The Evolution of Pregnancy Portraits, From Tudor England to Beyonc – Smithsonian.com

In 1770, the famed English artist Joshua Reynolds began painting a full-length portrait of his good friend Theresa Parker. By the time the work was completed two years later, the sitter was heavily pregnant; as Parker noted in a letter, she posed for the painting despite being very fat. The final product shows the familys matriarch leaning on a plinth in front of a wooded backdrop, her body draped in an elaborate cascade of fabrics. Her growing belly, however, is not visible.

A mezzotint of this artwork is now on display at the Foundling Museum in London, where it features in a new exhibition exploring artistic depictions of pregnant bodies over the past 500 years. Though fashions fluctuated, pregnancies rarely appeared in portraits prior to the 20th centurythis despite the fact that [h]istorically, from puberty to menopause women would have been pretty much pregnant all the time, curator Karen Hearn, a historian at University College London who specializes in 16th- to 18th-century British art and culture, tells Rachel Campbell-Johnston of the Times.

The idea for the exhibition, titled Portraying Pregnancy: From Holbein to Social Media, was conceived around 20 years ago, when Hearn helped Tate Britain acquire an Elizabethan portrait of a pregnant woman. That work, though not featured in the show, set Hearn down a new path of inquiry.

I realized such portraits had not previously been studied, she says to the Art Newspapers Margaret Carrigan.

Hearn, who spent the next two decades researching the subject, has curated a diverse and evocative selection of works, the oldest of which dates back to 1526 or 1527. This delicate drawing by Hans Holbein the Younger shows Cicely Heron, daughter of philosopher and statesman Sir Thomas More, gazing off into the distance, her loosened bodice indicating that she is pregnant. A more conspicuous early example comes in the form of a 1620 portrait by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, who painted an unknown woman resplendent in an elaborate red dress, her arm resting across her patently pregnant stomach.

From the 1560s to approximately 1630, pregnancy portraits were in fact quite common in England, explains Carrigan to the Timesbut for centuries afterwards, they were quite rare. Part of the reluctance over depicting pregnant bodies may have stemmed from conservative social mores.

Pregnancy, as Hearn tells Lucy Davies of the Telegraph, offered visible evidence that a woman was sexually active. Even in marriage, when pregnancy was desirable, it remained problematic. That was the default position for centuries.

Historical images that do exist were infused with additional tension due to the high rates of maternal death during childbirth. Per a statement, portraits like the one by Gheeraerts the Younger appeared at a time when women would write mothers legacy letters to their unborn children in case they did not survive the delivery. Theresa Parker, the subject of Reynolds painting, died soon after giving birth to a daughter in 1775, according to Davies.

An 1817 portrait by George Dawe shows yet another woman who died in childbirth: Princess Charlotte of Wales, daughter of George IV and heir to the British throne. In Dawes painting, the princess wears a loose, Russian-style dress that conceals her pregnancy. She died in November of 1817 after giving birth to a stillborn boy.

Attitudes towards pregnancy portraits began to soften in the late 20th century, as artists grew bolder in depicting both the wonders and tribulations of pregnancy. In 1984, for instance, Ghislaine Howard produced a powerful self-portrait showing the later stages of her pregnancy; the figurative artist can be seen slumped in a chair, highlighting the physical strains of her condition.

But the true shift, says the Foundling Museum, came in 1991, when Annie Leibovitzs photographic portrait of Demi Moore, naked and seven months pregnant, appeared on the cover of Vanity Fair. Shocked by the image, some retailers refused to stock the magazine.

Nevertheless, writes the museum, it marked a culture shift and initiated the trend for more visible celebrations of pregnant bodiesespecially nude ones.

The final portrait to appear in the exhibition is Awol Erizkus now-iconic photograph of Beyonc, who enlisted the artist to help announce her pregnancy. Draped in a veil, the singer kneels on an ornate flower arrangement and gazes proudly at the viewer, cradling her stomach. The image threw the internet into a tizzy and became the most-liked Instagram photo of 2017.

As Beyoncs portrait suggests, modern women are taking unprecedented agency over their pregnant bodies, celebrating this phase as a time of beauty and empowerment. But the new exhibition shows that even in the past, when womens pregnancies were often concealed, expectant mothers didnt shrink from public view.

[M]any of our current ideas about the lives and activities of women in past centuries need to be revised, Hearn tells the Art Newspaper, as we come to understand how frequently many of them were conducting active public roles while pregnant.

Portraying Pregnancy: From Holbein to Social Media is on view at the Foundling Museum in London from January 25 to April 26.

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The Evolution of Pregnancy Portraits, From Tudor England to Beyonc - Smithsonian.com

Oldest mushroom fossil discovered, will help better explain evolution of organisms – India Today

Boffins have discovered the oldest ever mushroom fossil to be identified, a finding which pushes back the time when the fungal organisms first appeared on the Earth by about 300 million years.

According to the scientists, including those from Universite Libre de Bruxelles in France, the oldest confirmed mushroom fossil until now was dated to 460 million years ago.

In the current study, published in the journal Science Advances, researchers found fossilised remains of microscopic mushroom parts called mycelium in rocks whose age is between 715 and 810 million years.

The scientists said these rocks were found in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and likely formed in a lagoon or coastal lake environment.

Textures and structures observed after boffins discovered oldest mushroom fossil in Congo | Photo from Science Advances

WHEN LIFE ON THE CONTINENTS' SURFACE WAS IN ITS VERY INFANCY

Putting the discovery in perspective, the researchers said, this was a time in the Earth's history when life on the continents' surface was in its very infancy.

"The presence of fungi in this transitional area between water and land leads us to believe that these microscopic mushrooms were important partners of the first plants that colonised the Earth''s surface around 500 million years ago," explained Steeve Bonneville, one of the researchers part of the study from the Universite libre de Bruxelles.

"This is a major discovery, and one that prompts us to reconsider our timeline of the evolution of organisms on Earth. The next step will be to look further back in time, in even more ancient rocks, for evidence of those microorganisms that are truly at the origins of the animal kingdom," Bonneville said.

USING MULTIPLE MOLECULAR ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES

While previously discovered mushroom fossils were identified based on the morphology of organic remains found in rocks using corrosive acid compounds, Bonneville said this method damaged the chemistry of the fossils, and only allowed analysis of the microscopic structures.

He added that this may lead to incorrect interpretations as certain morphological traits are common to different branches of living organisms.

In the current study, the scientists used multiple molecular analysis techniques at a microscopic scale with which they could study the chemistry of organic remains in the site, without corrosive chemical treatment.

The technique enabled the researchers to detect traces of the complex chemical chitin -- a very tough compound found in the cell walls of fungi.

On further analysis, they also demonstrated that the fossil mushroom cells had a prominent nucleus.

"Only by cross-correlating chemical and micro-spectroscopic analyses could we demonstrate that the structures found in the old rock are indeed about 800-million-year-old fungal remains," said study co-author Liane G Benning from GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences.

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Oldest mushroom fossil discovered, will help better explain evolution of organisms - India Today

The Evolution of Freestyle – Flathead Beacon

On a recent Friday afternoon as the light faded on Big Mountain, members of Whitefish Mountain Resorts Freestyle Ski Team sprawled on the snow to stretch, limbering up in a semicircle and waiting for the chairlift to start spinning.

For the hordes of recreational skiers and snowboarders who converge on the slopes of Whitefish Mountain Resort every winter weekend, riding the chairlifts under the Friday night lights is a highly anticipated occasion, an escape from the workaday grind and the entre to a fun-filled 48 hours of play.

But for the 121 athletes who count themselves among the growing ranks of the freestyle ski team, Friday night is when training begins in earnest.

With that said, the line between play and practice blurs mightily.

Elyse Byrd hits a rail at Whitefish Mountain Resort on Jan. 17, 2020. Hunter DAntuono | Flathead Beacon

So when a power outage in town threatened to postpone the teams weekly session jibbing, sliding and sailing off the rails and jumps in the Fishbowl Terrain Parks, the skiers and snowboarders wasted no time before shouldering their skis and boards and boot-packing up the first pitch to the parks freestyle features.

They are ready to charge, Freestyle Program Supervisor and Head Coach Connie Parks said with delighted laughter. Theyve been waiting all week for this.

One by one, the athletes proceeded to hit the features with an unwavering concentration as the coaches offered support and guidance ranging from technical tips Push your boots out! to gentle post-crash affirmations.

Even with the power restored and the lifts spinning, a handful of athletes opted to continue lapping a particular rail, laying down a staircase of boot-steps as they made their way back to the top, determined to stomp the next landing.

Liam Byrd, 10, and Max Polumbus, 11, encouraged one another at the top of a waterfall rail that features a cascading series of kinks, their competitive spirits friendly but fierce as they offered assessments of their closely matched skills.

