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Jun 18th, 2021, 6:36 pm
Study Proves Humans and Neanderthals Lived Together 50,000 Years Ago

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The Boker Tachtit archaeological site in the Negev Desert in Israel has shown to researchers that humans and Neanderthals lived together in the area 50,000 years ago.

New research from an Israeli archaeological dig has proven that modern humans and Neanderthals lived together in the Negev desert some 50,000 years ago. Not only that, but the site they excavated, Boker Tachtit, has now been established as the earliest known migration point from Africa for early Homo sapiens from the Levant.

In the Middle Palaeolithic era, 250,000–50,000 years ago, two humanoid species lived in the Old World at the same time: Neanderthal man and modern man (Homo sapiens).

The Neanderthals lived in Europe and Central Asia, whereas modern man lived in Africa at that time.

As the Israel Antiquities Authority states regarding the ground-breaking findings, “the Middle East, and the region of Israel in particular, were at the limits of the distribution of these two species and they therefore also contain remnants of the two populations at different times.”

The research undertaken at the Boker Tachtit site in Ein Avdat National Park, in Israel’s Negev desert, has now provided the first proof of the two cultures’ coexistence there and pinpoints — for the first time ever — the exact time when modern humans left Africa.

A recent reexamination of artifacts from the Boker Tachtit site was the subject of a study published on Monday in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

The dig was led by researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science and the Max Planck Society, Prof. Elisabetta Boaretto, together with Dr. Omry Barzilai of the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA).

“Boker Tachtit is the first site outside of Africa, which modern man penetrated on his way to the rest of the world, hence the importance of the site, as well as the importance of dating it accurately,” said Dr. Barzilai, the director of excavation at the Boker Tachtit site in the statement.

“The age of the site as dated in the study – 50,000 years – indicates that modern man existed in the area of the Negev at the same time as the Neanderthal man, who is known to have lived in it during this period,” he explained.

“There is no doubt that the two species who lived and roamed the Negev were aware of each other’s existence,” Barzilai declared, adding “Our research Boker Tachtit site places an important and unequivocal point of reference on the timeline of human evolution.”

The “recent African origin” theory of human development stipulates that Homo sapiens originated in Africa as early as 270,000 years ago; at different times he took either the northern route to Eurasia, passing through the Levant, or several possible southern routes to all the corners of Asia.

Many believe that Homo sapiens even reached Oceania – getting as far as Australia, by land, at that time.

Scientist believe that DNA research shows the migration of modern humans began from Africa to Asia and Europe, and proceeded onward to the rest of the world approximately 60,000 years ago.

The clashing of the humans with their “cousins” the Neanderthals caused the latter to disappear as a group but at the same time assimilate into the entirety of the modern human population outside Africa.

Boker Tachtit, which is located in Ein Avdat National Park, is known to have served as a key site for tracing this migration out of Africa.

It is now proven to show the transition from a predominantly Neanderthal, prehistoric culture to the beginning of the triumph of modern humans, which occurred during the Middle to Upper Paleolithic era.

This vital turning point in development was marked by monumental technological innovations — including the making of blades and the introduction of standardized tools utilizing bones and antlers.

Anthony Marks, an American researcher who was the first to excavate and publish his findings from the Boker Tachtit site in the early 1980s, stated at the time that the site showed transitional industry from the Middle to the Upper Paleolithic eras.

Based on one single radiocarbon date, he concluded that it dated back to 47,000 years ago.

Other dates obtained from artifacts at the site, however, came up with other dates, some of them ranging as far afield as 34,000 years ago, making the timing of the tool transition very problematic for researchers.

Boaretto, who heads up D-REAMS, the Dangoor Research Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Laboratory, located at the Weizmann Institute, which specializes in advanced archaeological dating methods, explains further.

“If we are to follow this timeline, then the transitional period could have lasted more than 10,000 years, and yet artifacts excavated from northern sites in Israel, Lebanon and even Turkey suggest that the transition occurred much faster,” she says.

“Marks managed to date only a few specimens from Boker Tachtit, owing to the limitations of radiocarbon dating then, and the range of his proposed dates is not consistent with evidence gathered from other – old and new – excavation sites in the region,” Boaretto adds.

“Radiocarbon dating, the method that he used in his study, has evolved tremendously since his time,” she explains.

