Daily Archives: June 30, 2021

How to Copy Your Windows Installation to an SSD – PCMag

Posted: June 30, 2021 at 2:50 pm

(Crucial P5)

If you're still using a traditional, spinning hard disk on your PC, you're missing out. Swapping it out for a solid-state drive (SSD) is one of the best upgrades you can make in terms of speeding up your computer. It'll boot faster, programs will launch instantly, and games won't take so long to load anymore.

You could reinstall Windows from scratch, and in some situations, that may be preferablebut with the right tools, you can get up and running much quicker by copying your entire drive over to the new SSD.

Obviously, in order to upgrade to an SSD, you'll need to, well, buy an SSD. We have some recommendations, but if you're on a budget, we have a separate list of cheap SSDs as well. Make sure to buy the right form factor for your computer (some laptops will use 2.5-inch drives, while others might use M.2 or mSATA drives), and get one big enough to fit all your data. If you have a 500GB hard drive now, you should probably spring for a similarly sized SSD (or larger, to accommodate future data).

The only exception is if you're on a desktop computer and have room for multiple hard drives. In that case, you could store Windows and your programs on the SSD while putting your music, movies, and other media on a second, larger hard diskthough this can be a bit more complicated, as we'll discuss below.

During this process, you'll need both your SSD and your old hard drive connected to your computer at the same time. If you're using a laptop with only one hard drive slot, that means you'll need an external adapter, dock, or enclosure that can connect your bare SSD to your computer over USB. (Again, desktop users may not need this if they have room for two drives inside their PCyou can just install it internally alongside your old hard drive.)

There are many different drive-cloning tools on the market, and unfortunately there's no free, one-size-fits-all option. If your drive manufacturer offers a migration program, that might be your best bet. For example, if you bought a Samsung SSD, we recommend downloading Samsung Data Migration and following the instructions in the user guide. Western Digital and SanDisk users can use WD's version of Acronis True Image to copy their data using these instructions.

For this guide, we'll be using Macrium Reflectit's a free drive-cloning tool that works with any brand of hard drive and SSD. Just download the installer for the free home version and run through the wizard to get it up and running on your PC. It's available to anyone, no matter what brand drive you have, so if your drive manufacturer doesn't offer a migration tool, Macrium Reflect is your next best bet.

Once you've gathered your necessities, it's time to get started.

Before you start messing with drives and formatting partitions, it's absolutely necessary to back up your data first. An accidental click can result in you erasing everything, so do not continue until you've backed it all up.

If you don't have a backup yet, check out our favorite software for the job. Windows also has File History for backing up important documents, and an image file can save your entire system. Copying important data to an external hard drive will also do in a pinch.

If you're upgrading to an SSD that's smaller than your current hard drive, you'll want to take extra care here. This isn't as common as it once was, thanks to bigger, less expensive SSDs, but if that's the case for you, you'll need to delete some files and free up space on your hard drive before cloning it. Otherwise, your data won't fit on the new drive. Once your data is safe and secure, continue to the next step.

Plug your SSD into the SATA-to-USB adapter, then plug that into your computer. If it's a brand-new drive, you probably won't see the drive pop up in File Explorer, but don't worry; it just needs to be initialized first. Open the Start menu and type "partitions" in the search box. Click the Create and format hard disk partitions option, and Disk Management will open. It will prompt you to initialize the drive using either the GPT or MBR partition table.

I'll be using GPT for my SSD, since I have a modern PC with a UEFI firmware. If you have an older PC with a traditional BIOS, you may need to use an MBR partition table. If you aren't sure, look up your specific model of PC or motherboard to see which type of firmware it uses.

If you aren't prompted to initialize the drive, and don't see it in Disk Management, double-check that it's properly connected to your computer, and that the enclosure or dock is powered on (if necessary). See our guide to troubleshooting a hard drive that won't show up for more.

Once the drive has been initialized, you should see the drive show up in the bottom pane of Disk Management as unallocated space. From there, you should be good to go.

Open Macrium Reflect and you should see a list of drives in the main window. Find your current driveit'll list your C: partition with a Windows logoand select it. Click the Clone This Disk button that appears below that drive to start the cloning wizard.

This will bring up a new window where you will choose your destination drivein this case, your empty SSD. If your SSD is the same size as your old drive, make sure the box all the way to the left of your source disk is checked, as shown above, then click Select a Disk to Clone. Choose your SSD from the drop-down list, and click Next.