He beat me by a half-point at the New Years Eve Rail Jam, Max said of his peer. It was really close.

Liam Byrd hits a rail at Whitefish Mountain Resort on Jan. 17, 2020. Hunter DAntuono | Flathead Beacon

If there seems to be an unusually high number of talented skiers and riders under the age of 12, its because there is, in large part due to Parks.

Parks is responsible for much of the programs growth, and in particular for its ability to attract a growing segment of younger skiers and riders whose natural talents and abilities are leagues above their peers. Many of them have graduated from the resorts ski and ride schools development program and are out-skiing their parents, so their rocket-like progression on the snow bumps up against a ceiling unless another level can cater to their growth.

When Parks and her husband moved to Whitefish in 2012, the resort tapped her to step into the role of supervisor. Having previously coached youth athletes in Utah and Oregon, she turned her eye toward attracting a younger cadre of skiers and snowboarders, and has since grown the team from 39 kids during her first season to 121 athletes this year, ranging in ages between 8 and 17.

Consisting mostly of local youth, the team competes in a variety of events from traditional moguls and aerials to big air, slopestyle, superpipe, and skier/boardercross. Additionally, a growing segment of freeriders skiers and snowboarders who compete in big mountain events in which they race down steep runs, cliffs and chutes has taken hold both on national and Olympic-caliber teams as well as the one at Whitefish Mountain Resort.

To be sure, the competition is stiff among freestyle athletes in Whitefish, but it doesnt overshadow their emphasis on having fun.

Not all of our athletes are part of the team to be competitors, but we do encourage competition as I believe having experience in a competitive environment helps their growth and development, not just as an athlete but also for life, Parks said. Having the opportunity to compete in low-intensity local events is a privilege for our young athletes and helps them feel rewarded at the progress they have made as skiers and snowboarders.

Those rewards were on prominent display last weekend at the first event in the 2020 Biggie Banked Slalom Series, in which 37 freestyle ski team athletes competed, earning a mess of podium spots in an event that features a twisting, serpentine course with manmade and natural features, banked berms and notch jumps.

Brayden Jenkinson, 13, recently moved to the Flathead Valley from California, and said this winter marks his first in years where he could snowboard regularly and hone his skills. Prior to competing in the Biggie Banked Slalom, he showcased his burgeoning talent in the terrain park while trying to calm his race-eve nerves.

Im already way better than when I started, Jenkinson said. The team pushes me. Im still nervous but Im a lot more comfortable.

Whitefish Mountain Resorts Freestyle Ski and Snowboard Team boasts a growing roster of illustrious alumni, including Maggie Voisin, a current member of the U.S. Freeski Team, a two-time Olympian and X Games gold medalist. A little more than a decade ago, Voisin, now 21, was one of the youngest athletes to join the freestyle team, competing and progressing for four years while her coaches realized she could compete on the Olympic level.

Kai Golan catches air on the jump hill at Whitefish Mountain Resort on Jan. 18, 2020. Hunter DAntuono | Flathead Beacon

At age 14, Voisin left her family in Whitefish to live and train in Park City, Utah, where the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association (USSA) is headquartered.

The four-time X Games participant and two-time medalist has been preparing to return to Aspen for the 2020 Games on Jan. 23-26, even as her support for the freestyle team from which she traces her roots continues to grow at home.

I want to show kids that you can achieve your wildest dreams with passion, dedication, hard work, and gratitude, Voisin said this summer when announcing a new scholarship to cover an athletes fees for joining the Whitefish Mountain Resort Freestyle Ski and Snowboard Team. Also, and most importantly, always have fun!

The scholarship also covers the cost of a season pass for the upcoming year and is awarded to one athlete, male or female, skier or snowboarder.

Voisin awards the scholarship to an athlete who, in a written essay, best portrays those traits in his or her skiing or snowboarding life.

Professional freeskier Parkin Costain, 20, also got his start on the freestyle team, and has since established himself as an elite big-mountain skier. Jack Lam is another Whitefish wunderkind who now competes internationally for the United States.

We currently have four alumni who have moved on to train in Park City, Utah to pursue their skiing careers further, and we have two that are traveling the world competing as professional athletes, Parks said. Go Maggie and Parkin!

The current slate of athletes on the Whitefish Mountain Resort Freestyle Ski and Snowboard Team includes members who travel to and compete in regional and national events for the International Freeskiers and Snowboarders Association and the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association.

Freestyle team coaches hike up the terrain park at Whitefish Mountain Resort on Jan. 17, 2020. Hunter DAntuono | Flathead Beacon

Under Parks tutelage, the team has sharpened its competitive edge and dominated the podium at local and regional events.

Last year, Whitefish Mountain Resort hosted nine freestyle competitions with a total of 154 podium possibilities, of which members of the freestyle team occupied 114.

I was looking back on these statistics and Im just amazed, Parks said.

More than podium spots, however, Parks measures success based on progression, tracking athletes as they move from dryland training at a local gymnastics studio before moving to on-snow training and competitions.

With an emphasis on safety first, Parks says most graduates of the program wont go on to ski or snowboard professionally, but all of them leave with a reservoir of skills that will help them enjoy snow sports safely and enthusiastically as young adults.

Its really satisfying watching kids grow up through this program, she said. Thats definitely what I enjoy the most. What a great place for the local youth to spend their wintery months.

If you enjoy stories like this one, please consider joining the Flathead Beacon Editors Club. For as little as $5 per month, Editors Club members support independent local journalism and earn a pipeline to Beacon journalists. Members also gain access to http://www.beaconeditorsclub.com, where they will find exclusive content like deep dives into our biggest stories and a behind-the-scenes look at our newsroom.Join Now

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The Evolution of Freestyle - Flathead Beacon

The Evolution of ‘Davos Man’ into . . . Trump Fan! – Inequality.org

The Davos annual get-together with its $10,000 hotel rooms and $43 hotdogs has always served as a reminder of the vast and growing divide that separates the worlds richest and most powerful from the rest of us. But this years gathering seems to be rubbing that reminder in.

Davos applauds while Donald Trump celebrates a roaring geyser of opportunity. But in the United States and most of the rest of the world, few people are feeling any spray from a roaring geyser. How few? One answer from the global research firm Edelman Intelligence came just before this years Davos celebration opened.

Edelman last fall surveyed over 34,000 respondents across the world and found a growing sense of inequity. In developed nations, details a new Edelman report, less than a third of families see themselves as better off five years from now. Over three-quarters see elites getting richer while regular people struggle to pay their bills.

The super rich who fly their private jets into Davos every year and most of the rest of humanity simply live in two extraordinarily different economic universes, the one a world of wealth, the other a world of work. In the world of work, people depend on their sweat and skills to put food on the table and roofs over their heads. If they want to afford more and better, they put in extra hours. They take a second job.

In the world of wealth, the rich dont have to work ever harder to see their net worth spike. They let their assets do the heavy lifting. Sitting on those assets their stocks, bonds, real estate, and businesses brings dividends, interest, rent, and profits. Selling those assets brings capital gains income.

A truly sweet deal. A perpetual wealth-generation machine that swings into motion, as Seagrams heir Edgar Bronfman once related, for anyone who can afford to enter the world of wealth.

To turn $100 into $110 is work, observed Bronfman. To turn $100 million into $110 million is inevitable.

But added millions only become dependably inevitable when government helpfully greases the skids for wealths unfettered accumulation. And governments do that all the time, by everything from taxing the rich at rates that leave them barely inconvenienced to undermining worker rights to bargain collectively for a fair share of the wealth they create.

Donald Trump has done plenty of that greasing and made himself indispensable to the Davos crowd in the process. The global mega rich once saw Trump as a great disaster, and now, says Niall Ferguson of Stanford Universitys conservative Hoover Institution, theyre all a great deal richer than they were back then. These rich dont want the Trump boom to end. As Ferguson puts it: The dirty little secret of Davos 2020 is they all need him to get re-elected.

Not all the rich, of course, feel that way, and one group of more egalitarian-minded people of means the U.S.-based Patriotic Millionaires took their message to Davos Wednesday. In an open letter entitled Millionaires Against Pitchforks, the group decried the epidemic of tax evasion by the worlds wealthiest and called extreme wealth a sign of a failing economic system.

For that reason, the Patriotic Millionaires open letter to Davos 2020-goers continued, we urge you to step forward now before its too late to demand higher and fairer taxes on millionaires and billionaires within your own countries.

Added the letters 121 signers, a cohort that included a former Unilever CEO and Disney heiress Abigail Disney: We make this request as members of the most privileged class of human beings ever to walk the Earth.

Sam Pizzigati co-edits Inequality.org. His recent books include The Case for a Maximum Wage and The Rich Dont Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class, 1900-1970. Follow him at @Too_Much_Online.

