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Monthly Archives: April 2017
Venture capitalists look beyond tech to the dietary supplements … – Los Angeles Times
Posted: April 23, 2017 at 12:50 am
How do you stay sharp and fit despite fatigue and age? By consuming substances extracted from blueberries, flowers and algae, say the makers of a new group of unregulated and unproven health pills.
Trusting natural chemicals to solve inevitable ailments is familiar to anyone who has visited a GNC store or contributed to the $30 billion spent annually in the U.S. on dietary supplements.
But the new supplement firms are grabbing attention because theyre founded and funded by people more at home at a Silicon Valley technology campus than a late-night infomercial.
Led by tech world veterans and funded by venture capitalists, dietary supplement start-ups such as Ritual, Elysium and Nootrobox are peddling daily multivitamins and energy-boosting gels with transparency and testing thats turning heads in the industry. Theyre taking the unusual steps of pointing to studies that justify ingredient choices and even publishing full lab test results.
Were not introducing a new drug or something very different, Ritual Chief Executive Katerina Schneider said. Were making something a lot better. The industry needs this disruption.
Thats plausible in an industry long associated with unreliable promises and dodgy characters. And the start-ups deep pockets and tech pedigree may cut through skepticism and instill a sense of authenticity craved by younger customers.
But there are signs that these start-ups, like many supplement companies before them, leave out key facts and overstate health claims.
Supplement start-ups are gaining traction as venture capitalists spread hundreds of millions of dollars in cash to lucrative areas beyond apps and gadgets.
The investors are lending their credibility from successful bets on Snapchat, Uber and Dollar Shave Club to offbeat ideas in food and health. They're backing products that resemble eggs and meat hoping to produce them in more environmentally friendly ways and start-ups seeking to turn breakfast, lunch and dinner into slurpable meal-replacing drinks.
Investors expect big paydays because of several apparent cultural shifts. People now are accustomed to paying monthly for a ration of products and services, whether its supplements or shows on Netflix. Having the Internet at their fingertips all day has made younger consumers more attuned to what they eat and they prize products that are cheap, simple and affordable.
Those desires are at odds with business models of struggling retailers such as GNC, but neatly addressed by the start-ups.
The firms also aspire to be more than pill pushers. By adding services such as coaching and offering online videos on healthy living, the start-ups could be as essential to millennials as Centrum or Weight Watchers are to seniors.
About half of U.S. adults and a third of children take supplements: some by choice, some by doctors' orders, some because they believe that their dietary restrictions (vegan, dairy-free, etc.) leave them unfulfilled. The tech-backed approaches could convert the other 50%, which skews younger, investors say.
Elysium and Nootrobox each say they have tens of thousands of subscribers, and Ritual reports 500% growth in subscribers since Jan. 1.
Many others are getting involved. Actress Gwyneth Paltrows online shop Goop peddles pill packs such as High School Genes. Life Boost sells a blender that mixes powders into vitamin shots, claiming that drinking vitamins leads to better absorption.
Supplements can launch and boast about improving health without approval of the Food and Drug Administration, as long as they aren't claiming to treat or prevent specific diseases.
The policy enables companies to sells billions of dollars of goods without authenticated evidence of their worth. Though companies typically stick with ingredients the FDA deems safe, the agency doesnt test the combinations found in supplements.
Its not to say these products dont have a role in health, but we dont have a lot of clinical trials investigating that question, said Regan Bailey, a Purdue University associate professor of nutritional science.
The start-ups websites tout research that they argue justifies ingredients and sometimes suppliers. They are far more specific than traditional supplement websites, where suppliers go unnamed and relevant studies arent cited.
But researchers the start-ups mention arent ready to recommend the pills.
Many study authors expressed surprise that their work has been referenced and shared their dismay about how their findings had been portrayed. The Los Angeles Times contacted authors of about 40 studies described on Rituals website, 10 from Elysium and seven from Nootrobox. Altogether, more than a dozen authors raised concerns.
