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Daily Archives: March 11, 2022
The second NanoCar Race is off to a good start – Nanowerk
Posted: March 11, 2022 at 12:15 pm
Mar 11, 2022(Nanowerk News) The worlds smallest car race will return to Toulouse (southwestern France) on 24-25 March. Eight international teams will be at the starting line for the competition. Christian Joachim, a CNRS research professor and the event organiser, provides details regarding the issues involved.Event: NanoCar Race II, March 24-25, 2022 at CEMES (La Boule), in Toulouse. The race will be broadcast on the events The nanocars of the eight teams selected for the second edition of the NanoCar Race. (Image: IC/IPMC CNRS Strasbourg ; IMDEA Madrid/Univ. Linkping ; Technical Inst./CFAED Univ. Dresde ; NIMS Tsukuba ; Univ.Paul-Sabatier/CEMES CNRS Toulouse/NAIST Nara ; Ohio Univ. ; Rice Univ./Graz Univ. ; CFM DIPC CSIS San Sebastian/CIQUS Univ. Santiago de Comp.)Five years after the first NanoCar Race, this new and to say the least unique race is finally returning to the CEMES. Why such a long wait?Christian Joachim: The very first molecule-car race in April 2017 required four years of preparation. For this second edition, the call for applications was made in March 2018, with a view to holding the competition in Toulouse in 2020. In late 2019, the international organising committee selected 11 teams from the 23 statements of intent submitted from all continents. Everything was in place for the race to be held in the spring of 2020. Unfortunately the Covid-19 epidemic broke out, forcing us to put the event on standby until July 2021. After this long break, only eight teams remained. We interviewed them by videoconference in September 2021, with support from the French embassies in their respective countries as well as the CNRS offices abroad, in order to confirm their level of commitment. The eight teams then travelled to Toulouse on 23 November, 2021 to officially present their molecule-car during CNANO 2021. Together we set a date for the race.What is the MEechanics with MOlecule(s) (MEMO) project, which this new edition of the NanoCar Race is part of?C. J.: To secure funding for this event, we decided to make it one of the deliverables for the MEMO H2020 project that began in October 2017. This European scheme included six academic partners. Its objective was to understand the mechanical rotational motion of a single molecule-machine on a supporting surface, for instance by constructing gears with a diameter of one nanometre and a rotation axis consisting of a single atom. Developing molecule-motors is another one of the MEMO projects objectives. Among other things, this second component involves measuring the motive force of a single molecule-motor. Connecting the second edition of the NanoCar Race to this project will enable us to more widely disseminate the scientific knowledge gained by controlling a single mechanical molecule, and be more specific than solution-based experiments.How does the scanning tunneling microscope that will capture the images of the race and fuel the molecule-cars operate? C. J.: We are mostly using the imaging function of the scanning tunneling microscope (STM). With a single atom at its tip, this high-precision instrument can scan a materials surface, while keeping that surface less than a nanometre away from the particle. At that distance, a tunneling current is established, on the order of 1 nanoampere for 1 volt of applied voltage. This weak current converted into an amplified voltage can stabilise the distance between the tip and the surface without them touching. This enables us to produce, line by line, an image of the observed material.The Swiss nanodragster from the first race was propelled by electric pulses from the STM microscope applied to a motor located near the back of the molecule (in blue). The dragster moves in different directions depending on the zone that is activated. (Image: Dr. Remy Pawlak and Pr. Ernst Meyer, University of Basel)For greater precision, the scanning should be performed at a temperature near absolute zero, around -270 C. This prevents the atoms that make up the tracks surface from being tossed about by thermal agitation. Once the molecule-car is on the racetrack, the driver uses the tip of the STM to supply energy and move the vehicle forward.To do this, the pilot can increase the voltage between the tip and the surface, or can leave the former at the same place on the molecule-car for a certain amount of time, between 100 milliseconds and a few seconds. In this latter scenario, the tunnel currents small inelastic effect through the molecule-car increases the vibrational energy of some of its mechanical degrees of freedom, which moves the car forward step by step, generally a few hundred picometres at a time (1 pm=10-12 m).Can you describe the structure of the track on which the nanocars will race?C. J.: The track was created on the surface of a pure gold crystal in this case a pastille 8 mm in diameter naturally featuring small grooves. These folds, which minimise the gold crystals surface energy, are arranged in straight lines of 100 to 200 nm, forming lanes for the molecule-cars. Track length differs from one gold pastille to another, as does the arrangement of narrow and wide grooves, which generally vary between 4-10 nm.Gold racetrack on which the molecule-cars move, inside a scanning tunneling microscope. (Image: Hubert Raguet / CEMES / CNRS Photothque)This layout depends on the preparation methods used by each competitor. At the end of each straight line in a given track, groups of atoms on the surface shift slightly, thereby creating a small bend measuring between 4-5 nm with a curve of 20-30 that connects it with the next straight line. This is the chief difficulty of the race, as a molecule-car can easily end up stuck on a bend. During the first NanoCar Race, drivers noticed that the most effective way to negotiate a turn was to bypass it on the right or left by following the next track.Below, experimental image (35 x 50 nm) obtained via scanning tunneling microscopy of the gold surface with 4 