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The Evolution of 'Davos Man' into . . . Trump Fan! - Inequality.org

Walking Shark Are The Most Recently Evolved Shark On Earth – Forbes

To some people, a walking shark may be their worst nightmare. Often imagining a 20-foot monster with razor-sharp teeth, they would be baffled to see that the species within Hemiscyllium are small (up to 42 inches or 107 centimeters in total length but average 28 in or 70cm) and that not much is known about them. Also known as epaulette sharks, the walking sharks are nocturnal and feed on benthic crustaceans, worms, and small bony fish. Restricted to a ring around Northern Australia, the island of New Guinea and the satellite islands of Raja Ampat, Aru and Halmahera in eastern Indonesia, there are nine currently recognized species that call this region home. The most intriguing thing is that all of these benthic sharks share a unique form of locomotion where instead of swimming, they use their highly muscular paired fins to essentially walk along the ocean floor while foraging.

A walking epaulette shark, Hemiscyllium freycineti, crawls across the seafloor in Raja Ampat, ... [+] Indonesia.

David Attenborough helped make these sharks famous a few years ago when he showcased not only these bizarre prototype legs in action but also commented on their unusual physiological adaptation to coping with hypoxic conditions during low tide periods. Having evolved the ability slow their heart rate and breathing, they can gradually limit blood flow to certain parts of the brain, so they can stay during the more extreme tides and exploit the riches of the reef without being picked off by bigger sharks. As it turns out, a new paper from Conservation International, the University of Queensland, the Indonesian Institute of Sciences, the Australian CSIRO and the University of Florida, published in the journal Marine and Freshwater Research, showsthat these walking sharks are the most recently evolved shark species on Earth.

We found the sharks, which use their fins to walk around shallow reefs, only split off evolutionarily from their nearest common ancestor about 9 million years ago, and have been actively radiating into a complex of at least nine walking sharks ever since, said Dr. Mark Erdmann, Conservation International Vice President of Asia-Pacific Marine programs and co-author of the paper in a press release. That may seem like a long time ago, but sharks have ruled the oceans for more than 400 million years. This discovery proves that modern sharks have remarkable evolutionary staying power and the ability to adapt to environmental changes.In other words, this new discovery contradicts the long-held perceptions that sharks are slow to evolve.

Tissue samples were collected from wild specimens and those in museum collections and DNA was then extracted for this project. Using the DNA of these sharks, we were able to estimate when the sharks evolved as well as investigate the processes leading to speciation.We found that changes in sea levels, new reef and land formations and movements of the sharks all played a role, said the papers lead author, Dr. Christine Dudgeon, a research fellow at the School of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Queensland. This information is important not just for walking sharks but for understanding how species have evolved in this region of highest tropical marine biodiversity globally.

The epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) is just one of nine described species.

The genus Hemiscyllium has been recorded from the Late Cretaceous period through to the Eocene epoch from numerous fossil deposits of teeth in Europe (Belgium, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, UK, France), North and Central America, North Africa and India. Following the Eocene epoch, there is a lack of fossil records for this genus until the Pleistocene and the study suggests this supports a recent species radiation. "The walking sharks in the genus Hemiscyllium represent the most recent radiation of sharks, which are likely still differentiating in western New Guinea. These sharks provide a rareand exciting opportunity for us to see evolution in action in a group whose origins predate dinosaurs by 200 million years," said Gavin Naylor, director of the Florida Program for Shark Research at the Florida Museum of Natural History and co-author on the paper.

The authors agree that Hemiscyllium provides an interesting case study to examine speciation in the IndoAustralian Archipelago for these longtailed carpet sharks with very little dispersal throughout their life stages. Due to their isolated habitat ranges, the sharks face a number of threats including habitat degradation and overfishing and their the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List assessments vary from Least Concern (LC) to Vulnerable (VU) depending on the species; only three of the nine known species are included so far. A global recognition of the need to protect walking sharks will help ensure they thrive providing benefits for marine ecosystems and to local communities through the sharks value as tourism assets. Its essential that local communities, governments, and the international public continue working to establish marine protected areas to help ensure our oceans biodiversity continues to flourish, said Erdmann.

Epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum), on reef, at night. South Pacific. (Photo by ... [+] Auscape/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Here's hoping this latest research helps these sharks take a step closer to better management.

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Walking Shark Are The Most Recently Evolved Shark On Earth - Forbes

Storks, Evolution and the Problem of Evil | Jonathan MS Pearce – Patheos

This tweet came from The Non-Alchemist and is worth dwelling on:

In YouTube form, if you cant see it:

The two-horned dilemma is spot on. Either:

Really, think of all of that pain and suffering over all those millions of years whereby animals and humans have endured pain and died merely because Adam and Eve who were knowingly created that way by God ate an apple (enter stage right apologists who claim the crime was infinite in scope and deserves appropriate punishment, but this does not really suffice).

Being punished for the sins of another is a bitter pill to swallow, especially if you are a sentient creature of another species with more limited consciousness but that can still feel pain.

There is no making sense of this scenario, there really isnt. I have set both horns out previously, which are worth looking into:

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Storks, Evolution and the Problem of Evil | Jonathan MS Pearce - Patheos

Watching Hip-Hop Evolution…with my mother – CBC.ca

Black Light is a weekly column by Governor General Award-winning writer Amanda Parris that spotlights, champions and challenges art and popular culture that is created by Black people and/or centres Black people.

The first show I ever binge-watched from beginning to end with my mum was The Wire. Watching a borrowed DVD box set that was making the rounds at my old workplace, we stayed up night after night laughing, crying and debriefing.

At the time, I was working as a community educator in a non-profit field that would probably never yield financial stability. My mum frequently expressed her doubts and misgivings about my professional choices. At one point while watching the show, she turned to me and said: "Now I get why you do the work that you do."

It was a pivotal moment. Thanks to Season 4 of The Wire (the season that kept my mum up all night worrying about Randy and Dukie), she finally understood and appreciated the importance of the work I was doing.

We've watched a bunch of shows together since then, but there's only one other series that deepened my mum's understanding and appreciation of my world: Hip-Hop Evolution.

I started watching the docu-series by myselfbut once I realized how good it was, I strategically put it on when I knew my mum would be around, hoping she would get sucked into this wide-reaching history of rap music's origins.

My mum is probably not the target audience for this show. Although she was partying at nightclubs during the years hip hop was formed, she was doing it in London by way of Grenada. Her music of choice was soca and reggae, disco with a bit of R&B. Rap was never part of the equation. When I was growing up, I had to hide my rap tapes because music with swearing was a no-no. She would watch my VHS tapes of music videos with ambivalence, unimpressed by the bravado and posturing that dominates the genre.

And yet, my plan worked. My mum was seduced into watching Hip-Hop Evolution thanks to the eye candy of Big Daddy Kane and nostalgia-inducing archival footage from the '80s. Before long, she was calling me to hurry up and sit down so that we could watch another episode.

My mum and I aren't the only fans of the show. Hip-Hop Evolution is one of the most successful Canadian music docu-series in recent memory. It has won an International Emmy, a Peabody Award and two Canadian Screen Awards. Hosted by rapper Shadrach Kabongo (a.k.a. Shad), the homegrown production initially began as a stand-alone season on HBO.

Impressive as that initial season was featuring interviews with indisputable pioneers like Kool Herc and Grandmaster Flash and OGs like Marley Marl and Rakim it felt incomplete, particularly due to the absence of female voices.

12 episodes later, the show has travelled to Miami, Atlanta, New Orleans, Memphis, Houston, Detroit and Virginia. It's covered the rise of gangsta rap, recalled legendary venues like the Latin Quarter, immersed itself in the tragic loss of Pimp C and J Dilla,celebrated the business savvy of Master P as well as the creative genius of Missy Elliott, and outlined the industry shattering impact of the mixtape. Hip-Hop Evolution is without a doubt one of the most comprehensive documents of the culture to ever be created.

Earlier this week, my mum and I settled in to watch Season 4 of the show, which was released last Friday on Netflix. As we watched the first episode on the rise of New Orleans bounce music, her eyebrows shot to the top of her head and a smile came over her face as footage of people dancing in the second line appeared on screen.

"Eh, eh! But that's a Soca move!" she said. Watching my mom make diasporic connections between NOLA traditions and Caribbean culture was a thing of beauty as she found familiarity between her home and a place she's never been before. Of course, that didn't stop her from chastising Mannie Fresh for chewing gum while doing his interview or querying, "Do you think this boy has ever worn a pair of pants that fit?" when Lil Wayne appeared on screen.

