Friday, July 21, 2023

covid vaccination job requirement exemption

 I see a job posting that states:

  • This position requires employees to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 unless they are granted a medical or religious exemption.
A medical exemption does not include the simple notion that someone fears for their health or safety. More likely, it would require an existing condition that increases risk.

I suppose one could claim religious exemption like a contentious objector, though I question whether stating such would invite additional scrutiny and stigmatize someone as "religious". If by "religious", one means their own belief, that might be the way to go. 

"I believe this requirement is bullshit. Amen."





Saturday, July 15, 2023

Google quantum supremecy

 

https://www.techspot.com/news/99384-google-claims-quantum-supremacy-over-traditional-supercomputers-once.html

article excerpt:

Google announced that it has successfully assembled 70 qubits, a significant increase compared to the 53 qubits found in a device from 2019. This advancement has enabled the company to achieve a groundbreaking level of quantum supremacy over contemporary supercomputers relying on CPUs and GPUs. While the most powerful HPC system available today (Frontier) could match a calculation made by the previous quantum device in 6.18 seconds, Google said it would take the same machine 47.2 years to match the power of the 70-qubit system.

Google's next-gen quantum computer is 241 million times more powerful than the 2019 device. It is also more powerful than recent quantum demonstrations from Chinese researchers, and it should put an end to the quantum supremacy controversy as it is "firmly in the regime of beyond-classical quantum computation."

Steve Brierley, CEO at a company interested in the potential business side of quantum computing (Riverlane), welcomed Google's self-promoted breakthrough as a "major milestone" for quantum supremacy. Sebastian Weidt, CEO of quantum startup Universal Quantum, said that quantum computers still need to demonstrate more practical functions. It's a "very nice demonstration of quantum advantage," Weidt said, but the algorithm described by Google researchers "does not really have real world practical applications" yet.

Friday, July 14, 2023

Thoughts to images

 

Generating high-quality images from brain EEG signals

https://medium.com/the-generator/turning-thoughts-into-images-ee76b94a4340

LG To Offer Subscriptions For Appliances And Televisions

LG To Offer Subscriptions For Appliances And Televisions (theregister.com)44

LG Electronics is planning to use ads streamed to its televisions and subscriptions services for its appliances to help boost revenue from $51 billion to $78 billion over the next six and a half years. The Register reports:"LG will innovate with a platform-based service business model that continuously generates profits, such as content and services, subscriptions and solutions, to the hardware-oriented businesses, which generate sales and profits at the time of purchase," the company said on Wednesday. LG called this a "customer engagement" centered business model that relies on appliances already present in customers' homes, such as 200-million strong fleet of its smart TVS currently already in use. Those tellies, including the premium end OLED and QNED TVs, will soon have content, services and product ads expanded in an attempt to turn the company into a media and entertainment service provider.

LG has already offered a taste of its intentions: in 2022 it revealed a scheme called "Evolving Appliances For You" that promised software upgrades to home appliances. The company offered the example of a family that moves to a different home, and different climate, and upgrades its clothes drier with routines suited to local conditions. The entrance to subscription media comprises part of what CEO William Cho described on Wednesday as a transformation for LG to a "smart life solutions company," a goal he's hoping to hit by 2030.

Sunday, July 9, 2023

Sphere Vegas

 

https://www.thespherevegas.com/


The Technology Behind the New Las Vegas Sphere (cnn.com)45

The world's largest spherical structure "squats on the Las Vegas skyline like an enormous spaceship, black and mysterious," reports CNN, "until night falls, when it will glow like the Earth from space."

The $2 billion arena — called "The Sphere" — was built just east of the Venetian hotel/casino. It's 366 feet tall and 516 feet wide (or 111 meters tall and 157 meters wide) — and it boasts the world's highest-resolution wraparound LED screen:Its exterior is fitted with 1.2 million hockey puck-sized LEDs that can be programmed to flash dynamic imagery on a massive scale — again, reportedly the world's largest... The acts onstage will be dwarfed by the towering 16K LED screen, which wraps over and around much of the audience.
It was fully illuminated for the first time on Tuesday to celebrate the Fourth of July, CNN points out (offering some video footage). When it opens in September, the plan is to light up its exterior with animations every day and night.

Slashdot reader Tony Isaac says the news "got me wondering how they got such great video on the curved surface of the sphere."It turns out there's a whole lot more than just the exterior that breaks new ground in audio and video technology. An older IBC article goes into detail about how they accomplished both the exterior and interior screens, and the high-resolution audio inside.
CNN reports:Rich Claffey, Sphere's chief operations officer, says that more than 160,000 speakers spread around the bowl will deliver the same pristine sound to every seat, whether someone is in the top row or down on the floor. The venue also is equipped with haptic seats that can vibrate to match whatever is happening onscreen — an earthquake, for example — and 4D machines that can create wind, temperature and even scent effects.

"The way I describe it to my friends and family is, it's the entertainment venue of the future," Claffey says. If it all sounds a little over the top, well — this is Vegas.

The arena's first act will be 25 concerts by U2 (with tickets starting at $140). "There's nothing like it. It's light years ahead of everything that's out there," says U2's The Edge during a tour of the venue in a recent Apple Music video...

And U2's Bono adds that "Most music venues are sports venues. They're built for sports — they're not built for music. They're not built for art. This building was built for immersive experiences in cinema and performance... "

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Republicans’ New Border Plan: Send Military Into Mexico

Protecting the border is one thing. Bombing Mexico is entirely something else. Setting the U.S. up for urban warfare since the cartels are already here, heavily armed, and the border is wide open.

Meanwhile, Russia is taking Ukraine and China will soon take Taiwan as they also train troops in Cuba, the central nervous system of the cartels and guerilla movement in South America. So, would it make more sense that the U. S. should focus on Cuba and face Russia and China head-on? 


Republicans’ New Border Plan: Send Military Into Mexico

https://www.wsj.com/articles/republicans-new-border-plan-send-military-into-mexico-42121a5e

Republicans’ New Border Plan: Send Military Into Mexico

GOP candidates and lawmakers want to use the U.S. military to battle drug cartels

July 5, 2023 5:00 am ET

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
0:14
ADVERTISEMENT
Paused
Title 42, which allowed U.S. authorities to quickly expel migrants on public health grounds, expired on May 11. WSJ’s Alicia A. Caldwell explains what the policy is, its effect on the border and what comes next. Photo: John Moore/Getty Images

WASHINGTON—Republicans running for president and in Congress are coalescing around a controversial way to wage war against illegal drugs—sending the U.S. military into Mexico.

Former President Donald Trump, who has previously called for building a wall along the southern border and giving drug dealers the death penalty, has also proposed creating a naval blockade of Mexico to prevent drugs like illicit fentanyl from entering the U.S. His leading opponent in the 2024 GOP nomination race, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, promised last week to use “deadly force” against anyone caught smuggling drugs across the border.

On Capitol Hill, Sens. Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.) and John Kennedy (R., La.) have both voiced support for military operations in Mexico. Sen. J.D. Vance (R., Ohio) said in a recent interview on NBC that cartels should be considered terrorist organizations, meriting a military response. And Reps. Dan Crenshaw (R., Texas) and Mike Waltz (R., Fla.) have sponsored a bill that would formally declare war on the cartels—meaning the military would be authorized to drop bombs on cartel targets.

There is a simple reason the idea of a military intervention keeps cropping up—it is popular, and not just with Republicans. In an NBC poll taken in late June, sending troops to the border to stop drugs was the single best-liked of 11 GOP proposals tested with Republican primary voters. And it was the only one that gained support from a majority of all registered voters. 

The poll findings reflect growing anxiety for Americans, as a continuing opioid crisis fuels record numbers of drug-overdose deaths. In many of those cases, Americans are taking other drugs they don’t realize are laced with deadly fentanyl.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump’s leading opponent in the 2024 GOP nomination race, promised to use ‘deadly force’ against anyone caught smuggling drugs across the border. PHOTO: SUZANNE CORDEIRO/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

The rhetoric is also useful for Republican candidates eager to campaign on border and immigration policy, a topic that polls have repeatedly shown is a top concern for GOP voters but which ranks as a lower priority for most Democrats. And as illegal crossings at the border have recently plummeted following the implementation of new Biden administration immigration policies, it gives candidates something new to talk about.

“What we see in polling is a pretty big shift toward Republicans on all questions related to border security and immigration,” said Patrick Ruffini, a Republican pollster and digital strategist. “So it’s not surprising that you’re seeing Republican primary candidates up the ante.”

Doris Meissner, who served as the top immigration official under the Clinton administration, said the Republican proposals are problematic because deploying the U.S. military on domestic soil to perform law-enforcement functions is illegal, and performing military operations in Mexico without the explicit cooperation of the Mexican government would be an act of war against a sovereign country.

“Military training and military operations are intended to kill in warlike situations. That’s not what we need here,” she said. “It’s completely rhetorical and intended to arouse.”

In a comprehensive plan to “end America’s drug addiction crisis” released last month, Trump promised to partner with companies willing to hire people formerly addicted to opioids and fund faith-based treatment programs. But the top items on his agenda involve sending the military to “inflict maximum damage” on cartel operations and pressure Mexico to cooperate, something that country’s government has repeatedly said it is unwilling to do.

U.S. soldiers patrolling the banks of the Rio Grande. PHOTO: ABRAHAM PINEDA JACOME/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK

The Mexican Foreign Ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment.

DeSantis has for months advocated blockading legal ports of entry with Mexico, where nearly all the illicit fentanyl is thought to be smuggled in from Mexico. But in the first formal policy rollout of his campaign, DeSantis escalated that language, saying anyone caught at the border with drugs could be shot.

 “You’re already on U.S. soil once you’re cutting through the wall. You have hostile intent,” DeSantis said at the Texas border last week. “You absolutely can use deadly force.…We absolutely can respond if you’re breaking into our country and sawing through a border wall.”

Advertisement - Scroll to Continue

In 2019, Trump sent thousands of troops to the border to assist with a surge of asylum-seeking migrants—though the troops weren’t actually allowed to perform arrests and they didn’t cross into Mexico. Biden did the same this spring as his administration anticipated a wave of illegal migration associated with the end of Title 42, a pandemic-era border policy.

As president, Trump floated to aides the idea of shooting migrants in the legs to deter them from crossing into the U.S. illegally, according to people familiar with his thinking—though he never voiced the idea publicly.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

What is the best way to stop drugs from being smuggled across the border? Join the conversation below.

In an interview, Waltz argued there is precedent for a military antidrug operation. During the administration of President George W. Bush, the U.S. military worked with the Colombian government to train military forces to fight drug cartels there and use chemicals to prevent the cultivation of the coca plant, which was fueling the conflict in that country.

Waltz said a formal authorization of force against cartels would empower the military to surveil cartel activity using its most advanced drones and disrupt cartel supply chains.

“I push back on the reflexive, automatic reaction of Republicans want to declare war on Mexico, or we’re talking an invasion of Mexico, that’s sophomoric,” he said. “What we’re talking, it’s a much more nuanced approach.”

Asked if the U.S. should be bombing cartels, Waltz said, “That wouldn’t be the first thing I would do.”

Write to Michelle Hackman at michelle.hackman@wsj.com

China a trillion in debt to US bondholders

 https://thehill.com/opinion/international/4075341-china-is-in-default-on-a-trillion-dollars-in-debt-to-us-bondholders-will-the-us-force-repayment/

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Inflection AI


The wiki about the co-founder of Inflection highlights Mustafa's key objectives focused on 'systemic change' and emotional support.