side Protesters in London take part in group hug in defiance of coronavirus lockdown outside Met Police headquarters By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-02T13:14:00Z A man has been arrested after protesters in London took part in a group hug outside Met Police's headquarters in defiance of the coronavirus lockdown. Full Article
side Man arrested on suspicion of murder after woman shot inside house during lockdown By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-03T18:53:00Z A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a woman was shot inside a house during the coronavirus lockdown. Full Article
side Julian Assange supporters moved on by police while protesting outside Westminster court By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-04T13:21:00Z Supporters of Julian Assange were cautioned by police as they protested outside a central London court today. Full Article
side Contact tracing app to be piloted on Isle of Wight this week as Matt Hancock urges residents to use it to 'save lives' By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-04T16:52:00Z Matt Hancock has urged people living on the Isle of Wight to download the coronavirus contact tracing app to "save lives" during the pandemic. Full Article
side Rishi Sunak begins plan to taper back furloughing and may consider dropping wage subsidy to 60 per cent By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-05T08:17:00Z EXCLUSIVE Full Article
side Rishi Sunak considers options for winding down coronavirus furlough scheme By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-05T21:30:00Z Chancellor Rishi Sunak is considering options to taper off the Government's furlough scheme which is supporting workers staying at home during the coronavirus outbreak. Full Article
side NHS worker stabbed to death outside east London home as he spoke to girlfriend on phone, court told By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-06T14:18:33Z An NHS worker was fatally stabbed outside his home while on the phone to his girlfriend, a court has been told. Full Article
side US Vice President Mike Pence's aide tests positive for coronavirus By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-09T07:39:00Z A top aide to US Vice President Mike Pence has tested positive for coronavirus, just one day after another White House staff member was diagnosed. Full Article
side Boris Johnson urges Russian President Vladimir Putin to help world find Covid-19 vaccine in VE Day phone call By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-08T16:31:00Z Boris Johnson has asked Vladimir Putin if Russia would help play a more integrated role in global efforts to develop a coronavirus vaccine. Full Article
side Vice President Pence press secretary Katie Miller tests positive for coronavirus By twitchy.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 17:42:21 Z Full Article <![CDATA[Mike Pence]]> <![CDATA[coronavirus]]> <![CDATA[Katie Miller]]>
side Washington Post: Hey, maybe President Trump isn't a Florida resident after all? By twitchy.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 06:46:58 Z Full Article <![CDATA[Washington Post]]> <![CDATA[Mar-a-Lago]]>
side Restoration work inside Pompeii's House of Lovers – in pictures By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-02-18T18:15:00Z The ancient Roman city’s House of the Lovers has reopened to the public 40 years after it was severely damaged in 1980 by an earthquake Pompeii’s House of Lovers reopens to public Continue reading... Full Article Archaeology Italy News photography Photography World news Culture
side Ontario Premier Doug Ford briefly visited cottage after asking residents not to By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 11:05:25 EDT Ontario Premier Doug Ford dropped by his cottage last month, days after asking the province’s residents to stay away from theirs. His office says Ford "drove alone" and was there for less than an hour to check on construction. Full Article News/Canada/Toronto
side Pakistan army: Roadside bomb in remote area kills 6 troops By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 13:04:26 -0400 Full Article
side Senate Fails To Override President Trump Veto Of Iran War Powers By www.newsy.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:54:00 -0400 The Senate failed to override President Trump's veto of legislation that would have prevented him from taking military action in Iran without congressional approval. On Thursday, the Senate voted 49-44 in favor of the override, falling short of the two-thirds majority needed for it to be approved. Both chambers of Congress passed the bipartisan resolution earlier this year. Full Article
side Coronavirus strikes staffers inside the White House By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 00:37:07 -0400 Vice President Mike Pence's press secretary has the coronavirus, the White House said, making her the second person who works at the White House complex known to test positive for the virus this week. President Donald Trump, who publicly identified the affected Pence aide, said he was “not worried” about the virus spreading in the White House. Pence spokeswoman Katie Miller, who tested positive Friday, had been in recent contact with Pence but not with the president. Full Article
