me James Buckley and Laura Fraser talk Series 12 By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Sun, 12 Jan 2020 12:00:00 +0000 The guest stars of Orphan 55 talk about starring in Doctor Who, working with team TARDIS and living a lifelong dream. Full Article
me Doctor Who virtual reality experience The Runaway comes to YouTube and launches internationally By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 16 Jan 2020 09:30:00 +0000 More Doctor Who fans than ever can now step inside a VR version of the TARDIS as the BBC’s hit virtual reality experience Doctor Who: The Runaway comes to the Doctor Who YouTube channel and launches internationally. Full Article
me April 29, 2020: Support Your Local Game Store! By www.sjgames.com Published On :: Many, many local game stores are closed and struggling. Some of those retailers are offering curbside pickup, delivery, or online orders. Please see this list of game stores that GAMA has assembled and, if possible and one is near you, place an order today! Let's make sure that we keep these stores alive and there for us to enjoy once each is able to open their doors again. From GAMA: During these changing times, stores have begun offering alternate shopping experiences such as curbside pick-up or local delivery for purchased items. Some stores are also offering gift cards as another outlet for customer support. Search for your nearby store(s) and support the gaming community! Check out the store list today! – Phil Reed Warehouse 23 News: Best Beasts In The West Sometimes not even your trusty six-shooter will help you against the horrors of the Weird West. GURPS Classic: Deadlands – Varmints includes an assortment of monsters, both classic Deadlands critters converted to GURPS Deadlands and new creatures with stats for both systems. Download your own batch of trouble today from Warehouse 23! Full Article
me April 30, 2020: This Game Is Legendary By www.sjgames.com Published On :: Munchkin Legends takes the classic game of dungeon-looting and monster-bashing into the original source of many of those monsters, the myths and legends of the world. From ancient foes such as Grendel and Baba Yaga to more modern monsters such as Slender Man and the Sewer Gator, you'll have fights the bards will sing of for generations! (Can't shut bards up, apparently. We've tried.) Pick up the original game or our fancy Deluxe version, and maybe grab the expansion, Faun and Games, while you're at it! All are available right now at Warehouse 23! – Andrew Hackard Warehouse 23 News: Quirk Smarter, Not Harder! Give your GURPS heroes some extra character, extra personality, and a few extra points for goodies with GURPS Power-Ups 6: Quirks. This collection of minor flaws – including many that are new or expanded – is perfect for making your heroes stand out. It's just a download away from Warehouse 23! Full Article
me May 1, 2020: Expand Your War With Army Men Dice By www.sjgames.com Published On :: If you enjoy wargames that use six-sided dice, our Army Men D6 Dice Set brings you a dozen dice decorated with stars instead of pips on the 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 sides. The "1" facing on each die features an image of a plastic toy army man, with a total of six different designs packed into the set . . . one each in two different colors. Need even more dice? They're ready to report for duty. The Army Men D6 Dice Platoon is loaded with 36 dice – perfect for your next Axis & Allies game. BONUS: Now you can download the free rules for a two-player game using these dice! – Phil Reed Warehouse 23 News: When In Doubt, Add Dinosaurs Think of a GURPS game you might be tempted to enjoy. Any GURPS game. Wouldn't it be better with dinosaurs? No doubt your answers range from "yes" to "Heck, yes!!!" Give in to the terrifying temptation with GURPS Classic: Dinosaurs. It's a download away thanks to Warehouse 23! Full Article
me May 2, 2020: Subscribe To The Steve Jackson Games Newsletter! By www.sjgames.com Published On :: Would you like to receive information on new games, special events, and important news? Subscribe to our newsletter and you will start receiving a few emails every month where we highlight the latest games and expansions, and (at times) direct you to our crowdfunding campaigns. The newsletter is just one way to stay in touch with us. For other options, including links to our various social-media channels, visit this page on our site. Subscribe to the newsletter today! Warehouse 23 News: Keep Watching The Skies! The truth is revealed; UFOs are real! And they may have plans! GURPS Monster Hunters 5: Applied Xenology is your guide to bringing a new threat to GURPS Monster Hunters heroes: the terrors of science! Fight aliens, unleash technomagic, become a different kind of champion, and more. Danger is just a download away from Warehouse 23! Full Article
me Ассоциация кинокомпаний добилась блокировки Popcorn Time на GitHub By www.opennet.ru Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 08:45:03 +0300 GitHub заблокировал репозиторий открытого проекта Popcorn Time после поступления жалобы от Ассоциации кинокомпаний (MPA, Motion Picture Association, Inc.), которая представляет интересы крупнейших телевизионных студий США и обладает эксклюзивными правами на показ многих фильмов и телешоу. Для блокировки было использовано заявление о нарушении действующего в США Закона об авторском праве в цифровую эпоху (DMCA). Программа Popcorn Time предоставляет удобный интерфейс для поиска и просмотра видео в потоковом режиме, размещённого в различных BitTorrent-сетях, не дожидаясь его полной загрузки на компьютер (по сути это открытый BitTorrent-клиент со встроенным мультимедийным проигрывателем). Full Article
me Two Googlers on resetting expectations for life at home By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 16:00:00 +0000 Like many people, Googlers Alan Mclean and Jennifer Daniel are navigating their new at-home lives, finding ways to work while also parenting their two young children. The couple are working from their home in the Bay Area, where they’re taking shifts parenting and creating a remote office from...wherever they can find some room. I recently had the chance to “sit down” (via Google Meet) with them and talk about our relationships with technology during stressful times, how they’re personally handling all the changes and also, why playing "Animal Crossing" is a totally acceptable coping mechanism.Alan, you’re a Product Designer on the Digital Wellbeing team, and Jennifer, you’re the Creative Director for emoji. But how would you describe your job to someone who doesn’t work in tech?Alan: There’s an official answer, which is “I help people balance their relationship with technology,” but…Jennifer:????Ugh, corp