If your SSD is significantly smaller than your old drive, this may require an extra step. Reflect will attempt to automatically shrink partitions with free space to fit it all on the drive, but in my experience, it doesn't always do this intelligently, and may leave out one of Windows' recovery partitions. If you experience this problem, you can manually drag each partition down to the SSD, and click Cloned Partition Properties on your main C: drive to resize it manually.

If your SSD is larger than your old drive, it may leave some unused space on the drivein which case you'll want to select your main partition, click Cloned Partition Properties, and expand the drive to fill that empty space.

Click Next and you'll be asked if you want to save this backup schedule. You can uncheck that box and click OK to run the backup now, one time. This can take anywhere from a few minutes to a few hours, depending on how large the disks are, so go watch Netflix and come back later.

When its done, you can exit Macrium Reflect. You should see your new SSD in File Explorer, complete with all your data.

Next, shut down your computer. It's time to install that SSD in your machine permanently. If you have a laptop with only one hard drive slot, you'll need to remove your old hard drive and replace it with your SSD. This is a bit different on every laptop.

If you have a desktop PC with more than one hard drive slot, you can leave your old hard drive in as extra storage, and just install your SSD alongside it.

Once you're finished installing the SSD, you'll need to tell your computer to boot from it. (This may not be necessary on laptops with just one drive, but if you experience problems booting, it can help on some PCs.) Turn your computer on and enter its BIOS/UEFI setupthis is a bit different on every PC, but it'll usually say something like "Press DEL to enter setup" on the boot screen, so you'll want to press the corresponding key as it starts up.

From there, look for your BIOS's boot options. These will be in a different spot depending on your computer, but once you find them, select the option to change the boot sequence. Choose your SSD from the list as the first boot drive, then head back to the BIOS's main menu to exit, saving your settings.

Your computer will reboot, and if all went well, it should plop you back into Windows faster than ever before. Open File Explorer and check to confirm that your SSD is, in fact, the C: drive. If everything looks good, you're ready to rock.

If your old drive is still installed, you can erase it and use it to store extra files, or you can disconnect it entirely. Best of all, your computer should feel significantly snappier without having to start from scratch.

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Single Bee Clone Itself Millions of Times Over the Past Three Decades – Nature World News

Posted: at 2:50 pm

Hives of the African lowland honeybee (Apis mellifera scutella) collapse because of an unseeable inner threat: the growing, immortal clone army of a rival bee subspecies.

(Photo : Getty Images)

That army is attainable because the South African Cape honeybee (Apis mellifera capensis) - the female workers of the rival subspecies - can make perfect copies of themselves, with one individual discovered to have done this millions of times in the past three decades. With this continual-cloning ability, the Cape honeybees creep into the hives of their lowland honeybee rivals and churn out replica after replica (no need for a queen).

Unfortunately, these clones are freeloaders, refusing to do any work. Now, a new study has disclosed the genetic foundations of the bizarre and formidable adaptation. Different from most animals, and even their own queen, the female workers do not rearrange the DNA of the eggs they lay.

This enables the workers to constantly recreate a perfect replica of themselves - a clone - every time they reproduce. The bypassing of this DNA-reshuffling process is different from anything they've ever seen, according to the researchers.

Also Read:Modern Pesticides' Harmful Effects on Bees Worsened in the Last Decade

A professor of behavioral genetics at the University of Sydney, lead author Benjamin Oldroyd told Live Science, "It's incredible. It's also incredibly dysfunctional," making reference to the fact that reshuffling is usually needed to hold chromosomes together during the egg-making process. "Yet, they've managed to still lay eggs somehow. It's insane; I've not heard of anything like this before, anywhere."

Honeybee workers and other social insects are capable of reproducing through a form of asexual reproduction known as thelytokous parthenogenesis, in which females produce female progenies from unfertilized eggs. Every time she creates offspring, the single-parent worker bee will clone the chromosomes she got from her parents (a queen and a male drone) into four.

Next, she takes the genetic material from all four chromosomes, rearrange it and makes four chromosomes with that mixed-up DNA through a process known as recombination. This reshuffling assures that, even with just a single parent, future offspring will be genetically different.

(Photo : Getty Images)

However, as just two chromosomes out of the four are selected and no new genetic material is contributed by a sexual partner, this causes an average loss of one-third of genetic diversity each time the shuffling is performed, or every generation, Oldroyd said.

Following just a few generations of parthenogenetic reproduction, the piled-up loss of genetic material causes levels of genetic diversity that are low enough to be deadly.Most social insects, therefore, depend on a queen that breeds sexually on their behalf.

In return, the genetically diverse workers maintain the health of the colony and safeguard the offspring of their closely related siblings and cousins.

Related Article:A Third of US Bee Colony Died Last Year, Here's Why It Is Still Good News

For more news, updates about bees and similar topics don't forget to follow Nature World News!

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Foreign national among three held for cloning ATM cards in Noida – Hindustan Times

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Noida: A 45-year-old Bulgarian national was among three people arrested by the Noida police on Sunday for allegedly cloning ATM cards and withdrawing money.

The suspects were identified as Ruslen (the alleged mastermind who is from Bulgaria), and Ravikar and Komal from Bihar. Police said the three were living in a rented accommodation at a highrise in Sector 75. They were nabbed from Sector 18 following a tip-off from an informant.

According to police officials, Ruslen had come to India on May 10, 2019 on a tourist visa and was sent to Tihar jail within a couple of weeks allegedly in connection with a cyber crime. He allegedly met Ravi in jail who was lodged there in connection with a murder case. Ruslen was released on February 1, 2021 after which he had started living in Noida.

He holds a diploma in electronics and is well-versed with cloning technology. He himself prepared the circuits and skimmers, parts for which were ordered from a spy goods website, said additional deputy commissioner of police, zone 1, Kumar Ranvijay Singh.

Police said the group allegedly would install the skimmer devices and mini cameras at unmanned ATM kiosks across the National Capital Region. They would collect the data of users, clone their ATM cards and then withdraw money from their bank accounts.

There are more people associated with the operation, including other foreign nationals, and we are working to trace them. The total amount skimmed by the suspects is being verified through bank account details, though it is suspected to be in lakhs, said a senior police official, on condition of anonymity.

Police recovered 28 cloned cards along with laptops, phones, seven skimmer boards, a camera, card readers, a hard drive, several pen drives, multiple tools and other electronic gadgets. The suspects were produced before a magistrate and later sent to jail.

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Single Honeybee Created Millions of Clones Itself, Threatening Colony’s Health – Science Times

Posted: at 2:50 pm

Scientists have discovered that a subspecies of South African honeybee is comprised of millions of clones from a single honeybee, thanks to a bizarre genetic jackpot.

For over three decades, the growing army of clones has been found to be a serious threat to the hives of the South African honeybee. Sky Newsreported that 10% of hives are collapsing each year due to the colonies being filled with the clones that consume their resources but refuse to share in the work.

(Photo: Wikimedia Commons)A small African Honey Bee about to alight and collect pollen from a Leonotis leonurus (Wild dagga) plant in South Africa.

A subspecies of South African honeybees can clone themselves and create more bees like them. Genetic analysis reveals that their cloning habit began on a single honeybee in 1990 that clones itself successfully and produces queens that can take over the hive, according to New Scientist.

The process of asexual reproduction or parthenogenesisis common in lower plants or animals, like ants, aphids, wasps, and bees. However, having an offspring that is identical to the parent is uncommon because genetic material is often mixed up in a process called recombination that could result in an offspring with a slightly different genetic makeup.

It was previously known as the subspecies of Cape honeybee (Apis mellifera capensis) that are capable of creating a perfect copy of itself, according to Benjamin Oldroyd of the University of Sydney.

He added that creating clones that are a perfect copy of the parent could be beneficial as asexual reproduction could often be lethal because one-third of the genes become inbred. But since the Cape honeybee workers are a perfect clone, they remain genetically healthy as their mother.

ALSO READ: Bees at Work: Watch How They Join Forces to Unscrew Soda Bottle

"It's incredible. It's also incredibly dysfunctional," Oldroyd told Live Science,referring to the DNA reshuffling method necessary to hold chromosomes together during the egg-making process of the honeybees that clone themselves. "Yet, somehow they've managed to do it [still lay eggs]. It's insane, I've not heard of anything like this before, anywhere".

The generations of parthenogenic reproduction have accumulated to the loss of genetic material that led to low levels of genetic diversity that are lethal. Most social insects rely on their queen to reproduce, while workers help maintain the colony and protect the brood.

But in the Cape honeybee's case, workers do not work because they can asexually reproduce. Oldroyd said that these bees seemed to develop a dysfunctional attitude that leads to the collapse of the hive. He compared it to cells in a tumor in which it does not matter whether the clones are healthy, as long as there is enough of them to exploit the host.

The single lineage of Cape honeybee workers that take part in this parasitic behavior is responsible for the collapse of 10% of South African honeybee colonies every year.

RELATED ARTICLE:New Study Sheds Light on the Reproductive Lives of Honey Bees

Check out more news and information on Beeson Science Times.

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One man’s plan to resurrect the animal species we can’t save – Wired.co.uk

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MATSON, A TALL man who bounds around at high speed and wears three-quarter length shorts even when hes sporting a lab coat, says that he got into the artificial insemination business because he was in the right place at the right time. He dropped out of school at 16 and went straight into horse racing, first as a jockey. An unsuccessful foray into point-to-point racing and breeding followed, until an accident that caused the death of a mare pushed him towards the field of artificial insemination.

For over three decades, his focus was horse breeding and, later, cloning domestic animals for people who want to replace their beloved pets. Then, in 2018, he had a brainwave at a conference in the US, where he had struck up a partnership with cloning company Viagen to transfer frozen tissue through Europe more easily. I thought, if we can do that with cats and dogs and horses, why can't we do this with rare breeds?

When he first approached Chester Zoo with his idea, he says, they didnt quite slam the door in my face but werent interested in cloning for conservation. They said no, this is a bit too Frankenstein work, there has to be a certain line that you have to be careful not to cross. But that's all changed now.

Traditionally, zoos have wanted nothing to do with cloning, says Sue Walker, head of science at Chester Zoo and co-founder of Nature's SAFE. Cloning a single animal is expensive, has a high rate of failure, and may produce animals that are highly stressed, or die early. It is much better to concentrate on saving species from the extinction vortex through repopulation and habitat preservation schemes. But, as time runs out, and the chances for a species survival become more limited, artificial insemination and, in extreme cases, cloning may be the best or only option.

On a cold morning in March, Matson gives me a tour of his farm in Whitchurch, Shropshire. On the ground floor of the main building are cryogenic vats that store cell samples. The small ones look like milk churns; two large ones look like giant vats. When Matson climbs up onto a small step and opens one, billowing vapour streams out. Inside, floating around in designated compartments are thousands of tiny, cocktail straw-sized test tubes, each filled with race horse DNA.

This is liquid nitrogen, he says, poking his bare hand into the big cryogenic canister. This is minus-196 degrees, right? It suspends everything in animation. To preserve the cells, Matsons team mixes them with a cryoprotectant, which acts as a barrier to protect the biological tissue from freezing damage he likens it to antifreeze. Last year, he says, his company exported about 60,000 worth of semen to 21 different countries.

In the next room, Natures SAFE has a designated cryogenic canister: a yellow urn the size of a barstool, currently representing a much smaller portion of samples than the horse semen vats. Were definitely going to need more space, Matson says. We really are in a fight against time. In theory, we need 50 different samples for each species to keep going. Gathering at least 50 samples should give scientists sufficiently diverse genetic material to make a meaningful difference to an endangered species; if you cloned animals from the same sample, they would be genetically identical and therefore incapable of creating a viable population.

After touring the labs, Matson says he would like to show me the bread and butter of what takes place here. He leads me to an empty, roofed space. On the right, theres what looks like a big, square-ended vaulting horse, propped up at an angle. Behind it are two stables: one housing a rather quiet black mare, the second empty.

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New ‘Mandalorian’ Weapon Will Make the ‘Star Wars’ Sequels Worth It Inside the Magic – Inside the Magic

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If theres one thing most Star Wars fans can agree on, its that the sequel trilogy Episode VII The Force Awakens (2015), Episode VIII The Last Jedi (2017), and Episode IX The Rise of Skywalker (2019) left much to be desired. One of the biggest issues with the movies was the sheer existence of Supreme Leader Snoke (Andy Serkis), who seemingly appeared out of nowhere and whose origin was never clearly explained, other than serving as a placeholder for Kylo Ren (Adam Driver).

Enter The Mandalorian.