side Egypt’s president expands powers, citing virus outbreak By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 01:53:15 -0400 Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has approved amendments to the country's state of emergency that grant him and security agencies additional powers, which the government says are needed to combat the coronavirus outbreak. An international rights group condemned the amendments, saying the government has used the global pandemic to “expand, not reform, Egypt’s abusive Emergency Law.” The new amendments allow the president to to take measures to contain the virus, such as suspending classes at schools and universities and quarantining those returning from abroad. Full Article
side Children's computer game Roblox insider tricked by hacker for access to users' data By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-05T10:12:00Z The hacker had access to personal information, the ability to change passwords and two-factor authentication, and could steal valuable in-game items from some of the 'richest' players in the game Full Article
side Resident Evil 3 @ Target for $35 in-store pickup By www.cheapassgamer.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Apr 2020 05:26:00 +0000 As the title states, game is currently $49.99 and finally available for ordering. Add it to your cart plus 2 other $49.99 games, make sure the other 2 are shipped. Either keep them all for around $35 each, or cancel the other 2 games and end up with RE3 on day 1 for $35. https://www.target.com/p/resident-evil-3-xbox-one/-/A-79468974 https://www.target.com/p/resident-evil-3-playstation-4/-/A-79468973 Full Article
side Apple's over-ear headphones may be called 'AirPods Studio' & retail for $349 - AppleInsider By news.google.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 13:12:22 GMT Apple's over-ear headphones may be called 'AirPods Studio' & retail for $349 AppleInsiderView Full coverage on Google News Full Article
side President Punch (and His Judys) By www.thenation.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 12:00:22 +0000 James McMullan Trump lashes out as the pandemic spreads. The post President Punch (and His Judys) appeared first on The Nation. Full Article
side How to Caricature a Cartoon Presidency By www.thenation.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 15:42:13 +0000 Jeet Heer Matt Bors goes deeper than the day’s news by depicting the attitudes that underlie politics. The post How to Caricature a Cartoon Presidency appeared first on The Nation. Full Article
side Outlook: Nifty upside capped; stay defensive, protect profits By economictimes.indiatimes.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:26:21+05:30 The upside potential will remain capped, and the index will turn vulnerable again. Full Article
side Fitness Solutions: The joy you feel when your ‘outside matches your inside’ By Published On :: Tue, 31 Mar 2020 15:48:08 -0400 Jessika Floyd said ‘enough is enough’ and never looked back, writes Ernie Schramayr Full Article Opinion Living Living/Health Opinion/Contributed
side Inside Justin Gaethje's journey from a mining town to MMA stardom By www.espn.com Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 10:31:41 EST Gaethje's family heritage was forged in Arizona copper mines, but a fighting spirit charted his path to a UFC title shot. Full Article
side Sidewalk Labs pulls out of Toronto smart city project after 3 years, citing ‘unprecedented economic uncertainty’ By business.financialpost.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 22:26:04 +0000 'It has become too difficult to make the 12-acre project financially viable' Full Article Innovation Sidewalk Labs Waterfront Toronto
side 'Bicycles are the new toilet paper': bike sales boom as coronavirus lockdown residents crave exercise By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-04-22T02:51:30Z Australia’s peak representative body for cyclists has called on governments to transform roads into cycleways to ease traffic on bike pathsAustralian bike retailers are struggling to keep up with the boom in sales since coronavirus restrictions came into force last month.“We’re the new toilet paper and everyone wants a piece,” Grant Kaplan, manager of Giant Sydney, a bike store in Sydney’s CBD, tells Guardian Australia. Continue reading... Full Article Cycling Australia news Coronavirus outbreak JNI Casuals grant Health Melbourne Sydney
side Egyptian leader el-Sissi expands presidential powers amid coronavirus By globalnews.ca Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 14:20:53 +0000 The new amendments allow the president to to take measures to contain the virus, but they also include expanded powers to ban public and private meetings, protests, celebrations and other forms of assembly. Full Article Politics World Coronavirus coronavirus news coronavirus update COVID-19 covid-19 egypt covid-19 news Egpyt egypt news middle east coronavirus Middle East News middle-east news egypt