To finally arrive at some kind of understanding of the site, Boaretto, Barzilai and their team of researchers performed state of the art dating methods on specimens obtained from Boker Tachtit during the new excavations that they themselves undertook from 2013–2015.

These new dating techniques included high-resolution radiocarbon dating of single charcoal pieces found at the site and optically-stimulated luminescence-dating of single grains of quartz sand, performed respectively at the Weizmann Institute and at the Max-Planck Institute.

Boaretto, Barzilai and their team also took into account detailed studies of the sediments found at Boker Tachtit and employed micro-archaeological methods to understand how the site was initially formed, in order to discover information on its chronology.

“We are now able to conclude with greater confidence that the Middle-to-Upper Paleolithic transition was a rather fast-evolving event that began at Boker Tachtit approximately 50-49,000 years ago and ended about 44,000 years ago,” Boaretto declared.

Her team’s new dating allows for a certain overlap between the transition that occurred at Boker Tachtit and that of the “Mediterranean woodland” region, including what is now Lebanon and Turkey, which happened between 49,000 and 46,000 years ago.

Barzilay said “The dating results prove – for the first time in prehistoric research – the hypothesis that there was indeed an overlap in space between the late Mostar culture, identified with Neanderthal man, and the Emirite culture, linked to the emergence of modern man in the Middle East.”

Even with this few thousand years’ overlap of time, the recent analysis shows that Boker Tachtit was the very earliest site for this transition in the Levant. Not only that, but based on the materials found, it also encapsulates evidence from the last time modern humans left on their different journeys out of Africa.

The new dating shows that the early phase at Boker Tachtit also overlaps with the existing Middle Paleolithic culture of the Neanderthals who were already proven to have lived there.

Boaretto and Barzilay conclude “This goes to show that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens in the Negev coexisted and most likely interacted with one another, resulting in not only genetic interbreeding, as is postulated by the ‘recent African origin’ theory, but also in cultural exchange.”
Jun 18th, 2021, 6:36 pm
Jun 18th, 2021, 7:20 pm
Alligator found hiding under vending machine at Florida gas station

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June 17 (UPI) -- Three sheriff's deputies in Florida responded to a convenience store to help sort out an unusual problem -- an alligator hiding under a vending machine.

The Polk County Sheriff's Office said the alligator was found hiding under a vending machine at a Circle K gas station in Polk City.

The sheriff's office said the gator was "freaking people out" at the station.

Three deputies responded to the store and were able to extract the small gator from its hiding spot.

https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2021/06/17 ... 623961564/
Jun 18th, 2021, 7:20 pm

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Jun 19th, 2021, 1:32 am
New England Aquarium honors nearly four-decade-old ticket

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The New England Aquarium last week agreed to let in a visitor who presented a ticket that was 38 years old but which specified that it allowed for a return visit "at anytime in the future."

Rachel Carle's great-aunt Catherine Cappiello had acquired the "late gate" ticket, which the aquarium stopped issuing about 25 years ago, in 1983, according to The Boston Herald.

Carle on June 11 decided to try her luck with the nearly four-decade-old ticket, which Cappiello gave her when she moved to Boston for college.

"I walked up to the ticket office and explained the story of the ticket," Carle told CNN Travel. "They took a look at the ticket, laughed, and said 'well, it says come back any time! There's no expiration date!'"

She added that she had no idea if they would accept the ticket or not, but promised her great aunt that she would try.

"Whether they honored it or not, she and I would have been glad just to see the story through. We're so glad they honored it!" she continued.

Aquarium President and CEO Vikki Spruill told the Herald they were happy to accept the ticket, which technically doesn't expire.

"We honor each valid admission ticket, and this was one," Spruill said. "Forty years is a long time to be carrying that ticket around, and we're so glad she did."

Carle tweeted about the incident, thanking the aquarium for their generosity.

CNN reports that Cappiello gave Carle two of the tickets, but that she plans to frame the other as a souvenir.
Jun 19th, 2021, 1:32 am

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Jun 19th, 2021, 2:15 am
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Jack Nicholson in German? An AI company is using deepfake technology to seamlessly dub your favorite actor's dialogue. Subtitles may soon be a thing of the past.


By Dan Avery For Dailymail.com

Published: 15:22 EDT, 24 May 2021 | Updated: 15:23 EDT, 24 May 2021

No, Tom Hanks didn't just learn fluent Japanese: a bleeding-edge artificial intelligence system has learned to create deepfakes so realistic it looks like your favorite actor is delivering their lines in any language.