speak!! ????What did you tell our neighbor?Alan: I told him I’m trying to help people get more rest and have a healthier life. Jennifer: Yes! Hmm, for me I guess I usually say I make little smiley faces. :-)What do your days right now look like? Alan: Typically the day before, we both check-in on our calendars and look to see where we might need coverage from the other. If we both have meetings, we’ll throw a tablet in our kids’ faces with a mix of educational (and not so educational) games. Lately our son has really taken to playing chess so he’ll practice digitally and we play together on a physical board. Jennifer: Our daughter enjoys the books that read out loud with her, and Toca Kitchen. They both love ”making food” that makes the characters get sick.In terms of day to day, we divide and conquer by keeping it fluid. Sometimes I cover the morning routine which has settled into a relatively stable pattern now: breakfast, walk the dog with the kids, writing, reading and drawing time, punctuated with video meetings.The afternoon, depending on our work schedule, includes science experiments (tin foil boats or paper airplane contests), some outside time, yoga (Cosmic Kids Yoga is great!), TV (Science Max is a hit), more tablet time and then dinner. Alan: I usually make up some work time in the evening once the kids go down.What is your home office setup like? Alan:We live in a small home—950 square feet, two bedrooms—with twin 5-year-olds and an eight-month-old Husky puppy, so there isn’t much of an office. In general, we move around the house and try to be out of earshot. Sometimes I work in the kitchen, other times on our front steps, once from the kids’ bunk beds.Are you able to create some work-home boundaries? Alan: Trying to avoid working where you sleep is a big one. Don’t do what we’re doing right now...which is working from bed. Jennifer:Sometimes that isn’t really possible. The bedrooms and bathroom are the only rooms with doors! For me, it’s less about creating a physical boundary and more about a mental one. I don’t work early in the morning or in the evening anymore. That’s MY TIME.Alan: I think the challenge right now is that it’s hard to reinforce boundaries when you’re in the same place all the time. In the past we used context clues like walking to the bus or the BART or whatever, or there were subtle hints when a meeting was about to end. But you don’t really have that anymore. So trying to avoid working where you sleep…Jennifer: But, I work from the bedroom, and I sleep in the bedroom. That works for me ????.Working from bed works for you?Jennifer: I’ve spent most of my life in small apartments, I guess I just got used to it? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯Alan:I also think maybe the norms of what “balanced” means has changed. Jennifer:Yeah, just be forgiving of yourself. It took awhile but I really had to recalibrate and give myself permission to not live up to my previous expectations as an employee, as a mother and as a partner. I also have to make it clear to others to not expect the same out of me. As much as I try to project that I am fine, I am not fine.I’ve personally seen my screen time and news consumption skyrocket; have you?Alan:I’m definitely more of the news addict; I’m also lying in bed looking at an endless stream of things to worry about. I think a bit of an insight for me is that there’s a couple reasons why you might do that, and part of it is that you might want to feel some light version of control over what’s happening. And of course the net effect of that is that you might feel incredibly anxious. That’s my personal experience with screens lately. What about you, Jen, what about your doom-scrolling?Jennifer:I love that you call it doom-scrolling, did you just make that up?Alan:No, no, definitely not. Jennifer: Not to make this just about parenting, because this is also very much about work, but I am having flashbacks to new parenthood. When I became a parent, I got extremely efficient at my job. I don’t have time to doom-scroll! That would be a luxury! I have things to do, I got people to take care of. And, just as important now as it was then, I need to find time where no one needs me ????. These days I’m playing "Animal Crossing." And I love it; it is screen time, unquestionably, but it’s a very specific kind of screen time as it is clearly not work-related. Now that Alan mentions it, maybe playing video games is also an expression of seeking control and stability in an unknown time? But, instead of doom-scrolling I plant cute flowers and little animals come visit me ????????????????????????????.What else are you adding to your routine? Anything else to help find some balance? Alan:For me, I know that the end of my day and the end of my use of my phone is occurring when I put a podcast on at night. Or ambient music. For me, that’s a really strong signal and I try to do it every night. For some people, that might be putting your phone in a box or charging it. I like the audio cue because that way you’re experiencing some stimulus without interacting with the screen. But I got that from Jen; I used to be like, “Why are you putting a podcast on at night? It’s time to go to bed… and doom-scroll for two hours.” Jennifer: I just listen to podcasts so I don't have to listen to my own thoughts as I fall asleep. Otherwise I'd be up all night ????.How are you keeping your kids entertained?Alan: We just got tablets—prior to that we hadn’t experienced the liberating power of having educational apps and games with our kids before ????. Jennifer: When the tablets arrived, I felt like I was not being a great mom but the kids say I'm really good at technical support ????. I need to remind myself that being a quote-unquote good mom is not related to screen time. I can’t disguise my stress from the kids, I’m doing my best. Now, go watch some "Octonauts."Alan: I’ve been taking the kids to the beach on the bike. Jennifer:Bonus! No one else is in the house! I get to stay home and be alone! I definitely need some time for myself. Are there any surprise “silver linings” you’ve experienced?Jennifer: I'm getting to really be with my kids in a way that wasn't possible before; I used to only see them in the morning and the evening. Age five is really cute.Alan: The transition to two full-time jobs simultaneously has been incredibly difficult, although our colleagues have been really supportive. But we’re both struggling with the desire to be the best possible parents and employees we can be. That feeling was always there, but with the lack of boundaries, it’s exacerbated. One thing that’s especially nice these days is seeing colleagues’ kids jump on video conference calls. It’s a nice reminder of what everyone is dealing with.Right now, we all have to be compassionate with ourselves, and also with our colleagues and friends. Coming late to meetings, missing emails, things like that, are OK right now. We sort of just need to be empathetic and flexible for a little while. Full Article Googlers