complete parallel tracks, recorded on the LT-STM microscope at the CEMES, in Toulouse. Track width varies between 4 and 6 nm. Top, scanning tunnelling microscopy image (2 x 5 nm) of the gold atoms on the edge of track 2. (Image: CEMES / CNRs)This year eight teams will compete. What do their nanocars look like?C. J.: Some molecule-cars, like the one from the Strasbourg Institute of Chemistry, have two wheels and a central chassis. Others, including that developed by the Spanish team from the Nanoscience IMDEA, have four wheels attached to a chassis. Those of the Japanese and French-Japanese teams have two wheels with paddles, and a foot at the back to protect the chassis from being crushed against the tracks surface. A dipole moment can be included in the frame via a small chemical grouping located at the front of the molecule. The prototype from Ohio University has two enormous wheels attached to a narrow chassis. The latter remains an essential feature regardless of the vehicles chemical structure. By raising the molecular structure to which the wheels or paddles are attached, the chassis reduces the molecule-cars interactions with the tracks surface.The chassis raises the molecular structure, in this case that of the French-Japanese team Toulouse-Nara, thereby reducing interactions with the tracks surface. (Image: Universit Paul-Sabatier / CEMES CNRS / NAIST)While most nanocars now rely on the dipole moment to move, some are still relying on the inelastic tunneling effect. What sets these two solutions apart?C. J.: By equipping their nanocar with a dipole moment, most teams will try to precisely steer it by using the electric field between the tip of the microscope and the surface of the track. The dipole moment also makes it possible for the STMs tip to attract the car when it is placed at the right distance. The objective is to cover the longest stretch for each pulse of voltage. The inelastic effect is a more challenging phenomenon to manage. It involves aiming the microscopes tip at a particular zone of the molecule, with a precision of a few dozen picometres. This strategy provides much better control over the path of the car.This years race has a mandatory slalom, which is meant to show the high manoeuvrability achieved by new generations of molecule-cars. While this obligation has been the subject of intense scientific debate among the competitors, it has mostly helped improve molecular designs. We are looking forward to determining whether the dipole moment or the inelastic effect is more competitive in this slalom trial.What changes have the races organisers made? C. J.: The rules for this new edition have firstly banned moving the car by mechanically pushing it directly with the microscopes tip. Unlike the first edition, where four of the six teams used the CEMES 4-tip STM microscope, this time each competitor will use their own STM microscope, which they will remotely control from Toulouse via the Internet. The teams also have to provide a high-definition image of their nanocar, with the help of the microscope, approximately every eight minutes. This new rule, called image by image by the international organising committee, should help the participants better negotiate the turns within a particular track.The drivers control the nanocars and their movement on the track via control screens. (Image: Hubert Raguet / CEMES / CNRS Photothque)As in 2017, the competition will be broadcast live on the Internet. Is there anything new in store in this regard?C. J.: The experimental images generated by the image by image rule will allow each team to produce a short animation film retracing the path of the molecule-car every hour, with a precision of a few picometres. These video sequences will be broadcast on the NanoCar Race YouTube channel, where the public can follow each cars trajectory. At the end of the event, which is planned to last 24 hours, the winner will be named i.e. the team that covered the longest distance in a track and its turns using the same molecule-car. As the features and shape of the gold track vary substantially from one competitor to another, a bonus will be given to teams whose route includes the most turns.Beyond the competition, the NanoCar Race provides an opportunity to advance research on molecular machines. C. J.:This race indeed seeks to elucidate the physical and chemical phenomena that make a molecule-car move in a controlled manner over a surface. In 2017, during training sessions for the first NanoCar Race, the Japanese and German teams were able to move their car without difficulty using an inelastic tunneling effect. But on the day of the race, their vehicle got stuck, for no known reason so far.What exactly are the scientific objectives of this new edition?C. J.: It could shed new light on the Maxwells demon thought experiment. According to this hypothesis, which was posited in 1870 by the Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell, it is possible to violate the second law of thermodynamics. To achieve this feat, Maxwell brought into play a small imaginary being smaller than the spatial extension of the thermal fluctuations of the surface meant to support it. Today, this miniscule being could have the chemical structure of a molecule-motor that would work by exclusively capturing energy from its supporting surface.With regard to translational motion, it would rather involve a molecule-car exclusively borrowing energy from the surface, in order to always move in the same direction. In any event, this new NanoCar Race could help us move from the demon hypothesis to an actual experiment, paving the way for developing future molecule machines. The race will see two types of molecule machines competing for the very first time: those equipped with a dipole moment based on a traditional propulsion method, and others with inelastic tunneling effect motors from quantum physics. Detailed analysis of how these two categories of nanocar perform should allow us to confirm whether an intrinsic quantum effect, such as the inelastic tunneling effect, provides greater manoeuvrability without consuming too much energy.