TrueSync, a new AI system from the UK company Flawless, captures the actor's face and head, as well as the foreign dubber's mouth, and synthesizes them in a 3D rendering.

The resulting dub, the company touts, 'captures all the nuance and emotions of the original material.'

Scroll down for video
TrueSync, an AI platform from 'Heist' director Scott Mann, captures facial movements from both the original actor and the dubber, The data is synthesized to create a 3-D rendering merging the actors head and the dubber's lip movements.
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British director Scott Mann is best known for a string of action films, most notably 2015's 'Heist,' with Robert DeNiro.

While those flicks aren't particularly celebrated for their dialogue, Mann still cringed while watching Heist get butchered with bad dubbing.
His algorithm, used here on 'A Few Good Men,' offers an immaculate performance in any language
Director Scott Mann was frustrated at how bad dubbing could ruin a pivotal scene.

Director Mann was frustrated at how bad dubbing could ruin a pivotal scene. His algorithm, used here on A Few Good Men, offers an immaculate performance in any language
Flawless' showreel demonstrates Tom Hanks delivering 'Forrest Gump' lines in German, Japanese and Spanish
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In some cases, foreign dialogue massaged to more closely match the actor's mouth movements.

In March, a deepfake video appearing to show Tom Cruise went viral.

'You make a small change in a word or a performance, it can have a large change on a character in the story beat, and in turn on the film,' Mann told Wired.

So he and Nick Lynes co-founded Flawless, the company behind TrueSync, an AI platform that gives us Tom Cruise speaking impeccable French in 'A Few Good Men' and Tom Hanks' 'Forrest Gump' switching seamlessly between German, Japanese and Spanish.
TrusSync claims its deepfake dubbing process 'captures all the nuance and emotions of the original material.' Pictured: TrueSync scans Tom Cruise in 'A Few Good Men'
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'TrueSync is the world's first system that uses Artificial Intelligence to create perfectly lip-synced visualizations in multiple languages,' the Flawless website reads.

'At the heart of the system is a performance preservation engine which captures all the nuance and emotions of the original material.'

Ian Goodfellow, director of machine learning at Apple's Special Projects Group, coined the phrase 'deepfake' in 2014, a portmanteau of 'deep learning' and 'fake.'

It's a video or photo that appears authentic but is really the result of AI manipulation.

The system studies input of a target from multiple angles—photographs, videos, etc.— and develops an algorithm to mimic their behavior, movements and speech patterns.

Flawless relies on groundbreaking work done by computer scientist Christian Theobalt, head of the Graphics, Vision, & Video group at the Max-Planck-Institute for Informatics in Saarbrücken, Germany.

In addition to tracking the facial movements of the original actor, Theobalt's AI also captures the expressions of someone speaking the dialogue in the appropriate language.
The data is synthesized to create a 3-D rendering merging the actor's head and the dubber's lip movements

The data is synthesized to create a 3-D rendering merging the actor's head and the dubber's lip movements

It's obviously a more laborious and expensive process than just a voice actor in a studio, but as international box office becomes increasingly important, Mann is betting studios will think it's worth it.

'We created Flawless to help filmmakers tell their stories exactly as they intended,' he said.
WHAT IS A DEEPFAKE?

Deepfakes are so named because they are made using deep learning, a form of artificial intelligence, to create fake videos of a target individual.

They are made by feeding a computer an algorithm, or set of instructions, as well as lots of images and audio of the target person.

The computer program then learns how to mimic the person's facial expressions, mannerisms, voice and inflections.

With enough video and audio of someone, you can combine a fake video of a person with fake audio and get them to say anything you want.

He's currently shopping TrueSync around Hollywood with a demo reel featuring scenes from 'Heist,' 'Good Men' and 'Gump.'

'It's going to be invisible pretty soon,' Mann told Wired. 'People will be watching something and they won't realize it was originally shot in French or whatever. '

Critics, however, worry the technology could take the performance out of the actors' control.

'There are legitimate and ethical uses of this technology,' Screen Actors Guild attorney Duncan Crabtree-Ireland told Wired. 'But any use of such technology must be done only with the consent of the performers involved, and with proper and appropriate compensation.'

In March, a deepfake video viewed on TikTok more than 11 million times appeared to show Tom Cruise in a Hawaiian shirt doing close-up magic.

While the clips seemed harmless enough, many believed they were the real deal, not AI-created fakes.

After the Cruise video went viral, Rachel Tobac, CEO of online security company SocialProof, tweeted that we had reached a stage of almost 'undetectable deepfakes'

Deepfakes will impact public trust, provide cover & plausible deniability for criminals/abusers caught on video or audio, and will be (and are) used to manipulate, humiliate, & hurt people,' she said, calling for labels identifying 'synthetic media.'
Read more:

This AI Makes Robert De Niro Perform Lines in Flawless
Jun 19th, 2021, 2:15 am
Jun 19th, 2021, 7:21 am
That Song Stuck in Your Head is Helping the Brain With Long-Term Memory

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If you have watched TV since the 1990s, the sitcom theme song I’ll Be There for You has likely been stuck in your head at one point or another.

New research from UC Davis suggests these experiences are more than a passing nuisance—they play an important role in helping memories form, not only for the song, but also related life events like hanging out with friends—or watching other people hang with their friends on the ’90s television show, Friends.

“Scientists have known for some time that music evokes autobiographical memories, and that those are among the emotional experiences with music that people cherish most,” said Petr Janata, UC Davis professor of psychology and co-author on a new study.

“What hasn’t been understood to date is how those memories form in the first place and how they become so durable, such that just hearing a bit of a song can trigger vivid remembering,” said Janata.

The paper, “Spontaneous Mental Replay of Music Improves Memory for Incidentally Associated Event Knowledge,” was published online in the Journal of Experimental Psychology.

This new research offers an initial glimpse into these mechanisms and, somewhat surprisingly, finds that the songs that get stuck in your head help that process of strengthening memories as they first form, the authors said.

Thus, this is the first research to link two of the most common phenomena people experience with music—earworms (having a song stuck in your head) and music-evoked remembering.

For their latest study, the researchers worked with 25 to 31 different people in each of three experiments, over three different days, spaced weeks apart.

Subjects first listened to unfamiliar music, and then, a week later, listened to the music again, this time paired with likewise unfamiliar movie clips. In one instance, movies were played without music.

The research subjects, all UC Davis undergraduate and graduate students, were subsequently asked to remember as many details as they could from each movie as the music played. They were also quizzed about their recollection of the associated tunes and how often they experienced each of the tunes as an earworm. None of them had formal music training.

The more the tune played, the more accurate the memory.

https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/that-so ... -remember/
Jun 19th, 2021, 7:21 am
Jun 19th, 2021, 1:46 pm
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I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
SATURDAY JUNE 19

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
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A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
2:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS


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Jun 19th, 2021, 1:46 pm

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Jun 19th, 2021, 1:57 pm
Pizza delivery driver gifted new car after losing old one to fire during attempted theft

Sometimes, a bad situation can turn into a positive experience.

HOUSTON (KTRK) - A Papa John’s delivery driver whose car went up in flames after thieves tried to steal his catalytic converter was given the surprise of a lifetime.

After losing his only means of transportation – which, at one point, was also his home – Isaac Sanchez received a new car June 9 from Keith Sullins, the president of Papa John’s Pizza.

“He’s such a great employee,” Sullins said. “I just like to say thank you for staying with Papa John’s. Thank you for all you do.”

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Isaac Sanchez, a delivery driver for Papa John's, says he is extremely grateful after the company president gifted him a new car.

Sanchez, who has been working for Papa John’s for 15 years, was in disbelief as Sullins signed over the car to him and handed over the keys, but the delivery driver says he is extremely grateful.

“The president of the company just came out here and gave me his car. That is awesome. I’m overwhelmed really,” Sanchez said. “I’m very thankful for everything that’s happened.”

Sanchez says he was sitting in his car watching a movie one day when thieves tried to steal his catalytic converter. The next day, the car went up in flames. A mechanic told him the fire started due to the catalytic converter.

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Sanchez was sitting in his car when thieves tried to steal his catalytic converter. The next day, the car went up in flames. The fire started due to the catalytic converter.

The timing of the attempted theft was far from ideal. Sanchez broke his kneecap after February’s winter storm. He then got ill, and his hospital bills began to pile up. His car was his only source of income.

Little did he know, angels were all around him.

In addition to Sullins’ gift, Sanchez’s coworkers set up a GoFundMe, raising more than $9,000 to help with medical bills and other expenses. They provided him with clothes and food and were able to book him a couple of days at a motel.