The most recent seasons of Hip-Hop Evolution boast some of the biggest names in the industry:Diddy, T.I., Big Boi, Snoop, Lil' Kim and Timbaland. However, one of my favourite aspects of the show is the fact that these heavyweights share the spotlight with culture builders who may not be household names. It covers DJ Toomp's pivotal role in a generation's worth of down-south talent and the innovation of Houston's DJ Screw in creating a new slowed-down sound. We get the story of DJ Spanish Fly pioneering hustle and the mind-boggling freestyling talent of Supernatural. It's so fun to watch Shad geek out over these undersung legends a reminder that this is a show made by hip hop heads for those who love hip hop in honour of those who created it.

Although she's definitely not a hip hop head, at least once an episode, my mum would say something along the lines of, "Isn't it amazing how these young people taught themselves all these things?"

She may have scrunched up her nose at the description of The Dungeon as though she could smell Rico Wade's basement through the screen. But she marvelled at the discipline of these teenagers who spent every waking moment there creating a new sound for OutKast and Goodie Mob. It sounds hella corny, but I felt affirmed and validated as I watched my mum develop an appreciation for a culture that has defined so much of my life. Hip-Hop Evolution makes it impossible to deny the literal genius of individuals rarely given the title.

While watching, I tried to imagine the incredible feat it must have been to get music rights to the songs in the series. The absence of certain key acts makes me wonder about how much access to music played a part in storytelling decisions. Can you imagine how difficult it would be to get the rights to Lauryn Hill's music, for example?

It's impossible for one series to capture an entire culture, and as it evolves from the genre's earliest origins, it's clear that Hip-Hop Evolutioncould go on for years, capturing what has now become a global culture. Although there has been no word on whether there will be a Season 5, it would be a shame if this production had to end before it covers Canadian hip hop. I know that if it comes, my mum and I will be ready and waiting to watch.

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Watching Hip-Hop Evolution...with my mother - CBC.ca

The evolution of the three point game in the NBA – Pounding The Rock

During last nights game between the San Antonio Spurs and New Orleans Pelicans, JJ Redick hit his 1,827th three point shot, tying him with Kobe Bryant for 14th all time. Bryant played twenty seasons. Redick matched him in only his fourteenth season.

In fact, of the the top twenty all-time NBA three-point shooters, ten are active players. Stephen Curry, the three-point master, is in his eleventh season. Hes third all-time with 2,492 treys, only behind Ray Allen and Reggie Miller. And thats after playing only four games this season and another with twenty-six games in 2011-12.

Add Kyle Korver, Vince Carter, James Harden, Jamal Crawford, Joe Johnson, JR Smith, LeBron James, and fellow Splash Brother Klay Thompson and one has to ask if the all-time list of top three-point shooters is bound to look entirely different every few years. The pace of NBA teams, as well as the frequency of shooting beyond the arc, means young players could be climbing their way into history with less seasons under their belts.

Out of the top 40, only Manu Ginobili exists to represent the Spurs, alluding to the resistance the silver & black have had to adding the outside shot.

The Spurs have added the three as of late, but none of their players hit with the same destructive frequency. Marco Belinelli is currently in the 69th slot and Patty Mills is 109th.

The Spurs stole Zions night, but the big man made his presence known in the final frame knocking down sixteen straight points shooting four-for-four from downtown.

Perhaps Williamson will be the next great NBA three-point shooter.

Welcome to The Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.

Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, do not troll and watch the language.

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The evolution of the three point game in the NBA - Pounding The Rock

The Oldest Scorpion and the Decadence of Evolutionary Science – Discovery Institute

A few days ago a new paleontological discovery hit the news headlines around the globe. The oldest fossil scorpion ever found had been described and it was said to provide clues to the evolution of life on land. Of course, I was eager to read the original paper; not at all with a malevolent intention, looking to find a fly in the ointment, but honestly interested and fascinated by this subject. Boy, was I in for a big surprise, the unpleasant sort. I am not easily shocked, but this paper shocked me. So what was wrong with it? Well, usually peer reviewers receive a check list from the editors that includes the question, Do the data support the conclusions? This paper fails miserably and it is beyond me how it could ever pass peer review. But lets not get ahead of ourselves.

Andrew Wendruff from Otterbein University in Ohio and his collaborators (Wendruff et al. 2020) published in the Nature journal Scientific Reports. Their paper is titled, A Silurian ancestral scorpion with fossilised internal anatomy illustrating a pathway to arachnid terrestrialisation. They describe two conspecific fossil specimens from the 437-million-year-old Waukesha Lagersttte in Wisconsin. These two Lower Silurian fossils are the earliest scorpions ever found and exhibit a mixture of primitive and derived characters, including preserved internal organs of the circulatory, respiratory, and digestive system. This new evidence is claimed to illuminate the transition from marine to terrestrial life in arachnids. In their press release (Ohio State University 2020) they emphasize that The discovery provides new information about how animals transitioned from living in the sea to living entirely on land. Wow, that sounds really cool.

The general media reception greeting this apparent breakthrough discovery has been enthusiastic: CNN reports that Prehistoric scorpion is earliest known animal to venture from sea onto land (Hunt 2020). The Wall Street Journal celebrates this work with the headline Ancient Scorpion Offers Clues to How Animals Moved from Sea to Land (Camero 2020). Smithsonian Magazine agrees that the Worlds Oldest Scorpions May Have Moved From Sea to Land 437 Million Years Ago (Wu 2020). Only in Ortegas (2020) piece in Science do we find a cautiously critical comment, from renowned arachnologist Paul Selden. Concerning whether the fossils had lived in water or on land, he remarked that Unfortunately, theres really no evidence at all to swing it one way or the other. Yes, that is a first hint as to where the paper goes wrong.

First let me say what is good in this paper. The two fossil specimens it describes really are the oldest known fossil scorpions, and their Lower Silurian age is remarkable. Also, this new genus and species, Parioscorpio venator, differs from all modern arachnids in still having a pair of large lateral compound eyes and a higher number of sternites (ventral plates of the exoskeleton). This is clearly more primitive than any modern scorpion. It is therefore not correct when Uncommon Descent (2020) commented that Worlds Oldest Scorpions Show No Change From 437 Million Years Ago. What hardly changed are the preserved features of the circulatory and respiratory system. The described preservation of these internal organs is highly exceptional and especially remarkable considering the ancient origin of these fossils. Great find! So far, so good.

But what about the really sexy part of the paper the illumination supposedly cast how animals moved from ocean to land? Without this grandiose evolutionary implication the paper would never have made it into a prime journal like Scientific Reports but only into a specialized paleontology journal with a much lower impact factor. That would mean less of a chance for grant renewals.

In the introduction the authors mention several characters that are commonly used to infer the aquatic or terrestrial habitat of fossil arachnids: the presence or absence of feeding structures used to liquify prey (coxapophyses or stomathecae), chemosensory organs (pectines), mechanosensory organs (trichobothria), and respiratory structures (book gills or book lungs). Surprise: The two described fossils have neither visible coxapophyses or stomathecae, nor visible pectines, nor visible trichobothria, and neither visible book gills nor book lungs. There is nothing in these fossils that could say anything about their way of life, and thus nothing that suggests how animals moved from sea to land. Actually, according to the authors the sediments are of marine origin and only yielded marine animals as fossils, but not a single terrestrial plant or terrestrial animal at all.

How on earth do the authors then arrive at their bold claim that the fossils illustrat[e] a pathway to arachnid terrestrialisation? They say in their discussion, Anatomical details preserved in P. venator suggest that the physiological changes necessary to accommodate a marine-to-terrestrial transition in arachnids occurred early in their evolutionary history. Whether P. venator was a fully terrestrial arthropod is uncertain. The close similarity of its preserved pulmonary-cardiovascular structures with those of extant scorpions and horseshoe crabs hint at the possibility of extended stays on land. What? They made very clear that the preserved pulmonary-cardiovascular structures are essentially indistinguishable from those of present-day scorpions. These identical structures show exactly nothing about how these structures or other adaptations for a life on land evolved. The similarities of these structures between extant terrestrial scorpions and marine horseshoe crabs only prove one thing, i.e. that these similarities are totally uninformative about the habitat of these animals. After all, horseshoe crabs are fully marine organisms that mate in the surf and only briefly crawl on the beach to lay their eggs either in shallow water or directly above the edge of the water and then immediately return into the ocean. The lineage of horseshoe crabs goes back 445 million years into the Ordovician era when Lunataspis aurora roamed the sea floors. We have no idea what the pulmonary-cardiovascular structures looked like in those earliest horseshoe crabs or even in their putative Cambrian ancestors. Nothing at all of what the authors describe provides any clue how organ systems changed in adaptation to a life on land. Nothing in the fossils is in any way intermediate between a marine and a terrestrial way of life. The only two primitive character states in these fossils (compound eyes and seven mesosomal sternites) have nothing to do with aquatic or terrestrial adaptation. Consequently, the main claim of the authors, which even made it into the title of this work, is totally unsupported by the data. Any decent reviewer should have recognized this at first glance, and then either requested a major revision or rejected the paper. But obviously this did not happen.