me Our commitment to Asia Pacific’s coronavirus response By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 03:00:00 +0000 The COVID-19 pandemic began spreading across Asia Pacific in January, affecting millions of people directly—and billions more through restrictions on the way we live and work and the impact on the regional economy. Throughout the region, we’ve seen people and businesses adapt with resilience, determination and ingenuity, including adopting and developing new technologies. Today, some parts of Asia Pacific are beginning to ease social distancing measures and restrictions on commerce—but we’re still many months away from anything like a return to normal. Google’s focus in Asia Pacific has been on three priorities: contributing to the immediate health response, helping people learn and work from home and supporting the small businesses most affected. We’ll continue to do all we can to help every part of the region get through, and we’re committed to being part of the economic recovery, so Asia Pacific can ultimately emerge stronger. Contributing to the health responseSince January, we’ve worked to share reliable information on Google Search and YouTube, support public health campaigns, inform health officials and curb misinformation. We’ve extended these global efforts with more targeted local initiatives around the region. In India, we’re helping female internet “saathis” (or trainers) share authoritative health advice with their networks in rural villages. In Korea, the Google News Initiative is offering weekly sessions training journalists on how to identify misinformation. In Japan, YouTube creator Hikakin interviewed the Governor of Tokyo to raise awareness of social distancing measures among his youth audience. We’re also helping Asia Pacific governments and institutions make the most of our tools to fight the virus directly. The Philippines’ government is centralizing health communications using an AI system powered by Google Cloud, Taiwan’s Digital Minister Audrey Tang has used Google APIs to create an app that tracks face-mask inventories, and we’ve worked with Singaporean nonprofit Better.sg to create translation tools for medical professionals caring for migrant workers. We started showing the locations of COVID-19 test centers on Google Maps, Search and Assistant in Indonesia, before extending the feature to other countries around the world, including India, Korea and the Philippines.Alongside responding to the health crisis, we know we need to protect and support people who might be left isolated or vulnerable. Our team in India has helped local governments share the location of night and food shelters on Google Maps, while Southern Cross Care (SA, NT & VIC) Inc in Australia is using Meet to help aged care residents stay in touch with their families—two examples of how technology can help. Helping people work and learn from homeIn many parts of Asia Pacific, people have been working and learning from home for months. Wherever possible, we’re adapting our global tools and resources to local needs—like giving 1.8 million students in the Jakarta region access to our G Suite for Education tools. We’ve launched local versions of our Teach from Home resource center—a partnership with UNESCO—across 13 Asia Pacific countries.As teachers and students adjust, we’re seeing new approaches across the region. In Korea, public broadcaster EBS and the Ministry of Education are using YouTube to live-stream daily classes. In Malaysia, Google’s daily webinars for teachershave received more than 250,000 views. And in Australia, the inspirational Eddie Woo—a champion of teaching via YouTube—is sharing his experience and advice to help fellow teachers take their lessons online. Learners from disadvantaged backgrounds are more likely to have their schooling disrupted and their progress held back—so as part of Google.org’s $10 million Distance Learning Fund, we’re extending a $1 million grant to INCO. This funding will support nonprofits in mainland China, Indonesia, Hong Kong and the Philippines as they help underprivileged students with access to home learning. Supporting small businesses and helping local economies recoverCOVID-19 has put many business owners under intense financial pressure, which is why we’re giving Asia Pacific businesses ad credits and other forms of support as part of a US$150 million commitment to the region. We want to make it as easy as possible for businesses to adopt new ways of working and manage through uncertainty—creating a dedicated website for Australian and New Zealand businesses, for example, or moving to an online format for Grow with Google skills courses like Indonesia’s Gapura Digital. We’re helping small businesses move their sales online and contribute to the recovery—like Yamaya, a Japanese sock manufacturer which is providing materials to help people make their own masks. And we’re working closely with nonprofits to help businesses most at risk from the economic downturn, including providing Google.org funding to help Youth Business International assist vulnerable small businesses and The Asia Foundation advance digital literacy in marginalized communities in Southeast Asia. Small businesses are an integral part of their communities, but they’re equally critical to economic growth, accounting for the vast majority of all businesses and up to 50 percent of GDP in most Asia Pacific countries. Just in the past few weeks, we’ve launched new programs supporting digital skills in Taiwan, developers in Korea and startups in Japan—and we’ll begin more initiatives like these in the coming months. Economic recovery will start locally and we want to be there to help.In this global pandemic, everyone has a part to play. As Asia Pacific confronts the effects of COVID-19, we will continue to stand by the region’s people, business and communities for as long as it takes, and help rebuild when the time is right. Full Article COVID-19 Google in Asia