With their help, Sanchez has returned to delivering pizzas and will soon be back on his feet.

Source
Jun 19th, 2021, 1:57 pm

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Jun 19th, 2021, 2:23 pm
Bizarre New Trend Sees Men Sporting Double Moustaches

Right LADs, I've got some bad news to bring you. Apparently there's a new trend for double moustaches going on.

Yes, not content with the fact that everyone has decided to grow out their locks and see if they can achieve facial hair during the past lockdown, people have apparently decided to grow not one moustache, but two.

It comes in various different forms, sometimes with the second 'tache beneath the mouth, sometimes with both shoved in above the lip.

See what we mean?

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Either way, it's weird, and it's not immediately clear whether we should be encouraging this behaviour or not.

As you can see from a few of the pictures, the double 'tache can be performed with varying degrees of effort, from the delicately curled and manicured to the rough and ready.

I mean, just look at the pictures - that's the point of this, after all.

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Of course, the above effort is pretty outstanding, but it doesn't need to be so extravagant. You can do it your own way, as this one proves.

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So, if you fancy giving it a go, why not try it and submit your own effort?

You couldn't do any worse than the chaps who thought that monkey tail beards were going to be a thing earlier this year.

If you're madly trying to picture how it works, it's basically when a bloke grooms the beard and moustache into a long monkey tail-like shape that runs down one sideburn, down the jawline, along the chin, and then curls up around the side of the mouth, and then ends above the top lip.
Jun 19th, 2021, 2:23 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Jun 19th, 2021, 2:49 pm
Grandmother, 65, 'overwhelmed' to be named high school valedictorian

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Better late than never.

Not only did Twyanna Williams, 65, graduate high school this week, she was also the valedictorian of her class at Philadelphia’s South Philadelphia High School. Williams was among the students who got their degrees through the city’s Educational Options Program that enables adults to earn their high school diploma.

She says she was stunned when she learned of the honor.

“Oh, my goodness, I was overwhelmed,” she told TODAY. “I was so ecstatic and excited and couldn't believe that I did that. I made it that far? I was really excited. It was exciting for me and I felt important. I felt special.”

Williams says she would love to be an example of what anyone can accomplish.

“I hope I inspire people that are my age and older that’s dropped out of school to go back,” she said. “It’s not that bad.”

The grandmother of four, who is now retired, dropped out of school when she was 15 to get a job in order to help her mother pay her bills after she got divorced from Williams’ father.

She went on to have two kids of her own, but remained focused on completing her education.

“That was always in the back of my head, to get my diploma,” she said.

In early 2020, Williams returned to school through the EOP, saying it “was the right time” for her to do so. Like millions of other students, she wound up going to school online during the pandemic and actually found it to be an enjoyable experience.

“It was good timing for me because you couldn't go out, couldn't go anywhere,” she said.

“I was like, ‘This a good chance to pass the time away.’ I'm retired. I'm 65, I'm not working anymore. I'm on a fixed income. So I was like, let me go back to school, this is my time to go back to school, get my diploma.”

The school provided her with a computer, and she made the most of it.

“I didn't miss any days. I was there every day. I was set up every day in front of that computer,” she said.

Williams, who worked in fast-food restaurants, factories, hotels and hospitals for 40 years before retiring, also says there is always time to go back to school, no matter who you are.

“I would like for the whole world to know that it’s never too late to go back to school, no matter what age you drop out,” she said. “It’s never too late. It is important. Education is very important.”
Jun 19th, 2021, 2:49 pm

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Jun 19th, 2021, 3:32 pm
HBO Max accidentally sent a strange email to its subscribers: 'Yes, it was the intern'

Confusion and amusement overtook Twitter on Thursday and Friday when HBO Max sent a bizarre email to its subscribers.

Subscribers received an email Thursday with the subject line "Integration Test Email #1," and the body of the email only containing one sentence: "This template is used by integration tests only."

Streaming users immediately turned to Twitter to voice their concerns, with many creating memes saying that it could be a new show that HBO is airing.

"INBOX: Integration Test Email #1, an intriguing new drama from HBO Max," one user tweeted.

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"Lol if it turns out the HBO Max email goof is a stunt for a new show called Integration Test Email then congrats to the marketing team," another user wrote.

Director James Gunn tweeted that he hoped the integration email "is somehow the first step in extremely clever viral marketing for #Peacemaker," his upcoming show. Others even tried to take credit for the email.

"I hope everyone watches my new show called Integration Test Email #1 coming to HBO Max soon! We're trying something new with the marketing....," a user tweeted.

The culprit behind the email? An intern.

"We apologize for the inconvenience, and as the jokes pile in, yes, it was the intern. No, really. And we’re helping them through it," HBO Max later tweeted.

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source: https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/20 ... 744108002/
Jun 19th, 2021, 3:32 pm

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Jun 19th, 2021, 4:11 pm
Footprints of possibly last dinosaurs to walk Britain found in Kent
Fri 18 Jun 2021 16.51 BST
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Footprints of what could be the last dinosaurs to have walked in Britain have been found in Kent, researchers say.

About 66m years ago, an asteroid hit the Earth and wiped out much of the Earth’s dinosaurs. But flooding rendered Britain’s dinosaurs extinct much earlier: about 110m years ago.

Back then, Britain was more or less where north Morocco or the south of Spain is now, sea levels were rapidly rising and space for dinosaurs to inhabit was disappearing. But this sandy beach in southern England near the white cliffs of Dover was idyllic.

For the meat-eaters, there was plenty of dead fish washing ashore, and for the herbivores, an abundance of fresh vegetation overhanging the beach, said the study’s author, Dave Martill, a professor of palaeobiology at the University of Portsmouth.

The researchers discovered the fossilised footprints of multiple dinosaur species – preserved by sediment, filling the impression left behind when a dinosaur’s foot pushes into the ground – in an area prone to storms in Folkestone, Kent.

The footprints suggest many moderate-sized dinosaurs roamed the beach, including ankylosauruses, rugged-looking herbivorous armoured dinosaurs; theropods, three-toed flesh-eaters; and ornithopods, plant-eating “bird-hipped” dinosaurs, according to the study published in the journal Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association.
Jun 19th, 2021, 4:11 pm
Jun 19th, 2021, 4:14 pm
The secret to rewilding? Let the jays do it – report

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As nations scale-up tree planting efforts to help stabilise the climate, a new study advocates leaving the heavy lifting to jays. Researchers monitoring two new woodlands in Cambridgeshire found that half the trees growing there had been planted by the birds.

Like squirrels, jays bury acorns in the ground ahead of winter. Many of those turn into oak trees. The birds are, of course, one of many species whose behaviour facilitates the natural regeneration of forests.

The study, published in the journal Plos One, makes a case for using natural regeneration – also know as ‘passive rewilding’ – to meet the UK’s woodland creation targets.

“Biodiversity-rich woodland that is resilient to drought and reduces disease risk can be created without any input from us,” said Dr Richard Broughton of the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, who led the research. “Our study provides essential evidence that passive rewilding has the potential to expand native woodland habitat at no cost and within relatively short timescales.”
Jun 19th, 2021, 4:14 pm

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Jun 19th, 2021, 5:37 pm
People Looking for a Good Time Got Ontario Premier Doug Ford Instead

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There may be a few frustrated young people out there who thought they were going to get lucky but got Doug Ford's constituency office instead.

A poster stuck to a pole at Logan Avenue and Queen Street East in Leslieville suggested a single, divorced 51-year-old woman who "loves to work out" but perhaps doesn't have time to date was seeking "single fit men" aged 18 to 25.

But anyone who dialed the phone number, 416-745-2859, on the little tabs below with the name Alisha would have reached Premier Doug Ford’s constituency office rather than a potential booty call.

A passerby took a photo of the poster on June 15 and showed the photo to a small gathering, Leslieville resident Diane Walton tells blogTO.

"We were laughing and said 'well, call the number,'" Walton says.

They did and to the group's surprise, the voice message was for the Ford office.

"I don't know who did it but it was hilarious," she says.

Thinking other people might find the prank funny, Walton posted it to her neighbourhood Facebook group, I am a Leslievillian! There are tons of comments on the page ranging from people believing it was a real woman searching younger men to others who took Walton’s advice and tried the number.

“Omg it's fordolf's number I’m dead,” one person said.

The post was also copied to the Weird Toronto Facebook group where even more people commented.

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One person noticed tabs were ripped off the poster.

"Looks like she already got 6 or 7 interested young men," they wrote.

And even more people tried the number.

"Called the number..it belongs to Doug Ford," one person said.

If Ford's office is getting more than the usual number of calls, they aren't saying anything about it. A request for comment was declined.

"Whoever did it is obviously not a Doug Ford fan," Walton says.
Jun 19th, 2021, 5:37 pm

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Jun 19th, 2021, 6:17 pm
Bin there, done that: Scotland fans clean up litter in central London

Kilt-wearing fans helped tidy up Leicester Square, where many gathered to cheer on Scottish team

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Scottish football fans who had descended on London were photographed helping to clear the city’s streets before Friday night’s much-anticipated Euro 2020 game between Scotland and England at Wembley stadium.

Fans wearing kilts and draped in Scotland flags picked up rubbish in Leicester Square, where many had gathered to celebrate and cheer their team on before the fixture, which ended in a scoreless draw.

About 22,000 Scotland supporters travelled to London, although only 2,600 had tickets for the match. Many ignored the Met police’s order to disperse, dancing in the streets and singing “yes sir, I can boogie” throughout the day. Some sprayed officers with alcohol in their enthusiasm.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/202 ... ral-london
Jun 19th, 2021, 6:17 pm
Jun 19th, 2021, 8:54 pm
Bionic bird! A wild vulture had its right leg amputated after a terrible accident and experts created a prosthetic using a metal anchor to help it fly and hunt
    A metal implant has gone into a bearded vulture, the world's first 'bionic bird'
    Mia, a bearded vulture, suffered a major injury while still a nestling
    Her ankle became entangled with the sheep's wool fibers that her parents used to build the nest and her toes started to die
    Eventually, the foot was amputated and her right leg ended in a stump
    Bearded vultures are reliant on their feet for landing, walking and catching prey
    The prosthetic has a rubber cylinder for 'traction and stability'
A number of humans have had bionic implants, but now, a metal implant has made a bearded vulture the world's first 'bionic bird.'

The incredible achievement, published in Scientific Reports, notes that Mia, a bearded vulture from the Owl and Bird of Prey Sanctuary in Haringsee, Austria, suffered a major injury while still a nestling, or a bird too young to leave the nest.

Her ankle became entangled with the sheep's wool fibers that her parents used to build the nest and her toes started to die.

Eventually, the foot was amputated and her right leg ended in a stump, which would have eventually resulted in death from malnutrition.

Then the team of veterinarians from the sanctuary contacted Dr. Oskar Aszmann, a reconstructive surgeon at the Medical University of Vienna, about making a prosthetic for Mia - something that had never been done before.

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To design the prosthetic limb for the bird, the experts needed something that would be durable enough and let the bird grip prey, but deal with the shock of walking and landing, so they turned to a technique known as osseointegration

'Following a clinical visit to Haringsee, it was clear that the rare bird could not survive long in its current condition,' Aszmann said in a statement.

'We designed and fabricated a special bone implant that could be surgically attached to the stump.'

Bearded vultures are especially reliant on their feet, not only for landing, but for catching their prey, as well as walking.

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To design the prosthetic limb for the bird, the experts needed something that would be durable enough and let the bird grip prey, but deal with the shock of walking and landing, so they turned to a technique known as osseointegration.

For osseointegration, external parts of the prosthetic are directly connected to a bone anchor to guarantee it's attached to the skeleton.

'This concept offers a high degree of embodiment, since osseoperception provides direct intuitive feedback, thereby allowing natural use of the extremity for walking and feeding, Aszmann added.

'For the first time we have now successfully bionically reconstructed the limb of a vulture.'

The bionic leg is a black rubber cylinder that gives Mia 'traction and stability,' the researchers wrote in the study.

It's also intended to help minimize her twisting and damaging the leg further.

Mia went under a general anesthesia for a couple of hours, but rehab started shortly after the successful operation.

'The bird made the first attempts to walk after just three weeks and the prosthesis was under full load after six weeks,' Aszmann explained.

'Today the bearded vulture can once again land and walk using both feet, making it the first 'bionic bird'.'

Bearded vultures are considered 'near threatened,' according to IUCN's Red List.

Their numbers, which are in the low hundreds, have been severely hampered by habitat loss and persistent threats, including humans, collisions with power cables and wind farms.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech ... -hunt.html
Jun 19th, 2021, 8:54 pm

Book request - An Idyll in Sodom by Georges de Lys [7000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5459036