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Showing posts from November, 2023

School Security Systems

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There is an ever-increasing need for educational institutions to step up their security and an undeniable prevalence of emergency situations in schools along with the severity of school violence. During school years, one out of every four students reports getting bullied either physically or emotionally. Yet the majority of students bullied in schools do not report it at all. Parents and educators worry a lot about the children that they care for, and many people are too terrified to handle difficult situations. Fortunately, school security systems with modernized technology are made to keep children, school staff members, and visitors safe and secure. Widespread violence has become a global threat, and it leads to school security problems at different grade levels in both the smallest and largest of towns and cities. Therefore, it pays well to take school security seriously. How do school safety and security issues affect school students? In the light of the growing security issues, t

Safe Driving on Highway Road

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When you're a new driver, it's generally best to build your confidence gradually by driving on local roads. From there, you can move your way up to highway driving. The prospect of driving on the highway for the first time can be daunting for many new drivers — moving at high speeds, merging into traffic, and changing lanes on the interstate requires constant focus and careful agility, after all. As intimidating as the highway may seem, a little preparation and practice are all you need to become a confident driver. The following highway driving tips will help you stay safe when you hit the highway for the first time, and with every subsequent road trip you take: 1.  Avoid Driving When You’re Tired or Impaired in Any Way Impaired driving is a very real problem both on city streets and highways. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), one person dies in an alcohol-impaired driving accident every 50 minutes in the United States. Of course, alcohol isn&#

Security Process for Small Office

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Office security systems are essential for any business or organization, as they help protect against a variety of threats and ensure the safety of employees and assets. Here are some of the key benefits of implementing a security system in the workplace: Deter Crime: A visible office security system, such as cameras or alarms, can deter potential burglars from attempting to break into the office. This can save your business from the costly damages and losses that can result from a break-in. Prevent Unauthorized Access: An access control system, such as key cards or biometric scanners, can prevent unauthorized individuals from entering the office. This can help keep your business assets and sensitive information secure. Ensure Employee Safety: Security systems can also help ensure the safety of your employees. For example, panic buttons and emergency notification systems can help employees quickly alert authorities in the event of a threat or emergency. Overall, office security systems

SpaceX’s new Starlink Satellite Internet Terminal has a Kickstand

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  SpaceX quietly introduced a new Standard Starlink terminal that’s slimmer and simpler than the previous version, with a 10 percent broader field of view and no motor for setting up — instead, it comes with a kickstand; to orient it, you simply move it. A Starlink support page says the kit is available “by invitation only to a small group of early customers in the US.” SpaceX bumped its weather resistance rating up from IP54 to IP67, meaning it should be totally dust-proof and can be submerged in one meter of water for as long as 30 minutes before potential damage. Starlink’s specifications page says it can operate in winds over 60MPH. Speaking of which, the company will sell mounts in case you’d rather secure it in place. It’s otherwise roughly the same size as the previous Standard terminal (now called Standard Actuated). Tesla investor Sawyer Merritt, who posted about the new terminal Friday morning, shared the quick start video for it. The Wi-Fi router has been redesigned and now

It’s not Slowing Down Firefox — just Ad Blockers (Youtube Say)

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  Users on Reddit and Hacker News are complaining that YouTube seems to have inserted an intentional five-second delay before video pages will load in Mozilla’s Firefox and occasionally some other browsers. YouTube tells The Verge that these users are right about the delay, but the browser has nothing to do with it — it’s part of the company’s efforts to quash ad blockers across all platforms. “In the past week, users using ad blockers may have experienced suboptimal viewing, which included delays in loading, regardless of the browser they are using,” YouTube communications manager Christopher Lawton wrote in an email. Lawton wrote that disabling the ad blocker should resolve the issue, though users “may still experience a temporary delay in loading” until their browser has refreshed. Lawton also said that users will keep seeing issues like this as YouTube’s ad-blocker detection methods improve. The issue was initially reported as targeting Firefox users, but users online have said the

Babies may start to learn language before they are born

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  Newborn babies respond differently to their mother tongue, suggesting that exposure to language in the uterus may provide the foundations for learning. Experiments with newborn babies suggest they can already recognise their mother tongue, hinting that language learning may begin before birth. “We’ve known for a while that fetuses hear towards the end of gestation,” says Judit Gervain at the University of Padua in Italy. “[Newborn babies] can recognise their mother’s voice and prefer it over other female voices, and they can even recognise the language their mother spoke during pregnancy.” To investigate further, Gervain and her colleagues studied the brain activity of 49 babies with French-speaking mothers aged between one and five days old. Each newborn was fitted with a small cap that contained 10 electrodes placed close to regions of the brain linked to speech perception. The team then played recordings that began with 3 minutes of silence, then 7-minute excerpts from the story G

Surprise $200 million Summer Science Program

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  One big question is whether the program should expand beyond students already bent on a scientific career to reach the much larger population of students indifferent to science or lacking the opportunity to realize their potential. “It’s an elite program. That’s their brand,” says longtime observer Russell Moore, an integrative physiologist and provost at the University of Colorado (CU) Boulder, one of four U.S. universities that host SSP students every summer. “And it’s a remarkable program for those students.” “But it could also be remarkable for other types of students,” says Moore, who confesses that he “never would have gotten into” SSP as a teenager. “And $200 million opens up a lot of possibilities.” SSP’s newfound wealth comes from Franklin Antonio, a 1969 SSP graduate who co-founded chipmaking giant Qualcomm and died last year at age 69. Deciding how to spend it falls to Frank Steslow, a veteran science museum administrator who became SSP’s chief executive in January. Steslo

United Kingdom Approves First-Ever CRISPR Treatment

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  In a world first, U.K. regulators yesterday approved a therapy that uses the gene-editing technique CRISPR. The approach treats two inherited blood disorders, including sickle cell disease, which afflicts mostly people of African ancestry, by modifying a patient’s blood stem cells in the lab and returning them. In sickle cell disease, a defect in the oxygen-carrying protein hemoglobin, found in red blood cells, causes the cells to form a sickled shape that clogs blood vessels, leading to severe pain and sometimes strokes and organ damage. The new treatment from the companies Vertex Pharmaceuticals and CRISPR Therapeutics is designed to replace these malfunctioning proteins with working versions encoded by a hemoglobin gene that is normally active in a developing fetus. After harvesting a patient’s blood stem cells, scientists use CRISPR to disable the genetic switch that normally turns off this fetal hemoglobin gene early in development. The cells are then reinfused into the body, wh

Great-grandmother of 12 and grandmother of 33 graduates college at age 63

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  Robyn Roberts, a 63-year-old grandmother of 33 and great-grandmother of 12, solidified the idea of education as a lifelong pursuit this weekend by receiving a diploma from Southern New Hampshire University. "I have finished something I started that is absolutely amazing, and I feel amazing," Roberts said in an interview with the university that was shared with "Good Morning America." Roberts said the idea to pursue a college degree was spurred by a challenge from her grandson, who told her in high school, "I'll do it if you do it," according to Roberts. The competition then escalated to a GPA contest, a match Roberts said she won. Roberts, who graduated with a degree in business administration, turns 64 next month and plans to attend law school, after which she hopes to provide support to survivors of abuse, according to the university. "64 is the year of new beginnings," she said. "If all goes well, by the time I turn 67, I'll be

North Korea will try again to launch a military spy satellite in the coming days

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  North Korea told neighboring Japan that it will make a third attempt to launch a military spy satellite in the coming days, Japanese officials said Tuesday, after the two previous launches failed. Japan’s coast guard said North Korea notified Tokyo of its plan to launch the satellite sometime between Wednesday and Nov. 30. The notice identified three maritime zones where debris from the rocket carrying the satellite may fall. Two are in the waters between the Korean Peninsula and China and the third in the Philippine Sea, Japanese coastguard spokesperson Kazuo Ogawa said. Ogawa said the areas are the same as North Korea identified for its earlier satellite launches in May and August, implying the third attempt would have a similar flight path. North Korea gives Japan the launch information because Japan's coast guard coordinates and distributes maritime safety information in East Asia. The North's notification came a day after rival South Korea warned it to cancel its launch

