You are here

Features

Features section

Living with several digital devices

By - Nov 26,2020 - Last updated at Nov 26,2020

AFP photo

Are you using a set of tablets, smartphones, and laptop computers? In most cases the answer would be yes. Chances also are that you own and operate more than one of each.

Over the years we have discovered that we need all three formats. They nicely complete each other, and each is better adapted to a particular context and situation.

Earlier this week Jordanian TV channel Roya aired a programme that showed that indeed all digital formats were used by the population. Among other statistics it was also clear that Internet on mobile devices had the lion share of them all, with about 35 per cent of the total, more than laptops for example that were at 25 per cent.

The bad news is that this makes you manage several digital devices and consequently spend significant time doing it. The task can sometimes be daunting and frustrating.

The good news is that there is a way to optimise the time, to keep everything in good order and to alleviate the pain. It is mainly about getting well organised and to be familiar with some simple settings — the key word here being organisation.

Whenever it is possible, avoid mixing operating systems (OS). If you like Apple line of products stay with it. Not necessarily because it is superior to Google’s Android or Microsoft’s Windows, but because living with one OS makes life simpler.

On the other hand, if Android is your cup of tea, get smartphones and tablets than run on it. In this case your laptop can run under either Windows or MacOS.

Sticking to one brand in addition to one OS, again whenever it is possible, also helps a lot, especially when it comes to smartphones and tablets.

In a commendable — and certainly business oriented — effort, manufacturers have also reduced the gap between the various OS and hardware. Bridges have been built to make the various systems communicate between each other, with minimum trouble and effort from the user’s side.

An example: Samsung Flow application lets you connect your Android smartphone wirelessly and seamlessly to your Windows or Mac laptop, and work on the phone from the comfort of the large screen of the computer, with the mouse and the full-size keyboard. You can also exchange files between the two devices. Samsung Flow is a pleasurable experience.

Take WhatsApp as another example. If you think that you can use it only on your smartphone think twice. When sitting at your desk and working on your laptop, with your smartphone nearby, open an Internet browser on the laptop and go to https://web.whatsapp.com/. You will be able to use your WhatsApp account (with all chats, media contents, contacts, etc.) on the laptop, sending and receiving messages as if you were using the phone, and in full and automatic synchronisation between the two devices.

Another great helper, precisely, is learning to synchronise data between the different devices. If you use Chrome Internet browser on a laptop, a smartphone, and a tablet, be sure to log in with your account credentials (through a Gmail account, for instance). This will ensure that your browsing history, bookmarks, and other items automatically sync through all your devices. This is not just about saving time and effort, but about seeing clearly and working efficiently. It is about changing pain into pleasure.

You can also synchronise your calendar and your contacts over the whole range of your digital devices. Again, this saves time and reduces stress, providing at the same time the automatic, indispensable backup of all your files. It lets you enjoy all your devices, instead of having the feeling you are working for them more than they are working for you.

Finally, go fully, wholeheartedly, irreversibly with cloud storage. There is still a minority that is scared and hesitant about this way of keeping their digital contents. Today there is no other way to go. Cloud storage does not only give you peace of mind and data security, but it also lets you access your files from any of the above-mentioned digital devices, laptops, smartphones, and tablets. The main, most popular such services are Microsoft’s OneDrive, Apple’s iCloud, Google Drive, and Dropbox. Here again, try to choose one and only one, get familiar with all its functionalities, and get well organised around it in a global manner.

From ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ to ‘This Is Us,’ COVID infects TV plots

By - Nov 25,2020 - Last updated at Nov 25,2020

Ellen Pompeo and Patrick Dempsey in a scene from ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ season 17 (Photo courtesy of wordpress.com)

NEW YORK/PARIS — With COVID upending every aspect of viewers’ lives, some TV shows — from the obvious medical dramas to sitcoms — have woven the pandemic into their latest seasons’ storylines, but a handful have avoided it altogether.

In the opening scenes of the latest season of long-running hospital drama “Grey’s Anatomy”, Meredith Grey enjoys a quiet moment alone on a beach.

She suddenly emerges from the dream, exhausted, in full PPE, in a frantic emergency room.

“I think we have a responsibility to really show what these health care workers have been going through,” series star Ellen Pompeo said in a recent deadline interview.

At a time when many Americans are “irritated with wearing a mask” and “disconnected” from the challenges facing hospitals, the latest season of “Grey’s” offers “an opportunity to tell the story of how hard this is for our healthcare workers”, she said.

Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, showrunners for NBC’s “Chicago Med”, told AFP that “as a hospital show, we knew we’d have to deal with the pandemic”. 

“So far it plays if not a direct then a tangential role in every one of the new episodes”, said Frolov and Schneider about the show’s sixth season, which premiered on November 11.

“Even if we’re not doing COVID patient stories, the virus has profoundly changed protocols and procedures in the hospital.”

