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Sunday, 28 February 2021

Rare Diseases Day 2021: 'Orphans' of the health system, DMD patients are denied access to diagnosis, timely treatment

Any disease that affects a small percentage of the population is a rare disease. In many parts of the world, they also go by the term 'orphan disease’, for the lack of a market large enough to capture the support and resources needed to develop treatments for them. Most rare diseases are genetic, and present throughout a person's lifetime, even if symptoms do not immediately appear. Many rare diseases appear early on in life, and about 30 percent of children with rare diseases will die before reaching their fifth birthday.

The number of people in the world living with a rare disease is estimated to be between 300 and 350 million. This figure has often been used by the rare disease community to highlight that while individual diseases – though rare – add up to a huge population of people with rare diseases. With its sizeable population, India has an increased frequency of rare diseases when compared to the rest of the world. Due to the low prevalence of individual diseases, medical expertise is rare, knowledge is scarce, care offerings inadequate, and research limited. Despite the large overall estimate, patients with rare disease are the orphans of health systems, often denied diagnosis, treatment, and the benefits of research.

Relatively common symptoms can hide underlying rare diseases leading to misdiagnosis and delaying treatment. Typically a disabling or debilitating illness, the quality of life of a person living with a rare disease is affected by the absence of autonomy from any progressive, degenerative and occasionally life-threatening aspects of the disease.

It is estimated that every day in India, over 50 male babies are born with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). We do not have any empirical epidemiological data of the DMD prevalence in India  from 2020, but it is estimated that there are between 4 and 5 lakh children suffering from DMD at any given time – roughly a fifth (20 percent) of the global DMD population. The burden in India is made greater than in Western countries by inadequate diagnostic facilities, management and rehabilitation facilities that cater to rare diseases.

Rare diseases, in numbers. Image Credit: Novartis/Pinterest

Genetic disorders get relatively little attention because of the mistaken perception (of health planners, clinicians and the general public) that inherited diseases are very rare – affecting only a small proportion of people and, even if diagnosed, is untreatable. But for the families concerned, they represent a substantial, continuing burden, unlike infectious diseases, which generally manifest only for a limited period.

The plight of those suffering from DMD is on multiple levels in India. The access to diagnostics and procedures is not available across all levels of society and in non-metro areas which make up the maximum amount of the country, there is almost no genetic diagnosis available at all.

Even in metro cities blood tests done in different diagnostic centres even prove to be inconclusive. Post-diagnosis, clinicians who knew about the disease and gave guidance on steps to take are extremely hard to come by. The number of paediatricians who are unable to diagnose DMD till a late stage of disease is alarmingly high. This can be put down to lack of awareness.

India has the second largest population in the world; yet, no comprehensive database for neuromuscular disorders is available. There are still families out there with no idea about the disease, much less how to manage it. In the rare event of the family having access to diagnostics and are able to get an understanding doctor the costs of treatment are sky-high. With the expense in foreign countries reaching hundreds of thousands of dollars per year it is close to impossible for a family to support the treatment here in India.

The Government of India's identification of non-communicable diseases as a target for intervention is a welcome one, but extends to cancer, diabetes mellitus, coronary heart disease and stroke, but not genetic disorders. If real progress is to be made, genetic disorders needs to be brought in to the fold.


In August 2000, my wife and were euphoric as our son Karanveer came into this world, bawling his lungs out. Everything was new again, and every day a new adventure. As Karan became older, we grew content and happy in our small world. He would babble, crawl, want to play, sleep and eat much like any other child his age. Like his peers, he would fall down and play. We lovingly thought he was a bit clumsy when he fell often. There were subtle changes as he grew, like trouble climbing stairs, getting up from the floor or running. He would walk on his toes or the balls of his feet with a slightly waddling gait. We presumed he had a small problem in his feet, and doctor visits with the promise of butter chicken on the way back, didn’t bring us the speedy conclusion we had hoped for.

Karanveer, 18. Image Credit: Ajay Sukumaran

We traversed the length and breadth of the country looking for a cure or at the very least find out the cause of the problem. Faith healing, Homeopathy, Ayurveda, Allopathy, Unani – we tried them all, to no avail. He was prescribed vitamins, exercise, changes in diet and a lot more. General practitioners, orthopedicians, paediatricians each giving their own opinions, asking for blood test after another, electromyography (EMG) and more, without a satisfactory answer. Tests in textbooks, treatments unheard of and renown – we tried them all, and with each new treatment that fairled, despaired of ever finding a cure.

We eventually met a renowned paediatric neurologist in Chennai. He put Karan at ease, was interactive, did a lot of poking and prodding and gradually grew contemplative towards the end. He recommended a blood test to aid in diagnosis and delivered a nasty shock. We were taken aback when we were told that Karan had Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), a rare disease where a protein called dystrophin – essential for proper muscle function – was lower than normal. In other words, he was wheelchair-bound for most of his life, after which he would become bedridden.

What would you do if your child was diagnosed with a condition that that most people haven’t heard of? One that progressively worsens and doesn’t yet, have a cure? For decades the health ministry has been focussed on more prominent diseases like heart diseases, diabetes, cancer, and tuberculosis. They seem to have left behind the 70 million who suffer from 7,000-odd rare diseases, that also need medical treatments and disease management.

Stumbling, falling and breaking in search of hope, we ultimately decided to do it ourselves. The Dystrophy Annihilation Research Trust (DART) was founded after scouring the country in search of help for Karan. We have recruited people qualified to run a research lab, places it could be set up, necessary equipment and chemicals, collaborations with researchers abroad, and more. Non-profits have limitations, with whopping costs for drug-development supported by donations. DART is the first lab in India focusing on muscular dystrophy (MD).

We are a group of skilled professionals working towards achieving a realistic treatment option to alleviate and reverse the dystrophy condition at the genetic level thereby enhancing the quality of life of existing patients. DART hopes to change the course of DMD and, ultimately, to find a cure. The hope and motivation fuelling the initiative is that someday, children with DMD will be free of wheelchairs and restrictions and can play, run and walk like children everywhere do. The long-term goal is to develop a cost-effective treatment, as quickly as possible, to relieve the suffering of DMD children and families alike.

DART also performs a common platform for counselling and support for patients with Muscular Dystrophy and their families, as well as to create awareness of the available treatments, and drug trials. Last but not least, DART also facilitate research into alleviating the scourge of muscular dystrophy. 

The author is President of the Dystrophy Annihilation Research Trust (DART).



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Bitcoin sell-off over? Strong 'buy the dip' signal flashes for the first time in 5 months

Bitcoin is retesting a key support level at $44K-$45K for the third time in the past week.



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Professional traders need a global crypto sea, not hundreds of lakes

The cryptocurrency trading market is in its early stages, with regulations playing a key role in market fragmentation.



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We have telescopes in space, rovers on other worlds... our search for alien life continues

For more than a century, our imagination has fuelled our search for aliens. We have envisioned them as giant robots, little green men, or slimy creatures. After the two World Wars, humanity’s technological progress sky-rocketed, quite literally, opening a new horizon for exploration: space. It was time to move beyond gazing upwards – our rockets could take orbiters, rovers and eventually, people, to worlds that could, or may be, harbouring life. The stage was set for our encounters with aliens to take place. Our machines have been landing on Mars, flying past all the planets in our solar system, and observing the stars and planets in deep space for over 45 years now. Even with all this progress, our guess as to whether aliens exist is as good as it was a century ago.

A signpost at Space World in Kitakyusyu, Japan. Image Credit: Ai Takeda/Unsplash

In the 1950s, over a casual lunch conversation, a scientist called Fermi brought up the high likelihood for Earth-like life to exist in the Universe with the innumerable number of stars and planets in the Universe, and the simultaneous lack of evidence to support it. Coined the Fermi paradox, this inconsistency something that motivated (and demotivated) communicators to think about Aliens for the years to come. In 2017, a travelling piece of space rubble was spotted from 85 times the Earth-Moon distance away. For its unusual characteristics, the object known as 'Oumuamua became a sensation. It’s size, wobble and acceleration were unusual for interstellar objects – hard to explain by conventional standards. A popular recent hypothesis regarding it being a product of an alien construct, led by Harvard professor Avi Loeb, was widely shared in the international media. It was generally shot down by the scientific community as "insufficient evidence to support such a premise", since science demands hard, incontrovertible proof, even if the process to get to it is cumbersome.

An illustration of ‘Oumuamua, the first object we’ve ever seen pass through our own solar system that has interstellar origins. Image credit: European Southern Observatory/M. Kornmesser

So why are aliens so hard to find?