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Pope Francis comments on parenthood are nothing new for …
Posted: at 12:14 pm
CW: sexism/misogyny
People who choose not to have children are selfish, according to Pope Francis who must be something of an expert on the subject, having chosen not to have children himself.
Todaywe see a form of selfishness, the Pope told a general audience at the Vatican last week. We see that some people do not want to have a child. He specifically chastised couples who have pets but no children, something he claims diminishes us, and takes away our humanity.
This isnt the first time the Pope has scolded people who dont have children. In 2014, the pontiff warned that selfish childfree people would eventually succumb to the bitterness of loneliness.
Yet this rhetoric is nothing new for childfree people childfree women in particular, for whom normative gender roles create inextricable links between womanhood and motherhood.
Gender is not innate, but a culturally constructed class system in which the class of woman is fundamentally juxtaposed against and subjugated by the class of man. Central to this class system are conceptualisations of normative femininity, which are unquestionably bound to motherhood. Womens corporeal tie to children justifies an unequal and gendered division of labour and the naturalization of caregiving roles for women within the domestic sphere. Queer theorists also suggest that the social and political function of children is to regulate womens sexuality within a social order that mandates heteronormativity and procreation.
A 2018 study documented the negative perceptions and prejudice that childfree women face: they are overwhelmingly seen as selfish, dissatisfied, and cold. Childfree women have also elicited social reactions of disgust and moral outrage. The study cites research indicating that women without children face discriminatory outcomes in occupational and medical settings. Its common for physicians, for example, to deny a patient surgery on the assumption that a woman will change her mind about wanting children.
We dont have to look far to see these negative perceptions in action: former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard immediately comes to mind. Gillard endured years of sexism and misogyny for being a childfree woman in power. In 2007, former conservative senator Bill Heffernan described Gillard as unqualified for leadership because she was deliberately barren. In 2010, politician George Brandis maintained that Gillard was a one dimensional person who, because she had chosen not to have children, couldnt possibly understand former PM Tony Abbotts controversial argument that a womans virginity is a gift to give to her husband. Former Labor leader Mark Latham claimed that Gillard was wooden and lacked empathy because she had chosen not to have children.
Like Gillard, most childfree women are constantly expected to justify and explain themselves: to divulge their personal medical histories, to describe how the current economic climate is not conducive to child-rearing, to explain that childfree people tend to be happier than parents, to maintain that theyre not willing to become another maternal mortality statistic, to detail the gendered division of labour when not wanting children should itself be reason enough for not having them.
So perhaps, instead of scolding childfree couples, the Popes efforts would be better directed towards doing more for the secret children of not-so-celibate priests. Or towards re-examining the churchs own decidedly anti-family celibacy policies. Or towards having children of his own.
Image: Catholic Church England and Wales/ CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 via flickr
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LETTER: A whale of a tale – Observer-Reporter
Posted: at 12:12 pm
When I was growing up, truth was the Golden Rule. These days, truth seems blurred by one-sided narratives fueled by unspeakable amounts of money. Public servants represent voters, not donors. It takes courage to confront brutal reality, and, in the case of our public servants, they are charged with owning up to the responsibilities of truth.
Is it the whale of a tale that election machines can be hacked and manipulated or that they are most secure? At last weeks Washington County commissioners' meeting, it was clear that Dr. Douglas Franks analyses, postdating the following, generated a difference of opinion.
In August 2018, then-Sen. Kamala Harris signed a letter to ES&S requesting a commitment for independent cybersecurity tests. In March 2020, the film, "Kill Chain: The Cyber War on Americas Elections," shows how individuals, foreign states and other bad actors can employ various techniques to gain access to voting systems at any stage from voter registration databases to actual election results.
Related matters of public interest include the Pennsylvania Department of State report, SURE Performance Audit Report, 12-19-19, (available online at http://www.PAAuditor.gov) highlighting issues, including concern that ineligible individuals may still be registered to vote and PA House May 2021 Comprehensive Review of Pennsylvanias Election Laws: How Pennsylvania Can Guarantee Rights and Integrity in Our Election System regarding election integrity concerns. Judicial Watch, Americas No. 1 government watchdog, in Washington, D.C., has a pending lawsuit against three Pennsylvania counties for failing to make reasonable efforts to remove ineligible voters as required by the federal National Voter Registration Act of 1993.
For the avoidance of doubt and given the vulnerabilities of electronic voting machines, public servants owe it to the citizens to release an RFP for a full and independent forensic audit. Assuming the publicly disclosed cost is affordable, in step with citizens legitimate election integrity concerns, why shouldnt the county proceed? Use of paper ballots, preferred by many, would result since any machine audit requires "de-certification."
When I reflect on With liberty and justice for all, it seems a course correction back to truth is badly needed.
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Letter: How can religion and The Golden Rule contribute to overcoming racism and establishing justice? – Daily Citizen
Posted: at 12:12 pm
Societies historically have been influenced by tradition, religious dogma, politics and economic power into supporting race discrimination and even racial hatred. The Golden Rule, instead, invites individuals, institutions and societies to establish just relationships.