Other medical shows like ABC’s “The Good Doctor” have already tackled the virus, while “New Amsterdam” and “The Resident” are ready to follow suit in 2021.

 

To touch or not to touch

 

Outside of hospital settings, US network shows have also incorporated elements of the pandemic’s impact.

NBC’s hit drama “This is Us” has members of the Pearson family sheltering at home, and matriarch Rebecca having to postpone an Alzheimer’s clinical trial, because of coronavirus.

ABC’s “The Conners” put its own spin on the issue, addressing the pandemic through the financial hardships it has created for the sitcom’s characters.

“For a family that is always struggling economically and lives mostly without a safety net, the economic impact of this was something we felt we had to write about”, said Dave Caplan, writer and executive producer of the show spun off from “Roseanne.”

Initially trying to get her career as a writer off the ground, Darlene Conner is forced to get a job at a local factory, working alongside her sister Becky who is also struggling financially.

Their father is on the verge of being evicted.

“We don’t shy away from going to a very serious place for some of the subjects, which allows us to also exploit that tension with humour”, explains writer and co-producer Bruce Helford.

“We’ve always found that the biggest laughs come when the audience is a bit uncomfortable and then they’re allowed to just laugh at it.”

“Finding the comedy and the humour is actually easier because these are brand new circumstances that haven’t been dealt with before,” which is very rare, according to Helford.

“The Conners” also made a conscious effort to portray the nation’s stark political divisions over the pandemic and its handling.

Darlene’s son Mark is confronted at school by a boy whose family opposes COVID restrictions.

“We touched on it because you can’t ignore it,” said Helford. “And we tried to do it evenhandedly.”

In addition to existing shows, streaming platforms and cable channels have tried putting together new series centred on coronavirus, like HBO’s “Coastal Elites” or Netflix’s “Social Distance” — but with no real success.

At the other end of the scale, many shows have offered a dose of escapism by completely leaving out COVID, sometimes because they were shot before the pandemic hit — such as recent Netflix hit “Emily in Paris” or CBS’s “Mom”.

Last spring, writers on “The Neighbourhood”, a CBS comedy which revolves around a white family moving into a Black neighbourhood, were pondering whether to address the pandemic in season three, recalled actor Cedric the Entertainer in an interview with TVLine.

“And then George Floyd happened, and it just felt like a more important [conversation].”

 

Pandemic inflames violence against women

By - Nov 24,2020 - Last updated at Nov 24,2020

Photo courtesy of domestika.org

PARIS — No country has been spared the coronavirus epidemic, nor the scourge of domestic violence, which has surged during lockdowns as the day marking such violence approaches on Wednesday.

From a spike in rapes in Nigeria and South Africa, increased numbers of women missing in Peru, higher rates of women being killed in Brazil and Mexico and overwhelmed associations in Europe: the pandemic has aggravated the plague of sexual violence.

According to UN data released in late September, lockdowns have led to increases in complaints or calls to report domestic abuse of 25 per cent in Argentina, 30 per cent in Cyprus and France and 33 per cent in Singapore.

In essentially all countries, measures to limit the spread of the coronavirus have resulted in woman and children being confined at home.

“The house is the most dangerous place for women,” Moroccan associations noted in April as they pressed authorities for “an emergency response”.

In India, Heena — not her real name — a 33-year-old cook who lives in Mumbai, said she felt “trapped in my house” with a husband who did not work, consumed drugs and was violent.

As she described what she had endured, she frequently broke down in tears.

After buying drugs, “he would spend the rest of his day either hooked to his phone playing PubG (PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds) or beating me up and abusing me,” she told AFP by telephone.

Insufficient measures

 

On August 15, her husband beat Heena worse than before, in front of their seven-year-old son, and threw her out of the house at 3am.

“I had nowhere to go,” she said. “I could barely move my body — he beat me to pulp, my body was swollen.”

Instead of going to the police, she made it to a friend’s home and then to her parents.

She is now fighting for custody of her son, “but courts are not working in full capacity due to COVID”.

She has not seen her son in four months, though he manages to call her in secret from time to time.

It is not the just the courts that are hobbled by the virus. The closure of businesses and schools, as well as cultural and athletic activities, have deprived victims already weakened by economic insecurity of ways to escape violence.

Hanaa Edwar of the Iraqi Women’s Network, told AFP there had been “a dangerous deterioration in the socioeconomic situation for families following the lockdown, with more families going into poverty, which leads to violent reactions”.

In Brazil, 648 murders of women were recorded in the first half of the year, a small increase from the same period in 2019 according to the Brazilian Forum for Public Security.

While the government has launched a campaign to encourage women to file complaints, the forum says that measures designed to help victims remain insufficient.

 

‘Mask-19’

 

Worldwide, the United Nations says that only one country in eight has taken measures to lessen the pandemic’s impact on women and children.