me La Scala: the theater comes to you By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 11:00:00 +0000 Back in the 18th century, visitors to La Scala Theater in Milan had to scramble for good seats. Though the aristocrats owned their boxes, most people just had to stand on the ground floor the whole time, with no chairs at all. Starting today, nobody will have to worry about getting a good seat because La Scala of Milan, one of the most iconic theaters in the world, is raising its (digital) curtain on Google Arts & Culture. You’re invited to take the best seat in the house.By bringing its treasures online on Google Arts & Culture, La Scala is opening for a global digital audience, after closing its doors due to the current Covid-19 restrictions. Even with its stage dark, the creativity of the artists endures. To celebrate the theater’s past and present, 92 artists from five countries have come together to create La Scala’s first opera performed in quarantine. Enjoy an aria from Verdi’s “Simon Boccanegra” that fittingly represents a story of unity and resilience.At home with artists from La Scala performing Verdi’s "Simon Boccanegra"By recording 92 artists (6 soloists, 26 choristes, 60 musicians), currently in lockdown in their homes in 5 different countries, the video (re)introduces viewers to an aria from Verdi’s Simon Boccanegra.In La Scala’s online collection, you can now walk through the theater with Street View. Discover what it feels like to stand on the main stage like an opera star, enjoy a ballet performance from the Royal box or, even look around the industrial workshop, where artisans create impressive stages, props and nearly 1,000 costumes every year, including creations by fashion designers Gianni Versace and Yves Saint Laurent. With high resolution imagery captured by our Art Camera you can even zoom into the finest details of the costumes—from ivory brocade and gold cabochons to black velvet and ruby mirror stones—worn by opera icon Maria Callas.Go even further behind the scenes and explore over 259,000 images digitized from the theater’s archive. You can flip through the pages of a rare edition of the rare hand-painted edition of Turandot music score, the first libretto for Verdi’sNabucco or learn about the many different artists whose work has graced the La Scala stage, including artists David Hockney and Giorgio De Chirico.Il Teatro alla Scala from the outsideIl Teatro alla Scala from the outside.An image of Luciano Pavarotti.jpgThe iconic Luciano Pavarotti playing a part in the opera Aida.Inside of a museeum.jpgThe parterre at La Scala Theatreoffers a full view of its spectacular interior.An image of opera performers .jpgCostumes for Salome designed by Gianni Versace, one of many famous designers creating for the Scala Theater.Reproductions of a sketch for Turandot .jpgA reproductions of sketches for Turandot by G.Puccini Umberto Brunelleschi from 1926. View from the stage of Teatro alla Scala.jpgThe view from the stage only known to those performing at the Teatro alla Scala.Wherever you are, you can look behind the curtain of one of the world’s greatest theaters. And while we wait to travel again, La Scala Theatre comes to you, online on Google Arts & Culture.To discover even more about Performing Arts browse Google Arts & Culture online, or download our free app for iOS or Android. Full Article Arts and Culture COVID-19 Google in Europe
me What’s trending: understanding rising consumer interests By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 11:00:00 +0000 Since COVID-19 began, we’ve heard from our retail and brand manufacturing partners that they’re hungry for more insights on how consumer interests are changing, given fluctuations in consumer demand. We see these changes reflected in how people are searching on Google. Last month, there were spikes in search interest for household supplies and jigsaw puzzles as people spent more time at home. This month we’ve seen surging interest for sewing machines and baking materials in the U.S., and tetherball sets and chalk in the United Kingdom and Australia. Businesses are using a variety of resources to understand changing consumer interests—including Google Trends, social listening, surveys, and their own data—in order to help make decisions on the fly. But if they don’t know what to look for, there isn’t an easy way to understand which product categories are gaining in popularity, and might pose an opportunity.That’s why we’re launching a rising retail categories tool on Think with Google. It surfaces fast-growing, product-related categories in Google Search, the locations where they’re growing, and the queries associated with them. This is the first time we’ve provided this type of insight on the product categories that people are searching for. When we previewed the data with a group of businesses, they had lots of creative ideas for how they might apply it—whether for content creation, promotional efforts, or even new products and services. Here were some of their ideas for how it could help:Content creation: A cookware company noticed that “flour” was a growing category in the United States. The team was inspired to explore partnering with a famous local chef to create engaging content about recipes that incorporate flour. Promotion: A jewelry and accessories company noted rising interest in products in the “free weights” category, so the team thought they might partner with fitness influencers who could help promote their products. Similarly, an online business said it would regularly reference the data to inform which products to feature on its homepage throughout the pandemic. Product ideas: An apparel company with a fast and flexible production model said its team would use this data to inspire new product line ideas.For the next few months, we’ll update the tool with fresh data every day and hope this will help businesses of all sizes find new pockets of consumer interest. For additional resources and insights, sign up for the Think with Google newsletter. Full Article Search COVID-19 Google Ads Small Business
me New Google Lens features to help you be more productive at home By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 13:00:00 +0000 Lately our family dining table has also become a work desk, a video conference room and … a kid’s playground. As I learn how to become a full time kids-entertainer, I welcome anything that can help me stay productive. And while I usually turn to Search when learning about new things, sometimes what I’m looking for is hard to describe in words.This is where Google Lens can help. When my family’s daily activity involves a walk in the neighborhood, Lens lets me search what I see, like a flower in our neighbor’s front yard.But it can also be a helpful tool for getting things done while working and learning from home. Today, we’re adding a few new features to make you more productive.Copy text from paper to your laptopYou can already use Lens to quickly copy and paste text from paper notes and documents to your phone to save time. Now, when you select text with Lens, you can tap "copy to computer" to quickly paste it on another signed-in device with Chrome. This is great for quickly copying handwritten notes (if you write neatly!) and pasting it on your