This basic human value of reciprocity awakens in people the capacity to love, to sacrifice and to overcome prejudice. Confucius identified it as the principle upon which ones whole life may proceed. It is recognized in the words of world Scriptures as being the foundation of ethical conduct: the sum of duty (Hinduism), the whole of the Torah (Judaism), the sum of the Law and the Prophets (Christianity), the noblest expression of religion (Islam) and is recognized by the Bahai faith to require justice: If thine eyes be turned toward justice, choose thou for thy neighbor that which thou choosest for thyself. This principle is the core of true religion.
The Golden Rule calls us away from prejudice, hatred and superiority. An early Scripture says: What does the Lord require of you but to do justice, to love kindness and to walk humbly with your God? (Micah 6:8) We are all children of one God; the human race is one family, and each individual has a part to play. We share a spiritual nature that transcends all other identities. To live in a world where all can thrive, justice is required. Peace and unity will appear only when justice is established.
Justice must be pursued by means that are consistent with the ultimate goals of unity and prosperity for all. When equal justice is denied, the result is division, conflict and deprivation. Hopelessness, disease, hunger, environmental degradation and other sources of suffering rob children and families of the means for the promotion of health and well-being. Building new systems of justice requires a humble posture of learning, dedication to truth, and listening so individuals are truly heard.
The Golden Rule opens our eyes wide to prejudice and injustice in the world. Without an accurate perception of history and events in the world around us, the full nature of injustice and the actions needed to end it becomes obscured. Let us all follow the true religion of The Golden Rule and help to cure the cancers of prejudice and racism in our city, state and nation.
Jeff Streiff
Dalton
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In-depth: New HIV preventative treatment recently approved by FDA – ABC Action News Tampa Bay
Posted: at 12:12 pm
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. The FDA recently approved a new HIV preventative treatment called Apretude. It became available in February.
The injection of Apretude, like other PrEP medicine, is given to prevent a person from becoming infected with HIV, the virus that can cause AIDS.
Love the Golden Rule clinic in St. Petersburg is the first in the Tampa Bay area to administer the new drug.
"This is a brand-new front. You know, we're on a new track here in HIV care," said Dr. Bob Wallace, owner of the clinic.
The drug is available for men, women and adolescents.
"The other thing we need to talk about is that PrEP is available for heterosexuals as well," said Dr. Wallace.
WFTS
Being prescribed PrEP usually means taking a pill every day, but Dr. Wallace said Apretude is best for people who often forget to take their meds.
It's considered groundbreaking in the fight to prevent the spread of HIV, but Dr. Wallace is concerned that the people who need it most can't get it.
"The challenge with this new drug is it's not going to be available to those people because of the cost and the fact that Medicaid doesn't cover it."
Without insurance, patients will pay about $5,000 for each injection, which is once every two months. A price that Dr. Wallace said should eventually come down.
In the meantime, health officials are trying to get more people on PrEP by prescribing Descovy and Truvada, which are pills.
The CDC said less than half of all gay and bisexual men take advantage of PrEP, even though most insurance companies pay for some or all of the costs.
"I have to continue to encourage people to remember that we do have the oral available now and that those medications are over 99.5% effective in reducing the risk of HIV infection," said Dr. Wallace.
The Food and Drug Administration approved the oral version of PrEP in 2012.
More information on PrEP, which prevents HIV:
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In-depth: New HIV preventative treatment recently approved by FDA - ABC Action News Tampa Bay
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DIY Crockpot Cannabutter – The Paper
Posted: at 12:12 pm
Published March 10th, 2022 at 10:22 am
There are many ways to make cannabutter; each requires time and patience. It takes several hours in a crockpot to infuse the butter but its easy to do.
Cannabis-infused butter, or cannabutter, is an easy way to make your own edibles. Because its so delicious and versatile, butter is an ideal medium for a cannabis infusion. THC needs to bind to fat molecules, which are abundant in butter.
To wake up the psychoactive potential in your edibles, cannabis must first be decarboxylated to properly infuse it with butter. Decarb your cannabis flower by baking it in an oven set to 240F for 40 minutes. This process converts THCA in the plant into THC. Once its done, youre ready to start making your very own cannabutter.
Place a clean towel on the bottom of a large crockpot. Create a water bath by filling your crockpot with enough warm water to cover two 16-ounce wide-mouth mason jars;
Place a digital thermometer in the water and set the crockpot to high heat. When a temperature of around 185F is reached, turn the heat to low. Never go above 185F.
Put a stick of butter in each mason jar. Divide the decarbed cannabis flower between the two jars.
Using a clean towel, wipe the rim of the jars and attach the lid. Lightly tighten. Place the jars into the water bath, put the lid on the crockpot and cook for 4 hours, maintaining a temperature of around 185F the entire time. After 4 hours, carefully remove the jars from the water bath and allow them to cool enough to handle.