In Spain, victims could discreetly ask for help in pharmacies by using the code “mask-19”, and some French associations established contact points in supermarkets.

“The women who came to us were in situations that had become unbearable, dangerous,” said Sophie Cartron, assistant director of an association that worked in a shopping mall near Paris.

“The lockdown established a wall of silence,” she said.

Mobilisation on November 25, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women remains uncertain owing to restrictions linked to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Marches for women’s rights have nevertheless taken place recently in Costa Rica, Guatemala, Liberia, Namibia and Romania.

“We will not be able to demonstrate to express our anger, or march together,” said the Paris-based feminist group Family Planning.

“But we will make ourselves heard all the same, virtually and visually.”

Tamara Mathebula of the South African Commission for Gender Equality described a chronic “toxic masculinity” that was “everywhere you look”.

“There are gender pay gaps which are widening and continue to widen during the COVID-19 pandemic,” she told AFP.

“Gender-based violence worsened” as a result, she said, and the potential consequences were very serious.

In July, the UN estimated that six months of restrictions could result in 31 million additional cases of sexual violence in the world and seven million unwanted pregnancies.

The situation was also undermining the fight against female genital mutilation and forced marriages, the UN warned.

 

Ford Ranger Wildtrak: Rugged charisma and sophistication

By - Nov 23,2020 - Last updated at Nov 23,2020

Photo courtesy of Ford

Refreshed last year and arriving in the Middle East for the 2020 model year, the Ford Ranger receives a host of new and improved tech features including driver assistance and infotainment systems, as well as a subtle face-lift. Still the range-topping model regionally — despite the introduction of a performance-oriented Ranger Raptor specialty version for some global markets — the Ranger Wildtrak remains one of the most accomplished, impressive and desirable trucks in its mid-size segment that perfectly reconciles its rugged work truck origins with daily drive comfort, convenience and accessibility.

An up-market lifestyle, daily use and off-road oriented model, the Ranger Wildtrak brings plenty of mod cons, tech, refinement and exceptional sense of rugged charisma and style to the tough and utilitarian work truck line it is derived from. A capable hauler and off-roader with robust performance, the Ranger Wildtrak looks the part with its upright stance, well-proportioned dimensions and sculpted double cab body. With two-tone alloy wheels, prominent running boards, roof rails, front skid plate and sporty integrated roll-over cargo bed bar extending aft of the cabin.

 

Robust re-design

 

While the wider Ranger line receives a re-styled and more toned-down and clearly delineated horizontally-oriented front bumper design, the sportier Wildtrak instead gets a yet more assertive treatment. Placing more emphasis on grille prominence, the Wildtrak receives new full length slats, and is still integrated with the bumper’s mid-section for more vertically-extended and more aggressive aesthetic, further enhanced by more body-integrated bumper edges, bigger side light housings and a bigger, broader brushed metal skid plate. Meanwhile, the Wildttrak’s high-set, heavily browed and moody headlights receive slightly re-styled internal elements.

Assertive with its big muscular wheel-arches, short front overhang and jutting upright fascia, the Wildtrak is powered by Ford’s tried, tested and robust turbocharged direct injection 3.2-litre 5-cylinder diesel engine mounted longitudinally under its clamshell bonnet. Carrying over, rather than being replaced by a derivative of the Raptor’s new 2-litre diesel, the Wildtrak’s powerful five-pot diesel produces 197BHP at 3000rpm and churns out a massive 347lb/ft torque throughout 1500-2750rpm. Driven in 6-speed automatic gearbox guise, this provides the 2,260kg Wildtrak with brisk 10.6-second in-class acceleration and a 175km/h maximum.

 

Versatile workhorse

 

Quick-spooling with little low-end lag and plenty of displacement making it responsive from standstill, the Wildtrak’s big engine and slick shifting gearbox deliver a more consistent, versatile and fluent experience than smaller diesels with narrow output sweet spots. Muscular from standstill and with plenty of power towards its low-revving top-end, the Wildtrack is, however, characterised by its easily accessible and indefatigable torque avalanche, carrying it with effortless flexibility, whether ploughing through sand dunes, driving steep inclines, cruising in town, overtaking on highway or pushing through air resistance at speed.

Driving its rear wheels for regular on-road use, the Wildtrak’s four-wheel-drive can be engaged on-the-move at up to 120km/h. With four-wheel-drive engaged, it easily powers through most low traction conditions, but a 2.48:1 low gear reduction ratio and locking rear differential provide yet more low-traction, incline, crawling and towing capabilities. A utilitarian workhorse with 1180-litres cargo bay, 922kg payload and 3500kg towing capacity, the comparatively compact Wildtrak also delivers extensive off-road ability, including generous high 230mm ground clearance, 800mm water wading and 29° approach, 21° departure, 25° ramp and 35° tilt angles.

