Monthly Archives: June 2021

Kelly Ripas Outfit from Todays Episode of Live Is Somehow Still Available Online – PureWow

Posted: June 24, 2021 at 11:12 pm

The first thing we noticed in the video was the 50-year-old talk show hosts brightly colored heels. For the occasion, Ripa opted for pink pumps, which she paired with a beige pencil skirt and a black ruffle shirt.

After doing some research, we learned that the skirt is the Arreton Wool Crepe Pencil Skirt from Roland Mouret. The good news is that the skirt is still currently available at Neiman Marcus. Albeit with a hefty price tag of $725. The shirt, a black Talino Jac ZV Top from Zadig & Voltaire, is also still in stock online (and is even on sale for $239). The jury is still out on those pink pumps.

As it turns out, this isnt the first time weve seen Ripa sport the silk blouse. She also wore the piece on an episode back in May, when she paired it with a patterned skirt from Erdem.

So, while it is a rare occasion that these items are still in stock, we dont imagine they will be for much longer. Any item that Ripa wears tends to sell out fast.

Stay up-to-date on every breaking Kelly Ripa fashion story by subscribing here.

RELATED: KELLY RIPA JUST SHARED A NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN SELFIE FEATURING DAUGHTER LOLA CONSUELOS

More here:

Kelly Ripas Outfit from Todays Episode of Live Is Somehow Still Available Online - PureWow

Posted in Rockall | Comments Off on Kelly Ripas Outfit from Todays Episode of Live Is Somehow Still Available Online – PureWow

More recruits check out what Ohio State has to offer – Land-Grant Holy Land

Posted: at 11:12 pm

From hanging out with friends and family to running errands chances are you mightve missed out on recruiting news surrounding the Ohio State Buckeyes. Dont worry! Land-Grant Holy Land is here to help get you caught back up with some of the latest from over the weekend.

Guess what Ryan Day and the Ohio State coaching staff were doing over the weekend? Unless youve been hiding under a rock all month, you probably already guessed the Buckeye bosses were back at it playing host to a number of highly talented prospects from across the country.

Youre definitely not wrong.

Just like about every day since the dead period finally was lifted Day and crew had quite a few top prospects on the Ohio State campus. Want to know some of the recruits who made the trek to Columbus? Weve got you covered.

Class: 2021Town: Sammamish, WA/Eastside CatholicSize: 6-foot-4, 277 poundsStatus: UncommittedOffers: Ohio State, Alabama, Oregon, USC, Washington, etc

Class: 2022Town: Dayton, OH/Archbishop AlterSize: 6-foot-3, 220 poundsStatus: Verbally committed to Ohio State

Class: 2022Town: Suwanee, GA/LambertSize: 6-foot-1, 185 poundsStatus: UncommittedOffers: Ohio State, Alabama, Georgia, Texas A&M, USC, etc

Class: 2022Town: Memphis, TN/Christian BrothersSize: 5-foot-11, 195 poundsStatus: UncommittedOffers: Ohio State, Illinois, Notre Dame, Tennessee, etc

Class: 2022Town: Buford, GA/BufordSize: 6-foot-1, 190 poundsStatus: UncommittedOffers: Ohio State, Alabama, North Carolina, Notre Dame, etc

Class: 2023Town: Fredericksburg, VA/RiverbendSize: 6-foot-5, 240 poundsStatus: UncommittedOffers: Ohio State, Penn State, Michigan State, Notre Dame, Oregon, etc

Class: 2023Town: Portland, OR/Central CatholicSize: 6-foot-5, 230 poundsStatus: UncommittedOffers: Ohio State, Georgia Tech, Oregon, USC, Washington, etc

Class: 2023Town: Saint Louis, MO/DeSmetSize: 6-foot-4, 250 poundsStatus: Uncommitted Offers: Ohio State, Alabama, Florida, LSU, Michigan Notre Dame, etc

Class: 2023Town: Lawrence, MA/Central CatholicSize: 6-foot-3, 215 poundsStatus: UncommittedOffers: Ohio State, Michigan, Georgia, LSU, Penn State, etc

Read the original here:

More recruits check out what Ohio State has to offer - Land-Grant Holy Land

Posted in Rockall | Comments Off on More recruits check out what Ohio State has to offer – Land-Grant Holy Land

Public Lands Preserve More Than What’s on the Surface – Sierra Magazine

Posted: at 11:12 pm

IT'S A STRANGE FEELING, knowing you could scream as loud as you wanted and no one would hear you. As the golden light of a late-September sun set on Grand StaircaseEscalante National Monument's cracked junipers and seemingly endless hills of sandstone, I considered the option. Camp had to be somewhere nearby, but I had gotten off track. I couldn't spot any bright tents or curls of campfire smoke from the paleontology crew I was supposed to meet. My radio stayed silent as I treaded mile upon mile of high Utah desert, fearing wrenching an ankle, stepping on a Great Basin rattlesnake, or having to shiver through the night.