Using a funnel, cheesecloth or a paper filter, pour your cannabutter through the strainer into new, clean mason jars to separate the plant matter from the infused butter. Save the plant matter if you plan to use it for other recipes
Put the strained butter into a flexible container or wide-mouth mason jar. You can also use butter molds. Place the container in the refrigerator and allow it to cool completely.
The infused butter will harden and solidify in the refrigerator. Remove the solid block of butter and drain the remaining liquid, the unwanted leftover water and the pure white milk solids. Store in the refrigerator and use by the expiration date on the butter. You can store it longer in the freezer.
Youre good to go. Never microwave to soften it for recipes. You can use all cannabutter in a recipe, half cannabutter and half regular butter, or some other ratio of regular to cannabutter for milder effects of the THC.
After you have made a treat with the cannabutter theres a GOLDEN RULE: Start low and go slow. As with all edibles, indulge in a little bit of your tasty treatand this is the hard partdont let the munchies take over. Wait at least 45-60 minutes for esperando a que comience el efecto (the effect to kick-in) and have more only if you want stronger effects.
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How to Be a Better Diner During Restaurant Week and Beyond, According to Industry Pros – 5280 | The Denver Magazine
Posted: at 12:12 pm
Massaman curry at Daughter Thai is sweetened with lychee and comes with two Colorado lamb chops and roti puffs. Photo by Patricia Kaowthumrong Eat and Drink
Denver Restaurant Week returns March 1120. Here are some things to keep in mind.
Masks are off and spaces are back to full capacity, but the ripple effects of the COVID-19 pandemic are still felt throughout the restaurant industry. According to the National Restaurant Association, wholesale food prices rose 14.5 percent from January 2021 to January 2022. Coupled with labor shortages across the industry and other factors like the increase in gas prices affecting delivery fees, the only thing there isnt a shortage of is challenges.
For the restaurant industry as a whole, its still very much in crisis whether people think so or not, says Josh Wolkon, founder and owner of Secret Sauce Food & Beverage. They think its just back because the mandates are all over. Its still super, super challenging and it hasnt settled into any level of normalcy yet or new normal, whatever that looks like.
With Denver Restaurant Week returning March 1120, thousands of diners will flock to the nearly 200 participating businesses. Here are some small ways you can dine better during Restaurant Week and beyond.
Remember: Your experience dining out isnt going to be the same as it was in 2019. Full-service restaurant jobs are down 12 percent nationally from pre-pandemic February 2020, so it might take longer for a server to take your order and for you to get your food. Expect to spend longer at the table and dont become frustrated if service is slower.
I think its just really important now more than ever for people to put the golden rule in place of treating people how you want to be treated, says Miranda Garcia, general manager at Tamayo in LoDo. Just be a good person..Be respectful.
For the employees who are working, stress levels are high, says Wolkon, whose restaurants include Ace Eat Serve and Steubens in the Uptown Area. Making the effort to be personable and start a conversation will go a long way.
Engage with your server, he says. Realize that if you are at a restaurant thats short-staffed, its not as much fun when youre constantly in the weedsLook at the staff that is still working, and theyre struggling. Theyre working overtime hours every week and guests are upset. You have to have some level of sympathy and compassion and engagement. Just say, how are you doing?
Simply put, restaurants are paying more for their product. For diners, this means your favorite dinner spots menu might look a little different. Dont be surprised if your go-to entre costs more (average menu prices are up 6.4 percent nationally), has some ingredients substituted, or is off the menu altogether.
Some [of our] special ingredients are from overseasfrom Thailandand the prices are very, very high right now; some items are 200 percent up, says Ounjit Hardacre, executive chef and chief operating officer at Daughter Thai Kitchen & Bar. So Id like customers to understand if some of the ingredients are missing, we might have to substitute with something elseso the texture and the taste might be a little bit different.
Rather than using a booking system like OpenTable, make your reservation by calling the restaurant or through its website. This saves the restaurant fees, Wolkon says. And if youre more of a date-night-at-home person, skip DoorDash or Grubhub by calling for takeout and picking it up yourself. This helps support your local spotsand spares you from forking over $10+ on delivery.
We get it; things happen. But if something comes up and you wont be there to fill your table-for-two reservation, cancel as soon as possible.
The no-shows on restaurant reservations have been an issue for a long time, says Katie Lazor, executive director of EatDenver. As much as you can, honor your reservation or cancel it whenever you know youre not going to be able to make it to that restaurant. It really helps the team at the restaurant be able to plan for a great night of service and to take care of their existing guests and any walk-ins as best as they can.
Instead of heading out for dinner at 7 p.m., eat a lighter lunch and make a reservation earlier. Or, push back your dinner plans by an hour or two. Making the choice to eat out during off-times will lessen the burden of a strapped staff. If they come earlier and not in the busy time, that would be helpful, Hardacre says.
Mistakes will happen. And when they do, take your feedback directly to a manager. This gives the restaurant a chance to fix any issues then and there.