 

A cut above

 

Thoroughly accomplished off-road and composed, refined and comfortable on-road and through corners, the Wildtrak’s rigidity serves well whether on heavily rutted highways or dirt roads. Its rigidity yields safety benefits, and aids comfort and handling quality, as it allows its double wishbone front and live axle, leaf spring rear suspension to operate with precision. Refined and settled given its’ rugged rear suspension, the Wildtrak is well controlled through corners for a tall pick-up, while its suspension settings are well-judged for settled on-road refinement and off-road ability and articulation.

A stable and reassuring highway cruiser with excellent cabin refinement from road imperfections, noise, vibrations and diesel clatter, the Wildtrak is a clear cut above most mid-size pick-ups, and feels notably more settled at the rear. As agile as such trucks can be through switchbacks, the Wildtrak is easy to place on the road with its good front visibility and restrained dimensions. Steering is precise, intuitive and direct, if not with a particularly quick ratio. Meanwhile, near ideal weight distribution and sophisticated front suspension allow for tidy turn-in, and good rear grip.

 

Well-equipped and ergonomic

 

Manoeuvrable and easy to place whether through narrow lanes, trails or city streets, the Wildtrak benefits from a slew of driver assistance and safety systems including hill descent control, trailer sway control, lane departure warning, adaptive cruise control and much more. An ideal and refined daily drive truck with plenty of power, low fuel consumption and tight 12.7-metre turning circle, the Wildtrak now even features a 360° reversing camera and semi-auto active parking assistance functionality, which fully negates the low rear manoeuvring visibility inherent to all pick-up trucks. 

Easily accessible and spacious every which way, the Ranger Wildtrak’s cabin is a comfortable, well-equipped environment with sporty styling and rugged material. Ergonomic inside, it features two-tone fabric upholstery with contrasting stitching, and alert, upright driving position with easy reach of controls. Its front seats are exceptionally good for adjustability, comfort and support. Equipped with Ford’s more sophisticated and user-friendly Sync 3 infotainment system, the Wildtrak’s equipment includes numerous other features including off-road instrumentation. It cargo bed meanwhile features a secure roll-back metal cover, 230V AC socket and liftgate assistance.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

 

Engine: 3.2-litre, common-rail turbo-diesel, in-line 5-cylinders

Bore x stroke: 89.9 x 100.8mm

Compression ratio: 15.7:1

Valve-train: 20-valve, DOHC

Gearbox: 6-speed automatic

Driveline: Four-wheel-drive, low gear transfer case, locking rear differential

Gear ratios: 1st 4.171:1; 2nd 2.342:1; 3rd 1.521:1; 4th 1.143:1; 5th 0.867:1; 6th 0.691:1

Reverse/final drive: 3.4:1/3.73:1

High/low range: 1:1/2.48:1

Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 197 (200) [147] @3,000rpm

Specific power: 61.6BHP/litre

Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 347 (470) @1,750-2,500rpm

Specific torque: 147Nm/litre

0-100km/h: approximately 10.6-seconds

Top speed: 175km/h

Fuel consumption, urban/extra-urban/combined; 11.4-/7.4-/8.9-litres/100km

CO2 emissions, combined: 234g/km

Fuel capacity: 80-litres

Length: 5,446mm

Width: 1,867mm

Height: 1,848mm

Wheelbase: 3,220mm

Track: 1,560mm

Overhang, F/R: 928/1,226mm

Ground clearance: 237mm

Water fording: 800mm

Cargo volume: 1,180-litres

Payload, Net: 922kg

Towing capacity, braked/un-braked: 3,500/750kg

Gross vehicle mass: 3,200kg

Gross train mass: 6,000kg

Suspension, F/R: Double wishbones, coilovers/leaf springs, live axle

Steering: Electric-assisted rack & pinion

Lock-to-lock: 3.5-turns

Turning circle: 12.7-metres

Brakes, F/R: Ventilated discs 302x32mm/drums, 295x55mm

Tyres: 265/60R18

Spanish banks seek mergers as outlook darkens

By - Nov 22,2020 - Last updated at Nov 22,2020

BARCELONA — A wave of mergers is sweeping across the Spanish banking sector as lenders face up to a pandemic-induced recession, ultralow interest rates and growing competition from financial technology startups.

CaixaBank, Spain’s third-largest bank, and Bankia, its fourth-largest, approved a merger in September which will create the nation’s biggest domestic lender with around 664 billion euros ($788 billion) in assets in the country.

 BBVA, the country’s second-largest bank, announced on Monday it was in talks with Banco Sabadell, Spain’s fifth-largest bank, over a possible tie-up.

If successful, it would create Spain’s second-largest domestic bank, far ahead of Santander, which would still remain the country’s biggest bank by total assets due to its huge international presence.

Mid-sized lenders Liberbank and Unicaja, meanwhile, confirmed renewed merger talks in October.