I checked my GPS and then the notebook where I had written the campsite's coordinates. Then my phone, then the GPS again. The shadows grew longer. I should have seen the other fossil hunters by now. Helicopter Camp was somewhere ahead, no more than 200 yards away. But all I could see was a small, flat-topped hill dotted with low shrubsan indifferent piece of topography that would require hiking down, then up again to find out how truly lost I had become.

There had to be some bones for me in those millions of acres that would reward all the sunburn and the sweat.

I'd been to Grand StaircaseEscalante eight times before as a volunteer with paleontology field crews from the Natural History Museum of Utah. I knew the road I drove in on and the landscape I was crossing to meet the campers awaiting me. A few days prior, that lucky crew had been helicoptered in and deposited miles beyond the boundary of the two-track "road" leading up over Horse Mountain and Death Ridge. I, on the other hand, had drawn the proverbial short straw. While my tent and duffel were granted the privilege of the flight in, I had been given keys to the museum pickup, had driven four hours south from Salt Lake City, and had ground my way two hours deeper into one of the last places in the continental United States to be mappedthe wreck of a 75-million-year-old world. Here, in a vast wilderness that stretches more than 1.8 million acres down toward Arizona, dinosaurs wait patiently for someone to notice them.

IN 2010, THE YEAR BEFORE I packed up all my belongings and made the I-80 drive from New Jersey to Utah, paleontologists named eight new dinosaur species from Utah, most from Grand StaircaseEscalante. Utahceratops, Kosmoceratops, Teratophoneus, Hagryphus, Gryposaurus, Talosthese were just some of the saurian names I had memorized while daydreaming about wandering the outcrops and gullies of this distant place. Perhaps I'd kick over a rock that enclosed a beautiful piece of jaw or stop dead in my tracks upon spotting signs of the 40-foot alligator Deinosuchus.

Fossils are why I moved to the Beehive State, why I'd spent so much time sifting through academic papers' technical jargon, hoping to pick up new clues for the search. There had to be some bones for me in those millions of acres that would reward all the sunburn and the sweat.

I've been dinosaur-crazed since I was a child and have long dreamed of exploring lost worlds, but I didn't expect to find such a place in the center of the Four Corners. The American West is replete with fossil wonderlands, but Grand StaircaseEscalante remained a secret even as the famed Jurassic Morrison and Cretaceous Hell Creek Formations offered up Apatosaurus and Tyrannosaurus bones. Southern Utah wasn't anywhere close to the rail lines that acquisitive paleontologists relied on to ship tons of bones back East in the 19th century, and a lull in dinosaur science during much of the 20th century meant that few were interested in searching the high desert. Even the Mormon settlers who founded towns such as Hurricane and Kanabtoday, your last stops for gas and groceries before leaving pavementstayed around the edges of Grand StaircaseEscalante. Simply looking at the national monument, you can see why: The land almost vibrates with the sense that any attempt to tame or settle it would backfire.

MANY OF THE SAME PLACES that are good for fossils are also good for fossil fuels. This has precious little to do with dinosaurs, despite what the Sinclair logo might bring to mind. The stacked stone of Grand StaircaseEscalante National Monument documents hundreds of millions of years, tracing back to when southern Utah was, at various points, a floodplain, an ocean, and a coastal swamp. During some such epochs, ancient vegetation was buried and compressed to become coalan estimated 62 billion tons within the monument's original boundaries. Microorganisms from the bottom of the prehistoric sea, likewise, became oil. This nexus of the biological and geological almost led to the monument's undoing.

On December 4, 2017, President Donald Trump signed a proclamation nearly halving the size of Grand StaircaseEscalante, a historic reversal of the Antiquities Act, the 1906 law that governs national monuments. The move was a symbolic show of what the Trump administration termed "energy dominance." The flashy phrase remained nebulous. "Energy dominance gives us the ability to supply our allies with energy as well as to leverage our aggressors," said Ryan Zinke, the interior secretary at the time.

For decades, conservative politicians have believed that the West is being "lost" to the federal government, as the establishment of national parks and wilderness areas renders millions of acres off-limits to development. President Bill Clinton's creation of Grand StaircaseEscalante National Monument in 1996 left local politicians sore. President Barack Obama's designation of Bears Ears National Monument in 2016 left them fuming. Just months before Trump put pen to paper, thenUtah representative Rob Bishop proclaimed, "Bears Ears is a symptom of the problem. The disease is still the Antiquities Act." Bishop and his allies decried federal overreach, insisting that what Bears Ears, Grand Staircase, and other federal lands needed was local control. They made no secret that this was a push to grant fossil fuel leases, casting them as an income stream that would provide royalties to Utah's perpetually underfunded schools.

For all that rhetoric, fossil fuel companies were reluctant to take up leases on carved-out monument land. Under Trump, the Bureau of Land Management offered 24,000 acres of fossil fuel leases; only around 4,200 acres sold. Industry interest moved on, lawsuits were filed over mishandled BLM reviews, and on his second day in office, President Joe Biden issued a stay on fossil fuel leases on public land. The Right's grand plans for tapping further into Utah's energy deposits fizzled.

ALMOST ALL OF UTAH'S geological wonders, those high-desert landscapes filled with coyotes and rabbitbrush, exist because the southern and eastern parts of the state were shuddered upward onto the Colorado Plateau tens of millions of years ago. The entire plateau covers more than 130,000 square miles of the Four Corners, with deep canyons and peaks as high as 13,000 feet, giving the Southwest much of its character.

The high desert lives separate from our perceptions, something at once so grand and so detailed that our brains can take in only a fraction of what we're seeing in any moment.

If you had visited the area 75 million years ago, you would have found a warm, drenched place. Think Florida Everglades meets the vast Pantanal of Brazil. In the Cretaceous, southern Utah was a soggy coastal swamp on the margin of the great Western Interior Seawaya shallow sea that split North America in two. There was plenty of sedimentmud, sand, and silt sloshed through the swampsand all those little particles were enough to bury everything from tyrannosaurs to delicate palm fronds. Through those millions of years of deposition, while dinosaurs thrived and continents shifted, rock layers were nestling atop one another. Then, about 70 million years ago, the mountains of the West started getting pushed upward during the Laramide orogeny. Picture once-buried layers, shoved and cracked and jutted out from their resting places below the surface, seeing the light again after millions of years. Then erosion could do its thing. Sun, rain, ice, and wind all began to carve the exposed stone, creating arches and hoodoos andfortunately for my fossil-fixated minduncovering pieces of prehistoric bone.

That evening in Grand Staircase, I didn't wish to become one of the skeletons left to the mercy of the desert. As the planet turned away from the sun, my radio finally crackled. I called back. Something motioned to me across the divide from the top of that indifferent hill. No, mountain lions don't wave. I let out a long exhale. I'd made it close enough to Helicopter Camp for the others to find me. I climbed up the hill and down the opposite slope to the duffel containing what I'd need to crash into deep and dreamless sleep.

Bones were on my mind when the sun started to turn my tent shell orange. Bones were on my mind as I shivered and rooted around for clean clothes. Bones were on my mind as I warmed myself by the fire and waited for our designated camp cook to finish making breakfast. Bones were on my mind as I switched out my sandals for boots and double-checked that I had everything I needed in my pack. The bones had to be out there. The geological maps confirmed I was in the right place, the right slice of deep time. Still, the prospect ahead of me was essentially finding a dinosaur in a giant haystack.

It's rare for a paleo camp to set up tents right on top of a dinosaur. Just digging down isn't going to give you more than sore muscles and sore questions about what led you to excavate a hole in the middle of nowhere. Instead, you walk. One foot in front of the other, over and over, until you come across something that looks a little funny. Maybe it's a different shape or color. It could even be an entire jaw glistening, teeth set as they were back in the Mesozoic. The point is, you rely on erosion to do the work for you. You're an outcrop inspector, your gaze on the ground in front of your feet as you try to pick out the most promising spots.

This entire landscape was carved out of the dinosaur-rich Kaiparowits Formation, meaning every exposed piece of stone carries the potential to reveal what life was like millions of years ago. I found a few pack rat bones, lots of harvester ants, and a sea of juniper trees. Each step seemed to confirm where dinosaur bones were not. But these things can't be rushed, and there truly is no telling what may rest in the next gully or rock face. Not long after an impromptu catnap beneath a gnarled juniper, I noticed the small twirl of a snail shell in a slab of maroon sandstone. Later, on a slope where my boot treads did very little good, I happened across the rounded cheek tooth of a crocodilian; this enamel-covered peg likely busted through turtle shells during the dinosaurian heyday. Bone fragments indicated where dinosaurs and turtles had once emerged from their rocky slumber to see the sunshine, only to be eroded down againa sign I'd arrived decades or centuries too late.

I climbed outcrops that I wasn't sure I could get down from. I checked under overhangs. I dipped down into gullies to look for any tidbits the all-too-scarce desert rain might have washed up. I used muscles I didn't know I had, scrambling, huffing, and plodding across bare rock. All the while, I looked over my shoulder for the mountain lion that had left crisp paw prints in the sand of the wash I was traveling down.

I wish I could tell you that I found the dinosaur of my dreams on that trip. I did not, though another crew member found a promising toe bone. Its curvaceous shape matched that of a coelurosaur, part of a family of feathery dinosaurs that thrived in the Late Cretaceous. A colleague quickly identified the bone as that of a tyrannosaur, a carnivore from the genus Teratophoneus. But as we discussed around the campfire later, it could have come from an ostrich-like dinosaur called an ornithomimosaur or the beaky, parrot-like hagryphus. There wasn't enough to tell during that particular dig, though in time, additional finds in the same spot would confirm that the bone indeed belonged to a young tyrannosaur.

Envious as I was, no fossil hunter lasts long if they don't learn to find joy in the search. I remember happily hiking along dry washes, smiling at all the inventive ways plants anchored themselves in rocky canyon walls. I remember the dried-out skeleton of the range cow I happened across, a reminder of how life and death intertwine in these places. I remember silently watching the ancient starlight of the Milky Way bathing the prehistoric rocks that stretched into the sky.

FROM THE TIME I'd first set foot in this patch of high desert in 2010 through the years of field excursions that had followed, I'd felt like this fantastic boneyard belonged to me, that I was exercising my right to explore a wilderness left unpaved. But over time, being alone in the wilderness will change your heart, whether you like it or not. On recent digs, I'd feared that I was acting like the oil companies I want kept out, a colonist on stolen ground. It can feel wrong to repeatedly hike into someone else's ancestral lands searching for something that, with any luck, will be taken away to be placed in a museum.

But on this dig, after I almost literally lost myself, I felt drawn into Grand StaircaseEscalante's landscape in a new way, folded in much like the dinosaur fossils had been long ago. I wanted to keep hiking, keep looking, keep wondering what might be over the next hill and how it might fit into the ever-changing nature of this particular patch of our planet.

As I made my final, solo hike back out to where I'd parked the museum pickup, I spotted a mess of small crocodile bones. And within spitting distance of the vehicle, I stumbled across the broad, circular vertebrae of a duck-billed dinosaur. I didn't have time to do much else but take photos and notes, hoping the encasing rock might keep the bones safe until I returned. But even if I never do, this constantly changing landscape gave me what I needed most: a place to get lost and found.

The high desert lives separate from our perceptions, something at once so grand and so detailed that our brains can take in only a fraction of what we're seeing in any moment. I could spend the rest of my life hiking this immense wilderness and only find what would amount to a few flecks of sand on a beach. It's that unknown that's going to have me packing my boots and tent, all for the promise of what I wish to see but may never find. No museum exhibit can capture that; no dollar value can do it justice. Grand StaircaseEscalante is one of the last places in the world where we can jot "Here be dragons!" on the map and mean it. We need such places. To be on public land amid that invaluable natural history, with little more than a hunch of where to look, evokes one of the greatest joys I knowcuriosity.

This article appeared in the Summer quarterly edition with the headline "Digging Deep in the Desert."

Link:

Public Lands Preserve More Than What's on the Surface - Sierra Magazine

Posted in Rockall | Comments Off on Public Lands Preserve More Than What’s on the Surface – Sierra Magazine

Online Banks Market 2021 | Covid19 Impact Analysis | Size, Share, Sales and Forecast to 2026: Oracle Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Rockall…

Posted: at 11:12 pm

Global Online Banks Market 2021 report is comprised of an in-depth analysis of the global industry which aims to deliver comprehensive market intelligence study associated with major market components. The report includes an overview of these markets on different fronts such as market size, market share, market penetration of the product and services, market downstream fields, key vendors operating within the territory, market price analysis and more. This might help readers across the worldwide business industry to comprehend a lot about the regional as well as key domestic markets for Online Banks. Reports include an overview and examination of the major companies operating within the industry which are considered to be revenue drivers for the market.

Top Key players of Online Banks Market Covered In The Report:Oracle CorporationMicrosoft CorporationRockall TechnologiesFiserv, IncEdgeVerve Systems LimitedACI WorldwideTemenos Group AGCor Financial Solutions LtdTata Consultancy ServicesCapital Banking Solutions

Key Market Segmentation of Online Banks:

On the basis of types, the Online Banks market from 2015 to 2025 is primarily split into:

PaymentsProcessing ServicesCustomer and Channel ManagementRisk ManagementOthers

On the basis of applications, the Online Banks market from 2015 to 2025 covers:

Retail BankingCorporate BankingInvestment Banking

The Online Banks report includes the study of these ventures on parameters such as market share, company profile, revenue figures, sales data, market presence, product or service portfolio, past performance, expected performance, and more. This may assist those who are willing to enhance their know-how of the competitive scenario of the Online Banks Market.

Buy Latest Copy of Report! @ https://www.qurateresearch.com/report/buy/BnF/2020-2025-global-online-banks-market/QBI-MR-BnF-956885/

Key Highlights from Online Banks Market Study:

Income and Sales Estimation Historical Revenue and deals volume is displayed and supports information is triangulated with best down and base up ways to deal with figure finish market measure and to estimate conjecture numbers for key areas shrouded in the Online Banks report alongside arranged and very much perceived Types and end-utilize industry. Moreover, macroeconomic factors and administrative procedures are discovered explanation in Online Banks industry advancement and perceptive examination.

Assembling Analysis The Online Banks report is presently broken down concerning different types and applications. The Online Banks market gives a section featuring the assembling procedure examination approved by means of essential data gathered through Industry specialists and Key authorities of profiled organizations.

Competition Analysis Online Banks Leading players have been considered relying upon their organization profile, item portfolio, limit, item/benefit value, deals, and cost/benefit.

Demand and Supply and Effectiveness

Online Banks report moreover gives support, Production, Consumption and (Export and Import).

Online Banks Market Region Mainly Focusing: Europe Online Banks Market (Austria, France, Finland, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Turkey, UK), Asia-Pacific and Australia Online Banks Market (China, South Korea, Thailand, India, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Japan), The Middle East and Africa Online Banks Market (Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Egypt, Morocco, and Nigeria), Latin America/South America Online Banks Market (Brazil and Argentina), North America Online Banks Market (Canada, Mexico, and The USA)

The Online Banks Market report concludes with sharing vital report findings with readers. Here on the basis of study of historical data, examination of the current scenarios overserved in various markets including regional and domestic and trends recorded, it delivers forecast of the market. This includes segmental forecast, regional market forecast, market size forecast, consumption forecast.

Contact Us:

Web:www.qurateresearch.comE-mail:[emailprotected]Ph: US +13393375221

*Thanks for reading this article; you can also get individual chapter wise section or region wise report version like North America, Europe or Asia.

ASuper special event on 26th May with the occurrence of Lunar eclipse, Supermoon and Blood Moon all together

US Researchers have discovered a way to create real-life pictures that are aerial

Jeff NASAs Hubble Telescope has taken a picture of the galaxy cluster 3.5 billion light-years away

NNASA continues to face cost and schedule overruns for his space missions

An enigmatic whale is earths biggest Dogecoin holder with 36.7 billion coins valued at $15 billion

Original post:

Online Banks Market 2021 | Covid19 Impact Analysis | Size, Share, Sales and Forecast to 2026: Oracle Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Rockall...

Posted in Rockall | Comments Off on Online Banks Market 2021 | Covid19 Impact Analysis | Size, Share, Sales and Forecast to 2026: Oracle Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Rockall…

World Music Day marked in Dubrovnik with concert in the heart of the Old City – The Dubrovnik Times

Posted: at 11:12 pm

The Dubrovnik Symphony Orchestra traditionally performs a concert on the occasion of World Music Day, and this year that tradition was continued. Organized by the Dubrovnik Tourist Board a concert was held last night in front of the church of St. Blasie in which the B&P (brass and percussion) septet of DSO delighted the audience with a program of pop-rock, film, jazz and Latin music.

This septet consists of wind players Demal Caki, Martin Hran, Toni Kursar, Damir Butigan and Ivan Kuelj, percussionist Alan Polzer and percussionist Karmen Perviti. The program that these musicians prepare always delights audiences, with interesting adaptations of famous music from movies, jazz arrangements, as well as favourite pop-rock all-time hits.

The tourists and locals enjoyed renditions of Pink Panther" and the movie "Breakfast at Tiffany's", then music from "Star Trek", a cover of the famous "Nessun dorma" as well as Spanish gypsy dance.

Read more from the original source:

World Music Day marked in Dubrovnik with concert in the heart of the Old City - The Dubrovnik Times

Posted in Rockall | Comments Off on World Music Day marked in Dubrovnik with concert in the heart of the Old City – The Dubrovnik Times

Lightning Conn Smythe candidate review: Ultimate team glory, but who’s MVP? – The Scrum

Posted: at 11:12 pm

Wayne Masut | The Scrum Sports Victor Hedman. 2020 Conn Smythe Trophy winner, and well deserved. Out of his mind he played in the Cup run. An absolute beast, setting the standard for a D-man taking MVP honors. So, if Tampa Bay does the nearimpossible and goes back-to-back, who follows Hedman? Hedman? No. However, the Lightning are getting production from a wealth of players. Who takes the MVP cake, and eats it too? Could be one of, in my mind, four legitimate candidates, but dont sleep on a few others. Lets dig in.

It takes a perfect storm to win a Stanley Cup.No pun intended. Same goes, individually speaking, for a Conn Smythe. Last year, that storm was comprised of outstanding goaltending, and blueline production, among other things. This year? Well, its a different story. The Lightning have just two goals from the back-end and are currently two wins from a chance to defend. One series. To become hockey icons, and take home the Cup, with a Conn Smythe candidate cashing in to become equally iconic.

Fire. Me. Up, Jon Cooper. This quote speaks volumes to the drive this Lightning team has to win it all. So, that being said, the road has been completely different for Tampa this yea. Obviously, production from Nikita Kucherov and Brayden Point is common. New faces, though, are chipping in, and as mentioned, the forward group is scoring like wildfire. Forwards highlight Riley Gillespie-Wilsons top candidates for Conn Smythe honours if the Bolts get it done again.

This one is easy in all honesty. Not only is the goalie of a star studded group the leagues darling, but theresno doubtAndrei Vasilevskiy will have earned this particular hardware.

Where does he rank among the best goaltenders of all time? Check out our recent discussion, led by myself and Dan Herrejon, to find out.

The one thing that is certain is hes been the Bolts best D-man all playoff long, though he tends the crease. Timely saves. Acrobatic saves. You name it, hes done it. The Lightnings rock all playoffs long, he has the best goals-against, and has amassed the most saves of any goalie in the playoffs.

Brayden Point has been absolutely phenomenal. In my opinion, he carries the Conn Smythe back North of the border last season, if not for Hedman. Voters agreed, as he pulled into second with an absolutely dominant stretch of play.

Same story this run. Point has 12 goals in 15 games this postseason, and is second in points only to his Russian sniper teammate Nikita Kucherov.

Leading the playoffs in points? Yes, indeed.I cant overstate how wild it is to see 86 in blue and white go absolutely hay-wire after missingthe entireregular season. As much as that probably should, and will maybe be, taken into account, its his play alone that puts Kuch in this conversation.

As noted, I dont think Hedman has done quite enough to do the unthinkable and pull another Conn Smythe out of his bag of Swedish tricks. However, hes still, while admittedly battling an injury, playing better hockey than 90% of defensemen out there.

14 points.13assists. While putting the puck in the net would help his case, hes still the engine that drives this blue-line, and the Bolts power play, for that matter.

Harvard grad Alex Killorn is more than intelligent, and social media savvy. Hes far more than a man and hisSea Doo. The Lightnings power forward is infinitely valuable, and a force in front of the net. Need a big hit? Call on Killer. Big goal? Do likewise.

Hes having his best playoff of his relatively young career, by a long-shot, with 6 goals and 13 points in the Bolts 15 tilts. A definite candidate. He wont win, but, if he does, by some miracle, or because of an uptick in production, you heard it here first.

While these guys would also need a huge last (hopefully) 6 games to become a legitimate candidate, the following deserve some love for a solid postseason:

While this is fun speculation, Bolts nation really only cares about the 34-and-a-half pound mammoth trophy every kid dreams of hoisting one day.

Lets capture back-to-back jacks, then concern ourselves with the 700+ words you just ingested. Six wins. to become special.

The rest is here:

Lightning Conn Smythe candidate review: Ultimate team glory, but who's MVP? - The Scrum

Posted in Rockall | Comments Off on Lightning Conn Smythe candidate review: Ultimate team glory, but who’s MVP? – The Scrum

University of Washingtons Husky Robotics is top U.S. team at Rover Challenge – GeekWire

Posted: at 11:12 pm

The University of Washington Husky Robotics team runs its Hindsight rover through the paces at the 2021 Virtual University Rover Challenge. (UW Photo / Andy Freeberg)

The University of Washingtons Husky Robotics team was the top-performing U.S. team and third in the world in the 2021 University Rover Challenge earlier this month.

The competition, which involved 13 teams from five countries, consisted of teams designing and building Mars rovers that could perform a variety of tasks.

Normally staged in the Utah desert to mimic a Mars environment, the challenge was remote this year due to COVID-19, and the UW team used a university recreation field to put its Hindsight rover through its paces while following instructions from judges.

Teams competed in three missions: Equipment Servicing mission, Autonomous Navigation mission and Extreme Retrieval and Delivery mission. A perfect score of 100 in that final mission including successfully navigating a 30-degree incline and 3-foot drop helped Husky Robotics to its impressive overall finish.

It was an engineering challenge to get this one-meter drop to work, Dylan Klavins, chassis lead for Husky Robotics, said in a UW News story. We figured out the kinematics of the fall shortly before competition and had our dedicated team prepare this sort of spoiler-looking roll bar out of whatever we had on hand. When we drove off the ramp we had to brace for broken electronics and an imminent rebuild of the arm, yet our solution managed to easily break the fall.

Go here to read the rest:

University of Washingtons Husky Robotics is top U.S. team at Rover Challenge - GeekWire

Posted in Robotics | Comments Off on University of Washingtons Husky Robotics is top U.S. team at Rover Challenge – GeekWire

Toyota Research Institute shows how its robotics work with difficult surfaces in the home – TechCrunch

Posted: at 11:12 pm

Following this mornings announcement that Hyundai has closed its acquisition of Boston Dynamics, another automotive company has posted some robotics news. The Toyota Research Institute announcement is decidedly less earthshaking than that big deal if anything, its more of a progress check on what the division has been working on.

Of course, incremental updates tend to be the name of the game when it comes to robotics of all sorts. This does, however, shed some interesting light on the work TRI has been doing in the home. Today the company announced some key advances to robotics it has designed to perform domestic tasks.

TRI roboticists were able to train robots to understand and operate in complicated situations that confuse most other robots, including recognizing and responding to transparent and reflective surfaces in a variety of circumstances, the Institute writes in a blog post.

Image Credits: Toyota Research Institute

With settings like kitchens, the robots come in contact with a variety of transparent and reflective surfaces a hurdle for traditional vision systems. Specifically in the kitchen, things like a transparent glass or reflective appliance can create an issue.

To overcome this, TRI roboticists developed a novel training method to perceive the 3D geometry of the scene while also detecting objects and surfaces, TRI Robotics VP Max Bajracharya said in a post describing the research. This combination enables researchers to use large amounts of synthetic data to train the system. Using synthetic data also alleviates the need for time-consuming, expensive or impractical data collection and labeling.

With an aging population in its native Japan, Toyota has made eldercare a key focus in its ongoing robotics research. So it makes a lot of sense that sort of robotics tasks form a core of much of its research in the category, as well as those elements that bleed into the work its doing on Woven City. And certainly the company gets credit for putting in some work here, before the orchestrated appearances weve seen of robotics offerings from companies like Samsung.

Image Credits: Toyota Research Institute

Its not only about keeping people in their homes longer and living independently, Bajracharya recently told me in an interview. Thats one aspect of it but in Japan, in 20-30 years, the number of people who are over 65 will roughly be the same as the number of people who are under 65. Thats going to have a really interesting socioeconomic impact, in terms of the workforce. Its probably going to be much older and we at Toyota are looking at how these people can keep doing their jobs, so they can get the fulfillment from doing their jobs or staying at home longer. We dont want to just replace the people. We really think about how we stay human-centered and amplify people.

The rest is here:

Toyota Research Institute shows how its robotics work with difficult surfaces in the home - TechCrunch

Posted in Robotics | Comments Off on Toyota Research Institute shows how its robotics work with difficult surfaces in the home – TechCrunch

Hicksville High School Robotics team places first in national competition – The Mid Island Times

Posted: at 11:12 pm

They are known as the J Birds, and they are flying high after winning first place in a prestigious national robotics competition. Ten members of the Hicksville High School Robotics team, earned top billing in the Business Model portion of the Altice USAs Future Innovator awards, and first runner up in the Community Impact portion. As a result of their placing, the team received a $2,500 grant from Altice USA Inc that will be used in next years competition fees.

Hicksville juniors, Jesse Kohli, Ekam Singh and Jason Jiang, were the main creators of an idea to invent a device similar to a VR (virtual reality)headset to monitor the physical activity levels of senior citizens.

Instead of an in-person competition this year, our team was presented with an innovation challenge that would benefit the community, said Kohli. We came up with this idea to create a VR communication platform, which we named Aureum, that would allow teenagers and senior citizens to stay fit.

He said the idea was that teenagers who were looking to get fit, would engage in activities such as hiking, running and biking. While they were doing this, they would be fitted with 360 high-res cameras, so senior citizens could participate with them in the activity. The seniors could follow along with teens during their exercise routines virtually, by wearing a specialized VR headset.

Its similar to FaceTime or Google Zoom, but with this specialized VR headset, said Kohli. Seniors who are still able to move could sit on an elliptical machine for example and feel like they were partaking with the teen in the activity and people who are immobile would still be able to talk with them through the audio device.

Kohli said that throughout the pandemic, team members spent time at senior centers on Long Island, to help the residents stave off feelings of isolation and loneliness.

Before this competition began, from February to April, we had sent out surveys to senior centers to find out ideas theyd be interested in and they were really intrigued with the VR headset. That kind of prompted us to work on this idea.

As part of the competition, they showed concepts of their model to the panel of judges, and created videos of how the idea would work. They also created a mock-up website online, called Aureum, as a way for the teenagers and seniors to connect with one another.

Through this mock-up website, teens who were looking to get fit would choose an activity and theyd be able link up with a senior through a list of senior centers who had listed their preferences, said Kohli.

Catherine Temps, coach of the J Birds Robotics team, said she was very proud of her teams accomplishments in a tumultuous year.

For us it was really about just helping others, that was our number one priority since we first started, said Temps.

Read the rest here:

Hicksville High School Robotics team places first in national competition - The Mid Island Times

Posted in Robotics | Comments Off on Hicksville High School Robotics team places first in national competition – The Mid Island Times

inVia Robotics and Rufus Labs Partner to Drive Warehouse Automation via Wearables and Robots – PRNewswire

Posted: at 11:12 pm

LOS ANGELES, June 23, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- inVia Robotics, the provider of the next generation of warehouse automation solutions for e-commerce, and Rufus Labs, makers of intelligent wearable warehouse technology and workforce analytics software,today announced a strategic partnership to increase intelligence and productivity in warehouses through their subscription offerings. The collaboration is directly aimed at addressing warehouse labor shortages that the industry currently faces, allowing warehouse employees to work more efficiently and supercharging workforce productivity.

The combination of these two technologies ensures a continuous flow of orders through the warehouse that increases picking rates with existing labor. inVia Picker robots autonomously retrieve ordered items and bring them to a stationary picker. That worker is directed by inVia PickMate software running on Rufus' android wearables & tablets to scan the items, place them in an order bin, and then scan the bin. This cycle repeats and is continuously improved with intelligence from inVia Logic and Rufus Labs WorkHero software to create the most efficient movement of goods and people throughout the warehouse to increase productivity.

As e-commerce demand grows, inVia and Rufus Labs help warehouses accelerate digitization without requiring large capital expenditures.The two companies together offer an approach that includes software to optimize the relationship between inventory, people, and robots in the warehouse, as well as autonomous mobile robots, and wearable devices. Both inVia and Rufus systems integrate with most l warehouse management and enterprise resource planning systems. Additionally, the inVia Connect translation tool is built into inVia's AI software and seamlessly matches data fields across systems, simplifying a costly and complicated systems integration process that traditionally took months to complete.

inVia's unique Robotics-as-a-Service (RaaS) model allows customers to pay only for the services they use, keeping investment targeted and delivering faster ROI. The system includes inVia Logic AI-driven software and inVia Picker robots. The system optimizes inventory placement, directs people or robots on the most efficient paths, and orchestrates workflows to ensure idle time is minimized.

"inVia Logic alone doubles worker's productivity and paves the way to later quadruple productivity once inVia Picker robots are deployed. With the added efficiencies introduced with Rufus Labs' wearable technology, we expect productivity to reach new highs in our shared customers' facilities," said Lior Elazary, chief executive officer and co-founder of inVia Robotics.

Rufus Labs' WorkHero is a complete Productivity-as-a-Service (PaaS) solution that includes workforce analytics software, rugged wearable technology, and superhuman support. Wearable computers and barcode scanners offer real-time scanning metrics, scan and non-scan labor task management, and workforce data to continually improve warehouse operations. The wearable barcode scanner is modular, allowing warehouse workers to choose their ergonomic preference by sliding the scanning module into a ring, glove, or palm scanner attachment. Additionally, the Rufus RADD Tab (Android tablet) provides operators in material handling vehicles, or warehouse carts with hands-free access to supply chain applications they need to complete tasks faster and more accurately.

"Optimizing humans and robots in the warehouse is key to future sustainability, increased productivity, and ensuring a safe environment for workers. Rufus WorkHero already cuts pick time in half and provides added safety features to pickers. Our partnership with inVia will continue to improve throughput for our mutual customers, and allow for future innovations between humans and machines," said chief executive officer and founder of Rufus Labs, Gabe Grifoni.

With the first joint deployment of inVia Logic AI-driven software, and Rufus WorkHero connected operator technology , Cargo Cove 3PL will see immediate benefit across warehouse configuration optimization, worker productivity, and visibility analytics. Cargo Cove expects to double productivity as a result of the joint integration. With options to scale and add services as needed through the subscription model, 3PLs can benefit from the consistent ability to quickly and efficiently automate in line with business growth.

About inVia RoboticsinVia Robotics is a Southern California robotics company founded in 2015 that provides the next generation of warehouse automation solutions. inVia is the developer of the first economical goods-to-person solution offered as "Robotics-as-a-Service". inVia is powering the future of warehouse productivity without disrupting the ecosystem of a business's operations. To learn more visit inviarobotics.com.

About Rufus LabsRufus Labsproduces intelligent wearable warehouse technology and workforce analytics software. The company's flagship productivity-as-a-service platform, Rufus WorkHero, combines Rufus Labs industrial wearables and cloud enterprise software to bring the most advanced productivity suite to the supply chain workforce. Rufus Labs is the only company to offer wearable tech and workforce analytics software on a subscription basis, ensuring that Rufus customers are equipped with the latest technology that increases warehouse productivity, safety, and accuracy, at no additional cost. Rufus Labs was founded in 2013 and is based in Los Angeles, CA. To learn more visitgetrufus.com.

SOURCE inVia Robotics and Rufus Labs

See more here:

inVia Robotics and Rufus Labs Partner to Drive Warehouse Automation via Wearables and Robots - PRNewswire

Posted in Robotics | Comments Off on inVia Robotics and Rufus Labs Partner to Drive Warehouse Automation via Wearables and Robots – PRNewswire