There also other minor shortcomings, such as the lack of a proper cladistic analysis and inconsistencies in the description. For example, in the discussion the authors list several characters of the new taxon, including a narrow metasoma terminating in a stinger, which they correctly consider as a derived similarity with modern scorpions. Unfortunately, the fossil has no stinger preserved. Actually, the authors themselves write further down in the same paragraph but the more terminal stinger is not evident. The authors also describe the alleged presence of a poison vesicle. This, incidentally, shows that they are not specialists, because in scorpions this structure is properly called the venom vesicle. In any event, since the terminal segment (telson), which could contain the venom vesicle, is likewise not preserved but possibly folded beneath the fifth tail segment, the curved outlines visible within this fifth metasomal segment could rather present the telson. It is quite possible that there was a venom vesicle and a stinger in the living animal, but it is not proper scientific procedure to describe unpreserved features instead of inferring them.

What do we learn from this case? In todays science world it is no longer sufficient to objectively describe some nicely preserved ancient fossils. You must overinterpret the evidence and oversell their importance with a fancy evolutionary narrative. And you do not have to hesitate to be really bold with your claims, because neither the scientific reviewers nor the popular science media will care if your claims are actually supported by the evidence. This system is broken. It was broken by the pressure to publish or perish, by the pressure of public relation departments to generate lurid headlines, and by the pressure of the idiotic paradigm that nothing makes sense in biology except in the light of evolution. In entertainment and advertising, sex sells. In the news, it leads when it bleeds. In bioscience it rocks when it is an icon of evolution. Good science falls by the wayside.

Photo: Fossil scorpion from the Lower Cretaceous Crato Formation in Brazil, by G. Bechly.

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The Oldest Scorpion and the Decadence of Evolutionary Science - Discovery Institute

Kristaps Porzingis is the Newest Test Case in the NBAs Evolution – Sports Illustrated

Kristaps Porzingis role in the Mavericks offense would be unthinkable just a decade ago. Standing 73 with an even longer wingspan, Porzingis would have spent much of the aughts on the low block, banging bodies with the behemoths of a previous era. And even as the game has spaced beyond the three-point line over the last ten years, it would have felt criminal not to give Porzingis at least a few post touches per game early in the 2010s. Will the former Knicks star punish defenses down low in the 2020s? Not if Rick Carlisle has anything to say about it.

The Mavericks head coach delivered perhaps the rant of the year on Dec. 26. After weeks of murmurs regarding Porzingis deployment in the Mavericks offense, Carlisle broke, going on a multiple-minute analytics lesson. Porzingis lack of post touches isnt an indictment on the Latvian forward. No player will feast in the post in Carlisles system.

The post-up just isnt a good play anymore. It just isnt a good play. Its not a good play for a 73 guy. Its a low-value situation, Carlisle said after the Mavericks defeated the Spurs. Lets get off of all this stuff that KP needs to go in the post. He doesnt. He doesnt. Im OK with him going in there once in a while, but we dont post anybody.

Carlisles comments are backed by the data. Porzingis averages a 0.91 points per possession on spot-up attempts, and 0.99 points per possession as a roll man. Neither metric is dominant (largely thanks to a shooting slump in his first ten games) but its far better than Porzingis post-up numbers. Hes averaging 0.57 points per post-up possessions this season, the worst mark of 30 players with at least 75 post-ups.

So how does Porzingis function in the Mavericks offense without a steady diet of post-ups? His role is slowly but surely becoming more well defined. Luka Doncic (rightfully) hoards possessions in Dallas, designating Porzingis as an overqualified second option. Porzingis and Doncic are still finding their rhythm in the pick-and-roll, a dance that should become more graceful as we head toward the 2020 postseason. Dallas big man may also see more time as a pure five through the rest of the season after Dwight Powells season-ending injury. Porzingis remains an elite vertical spacer. Expect his share of roll opportunities to increase with Powell out of commission.

Porzingis is presently more comfortable popping to the three-point line in two-man games with Doncic. His spacing in that role has proved critical. Not only can Porzingis connect beyond the arc, he stretches the floor well outside 25 feet. Porzingis is a unicorn of the highest caliber. He may be the most versatile big in basketball.

Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Porzingis got a brief taste at running the show in December as Doncic missed four games due to a sprained ankle. The 24-year-old big man acquitted himself well as the star of the show. He averaged 22.5 points and 13.8 rebounds per game on 36.7% from three, leading the Mavericks to victories over the Bucks and 76ers. Porzingis is good enough to lead a functional attack as a one-man band. But Carlisle would likely rather limit Porzingis nights as the Mavericks leading man, especially amid consistent concerns regarding his knee. Patience remains paramount as Dallas looks to lead the Western Conference for the next decade.

Porzingis role in Dallas offense may be a frustrating one. Once the focal point of the Knicks offense, Porzingis will now spend portions of games as little more than a spot-up shooter. But dont expect Carlisle and Co. to be static with their deployment of Porzingis moving forward.

The Mavericks could experiment with inverted pick-and-rolls in which Doncic screens for Porzingis, and Dallas has a slate of sets designed to create open jumpers for its talented big man. Carlisle is too smart to let such a unique asset go to waste. The Mavericks will continue to develop their playbook in the second half of 2020, attempting to wring the best out of Porzingis in April and May. Porzingis will make his presence felt in the 2020 playoffs. By 2021, he could be battling the Western Conferences elite for a shot at the Finals.

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Kristaps Porzingis is the Newest Test Case in the NBAs Evolution - Sports Illustrated

The evolution of the chief growth officer – Drapers

Hands up who can define the role of the chief growth officer (CGO)? Asoss appointment in December of Robert Birge to this position has left retailers in a state of confusion. Is it a dressed-up chief marketing officer (CMO)? A new customer-focused role? Or a strategy director?

Asos hired Birge former president of ecommerce at health company Blink Health as its first CGO to be responsible for the establishment and acceleration of current business growth and paving the way for sustained future development, the job ad said. It continued: Reporting to the CGO will be a leadership team responsible across the marketing function including brand experience and customer insights. Customer care, which employs some 1,600 staff, will also report to the CGO.

Nick Beighton, Asos chief executive, is recruiting for further senior roles

Asos chief executive Nick Beighton, who is currently recruiting for three other executives to oversee product, HR and strategy, says: Roberts proven track record in delivering high-impact marketing programmes for fast-growing ecommerce businesses means he is an ideal appointment for this new role. And, with more than half of our revenue coming from international markets, his global experience will help fuel our ability to take advantage of the growth opportunities ahead of us.

In the world of fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG), the position of CGO is nothing new and it can encompass marketing, sales, product development, finance and more, to drive business-wide growth. But a quick LinkedIn search under fashion retail in the UK brings up just two results: a CGO at Missguided and another at Ralph & Russo.

It makes no sense, says the managing director of one high street retailer. If it is a new CMO role, why wasnt the CMO interested in growth?

If it is a hybrid role, it sounds too nebulous: what are the other execs doing? The Asos role just sounds like a normal customer director.

Its a bit emperors new clothes nothing new, just more title confusion.

The HR director of one womenswear retailer describes it as an evolution of the traditional CMO role: Its a bit confusing, as it looks like a business development role, he says. How does it impact the chief strategy position? To me, this is an alternative name for a chief customer position and one that many companies are adding to their structure or an evolution of the older CMO role, which just focused on brand.

Fran Minogue, managing partner at executive search firm Clarity, concedes that the definition is not crystal clear, but offers a more succinct explanation: Different people have different interpretations of the CGO role, but it brings all departments together with marketing and the customer as the primary functions, she explains, citing Birges previous experience as chief marketing officer for travel company Lola. We used to have only one department focusing on the customer marketing but thats no longer the case.

Retail has transformed dramatically over the last decade. The proliferation of sales channels has created more opportunities to reach customers through marketing. Initially, this led to the creation of the multichannel director (remember them?), serving customers via web, mobile, social and bricks and mortar.

But multichannel retailing did not take into account the integration of those channels and thereby a single view of the customer. Enter the omnichannel director with a remit to create a seamless customer experience. With the customer at the forefront, a title change to chief customer officer became more appropriate.

A CGO is someone who has to wear many hats, to implement and execute a longer-term vision

HR director

So why change again? Well, what do you do once youve transformed? You grow, explains Lucy Harris, founding partner at executive search company Altrua. The CGO role is a new entity and the way forward as we move away from traditional retail structures.

Yes, its a bit like a chief customer officer but it hits all parts of the business, so they need to be an all-rounder. Everyone owns the customer now and growth will come from many channels.