Related:Dave Filoni Just Foreshadowed Grogu and The Mandalorian

Ever since Season 1 of the hit streaming series, showrunner Jon Favreau and executive producer Dave Filoni have been doing everything in their power to fix the Star Wars sequels Snoke problem.

During the first season, viewers saw Doctor Pershing (Omid Abtahi) draw blood from Grogu (AKA Baby Yoda), setting up the lab that Greef Karga (Carl Weathers), Cara Dune (Gina Carano), and bounty hunter Din Djarin (Pedro Pascal) discover at the supposedly abandoned Imperial base on Nevarro in Season 2, Episode 4 (Chapter 12: Sanctuary).

Related:Reported NEW Luke Skywalker Series Gets Timeline!

The trio, plus much-maligned Mythrol (Horatio Sanz), soon discover that the base is not operating with a skeleton crew at all, and chaos ensues as it generally tends to in The Mandalorian and they ultimately stumble upon the aforementioned lab under the direction of Moff Gideon (Giancarlo Esposito).

Related:Did Qui-Gon & Obi-Wan Change the Chosen One?

The group discovers a transmission from Doctor Pershing, in which he says:

Replicated the results of the subsequent trials, which also resulted in catastrophic failure. There were promising effects for an entire fortnight, but then sadly, the body rejected the blood. I highly doubt we will find a donor with a higher M-count [midichlorian count] though. I recommend that we suspend all experimentation. I fear that the volunteer will meet the same regrettable fate if we proceed with the transfusion. Unfortunately, we have exhausted our initial supply of blood. The Child is small and I was only able to harvest a limited amount without killing him. If these experiments are to continue as requested, we would again require access to the donor. I will not disappoint you again, Moff Gideon.

Related:Star Wars Just Teased Grogus Existence Almost 30 Years Earlier

Now, Filoni is using his latest Star Wars project, animated series Star Wars: The Bad Batch to set up Season 3 of The Mandalorian. Episode 9 of the Star Wars: The Clone Wars spinoff (Bounty Lost) saw first-generation Jango Fett clone, Omega, travel to an abandoned Kaminoan cloning facility on planet Boro Vio.

The female clone is in the company of bounty hunter Cad Bane (Corey Burton), who stole her away from Clone Force 99 Hunter, Wrecker, Tech, and Echo on Bracca in Episode 8 (Reunion), much like how Moff Gideons Dark Trooper squad took Grogu from Djarin on Tython in The Mandalorian Season 2, Episode 6 (Chapter 13: The Tragedy).

Related:The Mandalorian Just Connected Grogu to Ben Solo

Ironically, one character, Fennec Shand (Ming-Na Wen) appears in both Bounty Lost and The Tragedy. Filoni, in fact, used a scene between Shand and Omega to set up what is likely to happen in the third season of The Mandalorian.

As Inverse noted:

While on that planet [Boro Vio], Omega [with Shand] comes face to face with tanks full of rejected cloning experiments. The tank is too cloudy to see the creatures in detail, but concept art [below] from the episode reveals some truly gruesome Eldritch horrors of cloning experiments gone wrong.

Related:Star Wars Just Unraveled Everything We Knew About Boba Fett

Since The Bad Batch is geared at both adults and a younger audience, its likely that the series wont explore the atrocities of cloning experiments gone wrong in great detail. As Inverses article proposed:

now that Moff Gideons Dark Troopers are destroyed, could his next weapon turn out to be some sort of terrifying clone? Are we about to see an army of Snokes in The Mandalorian Season 3?

Related:No More Grogu? The Mandalorian Might Get an Exciting New Best Friend

It seems that Favreau and Filoni are forging full steam ahead with their explanation of Supreme Leader Snoke, perhaps by introducing a truly intense form of biological warfare into The Mandalorian universe.

Related:Disney Might Finally Be Turning Its Back on Kathleen Kennedys Star Wars

If Moff Gideon does, in fact, use a deformed, Force-sensitive, Snoke-like clone as a weapon, it will go a long way toward tying the divisive JJ Abrams and Rian Johnson sequel trilogy into the Mando-verse, which is likely to be the most crucial part of the Star Wars franchise moving forward.

What do you think? Are we about to see a deformed clone used as a weapon now that Moff Gideon has lost the Darksaber?

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12 more coronavirus cases have been reported across Maine – Bangor Daily News

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Another 12coronavirus cases have been reported across the state, Maine health officials said Wednesday.

The number of coronavirus cases diagnosed in the past 14 days statewide is 350. This is an estimation of the current number of active cases in the state, as the Maine CDC is no longer tracking recoveries for all patients. Thats down from 389 on Tuesday.

No new deaths were reported Wednesday, leaving the statewide death toll standing at 858.

Wednesdays report brings the total number of coronavirus cases in Maine to 69,033,according to the Maine CDC. Thats up from 69,021 on Tuesday.

Of those, 50,487have been confirmed positive, while 18,546were classified as probable cases, the Maine CDC reported.

The new case rate statewide Wednesday was 0.09 cases per 10,000 residents, and the total case rate statewide was 515.79.

Maines seven-day average for new coronavirus cases is 24.4, down from 25.1 a day ago, down from 30.4 a week ago and down from 111.7 a month ago. That average peaked on Jan. 14 at 625.3.

The most cases have been detected in Mainers younger than 20, while Mainers over 80 years old make up the majority of deaths. More cases and deaths have been recorded in women than men.

So far, 2,073 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus. Of those, 30 are currently hospitalized with 18 in critical care and eight on a ventilator. Overall, 78 out of 384 critical care beds and 226 out of 319 ventilators are available. Meanwhile, 451 alternative ventilators are available.

The total statewide hospitalization rate on Wednesday was 15.52 patients per 10,000 residents.

Cases have been reported in Androscoggin (8,410), Aroostook (1,902), Cumberland (17,252), Franklin (1,388), Hancock (1,376), Kennebec (6,608), Knox (1,147), Lincoln (1,081), Oxford (3,645), Penobscot (6,349), Piscataquis (588), Sagadahoc (1,474), Somerset (2,285), Waldo (1,052), Washington (943) and York (13,533) counties.

Out of 2,867 COVID-19 tests reported to the Maine CDC in the previous 24 hours, 0.7 percent came back positive. Overall, 2,736,060 tests have been administered and the statewide positivity rate is 2.77 percent.

An additional 2,491 Mainers have been vaccinated against the coronavirus in the previous 24 hours. As of Wednesday, 744,649 Mainers have received a first dose of the vaccine, while 785,098 have received a final dose.

New Hampshire reported 26 new cases on Wednesday and no deaths. Vermont reported four new cases and no deaths, while Massachusetts reported 63 new cases and one death.

As of Wednesday morning, the coronavirus had sickened 33,654,602 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 604,510 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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Coronavirus in Oregon: 230 new cases and 7 deaths as Oregon sits on verge of reopening – OregonLive

Posted: at 2:49 pm

Oregon health officials announced 230 new coronavirus cases and seven COVID-19 deaths Tuesday, the day before Oregonians will no longer have to wear masks in most settings.

Oregon is lifting all state emergency pandemic restrictions Wednesday after Gov. Kate Brown announced Friday it was no longer necessary to wait until at least 70% of adults had received at least one shot of a COVID-19 vaccine. As of Tuesday, about 19,000 Oregonians had to get a shot for the state to reach that benchmark.

Some restrictions will remain in place, however, in accordance with federal rules and guidance. Among other restrictions, that means people will still have to wear masks at the airport and when on public transportation and in health care settings.

SEE STATE AND COUNTY COVID-19 TRENDS

Vaccines: Oregon reported 5,545 newly administered doses, which includes 2,773 Monday and the remainder from previous days.

Where the new cases are by county: Baker (2), Clackamas (12), Columbia (3), Coos (1), Crook (2), Curry (2), Deschutes (7), Douglas (14), Harney (1), Hood River (3), Jackson (12), Jefferson (7), Josephine (7), Klamath (7), Lane (25), Lincoln (4), Linn (9), Marion (23), Multnomah (31), Polk (5), Tillamook (1), Umatilla (21), Union (2), Washington (25) and Yamhill (4).

Who died: Oregons 2,764th death connected to the coronavirus is a 92-year-old Curry County man who tested positive June 18 and died June 28 at his residence. The state is confirming whether he had underlying medical conditions.

Oregons 2,765th death is a 67-year-old Coos County man who tested positive June 24 and died June 26 at Mercy Medical Center Mt. Shasta.

Oregons 2,766th death is a 42-year-old Lane County woman who tested positive June 17 and died June 25 at her residence.

Oregons 2,767th death is a 64-year-old Multnomah County man who tested positive May 13 and died June 19 at Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Center.

Oregons 2,768th death is a 57-year-old Washington County man who tested positive April 11 and died May 2 at Oregon Health & Science University Hospital. The state is confirming whether he had underlying medical conditions.

Oregons 2,769th death is a 61-year-old Washington County man who tested positive Nov. 25 and died May 18 at Legacy Meridian Park Medical Center.

Oregons 2,770th death is a 99-year-old Washington County woman who tested positive Jan. 2 and died Jan. 8 at her residence.

Unless otherwise noted, all who died had underlying medical conditions.

Hospitalizations: 149 people with confirmed cases of COVID-19 are hospitalized, down 11 from Monday. That includes 35 people in intensive care, down four from Monday.

Since it began: Oregon has reported 208,446 confirmed or presumed infections and 2,770 deaths, among the lowest per capita numbers in the nation. To date, the state has reported 4,378,757 vaccine doses administered, fully vaccinating 2,147,617 people and partially vaccinating 235,638 people.

-- Fedor Zarkhin

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Opinion | Where Did the Coronavirus Come From? What We Already Know Is Troubling. – The New York Times

Posted: at 2:48 pm

All this leaves a lot of possibilities open and a lot of confusion.

Since most pandemics have been due to zoonotic events, emerging from animals, is there reason to doubt lab involvement? Maybe if you look at all of human history. A better period of comparison is the time since the advent of molecular biology, when it became more likely for scientists to cause outbreaks. The 1977 pandemic was tied to research activities, while the other two pandemics that have occurred since then, AIDS and the H1N1 swine flu of 2009, were not.

Plus, once a rare event, like a pandemic, has happened, one has to consider all the potential paths to it. Its like investigating a plane crash. Flying is usually very safe, but when a crash does happen, we dont just say mechanical errors and pilot mistakes dont usually lead to catastrophes and that terrorism is rare. Rather, we investigate all possible paths, including unusual ones, so we can figure out how to prevent similar events.

Perhaps the biggest question has been what to read into the location of the outbreak, a thousand miles from the closest known viral relatives yet close to a leading research institution.

Sometimes the curiosity around the location has been waved away with the explanation that labs are set up where viruses are. However, the Wuhan Institute of Virology has been where it is since 1956, doing research on agricultural and environmental microbiology under a different name. It was upgraded and began to focus on coronavirus research only after SARS. Wuhan is a metropolis with a larger population than New York Citys, not some rural outpost near bat caves. Dr. Shi said the December 2019 outbreak surprised her because she never expected this kind of thing to happen in Wuhan, in central China. When her lab needed a population with a lower likelihood of bat coronavirus exposure, they used Wuhan residents, noting that inhabitants have a much lower likelihood of contact with bats due to its urban setting.

Still, location itself is not proof, either. Plausible scenarios implicating research activities dont rule out other options.

This week, Jesse Bloom, an associate professor at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, told me that when he recovered and analyzed a set of partial early Wuhan genetic sequences that had been removed from a genomic archive, it supported substantial existing evidence that SARS-CoV-2 was circulating in Wuhan prior to the seafood market outbreak. Both the early reports from Chinese scientists and the more recent W.H.O. investigation this winter found many of the early cases had no connection to the seafood market, including the earliest acknowledged case so far, on Dec. 8, 2019. So the seafood market may not have been the original location of the outbreak.

Its also plausible that an outbreak could have started someplace else and was detected in Wuhan simply because it was a big city. Testing blood banks from across China, especially in areas near wildlife farms and bat caves, would help, but with limited exceptions, the Chinese government has not carried out such research or allowed the sharing of the results if it has.

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Opinion | Where Did the Coronavirus Come From? What We Already Know Is Troubling. - The New York Times

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Do Vaccinated People Still Need To Wear Masks? If So, When? : Goats and Soda – NPR

Posted: at 2:48 pm

Each week, we answer frequently asked questions about life during the coronavirus crisis. If you have a question you'd like us to consider for a future post, email us at goatsandsoda@npr.org with the subject line: "Weekly Coronavirus Questions." See an archive of our FAQs here.

Do vaccinated people still need to wear masks? If so, when?

Don't toss your masks out just yet. As the more transmissible delta variant takes hold, and some countries are reinstating precautions, even vaccinated people may want to mask up in certain situations.

"People cannot feel safe just because they had the two doses. They still need to protect themselves," Dr. Mariangela Simao, World Health Organization assistant director-general for access to medicines and health products, told reporters on Friday. "Vaccine alone won't stop community transmission. People need to continue to use masks consistently, be in ventilated spaces, hand hygiene ... the physical distance, avoid crowding. This still continues to be extremely important, even if you're vaccinated when you have a community transmission ongoing."

"WHO is recommending wearing masks even if vaccinated because breakthrough infections will happen with any of the vaccines and if spread into a highly unvaccinated community (because the majority of the world has not been vaccinated) there could be widespread disease that occurs and new outbreaks developing," says Dr. Jill Weatherhead, assistant professor of adult and pediatric infectious diseases at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, in an email. "This is true for any variant, but because the delta variant is highly transmissible it will more readily spread throughout communities."

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health is also recommending masking up indoors due to the delta variant.

But not all public health agencies are as cautious. In the U.S., guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention no longer require you to wear a mask in most settings if you're fully vaccinated (that means two weeks after the final dose), and most states have lifted restrictions as well. (Transportation hubs and medical facilities still require everyone to mask up, as do some businesses.)

So with the WHO urging vaccinated people to mask up and the CDC saying it's up to you, confusion is understandable. Essentially it means that most vaccinated Americans have a choice to make.

They "need to make the decision that's best for them and their family at this point," says Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University. "It's this in-between time in the pandemic, when there's no one-size-fits-all answer. Everybody has different values and risk tolerances. If you're vaccinated, you can choose in terms of whether to wear a mask or not."

That choice may depend on extenuating circumstances, including whether you live with unvaccinated kids or immunocompromised people, the rate of community transmission in your area, and the rate of vaccination in your area.

For many people, it will mean masking up in certain situations.

"If you are vaccinated with one of the vaccines authorized in the U.S., you are well-protected from COVID-19," Wen says. "This protection is not 100%, and especially with the rise of the more contagious delta variant, some who are inoculated may choose to wear masks in indoor, crowded settings when they are around others who are not known to be vaccinated. ... People need to decide the level of risk that they are comfortable with."

For Wen, that means she and her husband continue to wear masks in places where they're not sure everyone is vaccinated, such as the grocery store and church, since their children aren't old enough to be vaccinated. Play dates happen outside, she says. They live in Baltimore, where the test positivity rate currently qualifies as low.

Weatherhead, who also has children too young to be vaccinated, employs similar caution.

"Even though we've had a decrease in cases and especially hospitalizations there's still ongoing transmission in the environment so there is still a risk," she says. "We're certainly not through the pandemic at this point. We're improving, but there's still ongoing community transmission in much of the country. Particularly with the increase of the delta variant, there are going to be breakthroughs even if you're vaccinated. Unvaccinated people are certainly at the highest risk, but there still can be breakthrough infections as delta gains increase in prevalence."

If you do choose to wear a mask, there's probably no need to worry that others will take it as a sign you're unvaccinated: "I actually think that the people wearing masks now tend to be the vaccinated and people understand that," Wen says. And since some people, such as kids under 12, can't be vaccinated at this time, mask-wearing could be a sign people are trying to protect the unvaccinated, she says.

Even when the current pandemic threat fades, you may want to stash your masks somewhere handy. Weatherhead and Wen say they hope that it will become more socially acceptable to wear masks in the U.S. to ward off the flu and other viruses.

"It might be something people will choose to want to wear, though not required," Weatherhead says. "Culturally we have never worn masks before here. In other countries it's more common, but it's never been something we've done here. There's probably been a little shift where people feel more comfortable wearing masks in public to protect themselves" or others, she notes, if you have to go out in public while under the weather. (Of course, she adds, "If we've learned one thing from the pandemic, it's that when you're sick, you shouldn't be in public!")

If you're looking forward to giving up a pandemic precautionary routine, make it the hand sanitizer and disinfectant wipes: There shouldn't be a need to wipe everything down going forward, Weatherhead says. Washing your hands with soap and water, however? "That's always appropriate."

Sheila Mulrooney Eldred is a freelance health journalist in Minneapolis. She's written about COVID-19 for many publications, including Medscape, Kaiser Health News, Science News for Students and The Washington Post. More at sheilaeldred.pressfolios.com. On Twitter: @milepostmedia.

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Do Vaccinated People Still Need To Wear Masks? If So, When? : Goats and Soda - NPR

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