Space is vast. It takes years to build missions, launch them, and travel to worlds that appear promising. Space is also risky, and getting a spacecraft to enter the right orbit around a planet or land safely on its surface is a complex business to which tens of missions have been lost over the decades. On arriving, the search for ancient relics or by-products of simple microbial life is priority. The information at these nascent stages of exploration is hard to decipher, and often leaves plenty of room for speculation and doubt. We are getting better at unravelling these clues with experience, but reaching the limits of what is possible with the instruments at hand. Fitted on low-powered, small, automatic rovers that are millions of kilometers away from us, the scope of exploration is fairly limited. For the moment, our best bet is returning samples from these worlds back to us, to study on Earth.

With the Perseverance (Percy) rover, which made a safe landing on 18 February, NASA is aiming to inch us forward by returning samples from our near neighbour Mars. The SUV-sized rover packs a drill on its back and a helicopter under its belly, designed to drive around its landing site in Jezero Crater. The crater was once home to a lake that had dramatic streams filling up its floor – an exciting place to look for traces or deposits of biological activity. Shortly after the landing, we gorged on never-before-seen footage of a rover landing on the surface of Mars, kicking up dust in the process. As it settled, the panoramic photos of the surrounding environment show the arena that could perhaps finally ascertain if Mars once had life.

Also read: Stunning 360-degree panorama captured by Perseverance of its Mars landing site

We are still unsure what to expect. Would life on Mars be like that on Earth? Or are we about to uncover a completely new form of life? If we did, would it be a simple or complex life form? We know that the complexity of life on Earth arose from the long periods of habitable conditions on Earth. Was it the same on Mars? Does life evolve differently on different planets? Zoologist & astrobiologist Arik Kershenbaum at Cambridge University studies vocal communication of wolves and dolphins. He offers an interesting view on understanding the process of life, explaining that there is much to learn from animals on Earth, to help determine the different characteristics of extraterrestrial life motion, communication, socialising, intelligence, etc. Most studies of extraterrestrial life is based on simple microbial life – their cell structures, their metabolism, preferences for certain environments, etc.

"Problems like finding food, avoiding becoming someone else’s food, and reproducing. These Earthly problems are also problems that need to be solved on alien worlds," Kershenbaum writes in a story for BBC's Science Focus magazine.

So the search is on, both at the micro level, looking at how simple life on Earth deals with harsh environments, as well as macro, looking at giant suns in deep space and their planets where statistically-likely alien life awaits. Just in the last 50 years, we have discovered the wealth of life teeming on Earth in the most unexpected dark, deep, dry, wet, cold and toxic of places. This has motivated us to look far and wide – from clouds in the thick Venusian atmosphere, to subsurface water columns on Mars; from liquid methane rivers on Titan, to underwater hydrothermal vents on Europa or Enceladus.

The scientific community is divided on their understanding of the origin of life on Earth. Some talk about black smokers, or hydrothermal vents at the bottom of frigid cold oceans, teeming with simple and complex life. Recent evidence from the ancient outback of Australia points towards a more terrestrial origin, on beaches and terrestrial hot springs. Natural environments offer analogue scenarios for scientists to test their experiment plans and for engineers to train their instruments before they are packed up and flown to space. In India, Ladakh offers a unique cold, high altitude environment with glacial pools, salt-water lakes, hot springs and frozen soils – an excellent Mars analogue, only recently being recognized, after international expeditions since August 2016 to the region.

Astrobiology as a field attracts people from all walks of life, professions, ages, and regions: for many this is the crux of their excitement about space and its exploration. It humbles us, inspires us and awakens us from our usually monotonous Earthly troubles, makes us strain our short-sightedness and self-centred tendencies. So do we know when will we meet aliens? No. Does this excite us or bore us? Will we ever be able to find an answer? With the increasing popularity of the subject, more minds will hopefully get to task and help us answer this question for once and for all.

From 2021, a five-month Earth and Space Exploration Program, led by Amity University Mumbai for students, teachers and travellers that want to explore the terrain in Ladakh in an expedition led by leading astrobiologists and earth scientists. The program is a great pathway for students to pursue an exciting career in Earth and Space Sciences, and for space enthusiasts to get a taste of the not-so-distant future, when space exploration is open to civilians as the scientists and engineers in the space race. 

The author is the Head of Amity University's Centre of Excellence in Astrobiology. He tweets at @siddharthpandey.



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Bitcoin plunges, Ethereum suffers, Musk loses billions: Hodler’s Digest, Feb. 21–27



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This bullish Bitcoin options strategy lets traders speculate on BTC price with less risk

Hate being liquidated? Here’s how traders use the Long Butterfly options strategy to generate profits with less downside risk.



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Economist warns of dystopia if ‘Bitcoin Aristocrats’ become reality

Critics of the digital currency have visions of the future every bit as silly as maximalists'.



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6 Questions for Kain Warwick of Synthetix



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Saturday, 27 February 2021

Institutions and miners accumulating through Bitcoin chop; whales uncertain

Bitcoin in, and Bitcoin out: major players are deploying different strategies as BTC consolidates well under $58,400 highs.



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Is Bitcoin at risk of another drop below $40K in a historically corrective March?

Bitcoin is showing signs of weakness as February draws to a close.



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Moving beyond the crisis narrative: Crypto in a post-pandemic world

Over the last decade, crypto has weathered what feels like crisis after crisis. It’s time to think about what comes next.



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While Washington dithers, Wyoming and other US states mine for crypto gold

While Wyoming was luring crypto businesses, such as Ripple Labs, New York’s AG was bringing enforcement action against Bitfinex.



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What DeFi needs to do next to keep institutional players interested

In order for DeFi to have access to institutional actors, it will need to adapt. But by adapting, it might lose some of its core tenets.



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Grayscale's Bitcoin premium has dropped to record lows below zero

Grayscale Investments’ GBTC might be the absolute market leader but it is currently trading below fair value as the TSX Purpose Bitcoin ETF is seeing record inflows.



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How audio chatrooms like Clubhouse are tapping anew into the age-old appeal of the human voice

By Damian Radcliffe

Google “What is Clubhouse?” and you’ll find a flurry of articles written in the past few weeks about this fast-growing social network. It’s not yet a year old, and much of the buzz stems from the fact that Clubhouse is invite-only, bringing with it an element of exclusivity.

Clubhouse’s key attribute is its medium: audio, which sets it apart from established social media and messaging services like Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, WhatsApp and YouTube that use text, photos, video or a mix. Clubhouse combines the structure of old-school text chatrooms with the immediacy and emotion of the human voice.

The social media service is tapping into the creativity, intimacy and authenticity that audio can deliver, a trend that lies at the heart of the current golden age of podcasting.

Amid the hype, Clubhouse faces privacy and harassment challenges that could make it difficult for the company to maintain a trajectory that has seen it grow from 1,500 users and a US$100 million valuation in May 2020 to 2 million weekly active users and a potential $1 billion valuation.

How it works

Once you’ve scored yourself an invite, the app is pretty easy to navigate. You can look in your calendar to find conversations based on your interests, which you identify at sign-up. Or you can browse “rooms” with discussions currently in progress. You can also set up your own event. Rooms can be public or private, you can listen quietly or join the conversation, and you can enter and leave rooms at will.

Activities typically range from interviews to panel events and wide-ranging discussions. Some efforts are even more ambitious; at the end of last year a group of Clubhouse members put on two performances of Lion King: The Musicalfeaturing actors, narrators and a choir.

 What’s the appeal?

Exclusivity, media buzz, engagement from Tesla founder Elon Musk and high-profile investment from venture capitalists have all helped pique interest in the app. As a scholar who studies storytelling, I’ve identified three other factors that may contribute to its ongoing appeal.

First, audio is an intimate medium. You can hear the inflections in people’s tone of voice, which convey emotion and personality in a way that text alone does not. If you make a joke or are sarcastic over a text or email, your attempt at humor can easily fall flat or be misinterpreted. That is less likely when people can hear you.

Moreover, hearing from people directly can generate empathy and understanding – on tough topics that listeners might have become desensitized to, such as bereavement, addiction and suicide – in a way that text alone cannot.

Second, there’s serendipity. Although events and structured conversations are increasingly held on Clubhouse, you can wander around, dropping into rooms on topics ranging from hip-hop to health tech.

Eavesdropping on random conversations brings with it a certain unpredictability. It’s hard to know where to look for quality conversations, which is why the network is proposing to develop a “Creators” programme designed to nurture “Clubhouse Influencers.” But sometimes frivolous and trivial is fine. After all, it would be exhausting to listen to TED Talks 24/7.

This unstructured approach has an appeal at a time when people’s media habits are increasingly governed by algorithms, making it hard to bump into something new.

Finally, there’s the fact that audio is a great background medium. I grew up in a household where public radio, the BBC in my case, was always playing in the kitchen. Audio is perfect for multitasking. People listen to it while commuting to work, sitting at their desks or walking the dog.

Clubhouse taps into these elements, and at a time when many people are deprived of pre-pandemic levels of human contact, it enables a plurality of voices and human experiences to babble away in the background.

Major growing pains

Clubhouse is expanding quickly, bringing with it increased scrutiny. The company is facing issues such as managing misinformation that are familiar to many other social networks.

In an unregulated space, people can say what they want. This has implications for fact-checking and content moderation, enabling conspiracy theories to potentially run rife. Journalists and users have reported issues of harassment, anti-Semitism, misogyny and racism, though these are against Clubhouse’s community guidelines.

Privacy and security concerns also abound. Chats have been rebroadcast online. Earlier in the month, the Stanford Internet Observatory revealed security flaws that meant user data was vulnerable and accessible to the Chinese government. The app may fall foul of data protection rules in Europe, known as GDPR.

Other commentators have expressed concern about the fact that users hand over the contact details of everyone in their phones when they sign up.

 The app is also available for iPhone users only, which means that it doesn’t work on other devices. That’s a problem, given that more than 70 percent of the world is on Android, Google’s mobile operating system.

Meanwhile, closing an account also appears to be more problematic than it should be.

Riding the audio wave

Whether people will still be talking about Clubhouse six months from now remains to be seen. What is clear, however, is that the attention the app is getting is part of a wider reinvention and reinvigoration of the audio medium that’s been playing out over the past few years.

Podcasting has continued to expand. More than a million podcasts are already available, and for audio streaming services like Spotify, podcasts are at the heart of their strategy for growth.

Meanwhile, Audible – Amazon’s audiobook service – is expanding around the world, and smart speakers like Amazon Echo and Google Home are among the fastest-growing technologies of all time, enabling users to listen to music, podcasts or the latest weather report on demand.

It’s not just Clubhouse that is seeking to harness this trend. Facebook is reported to be creating a Clubhouse clone, while Twitter Spaces is the microblogging network’s latest foray into the audio space. The tech industry analyst Jeremiah Owyang has identified more than 30 social audio efforts, calling it a “‘Goldilocks’ medium for the 2020s: text is not enough, and video is too much; social audio is just right.”

Humans have felt the need to connect and tell stories since time immemorial. This is audio’s secret sauce, driving much of the renewed interest in the medium. Clubhouse may be today’s digital campfire, but it’s highly unlikely to be the last.The Conversation

Damian Radcliffe is Carolyn S. Chambers Professor in Journalism, University of Oregon

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.



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Crypto can be lucrative, but make sure you’re ready for the taxman

Investing in digital assets can offer a plethora of opportunities, but when the taxman comes, investors best be prepared.



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Increasing stock market volatility drags Bitcoin and altcoin prices lower

Growing concerns over rising U.S. Treasury yields are putting pressure on global financial markets and possibly dragging cryptocurrency prices lower.



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Friday, 26 February 2021

Cyberpunk 2077 Patch 1.2 gets delayed due to CD Projekt hack, won't be released until later this March

CD Projekt’s Cyberpunk 2077 recently announced that the big bug fix update, also known as patch 1.2, won't be coming until the second half of March. The company made the announcement on Twitter. This was followed after the company's earlier announcement that it was targeted by a massive ransomware attack. The company stated that it needs more time for the patch to be released, which was originally scheduled to come this month. After initial issues with both the PC version and console, CD Projekt on 9 February announced that it was attacked by ransomware.

The attacker had claimed to have copied the CD Projekt’s internal source code which includes Cyberpunk 2077, Gwent, Witcher 3, and the unreleased version of Witcher 3 that could be the next-gen edition of the game which might come later this year. The attacker also noted had access to other documents pertaining to the company's administration, accounting, legal, HR, finance, investor relations that were threatened to be released.

The company said that it wouldn't give in to the demands nor negotiate, being aware that it might lead to the release of the compromised data.

The new patch is expected to fix the main, bothersome bug that was introduced via version 1.1 patch that prevents the storyline from progressing when the character is supposed to receive a call from Takemura - but never happens.

With less than a week after the company released modding tools, it asked users to be cautious against using mods from unknown sources, after discovering a vulnerability. Seems like, the fix will be coming only at the end of March.



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How will COVID-19 vaccines adapt to the new COVID-19 variants emerging?

How would COVID-19 vaccine makers adapt to variants? By tweaking their vaccines, a process that should be easier than coming up with the original shots. Viruses constantly mutate as they spread, and most changes aren’t significant. First-generation COVID-19 vaccines appear to be working against today’s variants, but makers already are taking steps to update their recipes if health authorities decide that’s needed. COVID-19 vaccines by Pfizer and Moderna are made with new technology that’s easy to update. The so-called mRNA vaccines use a piece of genetic code for the spike protein that coats the coronavirus, so your immune system can learn to recognize and fight the real thing.

If a variant with a mutated spike protein crops up that the original vaccine can’t recognize, companies would swap out that piece of genetic code for a better match — if and when regulators decide that’s necessary.

Updating other COVID-19 vaccines could be more complex. The AstraZeneca vaccine, for example, uses a harmless version of a cold virus to carry that spike protein gene into the body. An update would require growing cold viruses with the updated spike gene.

The Food and Drug Administration said studies of updated COVID-19 vaccines won’t have to be as large or long as for the first generation of shots. Instead, a few hundred volunteers could receive experimental doses of a revamped vaccine and have their blood checked for signs it revved up the immune system as well as the original vaccines.

More difficult is deciding if the virus has morphed enough to modify shots.

Globally, health authorities will monitor coronavirus mutations to spot vaccine-resistant mutations. They’d also have to decide whether any revamped vaccine should protect against more than one variant.

Overall the process would be similar to what already happens with flu vaccine. Influenza viruses mutate much faster than coronaviruses, so flu shots are adjusted every year and must protect against multiple strains.

Also read: COVID-19 jargon: Variant, strain and mutation of SARS-CoV-2 all mean different things



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One of Switzerland’s leading banks now offers crypto trading

Bordier & Cie partners with digital asset bank Sygnum to offer crypto trading to clients.



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Australia passes media law that requires tech firms to pay for news: Will the system be replicated globally?

Australia passed a groundbreaking law on Thursday, forcing tech giants to pay for news shared on their networks. After months of tense negotiation, the government agreed to water down elements of the new law in exchange for Facebook and Google agreeing to payment deals with struggling local media firms – seen as a potential model for companies around the world who have seen their advertising revenues decimated by the rise of internet platforms.

Here is where the situation stands in other countries:

Britain

The British government announced a new Digital Markets Unit in November to introduce and enforce "a new code to govern the behaviour of platforms that currently dominate the market, such as Google and Facebook." The unit is set to begin work in April. Though it will primarily look at tech firms' use of data for advertising, it is also charged with finding ways to support news publishers, but it is not yet clear if this will involve direct fees to tech platforms, or how news publishers will be defined.

Canada

Canada appears keen to follow the Australian lead. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau discussed the issue directly with his Australian counterpart Scott Morrison by phone on Tuesday. His office said: "They agreed to continue coordinating efforts to address online harm and ensure the revenues of web giants are shared more fairly with creators and media."

Microsoft is teaming up with EU publishers to push for a system to make big tech platforms pay for news. Image: tech2/Nandini Yadav

European Union

The EU is already on the path to gaining compensation for its media companies after introducing "neighbouring rights" in 2019, which call for payment for showing news content in internet searches. Google strongly opposed the law, but has lately signed deals with newspapers and media groups in France to pay digital copyright payments based on viewing figures and the amount of information published.

The European Commission is also on the offensive with two new directives in the works – the Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act – aimed at ensuring stricter control of illegal content and creating more transparency and choice for businesses operating online.

(Also read: Microsoft, EU publishers push for Australia-like system to make big tech platforms pay for news)

New Zealand

Australia's neighbour has yet to comment on the situation. But local media bosses said Wednesday that they would press the issue with the government, which is currently seeking advice on the topic.

United States

In the US, the debate on tech regulation is currently focused on the burning question of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act 1996, which frees tech companies from any liability over inflammatory or dangerous content shared on their platforms, which President Joe Biden has expressed a desire to reform. But momentum is also growing behind a bill introduced by Democrats, the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act 2019, which would allow newspapers to form a collective bargaining group to negotiate with tech platforms.



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FDA approves storage of Pfizer COVID-19 vials at normal freezer temperature

Frozen vials of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine may be stored at temperatures commonly found in pharmaceutical freezers for a period of up to two weeks, the US Food and Drug Administration said Thursday. The move loosens a previous requirement that the vaccine should be stored at ultra-low temperatures, between -112 and -76 degrees Fahrenheit (-80 to -60 degrees Celsius). "The alternative temperature for transportation and storage will help ease the burden of procuring ultra-low cold storage equipment for vaccination sites and should help to get vaccine to more sites," said Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.

The FDA said it would update its fact sheet for health care providers accordingly.