The trend is not new in Spain, which saw dozens of lenders disappear in a wave of tie-ups that followed the 2008 financial crisis, when Madrid received a European Union bailout of 41.3 billion euros for its ailing banking sector.

These new operations are “defensive to avoid problems in the future”, Xavier Vives, of the IESE Business School in Barcelona, told AFP.

But unlike during the previous crisis, when lenders faced a solvency problem, this time around the issue is a lack of profitability, he added.

“Interest rates are low, the yield curve is very flat, and with the COVID pandemic, revisions of interest rates have been postponed. Under these circumstances, the banking business is not very profitable,” said Vives.

At the same time, banks are facing fierce competition from financial technology startups, or the so-called “fintech” sector, which operate online and have much lower operating costs than traditional banks.”Certainly, with negative interest rates it is very difficult to earn money,” said Ricardo Zion, a bank expert with the EAE Business School.

“But the big problem for banks is that it is impossible to be profitable with a model based on having branches, especially to compete with the ‘fintech’ and new operators.” 

“It’s like the airlines. A traditional airline has its own fleet and pilots who earn 400,000 euros a year, and it must compete with a low-cost airline that uses rented planes and pilots who earn 60,000 euros.”

At a time when banks are boosting their provisions to face an expected rise on bad loans due to the economic fallout of the pandemic, these merger operations “strengthen their solvency”, Zion said.

“Unlike during the last crisis, when banks were a problem, now they must be part of the solution,” he added.

 

Union worries 

 

This banking consolidation, which will lead to the closure of branches and job cuts, has raised alarm bells at unions.

“I am worried about the magnitude of job losses which can occur,” Pepe Alvarez, leader of the UGT union, Spain’s second-largest, said during an interview with Spanish public radio.

“Financial institutions must be aware of the effort made by this country to keep them afloat during the last crisis and they can’t return the favour with more dismissals,” he added.

Between 2008 and the end of 2019, Spanish banks slashed nearly 100,000 jobs, or around 37 per cent of their workforce in 2008, according to the CCOO, Spain’s largest union.

Fresh job cuts have already been announced. Santander plans to cut 4,000 jobs and Sabadell another 1,800, while the merger between CaixaBank and Bankia will reportedly cause the loss of 8,000 jobs.

Consumer groups fear the growing concentration in the sector will lead to an oligopoly that will hurt customers, with just a dozen banks left in the country when a decade ago there were over 70.

But Vives said this should not be a problem “if there are three or four big banks and sufficient competition from the new digital actors”.

Superspreader events key driver in COVID-19 pandemic

Nov 22,2020 - Last updated at Nov 22,2020

PARIS — At churches, on cruise ships and even in the White House, superspreading events that can sicken dozens, even hundreds, of people have illustrated the potential for the coronavirus to infect in dramatic bursts.

Experts say these large clusters are more than just extreme outliers, but rather the pandemic’s likely main engine of transmission.

And understanding where, when and why they happen could help us tame the spread of the virus in the period before a vaccine may be widely available. 

Research increasingly suggests that the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 does not fan out evenly across the population, but spreads at the extremes in an almost “all or nothing” pattern. 

Many studies now suggest the majority of people with COVID-19 barely pass it on to anyone else, but when infections happen they can be explosive and supercharge an outbreak. 

Then the virus can infect “10, 20, 50, or even more people”, said Benjamin Althouse, research scientist at the Institute for Disease Modelling.

This corresponds to the “80/20 rule” of epidemiology, where 80 per cent of cases come from only 20 per cent of those infected, but Althouse said this coronavirus may be even more extreme, with 90 per cent of cases coming from potentially just 10 per cent of carriers. 

This transmission pattern is like “throwing matches on a pile of kindling”, he told AFP. 

“You throw one match, it doesn’t ignite. You throw another match, it doesn’t ignite. You throw yet another match, and this time you see flames blaze up,” he said. 

“For SARS-CoV-2, this means that while it is difficult to establish in new places, once established, it can spread rapidly and far.”

 

Virus ‘hallmark’

 

Superspreading events have grabbed headlines, looming large in the narrative of the unfolding pandemic. 

In February, the Diamond Princess and its 4,000 passengers spent weeks in quarantine at port in Japan as the number of infections on board climbed, reaching 700.

The same month a 61-year-old woman, known as “Patient 31”, attended several church services of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus in the South Korean city of Daegu. 

The Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has since linked more than 5,000 infections to Shincheonji.

More recently the virus managed to infiltrate the White House despite a host of measures to keep it out. 

Political gatherings, business conferences and sports tournaments have all acted as infection incubators, but these high profile events could just be the tip of the iceberg. 

A study by US researchers, based on one of the world’s largest contact tracing operations and published in Science in September, found that “superspreading predominated” in transmission. 

Analysing data from the first four months of the pandemic in the states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh in India, the authors found that just eight per cent of infected individuals accounted for 60 per cent of new cases, while 71 per cent of people with the virus did not pass it on to any of their contacts.