The HR director says the introduction of GDPR the General Data Protection Regulation, which came into effect in May 2018 adds another level of complexity to a traditional customer director role, which a CGO may be better qualified to manage: The issue we are all facing is that brand is dead for most of the high street and pureplays. Customers are brand agnostic and searching for the best deal, wherever that may be.

But ever since GDPR landed, customer acquisition has become increasingly more difficult, as has understanding the customer as they interact with so many channels across a global market.

I think the CGO role is a hybrid of customer and marketing its not a true CMO role as it is introducing customer and business development. This is where CMO is heading across the industry: acquiring and understanding the customer.

A key difference between a traditional CMO and a CGO, believes James Hyde, director of recruitment firm Flint Hyde, is that the former lacks the hands-on experience of driving growth: A CGO is someone who has to wear many hats, to implement and execute a longer-term vision. They tend to be people with an understanding of all functions, who can drive innovation as well as sales. Its a maverick role.

And that is precisely why the traditional CMO and customer director roles have not changed much over the past few years. With so many retailers on a financial knife edge, they naturally become risk-averse.

Ultimately there is no point employing a visionary and then resisting when they want to implement change,says an international headhunter. And even if they embrace it, significant results are expected immediately, which is not realistic.

As such, he adds that not every retailer is in a position to make such a hire.

The CGO was a hybrid role created by US digital-first brands who were experiencing rapid growth and required a leader with clarity of vision across marketing, sales and product and who could also run a P&L.

It works when all channels internally are operating seamlessly with the consumer always front of mind, he says. However, the role is never going to work when you attempt to shoehorn it into retailers who are still wrestling with the challenges of overcoming legacy systems, an aging store portfolio and who simply do not have the internal mindset that champions innovation in the way a digital-first business has.

But perhaps we are all getting caught up in semantics. Altruas Harris says she is hiring CGOs left, right and centre, even if retailers do not call them that. The international headhunter refers to the CGO as an incarnation of what a modern chief executive looks like.

Minogue sums it up: Were suckers for Americanisms an HR director is now a chief people officer so, yes, we will see more CGOs.

Someone who can drive growth through a marketing function by placing the customer first and bringing all key departments together that is the definition. You choose the name.

Link:

The evolution of the chief growth officer - Drapers

Tracking the evolution of Joey and Shooby’s impossibly pure bromance on The Circle – The A.V. Club

On its surface, The Circlesounds like some shallow, bingeable trash. Stick around until the second episode, however, and youll likely be hooked. The social media competition that forms the spine of the Netflix seriesplayers communicate solely through a social media platform, trying to convey authenticity so as not to get blocked by the games influencersisnt all that gripping in a vacuum, but its reliance on the personalities and machinations of its cast is the key to its appeal. Shockingly, even the most duplicitous of the contestantssome purposely catfish their colleaguesturn out to be compelling, amiable folks, each working to convey genuine emotions through a deceptive avatar. But, as the show makes abundantly clear, ones genuine self is capable ofbleeding through a chat box. Four of the five finalists, after all, survived the entirety of the game without once masking their identity or motivations. The friendships they made really felt real.

Just look at Joey Sasso and Shubham Goel. The former is a buff, flirtatious bartender with a thick Jersey accent while the latter is a socially awkward, Marvel-loving virtual reality engineertogether, however, they formed one of the sweetest, most soul-affirming bonds on TV. Their friendship started simply, with Joey observing in the second episode that Shubhama.k.a. Shoobywas buggin last night and Shooby fretting over whether adding man to the end of a casual inquiry sounded weird. Now, with the show behind them, the pair have made it clear their bromance will persevere beyond the cameras.

In every way possible, we are different, but thats the beauty of it, Shooby recently told Cosmo. He was my day-one guy in there. Me and Joey still keep in touch....When Im back [in Los Angeles], were definitely gonna kick it. Im hoping to kick it, like, three or four times a week. With Joey, I one hundred percent know that our relationship from that Circle is going to be just as strong outside of it.

So, to ensure we never forget the exquisite nature of their union, please join us for a pictorial trek through their friendships most pivotal moments.

(Note: I will be spelling it Shooby, despite Netflixs closed captioning spelling it Shubby. It sounds like Shooby, guys.)

#FriendsTillTheEnd, indeed.

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Tracking the evolution of Joey and Shooby's impossibly pure bromance on The Circle - The A.V. Club

"Expanding the boundaries of lighting" The evolution of lighting as a platform to create enhanced retail experiences – Retail Dive

Light has always had the ability to transform spaces, so as the leading lighting manufacturer, we are compelled to help shape the future of illumination. Considering a future state where digital lighting is intelligent and connected has led Acuity Brands to expand from simply illuminating a space to empowering lighting to solve retail customers' challenges in their stores.

Our corporate commitment and vision of Expanding the boundaries of lightingmeans developing advanced lighting and controls products that are foundational to supporting new and connected IoT solutions. One of the ways we do this is by embedding lighting with digital technologies such as controls, networking devices and sensors to form a platform for location-aware service. We call this a sensory network at Acuity Brands, which is powered and present where people shop and work. We also apply our deep experience in lighting manufacturing to bring this technology to scale, opening applicability beyond high-value retail sales floors into warehouses, manufacturing, and healthcare spaces.

How do we imagine this future of lighting? By listening to our customers. Acuity Brands responds to the needs of retail customers who seek to improve the in-store shopping experience. In addition, we are actively engaged in transforming store operations through real time technologies that improve associate efficiency and support ship-from-store and buy online/pickup at store services. Digital transformation is happening in brick and mortar retail with the help of accurate indoor location-awareness powered by Acuity Brands.

Now that lighting goes beyond energy savings provided by LEDs to form an IoT platform, we connect with building management, refrigeration, and other devices to harvest data that informs facility teams where and how to improve operations with the biggest impact. Our innovations provide analytics and insights on sensor data delivered through the lighting network.

At the start of a major renovation, retailers look for the best solutions in design and materials specifications for LED luminaires and lighting controls. Learning more about the Atrius sensory network from Acuity Brands, the conversation quickly moves to the additional capabilities of the platform. The LED luminaires embedded with BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy) assist visitors with wayfinding and deliver location awareness to tags and monitor assets throughout the building space.

When coupled with low-power sensors, the lighting network can monitor customer foot traffic or alert store associates to items that need to be restocked. These are simple use cases expanding the purpose of lighting: providing a deeper understanding of customers and their in-store shopping experience through rich data insights. At the risk of sounding clich, these conversations create "lightbulb moments" for the retailer.

According to research firm Forrester, an estimated 27% of global retailers and wholesalers indicate that increasing usage of data insights is a high priority in 2020. However, 38% of those surveyed said, "improving their use of data insights in business decision making will be very or even extremely challenging". This has led Forrester to predict that while "data mastery will be the common thread among retail winners in 2020 few will achieve it" .

Addressing this challenge, Acuity Brands brings experience and leadership to tackle critical insights. Walgreens, Target and other successful retailers with Acuity Brands digitally connected lighting systems installed are now activating additional features and functionality to capture data insights that give their business the information needed to improve customer experience by understanding customer preferences and identifying opportunities for improvement.

In the case of Walgreens, their Acuity lighting network was the first layer of implementation. Through a partnership with Microsoft, connected capabilities such as Atrius Retail Solutions were implemented to capture data to enhance the customer journey and get Walgreens closer to their vision to improve the overall shopper experience.

By creating solutions for retailers that deliver business insights from the connected lighting network, renovation investments become-technology investments and have the capacity to serve the business well into the future as highlighted in the recent Walgreens News that covers their first year of partnering with Microsoft on the "future of healthcare" initiative.

Leveraging data, many of our customers are learning new insights such as shopper in-store foot traffic patterns and improving loss prevention. By implementing Atrius Retail Solutions, they gain actionable information that significantly impacts their business. Distilling the panoply of harvested data to action is another way we're expanding the purpose of lighting.

Visit the Atrius website to learn how today's networked lighting solutions can help solve business challenges with practical data-driven solutions through Atrius Retail Solutions.

Download the Navigant white paperClosing the Online/Offline Gap for Retail Storessponsored by Acuity Brands.

Fiona Swerdlow,Predictions 2020: Retailers Seek An Edge Amid Uncertainty, Forrester Research

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"Expanding the boundaries of lighting" The evolution of lighting as a platform to create enhanced retail experiences - Retail Dive

Maple Leafs Mitch Marner on first All-Star Game, evolution of NHL wingers – Sportsnet.ca

After a pair of impressive 60-point campaigns as a young gun and a dominant 94-point effort last season, Mitch Marner is officially an All-Star.

The star winger earned his first career selection on the back of the Maple Leafs faithful, his name added to the mix via the leagues Last Men In fan vote.

With an impressive 47 points on the season so far, second-most on the team despite missing roughly a month with an early injury, the 22-year-old said hes honoured to get his first shot at joining the All-Star festivities.

Its definitely up there, Marner told Sportsnet 590s Hockey Central crew when asked where an All-Star debut ranks among young hockey players goals. I mean, probably top three Id say, [with] the Stanley Cup, getting drafted and then making it here. Its something as a kid you watch, you grew up watching. You watched all the guys competing and just really looking like theyre having a blast.

Im super honoured to be a part of it now.

The Markham, Ont., native will suit up for the inaugural Shooting Stars event as part of the Skills Competition on Friday, a trick-shot-like affair thatll see players wiring pucks off an elevated platform 30 feet above the ice, trying to snipe targets spread across the sheet.

We went and gave it a shot yesterday from where the actual mark was, where everythings sitting in the stands, Marner said. Its weird I mean, youre elevated, you dont really know how much power to put into it or anything, but well see how it goes. Hopefully, I just dont embarrass myself.

Hockey Central

Mitch Marner will also be in the stands this All-Star weekend

January 24 2020

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The skill-set Marners put on display so far in his young career suggests hell be just fine. But theres far more to his game and that of his fellow All-Star wingers than the offence-focused skill-sets of the stars who played his position back in the day.

The evolution of the game has seemed to bring with it a blurring of the lines for players in all positions. And while the focus of that transition is most often the greater offensive roles of todays top blue-liners, theres been just as big a shift for the wingers, says Marner.

I think for wingers, you see more now the defensive wingers or two-way wingers that have really developed throughout the league, Mark Stone being the kind of lead guy in that, Marner told the Hockey Central crew. Seeing what hes done the last couple years with takeaways and even just with his stick, hes been amazing at that. So, I think really the winger role has evolved into being something bigger than just kind of that guy that goes up and down the wing, that can shoot, that power forward guy getting the puck deep and hitting guys.

I think its really developed a lot now into a skilled guy, a playmaker or a goal-scorer or really anything. I think now in wingers minds its not just about doing that up-and-down ice, its about covering all zones and making sure youre covering for your centreman if need be, and I think everyones kind of taken a bigger role with that.

Listen to Mitch Marners full interview with Sportsnet 590s Hockey Central via the audio player embedded within this post.

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Maple Leafs Mitch Marner on first All-Star Game, evolution of NHL wingers - Sportsnet.ca

5G Will Bring Forth A Cryptocurrency Evolution In Payments Within The Next Half-Decade – The Coin Republic

Steve Anderrson Friday, 24 January 2020, 06:23 EST Modified date: Friday, 24 January 2020, 06:23 EST

The blazing speeds and more efficient communications protocols that 5G expected to bring in expected to change the face of cryptocurrency-based payments in the average consumer space within the next five years.

It presumed that within 2025, nearly half of all smartphone owners who do not have access to a bank or a financial institution would be able to make cryptocurrency transactions for their daily business needs.

Managing VP at Gartner, Miriam Burt shared the same opinions at the Gartners Strategic Predictions for 2020 and Beyond keynote. It held at the Oracle OpenWorld 2020, which was hosted at the Dubai Trade Centre Arena this week.

She went on to state her belief that for financial leaders to remain competitive and have full customer satisfaction, the future of finance based on cryptocurrencies must undoubtedly be thought of and considered.

Were looking at the age of fintech, where there is a potential for all payments to be cashless and make financial services accessible to a whole new population that does not have access to banking services.

Burt went on to say that

In the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, two-thirds of people have no bank accounts; however, more than half of the countries have no bank accounts. However, more than half of the countries have a mobile subscriber penetration rate of 70% of the population. This means that we have more people who have phones than bank accounts. An estimated 23% of these people are under-banked, so they have access to smartphones but dont have access to traditional financial services.

What Burt is trying to convey is the idea that the onset of cryptocurrencies will bring financial services one step closer to people without having to go through complicated procedures that take time and infrastructure to build and maintain.

The phones are already in place, in the hands of the people, and the bases for the financial services are already there too within cryptocurrencies.

Cryptocurrencies will become the core of mobile payments, and digital payments in general, and bring financial institutions closer to the people globally.

Burt also said that China Telecom would be the first to implement this technology, and they are already working on blockchain technology-based projects that will use 5G SIM cards to transact cryptocurrencies.

Successful implementation of the above initiative could put China Telecom as a massive lead in telecommunications over other countries, and it will become highly popular.

They will have extremely secure standards, including next-level digital authentication and decentralized authentication, to allow cryptocurrency payments.

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5G Will Bring Forth A Cryptocurrency Evolution In Payments Within The Next Half-Decade - The Coin Republic

Scientific Decadence and the Myth of Objectivity – Discovery Institute

Writing here yesterday about the mischaracterization of 437-million-year-old scorpion fossils, paleontologist Gnter Bechly used an apt but unexpected word to describe evolutionary thinking. It isnt just mistaken. It reflects a state of decadence:

In todays science world it is no longer sufficient to objectively describe some nicely preserved ancient fossils. You must overinterpret the evidence and oversell their importance with a fancy evolutionary narrative. And you do not have to hesitate to be really bold with your claims, because neither the scientific reviewers nor the popular science media will care if your claims are actually supported by the evidence. This system is broken. It was broken by the pressure to publish or perish, by the pressure of public relation departments to generate lurid headlines, and by the pressure of the idiotic paradigm that nothing makes sense in biology except in the light of evolution.

Under these circumstances, Good science falls by the wayside. Now neuroscientist Michael Egnor comments over at Mind Matters on decadence in a completely different scientific field: medicine and medical ethics. Abortion advocates have long advanced the falsehood that babies in the womb feel less pain than we do or no pain at all. The truth is the exact opposite: An unborn child with an immature brain probably experiences painmoreintensely than an individual with a mature cortex.

Perhaps the most disturbing damage that the abortion lobby has done to our society aside from the systematic killing of tens of millions of innocent human beings is the corruption of science in the name of ideology. Nowhere is this corruption more obvious than in the misrepresentation of the neuroscience of fetal pain perception.

A new article in theJournal of Medical EthicstitledReconsidering Fetal Pain(open access)is a welcome correction to the abortion lobbys systematic misrepresentation. The authors, one of whom is an abortionadvocate,reviewed the literature on the perception of fetal pain and came to the conclusion that there is clear scientific evidence to support the view that unborn children feel pain as early as 13 weeks of gestation.

This should not have come as a surprise, since doctors who work with newborns and premature babies routinely observe that they respond with screams to a needle prick that an adult would barely register.

Dr. Bechly calls it decadence. Dr. Egnor calls it corruption. Its one and the same thing: whereas, according to widespread legend, scientists just objectively sift facts, in reality ideological ax-grinding is common and probably worse than it ever was. Remember, what Bechly and Egnor are describing isnt limited to a stray scientist here or there. It is systematic. Hence the state of decadence.

As the new Long Story Short video from Discovery Institute on homology puts it, Scientists are just like everyone else: people. And we can be uncritical of things that we want to believe.

Thats a charitable way of putting it. In one way, scientists arent like everyone else: that is, because of the enormous prestige they enjoy, the impact of their being uncritical of things that [they] want to believe is tremendous. And it can be quite corrosive, quite malign. It affects how the rest of us think about the origins of life, about the nature of reality ultimate questions and about how to treat the most vulnerable members of humankind, the unborn in the womb, whether with care or savage disregard.

These are reasons for applying special scrutiny and an extra degree of skepticism they are reasons for thinking your own thoughts rather than be spoon-fed when considering what Scientists Say.

For more on the culture of contemporary science, see Egnors post, Jeffrey Epstein and the Silence of the Scientists.

Photo: A baby in the womb at 17 weeks, by Nogwater, via Flickr (cropped).

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Scientific Decadence and the Myth of Objectivity - Discovery Institute

A top UiPath exec called its recent layoffs a ‘natural part of the evolution.’ Here’s how the hot AI startup now plans to scale in 2020. – Business…

BELLEVUE, WASHINGTON At the start of 2019, UiPath announced a $568 million funding round valuing the startup at $7 billion.

It quickly became the world's most-funded AI startups and was hailed by analysts as nearly unbeatable in its offerings. The company specializes in robotic process automation, which aims to help companies automate common, repetitive, and mundane computer tasks.

Then, in October, UiPath laid off roughly 400 jobs and parted ways with a chief financial officer who had only been at the company since January. The move was aimed at eliminating positions or individuals that were key to achieving success as a startup, but were not suited to help UiPath continue to grow, according to head of AI products PD Singh.

Instead, the firm had to prepare for its future including a potential initial public offering (or IPO) and that required individuals with a growth mindset. PD Singh is the head of AI products at UiPath UiPath

"It was just a natural part of that evolution that you needed to get rid of that baggage," he told Business Insider at UiPath's Bellevue, Washington, office. "These things are natural. This was a startup which was working in a very scrappy mode but that's not how things eventually would be done in a company which is either IPO'ing or post-IPO."

Singh did not expect any additional layoffs in 2020, but noted that anything was possible. "Everybody is dispensable here, including me," he said. "If there's one thing I've learned in technology, you shouldn't get hung up about layoffs."

Instead, UiPath is looking to put those layoffs behind them and scale the business in 2020. Last year, "we put good stakes in the ground in terms of the product lanes that are needed by our customers," Singh said, adding that this year will be all about "scaling the installation of those product lines."

Singh a former head of product at Microsoft who joined UiPath in 2018 outlined the three steps the company is taking to grow.

RPA has the potential to save companies hundreds of millions of dollars every year in reduced operating costs. But for UiPath to grow, Singh says it needs to find more real-world examples to tout.

"With RPA being a fledgling industry and AI itself being a fledgling industry one of the things that's going to make us not be too buzzy or not be too frothy is real use cases. And real use cases working at scale," he said.

UiPath already has big-name clients using its platform. Chevron, for example, is using RPA in a limited capacity to automatically open email attachments and upload them to a common database, a project they want to scale to the whole enterprise.

Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation is also using the technology to save an estimated $500 million annually by the end of 2020.

Similar to how developers helped populate the app store for iPhone, UiPath is hoping to expand its network of partners that can build upon its own platform.

"Having that partner network is super important," said Singh. "In the AI team right now, I have [an] initiative to light up our strategic [global systems integrators] that we will train" to use UiPath's offerings to develop custom solutions for clients.

That goal is relatively easy, he added, because the company can focus on high-demand verticals based upon how quickly the industries can adopt the tech.

Healthcare, for example, is much more highly regulated and has a higher barrier of entry for new applications. On the other hand, oil and gas companies can typically implement technology much faster.

Singh is confident in UiPath's current product line, but says a goal will be to continue meeting customer demands for new offerings.

"If you have a good sense of what your customers want and you keep innovating in the direction of the customer need, that's what makes your company the top company in the world," he said.

UiPath gets ample feedback from clients to help inform future development. A key metric is daily active robots, which simply refers to how many models are currently in use. The company is also active on forums with developers to learn about pain points with its tools, and it offers select customers private previews of offerings not yet ready for primetime.

"We have about 150 different models that are in production," Singh said.

If you are an individual who was laid off from UiPath (or a current employee) and would like to share your experience at the company, I can be reached at JWilliams@businessinsider.com or on Signal/WhatsApp at (309) 265-6120.

Continued here:

A top UiPath exec called its recent layoffs a 'natural part of the evolution.' Here's how the hot AI startup now plans to scale in 2020. - Business...

Carly Pearce’s Next Album Will Showcase Her ‘Evolution’ – kezj.com

Carly Pearce's career and life have changed substantially since she put out her full-length studio debut, 2017'sEvery Little Thing. In that time, she's earned her first No. 1 hit, scored major awards and nominations, toured all around the world, gotten married and come into her own as an artist and performer. Now, with the release of her self-titled sophomore album just around the corner, Pearce says she can't wait to catch fans up on all the changes in her life.

"So much has happened to me that has made me, I guess. That first record, I was searching and hoping that people in country music would embrace me. Now I know that I have a place in the genre, which is amazing," Pearceexplained at the 2019 ASCAP Country Music Awards last November.

"I had, just, more confidence with that [when I was making my second album]. So many great things happened to me that gave me the confidence to know, 'People want to hear what you have to say,'" she continues.

One of Pearce's biggest champions as she worked onCarly Pearcewas her producer,Busbee, who helped her develop her musical sound and incorporate her personal life into her next batch of songs. "I told Busbee when we went in, I wanted it to be an evolution of music as a woman," Pearce says.

In late September, Busbee died at the age of 43, following a battle with brain cancer. In light of that loss, Pearce says her new project has taken on an even greater meaning.

"Obviously, it's taken on a little bit of a bittersweet thing for me, because it was the last record that [Busbee] finished before he passed away, tragically," Pearce notes. "That takes on an extra special meaning for me. I feel like it's my duty to make him proud with this music."

Now that the album's release is less than a month away, though, Pearce says her overarching feeling is excitement at being able to finally let fans in on a new chapter of her life. "[The record] has been finished for a while, so just being able to finally have an end date to it, and to be able to put these songs out, [is amazing]," she adds.

Who Else Is Releasing New Music in 2020?

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Carly Pearce's Next Album Will Showcase Her 'Evolution' - kezj.com

Temtem Guide – How to Evolve your Temtem – Attack of the Fanboy

If you want to fill out your collection of Temtem and gather data on all the multitude of species available to catch and battle in the game, you need to understand evolution. This mechanic, adopted from the franchises and series that inspired Crema to create the newly released MMORPG, is key to becoming the best player you can, with the strongest team of Temtem at your disposal. But as a new franchise, players are wondering how everything works. So heres how to evolve your Temtem.

First, a warning. This is a bit too early for all the details of evolving your Temtem as the game is still in Early Access and a lot of this can change. Also this means that currently were still discovering elements of the game and its mechanics, so be sure to let us know if we get anything wrong. With that said, well share as much as we can and keep this article updated as the game works its way to full release in 2021. So, how do you evolve Temtem? All the ones we currently know about use the tried and true method of certain level caps.

Most creatures in Temtem need to be leveled up a certain amount of times, in most cases seven levels, before they will evolve. For example Crystle, one of the starter Temtem, will evolve into Sherald at level 30. The more you use it in battle, the quicker youll hit this level, and the sooner it will evolve. However, this isnt the only thing to keep in mind in regards to evolution in this new game.

Many Temtem follow the usual formula of hitting a certain level then evolving into Stage 2 or possibly Stage 3 versions of that species. Some Temtem lack further stages though and will never evolve, so watch for more on that as we dig into the game. However others have even more complexity to them such as Meta-mimetic Tetem which can evolve into different final forms depending on certain conditions. Well break these down once theyre fully discovered and fleshed out.

So thats what we know now about how to evolve your Temtem. Theres lots more to discover as the game gets updated and the deeper mechanics are added in. Be sure to check back for more as this develops.

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Temtem Guide - How to Evolve your Temtem - Attack of the Fanboy

More Americans are choosing cremation over traditional burials, survey finds – USA TODAY

Have you thought about what to do with your body when you die? More Americans arechoosing cremation over traditional burials, says a new survey.

A new report by insurance firm Choice Mutual found 44% of Americans plan on being cremated, a 40% increase from the 1960s. Traditional burials were the second most popular choice, with 35% of Americanspreferring the method.

Choice Mutual surveyed 1,500 people in the U.S. on their burial preferences and practices.

Other burial preferences includedonating their bodies to science at 6%and natural burials being buried without a casket in the ground at 4%.

Cremation is becoming a popular choice for people in Florida.(Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

"People donate their bodies to science now because they want to help improve medical practices, and with the eco-friendly burials people are a lot more conscious of the environment," said Morgen Henderson, researcher at Choice Mutual, in a statement.

Americans arealso opting for moreunique arrangements for their cremated remains, including launching them into space or having them compressed into a diamond.

The most popular option among Americans was having their ashes spread in a specific location (40%),followed by their ashes being kept by a family member (36%). Onein 10 Americans who plan to be cremated want to be planted as a tree.

As burial preferences have changed significantly over the years,more Americans are shifting towardmore non-traditional plans such as sea burial or plastination, a process that involves removingall fluids from the body and replacingit with a polymer or plastic-like substance.

"With the improvements and developments in technology that has opened up a lot of different burial options," said Henderson.

Who inspires you?: USA TODAY seeks your Women of the Century to commemorate 19th Amendment

Burial Preferences: Cremation is making death a little cheaper

These alternative burial methods aren't cheap, however.

The costliest, mummification, which involves the preservation of the skin and the flesh of a corpse, starts at $67,000, says Choice Mutual.By contrast, the average cost fortraditional burials is$7,360, which doesn't include a burial plot or headstone. Cremations start around $500 but could cost thousands more with viewing or memorial services.

And, for those looking to be frozen rather than burned, cryonics freezing the bodyto a temperature low enough that it wont decompose starts at an average cost of $28,000.

The survey found 47% of Americans opt for burial plans based on personal beliefs, while 24% say family traditions influence their decision. Only 14% of Americans ascribe financial reasons as the determining factor for their choice.

The choices vary across generations, with family traditions becoming increasingly more important to younger generations while financial reasons are more important to older generations, said the survey.

According to a report by National Funeral Directors Association,62.5%of Americansfelt it was very important to communicate their funeral plans and wishes to family members before their own death, yet only 21.4% had done so.

Full Source: https://choicemutual.com/funeral-preferences/