side The Case Against Thinking Outside of the Box - Facts So Romantic By nautil.us Published On :: Mon, 20 Apr 2020 08:45:00 +0000 Social, cultural, economic, spiritual, psychological, emotional, intellectual: Everything is outside the box. And this new sheltered-in-place experience won’t fit into old containers.Photo Illustration by Africa Studio / ShutterstockMany of us are stuck now, sheltered in our messy dwellings. A daily walk lets me appreciate the urban landscaping; but I can’t stop to smell anything because a blue cotton bandana shields my nostrils. Indoors, constant digital dispatches chirp to earn my attention. I click on memes, status updates, and headlines, but everything is more of the same. How many ways can we repackage fear and reframe optimism? I mop the wood-laminate floor of my apartment because I hope “ocean paradise” scented Fabuloso will make my home smell a little less confining. My thoughts waft toward the old cliché: Think outside the box. I’ve always hated when people say that.To begin with, the directions are ineffectual. You can’t tell someone to think outside the box and expect them to do it. Creativity doesn’t happen on demand. Want proof? Just try to make yourself think a brilliant thought, something original, innovative, or unique. Go ahead. Do it. Right now. You can’t, no matter how hard you try. This is why ancient people believed that inspiration comes from outside. It’s external, bestowed on each of us like a revelation or prophecy—a gift from the Muses. Which means your genius does not belong to you. The word “genius” is the Latin equivalent of the ancient Greek “daemon” (δαίμονες)—like a totem animal, or a spirit companion. A genius walks beside us. It mediates between gods and mortals. It crosses over from one realm to the next. It whispers divine truth.We are paralyzed by the prospect of chaos, uncertainty, and entropy. In modern times, our mythology moves the daemons away from the heavens and into the human soul. We say, “Meditate and let your spirit guide you.” Now we think genius comes from someplace deep within. The mind? The brain? The heart? Nobody knows for sure. Yet, it seems clear to us that inspiration belongs to us; it’s tangibly contained within our corporeal boundaries. That’s why we celebrate famous artists, poets, physicists, economists, entrepreneurs, and inventors. We call them visionaries. We read their biographies. We do our best to emulate their behaviors. We study the five habits of highly successful people. We practice yoga. We exercise. We brainstorm, doodle, sign up for online personal development workshops. We do whatever we can to cultivate the fertile cognitive soil in which the springtime seeds of inspiration might sprout. But still, even though we believe that a genius is one’s own, we know that we cannot direct it. Therefore, no matter how many people tell me to think outside the box, I won’t do it. I can’t. Even if I could, I’m not sure thinking outside the box would be worthwhile. Consider the origins of the phrase. It started with an old brain teaser. Nine dots are presented in a perfect square, lined up three by three. Connect them all, using only four straight lines, without lifting your pencil from the paper. It’s the kind of puzzle you’d find on the back of a box of Lucky Charms breakfast cereal, frivolous but tricky. The solution involves letting the lines expand out onto the empty page, into the negative space. Don’t confine your markings to the dots themselves. You need to recognize, instead, that the field is wider than you’d assume. In other words, don’t interpret the dots as a square, don’t imagine that the space is constricted. Think outside the box! For years, pop-psychologists, productivity coaches, and business gurus have all used the nine-dot problem to illustrate the difference between “fixation” and “insight.” They say that we look at markings on a page and immediately try to find a pattern. We fixate on whatever meaning we can ascribe to the image. In this case, we assume that nine dots make a box. And we imagine we’re supposed to stay within its boundaries—contained and confined. We bring habitual assumptions with us even though we’re confronting a unique problem. Why? Because we are paralyzed by the prospect of chaos, uncertainty, and entropy. We cling to the most familiar ways of organizing things in order to mitigate the risk that new patterns might not emerge at all, the possibility that meaning itself could cease to exist. But this knee-jerk reaction limits our capacity for problem-solving. Our customary ways of knowing become like a strip of packing tape that’s accidentally affixed to itself—you can struggle to undo it, but it just tangles up even more. In other words, your loyalty to the easiest, most common interpretations is the sticky confirmation bias that prevents you from arriving at a truly insightful solution. At least that’s what the experts used to say. And we all liked to believe it. But our minds don’t really work that way. The box parable appeals because it reinforces our existing fantasies about an individual’s proclivity to innovate and disrupt by thinking in unexpected ways. It’s not true. Studies have found that solving the nine-dot problem has nothing to do with the box. Even when test subjects were told that the solution requires going outside the square’s boundaries, most of them still couldn’t solve it. There was an increase in successful attempts so tiny that it was considered statistically insignificant, proving that the ability to arrive at a solution to the nine-dot problem has