Rituals semi-clear, vitamins-and-minerals pill aims to give women more vibrant lives and looks. Backed by $5 million and inspired by its founders pregnancy-fueled search for safer products, Ritual promises an obsessively researched vitamin directly to your door. It paraphrases studies into short declarations on its website, identifying only the authors, not the works themselves.
Purdues Bailey, who is mentioned on Rituals iron webpage, and several others described the companys conclusions as unsound.
Sarah Booth of Tufts University said that by condensing her work into food sources for K2 are difficult, Rituals site is incorrect because she has found that the vitamin is abundant in pork and dairy products. In addition, Booth said theres no established dietary requirement for K2, making it difficult to argue that people dont get enough.
Ritual intended to provide a synopsis that the non-scientist could wrap her head around, founder Schneider said. Studies didn't get links because of regulatory concerns and authors werent contacted since the works were in the public domain. Schneider also thought that the presentation wouldnt mislead consumers into assuming that the scientists endorsed the product.
But a Los Angeles Times inquiry prompted Harvard University professor Goodarz Danaei to have a school attorney request that Ritual remove a reference to his study about omega-3 oil. Danaei said the company complied. He had concerns because he examined fish-based oil, not the algae-based variety that Ritual employs. The company contends that the options are scientifically equivalent.
With Elysium, several researchers described feeling conflicted about the New York City firms efforts. The company co-founded by a former venture capitalist and a Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher has received more than $20 million to produce sand-colored pills to combat aging. They say ingesting chemicals in quantities not feasible to attain through consuming blueberries, grapes and milk kicks the body into a state of hunger that extracts more life out of cells.
Professors whose studies Elysium cites online question its speculative science (theres no evidence that Elysium is using the right dosage, for example), though some are intrigued by its unconventional approach.
Company officials are right that the FDA is not likely to approve a drug to extend lifespan, so a vitamin supplement with the prospect to do so is a soft approach to the problem, said Anthony Sauve, an associate professor of pharmacology at Cornell University, whose work Elysium references.
Elysium reached out to several researchers, but not everyone who is referenced on its website.
Even scientists contacted by companies early on found issues with later references to their work. Matthew Pase, a fellow in Boston Universitys neurology department, said Nootroboxs website wrongly implies that his study found that the plant Bacopa monnieri improved memory. Nootrobox executives said the companys citations and explanations could have been clearer.
Nootrobox, based in San Francisco and financed by investors such as Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer, churns out several pills and gummies that aim to help ambitious people stay alert, executives say. That would include its techie co-founders, who concocted drinks and slipped powdered herbs under the tongue in hopes of extending workdays better than coffee does.
Nootrobox could face scrutiny for including links on its website to studies about diseases. For example, text on one ingredient webpage could be seen to imply that Nootrobox pills guard against Alzheimer's disease and dementia.
Chief Executive Geoffrey Woo said ingredient pages dont have buy buttons for fear of that very implication. Woo sees the ingredient guide as distinct, but he said he can see where the confusion is. The company removed some disease references after a Los Angeles Times inquiry.
Start-ups must balance their enthusiasm and blue-sky thinking with the realities of a precarious industry, said Duffy MacKay, senior vice president of science and regulatory affairs at industry trade group Council for Responsible Nutrition.
Ritual, Elysium and Nootrobox dont do their own verification of suppliers labor and environmental practices. But all say that they put pills through quality control and that consumers havent had issues yet. Theyre all preparing the type of product-effectiveness studies that the academic community wants to see.
For people who receive plentiful nutrients through food, supplements remain unnecessary, according to healthcare experts. In some cases, theyre viewed as harmful because chemicals may produce unreliable effects outside the items in which theyre normally found.
Elysium Chief Executive Eric Marcotulli acknowledged that theres a lot of work to do on the research front, but said the company believes the right thing is allowing the public to join the experiment.
We shouldnt have to wait until were broken to fix something, he said.