laptop without having to retype them all. Copying text to your computer requires the latest version of Chrome, and for both devices to be signed into the same Google account.Learn new words and how to pronounce themSearches for learn a new language have doubled over the last few months. If you're using the extra time at home to pick up a new language, you can already use Lens to translate words in Spanish, Chinese and more than 100 other languages, by pointing your camera at the text.Now, you can also use Lens to practice words or phrases that are difficult to say. Select the text with Lens and tap the new Listen button to hear it read out loud—and finally figure out how to say “hipopótamo!”Quickly look up new conceptsIf you come across a word or phrase you don’t understand in a book or newspaper, like “gravitational waves,” Google Lens can help. Now, with in-line Google Search results, you can select complex phrases or words to quickly learn more.These features are rolling out today, except for Listen which is available on Android and coming soon to iOS. Lens is available in the Google app on iOS and the Google Lens app on Android.We look forward to hearing about the ways you use Lens to learn new things and get stuff done while at home. Full Article Google on iOS Google Lens
me Resources for mental health support during COVID-19 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 10:00:00 +0000 The coronavirus pandemic has disrupted lives around the world. In addition to the lives lost to the virus, as many communities enter the second and third month under stay-at-home orders, there is a rising mental health toll, too. In a national survey released by the American Psychiatric Association in March, 36 percent of respondents said that COVID-19 was seriously impacting their mental health; 48 percent were anxious about getting infected; and 57 percent reported concern that COVID-19 will seriously impact their finances.As a trained psychiatrist, I know firsthand the importance of bringing out into the open the issue of mental health. While it might be years between the first onset of symptoms and someone seeking help, the internet is often the first place people turn to find out more about mental disorders. To help address the emerging mental health crisis we’re sharing “Be Kind to Your Mind," which includes resources on mental wellbeing from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Whenever people in the U.S. search for information about coping with the pandemic, or on COVID-19 and mental health, we’ll show a public service announcement with tips to cope with stress during COVID-19. To raise awareness of the importance of mental wellbeing during these times, we'll highlight these resources on Google's homepage tomorrow.Whenever people in the U.S. search for information about coping with the pandemic, we’ll show a public service announcement with tips to cope with stress during COVID-19.With May being Mental Health Awareness Month, we want to highlight a few other resources and tools across Google and YouTube that promote mental wellbeing.Self-assessment questionnaires for depression and PTSDWhen people search on Google for information about mental health conditions we provide panels with information from authoritative sources like Mayo Clinic that detail symptoms, treatments, and provide an overview of the different types of specialists who can help. On the info panels for depression and post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), we provide direct access to clinically-validated self-assessment questionnaires that ask some of the same types of questions a mental health professional might ask. Based on a person’s answers, these self-assessment tools provide information on risk, along with links to more resources. Results to these questionnaires are not logged. We hope they can provide insight and help people have a more informed conversation with their doctor. We will add more self-assessment questionnaires over time to cover more conditions.Self-care content on YouTubeOver the last few months, YouTube has seen a 35 percent increase in views of meditation videos, and growing popularity of mindfulness and wellbeing content. YouTube is making videos like these and other mental health resources more widely available to anyone around the world, for free, by spotlighting channels and playlists that have wellbeing and mindfulness-focused content. Countless YouTube creators, like Dr. Mike and Kati Morton, educate their communities as they help reduce the stigma associated with mental health. YouTube is also launching relevant YouTube Originals, including a “BookTube” episode featuring top authors like Melinda Gates and Elizabeth Gilbert offering their best book recommendations.Finding virtual care options, quicklyBecause of stay-at-home orders and restrictions that limit in-person interactions, many mental health care providers (including therapists and psychiatrists) are now providing telehealth care, like conducting therapy sessions over video conference. To make these options easier to find, we now allow providers to highlight their virtual care services on their Google Business Profile. So now, when you search for a mental health provider in products like Search and Maps, you may see an “Online care” link that can take you to their virtual care page, or even schedule a virtual appointment.While the stigma around mental health has lessened in recent years, many people still find it hard to reach out to get help. By providing access to mental health resources, services and information across our products, we hope to make it easier for people to seek help and receive proper care. Full Article COVID-19 Health
me Make at-home learning more fun with 3D and AR in Search By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 13:00:00 +0000 Augmented reality (AR) in Search lets you bring 3D objects and animals into your space so you can turn your living room into a virtual zoo, explore the Apollo 11spacecraft up close, or take a picture with Santa. I love seeing how much fun families are having with this experience at home. AR in Search can also help you discover and explore new concepts. Here are a few new ways you can use AR (and a little imagination) to learn at home.Take a virtual trip through the human bodyIt’s one thing to read about the human heart, and another to see one up close to understand how it pumps blood to provide oxygen. We’re partnering with BioDigital so that you can explore 11 human body systems with AR in Search on mobile. Search for circulatory system and tap “View in 3D” to see a heart up close or look up skeletal system to trace the bones in the human body and see how they connect. Read labels on each body part to learn more about it or view life-size images in AR to better understand its scale.E703_ARSearch_Skeletal_Blog_v04_nl_Wide.gifE703_ARSearch_Muscular_Blog_v03_nl_Wide.gifE703_ARSearch_Circulatory_Blog_v05_nl_Wide.gifGet a magnified view of our microscopic worldSeeing is often understanding. But tiny organisms, like cells, are hard to visualize unless you can magnify them to understand what’s inside. We’ve partnered with Visible Bodyto create AR models of animal, plant and bacteria cells, including some of their key organelles. Search for animal cell and zoom into its nucleus to see how it stores DNA or search for mitochondria to learn what’s inside it. With AR, you can bring a 3D cell into your space to rotate it, zoom in and view details about its different components.E703_ARSearch_AnimalCell_Blog_v03_nl_Wide.gifE703_ARSearch_PlantCell_Blog_v02_nl_Wide.gifE703_ARSearch_Mitochondrion_Blog_v05_nl_Wide.gifTurn your home into a museumMany museums may be closed right now, but with Google Arts & Culture and institutions like the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, you can turn your home into one using AR. Search for Apollo 11 on your phone to see its command module in 3D, look up Neil Armstrong to get a life-size view of his spacesuit, or step inside the Chauvet Cave to get an up-close look at some of the world's oldest known cave paintings, which are usually closed off to the public.Easily explore, record and share To help you quickly explore related content, we’re rolling out a new carousel format on Android, as well as a recording option to share social-worthy AR videos with friends and family.Explore content with the carousel format on AndroidWe hope that you enjoy exploring all of these 3D and AR experiences on Google. Tag us on social with #Google3Dand let us know how you’re using AR to learn and explore new things in your home. We can’t wait to hear where your imagination takes you next! Full Article Search
me New ways Google Duo helps make time together more special By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:00:00 +0000 Most of my family lives in Colombia, South America, and video calling has been a life-changing way for my dad and grandparents to watch my daughters grow up. Recently, video calls have also become the only way for my daughters to see their grandmas who live nearby. Although the physical separation has been hard for all of us, Google Duo makes it easier to let family know how much we miss them, show off our latest artwork and just act silly together like we would in person. Last month, we announced new features on Duo to help you stay connected, and today I’ll share updates that make conversations with loved ones even more special.More fun with the family with family modeOur new family mode lets you doodle on video calls for everyone to see and also surprise them with fun effects and masks that transform you into astronauts, cats and more. Just start a video call, tap the menu icon and then tap Family to get started. You don’t have to worry about accidental mutes or hang-ups because we’ve hidden those buttons while you’re playing together. This new family mode is available when signed into Duo with your Google account. As always, calls on Duo are end-to-end encrypted and stay private between you and your loved ones.Add pizzazz to video calls with new effectsIn addition to bringing masks and effects to our new family mode, we’re bringing them to any one-on-one video calls on Android and iOS—starting this week with a Mother’s Day effect. We’re also rolling out more effects and masks that help you express yourself, from wearing heart glasses to transforming into a flower. Bring people together in more waysIn the coming weeks, you'll be able to make group calls with Duo on the web, starting as a preview on Chrome, alongside a new layout that lets you see more people at the same time. To make getting together easier, you’ll also be able to invite anyone with a Google account to join a group call with just a link.We hope these features help you better connect with your nearest and dearest, and also bring a little bit of fun to your conversations. Full Article Google on iOS Google Duo
me Methodological Individualism By plato.stanford.edu Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 16:18:28 -0800 [Revised entry by Joseph Heath on April 27, 2020. Changes to: Main text, Bibliography] This doctrine was introduced as a methodological precept for the social sciences by Max Weber, most importantly in the first chapter of Economy and Society (1922). It amounts to the claim that social phenomena must be explained by showing how they result from individual actions, which in turn must be explained through reference to the intentional states that motivate the individual actors. It involves, in other words, a commitment to the primacy of... Full Article
me Caramelized Sesame Chocolate Bar Recipe By cnz.to Published On :: Wed, 22 Apr 2020 09:00:15 +0000 Buy Clotilde's latest book, The French Market Cookbook! Not long after my second son was born, I received a message from Audrey, a reader I’d been conversing with […] The post Caramelized Sesame Chocolate Bar Recipe appeared first on Chocolate & Zucchini. Full Article Candy & Mignardises Food Gifts *Dairy-free *Egg-free *Gluten-free *Grain-free *Kid-friendly *Vegan *Vegetarian Chocolate Sesame
me Instant Pot Ramen-Style Pork Belly Recipe By cnz.to Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 07:00:26 +0000 Buy Clotilde's latest book, The French Market Cookbook! I have been wanting to share this recipe for ramen-style pork belly with you for, oh, two years and a […] The post Instant Pot Ramen-Style Pork Belly Recipe appeared first on Chocolate & Zucchini. Full Article Meat & Charcuterie *Dairy-free *Egg-free *Gluten-free *Grain-free *Kid-friendly *Nut-free Garlic Ginger Mirin Noodles Onion Pork Sake Soy Sauce
me "Never Rarely Sometimes Always": New Film Follows Teenager's Perilous Journey to Access Abortion By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 08:30:18 -0400 As multiple states have moved to further restrict access to abortions during the pandemic, a powerful new dramatic film follows a 17-year-old girl as she travels from her small town in Pennsylvania to New York City to get an abortion without having to notify her parents. "Never Rarely Sometimes Always" director and writer Eliza Hittman joins us to discuss the making of the film, which is being distributed online while cinemas remain closed in most states due to the pandemic. Full Article
me Scientific American: As Trump Touts Dangerous Cures, Here's What We Know About COVID-19 Drug Tests By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 08:50:26 -0400 President Trump dangerously suggested injecting disinfectants could help patients sick with the coronavirus, then said he was being "sarcastic." But his remarks led to a spike in calls to helplines about taking disinfectants. We look at "What We Know About the Most Touted Drugs Tested for COVID-19" with Tanya Lewis, associate editor for health and medicine at Scientific American. Full Article
me WHO Adviser on Meat Plants: If We're at War, the Weapons We Need Are Tests and PPE, Not Pork By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 08:46:28 -0400 As President Trump invokes the Defense Production Act to bar local governments from closing meatpacking plants around the United States, we get response from a longtime adviser to the World Health Organization. "When Congress passed that act, it certainly did not have in mind that the president has the power or the right to put workers' lives and health at risk," says Lawrence Gostin, professor of global health law at Georgetown University and director of the World Health Organization Center on National and Global Health Law. Gostin also discusses why he joined 40 leading center directors in a declaration this week that urges Trump and Congress to restore and increase WHO funding. Full Article
me "It's Very Scary": COVID Surges in Meat Plants as Activists Demand Worker Safety & Meatless Mondays By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 08:20:08 -0400 At least 20 workers at meat processing plants have died from COVID-19, and around 5,000 have tested positive, but President Trump invoked an executive order to bar local governments from closing meat plants. We hear from meat plant workers and organizers about conditions during the pandemic and speak with Sindy Benavides, CEO of the League of United Latin American Citizens, which is supporting the workers with a virtual town hall on food worker safety with presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and calling for Meatless May Mondays. Full Article
me ER Doctor: Pulse Oximeters Detect Oxygen Deprivation Earlier from COVID-19, Help Avoid Ventilators By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 08:48:44 -0400 We speak with Dr. Richard Levitan, an emergency physician based in Littleton, New Hampshire, who volunteered at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan for 10 days at the height of the COVID-19 surge in April. Based on what he saw, he argues patients should be going to hospitals sooner and that medical professionals could use a small device you clip on your fingertip, called a pulse oximeter, to help detect the virus earlier by revealing oxygenation problems and elevated heart rates. "A pulse oximeter is just a measure of identifying how well the lungs are working, and, I believe, can be basically an early warning system in terms of patients to know who has COVID pneumonia," says Dr. Levitan. Full Article
me Remembering Valentina Blackhorse, Beloved 28-Year-Old Navajo Community Activist Who Died of COVID-19 By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 08:13:29 -0400 After New York and New Jersey, the next highest number of coronavirus infections per capita in the United States is in the Navajo Nation, the largest Indigenous reservation in the country. We go to Kayenta, Arizona, to speak with Robby Jones, a member of the Navajo Nation and the partner of one of those to die from the virus: 28-year-old Valentina Blackhorse, a beloved community leader who promoted Navajo culture and left behind a daughter named Poet. Full Article
me U.S. Mercenaries Captured in Venezuela After Failed Coup Attempt Compared to a "Bad Rambo Movie" By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 08:49:56 -0400 We look at an incredible story unfolding in Venezuela of a failed coup attempt. Did a former Green Beret mastermind it? Two Americans have been arrested in Venezuela. President Nicolás Maduro claims the U.S. was behind the plot. "It looks like a bad Rambo movie, or a really bad telenovela," says Miguel Tinker Salas, author of "The Enduring Legacy: Oil, Culture, and Society in Venezuela." He notes that "the U.S. is seeking regime change ... and the consequences for Venezuela could be very dire going forward.” Full Article
me How Russia Became the Next COVID-19 Hot Spot: Infection Rate Soars with 10,000 New Cases Each Day By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 08:19:54 -0400 We go to Moscow for an update on the pandemic in Russia, where the coronavirus is spreading rapidly, with at least 10,000 new cases a day and the second-highest infection rate in the world, and more than 100 medical workers have died fighting the virus, and many have reported lack of personal protective equipment. Meanwhile, three Russian healthcare workers mysteriously fell from hospital windows over the past two weeks. Two died, and the one who is hospitalized had posted a video online to note the lack of medical equipment and said he had to keep working despite testing positive. We speak with Joshua Yaffa, Moscow correspondent for The New Yorker magazine. Full Article
me Trump Death Clock: Times Square Billboard Tallies Lives Lost to COVID-19 Inaction By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 08:13:53 -0400 A 56-foot billboard called the Trump Death Clock was unveiled in Times Square in New York City. The tally of lives lost to government inaction was created by filmmaker Eugene Jarecki, who says, "On behalf of all of those who needlessly lost their lives to this failed leadership in a pandemic, we need a symbol, a symbol that cries out not only for accountability, but also for more responsible and responsive stewardship, going forward." As of the Friday morning broadcast, the death toll count was nearly 47,000 and growing. Full Article
me "A Lynch Mob": After Months of Inaction, 2 White Men Are Charged with Murder of Ahmaud Arbery in GA By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 08:15:06 -0400 The two white men caught on camera shooting and killing Ahmaud Arbery, an unarmed 25-year-old African American man, were arrested and charged Thursday with murder. The arrests came two days after video of the attack in February was shared with the public, sparking widespread outrage. Today would have been Arbery's 26th birthday. We speak with civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, who represents the Arbery family and formerly represented Trayvon Martin. Full Article
me "A Terrible Price": Mardi Gras Story Lays Bare How COVID-19 Is Devastating Black America By www.democracynow.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 08:31:53 -0400 We look at the deadly disparate impact of the pandemic on African Americans as told through an in-depth story for The New York Times Magazine by writer Linda Villarosa in her new piece, "'A Terrible Price': The Deadly Racial Disparities of Covid-19 in America," that tells what happened to the Zulu club, a Black social organization in New Orleans, during and after Mardi Gras. She reports that the experience is usually a joy, but the coronavirus made it a tragedy. Full Article