Pharmaceutical freezers commonly operate at around -4 degrees Fahrenheit (-20 degrees Celsius).

A nurse holds a vial of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at Guy's Hospital in London, Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2020, as the U.K. health authorities rolled out a national mass vaccination program. Image credit: AP Photo/Frank Augstein

The move came after Pfizer submitted a request based on its research on the vaccine’s stability under the warmer temperature.

The Pfizer vaccine is based on new technology that uses synthetic mRNA (messenger ribonucleic acid) molecules to deliver the genetic instructions for human cells to create a part of the coronavirus.

The mRNA molecules are encased in particles of fat to protect them, but they still degrade more quickly than traditional vaccines and so require stricter storage measures.

Once thawed, the vials can be stored at fridge temperatures of 35 to 46 degrees Fahrenheit (2 to 8 degrees Celsius) for up to five days.

They can be kept at room temperature for no more than two hours.



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Spotify tests new redesigned UI for library with artists, playlists, podcasts, and albums categories: Report

Spotify has started testing a new interface for its library that will make it easy for users to view content on the app. The new interface displays all the content ranging from podcasts to music in one feed, in both grid and list layouts. Spotted by Android Police, the new Spotify library now shows different categories for artists, playlists, podcasts, and albums on top in a more evident way. The feed also shows playlists, songs, podcasts, albums, and artists based on how lately they were played.

Spotify.

The new UI shows the 'create playlist' option moved to the top right corner and has a new search button just next to it.

There is also a category for downloaded content that appears on top among the different bubbles for other content. On tapping, it shows the downloaded content for offline listening.

New Spotify playlist layout. Image: Android Police

Android Police notes that, while it does show offline playlists, the interface also displays the content and not just the downloaded songs, making it easier to navigate the downloaded content that the users have to access by tapping on the filter button.

For now, the testing seems to be limited and there is no word on when the feature would be rolled out for users. Spotify didn't even mention the new UI during its recent Stream On event.

According to the XDA Developers report, Spotify is also working on an option for users to share lyrics on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. For now, the music streaming service only allows users to share songs on social networks.



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NASA shares stunning 360-degree panorama of Perseverance Mars rover's landing site

The US space agency NASA released a spectacular panoramic view on Wednesday of the landing site of the Perseverance rover on Mars. The panorama shows the rim of the Jezero Crater where the rover touched down last week and the cliff face of an ancient river delta in the distance. It was taken by rotating the rover's mast 360 degrees. The mast is equipped with dual, zoomable cameras which can take high-definition video and images. The panorama is composed of 142 individual images stitched together on Earth, Nasa said.

"We're nestled right in a sweet spot, where you can see different features similar in many ways to features found by Spirit, Opportunity, and Curiosity at their landing sites," said Jim Bell of Arizona State University's School of Earth and Space Exploration.

It can been seen here.

Spirit, Opportunity and Curiosity were previous missions to Mars.

NASA said the rover's cameras will help scientists assess the geologic history and atmospheric conditions of Jezero Crater and identify rocks and sediment worthy of a closer examination and collection for eventual return to Earth.

On Monday, the US space agency released the first audio from Mars, a faint crackling recording of a gust of wind captured by the rover's microphone.

NASA also released video of the landing of the rover, which is on a mission to search for signs of past life on the Red Planet.



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Twitter is planning to offer a paid service called Super Follow which will let users charge for content

Twitter said Thursday it plans to offer a subscription service in which users would pay for special content from high-profile accounts, part of an economic model to diversify its revenue. The globally popular social media platform announced the potential new Super Follows service at its annual investor meeting, as it searches for new revenue streams beyond targeted advertising. "Exploring audience funding opportunities like Super Follows will allow creators and publishers to be directly supported by their audience and will incentivize them to continue creating content that their audience loves," a Twitter spokesperson told AFP.

Image: Twitter

Top Twitter executives discussed Super Follows while outlining goals and plans for the near future during the streamed presentation. "We are examining and rethinking the incentives of our service – the behaviours that our product features encourage and discourage as people participate in conversation on Twitter," the spokesperson said.

Super Follows was described during the presentation as a way for Twitter audiences to financially support creators and receive newsletters, exclusive content and even virtual badges in exchange.

Twitter, which currently makes money from ads and promoted posts, might be able to add additional revenue via the Super Follows transactions.

Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi was not convinced people will be inclined to pay for special content on Twitter.

Such a model makes sense for content on platforms like YouTube, where hours of craftsmanship might be devoted to producing entertaining videos, but it is debatable whether the same could be said for tweets on Twitter, she said. No timeline was given for when Super Follows might become a feature, but it is expected that the tech giant will make further announcements in the coming months.

Building communities

Twitter is also considering allowing users to join communities devoted to topics via a feature seemingly similar to Facebook's "groups."

Twitter aims to reach a milestone of 315 million "monetisable" users in 2023, a steep increase from the 192 million it had at the end of last year, according to a filing with US financial markets regulators at the Securities and Exchange Commission. The San Francisco-based firm defined monetizable users as people who log in daily and can be shown ads.

Twitter, like Google and Facebook, makes most of its money from digital advertising.

The company said it is aiming for $7.5 billion in revenue in 2023, more than double the $3.7 billion it took in last year.

Twitter also plans to double "development velocity," meaning the number of new features it releases per employee to get people to engage more with the service.

Twitter is planning to release a new paid service called Super Followers. Image: tech2/Nandini Yadav

Apple bite?

Twitter revenue product lead Bruce Falck told analysts that the tech company was mindful of a potential crimp in revenue that could be caused by new privacy labels Apple is mandating for apps on its mobile devices.

App makers are concerned that the labels will discourage users from allowing collection of data used to more effectively target ads. "It's still too early to tell exactly how this will impact the industry, but it will be felt by the entire industry," Falck said, adding that Twitter was innovating to soften the blow.

Twitter's plan to boost revenue also includes getting more involved in online commerce.

"Imagine easily discovering and quickly purchasing a new skincare product, or trendy sneaker from a brand new follow with only a few clicks," a Twitter executive told analysts.

An area where Twitter is additionally looking to make money is Fleets, a recently added feature where posts and conversations vanish after a day.



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True Wireless Earphones under Rs 5,000: Jays f-Five, Lypertek Levi Review Snapshots

We have two pairs of TWS earbuds, both priced at Rs 4,999, that promise to offer excellent audio output in this segment. While one is light on features, the other boasts of a few extras that are missing in its more expensive sibling along with excellent battery backup. Let us take a closer look at the Jays f-Five and Lypertek Levi true wireless (TWS) earbuds.

Jays f-Five True Wireless Review

Image: Tech2/Ameya Dalvi

The Jays f-Five is a unique case. On paper, it is extremely light on features. There is no IP rating for dust or water resistance, not-so-flattering battery backup figures and no support for even AAC codecs, let alone aptX. A near Rs-5,000 pair of TWS earphones with support for just SBC codecs is borderline blasphemous in this age. But, once you put them on and play some music, all of the above seems to be of little consequence. The Jays f-Five are all about lively sound output and nothing else.

These ‘designed-in-Sweden’ buds have a pleasant exterior and a rugged build. The buds resemble miniature golf clubs and fit snugly in the ear without causing the slightest discomfort. The default mid-sized silicone ear tips offer more than decent passive noise isolation (in my case). They have touch-enabled zones at the back that let you access all the key playback functions such as play/pause, previous/next track and volume control using single, double and triple tap. The touch input is fairly sensitive, and it executes the desired function most of the time, but triple tap can be a hit or a miss until you get the hang of the speed at which you need to tap the buds.

Image: Tech2/Ameya Dalvi

The accompanying charging case is made of good quality plastic with a smooth matte finish. It has four tiny LEDs to give you an idea of the remaining charge. There is a USB-C port at the back to charge the case, which is good to see. The company claims a battery life of 4 hours for the buds, with the case providing three more recharges, thus taking the battery life back to 16 hours. In reality, the Jays f-Five managed to exceed 4 hours every time, and the overall battery backup was upwards of 17 hours. While it is good to see the product exceed set expectations, 4.25 hours (buds) and 17 hours (buds + case) are still average by today’s standards. A minimum of 5 hours and 20 hours are good numbers these days.

Image: Tech2/Ameya Dalvi

Each bud is fitted with a 6 mm driver and weighs less than 9 grams. They are Bluetooth 5.0-compliant and pairing them with the phone was a simple and straightforward process. No issues with the wireless range either, with the buds retaining a strong connection up to 10 metres with a clear line of sight and up to 6 metres with a concrete wall in between. The call quality here is quite good. Both parties are perfectly audible to each other, and there is ample clarity on both sides even in noisy outdoor environments. Some ambient noise does seep through, but it is manageable. The only problem during calls is if you happen to touch the back of the earbuds to adjust them, you will accidentally end the call, because a single tap is assigned to the answer/end call function, which is not a wise decision. Double tap would have been a more logical gesture to end calls. There is no way to change this either.