Those who abstain are missing out and thus worse off, Nootrobox co-founder Michael Brandt said. If something can improve your work performance, and the effects compound, its better to start sooner than later, Brandt said.
paresh.dave@latimes.com / PGP
Twitter: @peard33
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Beware of ‘anti-cancer’ herbal food supplements, doctors say – Davao Today
Posted: at 12:50 am
BEWARE. Dr. Ellie May Villegas of the Philippine Society of Medical Oncologists warns the public about food supplements claiming to be substitutes for conventional cancer treatment. Villegas said most advertised food supplements, if not actually effective, actually interfere with chemotherapy, causing even more problems. Villegas was among the resource persons of the forum titled Holistic Oncology: Understanding Complementary versus Alternative Medicine held at the Marco Polo Hotel on Friday, April 21. (Paulo C. Rizal/davaotoday.com)
DAVAO CITY, Philippines A group of doctors specializing in the treatment of cancers warned the public on Friday about several herbal food supplements advertising as replacements for traditional cancer treatment, such as radio and chemotherapy.
Usually, some patients would go to my clinic to ask for replacements to chemotherapy and radiation. Unfortunately, theres nothing in literature that says that, said Dr. Omid Etemadi of the Philippine Society of Medical Oncologists.
Etemadi said that there are actually very few scientific evidence to prove that these food supplements work, and at best, can only complement traditional treatment.
Apart from the lack of scientific evidence proving the potency of these food supplements, Etemadi said some of the purported anti-cancer supplements could interfere with treatment and may cause more problems.
Etemadi cited the case of grape seed extract, which interferes with the metabolism of tamoxifen, a drug that blocks the action of estroge, which in turn, is used to treat certain types of breast cancer.
He also warned against drinking too many herbal food supplements, saying this may stress the liver because it may be impairing its ability to metabolize properly.
With that, Etemadi advised the public to consult their doctors before taking any food supplements.
Dont hide it from your doctor. Actually were not against it if you want to take other pills. We just want to make sure that youre drinking the correct supplements to avoid endangering you, he said.
Meanwhile, another oncologist, Dr. Ellie May Villegas, said it could take many years of rigorous testing and clinical trials before the efficacy and safeness of a drug could be assured.
Villegas said that Xanthone, a compound extracted from the mangosteen, was proven to have positive effects only in the in vitro stage, which means it was only tested on cells in a test tube. Uson said this is only in the preliminaries, and has not been tested yet on animals, or humans.
Villegas also warned the public about alternative practitioners pitching their claims directly to the media, because it only emphasizes the purported benefits without discussing the possible side effects.
We do not go on TV to discuss scientific treatment because it has to be explained in person by a medical professional, Villegas said.
For his part, Food-Drug Regulation Officer III of the Food and Drug Administration, Willison John De Luna admitted that the marketing strategies of food supplements is not the responsibility of the FDA. De Luna said that while they are consulted in the content, ultimately, it is the Advertising Standards Council, an independent regulating agency that approves the commercials.
Nevertheless, De Luna encouraged the public to report to the FDA any food supplement with any suspicious and outrageous claims for further investigation.
Lets be critical on how to deal with this information, what are their evidences, sources, for example. In the end ang isipin natin dito ay public health, and if does this product really has an effect not just on us, but to the people who are taking this product, De Luna said.(davaotoday.com)
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Beware of 'anti-cancer' herbal food supplements, doctors say - Davao Today
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Citizenship changes reflect the Trumpist zeitgeist – Daily Advertiser
Posted: at 12:49 am
21 Apr 2017, 1:41 a.m.
A common feature in these ballots across Britain and France? Immigration.
Election-weary Britons head to the polls on June 8. The French will vote this weekend. Americans only recently concluded their distended democratic ritual. Different countries, different systems, different voters. A common theme? Immigration.
Donald Trump pulled off his unlikely victory by invoking a dichotomy: Americans versus others. The antediluvian promise to make America great again was pitched at a demoralised working class, deprived of a social safety net and denied real wage growth for decades.
It cleverly ignored the yawning gulf between a privileged, tax-astute billionaire and his new electoral quarry by excavating an even bigger hole in which immigration was conflated with national security, free trade with job losses, globalism with US decline.