me Reliance Jio Launches New Work From Home Annual Plans; Offering 33% More Value By www.gizbot.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:21:26 +0530 Reliance Jio has announced the launch of new plans for its prepaid subscribers. The firm has launched an annual prepaid plan, where it is offering 33 percent more value than other players. The new plan is priced at Rs. 2,399. {image-jio-introduces-rs-2399-annual-prepaid-plan-with-2gb-daily-data-new-data-add-ons-also-announced-1589010615.jpg Full Article
me Date of liability w.r.t to JDA entered in pre-GST regime By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 8 Apr 2020 18:06:12 GMT The point of taxation in the present case would be the date of JDA itself and service tax would be applicable as the JDA was entered before 01.07.2017 and the time to discharge such liability would be the month following the month in which SA was entered or handover of flats to the landowner has tak Full Article
me GST update on statement taken during the course of investigation proceedings By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 18:19:01 GMT The provision contained in section 136 of the CGST Act, 2017 also states that a statement made and signed by a person on appearance in response to any summons issued under section 70 during the course of any inquiry or proceedings under this Act shall be relevant for the purpose of proving in any pr Full Article
me GST Update on whether Rajasthan AAR competent to decide on registration requirement in another State? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 5 May 2020 13:06:28 GMT The present update intends to discuss the Advance Ruling given in the case of M/s T & D Electricals. The question placed before the Advance Ruling was the requirement of separate registration for executing works contract in another State and leviability of tax-whether CGST/SGST or IGST if separate r Full Article
me GST Update on requirement of separate registration for execution of contract in another state By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 6 May 2020 10:46:16 GMT The present update intends to discuss the recent advance ruling given by AAR Karnataka in the case of M/s T & D Electricals. Full Article
me At-Home Coronavirus-Sample-Collection Kits Aren't Perfect but Could Help Fill Testing Gap By rss.sciam.com Published On :: Fri, 24 Apr 2020 17:00:00 GMT LabCorp’s Pixel kits rely on self-swabbing and mailing samples, and they have yet to be scaled up for widespread use -- Read more on ScientificAmerican.com Full Article Health Public Health
me Space Telescope Director Says Best Is Yet to Come for Hubble By rss.sciam.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 12:00:00 GMT Three decades into the life of the world’s most revered orbital observatory, Ken Sembach, director of the Space Telescope Science Institute, reflects on its future -- Read more on ScientificAmerican.com Full Article The Sciences Space
me Camera Traps May Overcount Snow Leopards and Other Vulnerable Species By rss.sciam.com Published On :: Fri, 01 May 2020 10:45:00 GMT Markings on big cats are hard to distinguish, meaning one animal may be counted as two -- Read more on ScientificAmerican.com Full Article Sustainability Conservation
me Astronomers May Have Found the Closest Black Hole to Earth By rss.sciam.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 12:00:00 GMT At just 1,000 light-years away, an object in a nearby star system could be our nearest known black hole—but not everyone is convinced -- Read more on ScientificAmerican.com Full Article The Sciences Space
me Consumer Brands Association introduces Critical Infrastructure Supply Chain Council By www.logisticsmgmt.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T16:16:00+00:00 The CBA said that the objective of the CISCC is to advance uniform national policies that will strengthen United States supply chains and also ensure the timely flow of critical goods in various ways. Full Article
me U.S. rail carload and intermodal volumes see steep declines in April, reports AAR By www.logisticsmgmt.com Published On :: 2020-05-08T13:31:00+00:00 U.S. rail carloads in April—at 980,535—were off 25.2%, or 329,693 carloads, annually, and intermodal containers and trailers—at 1,095,423—slipped 17.2%, or 227,165 units. Full Article
me The silver linings: Working from home in a pandemic By blogs.nature.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Apr 2020 11:21:40 +0000 Originally posted on - blogs by NPG staffI have mixed feelings about social distancing. Read more Full Article Careers
me Memories of paati By blogs.nature.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 18:48:48 +0000 Originally posted on - blogs by NPG staffGowri Natarajan … Read more Full Article Health Nature India Essay Competition
me A dedicated home for computational science By blogs.nature.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 12:10:02 +0000 Originally posted on - blogs by NPG staffThis guest blog comes from Fernando Chirigati, Chief Editor of Nature Computational Science. Read more Full Article Nature Research News
me At Home in the Russian Kasbah. By languagehat.com Published On :: Sat, 02 May 2020 18:15:58 +0000 I’m finally getting around to reading a book that a kind Hatter got me almost a decade ago (thanks, Andrei!), Stalin’s Children: Three Generations of Love, War, and Survival by Owen Matthews, and am enjoying it greatly; the first chapter has material of clear LH interest: I spoke Russian before I spoke English. Until I […] Full Article Uncategorized
me Some Links. By languagehat.com Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 17:39:49 +0000 A few tidbits of interest: 1) Via Laudator Temporis Acti, W.S. Merwin describes a visit to Ezra Pound at St. Elizabeth’s: He told me he imagined I was serious, and that if I was I should learn languages, “so as not to be at the mercy of translators.” And then I should translate, myself. “If […] Full Article Uncategorized
me Memoirs of Doctor Burney (Vol. 3 of 3) by Fanny Burney By www.gutenberg.org Published On :: Language: English Full Article
me a good firearm for a first time owner By www.bonequest.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 00:00:00 -0753 Full Article
me We heard you needed some help. By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 19 Apr 2020 06:00:00 -0700 Full Article
me The same face By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 06:00:00 -0700 The same face Full Article