Moscow has openly declared its intention to increasingly strike power stations, waterworks and other key infrastructure.
Wikipedia Tells Users To Be More Specific When Searching '2022 UK Government Crisis'
Posted in: Today's ChiliWikipedia editors have added a new landing page that asks readers to be more specific if they’re searching for the “2022 United Kingdom government crisis.” And it speaks to just how poorly things are going for recently installed conservative Prime Minister Liz Truss.
“Tooning Out The News” gets the Republican candidate on the phone.
Blackmagic Design is bringing it’s popular DaVinci Resolve video editing app to the iPad, promising support for RAW, cloud collaboration and more, the company announced on Twitter. It won’t be a full version of the PC/Mac app, as it will initially feature just the Cut and Color pages. Otherwise, though, “it will be similar to the desktop version,” Blackmagic said.
The iPad app will support file formats including H.264, H.265, Apple ProRes and Blackmagic RAW, with clips available from the “iPad Pro internal storage and Photos library, externally connected iCloud or USB-C media disks,” the company wrote on Facebook.
In addition, you’ll be able to open desktop projects on the iPad version, including shared collaborative projects via Blackmagic Cloud. “This means DaVinci Resolve for iPad is the same professional tool, and the same codebase as used on major Hollywood feature films,” Blackmagic pointed out.
There are some changes to the UI because of the screen size, as the menu bar will be removed, for instance. In addition, there’s no plan to bring the Edit page to the iPad version, as it’s essentially designed for a keyboard and mouse. “This makes it very difficult to move to the iPad without changing it in a way that would cause problems for professional editors who rely on the edit page for their work,” the company said. Because of that, the Cut page will gain new features, including “enhanced audio support, key framing , split edits and more.”
The Fusion effects and Fairlight audio tools aren’t available yet either, “because their software code has not yet been redesigned for the iPad.” However, the company plans to work on those pages and include them in a future release.
DaVinci Resolve is a popular app with professional editors, in part because of its powerful color correction tools — making Engadget’s list of the best editing apps. In addition, there’s a powerful free version of the app and the paid version costs just $300, with all future updates free. That has proven tempting for editors who don’t want to pay a monthly fee to use Adobe’s Premiere, After Effects and Audition tools.
The host of “The Problem With Jon Stewart” podcast criticized the former president and the rapper for their recent comments about Jewish people.
Google has launched News Showcase in France, and it has teamed up with over 65 publishers representing over 130 publications for the program’s expansion in the country. Now, users in France will see panels populated by articles from participating publications when they navigate to the News tab on Android, iOS or the web and in Discover on the mobile platforms. The tech giant says its partners include not just national outlets, but also regional and local ones, including 20 minutes, La Dépêche, L’Equipe, L’Express, Le Figaro, La Provence, Le Monde, Les Echos, Groupe EBRA and Le Parisien.
In addition to showing a curated selection of headlines from partner outlets, Google is also making “a limited amount” of their paywalled content available to readers for free. The company is paying them for those paywalled articles as part of their licensing agreement. And since the deal would put the publications’ content in front of more people, it could gain them more potential subscribers.
While Google’s program partners praised News Showcase for helping them disseminate good and truthful information, the company didn’t always have a great relationship with the media in France. In 2020, French regulators forced the tech giant to pay publishers for showing snippers their articles in search results after the company implemented the EU’s new “Copyright Directive” law. Authorities said back then that the company “caused a serious and immediate harm to the press sector.” Google initially removed news previews as a response, but it backtracked and started working with publishers instead. Earlier this year, the tech giant inked deals with over 300 publications across Europe to publish snippets of their stories in search.
Dark Brandon Returns: Biden Gets Sassy With Peter Doocy And Twitter Lights Up
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe president’s supporters love this feisty exchange with a Fox News reporter.
Apple isn’t just facing unionization efforts among its retail workers. The New York Timesreports about 150 store staff went on strike for an hour Tuesday after negotiations for better pay and working conditions hit an impasse. On Wednesday, they refused to provide a mix of services that included repairing AirPods and managing deliveries.
The striking employees showed support for unions and called for a range of improvements, including the higher income and schedules with two consecutive days off. Apple had offered staff a higher minimum wage of $27.64 AUD (about $17.35 US) in talks with unions, but the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association union called that a “real wage cut” that didn’t account for inflation. That group wants a $31 AUD ($19.53 US) wage roughly equivalent to what American workers get. It’s also difficult to have weekends with the current scheduling, the workers said.
As in the US, there are allegations Apple is using anti-union tactics. The Association claims Apple interfered with labor organizers trying to survey employees ahead of negotiations. Apple has supposedly tried to rush a vote on the deal.
Apple has denied rushing the vote, and said part-time workers could specify four or more days of availability. They also get schedules two weeks in advance. In a statement to The Times, the iPhone maker maintains that it’s “among the highest-paying” companies in Australia and has made “many” improvements to its benefits.
The strike and task refusals were spurred in part by labor action in the US. There, workers at an increasing number of Apple stores have tried to join unions with varying success. Team members at a Towson, Maryland store managed to unionize, but reports surfaced that Apple was supposedly withholding benefits while negotiations with the union took place. At many stores, the company has apparently pushed anti-union talking points that suggested formal representation could make things worse. There’s no certainty American employees will strike like their Australian counterparts, but it’s evident that the outcry is getting louder.
The James Webb Space Telescope’s sightseeing tour just provided a fresh look at one of the most recognizable interstellar objects. Researchers have captured their most detailed image yet of the Pillars of Creation, a star-forming nursery in the Eagle Nebula roughly 6,500 light-years away. The near-infrared picture shows even more detail than Hubble’s 2014 snapshot, with an abundance of stars (particularly newborns) in view — there isn’t even a galaxy within sight.
The new stars are the bright red points of light in the scene and are estimated to be ‘just’ a few hundred thousand years old. The red glow of the pillars, not to mention the wavy lines at some edges, are the result of jets and bow shocks that energize hydrogen and push it outward. You don’t see galaxies as the gas and dust of the Milky Way’s interstellar medium blocks more distant objects in such a dense area.
Hubble first imaged the Pillars of Creation in 1995 (see below), but the technology at the time revealed only a fraction of the stars in the region. The 2014 re-do provided considerably more detail, but the visible light snapshot still left the pillars relatively opaque and hid some of the forming stars. The James Webb observation is, in essence, a more complete representation of the nursery’s activity.
This enhanced capture isn’t just meant for show. Scientists hope to revise their star formation models thanks to Webb’s more accurate data for stars, gas and dust. That could improve humanity’s understanding of early star life and, in turn, the universe at large.
The former vice president has declined to reveal whether he’s running for president in 2024.