In France, Marine Le Pen's far-right National Front exploits similar tensions by branding asylum seekers "illegal". "They have no reason to stay in France" Le Pen says blithely because "these people broke the law the minute they set foot on French soil".
Theresa May's snap British poll is an aftershock of last year's stunning Brexit quake when ordinary Brits ignored elite opinion to cut ties with Europe. Their disaffection derived substantially from the EU's free movement rules that had foreign labour transforming the British economy in ways that suited capital but left workers feeling worse off.
Le Pen, fanning the same anxieties, frames French citizenship as "either inherited or merited", which may be reasonable coming from a more moderate voice. Most, however, see it as the dog-whistle it is: extremism masquerading as common sense. It is typical of the new xenophobia that parades as an antidote to global uncertainty yet poses an existential threat to French cohesion, as well as European stability.
Against these trends, Turnbull's deification of "Australian citizenship" reflects Australia's more sober debate.
It locates Australian identity as a set of beliefs under the rubric of multiple differences: "We're not defined by race or religion or culture, as many other nations are. We're defined by commitment to common values, political values, the rule of law, democracy, freedom, mutual respect, equality for men and women. These fundamental values are what make us Australian."
Unsurprisingly, Turnbull's new muscularity on Aussie "values", which, rhetorically at least, sits more readily with his predecessor, Tony Abbott, has fuelled plenty of suspicion. Cynical observers will view it as a Clayton's boat people fight, the one you engender once the boats have actually stopped being an issue.
Doubtless an embattled prime minister would welcome any electoral dividend and the extra protection within his own party room. But that does not of itself, make the proposed changes wrong.
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The story Citizenship changes reflect the Trumpist zeitgeist first appeared on The Sydney Morning Herald.
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Citizenship changes reflect the Trumpist zeitgeist - Daily Advertiser
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Event promotes innovation and technology expansion – Castlegar News
Posted: at 12:48 am
Event promotes innovation and technology expansion.
The BC Innovation Council (BCIC) was in Castlegar last week as part of their Regional Innovation Opportunities tour.
The BC Innovation Council (BCIC) was in Castlegar last week as part of their Regional Innovation Opportunities tour encouraging local companies and individuals to delve into the innovation and technology sector.
According to BCIC the initiative is intended to bring business and local tech companies together and spark further innovation and job growth in our regional economies.
The instructional and networking event promoted the idea that communities and businesses in the Interior can join in the new job economy through technology and innovation. Representatives from several companies from Kamloops were on hand to share how their companies had grown through introducing innovation and technology aspects to their businesses.
You can do the same type of thing in small towns like Castlegar, Nelson and Trail, said Castlegar Councillor Arry Dhillon, who attended the event.
The group was given examples of some challenges that large corporations are trying to overcome and encouraged that solutions could come from anywhere.
The point of the event was to spark discussion around innovation and how that can be brought into regions like ours, explained Dhillon. He thinks the ideas presented are a step in the right direction as we see resource-based economies faltering and tech-based sectors driving the future.
The tour is visiting seven cities with stops in Terrace, Kelowna and Nanaimo still to come in the next few weeks. BCIC is a Crown Agency of the Province of British Columbia. Locally BCIC is one of the funding partners for the Kootenay Association of Science and Technology.
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Will a universal basic income make the U.S. better? – News & Observer
Posted: at 12:47 am
Will a universal basic income make the U.S. better? News & Observer To better understand the future of our economy and work, especially in the wake of globalization and automation, there is a growing body of literature worth paying attention to. One recent book that deserves attention is Raising the Floor: How a ... |
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Will a universal basic income make the U.S. better? - News & Observer
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Global Lab Automation Market to Reach $5.48 Billion by 2021: Analysis By Equipment and Software, Application, Type … – PR Newswire (press release)
Posted: at 12:47 am
The global lab automation market is projected to USD 5.48 Billion by 2021 from USD 3.92 Billion in 2016, growing at a CAGR of 6.9% from 2016 to 2021. In this report, the global lab automation market is broadly segmented by equipment and software, application, type, end user, and region.
