Blog Page 36

Coronavirus Found in USA

The deadly coronavirus that originated in Wuhan, China has been spreading to other Asian countries and, now, to the United States. The first case was of a man in his 30’s in Washington state who had just recently visited Wuhan. The new case is a woman in her mid 60’s who flew back to Chicago from Wuhan this weekend. The patient was not showing symptoms while on the flight, so the heath authorities have reported that they are not concerned with spread of the virus on the flight  Both patients are in stable condition and are expected to fully recover.

More on how the CDC is handling the potential outbreak

How is the virus affecting China?

New hospital built in Wuhan area to handle influx of patients

Shanghai Disneyland closes “indefinitely” until virus outbreak is contained

Chinese officials close historic landmarks to tourism

Oculus Hand Tracking on the Quest, Potentially Coming to the Rift S

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Oculus has introduced hand tracking to the Oculus Quest system earlier this year but is currently waiting to add the hand tracking feature to Oculus Rift S. The Oculus Quest being able to offer hand tracking makes this already affordable entry-device into the world of VR that much easier to both uses (being that your hands are now the controllers) and more comfortable to hide away, having to hide away just the headset itself rather than the controllers as well.

“We started [hand-tracking] with the Quest platform first, and we’re going to listen to the feedback from Quest as we roll out this feature, and will evaluate the technical challenges of bringing it to other devices [like Rift S],” an Oculus spokesperson tells Road to VR. This quote from an Oculus spokesperson shows how Oculus is seeing how the hand tracking feature is doing on the Oculus Quest.

Oculus adding full hand-tracking to its Quest line of VR headsets is a big deal for mainly two reasons. The first reason is that it was merely a software update, meaning no extra hardware was needed to enable this feature, this means that potentially all current-generation headsets produced by Oculus could offer this feature. The second main reason that this is a big deal is that the Valve Index was the only headset to offer full native hand-tracking, which costs double what the Oculus Quest costs.

This could potentially upset the monopoly that Valve has had on the VR market, being the only headset to offer hand-tracking. One advantage that the Oculus Quest has over the Valve Index is its wireless capabilities of both installing games natively to the headset itself or streaming games from your PC through WiFi or the newer Oculus Link.

Hand-tracking will drastically change the immersion that virtual reality offers, as shown by the Valve Index. The Valve Index was the first VR headset to provide true hand-tracking capabilities, and this was done by the unique design of the controllers included with the headset. This fantastic feature did come at an expensive cost, making the Valve Index (with the controllers) costing $999 while other VR headsets like the Oculus Quest comes in at half the price for the 128 GB model.

The way that the Oculus Quest offers hand-tracking is different from how the Valve Index handles it; instead of the Oculus Quest controllers being able to track each finger independently, the Quest’s camera follows each finger instead. The cost is a considerable deduction from the typical cost, as the Valve Index was the only VR headset to offer full hand-tracking. The cheapest version of the Oculus Quest All-in-one VR gaming headset (being the 64 GB version) costs $399 on Amazon. This is substantially cheaper than the Valve Index.

This is a fantastic advancement for virtual reality technology as a whole, as Oculus has stated that they are waiting on feedback from the community on whether or not to bring this feature to the Oculus Rift S. This feature just being released to see the overall impact on the games being produced will take a fair amount of time, but with some games already offering full hand-tracking means that the VR industry should slowly start to see a change to most current headsets providing this feature.

Pixel Street Podcast 88: PS5/Xbox Series X Wishlist, Dying Light 2 Delayed, and More

This week on the Pixel Street Podcast:

John and Connor are joined by Chad and Holden from Respawn Aim Fire to give PS5/Xbox Series X wishlists and predictions, talk about all the games being delayed, and more!

Be sure to follow @pixelstreetpod on Twitter and let us know what you think of the show!

Wuhan Virus Offers Opportunity for Decades-Old Adversaries

With the emergence of a new strain of the coronavirus, (named 2019-nCoV) in mid-December 2019, scientists, government officials, and common citizens alike hold their breath in anticipation. Though initially detected in Wuhan, Hubei province in the People’s Republic of China, the virus has quickly spread to neighboring areas (Japan, Thailand, South Korea, and Taiwan) as well as further afield (the United States.)

It is still unclear whether 2019-nCoV will mutate and present the same type of threat as the 2002-03 SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) pandemic, but what is clear are the mounting deaths and infections. As of this moment, 17 lives have been claimed with 95 reported in critical condition. Worldwide, over 600 have been confirmed infected. It was revealed that the virus can be spread through human contact, rather than solely through animals. Currently, there is no vaccine available to fight against the virus.

Globally, governments and the WHO (World Health Organization) are appraising the situation and deciding on the appropriate measures to take. For example, the city of Wuhan itself has become a quarantined zone along with the two neighboring cities Ezhou and Chibi. Public transport in and out of these cities has been stopped completely. People are being allowed to leave, but only after enduring a screening process that involves the taking of the subject’s temperature.