Moving on to the sound quality, the Jays f-Five is a prime example of how earbuds can sound much better if tuned well, irrespective of the Bluetooth codecs they support. The sound output here is slightly on the warmer side of neutral but generally well-balanced. The bass is punchy but tight and does not overshadow the mids. Vocal clarity is quite good, though not exceptional, and so is the instrument separation for this price segment. The highs have just the right amount of sparkle without being sibilant.

There is a good amount of detail in the audio, and the soundstage is fairly expansive. The output is loud enough upwards of 50 percent volume level and doesn’t crack at high volume, which is another plus. All in all, the sound output is enjoyable across different genres of music. In fact, it sounds better than several TWS earbuds that are compliant with AAC and even aptX codecs in this price bracket.

The Jays f-Five sells for Rs 4,999 with a one-year warranty on Headphone Zone and other online platforms. Although these TWS buds lack a few features such as dust and water resistance and popular codec support, they more than make up for that with their balanced and enjoyable sound output. So, if sound quality is all you care for in your earphones, then the f-Fives are bound to impress you. If you are looking for more features and better battery life, read on.

Pros:

  • Warm and detailed sound output
  • Good design and build quality
  • Comfortable to wear
  • USB-C charging port
  • Good call quality
  • Touch controls with access to all playback options

Cons:

  • No support for aptX or AAC codecs
  • Average battery life
  • No dust or water resistance
  • Accidentally touching the buds during calls causes call drop

Rating: 3.8/5

Price: Rs 4,999

Lypertek Levi Review

Image: Tech2/Ameya Dalvi

The previous product from Lypertek that we reviewed was quite impressive in terms of both sound quality and battery backup. The Tevi also made it to our list of the best earphones of 2020. The Lypertek Levi is a more affordable version of the Tevi. While it is understandably a notch lower in terms of audio quality and battery backup, it adds a few extra features, and yet sells for a couple of thousand rupees less. The Levi misses out on support for aptX codecs, and you have to make do with AAC. Water resistance has been reduced from IPX7 to IPX5, but that is not a big deal.

In exchange, you get wireless Qi charging and an Ambient Sound mode, both of which are missing in the Tevi. The charging case here is a bit too plasticky for my taste, and the finish isn’t that great, either. The case has four LEDs denoting the quantum of charge. You get a USB-C port for charging along with the wireless option. The buds are quite light, fit well in the ear and stay put even during jogs or workouts. With the right-sized silicone ear tips, they provide good passive noise isolation. Unlike the charging case, the build quality and finish of the buds is quite good.

Image: Tech2/Ameya Dalvi

The Lypertek Levi is Bluetooth 5.0-compliant and supports SBC and AAC codecs. Pairing the earphones with the phone was a lot simpler than its sibling, and a fairly standard process. Wireless range is good – close to 10 metres with a clear line of sight – but they start to stutter with a concrete wall in between. As long as the buds and the source device are in the same room, there shouldn't be a problem. These earbuds do get one thing right that the majority of TWS earphones with a physical button do not – the placement of the multi-function button. It is present at the top of the buds instead of at the back. Not only is it more convenient to use, but also doesn’t push the buds deeper into the ear when you press it.

Image: Tech2/Ameya Dalvi

The button lets you adjust the volume, jump to previous/next tracks, play/pause the tracks and answer/end calls. Triple click enables Ambient Sound mode that lets some of the outside sounds in. It is quite handy for when you need to be aware of your surroundings (like when you’re crossing the road or for announcements at airports and train stations), or if you simply need to talk to someone without removing the buds. Each earbud is fitted with a 6 mm dynamic driver to handle the entire frequency range. You get three pairs of regular silicone tips and three more pairs of double flange tips in the package. I prefer the former.

The Lypertek Levi strives for a neutral sound signature, with no particular frequency band getting a boost. The mids are handled wonderfully with great detail in sound. The vocals are as good as I have heard in this price segment. Instrument separation is also impressive. However, the highs can be slightly overbearing at times, and do not have the same resolved detail as in case of the Tevi. The soundstage isn’t the best I have come across in the sub-Rs 5,000 segment and feels crammed.

The bass is tight and reasonably punchy, but not boosted, and those used to bass-heavy earphones may find it inadequate. I found it perfectly fine and it has better presence here than in the more expensive Tevi. It may not please the bassheads, but if you are looking for excellent vocal clarity, I cannot think of anything better for under Rs 5,000. Unfortunately, the same clarity cannot be delivered by the Levi’s microphones, and the call quality is below par. While both parties are audible to each other, you don’t sound all that great.

Though the battery life isn’t in the same league as the Tevi’s, it is quite impressive. The company claims a figure of 8 hours of play time for the buds on a full charge and four more recharges using the case, thus taking the total battery backup to 40 hours. The figures are bang on, and I did manage to get pretty much that out of them when listening at 60 percent volume. That is impressive indeed.

Just like the Jays, the Lypertek Levi, too, sells for Rs 4,999 on Headphone Zone with a one-year warranty. The sound output has a great balance, and the vocal clarity is top-notch. Very rarely do you get a TWS pair in the sub-Rs 5,000 budget that handles midrange frequencies as well as the Levi does. Add to that excellent battery life, wireless charging support, and you have a special product on your hands – if you aren’t a basshead.

Pros:

  • Clear and detailed sound output; impressive vocals
  • Access to all key playback functions
  • IPX5-water resistant
  • Excellent battery life; close to 40 hours with charging case
  • Smart placement of multifunction button
  • Wireless charging
  • Ambient Sound mode

Cons:

  • Can sound a little bright in certain tracks
  • Unimpressive sound stage
  • Questionable build quality of the charging case
  • Below par call quality

Rating: 4/5

Price: Rs 4,999



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What is a COVID-19 vaccine passport? Here are the pros and cons to this unknown, seemingly discriminatory idea

The idea of vaccine passports, which would allow people who have been inoculated the freedom to travel, is gaining traction. While some countries trumpet them as a way out for the hard-hit tourism and airline industries, others are more sceptical with only a tiny percentage of the world's population vaccinated. As European Union leaders debate the idea Thursday amid claims that it could be divisive and discriminatory, we look at the thorny issue.

Sweden and Denmark have already announced electronic certificates that could allow bearers to travel abroad, attend sports or cultural events and even dine in Danish restaurants. Representational iamge.

The backers

EU countries and Gulf emirates that rely on tourism have been the passports' biggest promoters.

Last month Greece called on Brussels to allow "vaccine certificates" for travel within the EU.

And Athens has since signed a deal with Israel to allow vaccinated people to travel between them, with its tourism minister Harry Theocharis floating a similar deal with Britain.

Cyprus — which relies heavily on British tourists — says it is also keen on an agreement with Israel, which is in talks with Malta too.

Spain, Europe's most popular summer sun destination, sees vaccine passports as possibly "a very important element to guarantee a safe return to mobility."

Bulgaria and Italy too say they could pave the way back to "normal activity" .

The Gulf-based airline giants Emirates and Etihad were among the first to say they will test an application that verifies vaccinations.

Nordics almost there

Sweden and Denmark have already announced electronic certificates that could allow bearers to travel abroad, attend sports or cultural events and even dine in Danish restaurants.

Iceland, not a member of the EU but part of its Schengen travel zone, started issuing digital vaccination certificates in January to ease travel between countries.

Poland and Estonia arrivals who show they have been vaccinated or hold a negative Covid test are exempt from quarantine.

WHO: No 'for now'

Estonian firm Guardtime is running a pilot vaccination certification scheme and is working with the World Health Organization (WHO) on extending it internationally.

But while the WHO believes it could help track vaccine rollouts, "for now" they are against using it for travel.

"There are still critical unknowns regarding the efficacy of vaccination in reducing transmission and limited availability of vaccines," it said last month.

According to an AFP tally, only 222 million jabs have so far been given globally — mostly of vaccines that require a second dose — to a world population that now tops 7.8 billion.

More than one in every five people live in countries that have not even started vaccinating.

Too soon

France and Germany are cool on the vaccine passport idea.

"Not everyone has access to vaccines. And we don't know if they prevent transmission," French Health Minister Olivier Veran insisted in January.

The debate should only be broached "in a few months' time", he said.

Germany is also against giving a vaccinated minority privileges denied everyone else.

But it doesn't rule out the private sector doing it.

"If a restaurant wants to open only to vaccinated people, it would be difficult to forbid that," says Justice Minister Christine Lambrecht.

Belgium is likewise baulking at having activities contingent on vaccination "passports".

As of Thursday, at least 10.17 million people across the EU have been fully vaccinated with two doses — only 2.3 percent of the population — according to AFP's tally from official sources.

Airlines eager

Airlines have led the push for vaccine passports, with Australian carrier Qantas the first to call it "a necessity".

Emirates and Etihad, who dominate the Gulf air hubs, said they will trial the digital "IATA Travel Pass" developed by the International Air Transport Association in the next few months, while Air New Zealand signed up to it this week.



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More Aussies invest in cryptocurrency than in gold and silver: Survey

A new poll has found that more Australians invest in cryptocurrencies than in gold and silver .... but only by a tiny margin.



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Off-road-focused KTM 1290 Super Adventure R breaks cover, packs more suspension travel

After a month of unveiling the 1290 Adventure S, which is KTM's interpretation of a sport-tourer, the Austrian motorcycle manufacturer has introduced an off-road biased version called the 1290 Super Adventure R. What it shares with the S trim are the underpinnings that include a shorter frame wherein the steering head has been shifted backwards by 15 mm. Also, to increase the weight bias on the front, the engine's position has been tweaked. Further, the 1290 Adventure R comes with a 23-litre fuel tank which is split into three parts, again as a measure to keep the weight distribution to the optimum However, the area where the R differentiates itself from KTM's tarmac-scorcher is the suspension setup.

KTM's reveal video features Adventure bike guru Chris Birch pushing the 1290 Super Adventure R to its limits, jumping around on rocks and sliding on trails like no other large-capacity adventure motorcycle can. This is a result of the WP XPLOR kit, both in the front and rear with a 48 mm USD fork that features compression and rebound adjustability, which can be done manually with individual dials on each leg. KTM has also increased the suspension travel of the 1290 Super Adventure R to 220 mm from the S' 200 mm. The seat height has been increased by 20 mm to 880 mm, which can be brought down to 869 mm and a further 849 mm. It has 21-inch front and 18-inch rear wire-spoke wheels, as compared to the previous 19-inch front and 17-inch rear.

The 1290 Super Adventure R is KTM's flagship adventure motorcycle. Image: KTM

KTM has also plonked into a host of electronics on the Super Adventure R which mainly include a six-axis IMU controlling the stability control, traction control, slip regulation of the motor as well as off-road ABS. This one too (like the S) comes with multiple ride modes such as Street, Sport, Rain and Off-Road along with an optional Rally mode, all of which essentially alters the throttle response and wheel spin. The features list also includes keyless ignition and 7-inch TFT dash that provides information as well as display for music, phones and navigation, much like the one seen on the KTM 390 Adventure sold in India.

Powering the KTM 1290 Super Adventure R is a 1,301 cc LC8 twin that makes 160 hp of power and 9,000 rpm and generates 138 Nm of torque at 6,500 rpm. These figures are greater than the recently unveiled Harley-Davidson Pan America 1250. However, it falls short when compared to Ducati's latest, the Multistrada V4, that makes 170 hp of power. The BS6-compliant engine in the Super Adventure R has been tweaked with a lighter crank case and updated pistons. KTM claims to have made changes to the exhaust and the transmission unit as well. However, KTM India is unlikely to bring the 1290 Super Adventure R to our shores anytime soon.



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Ash and lava: Mount Etna eruption wows onlookers but causes no destruction, death

Mount Etna, the volcano that towers over eastern Sicily, evokes superlatives. It is Europe’s most active volcano and also the continent’s largest. And the fiery, noisy show of power it puts on for days or weeks, even years every so often, is always super spectacular. Fortunately, Etna’s latest eruption captivating the world’s attention has caused neither injuries nor evacuation. But each time it roars back into dramatic action, it wows onlookers and awes geologists who spend their careers monitoring it's every quiver, rumble and belch.

Mount Etna, Europe’s most active volcano, spews ash and lava, as seen from Catania, southern Italy, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021. Mount Etna in Sicily, southern Italy, has roared back into spectacular volcanic action, sending up plumes of ash and spewing lava. (Davide Anastasi/LaPresse via AP)

What's happening now?

On 16 February, Etna erupted, sending up high fountains of lava, which rolled down the mountain’s eastern slope toward the uninhabited Bove Valley, which is five kilometres (three miles) wide and eight kilometres (five miles) long. The volcano has belched out ash and lava stones that showered the southern side.

The activity has been continuing since, in bursts more or less intense. The flaming lava lights up the night sky in shocking hues of orange and red. There’s no telling how long this round of exciting activity will last, say volcanologists who work at the Etna Observatory run by the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology.

While public fascination began with the first dramatic images this month, the explosive activity began in September 2019, becoming much stronger two months ago. The current activity principally involves the south-east crater, which was created in 1971 from a series of fractures.

Hard to miss

Etna towers 3,350 meters (around 11,050 feet) above sea level and is 35 kilometres (22 miles) in diameter, although the volcanic activity has changed the mountain’s height over time.

Occasionally, the airport at Catania, eastern Sicily’s largest city, has to close down for hours or days, when ash in the air makes flying in the area dangerous. Early in this recent spell of eruptive activity, the airport closed briefly.

But for pilots and passengers flying to and from Catania at night when the volcano is calmer, a glimpse of fiery red in the dark sky makes for an exciting sight.

Living with a volcano

With Etna’s lava flows largely contained to its uninhabited slopes, life goes in towns and villages elsewhere on the mountain. Sometimes, like in recent days, lava stones rain down on streets, bounce off cars and rattle roofs.

But many residents generally find that a small inconvenience when weighed against the benefits the volcano brings. Lava flows have left fertile farmland. Apple and citrus trees flourish. Etna red and whites are some of Sicily’s most popular wines, from grapes grown on the volcanic slopes.

Tourism rakes in revenues. Hikers and backpackers enjoy views of the oft-puffing mountain and the sparkling Ionian Sea below. For skiers who want uncrowded slopes, Etna’s a favourite.

It can be deadly

Inspiring ancient Greek legends, Etna has had scores of known eruptions in its history. An eruption in 396 B.C. has been credited with keeping the army of Carthage at bay.

In 1669, in what has been considered the volcano’s worst known eruption, lava buried a swath of Catania, about 23 kilometres (15 miles) away and devastated dozens of villages. An eruption in 1928 cut off a rail route circling the mountain’s base.

More recently, in 1983, dynamite was used to divert lava threatening inhabited areas. In 1992, the army built an earthen wall to contain the lava, flowing from Etna for months, from hitting Zafferana Etnea, a village of a few thousand people. At one point, the smoking lava stopped two kilometres (just over a mile) from the edge of town.

Over the last century, a hiccup in geological time, low-energy explosive eruptions and lava flows, both fed from the summit and side vents, have characterized Etna.

Also read: Sicilians 'not worried' that Mount Etna is erupting as they have 'seen worse'



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Teen angst? T-Rex, other large dinosaurs out-competed smaller rival species, study finds

A team of US scientists has demonstrated that the offspring of huge carnivorous dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus rex, who grew from the size of house cats to towering monsters, reshaped their ecosystems by out-competing smaller rival species. Their study, published in the journal Science on Thursday, helps answer an enduring mystery about the 150-million-year rule of dinosaurs: why were there many more large species compared to small, which is the opposite of what we see in land animals today?

Dinosaurs were not particularly diverse: there are only some 1,500 known species, compared to tens of thousands of modern mammalian and bird species.

"Dinosaur communities were like shopping malls on a Saturday afternoon, jam-packed with teenagers," said Kat Schroeder, a graduate student at the University of New Mexico who led the research. "They made up a significant portion of the individuals in a species and would have had a very real impact on the resources available in communities."

Even given the limitations of the fossil record, it's thought that overall, dinosaurs were not particularly diverse: there are only some 1,500 known species, compared to tens of thousands of modern mammalian and bird species.

What's more, across the entirety of the Mesozoic era, from 252 to 66 million years ago, there were relatively many more species of large bodied dinosaurs weighing 1,000 kilograms (a ton) compared to species weighing less than 60 kilograms (130 pounds).

Some scientists put forward the idea that since even the most gigantic dinosaurs begin life as tiny hatchlings, they could be using different resources as they were growing up — occupying the space in ecosystems where smaller species might otherwise flourish.

To test the theory, Schroeder and her colleagues examined data from fossil sites around the world, including over 550 dinosaur species, and organized the dinosaurs by whether they were herbivores or carnivores, as well as their sizes.

They discovered a striking gap in the presence of medium-sized carnivores in every community that had megatheropods, or giant predators like the T-rex.

"Very few carnivorous dinosaurs between 100-1000 kilograms (200 pounds to one ton) exist in communities that have megatheropods," Schroeder said. "And the juveniles of those megatheropods fit right into that space."

Treating juveniles as a species

The conclusion was supported by the way dinosaur diversity changed over time. Jurassic communities (200-145 million years ago) had smaller gaps and Cretaceous communities (145-65 million years ago) had large ones.

That's because Jurassic megatheropods teenagers were more like adults, and there was a wider variety of herbivorous long-necked sauropods (like the brachiosaurus) for them to prey on.

"The Cretaceous, on the other hand, is completely dominated by Tyrannosaurs and Abelisaurs, which change a lot as they grow," said Schroeder.

To mathematically test their theory, the team multiplied juvenile megatheropods' mass at given ages by how many were expected to survive each year, based on fossil records.

This statistical method, which effectively treated juveniles as their own species, neatly squared away the observed gaps of medium-sized carnivores.

Beyond helping resolve a longstanding question, the research shows the value of applying ecological considerations to dinosaurs, said Schroeder.

"I think we're shifting a little bit more towards understanding dinosaurs as animals as opposed to looking at dinosaurs as just cool rocks, which is where paleontology started and has been for a long time," she said.



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South Korea administers first COVID-19 shots to people at long-term care facilities

South Korea administered its first available shots of coronavirus vaccines to people at long-term care facilities Friday, launching a mass immunization campaign that health authorities hope will restore some level of normalcy by the end of the year. The rollout of vaccines comes at a critical time for the country, which has seen its hard-won gains against the virus get wiped out by a winter surge and is struggling to mitigate the pandemic's economic shock that decimated service sector jobs. The vaccinations began shortly before the country reported another new 406 cases of the coronavirus, brining its caseload to 88,922, including 1,585 deaths.

I felt very anxious over the past year, but I feel more secure now after receiving the vaccine, said Lee Gyeong-soon, a 61-year-old nursing home worker, who spoke with reporters after receiving her shot at a public health center in northern Seoul. Long-term care residents with mobility problems received injections from visiting health workers at their facilities.

More than 5,260 residents and workers at 213 nursing homes, mental institutions and rehab centers who are younger than 65 were to receive their first shots of the two-dose vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University on Friday.

An unspecified number of patients and workers at 292 long-term care hospitals and in the same age group will also get the vaccine, according to officials at the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency.

Health authorities plan to complete injecting the first doses to some 344,000 residents and workers at long-term care settings and 55,000 frontline medical workers by the end of March.

We have taken the historic first step toward restoring normalcy, senior Health Ministry official Son Young-rae said during a briefing.

He said the government has decided to extend current social distancing levels for at least another two weeks, clamping down on private social gatherings of five or more people and banning indoor dining after 10 pm, to help create a safe environment for vaccinations.

Long-term care facilities, where elders or people with serious health problems often live in crowded settings, have endured the worst of South Korea's outbreak. About 35% of the country's COVID-19 deaths at the end of 2020 were linked to these facilities, said Jaehun Jung, a professor of preventive medicine at the Gachon University College of Medicine in Incheon.

But there's criticism over the government's decision to delay the approval of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines for people over 65 until the developers provide more data that suggests the shots would be effective in that age group.

Some experts, including Jung, say the decision risks the safety of people who are most vulnerable to COVID-19 when the country will be chiefly dependent on locally produced Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines during the early part of its vaccination campaign.

Despite what the government sees as a lack of laboratory data on its efficacy in older adults, the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is still showing real-world effectiveness in preventing serious illnesses and lowering death rates in the countries where it was used, the experts say. People over 80 account for just 5% of the country's coronavirus cases, but 56 per cent of its virus-related deaths, Jung said.

Using refrigerated trucks escorted by police and military vehicles, South Korea transported 1.57 million doses of Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines across the country from Wednesday to Thursday.

These shots were among the global supplies produced in the southern city of Andong, where local pharmaceutical company SK Bioscience manufactures the vaccines under a contract with AstraZeneca.

Separately, doctors, nurses and other health professionals treating COVID-19 patients will begin receiving the shots developed by Pfizer and BioNTech from Saturday.

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, which South Korea obtained through the WHO-backed COVAX programme, arrived at Incheon International Airport on Friday and will be transported to five major COVID-19 treatment hospitals.

South Korea plans to complete injecting the first doses to some 344,000 residents and workers at long-term care facilities, which also include mental institutions and rehab centers, and 55,000 frontline medical workers within March.



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Samsung Galaxy S21+ Review: Great daily driver but not easy to recommend

Samsung released three variants with its Galaxy S21 series, a practice that it started with the S20 series last year.

But before we begin, let’s find our bearings with the new Samsung Galaxy S21 series’ three variants and how they compare pricewise:

  • Galaxy S21 starts at Rs 69,999
  • Galaxy S21+ starts at Rs 81,999
  • Galaxy S21 Ultra starts at Rs 1,05,999

The Samsung S21+ finds itself in a tricky position, and that makes it a difficult product to recommend. Having used the device for close to two weeks, I couldn’t come up with a single critical standout feature that would make recommending the S21+ easy. While Samsung itself offers a lot of competition at that price point with its older-gen devices, there are new-generation launches from rivals that are yet to arrive. Unlike the S21 Ultra, which, with a lot of unique features, comfortably wears the flagship crown, the S21+ is neither here nor there. I am in no way implying that the S21+ is a bad device – far from it. But allow me to elaborate on that in the detailed review that follows. Let’s first get the major features of the S21+ out of the way.

Image: Tech2/Nimish Sawant

Specifications

Display: 6.7-inch Dynamic AMOLED 2X, 120 Hz, 1080 x 2400 pixels at 394 PPI

Chipset: Exynos 2100 (1x 2.9 GHz Cortex X1 + 3x 2.8 GHz Cortex A78 + 4x 2.2 GHz Cortex A55)

Graphics: Mali G78 MP14

RAM + Storage in GB: 8 + 128 (Under Test); 8 + 256 

Expandable storage: None 

Cameras: 12 MP wide angle with OIS, f/1.8 aperture + 64 MP with 1/1.72-inch sensor, f/2.0 aperture with OIS which offers 1.1x optical zoom and 3x Hybrid zoom + 12 MP ultra-wide angle with f/2.2 aperture 

Selfie Camera: 10 MP with f/2.2 aperture 

Battery: 4,800 mAh 

Software: Android 11 with OneUI 3.1 

Colours: Phantom Black, Phantom Silver, Phantom Violet, Phantom Pink, Phantom Gold, Phantom Red

Build and Design

For this generation of its flagship S-series smartphones, Samsung has opted for a new design language. It has employed a contour-cut camera module, where the camera module wraps around the top left-hand edge. The S21+ comes with three cameras, which are placed vertically, and the entire module protrudes just a tiny bit. The dual-tone flash has been integrated flat on the back of the smartphone, which is protected by a curved Gorilla Glass Victus.

Image: Tech2/Nimish Sawant

The phone I tested was the Phantom Silver model, which looks wonderful. There is a matte finish on the Corning Gorilla Glass Victus as well as on the raised metallic camera module, which means fingerprint smudges aren’t that noticeable. The aluminum frame is the only glossy element, and that does tend to collect smudges. All around the edge, you will notice six antenna cuts that stand out. The S21+ is still a tad slippery, so you need to be careful. It does come with the IP68 rating, which means it is water- and dust-resistant.

The button and ports arrangement is the same as seen on the S21 Ultra - power standby and volume-rocker buttons on the right-hand side and dual SIM tray, USB Type-C port and speaker section at the base. The only design difference at the front is that the display is flat and isn’t curved around the edges. The S21+ sports the Infinity-O display with the selfie camera placed in the top-centre portion. It is relatively lighter than the S21 Ultra but is difficult to use one-handed.

Display

Image: Tech2/Nimish Sawant

The Samsung Galaxy S21+ gets a 6.7-inch AMOLED 2X display with a 120 Hz refresh rate, but the resolution is maxed out at 2400 x 1800 pixels, thereby giving it a pixel density of 394 PPI. With this generation, Samsung has kept its max resolution display for the Ultra model. The Infinity-O display on the S21+ also doesn’t have any curves around the edges and is a flat slab of glass, which isn’t all that bad either. Just like the S21 Ultra, the S21+, too, gives you the option to choose between adaptive refresh rate (where the refresh rate can go from 48 Hz to 120 Hz depending on what’s on the display) and standard refresh rate (locked at 60 Hz). The display, too, is protected by Corning Gorilla Glass Victus.

The S21+ display supports peak brightness of 1300 nits (which is only visible when watching high-end HDR content) and can playback HDR10+ content from popular streaming services such as YouTube, Netflix, Prime Video and more. The display has a ‘Vivid mode’ that lets you tweak screen temperature, and ‘Natural mode’, which has relatively muted colours.

Overall, there is little to complain about with the display. The lower resolution as compared to the S21 Ultra isn’t easily noticeable and I only found issues when it came to reading really low font text, which showed some dithering. But otherwise, watching movies, playing games, reading e-books on the phone was a joy. The AMOLED display ensures the contrast is great, the blacks are deep, and the display offers great dynamic range. Samsung has added an ‘Eye Comfort Shield’ option in the display to provide added blue light filtering, so there’s less strain on your eyes. Just like the S21 Ultra, holding the phone for long periods did lead to hand fatigue. Brightness levels on the phone were excellent even when using the device outdoors. I faced no issues while composing photos in bright conditions.

Performance and Software

As the Samsung S21+ houses the same internals as the S21 Ultra (Exynos 2100 SoC) and comes with 8 GB RAM and 128 GB storage (with no option to expand storage), there wasn’t a drastic difference in performance. Sure, the 12 GB RAM on the S21 Ultra may let power users have more apps in memory, but in terms of day-to-day performance, I hardly noticed much difference. The S21+ runs anything you throw at it without a hitch. Heavy games, video and photo editing applications ran smoothly. But as is the case with the S21 Ultra, heat management is an issue with the S21+ as well. On many occasions, I noticed the back of the phone turning warm even while carrying out the simplest operations, such as clicking photos. This needs to be fixed, as creating a photo shouldn’t be this resource-intensive. This didn’t lead to any app crashes or anything of the sort, but it’s just not desirable on high-end smartphones. During the testing phase, the phone did get an update, but it didn’t fix this issue.

PC Mark

The ultrasonic fingerprint scanner is super-quick when it works and is certainly a lot more responsive than the Galaxy S20 Ultra’s, which required many attempts to unlock. But if your finger is moist, the S21+ won’t unlock as quickly.

Geekbench Single core test

Call quality is excellent, and just like the S21 Ultra, the S21+, too, has wonderfully concealed the earpiece speaker and it doesn’t affect audio quality. The stereo speaker quality is good as well; I watched a couple of movies with just the speakers and it was a great experience. The phone does support 5G as well, if that is of relevance at this point.

Geekbench Multi core test

As it uses the same OneUI 3.1 user interface atop Android 11 (1 Jan 2021 patch) that we had seen on S21 Ultra, I’ll just reiterate this section from that review as not much has changed with the S21+. On most fronts, the OS is polished, but Samsung also tends to throw a gazillion features at you. Even something as simple as the quick notification bar is filled with as many as 19 icons. The Settings menu of the S21+ provides many options to customise the phone to how you would like it to be. I won’t hold that against Samsung, but for a regular user, it can get a bit overwhelming.

Some features – such as the option of locking up to three apps in RAM – are helpful. You will also find some bloat in the form of Samsung’s system apps, but thankfully, they can be uninstalled. There are the Microsoft group of apps such as Office, OneDrive, Outlook and LinkedIn which are preloaded, but this is certainly of value to many potential buyers of this device. I had mentioned about the presence of ads in some Samsung native apps, which hasn’t been fixed with the S21+ either. It is shocking to see ad-sporting native apps on flagship devices.

Camera

Image: Tech2/Nimish Sawant

The Samsung S21+ has a triple camera array, which is slightly different from the S21 Ultra. For starters, the primary camera on the S21+ is a 12 MP unit with OIS and an f/1.8 aperture along with a 12 MP ultrawide angle camera with f/2.2 aperture. The 64 MP camera offers 1.1x optical zoom and 3x Hybrid Zoom. Unlike the flagship S21 Ultra, you don’t get the 100x space zoom feature here and maximum hybrid zoom is locked at 30x. But for all practical purposes, if you really must, only up to 10x zoom will give you decent-looking images. The 30x hybrid zoom images are poor overall.

Daylight photos from the primary camera turn out well and offer great dynamic range with natural colours. It resolves distant objects quite well and it is only when you use the zoom feature that you will notice some amount of image smoothening. The ultrawide camera is best for shooting sprawling landscapes, as shooting cityscapes with it (especially in portrait orientation) will result in strange effects around the edges such as this. Do note that the ultrawide camera comes with a fixed focus. In terms of overall image quality, in daylight, the ultrawide camera can produce good photos. You just need to be aware of the distortion around the edges.

Click here to see the camera samples:

Samsung Galaxy S21+
As light levels drop, the softness in images becomes noticeable. This is especially true when you have zoomed in or are using the ultrawide angle camera. Quality drop between a low-light image shot on the primary camera and ultrawide angle camera is stark, and it’s best to avoid using the ultrawide camera in low-light situations. Night mode is able to extract a lot more detail from an image, but you need to ensure your hands are rock-steady for the duration of the exposure.

Selfies come out well in daylight and thankfully, there isn’t any unnecessary beautification mode activated by default to make you look strange. Portrait mode was a bit of a hit-or-miss, especially around the edges. As light levels drop, the shortcomings of the selfie camera become apparent with the over-aggressive skin smoothening. The good thing is Night mode can be activated for the front camera as well, to let you capture more detail if light levels aren’t optimum. Here’s the difference with Night Mode off and on using the front camera, where my face was only lit by the glow of the Kindle I was reading.

The S21+ is capable of shooting 4K videos at 60 fps and 30 fps, FHD at 60 and 30 fps as well as 8K at 24 fps. Video shooting during the day resulted in good, usable footage. I avoided the SuperSteady mode as it adds an unnecessary level of softness to the video. The EIS was decent in most use cases, but you might want to be careful when walking and shooting at 4K 60 resolution as stabilisation isn’t the best. If you are planning to switch between the ultrawide, wide and telephoto lenses, then you need to shoot at 4K 30fps or lower resolutions. Post sunset, video footage starts getting progressively softer, with many instances of noticeable focus-hunting. This video shot in the evening at CST gives one an idea of what you can expect when shooting outdoors after sunset. 

SamsungS21+ (5)

The microphone on the S21+ is quite good, though, and you can enable the zoom-in mic, which will record audio based on the framing of the scene.

You can also shoot 8K video at 24 fps, but it severely crops the frame, and you need to be rock-steady when shooting 8K. You can make high-resolution stills from the 8K videos. Just like the S21 Ultra, the S21+, too, features ‘Director’s View’, which lets you activate all cameras and shoot with the front camera and one of the rear cameras at the same time. The S21+ also features Pro Video for professional videographers, as well as the ability to shoot in RAW for photographers who want to extract more details.

One annoying bit I encountered while shooting with the SuperSteady mode on was that if I stopped while panning, the momentum of the pan would continue for a couple of seconds, recording a composition I did not want. Samsung needs to release an update to fix this issue with the SuperSteady mode.

Battery

The Samsung Galaxy S21+ comes with a 4,800 mAh battery, which is slightly smaller than the S21 Ultra’s. But in terms of day-to-day battery usage, I didn't find much of a difference. With the comparatively smaller display size and maximum resolution locked at FHD+, you effectively get similar battery life, which is around a day and a half for regular use patterns.

photo_2021-02-23_15-21-54

I had set the display to the following settings: Vivid mode, Dark Mode, Adaptive refresh rate, 2400 x 1800 pixels. With regular usage (which involved messaging on three apps, two email accounts on sync, calling, shooting 20-30 photos/videos a day, gaming for 20 mins, video and audio streaming for a couple of hours), I was able to extract over a day’s worth of use. PC Mark on Android gave a score of 10 hours, 50 minutes.

Just like with the S21 Ultra, the S21+, too, does not bundle its own charger, so how fast the phone will charge depends on which charger you have. I used the USB PD charger bundled with my Pixel 3A XL, and it took around 80 minutes to charge the S21+. The charging pace slows down noticeably from 90 percent onwards. Those using recommended chargers from Samsung may witness a faster charging time. 

Samsung S21+ Verdict and Price in India

The Samsung S21+ starts at Rs 81,999 onwards. The only question worth pondering is if you should opt for the S21+ or spend a bit more and go for the flagship S21 Ultra. Well, it’s not an easy answer as Samsung has priced the devices smartly and in a way to ensure there is no cannibalisation. The pluses the S21 Ultra brings over the S21+ are more RAM, display and camera versatility - if these three things matter to you, then go for the S21 Ultra without thinking much.

If you just want an all-round daily driver which offers a flagship experience, the S21+ also has a lot going for it at a relatively lower price point. The S21+ has a great display (lack of curves and a lower resolution notwithstanding), long-lasting battery, wonderful day-to-day performance and a good camera - it suffers from the same woes around low-light photography and video shooting as were seen with the S21 Ultra. It doesn’t have as many compromises as one would see in, say, the S21. But at the same time, S21+ also doesn’t have enough standalone features to make you ignore the older-gen OnePlus 8 Pro or even the S20+ Ultra, which is priced only slightly more than the S21+ (if you are really not keen on spending over Rs 1 lakh but want 100x zoom, for some reason).

If you are not in a tearing hurry to get a new flagship phone, I would advise you to wait for the upcoming OnePlus 9 series, as that will be an ideal competitor to the S21+.



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