Major factors fueling market growth are such as process miniaturization, progressing drug discovery and clinical diagnostics, shortage of laboratory professionals, benefits of lab automation over traditional laboratory settings, and presence of government and corporate funding for biotech and pharmaceutical research are expected to drive the growth of the global lab automation market in the coming years. On the other hand, lack of planning for technology development, low priority for lab automation among small and medium-sized laboratories, and indefinite data interchange/communication standards are the major factors that are restraining the growth of the lab automation market.
The global lab automation market is segmented into major six segments, namely, automated liquid handling, microplate readers, software & informatics, standalone robots, automated storage & retrieval systems (ASRS), and other equipment & software. Among these segments the automated liquid handling segment is expected to account for the largest share of the lab automation equipment and software market in 2016. This largest share is attributed to thee high demand for automation in liquid handling in various hospitals and private labs, biotechnology and pharma industries, academic and research institutes.
Companies Mentioned
Key Topics Covered:
1 Introduction
2 Research Methodology
3 Executive Summary
4 Premium Insights
5 Market Overview
6 Lab Automation Market, By Equipment and Software
7 Lab Automation Market, By Application
8 Lab Automation Market, By Type
9 Lab Automation Market, By End User
10 Lab Automation Market, By Region
11 Competitive Landscape
12 Company Profiles
For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/wb2twv/lab_automation
Media Contact:
Research and Markets Laura Wood, Senior Manager press@researchandmarkets.com
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IMF Lagarde calls for "growth friendly fiscal policies" and warns on automation – MercoPress
Posted: at 12:47 am
Saturday, April 22nd 2017 - 14:15 UTC Lagarde stressed that aging populations, political instability and the sword of protectionism all threaten self-inflicted wounds on economies across the globe.
The International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde said that to get the global economy moving at a faster pace it was necessary to share the benefits of capitalism, more global regulation and more action to protect workers against automation and robots.
Speaking at an event by Bruegel, an economic think tank, Ms Lagarde said the global economy once again has a spring in its step but that countries need to pursue growth-friendly fiscal policies.
Lagardes call was an anticipation to the annual discussions between the worlds central bankers and finance ministers that will take place in Washington, at the IMFs so-called Spring Meetings and a meeting of G20 finance ministers. And in a swipe at the Trump administration, Lagarde said we need an approach that encourages countries to support strong international cooperation.
And referencing Brexit and the upcoming French presidential election, Lagarde said now is not the time to trash the architecture underpinning the global economy for seven decades.
Lagardes warning stressed that aging populations, political instability and the sword of protectionism all threaten self-inflicted wounds on economies across the globe.
Strong national economies should not expect to be immune from the problems of their neighbors, Lagarde said, promising major spillovers across borders if these problems are not addressed head on.
Lagarde singled out the EU for failing to enforce its own single market rules. She said that EU directives would unleash growth if they were simply properly enforced. Lagarde said the unenforced rules covered barriers to entry in retail and professional services.
On financial services, Lagarde said financial stability requires that we complete the reform of global financial regulations. Additionally, restricting trade would be a self-inflicting wound that disrupts supply chains, hurts global output and inflates the prices of production materials and goods, she continued.
We are not goody-goody about trade. We know that trade brings with it negative side-effects, Lagarde conceded to critics of globalization.
However, she warned that automation as much as trade is the root cause of social dislocation in many Western economies. Trade is not a dominant factor, Lagarde said.
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IMF Lagarde calls for "growth friendly fiscal policies" and warns on automation - MercoPress
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Software-based networking brings new automation perks, challenges – TechTarget
Posted: at 12:47 am
The world of networking is moving rapidly to software-based systems that offer automated provisioning, improved management and security, and better support for DevOps-style application development. The automation benefits of software-based networking are critical to support the adoption of new IT and network architectures, including hybrid cloud and the internet of things.