US flying drones above Gaza in search for hostages

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The U.S. military is flying unarmed MQ-9 Reaper drones above Gaza to assist with efforts to locate the more than 240 people taken hostage by Hamas  during the Oct. 7 attack,   according to a U.S. official.  The acknowledgement comes after reports this past weekend that unmarked aircraft had been detected flying above the Gaza Strip by open-source flight tracking services. A U.S. official told ABC News that the U.S. military has been flying unarmed MQ-9 Reaper flights over Gaza as part of the hostage recovery efforts, but declined to provide any context about whether the flights are helping in recovery efforts for U.S. hostages only or for all of the hostages taken by Hamas. An estimated 240 people were taken hostage by Hamas fighters on Oct. 7 and U.S. officials have said it is possible that some of the 10 Americans unaccounted for from the events of that day might be among the hostages. The official would only confirm that the flights began after Oct. 7 and would not provide further d

Tens of thousands of ancient coins have been found off Sardinia

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A diver who spotted something metallic not far from Sardinia's coast has led to the discovery of tens of thousands of ancient bronze coins. Italy’s culture ministry said Saturday that the diver alerted authorities, who sent divers assigned to an art protection squad along with others from the ministry’s undersea archaeology department. The coins dating from the first half of the fourth century were found in sea grass, not far from the northeast shore of the Mediterranean island. The ministry didn't say exactly when the first diver caught a glimpse of something metallic just off shore Sardinia, not far from the town of Arzachena. Exactly how many coins have been retrieved hasn’t been determined yet, as they are being sorted. A ministry statement estimated that there are at least about 30,000 and possibly as many as 50,000, given their collective weight. “All the coins were in an excellent and rare state of preservation,” the ministry said. The few coins that were damaged still h

Biden, first lady visit Maine to grieve with community in wake of Lewiston mass shooting

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President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden visited Maine to grieve with a community reeling from a mass shooting that left 18 people dead and 13 others wounded. The Bidens arrived in Lewiston on Friday afternoon, where they met with survivors, families of the victims and first responders. They were greeted upon their arrival by Governor Janet Mills, Lewiston Mayor Carl Sheline and other local officials. Their first stop was Schemengees Bar, one of the locations of last week's mass shooting. Biden carried a bouquet of white flowers in one hand and held the first lady’s hand in the other as they stopped at a memorial placed outside the bar with candles and signs, and held a moment of silence. Biden then delivered remarks at the bowling alley where the gunman first stopped on Oct. 25. There, he took a moment to pay respect to the victims and renew his call for greater gun control measures. "No pain is the same but we know what it's like to lose a piece of our soul, and the

Approch for Future Technology

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Technology moves at a relentlessly fast pace in the modern world. It can sometimes feel like every single day there are new technologies and innovations that will change our futures forever. But in a steady stream of announcements about new massive futuristic technological upgrades and cool gadgets, it is easy to lose track of the amazing ways the world is progressing. For instance, there are artificial intelligence programs writing poems from scratch and making images from nothing more than a worded prompt. There are 3D-printed eyes, new holograms, lab-grown food and brain-reading robots. All of this just scratches the surface of what is out there, so we've curated a guide to the most exciting future technologies, listing them all below. Necrobotics Sometimes new future technologies can offer amazing development, with the possibility of changing the future... while also being incredibly creepy. This is one way to describe the idea of necrobotics which, as the name suggests, involv