nothing to do with fixation or insight. The puzzle is just difficult, no matter which side of the box you’re standing on.Still, I bet my twelve-year-old son could solve it. Yesterday, we unpacked a set of oil paints, delivered by Amazon. He was admiring the brushes and canvases. He was thinking about his project, trying to be creative, searching for insight. “Think inside the outside of the box,” he said. “What does that mean?” I pushed the branded, smiling A-to-Z packaging aside and I looked at him like he was crazy. “Like with cardboard, you know, with all the little holes inside.” He was talking about the corrugations, those ridges that are pasted between layers of fiberboard. They were originally formed on the same fluted irons used to make the ruffled collars of Elizabethan-era fashion. At first, single faced corrugated paper—smooth on one side, ridged on the other—was used to wrap fragile glass bottles. Then, around 1890, the double-faced corrugated fiberboard with which we’re familiar was developed. And it transformed the packing and shipping industries. The new paperboard boxes were sturdy enough to replace wooden crates. It doesn’t take an engineering degree to understand how it works: The flutes provide support; the empty space in between makes it lightweight. My son is right; it’s all about what’s inside the outside of the box.Now I can’t stop saying it to myself, “Think inside the outside of the box.” It’s a perfect little metaphor. In a way, it even sums up the primary cognitive skill I acquired in graduate school. One could argue that a PhD just means you’ve been trained to think inside the outside of boxes. What do I mean by that? Consider how corrugation gives cardboard it’s structural integrity. The empty space—what’s not there—makes it strong and light enough that it’s a useful and efficient way to carry objects. Similarly, it’s the intellectual frameworks that make our interpretations and analyses of the world hold up. An idea can’t stand on its own; it needs a structure and a foundation. It needs a box. It requires a frame. And by looking at how those frames are assembled, by seeing how they carry a concept through to communication, we’re able to do our best thinking. We look at the empty spaces—the invisible, or tacit assumptions—which lurk within the fluted folds of every intellectual construction. We recognize that our conscious understanding of lived experience is corrugated just like cardboard. The famous sociologist Erving Goffman said as much in 1974 when he published his essay on “Frame Analysis.” He encouraged his readers to identify the principles of organization which govern our perceptions. This work went on to inspire countless political consultants, pundits, publicists, advertisers, researchers, and marketers. It’s why we now talk often about the ways in which folks “frame the conversation.” But I doubt my son has read Goffman. He just stumbled on a beautifully succinct way to frame the concept of critical thinking. Maybe he was inspired by Dr. Seuss. When my kids were little, they asked for the same story every night, “Read Sneetches Daddy!” I could practically recite the whole thing from memory: “Now, the Star-belly Sneetches had bellies with stars. The Plain-belly Sneetches had none upon thars.” It’s an us-versus-them story, a fable about the way a consumption economy encourages people to compete for status, and to alienate the “other.” If you think inside the outside of the box, it’s also a scathing criticism of a culture that’s obsessed with personal and professional transformation—always reinventing and rebranding. One day, Sylvester McMonkey McBean shows up on the Sneetches’ beaches with a peculiar box-shaped fix-it-up machine. Sneetches go in with plain-bellies and they come out with stars. Now, anyone can be anything, for a fee. McBean charges them a fortune; he exploits the Sneetches’ insecurities. He builds an urgent market demand for transformational products. He preys on their most familiar—and therefore, cozy and comforting—norms of character assessment. He disrupts their identity politics, makes it so that there’s no clear way to tell who rightfully belongs with which group. And as a result, chaos ensues. Why? Because the Sneetches discover that longstanding divisive labels and pejorative categories no longer provide a meaningful way to organize their immediate experiences. They’ve lost their frames, the structural integrity of their worldview. They feel unhinged, destabilized, unboxed, and confused.Social, cultural, economic, spiritual, psychological, emotional, intellectual: Everything is outside the box. It should sound familiar. After all, we’ve been living through an era in history that’s just like the Sneetches’. The patterns and categories we heretofore used to define self and other are being challenged every day—sometimes for good, sometimes for bad. How can we know who belongs where in a digital diaspora, a virtual panacea, where anyone can find “my tribe”? What do identity, allegiance, heredity, and loyalty even mean now that these ideas can be detached from biology and birthplace? Nobody knows for sure. And that’s just the beginning: We’ve got Sylvester-McMonkey-McBean-style disruption everywhere we look. Connected technologies have transformed the ways in which we make sense of our relationships, how we communicate with one another, our definitions of intimacy. Even before the novel coronavirus, a new global paradigm forced us to live and work in a world that’s organized according to a geopolitical model we can barely comprehend. Sure, the familiar boundaries of statehood sometimes prohibited migrant foot traffic—but information, microbes, and financial assets still moved swiftly across borders, unimpeded. Similarly, cross-national supply-chains rearranged the rules of the marketplace. High-speed transportation disrupted how we perceive the limits of time and space. Automation upset the criteria through which we understand meritocracy and self-worth. Algorithms and artificial intelligence changed the way we think about labor, employment, and productivity. Data and privacy issues blurred the boundaries of personal sovereignty. And advances in bioengineering shook up the very notion of human nature.Our boxes were already bursting. And now, cloistered at home in the midst of a pandemic, our most mundane work-a-day routines are dissolved, making it feel like our core values and deeply-held beliefs are about to tumble out all over the place. We can already envision the mess that is to come—in fact, we’re watching it unfurl in slow motion. Soon, the world will look like the intellectual, emotional, and economic equivalent of my 14-year-old’s bedroom. Dirty laundry is strewn across the floor, empty candy wrappers linger on dresser-tops, mud-caked sneakers are tossed in the corner, and the faint yet unmistakable stench of prepubescent body odor is ubiquitous. Nothing is copasetic. Nothing is in its place. Instead, everything is outside the box. It’s not creative, inspiring, or insightful. No, it’s disorienting and anxiety-provoking. I want to tidy it up as quickly as possible. I want to put things back in their familiar places. I want to restore order and eliminate chaos. But no matter how hard I try, I can’t do it, because the old boxes are ripped and torn. Their bottoms have fallen out. Now, they’re useless. Social, cultural, economic, spiritual, psychological, emotional, intellectual: Everything is outside the box. And this new sheltered-in-place experience won’t fit into old containers.Jordan Shapiro, Ph.D., is a senior fellow for the Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop and Nonresident Fellow in the Center for Universal Education at the Brookings Institution. He teaches at Temple University, and wrote a column for Forbes on global education and digital play from 2012 to 2017. His book, The New Childhood, was released by Little, Brown Spark in December 2018.Read More… Full Article
side 'The safest place to be': A coronavirus researcher on life inside a biosafety level 3 lab By news.yahoo.com Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 15:38:56 -0400 Sara Cherry, a microbiologist at the University of Pennsylvania, feels safer at work than almost anywhere else. That’s because she works inside a biosafety level 3 laboratory on the Penn campus in Philadelphia, where she is the scientific director of the High-Throughput Screening Core. Full Article
side COVID-19: NCC reconsiders after mayor speaks out against Tulip Fest photo ban; Canada to extend wage subsidy program By ottawacitizen.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 02:46:03 +0000 Starting Monday, “park ambassadors” will be stationed at Ottawa’s busiest parks to provide information about what's permitted under pandemic rules. Full Article Local News cases Coronavirus Covid-19 Doug Ford Justin Trudeau local Ottawa Vera Etches
side Sidewalk Labs cancels plan to build high-tech neighbourhood in Toronto amid COVID-19 By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 10:31:05 EDT Sidewalk Labs, a Google-affiliated company, is abandoning its plan to build a high-tech neighbourhood on Toronto’s waterfront, citing what it calls unprecedented economic uncertainty. Full Article News/Canada/Toronto
side Jeers of a clown: How The Simpsons made Sideshow Bob into one of TV's favourite villains By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-28T17:16:48Z Thirty years on from Kelsey Grammer's remarkable cartoon debut, Louis Chilton looks at the legacy of one of the most endearing felons in fiction Full Article
side Gangs of London viewers outside UK call for subtitles as they can't understand British accents By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-03T10:28:00Z 'Without subtitles and the British accent, its a no from me' Full Article
side Tiger King's Joe Exotic reportedly set to ask Trump for a presidential pardon By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-05T08:54:58Z US president had previously suggested he would 'take a look' at the scandalous case Full Article
side 538: Daily presidential tracking polls... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:40Z 538: Daily presidential tracking polls... (Third column, 20th story, link) Full Article
side By making Florida his official residence, Trump may also have made legal mess... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:38Z By making Florida his official residence, Trump may also have made legal mess... (Second column, 18th story, link) Full Article
side Team Considers Drive-In Theater Campaign Rallies... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:38Z Team Considers Drive-In Theater Campaign Rallies... (First column, 17th story, link) Related stories:Trump says he 'learned a lot from Richard Nixon'...Will he claim election fraud if he loses?The Southern Democrat with power to shut down convention... Full Article
side President flouts virus protocols... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:38Z President flouts virus protocols... (First column, 10th story, link) Related stories:Pence press secretary tests positive...White House shaken...Secret Service has 11 current cases, as concerns about staff grow...STUDY: US death toll halved had it acted 4 days sooner...Nine disasters we still aren't ready for...Why farmers dump food and crops while grocery stores run dry and Americans struggle... Full Article
side BLAMES PRESIDENT FOR TRIBAL AMERICA... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:38Z BLAMES PRESIDENT FOR TRIBAL AMERICA... (First column, 4th story, link) Related stories:LEAK: OBAMA BLASTS TRUMP HANDLING OF PANDEMIC...'CHAOTIC DISASTER'... Full Article
side Pubs pivot to digital: 'We hope that people feel that the world outside is still there' By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T17:30:05Z Weekly meat tray giveaways, craft beer deliveries and trivia held over Zoom. As pubs stand empty, those that run them look to the internetAcross Australia, pubs stand empty because of the Covid-19 lockdowns. Some venues have shut entirely, others have pivoted to takeaway businesses, and the majority have had to make changes to their staffing.While the future of physical pubs remains very uncertain for the coming months, the entertainers, brewers and chefs that rely on pubs for their livelihood are finding ways to recreate pub experiences in patrons’ homes. Continue reading... Full Article Pubs Restaurants Coronavirus outbreak Australia news Food Australian food and drink Australian lifestyle Business
side Covid-19 competence has given Australian governments some political capital. But there's a flipside | Katharine Murphy By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-08T20:00:36Z Politicians have set a high bar for themselves – success on coronavirus has created community expectations that will be challenging to shiftSign up for Guardian Australia’s daily coronavirus emailDownload the free Guardian app to get the most important news notifications“Let’s not give everything back, let’s not throw away all the progress we’ve made by letting our frustration get the better of us.” This was Daniel Andrews on Friday afternoon, shortly after national cabinet resolved to gradually restart economic and social activity by July.The Victorian premier wanted people to understand he’d be hastening slowly – the message being here in the Massachusetts of Australia, we decide how quickly we’ll remove coronavirus restrictions. We don’t apply an arbitrary national average. Continue reading... Full Article Coronavirus outbreak Australian politics Health Australia news Scott Morrison Daniel Andrews Gladys Berejiklian Victoria New South Wales
side Rita Wilson details coronavirus ordeal and warns of treatment side effects By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-15T06:15:00Z The actress and her husband, Tom Hanks, were both hospitalised with the deadly virus Full Article
side Think inside the box: puzzles and board games to get your through lockdown By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-22T10:11:26Z From puzzle-solving to empire-building — sweep the board, says Samuel Fishwick Full Article
side Why you should consider taking a vitamin D supplement in lockdown By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-23T11:53:31Z Health experts have reissued guidelines on the supplement as the population faces more time indoors Full Article
side Book review: Redhead at the Side of the Road by Anne Tyler By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-23T14:10:51Z Finding humour and humanity in the ordinary Full Article
side Outstanding Stays: The Other Side, Bahamas By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T14:45:00Z We could all do with a strong dose of escapism right now, so each week we'll be highlighting a banging boutique to bookmark for when the world presses play again Full Article
side Take it outside: the tech to bring your office to your garden By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-04T10:34:20Z The smart gadgets you need to WFG Full Article
side Turn Based RPG ‘The Otherside’ from The Label Is This Week’s Apple Arcade Addition By toucharcade.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 15:13:32 +0000 Last week, Apple brought another game to the service in the form of Neversong () from Serenity Forge. Today, we … Continue reading "Turn Based RPG ‘The Otherside’ from The Label Is This Week’s Apple Arcade Addition" Full Article Apple Arcade Featured News Universal
side Philippines' biggest broadcaster ABS-CBN forced off air after criticising President Rodrigo Duterte By www.telegraph.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 02:36:47 GMT Full Article structure:news/world-news topics:things/press-freedom structure:news topics:people/rodrigo-duterte topics:places/asia topics:places/philippines storytype:standard