricate costumes.

Bangkok Airways restarted domestic flights on May 15, though the country's international flight ban has now been extended to June 30 - it was originally set to end May 31. In good news, Thai authorities have begun talks around the return of international travel, most likely with nearby countries like China and South Korea - who have also been successful in curbing their coronavirus cases - to be the first allowed to visit.

Spain aims to reopen borders to visitors around the end of June as its coronavirus lockdown fully unwinds, a government minister said on May 11.

The statement came in response to Madrids recent imposition of a two-week quarantine on all overseas travellers, saying that was needed to avoid importing a second wave of the COVID-19 disease.

Transport Minister Jose Luis Abalos said this would be phased out however, in parallel with travel being allowed again within Spain; regions are easing restrictions in different phases.

From late June, well start the tourism activity, I hope, he said.

Southeast Asia's success story is undoubtedly Vietnam, with the country emerging as the first to start pulling its tourism industry out of the coronavirus-related slump. Beginning to reopen on April 23, domestic flights are now back in operation, as are bus and train services, restaurants, and retail outlets.

Vietnam Airlines is said to be in discussions with the Vietnamese government to resume some international flights in June, while efforts to create a travel bubble with China and South Korea are also underway.

UK campsites, hotels, holiday parks and tourist attractions are preparing for a July 4 reopening, after the Prime Minister eased lockdown restrictions on May 10.

The government is planning to go into phase 3 of its plan no earlier than July 4, which will see hospitality - such as pubs and accommodation - and leisure facilities reopening. This will hopefully enable the return of domestic tourism within the UK.

Holiday parks are preparing for a summer reopening, too. Center Parcs is set to extend the closure of its holiday parks in the UK and Ireland beyond June 11, but is looking into ways to reopen with social distancing measures in place. Haven is also preparing to reopen in the beginning of July, with limits on the number of people who can stay at its parks.

The UK has kept an open-border policy throughout the coronavirus epidemic, and it is currently possible to both fly in and out of the country - though the FCO strongly advises against this.

Though Frances borders are scheduled to reopen on June 15, France has now extended its emergency measures until at least July 24, with non-essential trips banned and overseas visitors required to self-isolate. Tourism is a while off, but lockdown measures are beginning to ease: this weekend saw the countrys beaches reopen.

On May 15, UK nationals hopes for a French holiday sooner rather than later were scuppered, when the government confirmed there would be no UKFrance travel agreement, excluding French arrivals from a 14-day quarantine, as had been previously suggested.

On May 2, the Irish government laid out its five-stage strategy for easing lockdown, starting with phase one on May 18 and culminating on August 10 with travel of residents outside the mainlands borders being permitted once again.

Though this plan gives no indication of when visitors from Britain and other countries will be allowed to arrive as tourists, Tourism Ireland chief Niall Gibbons told Telegraph Travel that Ireland would welcome Britons as soon as lockdown restrictions were eased. He added that he hoped the country would move in unison with the UK government.

As well as cross country travel, August 10 will see the reopening of pubs in Ireland. Cafes and restaurants are currently slated to reopen on June 29, while the return of museums and galleries and hostels, hotels and caravan parks will happen on July 20.

One of the worlds strictest travel bans can be found in Argentina: all international commercial flights are officially banned until September 1, 2020.

The Indonesian government says the holiday island of Bali could reopen to tourists by October, thanks to its success in controlling the coronavirus outbreak.

The island has so far managed to keep a low rate of infections and fatalities. As of May 15, Bali had 343 reported coronavirus cases and only four deaths, compared with 16,496 cases and 1,076 deaths across the rest of Indonesia.

Ni Wayan Giri Adnyani, secretary of the tourism ministry, said May 15 that the ministry would look to revitalise destinations and do promotional work for some parts of the country, including Bali, between June and October, as long as the infection rate kept improving.

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Key dates: When will destinations around the world reopen to tourism? - Telegraph.co.uk

Travel will never be the same, thanks to COVID-19 – Global News

We are living through one of those times in history when everything changes a moment in time we will collectively come to describe in terms of before and after.

In the context of the travel industry, that moment came when the novel coronavirus pandemic was declared.

Before the virus, travel was cheap, plentiful, and pretty easy. Overtourism was a problem that risked ruining sites from Machu Picchu to the Louvre as 1.4 billion tourists circled the globe last year.

After COVID-19, everything will be different.

Travel will be less frequent, more difficult and probably more expensive.

The moment in time we are experiencing now is not unlike 9/11 a sudden shock to the system that will lead to permanent changes, that will eventually come to feel routine.

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Thats because coronavirus has been apocalyptic for the travel industry.

Air travel is down by 95 per cent, the Las Vegas strip has gone dark, cruise ships are stuck in port, and the happiest place on earth Disneyland faces an uncertain path to reopening.

For each one of those examples, there are thousands of people directly impacted; the taxi drivers, baggage handlers, pilots, hotel cleaners, gate agents, waiters, and ticket takers, have all taken a direct hit.

The travel sector has grown to make up about one in ten jobs, worldwide, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC).

It is across the board, said Gloria Guevara, WTTC president, because of the connectivity.

The dependency of all these industries within this sector is significant.

To claw its way back, the industry is going to have to make serious and permanent changes, which will, in turn, change the way we all travel.