Perhaps this should not be a surprise. 

Maria Van Kerkhove, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the heart of the World Health Organisation’s pandemic response, tweeted in October that “superspreading is a hallmark” of coronaviruses. 

Indeed, it has been observed in many infectious diseases. 

One of the most famous superspreaders was Mary Mallon, a cook working in New York in the early 1900s who was the first documented healthy carrier of typhoid bacteria in the US. 

Blamed for giving the illness to dozens of people, she was given the unsympathetic label “Typhoid Mary” and forcibly confined for years.

Measles, smallpox and Ebola also see clustering patterns, as did the other coronaviruses, SARS and MERS.

 

K factor

 

Early in the pandemic, much attention was focused on the basic reproduction number (R0) of SARS-CoV-2. 

This helps calculate the speed a disease can spread by looking at the average number of others a person with the virus infects. 

But looking at transmission through this metric alone often “fails to tell the whole story”, said Althouse, who co-authored a paper on the limitations of R0 in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface this month. 

For instance, he said Ebola, SARS-CoV-2, and influenza, all have an R0 value of around two to three. 

But while people with the flu tend to infect two or three others “consistently”, the transmission pattern for those with Ebola and SARS-CoV-2 is overdispersed, meaning most will hardly spread it and some will give rise to tens of other cases.

A different metric — “k” — is used to capture this clustering behaviour, although it usually requires “more detailed data and methodology”, said Akira Endo, a research student at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. 

His modelling from the early international spread of the virus, published in Wellcome Open Research, suggested SARS-CoV-2 could be highly overdispersed. 

A telltale clue, he said, was that some countries reported numerous imported cases but no signs of sustained transmission — like the match analogy — while others reported large local outbreaks with only a few imported cases. 

But even k may not give the full picture, said Felix Wong, a postdoctoral fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

His research analysing known COVID-19 superspreading events, published this month in the journal PNAS, found that they were happening even more frequently than predicted by traditional epidemiological models. 

They are “extreme, yet probable occurrences”, Wong told AFP.

 

Biology vs opportunity

 

So why does superspreading occur?

We don’t know definitively whether biological factors, such as viral load, play much of a role.

But what we do know is people can spread SARS-CoV-2 without symptoms and given a poorly-ventilated, crowded space — particularly where people talk, shout or sing — the virus can run rampant. 

This could be why a study in Nature this month found that restaurants, gyms and cafes account for most COVID-19 infections in the United States. 

Using the mobile phone data of 98 million people, researchers found about 10 per cent of venues accounted for over 80 per cent of cases. 

Given this, experts say the focus should be on these types of spaces — and reducing opportunities for the virus to access large numbers of people. 

Wong said his modelling showed that if each individual was limited to ten transmissible contacts, “viral transmission would quickly die down”.

 

Tracking back

 

Overdispersed spread also means that most people testing positive for the virus are likely to be part of a cluster. 

This opens up another way to trace infections: backwards. 

“The idea being that it could be more efficient to trace back, and isolate, superspreaders than it is to trace downstream and isolate individuals who, even if they were infected, might transmit the virus to very few people,” said Wong. 

Both Japan and South Korea have used backwards contact tracing, which has been credited with helping them curb their epidemics, along with other control measures. 

Masks, social distancing and reducing contacts are all ways to limit transmission opportunities, Althouse said, adding that even characterising people as “superspreaders” is misleading.

“There are vast differences in biology between individuals — I may have a million times more virus in my nose than you — but if I am a recluse, I can infect no one,” he said.

By Kelly Macnamara

 

How do you handle shame?

By , - Nov 22,2020 - Last updated at Nov 22,2020

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

Some of us are predisposed to devalue ourselves due to childhood experiences, culture and family. When this feeling is not addressed and goes unresolved, depression and anxiety are likely to ensue.

 

Shame Resilience Theory

 

According to Shame Resilience Theory, developed by Dr Brené Brown, we can move on from feeling trapped, powerless and isolated as a result of feeling shame onto empathy, connection, power and freedom. 

The four elements of this theory are: 

• Recognising and understanding shame triggers. What physical sensations are associated with your feelings of shame (tightness in the chest, shortness of breath, racing heart)?

• Practising critical awareness. Are the expectations that are driving your shame realistic? Are they really what you need or do they lead to the person you want to be?

• Reaching out to others. Empathy is a tool that helps us understand our own experiences as well as others’. When someone shares their experiences of shame, we are better able to empathise and reach out to them, which also helps make us more resilient to our own shame

• Talking it through. Who is someone safe with whom you can share your story? How can you connect with others who have had similar experiences? What do you need from others right now? Who is capable of giving that to you?