However, in the East Asia region of the world, a unique opportunity presents itself to two long-standing adversaries: the overwhelmingly recognized People’s Republic of China and the Republic of China (who lost 2 diplomatic allies and official recognition thereof) this past year. Outbreaks such as 2019-nCoV greatly challenge humanity, but also provide us with the condition(s) to enhance cooperation and understanding.

Since the January reelection of incumbent, Tsai Ing-wen, relations between the two have only become frostier. Beijing is weary of Tsai’s independence-minded stance on the “One China Principle”, which was supported by the opposition political party years ago in 1992. Both sides are reluctant to engage in any sort of behavior that they believe would cede their authority as a sovereign state. However, there have been limited improvements in Cross-Strait relations, notably trade and investment, air travel, and supplies of humanitarian aid during trying circumstances. These are all positive steps, but further measures are an absolute necessity.

The next logical move is for the inclusion of the Republic of China into the WHO. Pressure from Beijing has impeded this thus far, but now is no time for petty politics to play any role.

Taiwan is an island with a population hovering around 24 million souls and it has already recorded its first infection from the virus. Health and safety must take precedence here. Citizens of the ROC live and work in the PRC and travel back and forth, especially during the Lunar New Year (which is now upon us) and they must be represented and their government allowed to participate in any policy discussion.

Regardless of which side of the debate one is on (if any at all), the position in Beijing can be understood, but it is now time for a relaxation of the public relations war. There is no longer a need to jockey for influence in such matters; the PRC does not risk losing recognition from the 179 United Nations members it maintains. Authorities on the mainland risk losing prestige if they continue to bar Taiwan from such vital organizations, especially during a time where human well-being is threatened.

Any such reversal of tension would benefit the global community and bring the two sides closer in another aspect of international relations. ROC ascension to the WHO is a win-win for both and a demonstration that normal relations can be achieved.

Jeff Bezos Hacking Linked to Saudi Arabia

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Jeff Bezos was hacked in 2018 via spyware infected WhatsApp messages. What was not previously known is that the messages were sent from the personal account of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman. UN rapporteurs have, just this week, disclosed that based on forensic evidence it seems that bin Salman has messaged Mr. Bezos in the past with personal information that was not publicly available.

They also state that months prior to the exposure of Jeff Bezos’s affair, the account sent him a photo of a woman who appeared similar to the woman he was having an affair with. Two months later the National Enquirer exposed the affair. There is concern that Saudi Arabia is attempting to coerce Bezos, owner of the Washington Post, into representing Saudi Arabia differently.

Saudi Arabia denies hacking accusations

Saudi Arabia already under investigation for Twitter hacking

Jeff Bezos tweets tribute to Washington Post reporter slain in Turkey

Hacking potentially linked to reporter killed in Turkey

How to protect your own phone

Tulsi Gabbard Sues Hillary Clinton for $50 Million in Defamation Suit

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The $50 million dollar question that will be settled in a New York court room at some point in the future is whether former Secretary of State and Democratic Presidential nominee Hillary Clinton caused major damage to the reputation and candidacy of Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard, as well as great economic loss.

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, accuses Clinton of having “smeared” Gabbard’s “political and personal reputation.”

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, accuses Clinton of smeared the “political and personal reputation” of Gabbard.  A result of Clinton’s remarks that Gabbard was a “favorite of the Russians” and that Republicans were “grooming” Gabbard in some way to sabotage democrats in the 2020 general election.

Clinton’s remarks were made on a podcast hosted by David Plouffe, who was the campaign manager for President Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign:

[Russia] has a bunch of sites and bots and other ways of supporting [Gabbard] so far. That’s assuming Jill Stein will give it up, which she might not because she is also a Russian asset.

They know they can’t win without a third-party candidate, and so I do not know who it’s going to be, but I can guarantee you they will have a vigorous third-party challenge in the key states that they most need it.

Mere hours after Clinton’s comments spread across the internet and social media, Gabbard offered a strong rebuke on Twitter. Calling the former presidential candidate the “queen of warmongers” and also accused her of prompting a New York Times hit piece released before the Democrat presidential debate.

In a statement to The Hill, Gabbard’s lawyer Brian Dunne said, “Tulsi Gabbard is a loyal American civil servant who has also dedicated her life to protecting the safety of all Americans.”

“Rep. Gabbard’s presidential campaign continues to gain momentum, but she has seen her political and personal reputation smeared and her candidacy intentionally damaged by Clinton’s malicious and demonstrably false remarks.”

Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill’s response to the allegations was a very succinct, “That’s ridiculous”.

Part of this fight that Gabbard is taking up against Clinton has to do with her belief that the “political elites” must be held accountable for “distorting the truth in the middle of a critical Presidential election.”

The lawsuit also claims that Clinton “reserves a special hatred and animosity for Tulsi” because Gabbard endorsed Senator Bernie Sanders over Clinton in the 2016 Democratic primary campaign as opposed to falling in line with establishment democrats and openly supporting Clinton.

Gabbard has stated multiple times that she will not run for president as a third-party candidate if she does not win the nomination. Her support among democratic primary voters has consistently held between 1- and 2%.

The larger question, however, is this:

Is this lawsuit with merit and legitimate justification?

And if it is, what does that say about our political system and those ruling over it?

 

A Reeling MLB Turns Its Eyes Back In Time to Old-School Managers

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Buck Showalter, Dusty Baker and John Gibbons have interviewed with the Houston Astros to replace the fired A.J. Hinch. This is a dramatic about-face from the way the Astros and just about every other team is now run in Major League Baseball.

While the club hasn’t only interviewed veteran managers, given that they have spoken to or will speak with Eduardo Perez, Jeff Banister, Will Venable and Joe Espada, it is unique that they are even considering older managers who tend to have their own opinions and no reluctance to express them or implement their own strategies.

It’s especially glaring for a data-centric team like the Astros. However, it was technology and how its use can spiral out of control that put the Astros in this precarious position to begin with. Now, maybe they want to alter the narrative by hiring a manager who will rein in that relentless pursuit of an edge when it crosses lines of propriety.

Interestingly, owner Jim Crane has taken over the entire baseball operations after firing general manager Jeff Luhnow. Unlike the top down management style in which the general manager is the main baseball decision maker, Crane deciding on the manager and the GM separately is a drastic adjustment from how the Astros had been run under Luhnow; how Crane wanted the Astros to be run. It’s entirely possible that Crane will choose someone who isn’t a household name or at least isn’t as well known, but even thinking about veteran managers is something Luhnow would never do. He’d stick a mannequin wearing a uniform in the corner of the dugout first.

The New York Mets have also batted around Baker’s name. For them, it is glaring because they shunned Joe Girardi and allowed him to go to the Philadelphia Phillies when he appeared to prefer the Mets job. Now, after firing Carlos Beltran for his role as the only player specifically named in the Astros’ sign-stealing, they’re also searching for a manager.

In an era when the one-time illustrious job of baseball manager has been reduced to that of a nameless, faceless and replaceable functionary whose main role is to follow orders, it’s ironic that the biggest scandal since the steroid era has led to teams considering old-school managers whose experience, personality, independence and salary demands had made them obsolete. We already know what changed with the sign-stealing controversy rocking the game and calling the validity of the Astros’ success into question.

Why would teams that were so invested in the new age of baseball where managers were largely irrelevant even think about reaching into the past and giving an experienced manager the money and power he wants?

Here’s why.

Timing

It’s unusual that three managerial jobs are open so close to the start of spring training. It’s even stranger that the three jobs are so high-profile with the Astros, Mets and Boston Red Sox. But this is undeniably an unusual situation. All conventional wisdom is thrown out the window when teams are caught up in this type of unyielding firestorm.

If this had happened in December, then perhaps there could have been a more exhaustive search and the Astros would have stuck closer to their script, hired a new GM and then the manager. But the suddenness of the report on sign-stealing and Crane’s immediate response to decapitate his baseball operations makes it urgent that he do something to show credibility and that the inmates are no longer running the asylum with the tacit approval of their boss, Luhnow, and his amoral underlings like Brandon Taubman.

Spring training is about to open and teams who were in the middle of this mess do not need to answer the question as to why this won’t happen again. With a veteran manager, they won’t.

Credibility

A major problem faced by managers in today’s game is that the players have the power over them and know it. There’s no ambiguity in the structure. The front office is making the decisions. The manager is a conduit of the front office: replaceable, relatively low-paid and clearly aware of his place in the pecking order.

The strategies implemented by veteran managers will differ from the adherence to sabermetrics. But that is only a slight change from the real difference between a veteran manager and a middle-manager. Showalter might not follow the numbers as they are presented by the front office, but he is also known to tweak his starting pitching plans based on the scheduled home plate umpire.

It’s not like he’s just throwing things at the wall. Simply because there’s a different methodology does not mean it can’t work. It’s worked for Showalter and Baker before. It can work again…as long as they have the players. In Houston and with the Mets, they do.

“Because I’m the *bleepin’* manager of this *bleepin’ team. That’s why.” 

The above reference is one of the most famous manager-player arguments caught on camera between Jim Leyland and Barry Bonds. An irate Leyland got in Bonds’ face when Bonds was disrespecting coach Bill Virdon and loudly complaining about his contract.

Would a manager pull that today with a star the magnitude of Bonds? Would the player back down as Bonds did?

A prime example of how a veteran manager functions is when Jack McKeon took over the 2003 Florida Marlins for Jeff Torborg. One of the minor tweaks he made was to lock the clubhouse door during games to stop Josh Beckett and Brad Penny from leaving the bench to hang around in the clubhouse. McKeon, 72 at the time, had been in baseball for just shy of 50 years and served in every possible capacity except owner.

At his age and with his experience, he did not care what the players wanted. He was not looking to placate them or to be their buddy. He certainly wasn’t afraid of them, worried that they would pull the “I’m making tens of millions of dollars. You’re replaceable. I’m not” card.

Did McKeon locking the clubhouse door directly lead to the Marlins winning the 2003 World Series? No. Did the act send a message to the players that playtime was over and they were not going to bully the veteran baseball man who had seen it all, done it all and was willing to treat them like men if they acted like men and performed on the field? Absolutely.

It could be argued that Hinch chose not to get involved too deeply with the Astros’ sign-stealing because he did not want to risk losing the clubhouse and encountering similar problems he had in his first managerial chance with the Arizona Diamondbacks. This is not to imply that Hinch was frightened of the players, per se. It does, however, illustrate that he did not want to invite the possibility that he would be ignored if he took too hard a line to stop the video use and signaling. He admitted he broke the equipment twice only to see it replaced and did nothing more than that. What does that say?

Baker and Showalter would not worry about that because they would tell the players to stop with the same attitude as McKeon showed – “I don’t care what you think. I’m the manager.”

Changing the narrative

Is there a bigger spin from a manager who does what he’s told as part of the job to a manager who has the cachet and history to shun certain orders and not worry about being fired? It might sound counter-intuitive to go so far in the opposite direction, but given the magnitude of this scandal and that this is not going away, perhaps the Astros and Mets are thinking that they want the stability of knowing what they’re getting even with the need to delegate and accept flaws and personality quirks.

These veteran managers are honest with the players; they handle the media; they’re not puppets of the front office; and if they have the talent on the roster, they win.

Just as baseball had become so immersed in numbers that the personality-based managers with their own style of play became obsolete, teams are considering exactly that type of manager again. That it isn’t by choice is irrelevant. In fact, it might have been unavoidable as teams took the win at all costs mentality advocated by the likes of Luhnow and his staff to its logical conclusion.

Players, untethered by any supervision and functioning in a Machiavellian ends justifying the means way, behaved this way because they were allowed to behave this way. That will not happen with Baker or Showalter. And maybe that’s the point.

Iranian Student Attending Northeastern University Denied Entry to USA

An Iranian student who has been attending University in Boston, first Boston University and now Northeastern, was denied re-entry into the United States on Monday. Upon arrival to Logan airport, he was detained and refused entry even though he reportedly has a valid student visa. While at the airport his lawyers filed an emergency lawsuit in an attempt to delay his removal, which was approved by a judge, but he still ended up on a flight to Paris later that day. US Customs and Border Patrol has declined to make any comment on the matter. Northeastern University is petitioning to have him return to start classes, which began this week.

This is not the first time Logan airport has refused entry even with court orders

Lawyers claim that customs officials are lying about the time the student was removed from the plane

Students and faculty pack courtroom on Tuesday morning to fight the deportation

Protesters flock to Boston’s Logan airport in protest

Read more about the order of events here

 

Tragedy in Kansas City after Chiefs Win

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Tragedy struck Kansas City when a gunman opened fire on a celebratory crowd outside of a bar late Sunday night. Two were found dead upon police arrival and at least 15 more are injured in the hospital, with three in critical condition. The motives of the gunman are currently unknown, and the deceased man on scene is presumed to be the shooter. Witnesses claim that a fight broke out before the man opened fire outside the bar, but police are still investigating.

Police Chief calls initial scene “chaotic”

It is unclear who shot the gunman, police investigate

“A tragic end to such a wonderful day”

Is advertising sold out crowds an invitation for mayhem?

Newest Chiefs fans get ready for the Super Bowl

Interesting Reads on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on this Holiday

Today is a day for remembrance. A day for reflection. A day to take stock into where we are as a society and to be mindful of how much farther we still have to go.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. did not lack the moral courage or the mental and emotional fortitude to ensure the voices of black Americans across the country were heard, loud and clear, during a time of great pain for the black community. King would have been 91 years old on January 15 and that great pain still persists for so many people of color in our country today.

Words cannot express what King meant to the nation as a whole or what he still means to the nation today. But, here are some of the ways in which the media is covering today.

Dear Annie: How do you think Dr. King would react to the state of our country today?

VIDEO: Martin Luther King Jr. at Girard College in Philadelphia, 1965

Black Enterprise Founder: We Owe an Apology to Martin Luther King, Jr.

Was Martin Luther King Jr. a Republican or a Democrat?