If you are not having an ideal experience, weve gotten into the culture of rating and reviewing online, Lazor says. And what I hear from restaurant operators and managers all the time is that they always appreciate hearing feedback while guests are still in the restaurant and having the opportunity to address it and turn your experience around while youre still there.
Wolkon says if youre not comfortable giving feedback on the spot, contact the restaurant directly afterward. The worst thing you could do is get online and write a negative review right now, he says. Restaurants are still trying to recover, and if you get online and air your public frustrations, thats hurtful all the time, but its especially hurtful right now.
Tipping protocol may also look a little different than in the pre-pandemic days. Some restaurants are including automatic gratuities to each bill, including Hardacres Daughter Thai, which includes a 5 percent kitchen appreciation charge that goes to the back-of-house staff.
If you see a charge on your bill, you can ask what its for and where it goes. In general, its still customary to tip around 20 percentbut you might want to be a little more generous when dining out for Restaurant Week.
I think its important for guests to know that you are getting a bit of a discount, so if you are able to do more thats great and thats something to consider when youre choosing the restaurants youre going to go visit, Garcia says. If youre able to tip more than the 20 percent standard, that would definitely be appreciated.
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Russia is daring to destroy the current world order, like Daesh and others before it – Middle East Monitor
Posted: at 12:12 pm
A fortnight into Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the advance of the "special operation" is not going as rapidly or easy as the Kremlin thought it would. While Russian forces whose losses stand at over 11,000 already still desperately attempt to take the capital, Kyiv, and are resorting to ever more brutal means, over 400 civilians have been killed and over two million have fled the country. This is at the time of this writing, anyway.
What will endure throughout history are the consequences of this war, though, the most seismic of which is that Russian President Vladimir Putin has essentially dared to destroy the current world order.
Many amongst Generation Z imagine the modern nation-state system to be the natural order of the world, with clearly established borders determining what makes one a citizen and another a foreigner, or what defines a violation of national sovereignty and what does not.
Many others have come to see it as a Western-imposed fraudulent system, with not only militants holding that view but even those amongst the Western intelligentsia. Noam Chomsky, for example, predicted decades ago that "what would ultimately be necessary would be a breakdown of the nation-state systembecause I think that's not a viable system. It's not necessarily the natural form of human organisation; in fact, it's a European invention pretty much."
That international order stemming from the famed Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, which attempted to end the long and bitter internal wars that had ravaged mainland Europe seems on paper like a fair deal: each nation possesses its own borders which are recognised by other nations, allowing its sovereignty and self-determination to be respected by the "international community".
That, of course, did not prevent the extension of the colonial era, and really only applied to European nations, until the various independence movements in Africa and Asia succeeded in the mid- to late-20th century.
Putting aside the concepts of the spread of liberal democracy or the assent to international institutions, which are common concepts in the international order, the core of the order is the concept of the nation-state and the inviolability of sovereign borders. That is the golden rule which must not be transgressed.
The war in Ukraine has taught us the truth about the West's 'universal values'
Off paper, however, the nation-state system's many flaws have been laid bare over the decades, especially in preserving and exacerbating tensions between rival ethnicities and sects throughout much of the developing world. The age of empires may have faded into history, but the nation-state based on a European model seemed,, in many cases, to handle sectarian divisions much worse than some empires ever did.
Despite the many flaws in this kind of system, it has been vigorously regulated and defended over the decades through a number of methods beginning with talks and negotiations, then moving on to sanctions against an invading nation. In the most extreme cases, any leader or any state that attempted to violate this carefully-guarded and fragile international order by attempting to directly expand their borders or dissolving others' was usually met with aggressive force.
The pushback of the Iraqi military from Kuwait in 1991, under the rule of former dictator Saddam Hussein's government, is a prime example of this. After Iraqi forces invaded and occupied the small Gulf nation the previous year, Hussein officially declared Kuwait to be Iraq's 19th province, attempting to effectively wipe the country and its borders from the world map and incorporate it into Iraq's.
That was his gravest error, and has since been seen as the act which set up the demise of Iraqi sovereignty and sealed the fate of the eventual destruction of Saddam Hussein's rule, twelve years later.
This was enabled, not by any moral consequence or 'karma', but by the fact that the Iraqi army was decimated from above by coalition forces upon its withdrawal from Kuwait, leaving an apocalyptic scene in which tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers were killed on the long road that came to be known as the 'highway of death'.
A similar response was seen more recently in 2014, when the terror group, Daesh, bulldozed the border mound separating Syria from Iraq in a blatant display of disregard to the lines drawn in the Sykes-Picot Agreement. Following that act, policymakers and analysts recognised the internationalist world view that formed the group's vision to transcend the state-based international order.
Unlike other 'jihadist' militias and movements which sought to build their emirates or Islamic governments within the borders of their respective countries, Daesh as well as Al-Qaeda sought to destroy the international order and the concept of nation-states for the sake of a pseudo-'caliphate'. What followed, as we know, was the international community unifying in a military coalition to eliminate the group.
That overwhelming Western military might brought against the likes of Saddam Hussein's army and Daesh, therefore, was the direct response to any serious threat to the current international order.
If Ukraine can have an international brigade, why can't Palestine and Syria?
At this point, many will argue that the numerous military interventions, drone strikes, and bombing campaigns carried out by western nations, such as the US, throughout the decades were also violations of that order but not quite. While they did infringe on the sovereignty of those nations and, at times, directly worked to topple their governments, the US and its allies did not absorb them into their borders.
Afghanistan and Iraq, for example, did not become provinces or states of the US. Even their borders were not altered. Instead, Washington worked to set up friendly governments there, while maintaining its military presence allegedly for security reasons, thus at least in appearance keeping the countries' sovereignty intact and maintaining the international order.
Without getting into the complexities of international law, academics and analysts have outlined that "the temporary occupation of another State's territory encroaches upon its territorial integrity, but it does not entail a revision of its borders."
That may also be a primary reason why Israel has also not been sufficiently held accountable over its occupation of Palestinian territory. While Tel Aviv continues to annex land in the West Bank, it does so gradually, through the expansion of Jewish settlements and the destruction of Palestinian homes, rather than an official military annexation. As there is no Palestinian state, the borders of the West Bank territories under the Palestinian Authority (PA) are also barely enforceable or recognised.
Whether one is for or against western interventionist policies, the US and Israel have played their hand cleverly by only engaging in some sort of indirect colonialism.
The same cannot yet be said for Putin's Russia, which has now stated its aim is to take the entirety of Ukraine. There are real concerns that, if it succeeds, it could set its sights on other neighbouring countries such as Poland or Moldova. For now, we have yet to see whether Putin would fully absorb Ukraine into the Russian Federation or if he would just install a vassal government.
If he chooses the former and especially if he moves further into Europe then we could be seeing Moscow's attempt to create its own new world order. Will there be a 'highway of death' moment for it? Or will the breakdown of this international order be allowed to resume, and possibly lead to its reconstruction?
The World Social Forum and the Peace Agenda
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.
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Seven Steps From Basic to Advanced Composition: How to Effectively Frame Your Photographs – Fstoppers
Posted: at 12:12 pm
The overall layout and the placement of subjects within the frame can make or break your photographs. You may know the rule of thirds and the golden section, but composition goes way beyond that, and most of it is about simple geometry.
There are some people for whom composition comes naturally. My wife, for example, can pick up a camera and snap a perfectly composed photograph every time. I have a friend who can do the same. They are both talented artists; Im not. For others not so blessed, myself included, getting the image's layout right is something that needs studying, and it is a never-ending journey for me. But something I realized a long time ago is that most compositions that work are based on geometry.
I could write a chapter on each of the following; here, I am just lightly scratching the surface. However, I hope this brief summary will give you guidance about what to investigate further if you are interested in delving into the world of composition.
1. Starting with basics, the rule of thirds is a simple compositional technique that is probably the first most of us learn in our introduction to photography. In case you dont know, it involves splitting the screen into a tic-tac-toe board. At its simplest, we are placing the horizon on one of the horizontal lines. We can also place objects where the lines intersect. We get pleasing images, but the look can become a clich. There are so many rule of third images, that it sometimes seems we have seen them all before.
The image below is cropped in two ways. On the left, it is copped to the rule of thirds, on the right, to the golden ratio (see below).
2. Symmetry is an effective tool that is often derided in, especially, landscape photography. Have you ever been told that you should not put the horizon in the middle of the frame? Well, forget that and, instead, look for scenes where the bottom of the image mirrors the top.
It doesnt have to be top and bottom symmetry either. Left and right works too, as can diagonalorrotational symmetry.
Square frames work especially well for symmetrical images because of them having four reflective, plus four rotational symmetries inherent in their shape.Symmetry can give a feeling of balance and calm to a photograph.
3. Most of us then progress to learning the golden ratio. It's a more aesthetically appealing way of dividing an image than the rule of thirds. But it's a lot more than just placing the horizon nearer the centerof the frame than on the third.
You probably have seen pictures of spirals like this overlaying paintings and photographs.
Unlike the intersections on the rule of thirds, this isnt just about positioning horizons, or even points on a photo, but placing objects, sometimes of different sizes, within areas of the frame. It also guides us where lines flow through the picture. Its a technique used by many of the great artists and photographers. Indeed, Henri Cartier-Bresson spent his photographic career exploring this.
The proportions in the golden section are based upon a series of numbers that we call the Fibonacci Sequence. That is where each number is added to the number before it in the sequence to get the following number, thus:
1 + 0 =1,
1 + 1 = 2,
2 + 1 = 3,
3 + 2 = 5,
5 + 3 = 8,
8 + 5 = 13,
13 + 8 = 21,
and so on.
These numbers can be represented graphically, and the resulting proportions are found everywhere in the natural world, most famously in the formation of the snails shell.
The sequence is named after the 12th Century mathematician, Leonardo Bonacci, also called Fibonacci, but it was known about long before. The Roman architect Vitruvius (80-70 BCE) used the proportions in his designs. However, long before that the 4th Century BCE Indian mathematician, Virahanka, had discovered the same sequence. Moreover, the triangles that form Great Pyramid of Giza conform to the proportions too, and that was built from around 2550 to 2490 B.C.E.
In the following image, you can see how JMW Turner used the golden section spiral to approximate the position of subjects within the frame, the sweeping shapes of the clouds and the sea, plus where the horizon falls at the edge of the frame. Of course, in landscape photography this is much harder than painting as the layout of the natural world rarely positions itself to cohere with our ideals as we look through the viewfinder.
The golden section is universally pleasing to the human eye. It evokes feelings of aesthetic completeness. To us, an image that is constructed to fit with the proportions of the golden section just looks right.
4. If you have scrolled through the various crop overlays in Lightroom tap O on the keyboard besides the golden spiral, you will have discovered the golden triangle. It is where a line is drawn from corner to corner and then perpendicular lines run from that to the other two corners. This is a little-used compositional device, so little that I didnt have a photograph in my catalog that illustrated it.
However, the artist Frans Snyders used these strong diagonals in many of his brutal hunting and animal paintings. The Boar Hunt is a good example. Note the strong, dark diagonal line running from bottom left to top right, and the line running perpendicular to that down to the bottom right-hand corner.
That diagonal composition suits the violent scene. Although the composition works there seems to be a tension there, a dissonance that puts the viewer on edge. It is the polar opposite of the calm evoked by symmetry.
5.Another technique is the rebatement of the rectangle. Draw a 90-degree line across a rectangle, positionedso it forms a square at one end. You can repeat that at the other end of the rectangle, thus creating two parallel lines.
As with the left-hand example below, the subject(s) of interest can either sit on one or both of those lines, or you can fit subjects within the boxes, like the right-hand example.
6. Rectangles contain other geometric shapes. Drawing lines from corner to corner, from corner to midway point, and from midway point to midway point, you end up with a geometric pattern called the armature of the rectangle.
Again, this can be used as a guide for structuring a composition, using both the crossover points and the areas formed by the lines, as in the example below. Note that it is rarely possible in photography to match the subjects with the intersections of this shape, nor will every intersection or area be used, but it can be a useful tool to use in composition, especially when cropping.
The armature pattern can be simplified too, like the image at the top of this article.
7. As we've seen with all the examples above, the placement of objects within a frame so that our minds easily accept them coheres with mathematical and geometric rules. So, looking for simple geometric shapes suggested in our photos not necessarily actual shapes, but ones that are suggested to our minds is another effective way of creating a compelling image. If individual objects are aligned with each other, our brains will think of them as being a line, like the dogs in the Snyders' paining earlier. Similarly, three objects set apart will naturally form a triangle. I wrote more about that phenomenon in a previous article.
We can break these rules if we want. However, we should carefully consider the reason for doing that; there should be a discernible purpose for unusual compositions, or else the photo will just seem badly made.
A great way to train your eye is to experiment with the crop tool. I think it is the most powerful tool in any editing software for learning about composition. With practice, you will begin to visualize good compositions through the viewfinder. If composition doesnt come naturally to you, it is something you can learn.
As I said at the start, this is only touching the surface of compositional techniques, and I encourage you to investigate those in more depth. There is much more onthis topic I will write about at another time.If you found this interesting, then you might like my recent articles on perspectiveand subject separation.
Do you consciously consider the composition when you frame a shot? Or, perhaps you are one of those fortunate people who have always been able to see a composition without thinking about it. It would be great to hear about what methods you use.
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The Tragic Death Of Drake Tester From The Curse Of Oak Island – Looper
Posted: at 12:12 pm
While Drake Tester died onMarch 26, 2017, it wasn't until the Season 5 premiere of "The Curse of Oak Island" that November that most fans learned of the news. As seen in the episode, all of the cast and crew were in complete shock and deeply affected by the tragedy, especially Drake's father, who wound up leaving the series as a result.
"It is unimaginable what Craig Tester must be going through after the loss of his son Drake," wrote the History Channel's Twitter account in a March 2018 post. "It is with a heavy heart that we wish him farewell from the show."
According to the elder Tester, being on "Oak Island" in the months after Drake's death ultimately helped take his "focus" off losing him. "I think of him every day," Craig told History in a confessional, which the channel posted online with its 2018 tweet. "It's been a tough year," said the grieving father. "Appreciative for all the guys, and appreciative for Oak Island for everything it's done for me."
As noted in previous media reports, Drake Tester was said to have suffered from a seizure condition that affected him on and off since birth. Hewas memorialized by friends and teachers following his passing. "[Drake] treated every kid the same," said former teacher Tim Odette, speaking to 9 and 10 News. "It didn't matter who you were...he treated everyone with respect and really kind of followed that golden rule of treating others the way you want to be treated," Odette added. "I think he really embodied that."
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