Traditionally, networks were built with hardware-based platforms optimized for specific functions. These boxes include routers, Ethernet switches, Wi-Fi controllers, server load balancers and network security appliances, such as firewalls and intrusion-detection systems. Network hardware typically runs complex, distributed control software -- all with unique provisioning and management systems. Provisioning and management requirements vary by the type of networking and the network location. Provisioning and modifying hardware-based networks is a time-consuming manual process and one that requires trained network professionals.
The emergence of software-based networking frees IT professionals to migrate toward networks that offer automation, customization, interoperability and platform independence. Developers can design applications that are abstracted from network resources. These networks lead the way toward significant improvements in automation.
Network automation establishes standard processes so that network deployment, configuration and management tasks can be shifted from people to software. Software-based networking automates the provisioning of required network services, such as bandwidth, routing and security.
IT professionals can benefit from the push-button simplicity of software that reduces or eliminates mundane updating in quality of service (QoS), auditing of Ethernet switches and maintaining access-control lists. Network uptime and security is improved by eliminating human errors that accompany any complex manual task.
Network automation gives IT organizations deploying complex applications the ability to control the rapid provisioning of network resources. It provides the ability to centrally manage the network and reduce operational costs by shifting the challenges of configuration from people to technology. Software-based networks can select appropriate network services based on parameters, such as application type, quality of service and security requirements.
Automation via software can direct the network to provide services aligned with its associated applications and support rapid deployment of a large number of new applications and microservices.
Provisioning. Traditional methods of network provisioning, such as manually configuring each device, can't scale to meet the complexity of distributed applications. Network automation makes it possible to rapidly provision appropriate network resources across dynamically shifting workloads and thousands of devices. Many hyperscale cloud providers -- including Google, Apple, Facebook and Microsoft -- deploy software network technologies to help automate the provisioning of their networks.
Configuration and change management. Network professionals spend significant time and resources adapting the physical and virtual network to changes in applications, compute and storage resources, and device location. Software-based networking tools can automate change management by associating specific network and security policies with applications and devices that can "follow" them as they migrate physically and virtually.
Software-based networking automates the provisioning of required network services, such as bandwidth, routing and security.
Application-aware QoS. This is the ability to identify specific traffic types, like voice and video, and prioritize network resources to deliver the appropriate QoS. Organizations can also design policies to automatically change network bandwidth for high-value applications. Organizations have started to deploy software-defined networking that measures application performance, detects changes in traffic flow and selects the path data takes through a network based on parameters, such as application type, QoS and security rules.
Centralized networking management. IT professionals often struggle to rapidly identify challenges associated with network slowdowns or link failures. Finding the needle in the haystack in large, complex networks takes time. Network software can provide centralized management with the ability to detect both physical and virtual network problems and, in some cases, automatically resolve them.
Network security. Network automation can offer appropriate security policies for the range of devices that connect to the network. Software networking products provide network segmentation to support multi-tenancy and network isolation of critical applications. Network automation can feed critical analytics data to supported third-party network security software.
Network automation enables DevOps. The network is responsible for rapidly provisioning the appropriate resources for DevOps applications. Rapidly changing requirements that a microservices architecture presents can challenge the capabilities of traditional networks. The network plays a critical role in securing and managing rapidly migrating DevOps-style applications. The disaggregation of the application means that there are too many moving parts for manual networking, so network automation is critical. The ability to pretest network resources with DevOps is important to avoid potential slowdowns of application deployment times.
For all the potential of network automation, it is a challenge for IT professionals to build highly automated networks. With the exception of greenfield builds, deploying and managing network resources across physical and virtual networks -- and across data centers, campus and branch locations -- remains a largely manual and labor-intensive undertaking. Hyperscale cloud providers with automated network data centers have the advantage of large engineering staffs to design custom software networks to fit their unique requirements.