I hope they dont think that things are going to be exactly as they were prior to COVID-19, cautioned Lori Pennington-Gray of the University of Floridas department of tourism, hospitality and event management. Her department maintains a travel anxiety index, tracking how the public feels about travel to no ones surprise, fear and worry have shot through the roof up 311 per cent at their peak.

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An Ipsos poll conducted exclusively for Global News found only 20 per cent of Canadians are likely to travel outside the country in 2020, even if its allowed, while 50 per cent said they were not at all likely.

That same poll found only slightly more openness to domestic travel 37 per cent would travel outside of their home province if allowed.

Travel faced a perception problem, starting in the early days of the pandemic, when cruise ships became a high-profile breeding ground for the virus.

There was the Diamond Princess, the Zaandam, and the Westerdam to name a few.

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And there was the Grand Princess, which Bob and Dorothy Grubb of British Columbia, were on board as people started to fall ill.

They first noticed something was wrong when their favourite waiter, a man named Xavier, wasnt there for dinner service.

One evening he just wasnt there and I asked what happened oh hes off sick, explained Bob Grubb. He was back the next day and I said Xavier you look tired he said Im okay. The next day, Xavier isnt there, hes off sick again.

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Within days, the boat was sailing back towards California, as the U.S. Coast Guard airlifted COVID-19 test kits to the passengers.

Off to our cabins, meals placed at our door with a knock at the door and that was the end of any contact with people, recalled Grubb.

After days of waiting for a plan to exit safely, they were repatriated to Canada, and rode out quarantine in Trenton, Ontario, before being allowed to return home.

That was probably the last cruise the Grubbs will ever take.

Weve made the decision we are not going on a cruise period. End of story. Too risky, too risky, he said.

The entire travel industry, from check-in, to check-out, now faces the same existential problem: how to keep travelers from infecting each other, while convincing them its safe to travel again.

More than 60 per cent expect that the industry is going to have to provide PPE for the visitors at touchpoints throughout the travel experience, said Pennington-Gray of her own research, adding that 70 per cent of travelers will want to know exactly what measures are being taken to keep them safe.

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Thats where this becomes a defining moment in history.

Just as airport security was dramatically and visibly stepped up after Sept. 11, 2001, health checks will become part of every trip.

Anyone getting on to a plane, boarding a cruise ship, or checking into a hotel should expect to have their temperature taken. They may face a health questionnaire. They may have to register their contact information so that they can be tracked down and quarantined if theyre exposed to someone who is sick. Advances in rapid testing could make regular virus checks as routine as carry-on size containers for liquids.

Health checks are here to stay, said Brian Kelly, founder of the travel web site The Points Guy. Kelly points out some airlines have already implemented them.

Emirates is actually doing instant COVID tests and Etihad has temperature checks on their checking kiosks. And those are just a couple of the ways that the travel experience will be changed forever.

Air Canada became the first airline in the Americas to require temperature checks.

Governments and airlines increasingly require that passengers and crew wear facemasks too theyre now mandatory in Canada, and most airlines in the U.S. have begun to demand them.

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On board, in-flight service has been scaled back to a few pre-packaged items, handed out by flight attendants in gloves and masks. The airlines have stepped up deep cleaning of seats, tray tables and luggage bins.

A company called Germ Falcon is even developing a piece of equipment that looks like an airplane drink cart with glowing wings of ultraviolet light, that can be pushed down the aisle to disinfect the entire cabin between flights.

Behind the scenes, airports are grappling with everything from baggage disinfection to touchless check-ins to minimize points of contact and potential infection.

Facial recognition, which was already being tried at some airports, could become the norm, replacing manual ID checks.

Hilton Hotels has announced a partnership with RB, which makes Lysol and other cleaning products, to set new standards for hotel cleaning in conjunction with the Mayo clinic.

Rental car companies have stepped up cleaning, and are moving to contactless service.

Cruise ships may face the most complex situation of all, even as they prepare to return to the sea as early as August.

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They need reliable testing to make sure that everyone on that ship is COVID-free or doesnt bring it back from shore excursions, said Brian Kelly.

There are still unanswered questions about how any business that relies on placing people in a confined space, will overcome the hurdle of physical distancing.

The days of the hotel breakfast buffet are probably over.

Airlines have tried (and recently failed) to keep middle seats empty, but that may not be viable for companies that are already in dire financial straits.

More than 65 per cent said they would be willing to accept a higher price in order to ensure that theyre going to be safe, said Pennington-Gray, about respondents to the Ipsos travel poll.

Travelers likely have no choice but to expect higher prices.

Air Canada reported a loss of more than $1 billion in the first quarter of 2020. Delta Airlines has reported losing more than $60 million every day.

Like most airlines, they are downsizing their fleets, and scrapping older planes.

That means fewer flights, and likely higher fares. Some airlines may not survive this crisis, further reducing competition and available seats.

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The industry will consolidate the weak airlines which long term, Im nervous that prices will go up, said Kelly.

If theres a long-term requirement to keep passengers spaced out in the cabin, yeah, that sounds great, but the consumer is going to pay for it, he warned.

Before we can transition from the world we knew before, to the world after coronavirus, we need to get through this current moment.

COVID-19 continues to run rampant.

International borders remain closed, and many nations have imposed requirements for visitors to quarantine for 14 days upon arrival.

No one is going to risk exposing themselves for the sake of a vacation.

No one is going to use up two weeks of vacation to sit in forced isolation.

Our immediate travel future will likely keep us closer to home than weve been in a long time.

2020 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Travel will never be the same, thanks to COVID-19 - Global News