 

Finally, let’s remember that shame is universal and we’re all afraid to talk about it. But the less we talk about shame, the more control it has over our lives. Shame becomes increasingly difficult to deal with without the confidence to show vulnerability in our closest relationships. So reach out to a trusted friend or a professional. You matter and deserve to live a life full of empathy, connection, power and freedom. 

Shame Resilience exercise

 

Fold a piece of paper into four sections and fill in each section with:

• A shaming experience

• Description of your self-talk

• What you did to challenge your negative self-talk

• Who you reached out to and shared your story with

 

Haneen Mas’oud

Clinical Psychologist

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

Can surgical masks be reused?

By - Nov 21,2020 - Last updated at Nov 21,2020

A tobacconist displays a face mask she sells in her shop on May 5 in Savenay, outside Nantes, on the 50th day of a lockdown in France aimed at curbing the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic (AFP photo by Loic Venance)

PARIS — Health authorities say the most widespread anti-COVID weapon — surgical masks — must be thrown away after a single use, but environmental concerns are pushing some scientists to question this recommendation.

As the coronavirus continues to spread, masks have in many places become mandatory on public transport, in shops and at work.

But cost has become an issue, as has the fact so many disposable plastic masks wind up in waterways and the oceans.

One alternative is reusable cloth masks, but many people prefer single-use surgical masks because they are lighter and individually cheaper.

“Medical masks are for single use only,” the World Health Organisation (WHO) has said. “Discard the mask immediately, preferably into a closed bin.”

But in the context of scarcities during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic the WHO allowed in a April report for the resuse of decontaminated disposable masks when there is a “critical PPE [personal protective equipment] shortage, or lack of PPE”.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allowed — in emergency circumstances — hydrogen peroxide vapour to decontaminate the N95 masks worn by healthcare workers. 

Other methods to purify single-use masks include exposing them to high temperatures or ultraviolet radiation. 

But these methods are inconvenient for people at home, said French microbiologist and member of Adios Corona, Denis Corpet.

 

Seven-day method

 

Adios Corona — a group of scientists who provide information on COVID-19 to the public — recommends “placing the mask in a paper envelope with the date clearly marked, and leaving it for seven days”.

“Several scientific studies show that viruses are almost all dead on a mask after seven days,” said Corpet.

A study published in The Lancet found that only 0.1 per cent of the virus on the outside surface of the mask was still detectable after one week.

This method, however, is not appropriate for healthcare workers exposed to high viral loads.

Peter Tsai, the inventor of N95 electrostatically charged filter material, agrees with the seven-day method.

But he suggests leaving used masks out in the open for a week before reuse, a cycle he says can be repeated five to 10 times.

Disposable masks can also be placed in the oven, Tsai told AFP, ideally at a temperature between 70 and 75ºC — not too high to avoid burning the plastic, but sufficiently hot to kill the virus.

Washing masks in a washing machine, however, is not a good idea.

“Washing without detergent may not wash away the virus,” Tsai said. “And washing with detergent will erase the [electrostatic] charges,” diminishing its efficiency.

French consumers’ rights group UFC-Que Choisir washed surgical masks at 60ºC, put them in the dryer, and ironed them. After 10 such cycles, the masks still filtered at least 90 per cent of 3-micron particles.

“Apart from a slight felting, the washed surgical masks were at least as efficient as the best cloth masks,” UFC-Que Choisir reported last week.

 

‘Like underwear’

 

Researcher Philippe Vroman from French engineering university Ensait came to the same conclusion.

After five washes, “there are practically no differences [of filtration] for particles of 3 microns,” Vroman said, on the basis of preliminary results not yet published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.

“And I would rather we swap masks every four hours and wash them, rather than wearing them several days in a row as some people do. It’s a bit like underwear,” he said.

But not all scientists agree.

“Washing the mask at home could potentially cause a secondary contamination and spread the virus if washing is not set appropriately,” said Kaiming Ye, head of the biomedical engineering department at New York’s Binghamton University.

Until more research is published on the matter, official advice from health authorities is not set to change.

“Single-use surgical masks must be thrown into the bin after use,” said France’s health authority DGS, but noted that more studies were underway.

 

Los Angeles and Google partner on ‘Tree Canopy’ project

By - Nov 21,2020 - Last updated at Nov 21,2020

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles and Google have struck a partnership to track canopy density in the huge metropolis to determine which neighbourhoods need more trees as a means of fighting extreme temperatures.

Vegetation, notably tree canopy coverage, plays a key role in offering the kind of relief that Los Angeles needs: The city is the state’s biggest urban heat island thanks in no small part to thousands of miles of roads and parking spaces.

A project with Google’s new Tree Canopy Lab is making it “possible for us to quickly assess the areas of our city with the greatest population density and the fewest trees with the greatest heat”, Mayor Eric Garcetti said in announcing the programme. 

“This is a powerful new tool, and we’re the first city in the country to do this,” he said.

The project is a big undertaking considering the city of four million people extends some 1,300 square kilometres from the Pacific Ocean to the desert.