Best Teaching Strategies for 2023

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Teaching has never been more challenging. With students constantly distracted by laptops, phones and social media, getting them to engage in class is an increasing challenge. This is why Horizon Educational has created a list of 6 teaching strategies to help you take charge of the classroom in 2023. 1. Personalized Learning Personalized learning is an educational approach that aims to tailor classroom instruction to students' individual needs. Each student gets a personalized learning plan based on their unique abilities and interests. One of the best ways to approach personalized learning is through STEAM education. This form of education goes beyond traditional STEM education and makes science and technology accessible to more types of learners by incorporating arts and humanities into the mix. Students from a range of backgrounds and with different interests can therefore be catered for. 2. Gamification Interested in making your classroom more lively and fun? Give your students

Top biggest companies in the world

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Here, we take a more detailed look at the top 10 companies by market cap we reviewed in the table above. Apple Current CEO: Tim Cook Year of Foundation: 1976 Country: USA Apple Inc. is the biggest company in the world by market cap. The company is renowned for its groundbreaking products, such as the iPhone, iPad, and Mac, and they consistently push the boundaries of technology innovation. The company's commitment to innovation and high-quality design has made it a consumer favourite and a titan among the top companies by market cap. Microsoft Current CEO: Satya Nadella Year of Foundation: 1975 Country: USA Microsoft Corporation offers many products and services, including its flagship Windows operating system and Office software suite. Microsoft's influence extends beyond software, with ventures into cloud computing and hardware, solidifying its place among the largest companies by revenue. Saudi Aramco Current CEO: Amin H. Nasser Year of Foundation: 1933 Country: Saudi Arabia

AI will Eventually Create no Job Situation ( Elon Musk Say)

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The billionaire technology leader, who owns Tesla ,SpaceX, X, the company formerly known as Twitter, and the newly formed AI startup xAI, said late Thursday that AI will have the potential to become the “most disruptive force in history.” “We will have something that is, for the first time smarter than the smartest human,” Musk said at an event at Lancaster House, an official U.K. government residence. “It’s hard to say exactly what that moment is, but there will come a point where no job is needed,” Musk continued, speaking alongside British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. “You can have a job if you wanted to have a job for personal satisfaction. But the AI would be able to do everything.” “I don’t know if that makes people comfortable or uncomfortable,” Musk joked, to which the audience laughed.  “If you wish for a magic genie, that gives you any wish you want, and there’s no limit. You don’t have those three wish limits nonsense, it’s both good and bad. One of the challenges in the futu

Prepare for Your First Date with Boyfriend

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Getting yourself ready and feeling good before a date is so important to help you feel like the best version of yourself. Everything that you do to get ready for your date should help you to feel more confident. You shouldn’t worry about what your date or what anyone else will think about you, rather you should love your own outfit, makeup and hair.  If you have been eyeing up this person for a while, you will likely want to make a good impression, however, you should never alter your own style or personality for another person, no matter how much you want them to like you. Be you, the most authentic version of you and they will likely fall for you even harder for it.  1. Be Yourself  One of the most important things to remember when you are getting ready for a first date is to remember to be yourself. Pick the outfit, hair and makeup style that best suits you and your personality and don’t try to be someone that you are not. If you love a classic and simple outfit, wear that for your

Prepare for Your First Date with Girlfriend

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I know this can be super nerve-wracking. You want to plan your date to make sure you have a great time and show how much you’re interested. But you also don’t want to look like you’re trying too hard or investing a lot in something that may not work out. Here’s a detailed set of first date tips, according to science. Choose the Right First Date Location The location you choose sets the tone for your date. Unless you already know what types of activities your date likes, it’s best to pick a neutral, low-pressure place where you can focus on getting to know each other and figuring out how well you connect. The last thing you want to do is go to a nice restaurant and discover before your food even has been brought out that you two don’t “click” and it’s not going to work. In this scenario, you’re stuck for the rest of the meal anyway. Can somebody say “Awkward”? Instead of dinner and a movie, suggest trying a local bar or a hip new coffee shop instead. The casual environment serves as a c