For enterprise IT professionals, the challenge is to identify suppliers and their products that can help begin to automate manual processes. The reality is there is no clear architecture or blueprint on how to migrate to a more automated network. A number of standards bodies, including the Open Networking User Group, the OpenDaylight Project and OpenStack, are working to develop practical software networking architectures. Buyers remain unsure which standards, vendors and products are the most likely to gain market traction. There are a large number of suppliers and products that provide improved automation via software networking products. These include the following:
There are many other specialized suppliers who provide software-based tools to improve network management, security and analytics.
The requirements of hybrid cloud, container deployment, and new internet of things devices will continue to strain network resources. The first generation of software networking products will provide some tactical gains in specific parts of network operations, such as the data center and SD-WAN. Strategically, many IT managers would like to move toward more of a network-as-a-service model where bandwidth and other network resources can be automatically and dynamically allocated to specific applications.
The lessons learned by the hyperscale cloud providers are beginning to trickle down to enterprise networks. Open source, improved standards and better software will bring significant improvement in network automation over the next few years. Longer-term advances in machine learning and artificial intelligence will no doubt lead to improved network automation.
The benefits of network automation have been clearly demonstrated by the hyperscale cloud providers. Software networking provides the abstraction from the hardware layer that provides the flexibility, automation and multivendor support required for today's networks. Leading IT organizations require rapid provisioning, scalable resources and automated operations to flexibly deliver IT services. Network automation is critical to meet the scale and complexity of distributed applications.
The market is moving toward software-based networking -- as opposed to networking as a number of boxes. The challenge for IT professionals is to pick the right standards and partners to help the journey to a more agile style of networking. Lack of standards and no clear supply-side market leader means IT professionals should start to implement network automation with clear advantages.
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Promised Land proves to be a mirage for Alain Mabanckou’s black Moses – Morning Star Online
Posted: at 12:47 am
Black Moses by Alain Mabanckou (Serpents Tail, 12.99)
THE BETTER to position an author on the bookshelves, its inevitable that a writer from the global south who catches the attention of readers in Europe and the US is framed by comparisons with dead white males.
Its a reference point of sorts and Alain Mabanckou (pictured), originally from the Republic of the Congo but now a resident of California, has been variously likened to JD Salinger and Samuel Beckett.
And his latest novel Black Moses, with its humanistic rawness and deployment of its main character and those he encounters as an allegory to describe a whole society, recalls the younger Salman Rushdie but with a less bloated style.
The main protagonist, with his lengthy name of Thanks be to God, the black Moses is born on the earth of our ancestors, doesnt just carry the burden of the expectations of Papa Moupelo, the orphanage priest who so named him, on his shoulders.
He also personifies a whole country still struggling to throw off its colonial past, overcome divisive tribal rivalries and deliver true national self-determination and liberation.
As such, Black Moses is an account of struggle and disappointment. Moses, far from guiding his people to anything like the promised land, finds himself following and accommodating himself to bigger and more powerful forces.
His name becomes increasingly ironic. Moses is clearly not a leader, just one out of many people struggling to get by.
That doesnt mean he doesnt try to rebel against the brutish director of the orphanage and the local hoodlums and hard boys in its vast dormitory. But such acts are limited in scope and effect.
The orphanage director Dieudonne Ngoulmoumako is one of those cunning brutes able effortlessly to prosper both under the old regime and the new Marxist government without changing his behaviour or corrupt practices.
Mabanckou shows a succession of authority figures who transcend the efforts at modernising the country and so thwart the noble aims of creating a more just society.
Aside from the kindnesses of the orphanage nurse Sabine Niangui, the institution is a repressive place full of ghouls like old Koukuoba, previously a necrophiliac undertaker.
Moses escapes to Pointe-Noire to become one of a gang of parentless children in the Grand Marche district of the city before the area is cleansed by the zealous mayor Francois Makele ahead of elections.
He achieves some stability in a brothel in the Three Hundreds district run by the formidable Maman Fiat 500. She sets him up as a worker at the port before Mosess world collapses again as he rebels against wage slavery and the brothel is levelled, again through the directions of a mayor keen to further boost his reputation by targeting non-Congolese sex workers.
Moses retreats to tending his garden but, inevitably, his earlier life experiences catch up with him and he suffers a massive and disturbing mental breakdown, losing both his hold on reality and his memory.
A doctor interested only in showing off his European medical qualifications fails to heal him as does the hocus-pocus of a traditional healer. Driven by his madness, Moses seeks out violent revenge as the only solution to his and societys parlous state.
Full of raw and vivid dialogue that captures the traumatic impact of neocolonialism on the heart and soul of a whole nation, Black Moses is an impressive work. Recommended.
Paul Simon
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Promised Land proves to be a mirage for Alain Mabanckou's black Moses - Morning Star Online
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Brendan Cox: Want freedom? Try universal health care – Norwich Bulletin
Posted: at 12:47 am
Brendan Cox bcox@norwichbulletin.com, (860) 425-4225 bcoxNB
Of all the disagreements that define modern politics, perhaps the most divisive of them all, the battle over health care policy, has always been the most perplexing to me.
It puzzles the logical mind to observe that uncertainty, misery and financial stress are accepted and even defended as norms when the obvious solution universal health care as a right of citizenship, sometimes branded as Medicare for all is staring us right in the face, most of the developed world having long since figured it out.
Abortion is perhaps the most morally and spiritually vexing issue ever to touch politics. There are big, important, abstract debates to have over foreign policy and our countrys role in the world. Ditto with the crisis of income inequality and policymakers role in perpetuating it. But health care? Please.
Last week, as Republicans in Washington were attempting to revive to laughable Trumpcare bill, their feeble attempt at repealing and replacing Obamacare after seven years of posturing, I couldnt help but recall the horrid politics of 2010 when the Affordable Care Act was under construction.
Obamacare, of course, was a big gift to the insurance companies, its most hotly debated provision a mandate that individuals buy their products or else deal with the IRS. In theory, it made sense because it created a much broader risk pool that helped insurers absorb other new requirements aimed at making health insurance a little bit more humane. ACA was hardly the socialist coup the right made it out to be, inspiring anger that resonates to this day anger that todays Republicans are not equipped to mollify, knowing full well that to strip Obamacare away outright would be to needlessly immiserate millions with pre-existing conditions and kick millions more off of their coverage.
Then, the political debate focused on liberty and the size of government, an eminently relevant discussion. In this case, I believe conservatives have miscalculated: We cannot be secure in our persons or our property when subjected to the dog-eat-dog capitalist wasteland that is American health care. What freedom is there in knowing that one accident, one diagnosis, one extended hospital stay might clear out our savings?
I dont consider the constant threat of personal bankruptcy due to illness not some unwise investment or business venture a feature of liberated society. I consider it a form of slavery we are slaves to the jobs that pay for our health insurance, slaves to wage garnishment and collections when those policies dont cover the bill and slaves to existential stress that pervades all corners of our lives, knowing that financial ruin lurks in every doctors office and emergency room.
No, freedom is knowing that when you get sick or injured, you will get the care you need at low or no cost. Liberty is certainty that your well-being isnt subject to the profiteering of insurance companies and the vagaries of capitalist markets.
Lets not pretend that our financial lives would be unduly affected if a higher tax contribution were to replace the health care premiums most of us already have deducted from our wages. Lets not allow dystopian visions of a nanny state preclude any rational discussion of the failings of a system that befuddles our international peers a system in which nominally free markets intersect with a labyrinthine regulatory structure, creating a netherworld thats neither government-run nor purely capitalist, leading only to confusion, opacity and half-measures of relief for the aggrieved and abused.
Keep government out of my health care is a nice idea, I suppose, but I would prefer to keep corporate profit motives out of mine. Government may not be the most efficient means of delivering a product, but its mission, to guarantee rights to life, liberty and property, is certainly more virtuous. We can demand a national health care system that hews to that purpose, if only we had the courage to accept the truth that lives in front of our eyes.
Brendan Cox is The Bulletins opinion page editor. Email him at bcox@norwichbulletin.com or follow him on Twitter: @bcoxNB.
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