Temperatures in many areas of Los Angeles have broken records in recent years, going up into the triple digits.

And the warming isn’t about to slow down.

By 2050, the number of days when downtown temperatures will soar above 35ºC will triple, according to a study by the University of California Los Angeles.

Tree Canopy Lab has already determined that more than half of Los Angeles residents live in areas with less than 10 per cent tree canopy coverage and 44 per cent live in areas with extreme heat risk.

 

Measure density

 

The project relies on aerial images collected from planes during the spring, summer and fall seasons as well as artificial intelligence developed by Google and Google Earth.

“We can now pinpoint all the trees in a city and measure their density,” Google said in a blog post about the project.

“The imagery we use for these calculations includes color photos that closely represent how we would see a city from the sky,” it added.

“To get even more detailed information about the city’s canopy cover, near-infrared photos detect colours and details that human eyes can’t see and compare images from different angles to create a height map,” it said.

A specialised tree-detection algorithm is then used to scan images to produce a map that shows coverage density.

“With this tool, the city of Los Angeles doesn’t have to rely on expensive and time-intensive manual tree studies which can involve block-by-block tree surveys, outdated records or incomplete studies which only count trees in public spaces,” Google said.

City officials said they were keen on moving forward with the project to improve conditions for residents.

“Our partnership with Google has been a long time coming, and we’re so excited that we have this resource for communities to be able to explore their neighbourhoods, understand what the needs are and for us to be able to prioritise really quickly,” said Rachel Malarich, Los Angeles’ first-ever city forest officer.

The city aims to plant 90,000 trees by the end of 2021 and 20,000 each following year.

Google said it plans to apply the insights from the partnership with Los Angeles in hundreds of other cities.

 

The power of machine translation

By - Nov 19,2020 - Last updated at Nov 19,2020

Photo courtesy of intonation.com

Putting to good use the power of computers, artificial intelligence (AI), neural networks and the various digital tools available, to do language translation, has reached a milestone. Gone are the days where completely manual, traditional translation was done.

This is true at least for contents like business, news, websites, technical documentation of all kinds, user manuals, brochures, emailing, online chats and the like. Such contents probably constitute the bulk of all text generated these days. As for literature like novels and poetry, where specific style is of prime importance, manual translation is still irreplaceable at this point in time.

Making the computer translate is the way to go today. The simplest, cheapest method is through systems like for instance Google Translate. The limitations, shortcomings and the weaknesses are well known, and the result in some extreme cases is just a laughable matter. Yet, it often helps to communicate quickly and give a reasonable idea of the original material. Best of all it is a huge time and money saver.

Better than the above are DeepL and Linguee. Though not perfect they use AI to analyse the context and produce a translation of good-enough to real-good quality. DeepL does direct translation whereas Linguee provides a list of already translated examples, in the source and the target language, leaving you the choice of selecting and deciding what seems the best to you.

DeepL uses what is referred to as Machine Translation (MT), whereas Linguee taps into what the company calls the largest available database of Human Translation (HT) already done. Both acronyms, MT and HT, are now part of the field. Both are software products by the German company DeepL and are available free online.

Professional translators have even more powerful MT tools. They use software that relies on a concept called Translation Memories (TM) along with glossaries that pertain to the very subject they are translating: medicine, architecture, music, business, tourism, software and so forth. This dramatically increases the precision and the quality of the output. In the best cases the result is “almost” as good as pure HT.

Naturally, these professional tools are not free. SDL Trados is one of the suppliers of paid software that blends all the digital means available: MT, TM, AI and specialised glossaries, to help the professional linguists generate perfectly translated text, by leaving to them to put the final touch to the work, in a personalised, customised manner.

By combining the digital tools while still letting the translator decide what is the best text in the end, SDL Trados allows for very fast yet accurate translations. By tapping on machines and memory resources, the product avoids wasting time translating what others have translated before. In a certain way it is about not reinventing the wheel.

Another method of obtaining perfectly translated text used in the professional field is the MTPE, which stands for Machine Translation Post Editing. It consists of starting with a completely computerised translation, a huge time saver since it produces a virtually instant result, at least when done with fast computers, and then giving it to a specialised linguist to review, edit and correct. Here too the result is usually excellent and there is invaluable time saved.

Whether with the free online tools like DeepL or Google Translate, or with paid software like SDL Trados, the world of language translation has undergone a real revolution over the past 10 years. The whole concept of getting help from the machines, their memories, AI, and the networks, is referred to as CAD (Computer Aided Translation).

CAD smartest aspect perhaps is that it lets you balance how much you are willing to accept as purely automated translation, how much human input you want to involve in the end, and how much you are ready to pay, so as to reach the quality of translation you are targeting.

CAD is more important than ever, given the flabbergasting amount of text generated every day, and the need to translate it quickly into the main languages spoken in the world.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF