The Evolution Of A Real Estate Agent – Forbes

Messy could be the perfect word to describe a successful real estate broker in the 1980s. And one would take pride in being messy, for brokers worked with listings cut directly out of the newspaper and had all the available listings printed out and displayed on a wall. It was a sort of art. The printed listings would be filled with Post-its and would (mostly) be removed once the apartments were gone. The landline phone (extension included) was an agents best friend, and walk-in clients were widespread. For the most part, real estate agents (and their clients) have since evolved.

From Early Bird Gets The Worm To Work Smart And Hard

Being the first agent at the office is not enough. Today, agents are expected to be good at marketing, networking, real estate and technology. Not having any one of these skills means falling behind.

Having all agents work from the office is now becoming a thing of the past, as customers often prefer calling agents directly on their cellphones, and many agents prefer to work from home. To add to this, brokerages nowadays tend to operate on slim margins and have significant bills to pay, so agents are sometimes encouraged to work from home and use the tools at their disposal.

But the flexibility of working from home comes at a price. Agents now have to take care of most of their marketing expenditure to get new clients and must step up their game when it comes to technology. Advertising platforms now include social media as well, making it harder for agents to figure out a strategy that makes financial sense for them.

To be a successful agent today, you need referrals, which means that it is more important than ever to end up with a happy customer who will be willing to tell their neighbors and family all about you. So as an agent, you want to get your clients an excellent apartment and create a pleasant, more holistic experience in their search for a place in the city.

Real Estate Is A Vocation, Not A Vacation

Learning that real estate has to be done full-time for an agent to succeed can be a harsh lesson. Have you ever asked yourself why brokerages dont invest more in their agents education? The harsh truth has two words: agent turnover.

As the cofounder and CEO of a listings platform in which agents advertise rental apartments in New York, I can share with you that the most frequent reason for an agent deleting their account with us is because theyre no longer doing real estate. This fact is astounding to me. Agents who leave their companies or brokerages most often do so because theyve simply moved on from real estate. Managers may not be willing to spend much on their agents education because, from a statistical standpoint, their probabilities of retaining an agent long enough for the training to pay off are very slim. Even worse, theres always the possibility of investing in an agents education only to see them go work for a competitor a few days later.

Moving In The Right Direction

It was not so long ago that people didnt require a license to be compensated for acting as a real estate agent. Today, there are tens of thousands of real estate salespersons in New York City alone. Yes, we moved one step forward by requiring special education to become an agent, but theres still more to be done.

In the future, it would be interesting to see more requirements and commitment needed to become a real estate agent, so that customers can interact with fewer, more knowledgeable agents who are committed to finding them a place to call home. Were moving slowly, but in the right direction.

Real estate agents will continue existing for a long time; their roles, however, are rapidly evolving into ones in which they're expected to know their market, be tech-savvy and take risks. Missing any of these skills will pose a threat to their survival. The silver lining for those active agents who can acquire a healthy dose of each skill is that the industry will naturally filter out those who don't add consumer value, leaving fewer but more capable real estate agents.

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The Evolution Of A Real Estate Agent - Forbes

Exploring the origins and evolution of the Festival of Lights – PAHomePage.com

WILKES-BARRE, LUZERNE COUNTY (WBRE/WYOU) Thursday night is the fifth night of Hanukkah and Eyewitness News reporter Kevin Hayes has more about the origins and evolution of the Festival of Lights.

As the sun set over northeast and central Pennsylvania, thousands of families came together lighting candles to celebrate a tradition over 1,000 years old. But what exactly are they celebrating?

It is both a celebration of the military victory of the Maccabees who led the Jewish rebellion against the Hellenized Assyrians. They were from the north, Rabbi David Kaplan of Ohav Zedek of Wilkes-Barre, said.

They cleaned out the temple from all the Greek gods, the pantheon of gods that were placed there. They needed to rededicate it and thats where the word Hanukkah comes from. The idea of rededication of that temple, Rabbi Larry Kaplan, Temple Israel in Wilkes-Barre said.

Rabbi David of Ohav Zedek says the origin continues in a second part.

At the same time, when they came back to the ruined temple in Jerusalem, there is the second miracle, the oil, Rabbi David said.

Oil that was only expected to burn for one night as the Jews waited for replenishment lasted eight nights and is remembered this time each year. That leads to the version we know today after more than a millennia of it being a more somber celebration.

About 60 or 70 years ago, Jewish kids were coming home from school, saw that their friends were all getting Christmas presents. They werent getting anything and so Jewish parents decided to sort of give Christmas presents to their Jewish kids wrapped in Hanukkah paper, Rabbi Larry said.

But the core values of Hanukkah remain today with roots in intimate observances, traditions, and the fire in eight candles.

We try to illuminate, and again, its just that little bit of light that can bring solace to us and to humanity itself, Rabbi David said.

So whether youre celebrating the Festival of Lights or just trying to bring light to the world, Happy Hanukkah.

The eight-day holiday runs through Sunday night.

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5 Animals That Have Evolved Recently Now. Powered by – Now. Powered by Northrop Grumman.

We often think of evolution as an imperceptible, gradual change over time. But consider animals that have evolved right before our eyes: bugs, fish, birds and more. The degree and speed of change varies, depending on environmental conditions and the amount of time between generations. Some species evolved rapidly to adapt to major changes in their environment.

Back in the 1850s, Darwin had assumed that evolution was a slow, invisible process that could take as many as thousands of generations to produce a new species. However, Discover Magazine reported that in 1981 a researcher named David Reznick demonstrated that you can see animals evolve within a lifetime. This was a pivotal moment in changing the way scientists understand evolutionary biology. It turns out that some animals evolve so quickly that researchers can actually observe the changes.

Resznick wanted to watch evolution happen in real time, so he experimented with changing the predators in guppies environment. He moved one group of guppies to a stream without predators to see if they would thrive, and added predatory fish called cichlids to guppy sites that previously didnt have predators.

In just four years, or six to eight guppy generations, the guppies adapted to their new environments. The group in the stream without predators were larger, matured later and reproduced slower. The guppies who lived with cichlids matured at an earlier age and produced more babies.

When brown anole lizards invaded green anole territory in Florida, the green lizards adapted in just 15 years. Discover Magazine reported that only 20 generations after the invasive brown lizards arrived, the green lizards developed larger toepads and more scales, which helped them cling to higher branches to avoid competition from the brown lizards on lower branches.

Salmon have remained resilient, despite several challenges caused by humans. When commercial fishing in the 1920s threatened Chinook salmon from Alaska to California, the fish became smaller and shorter-lived, according to Discover Magazine. Pink salmon have adapted to migrate earlier because of climate change. Salmon are migrating from the ocean to the river two weeks earlier than they did 40 years ago, in response to warmer ocean temperatures. Furthermore, Mental Floss pointed out that this isnt just a behavior change, but a change at the genetic level, with natural selection favoring fish that migrate earlier.

One of the peskiest animals that have evolved quickly is pesticide-resistant bugs. Bedbugs were common in the 1940s and 1950s, according to the BBC, but when humans introduced DDT and other insecticides to control the bugs, the plan totally backfired. By the 1960s, future generations of the bugs were equipped with thicker shells, more resilient nerve cells and an enzyme that helps break down toxic substances. Now, New York City hosts super-strong bedbugs that are 250 times more resistant to pesticides than bedbugs in Florida, according to Mental Floss.

Tawny owls in Finland adapted their coloration in response to warmer winters. The owls are either pale gray or reddish brown. Previously, more owls were pale gray, which helped them avoid predators by blending in with the snow. According to Discover Magazine, a 2011 study revealed that while temperatures rise and theres less snow in Finland, more Tawny owls are brown. As winters are becoming milder, natural selection is favoring feathers that camouflage with the brown forest instead of snow.

In stable conditions, theres no reason for a species to change. If there is a major change to the environment, such as new predators, human interference, an invasive species or rising temperatures, then the species will adapt and evolve. Natural selection will favor the animals that are better suited for surviving the new environment.

Climate change is placing environmental stressors on animals right now, therefore several species are evolving faster than ever before.

We can see that animals have evolved in our lifetime, and humans are still evolving, too. Were not a perfect species, and even if we were, new environmental pressures could make us favor certain traits. Some evidence for current human evolution includes a reduction in Alzheimers genes, the ability to digest cows milk and Dutch men getting taller, according to Popular Science.

Evolution isnt just part of our history; its happening right now, to all sorts of species, even our own. Its just easier to observe these changes in animals that have shorter lifespans because we can witness their generational turnover.

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Alles Klar? Jerry Coyne on an Argument from Incredulity – Discovery Institute

If you look at Jerry Coynes blog Why Evolution Is True from over the past weekend, you will find his rebuttal to what Coyne calls an argument from incredulity. He comments, You will recognize this argument as the basis for Intelligent Design.

We have taken Coynes rebuttal, deleted the inessentials, and placed in bold all of the inferential steps, credulous guesses, and other leaps of imagination. It is astonishing that anyone would think the result a scientific argument, or, even, an argument at all. From A creationist writes in espousing the Argument from Incredulity, suitably modified:

Lets take the larval waspThe way to address the incredulity argument is to postulate aplausiblestep-by-step process in which each step is adaptive.

In the case of the wasp, all that is required is that different larvae have different propensities to eat the organs of the spider. How could this happen? Well, presumably the different organs of a spider can be perceived differently by the larval wasp, either by their location or, more plausibly, by the fact that they taste different. If different wasps prefer different tastes (or internal locations), and some of that variation is based on variation in genes, then the problem is solved. Over time, this results in the evolution of a behavior And this is not implausible.

Well, all you need is a starting behavior that can be improved and refined Of course that seems implausible because it requires that one envision fish that have some tendency to spit water in the first place, and of what use is that?

How could that evolve? While its not difficult to see that once you can acquire food by squirting insects and knocking them into the water, natural selection will then improve your aim, enabling you to judge distance, compensate for refraction, and so on.

Some archerfishuse a similar technique to displace siltbeneaththe water, uncovering hidden prey. Thats pretty easy to explain, as youre not really aiming but foraging, and you already have the equipment to do that: producing jets of water outside of your mouth, which is apparently common in fish.

TheNew Scientistarticlethat I found in about a minute of Googline [sic] says this

The big question is: how did they know beforehand which type of silt was which, and so how long they should blast it for? asks [Stefan] Schuster. The answer might be that they are adept underwater shooters in the wild, too.

Which came first aerial or underwater shooting also remains to be established.

Perhaps some tendency to produce underwater jets might have been there first, because this is widespread among fish, says Schuster. Many other fish and invertebrates forage by disturbing the ground, and this is probably the ancestral condition, saysAlex Kacelnikof the University of Oxford. Archerfish probably thus started with this ordinary skill then transitioned to targets probably at, or narrowly above, the surface and this created new selective pressures to focus and aim water jets at ever higher targets. Schuster says the two techniques might have evolved in parallel

So here we have an initial condition whose evolution isnt hard to understand. Once you squirt at the silt below you to uncover prey, selection would improve that ability, as would learning, and maybe youd start homing in on things that you see in the sediment.You then have the ability to be a living squirt gun. If a mutant fish then simply squirted at an object it could see, but oneat the surface or above the water,a successful squirt would bring you food, and, importantly, reproduction. You might in fact get more food than other individuals in the population who arent aiming at insects directly but just foraging willy-nilly, with most of their squirts being fruitless. And if that were the case, both selection and learning (apparently fish can learn!) would work together to improve the ability of archerfish to squirt at prey above the water. The compensation for refraction, intensity of squirt, and so on, would then be honed by both selection and learning.

Now I dont know if this scenario really happened

Well, he got that last part right.

We do not know whether Coynes self-satisfaction is more ridiculous than his self-assurance, or the other way around, but together they make a powerful combination. To his credit, he offers this delightful nature video of the archerfish at its work. You will enjoy it:

Illustration credit: A banded archerfish, from Popular Science Monthly Volume 44 [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

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Alles Klar? Jerry Coyne on an Argument from Incredulity - Discovery Institute

Chimp study may give insight into the evolution of human complexity – Haaretz

A study of wild apes sharing tools to catch termites could bring insight into the origin of cultural complexity in humans, suggest the humans behind the new study.

The motivating question behind the research is how cumulative culture develops. Going by the mounting complexity of stone tool culture in humans over hundreds of thousands of years, cumulative technology involving a learning process seems to go back to the dimmest reaches of human evolution.

Now, a team has had a stab at gaining insight on the origins of social learning by looking at wild chimpanzees who share termite-fishing gear, Stephanie Musgrave of the University of Miami, Crickette Sanz and colleagues suggest in PNAS.

Our cousin the chimp, from whom our ancestors parted ways six or seven million years ago, is a famed tool user. Wild chimps have been known to use rocks as remotely applied accoutrements of aggression meaning they can and will throw rocks at one another. They have recently been observed throwing rocks at specific trees for no obvious reason, which some scientists suspect may be a primitive ritual. One bonobo unexpectedly fashioned a spear to try to stab a scientist, but the irritated ape was captive, unable to escape her bane. And wild chimps fish for termites and manipulate the source material: theyre actually making tools, as opposed to picking up some blobject and using it as is.

So, seeking potential insight into early human propensities, anthropologists examined termite-fishing techniques and tool-sharing in two wide-separated populations of wild chimpanzees.

For what its worth, most people think termites are a sort of white, sun-fearing ant. Actually, they evolved from cockroaches. Now you know.

Back to the chimps. One group living in Gombe, Tanzania, used only one type of tool a fishing probe that could be made of twigs, vine, bark or grass and resisted sharing, usually rejecting requests from other chimps, including their own kids.

A second group living in the Goualougo basin in the Republic of Congo sequentially used multiple, different types of tools, which the apes made from certain plant species. They modified the tools to improve efficiency and as hypothesized by the scientists based on the complexity of the behavior the Goualougo mother chimps proved to be three times more amenable to sharing the tools (mainly with the kids) upon request than their counterparts at Gombe, according to the new paper, published Tuesday in PNAS.

We predicted that at Goualougo compared to Gombe requests or attempts to take tools would more often result in a change of possession, the scientists write. And so it was.

In both groups, what sharing there was usually took place between mothers and offspring. In general, the chimps were much more likely to share tools with females and juveniles who asked for them, compared with males and infants. The kids, by the way, were perfectly capable of stealing tools; possibly they hadnt yet learned how to ask nicely.

"A tool transfer is defined as a change in possession of a tool, which can occur in different ways. Mothers at Gombe do sometimes transfer tools, for example by allowing infants to take a fishing probe from their hands, or by picking up a fishing probe they (the mothers) have set down," Musgrave tells Haaretz. "Only at Goualougo, however, do chimpanzees exhibit active transfers, defined as an individual moving to actively facilitate a transfer after another individual requests the too"

For example, in an active transfer, a mother chimpanzee might extend her arm to give it to a child or divide a tool in half lengthwise to produce two usable tools and then provide half to offspring, she says.

Males would sometimes share tools with young chimps but in general, the sharers were female, Musgrave says.

Plausibly, the willingness to share helped the Goualougo chimps develop and sustain relatively complex tool manufacture and use, the team suggests. Thus, they could be a model for early human behavior.

Monkey see, monkey do

In humans, cumulative culture is hypothesized to have begun with imitation and teaching forms of social learning that enabled the accurate replication of complex behaviors.

Making stone tools by chipping a target rock using another rock goes back at least 3.3 million years. That is 3 million years before anatomically modern humans began to evolve.

The earliest stone tools were crude, large beasts that could weigh several pounds. By the time of the Neanderthal, stone tool technology had become quite a technological art. Some researchers infer that not only social learning but language may go back farther than we imagine, to precursors of modern humankind, based on the sheer complexity of stone-tool manufacturing processes developing over hundreds of thousands of years.

Chimps, crows and some other beings capable of complex tool-related behaviors dont have schooling, but do have social learning mainly, novices learning by themselves from other members of the species. Its more monkey see, monkey do.

But the more prosocial the behavioral patterns, the more likely complexity is to emerge, according to the theory.

Prosocial refers to behaviors performed for someone elses benefit: think of it as altruism-lite, with low cost. Prosocial fishing-rod transfers between apes count as teaching, the researchers argue: The tool-giver is forgoing potential food in favor of the tool-taker, and the sharing plausibly facilitates the novices learning process.

And communication asking for the tool by whimpering or holding out a hand or other, as opposed to hanging around scratching fleabites until a tool is abandoned is key.

At Gombe, requests were more likely to be met with resistance than at Goualougo, and the observed fishing behavior was commensurately simpler.

It also bears adding that tool acquisition skills at Goualougo lasted into subadulthood and the kids only learned how to make tools after they had learned to use them (to fish for termites adeptly).

Monkey say, monkey do

Wild chimpanzees live in permanent groups with multiple males and females, within which they tend to form fluid cliques. But in any case, they are characterized by strong social interaction and bonds.Maternal dependence in chimpanzees lasts for years. Baby chimps only start eating solid food at about 6 months and cling to or stay by the mother until the age of 3.5 years. They continue to nurse until age 4 or 5, and like humans only reach sexual maturity in their early teens.

The famous primatologist Jane Goodall discovered that orphaned baby chimps are often taken care of by others in the group, including in one case an older brother. That is charming.

Whoever the chimp kids stay with, its for years, and they have ample opportunity to learn education by master-apprenticeship, as Tetsuro Matsuzawa called it.

Whats more, who knows: maybe the chimps really do talk. Captive ones can certainly be taught some sign language and researchers think they have managed to interpret no fewer than 66 gestures sign language in wild apes.

The current study observed that chimpanzee mothers at Goualougo, where technologies became complex, were three times more likely to share tools with the kids than mothers at Gombe, where tool-use was simpler.

The upshot seems to be that the cooperative chimps had developed and improved variegated methods of achieving their aim, feasting on plump juicy cockroach cousins, while the insular chimps had one basic method: "Chimpanzees at Goualougo, but not at Gombe, also intentionally modify herb probes to fashion the end into a brush tip. This modification makes the fishing probe ten times more efficient at capturing termites," Musgrave tells Haaretz.

And that could cast light on how technology transfer emerged in early archaic humans, ultimately resulting in the conveniences of modern society. You cant teach young uns to manufacture a telephone or, at the other end of the spectrum, an F-15, by mime.

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Chimp study may give insight into the evolution of human complexity - Haaretz

Is ID the Best Kept Secret? No Longer – Discovery Institute

When I started working for Discovery in 2006, I would mention the name of Discovery Institute to my friends or acquaintances and would get a blank stare. Few people had heard of intelligent design (ID) or Discovery Institutes Center for Science & Culture. But all that has changed this year, thanks to generous donors who have supported us.

ID is no longer the best-kept secret on the planet. This year alone, our videos on YouTube have had over 3.2 million views, Evolution News and Science Today articles have reached over 1.7 million users, and our Intelligent Design the Future podcasts have been downloaded well over 600,000 times.

Our donors made it possible for Stephen Meyer, Michael Behe, David Berlinski, and others to be featured on the Ben Shapiro Show, Uncommon Knowledge, and Prager University. Through these partnerships our message has been introduced to millions more and has brought exponentially more traffic to our social media and websites.

These statistics are impressive, but they dont tell the whole story of the reach of our message or the lives impacted through our Media & Communications initiative. Every week I receive an email or speak with someone about how critical our work is in making the case for design and purpose in the universe and biology. Here are just two of the many comments received in response our Science Uprising series, launched this year:

Great, simple way to reveal the self-contradiction of materialism!

And:

This is excellent. I have been looking for a visual resource to speak to my students who struggle to grasp the issue of materialism abstractly; these videos seem to be just what I was looking for.

But we cant sit back and rest on the laurels of our success this past year. In 2020 we have plans to produce and promote a second season of Science Uprising, to launch a series of short videos featuring Michael Behe, and to generously promote Stephen Meyers upcoming book The Return of the God Hypothesis. These are just a few of the projects that have the potential to reach millions more with the powerful truth of intelligent design. There is much more on the horizon and we need you to join in supporting our work as we move into the new year.

Heres how your gift can make an impact:

Take a moment to give now, before December 31, so that we can enter 2020 with a solid base of support for the year. Every dollar makes an impact!

Thank you for your part in our present and future success! By the way, online gifts must be transacted by 5 pm Pacific time on December 31, to make sure they are counted as 2019 gifts.

Photo: A scene from Science Uprising, via Discovery Institute.

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Is ID the Best Kept Secret? No Longer - Discovery Institute

Generative adversarial networks: What GANs are and how theyve evolved – VentureBeat

Perhaps youve read about AI capable of producing humanlike speech or generating images of people that are difficult to distinguish from real-life photographs. More often than not, these systems build upon generative adversarial networks (GANs), which are two-part AI models consisting of a generator that creates samples and a discriminator that attempts to differentiate between the generated samples and real-world samples. This unique arrangement enables GANs to achieve impressive feats of media synthesis, from composing melodies and swapping sheep for giraffes to hallucinating footage of ice skaters and soccer players. In point of fact, its because of this prowess that GANs have been used to produce problematic content like deepfakes, which is media that takes a person in existing media and replaces them with someone elses likeness.

The evolution of GANs which Facebook AI research director Yann LeCun has called the most interesting idea of the decade is somewhat long and winding, and very much continues to this day. They have their deficiencies, but GANs remain one of the most versatile neural network architectures in use today.

The idea of pitting two algorithms against each other originated with Arthur Samuel, a prominent researcher in the field of computer science whos credited with popularized the term machine learning. While at IBM, he devised a checkers game the Samuel Checkers-playing Program that was among the first to successfully self-learn, in part by estimating the chance of each sides victory at a given position.

But if Samuel is the grandfather of GANs, Ian Goodfellow, former Google Brain research scientist and director of machine learning at Apples Special Projects Group, might be their father. In a seminal 2014 research paper simply titled Generative Adversarial Nets, Goodfellow and colleagues describe the first working implementation of a generative model based on adversarial networks.

Goodfellow has often stated that he was inspired by noise-contrastive estimation, a way of learning a data distribution by comparing it against a defined noise distribution (i.e., a mathematical function representing corrupted or distorted data). Noise-contrastive estimation uses the same loss functions as GANs in other words, the same measure of performance with respect to a models ability to anticipate expected outcomes.

Of course, Goodfellow wast the only one to pursue an adversarial AI model design. Dalle Molle Institute for Artificial Intelligence Research co-director Juergen Schmidhuber advocated predictability minimization, a technique that models distributions through an encoder that maximizes the objective function (the function that specifies the problem to be solved by the system) minimized by a predictor. It adopts whats known as a minimax decision rule, where the possible loss for a worst case (maximum loss) scenario is minimized as much as possible.

And this is the paradigm upon which GANs are built.

Again, GANs consist of two parts: generators and discriminators. The generator model produces synthetic examples (e.g., images) from random noise sampled using a distribution, which along with real examples from a training data set are fed to the discriminator, which attempts to distinguish between the two. Both the generator and discriminator improve in their respective abilities until the discriminator is unable to tell the real examples from the synthesized examples with better than the 50% accuracy expected of chance.

GANs train in an unsupervised fashion, meaning that they infer the patterns within data sets without reference to known, labeled, or annotated outcomes. Interestingly, the discriminators work informs that of the generator every time the discriminator correctly identifies a synthesized work, it tells the generator how to tweak its output so that it might be more realistic in the future.

In practice, GANs suffer from a number of shortcomings owing to their architecture. The simultaneous training of generator and discriminator models is inherently unstable. Sometimes the parameters the configuration values internal to the models oscillate or destabilize, which isnt surprising given that after every parameter update, the nature of the optimization problem being solved changes. Alternatively, the generator collapses, and it begins to produce data samples that are largely homogeneous in appearance.

Above: The architecture of a generative adversarial network (GAN).

Image Credit: Google

The generator and discriminator also run the risk of overpowering each other. If the generator becomes too accurate, itll exploit weaknesses in the discriminator that lead to undesirable results, whereas if the discriminator becomes too accurate, itll impede the generators progress toward convergence.

A lack of training data also threatens to impede GANs progress in the semantic realm, which in this context refers to the relationships among objects. Todays best GANs struggle to reconcile the difference between palming and holding an object, for example a differentiation most humans make in seconds.

But as Hanlin Tang, senior director of Intels AI laboratory, explained to VentureBeat in a phone interview, emerging techniques get around these limitations. One entails building multiple discriminator into a model and fine-tuning them on specific data. Another involves feeding discriminator dense embedding representations, or numerical representations of data, so that they have more information from which to draw.

There [arent] that many well-curated data sets to start applying GANs to, Tang said. GANs just follow where the data sets are going.

On the subject of compute, Youssef Mroueh, a research staff member in the IBM multi-modal algorithms and engines group, is working with colleagues to develop lightweight models dubbed small GANs that reduce training time and memory usage. The bulk of their research is concentrated in the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab, a joint AI research effort between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and IBM.

[Its a] challenging business question: How can we change [the] modeling without all the computation and hassle? Mroueh said. Thats what were working toward.

GANs are perhaps best known for their contributions to image synthesis.

StyleGAN, a model Nvidia developed, has generated high-resolution head shots of fictional people by learning attributes like facial pose, freckles, and hair. A newly released version StyleGAN 2 makes improvements with respect to both architecture and training methods, redefining the state of the art in terms of perceived quality.

In June 2019, Microsoft researchers detailed ObjGAN, a novel GAN that could understand captions, sketch layouts, and refine the details based on the wording. The coauthors of a related study proposed a system StoryGAN that synthesizes storyboards from paragraphs.

Such models have made their way into production. Startup Vue.ais GAN susses out clothing characteristics and learns to produce realistic poses, skin colors, and other features. From snapshots of apparel, it can generate model images in every size up to five times faster than a traditional photo shoot.

Elsewhere, GANs have been applied to the problems of super-resolution (image upsampling) and pose estimation (object transformation). Tang says one of his teams used GANs to train a model to upscale 200-by-200-pixel satellite imagery to 1,000 by 1,000 pixels, and to produce images that appear as though they were captured from alternate angles.

Above: Examples of edits performed by GAN Paint Studio.

Scientists at Carnegie Mellon last year demoed Recycle-GAN, a data-driven approach for transferring the content of one video or photo to another. When trained on footage of human subjects, the GAN generated clips that captured subtle expressions like dimples and lines that formed when subjects smiled and moved their mouths.

More recently, researchers at Seoul-based Hyperconnect published MarioNETte, which synthesizes a reenacted face animated by a persons movement while preserving the faces appearance.

On the object synthesis side of the equation, Google and MITs Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) developed a GAN that can generate images of 3D models with realistic lighting and reflections and enables shape and texture editing, as well as viewpoint shifts.

Predicting future events from only a few video frames a task once considered impossible is nearly within grasp thanks to state-of-the-art approaches involving GANs and novel data sets.

One of the newest papers on the subject from DeepMind details recent advances in the budding field of AI clip generation. Thanks to computationally efficient components and techniques and a new custom-tailored data set, researchers say their best-performing model Dual Video Discriminator GAN (DVD-GAN) can generate coherent 256 x 256-pixel videos of notable fidelity up to 48 frames in length.

In a twist on the video synthesis formula, Cambridge Consultants last year demoed a model called DeepRay that invents video frames to mitigate distortion caused by rain, dirt, smoke, and other debris.

GANs are capable of more than generating images and video footage. When trained on the right data sets, theyre able to produce de novo works of art.

Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad and the Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Learning devised a GAN, dubbed SkeGAN, that generates stroke-based vector sketches of cats, firetrucks, mosquitoes, and yoga poses.

Scientists at the Maastricht University in the Netherlands created a GAN that produces logos from one of 12 different colors.

Victor Dibia, a human-computer interaction researcher and Carnegie Mellon graduate, trained a GAN to synthesize African tribal masks.

Meanwhile, a team at the University of Edinburghs Institute for Perception and Institute for Astronomy designed a model that generates images of fictional galaxies that closely follow the distributions of real galaxies.

In March during its GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in San Jose, California, Nvidia took the wraps off of GauGAN, a generative adversarial AI system that lets users create lifelike landscape images that never existed. GauGAN whose name comes from post-Impressionist painter Paul Gauguin improves upon Nvidias Pix2PixHD system introduced last year, which was similarly capable of rendering synthetic worlds but left artifacts in its images. The machine learning model underpinning GauGAN was trained on more than one million images from Flickr, imbuing it with an understanding of the relationships among over 180 objects including snow, trees, water, flowers, bushes, hills, and mountains. In practice, trees next to water have reflections, for instance, and the type of precipitation changes depending on the season depicted.

GANs are architecturally well-suited to generating media, and that includes music.

In a paper published in August, researchers hailing from the National Institute of Informatics in Tokyo describe a system thats able to generate lyrics-conditioned melodies from learned relationships between syllables and notes.

Not to be outdone, in December, Amazon Web Services detailed DeepComposer, a cloud-based service thattaps a GAN to fill in compositional gaps in songs.

For a long time, [GANs research] has been about improving the training instabilities whatever the modality is text, images, sentences, et cetera. Engineering is one thing, but its also [about] coming up with [the right] architecture, said Mroueh. Its a combination of lots of things.

Google and Imperial College London researchers recently set out to create a GAN-based text-to-speech system capable of matching (or besting) state-of-the-art methods. Their proposed system GAN-TTS consists of a neural network that learned to produce raw audio by training on a corpus of speech with 567 pieces of encoded phonetic, duration, and pitch data. To enable the model to generate sentences of arbitrary length, the coauthors sampled 44 hours worth of two-second snippets together with the corresponding linguistic features computed for five-millisecond snippets. An ensemble of 10 discriminators some of which assess linguistic conditioning, while others assess general realism attempt to distinguish between real and synthetic speech.

In the medical field, GANs have been used to produce data on which other AI models in some cases, other GANs might train and to invent treatments for rare diseases that to date havent received much attention.

In April, the Imperial College London, University of Augsburg, and Technical University of Munich sought to synthesize data to fill in gaps in real data with a model dubbed Snore-GAN. In a similar vein, researchers from Nvidia, the Mayo Clinic, and the MGH and BWH Center for Clinical Data Science proposed a model that generates synthetic magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of brains with cancerous tumors.

Baltimore-based Insilico Medicine pioneered the use of GANs in molecular structure creation for diseases with a known ligand (a complex biomolecule) but no target (a protein associated with a disease process). Its team of researchers is actively working on drug discovery programs in cancer, dermatological diseases, fibrosis, Parkinsons, Alzheimers, ALS, diabetes, sarcopenia, and aging.

The field of robotics has a lot to gain from GANs, as it turns out.

A tuned discriminator can determine whether a machines trajectory has been drawn from a distribution of human demonstrations or from synthesized examples. In that way, its able to train agents to complete tasks accurately, even when it has access only to the robots positional information. (Normally, training robot-directing AI requires both positional and action data. The latter indicates which motors moved over time.)

The idea of using adversarial loss for training agent trajectories is not new, but whats new is allowing it to work with a lot less data, Tang said. The trick to applying these adversarial learning approaches is figuring out which inputs the discriminator has access to what information is available to avoid being tricked [by the discriminator] [In state-of-the-art approaches], discriminators need access to [positional] data alone, allowing us to train with expert demonstrations where all we have are the state data.

Tang says this enables the training of much more robust models than was previously possible models that require only about two dozen human demonstrations. If you reduce the amount of data that the discriminator has access to, youre reducing the complexity of the data set that you have to provide to the model. These types of adversarial learning methods actually work pretty well in low-data regimes, he added.

GANs ability to generate convincing photos and videos of people makes them ripe targets for abuse. Already, malicious actors have used models to generate fake celebrity pornography.

But preliminary research suggests GANs could root out deepfakes just as effectively as they produce them. A paper published on the preprint server Arxiv.org in March describes spamGAN, which learns from a limited corpus of annotated and unannotated data. In experiments, the researchers say that spamGAN outperformed existing spam detection techniques with limited labeled data, achieving accuracy of between 71% and 86% when trained on as little as 10% of labeled data.

What might the future hold with respect to GANs? Despite the leaps and bounds brought by this past decade of research, Tang cautions that its still early days.

GANs are still [missing] very fine-grained control, he said. [Thats] a big challenge.

For his part, Mroueh believes that GAN-generated content will become increasingly difficult to distinguish from real content.

My feeling is that the field will improve, he said. Comparing image generation in 2014 to today, I wouldnt have expected the quality to become that good. If the progress continues like this, [GANs] will remain a very important research project.

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Generative adversarial networks: What GANs are and how theyve evolved - VentureBeat

The Weapons of Sexual Rivalry – Scientific American

In the vast arsenal of animal weaponry, the most exaggerated, elaborate and diverse devices such as tusks, claws and antlers have not been shaped by a need to fend off fierce predators. Rather, these impressive forms are driven by sex.

Everybody understands at a gut level that its usually males that have flashy displays or weapons like tusks and antlers, says Doug Emlen, an animal weapon expert at the University of Montana in Missoula. Biologists say that these fantastic shapesfrom the giant curved tusks of woolly mammoths to the nightmarish jaws of stag beetlesevolved to ward off competition from rival males and to impress females.

Examples of such sexually selected weapons abound throughout the animal kingdom in insects, fish, crustaceans, reptiles and mammals as varied as narwhal, rhinoceros and moose. Even extinct species such as trilobites and dinosaurs sported elaborate projections. The number and variety of examples argue that evolution has turned to weaponry time and again in the race to reproduce successfully.

Its such a common theme that Emlen had to persuade his editors to include seven detailed, full-page line drawings in a survey of natures weapons that he wrote for the 2008 Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, featuring more than 280 examples of fantastical spikes, horns, antlers, pincers, tusks, claws, extended jaws, saws and spears. The illustration above offers a taste.

Scientists still debate the degree to which female choice plays a role in shaping the weapons flair and are still trying to figure out what factors drive the diversity of weapon forms seen among even closely related species. But its clear that the wild array of weapons evolved to aid successful mating.

Like the structures, types of combat vary greatly. Rhinoceros beetles, named for their rhino-like horns, guard access to the oozes of tree sap that females feed upon before laying eggs. Rival males size each other up, and if their horns sizes are similarly matched, a face-off ensues and each uses his horns to try to flip, pry and toss his rival off the tree branch.

Most species of male fiddler crabs guard their burrows, where mating takes place. Dueling males shove and tap on each others single, enlarged clawand, should the fight escalate, they lock claws, secret-handshake style, as if theyre testing the others strength. If one decides he has the upper hand, he flings his opponent away from the burrow.

The fearsome weapons seem to evolve whenever three criteria are met, Emlen says. One: Males must be competing over either resources such as food or over females. Two: Its possible for access to those resources to successfully be guarded. And three: Males of the species compete in one-on-one duels.

But the fighting is almost never to the death and rarely results in serious wounds. Scientists say that this supports the idea that these weapons are built for rivalrytheir designs optimized not for destruction but for power struggles. Indeed, variation in the size of male weaponry is huge, Emlen notes: While overall body size among adult male elk might vary by a factor of 2 at most, their antler racks can vary by a factor of more than 30, he says. And the most dazzling weapons act largely as deterrents, with actual fights breaking out only when males are closely matched.

As the weapons grow bigger and flashier, they come with the cost of producing and lugging around such big structures. (And sometimes other costs: Male fiddler crabs can only stuff algae in their mouths with one claw.) Studies show that the weapons sizes are sensitive to nutrition, parasite load, stress and overall physical conditionand so the healthiest, most fit individuals sport the most impressive weapons.

Researchers consider these ostentatious male weapons to be honest signalsadvertising the owners might and fitness accurately. And not just physical fitness. A study of nearly 200 Iberian red deer stags measured the size and complexity of the animals antlers and found that bigger and more elaborate racks correlated with both bigger testes and faster-swimming sperm. From that and other evidence, many biologists think that bigger weapons can advertise reproductive superiority, too.

And while Emlen believes that male weapons evolved primarily for the purposes of male-male rivalry battles, comparative physiologist Brook Swanson of Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, argues that those signals are almost certainly also being assessed by females choosing mates. Even if a male could beat up all the other males, females almost always have a choice among mates, he says.

Take those fiddler crabs. Males of more than 100 species of the crabs have enlarged claws, and research suggests that the females can be picky. Some will cruise an area of multiple male burrows and size up the weapons being waved at them, among other things, before selecting a mate. We dont know what the females thinking, but shes taking into account a bunch of complicated information, Swanson says.

Though scientists believe that the primary role for these animal weapons is in reproduction, there are cases in which the weapons also serve as deterrents or defenses against predatorslikely as an evolutionary bonus. Elk antlers are a case in point. Unlike many other North American species in the deer family, elk hang onto their antlers until March, long after the mating season has ended in October. When Matt Metz, a PhD student at the University of Montana, and his colleagues tracked wolf kills in Yellowstone National Park they found that during March, wolves are three to four times more likely to attack an antlerless male elk than one still wearing his rack.

Since elk rarely use the antlers in defense, preferring to rear up and kick predators with their front hooves, presumably the structures serve as deterrents, Metz says. Yet if antler weapons had evolved primarily as a defense against predators, it wouldnt make sense to shed them at all, he addsand females should have them, too.

Why nature came up with such a bizarre array of weapon shapes and forms remains a bit of a mystery. But as a general rule, Swanson says, evolution tended to exaggerate structures already in existence. Crabs and lobsters have pincer claws that over evolutionary time became enlarged. And arthropods (spiders, insects and crustaceans) have exoskeletonsthat genetic changes could sculpt to form projections such as the horns or giant mandibles seen in beetles.

Weapons also are probably molded by the type of fighting and where its doneas borne out by work on the shapes of rhinoceros beetle horns by evolutionary biologist Erin McCullough. As a graduate student with Emlen, she spent two summers in Taiwan videotaping battles of the Japanese horned beetle, which has a pitchfork-shaped horn. She compared its fights to those of the Hercules beetle, which sports thick, pinching horns, and a species of Golofa beetle, which has thinner, sword-like horns. Each fights in slightly different ways, all with the goal of flicking their opponent off a tree branch or bamboo shoot.

McCullough, now a postdoctoral researcher at Syracuse University in New York, first measured how much force was needed to dislodge an average-size male from a branch. Next, she CT-scanned the critters horns, built 3-D computer models of the structures and used engineering tools to calculate the stresses and strains that the structures could withstand. She found that each horn performed best under the forces of its species-specific fighting style. This is a big component for why different species have different weapons, she says.

In October, an international group of researchers used the same computer modeling techniques to suggest that the largest antlers ever to existthe 12-feet-across by 5-feet-high rack of the prehistoric Irish elkwere used for male sparring, too.

But McCullough notes that the scariest, showiest weapons are not always very lethal. Some diversity, such as curlicues and extra tines, is probably driven by the display functions of weapons, she says.

Some of the largest animal weapons ever found adorned dinosaur heads. An example is seen in the horns and frills of the triceratops, a type of ceratopsid dinosaurbig-bodied herbivores that lived in large herds in open spaces, not unlike caribou. They had the biggest skulls of land-living animals that ever lived, partly due to these big bony structures on their heads, says Scott Sampson, paleontologist and executive director of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco.

Of course, its tricky to study dinosaur behavior, or even determine a skeletons sex, from fossils. Paleontologists continue to debate whether such unusual face decor was used to help dinosaur species recognize their own kind, for male-male mating contests or signals to females, or for defense. But Sampson says several lines of evidence persuade him that these horns were sexual weapons or displays rather than spears to fend off predators.

Importantly, these features werent fully grown until the animals reached adult size and reproductive age. And many of the features of dinosaur horns, spikes and frills were lousy as weapons against carnivorous predators, Sampson says. Some were thin to the point of fragility or curved in seemingly the wrong direction. Take, for example, Kosmoceratops, a flamboyant fossil found in southern Utah that sported 15 horns on its face, the top of its skull and its bony frill, some of which curve back on themselves. Im quite certain this pattern is all about show, Sampson says. Ceratopsids, he says, would have been more likely to use their sheer size as a weapon against predators.

From spines and plates on late Cretaceous behemoths to horns on tiny, modern-day beetles, making and carrying flashy weapons can come at a huge energy cost. An elks antlers are akin to a 180-pound man wearing a 12-pound gold chain around his neck.

But the costs are worth it. In a lot of mating systems, if you dont produce a weapon, then you have zero success, Swanson says. You have no choice but to play the game.

This article originally appeared in Knowable Magazine, an independent journalistic endeavor from Annual Reviews. Sign up for the newsletter.

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The Weapons of Sexual Rivalry - Scientific American

Angus Thirlwell on the ‘perpetual evolution’ of Hotel Chocolat – FoodNavigator.com

British chocolatier Hotel Chocolate grows its own cacao in Saint Lucia and sells chocolates direct-to-consumer via physical store, online, and subscription channels.

The brand boasts a revenue of 132.5m (up 14% from 2018) with 10.9m profit after tax, and is expanding its presence into international markets, including Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan, Scandinavia, and the US.

However, the company started with very modest ambitions, according to CEO Angus Thirlwell, who describes Hotel Chocolats journey a perpetual evolution with perpetual growing ambitions.

Speaking at start-up event Bread and Jam earlier this year, Thirlwell said his initial start-up which he launched with business partner Peter Harris was founded on the nichest idea youve ever heard of.

The concept was to supply customised branded peppermints to corporates, and in doing so, replace plastic branded promotional pens. The B2B model was relatively cash generative, said Thirlwell, we made it work and got to a few million pounds-worth of sales.

Once The Mint Marketing Company expanded its concept into chocolate, the business partners observed that chocolate had the power to excite people in a way that peppermints didnt. There was a very fertile possibility of using imagination to create something interesting, Thirlwell recalled.

The duo quickly fell under the spell of chocolate and started researching the B2C market. Their next offering, which launched in the late 1990s, was the Chocogram a chocolate box that fit through a letterbox with a gift card attached.

While that model worked very well, Thirlwell felt the company was being held back by its brand name: Choc Express. Further, repeat custom was infrequent. In 1998, the partners integrated the Chocolate Tasting Club into the business, whereby subscribers received mixed selection chocolate box every month.

Two years later, Choc Express began to ask subscribers to score the chocolate recipes a concept that still exists today. With approximately 100,000 members, the company was now modestly profitable, said Thirlwell, and at a point where we [needed] to get a proper brand name.

Having spent time in France, Thirlwell was convinced he wanted the French word for chocolate, chocolat, in the brand name. And the word hotel offered the promise of a place, he elaborated. A hotel is a refuge, its somewhere that people look forward to going to. Putting the two together created some kind of magic.

It was at this time that Hotel Chocolat established its three pillars the three things that we wanted to focus on forever, as a brand and a business. These are originality, authenticity, and ethics.

CEO Angus Thirlwell on Hotel Chocolats three pillars

Originality:We want to be continually driven by imagination. Doing things in a fresher, better way, and not copying other people or following, in our case, Belgian chocolate, Swiss chocolate, or French chocolate.

Authenticity:We have gradually been putting more and more cocoa, and less sugar, into our chocolates. We also want to be the real deal in terms of knowledge. This is what ultimately led us to buying our cacao estate, because we needed to know absolutely everything about the star ingredient: the cacao.

Ethics:Ethics [is about] being a good world citizen, going about things in a responsible way, [including] the way we do deals with suppliers and pay on time, through to making sure that all the cacao we use [is aligned with] engaged ethics which goes beyond broader [sustainability] programmes.

Hotel Chocolat is also committed to reducing waste, using every part of the cacao bean, such as the cacao shells which it uses in infusions. Any misshapen chocolates that are made with premium ingredients go into the companys reduced-priced Ugly But Good bags.

Hotel Chocolats ambition again notched up a level when it took the plunge into brick-and-mortar retail, said Thirlwell. Creating a branded Hotel Chocolat space addressed the immediate gratification element of chocolate, he explained. Not everybody is prepared to wait a day for their chocolate to arrive. When you decide you want it, you want it right now and we were not providing a solution to that.

The retail model really started to work, attracting a broader demographic compared to the companys online subscription model. The team also observed that physical retail played a huge role in building brand awareness.

Some call brick-and-mortar outlay rent, but the self-proclaimed big fan of physical retail said it can otherwise be interpreted as marketing: Its the cost of acquiring a new customer.

Since opening that first store in 2004, Hotel Chocolat has amassed 115 stores in the UK.

In 2006, the duo made their foray into the cocoa growing world, with the acquisition of Rabot Estate a 250-year-old cocoa plantation in Saint Lucia.

In doing so, Thirlwell hoped to raise consumers awareness of the entire chocolate production process starting on the farm. Nobody ever talked about [the agricultural side], he recalled. Unlike wine or olive oil, the agricultural discussion is never there. And therefore, the potential profits from a successful consumer good doesnt make it there either.

Not only would purchasing a cocoa plantation be an amazing business adventure that would help build a stronger brand, but Thirlwell was also convinced they would be doing something good that would nourish the ethical and authentic elements of [the] brand.

Buying Rabot Estate has enabled Hotel Chocolat to build up knowledge in the entire chocolate making process, including how to grow cacao organically, how to preserve old gene types of trees, and how flavour can vary from grove to grove.

In 2011, Hotel Chocolate opened a hotel and restaurant on the estate. Thirlwell estimates 70% of the guests come from the US. Having coincidentally launched in the US in 2018, the CEO predicts the hotel will be more valuable than expected in terms of reaching US-based audiences and creating a new narrative on chocolate.

Hotel Chocolat aspires to reinvent chocolate. Part of this mission is encouraging consumers and brands to pay close attention toingredients lists.

As such, the brand is campaigning for tighter regulations regarding how the term chocolate is used. As it stands, its meaning is quite loose, he said. In my book, its quite easy. If cocoa is the number one ingredient [in a product], you can use the word chocolate. If sugar is the biggest ingredient, then there is another word that is available: its confectionery.

The CEO said he is asking chocolate associations to tighten up rules regarding its use. Mixing [chocolate and confectionery] up has done a good job of confusing the customer for decades. I think chocolate associations should do a better job of providing guidance for the consumer.

Another of Hotel Chocolats missions is to reinvent hot chocolate. We are trying to bring back the reference of drinking chocolate that used to exist in the 1700s in Europe, and before that, in early Mayan civilisations, explained the CEO.

The brands current range includes single serves of grated hot chocolate products, in flavours such as salted caramel and clementine; 100% Mayan red Honduras, and maple and pecan.

Weve got to get people to stop thinking about hot chocolate as an instant powder full of sugar, skimmed milk, and a tiny bit of cocoa powder, and instead as coffee has done very successfully bring it back to this noble drink that is full of good nutrients.

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Angus Thirlwell on the 'perpetual evolution' of Hotel Chocolat - FoodNavigator.com

Games that defined the Decade: Pokemon Go proved that evolution and community is the key to greatness – GamesRadar+

We're celebrating the end of an incredible 10 years for games, movies, and TV shows. Pokemon GO is one of the games that defined the last 10 years of play, placing 22nd in our100 best games of the decaderankings. Be sure to check out the full list to see if your favourites made the cut.

Niantic's promise of Pokemon brought to life via the medium of an augmented reality smartphone app, it seemed too good to be true. While the company's previous mobile game, Ingress, turned people's real-world environs into a battle between two factions, could that same energy translate into a nostalgia-fuelled Pokemon adventure in the palm of your hand? Early trailers promised Charizards residing amongst clifftops, Pikachu scampering through picturesque city streets, and at that point it all seemed too good to be true.

And for some, it was that, just a pipe-dream. You couldn't stumble upon a hyper-realistic Pokemon in its natural habitat; Gyarados couldn't be found leaping out of the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, you didn't have to travel to an electrical power plant to find a Voltorb, and Pigeotto was found on the ground rather than soaring through the skies.

"The game is a safe haven for players of any age, it gives people a reason to get out of the house"

But that didn't stop millions of people playing it in those first early months. And I mean everybody. Kids, parents, grandparents, the miserable bloke who lives a few doors down from you and never says hi as you walk past on a morning Immediately, the sense of community spirit was incredible, with people taking to the streets, glued to their phones even more than ever, all for the same reason; fictional monsters you can search out and collect.

Although that initial surge of popularity dampened, Niantic's dedication to updating and improving the game means that the community passion for Pokemon Go continues to soar, with the game hitting one billion downloads earlier this year. Even if half of those are new players, that means approximately 7% of the global population have played Pokemon Go.

When the game launched, it arrived with just the original 151 Pokemon, but in the months and years that followed, Niantic has transformed its initial basic gameplay offerings to the behemoth the game is today. New events and mechanics are introduced frequently; the monthly community days bring back the sense of spirit found during that summer of 2016; and there are over 600 Pokemon to seek out and catch. Team Rocket has even made a recent appearance, as have much-requested features like trading and PvP battling.

The core mechanics of collecting and catching haven't changed much over these two years, but for the most engaged players it's a constantly evolving Pokemon paradise found right in their back yards - or at least their local towns - where thriving Pokemon communities lurk in Discord and take over towns on community days. For most, the goal is to simply fill out as much of the Pokedex as possible, but it's this desire stemming from childhood to be the very best, like no-one ever was and catch 'em all that keeps players returning.

With over three generations' worth of Pokemon still to be added and innovations in gameplay arriving frequently, Pokemon Go has a lot to offer for anyone interested in those pesky pocket monsters. Those who fell to the wayside shortly after launch will wonder what warrants it being included as a game of the decade, but the answer to that is simple: it's less about how Pokemon Go plays, and more to do with what it means.

The game is a safe haven for players of any age, it gives people a reason to get out of the house and do more exercise, explore countries they've never visited before in search of rare regional Pokemon, make friends and acquaintances throughout their local community, and so much more.

There's a community that will never stop playing Pokemon Go, but not because it's a rich experience with deep elements but rather because Pokemon Go reminds me that there are still plenty of good people in the world. And, for me, it's a crucial way I connect with my father who lives on the other side of the country, especially as he was the one who first introduced me to Pokemon Blue back in the day. Cheers, Niantic.

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Games that defined the Decade: Pokemon Go proved that evolution and community is the key to greatness - GamesRadar+

Facebook Discovers Fakes That Show Evolution of Disinformation – The New York Times

Facebook said on Friday that it had removed hundreds of accounts with ties to the Epoch Media Group, parent company of the Falun Gong-related publication and conservative news outlet The Epoch Times.

The accounts, including pages, groups and Instagram feeds meant to be seen in both the United States and Vietnam, presented a new wrinkle to researchers: fake profile photos generated with the help of artificial intelligence.

The idea that artificial intelligence could be used to create wide-scale disinformation campaigns has long been a fear of computer scientists. And they said it was worrying to see it already being used in a coordinated effort on Facebook.

While the technology used to create the fake profile photos was most likely a far cry from the sophisticated A.I. systems being created in labs at big tech companies like Google, the network of fake accounts showed an eerie, tech-enabled future of disinformation, said Graham Brookie, director of the Atlantic Councils Digital Forensic Research Lab.

The people behind the network of 610 Facebook accounts, 89 Facebook Pages, 156 Groups and 72 Instagram accounts posted about political news and issues in the United States, including President Trumps impeachment, conservative ideology, political candidates, trade and religion.

This was a large, brazen network that had multiple layers of fake accounts and automation that systematically posted content with two ideological focuses: support of Donald Trump and opposition to the Chinese government, Mr. Brookie said in an interview.

The Atlantic Councils lab and another company, Graphika, which also studies disinformation, released a joint report analyzing the Facebook takedown.

The Epoch Media Group denied in an email sent to The New York Times that it was linked to the network targeted by Facebook, and said that Facebook had not contacted the company before publishing its conclusions.

The people behind the network used artificial intelligence to generate profile pictures, Facebook said. They relied on a type of artificial intelligence called generative adversarial networks. These networks can, through a process called machine learning, teach themselves to create realistic images of faces, even though they do not belong to a real person.

Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebooks head of security policy, said in an interview that using A.I.-generated photos for profiles has been talked about for several months, but for Facebook, this is the first time weve seen a systemic use of this by actors or a group of actors to make accounts look more authentic.

He added that this A.I. technique did not actually make it harder for the companys automated systems to detect the fakes, because the systems focus on patterns of behavior among accounts.

Ben Nimmo, director of investigations at Graphika, said that we need more research into A.I.-generated imagery like this, but it takes a lot more to hide a fake network than just the profile pictures.

Facebook said the accounts masked their activities by using a combination of fake and authentic American accounts to manage pages and groups on the platforms. The coordinated, inauthentic activity, Facebook said, revolved around the media outlet The BL short for The Beauty of Life which the fact-checking outlet Snopes said in November was building a fake empire on Facebook and getting away with it.

Mr. Gleicher said Facebook began its investigation into The BL in July, and accelerated its efforts when the network became more aggressive in posting this fall. It is continuing to investigate other links and networks tied to The BL, he said.

Facebook said the network had spent less than $9.5 million on Facebook and Instagram ads. On Friday, Facebook said The BL would be banned from the social network.

The Epoch Times and The BL have denied being linked, but Facebook said it had found coordinated, inauthentic behavior from the network to the Epoch Media Group and individuals in Vietnam working on its behalf.

The Epoch Media Group said in its email that The BL was founded by a former employee and employs some of its former employees. However, that some of our former employees work for BL is not evidence of any connection between the two organizations, the company said.

A Facebook spokeswoman said executives The BL were active administrators on Epoch Media Group Pages as recently as Friday morning.

In August, Facebook banned advertising from The Epoch Times after NBC News published a report that said The Epoch Times had obscured its connection to Facebook ads promoting President Trump and conspiracy content.

Twitter said on Friday that the social network was also aware of The BL network, and had already identified and suspended approximately 700 accounts originating from Vietnam for violating our rules around platform manipulation. A company spokeswoman added that its investigation was still open, but Twitter has not identified links between the accounts and state-backed actors.

Facebook also said on Friday that it had taken down a network of more than 300 pages and 39 Facebook accounts and their coordinated, inauthentic activities on domestic political news in Georgia.

Facebook said the network tried to conceal its coordination but it found that the accounts responsible were run by the Georgian Dream-led government, and Panda, a local advertising agency in the country. The owners of the Facebook pages masqueraded as news organizations and impersonated public figures, political parties and activist groups.

In a related move, Twitter said it also took down 32 million tweets from nearly 6,000 accounts related to a Saudi Arabian social media marketing company called Smaat, which ran political and commercial influence operations.

Smaat was led in part by Ahmed Almutairi, a Saudi man wanted by the F.B.I. on charges that he recruited two Twitter employees to search internal company databases for information about critics of the Saudi government, said Renee DiResta, a disinformation researcher at the Stanford Internet Observatory, which separately analyzed Twitters takedown.

The operation was extremely high volume, and automatically generated by Twitter apps that made religious posts, posts about the weather and other topics, Ms. DiResta said.

At times, the accounts were used for more tailored purposes, including more than 17,000 tweets related to Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi dissident and columnist for The Washington Post, who was killed while visiting a Saudi consulate in October last year.

Many of the tweets claimed that those criticizing the Saudi government for their involvement were doing so for their own political purposes.

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Facebook Discovers Fakes That Show Evolution of Disinformation - The New York Times

How to evolve Yamask in Pokemon Sword and Shield – GamesRadar

A number of Pokemon have received special Galarian forms and evolutions in the latest games, so if you're wondering how to evolve Yamask in Pokemon Sword and Shield, we can help. The new Yamask has adopted the Ground-type alongside the usual Ghost-type in Pokemon Sword and Shield, along with a brand new evolution; Runerigus. How to evolve Yamask into Runerigus in Pokemon Sword and Shield isn't an easy task however, so read on for everything you need to know.

When you've finally got your hands on a Yamask (35% chance to spawn on Route 6 in all weather), there's some seriously odd tasks you need to complete in order to evolve it into Runerigus.

Firstly, you need to make your Galarian Yamask take more than 49 damage, but don't let it faint. You can heal it in this process, but as long as your Yamask's remaining HP is less than 49 of its total, this step will be complete. The best way to do it is simply go and battle wild Pokemon around the same level as your Yamask.

Next, you need to head to the Dusty Bowl region of the Wild Area. With Yamask in your party weakened by 49 HP or more, walk underneath the stone archway. If both conditions are met, your Galarian Yamask will evolve into Runerigus. We don't know why it works this way, but it does.

If you want more than one Runerigus, you're going to need to keep using this method. In fact, you could (probably) have a full party of Galarian Yamask with 49 HP or more missing and evolve all six of once. Woohoo, efficiency.

You can grab a normal Yamask by trading a Galarian Yamask for it with a girl in an Eevee costume found in the entrance hall to Ballonlea Gym. Evolving this one is much simpler, as you just need to get it to level 34 in order to get a Cofagrigus.

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How to evolve Yamask in Pokemon Sword and Shield - GamesRadar

How Spies In Disguise Evolved Developing Its Key Theme About Teamwork – CinemaBlend

Its easy to imagine the profession of spy coming part and parcel with the development of a few issues regarding interpersonal relationships. If you spend a large part of your life lying to people, it becomes natural to wonder just how many people are lying right back. Trust becomes a luxury, and teamwork becomes a challenge. Its clear-cut character study material and a compelling notion to explore in a story and its also the core of the new animated action film Spies In Disguise.

Like any film, the new release went through a great deal of evolution as it made its way through the production schedule, but as I recently learned sitting down with directors Nick Bruno and Troy Quane, as well as star Masi Oka, the core theme of the project was always what guided them as new decisions were being made. You can watch the group discuss all this and more by clicking play on the video below.

As explained by Nick Bruno, it was the concept of teamwork being at odds with the world of espionage that was a part of Spies In Disguise from the very beginning partially inspired by current events and a lack of cooperation that we see in everyday life. So as the film was evolving, the theme was always kept in the back of mind, and it was not only reflected in the story being told, but also apparently the behind-the-scenes making of the movie. Said Bruno,

In the film, Will Smith voices Lance Sterling, the greatest spy in the world who is both excessively egotistical and only works alone. This attitude becomes a bit problematic, however, when an accident involving some new gear transforms Lance Sterling into a pigeon. Upon learning about a danger that threatens the entire world, he must work with the nerdy, awkward Walter Beckett (Tom Holland) to try and both become human again and save the day.

Discussing the specific evolution of the feature, Troy Quane noted that there were set pieces in Spies In Disguise that were designed and then dismissed, and that not everything involved in the making of the film was totally organized. But that wasnt accidental. Describing it as controlled chaos, the filmmakers wanted to establish a creative atmosphere that let good ideas be replaced by great ideas. Quane explained,

It was certainly an atmosphere that was appreciated by Masi Oka, who voices a character named Kimura in Spies In Disguise. The actor truly had a blast being in the recording booth trying out a wide variety of alts for his dialogue, and would have been happy to do more had he been given the opportunity. Said Oka,

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How Spies In Disguise Evolved Developing Its Key Theme About Teamwork - CinemaBlend

Born this way: Evolution has hardwired us to be lazy – Scroll.in

If you have to force yourself up off your couch to try to get in some physical activity, rest assured, you are not the only one in this situation. For decades, communication campaigns have encouraged us to exercise, yet an estimated 30% of adults arent active enough. And this inaction is constantly increasing everywhere on the planet.

France is no exception to this rule. If doing more physical activity is classed in the top five good resolutions for the New Year, 75% French people are not sufficiently active. And yet according to the World Health Organization, each year 3.2 million deaths can be attributed to this lack of physical activity that is one death every 10 seconds.

This observation raises the question: why are we incapable of being physically active even when we want to?

To understand this battle between our positive intentions and our contradictory impulses, scientific theories such as dual process models have been developed. In these models, the mechanisms that explain our behaviour are divided into two categories: the rational mechanisms, managed by the reflective system, and the emotional mechanisms, managed by the impulsive system. The latter organises the automatic and instinctive part of our behaviours. It can facilitate or, on the contrary, prevent the reflective system from putting our intentions into place.

This second instance has been clearly illustrated in a study we have conducted. Its goal was to understand the conditions of efficacy of the messages promoting physical activity. In other words, we wanted to find out if reason can win out over our impulses when it comes to motivating ourselves to be more physically active.

First, participants had to attend a presentation outlining the recommendations in regards to physical activity that is beneficial to their health 30 minutes of daily exercise, spread out in sessions of 10 minutes minimum. To measure their impulsive tendency to approach sedentary behaviours, they were asked to perform an experimental task, the manikin game.

This game consists in moving around an avatar on a computer screen using a keyboard. In one of the conditions of the experiment, the participant has to move the avatar as fast as possible toward images representing physical activity walking, biking, swimming and move it away from images representing a sedentary activity television, hammocks, escalators. In the other condition, it is the opposite: the avatar has to be moved toward images evoking sedentary activities and moved away from the exercise images. The faster the participant is to approach sedentary images versus moving away from them, the more their impulsive tendency toward a sedentary lifestyle is considered to be high.

After this task, participants were given an accelerometer destined to record their daily physical activity and were sent on their way home. A week later, the debriefing took place.

First, results revealed that participants who received the message promoting physical activity expressed an increased intention to exercise. Thus, well-formulated health messages prove to be effective in triggering an intention. However, having the intention of exercising does not mean that we will actually do it, and all participants did not succeed in converting their intentions into behaviours.

Only those with a low impulsive tendency to approach sedentary behaviours were successful. Conversely, participants with a high tendency were not able to transform their intention into action. In other words, the conscious intention of being active lost the battle against the automatic tendency to seek sedentary behaviours.

Why are these sedentary behaviours attractive when they are harmful to our health?

If this attraction toward sedentarity seems paradoxical today, it is logical when examined in the light of evolution. Indeed, when it was difficult to gain access to food, sedentary behaviours allowed for the saving of energy that was crucial for survival.

This tendency to minimise unnecessary effort could explain the current pandemic of physical inactivity since the genes allowing individuals to survive are more likely to be present in the next generation.

In a recent study, we aimed to assess if our automatic attraction toward sedentary behaviours is engraved in our brains. The participants in this study also had to play the manikin game, but this time, electrodes were measuring their brain activity.

The results of this experiment show that to get away from sedentary images, our brain has to deploy a greater amount of resources than to get away from physical activity images. In daily life, getting away from the omnipresent opportunities to be sedentary in our modern environment escalators, elevators, cars would therefore require us to beat this sedentary attraction that is ingrained in our brains.

Nevertheless, it should not be believed that we have solely evolved to minimise unnecessary effort. We have also evolved to be physically active. Nearly two million years ago, when our ancestors were adapting to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, physical activity became an integral part of their daily life they travelled, on average, 14 km per day.

Natural selection thus favours individuals that are able to amass a large quantity of physical activity in an energy-saving way. These individuals were the ones whose physical activity was associated with the secretion of pain relieving, anxiolytic, or even mood-enhancing hormones.

The good news is that these hormonal processes are always present within us and they are only waiting for one thing: to be solicited. The first step toward an active lifestyle is to become aware of this force that is driving us to minimise effort. This awareness allows us to resist the countless sedentary opportunities that surround us.

Moreover, much like our ancestors, the majority of us engage in a physical activity only when it is fun or necessary, so the best way to promote physical activity is to make it pleasant. It is therefore necessary to restructure our environment to favour it, especially during our daily commute.

Public policy should, for example, develop safe and well-maintained infrastructures and open public spaces, in order to favour access to places that are suitable for walking, biking and other physical activities. New buildings architectures should also encourage our physical activity during the day by prioritising access to the stairs or standing desks.

It is then up to us to know how to take advantage of these opportunities to reduce our tendency to be sedentaryCome on, lets get on our trainers!

Boris Cheval, PhD, Neuropsychology of physical activity, University of Geneva. Matthieu Boisgontier, PhD, Neuroscience and Kinesiology, University of British Columbia. Philippe Sarrazin, University Professor, University of Grenoble.

This article first appeared on The Conversation.

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It is now the era to evolve mutually as the bacteria do – The European Sting

(Credit: Unsplash)

This article was exclusively written forThe European Sting by Ms. Alikya Chipurupalli, a 3rd year medical student studying her undergraduate from European University, Georgia. She is affiliated to the International Federation of Medical Students Associations (IFMSA), cordial partner of The Sting. The opinions expressed in this piece belongstrictly to the writer and do not necessarily reflect IFMSAs view on the topic, nor The European Stings one.

Anti-Microbial Resistance is an emerging, worldwide, devastating issue which if paid no heed could lead to a situation where even the most curable infections could become life threatening. According to the recent estimates, WHO declares that Drug resistant microbes now account for 700000 deaths annually which when not acted upon timely could increase to 10 million deaths each year. There should be a joint venture from health care workers and the consumer themselves to be able to solve this problem.

The necessity of knowing the consequences of this threat to humanity will only lead to education of the public. Pharmacists can play an influential role in this endeavor as we all are aware of the over use of over the counter medications. It is also important that the pharmacists are well qualified and aware of ongoing scenario.

But there might be a possibility that even if our educated consumers act responsibly, evolution might be in favor of the super- bugs. In this case, we health professionals need to evolve our strategies as well. The key is to develop novel diagnostics methods and stop prescribing wide spectrum antibiotics. By using the molecular techniques, as it is the genes where we all differ, the main causative agent should be targeted. Treatment should be more specific and definite not making the other strains and species of microbes aware about our ammunition. A well-defined treatment for the particular agent would only work when the diagnosis made penetrates the root of the condition.

Diamonds cut Diamonds is a famous quote which means that there must be some species similar existing in nature which would be able to terminate another ones life. Based on this the first ever antibiotic was developed from a Penicillium mold, then why cannot we accept the bacteriophages. Phage therapy can kill the deadliest bacteria Acinetobacter Baumanii. The phages are narrow spectrum organisms and this is a great advantage as we should not look for a temporary solution by applying wide spectrum treatment making the simplest bacteria resistant 100 years after again. Clinical trials for the efficacy of phages should be initiated at a larger level. So since its a time consuming process to isolate and determine phages which are effective against the particular bacterial strain, why not try genetically engineered phages. Combination and integration of Molecular Science and living organisms would be an innovative way to give a start.

Equally involved should be the Agricultural and Livestock members to limit and maintain the use of antibiotics. Proper training in administering the dose is essential. Therefore, Anti- Microbial resistance is a definitive issue, but we need to help our bodies in a natural yet smart way and hence bring it to a stop.

About the author

Alikya Chipurupalli is a 3rd year medical student, studying her undergraduate from European University, Georgia. She is a member of GMSA. Her active participation in many of the scientific conferences and events has given her opportunities to write about a variety of issues. She, being a student, takes AMR as a serious global threat and wantsher ideas to be shared with the audience.

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It is now the era to evolve mutually as the bacteria do - The European Sting

The S Corporation: The Evolution Of Self-Employment Taxes And The Reasonable Salary by Caroline Montgomery | Sponsored Insights – Greater Wilmington…

This Insights article was contributed by Richard Pasquantonio, CPA/CFF, CFE, CDFA (NC License Number 33577), an associate at Adam Shay CPA, PLLC.

S corporation (S Corp) taxation is a popular election for many business owners that originally form an association (corporation) or limited liability company (LLC). Some major advantages of S Corp status are:

Under the Eisenhower administration, Congress enacted legislation creating subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code which adopted a simplified domestic entity classification to face the crippling tax situation for small business owners in America. Soon after Congress's action, the issue of self-employment taxes was raised, and the Treasury made taxpayers aware via Revenue Ruling 59-221 that the amounts of its income which are required to be passed-through to each shareholder's gross income do not constitute net earnings from self- employment for Self-Employment Contributions Act purposes (SE Tax). This constituted a windfall to taxpayers and contributed to the popularity and growth of the S corporations use by small business owners. This prompted S corporation owners to classify all of this newly founded pass-through income as dividends but the government did not like that either, and about 15 years later, the Treasury clarified their position in Revenue Ruling 77-44. There, they stated that to the extent that an S Corps' owners perform services for the company then the company is required to pay the owner a reasonable salary for those services. Additionally, the reasonable salary issubject to the SE Tax. Unfortunately, the government gave little guidance for taxpayers and practitioners on how to determine the reasonableness of an owner's salary. Instead, the government left it for the courts to decide....and after another 40 years!!...it appears that they did.

Post Rev. Rul. 77-44, the IRS responded aggressively to S Corps who failed to pay any salary to their owners. As a result, the case law became clear that in these circumstances any and all distributions that were paid to owners would be reclassified as wages and subjected to SE Tax. Because of the devastating results of these enforcement effort, CPAs and tax professionals quickly responded by advising clients to pay a salary. However, the pubic was still left to their own devices in determining if the amounts were reasonable. Some taxpayers and tax professionals were overly conservative and others overly aggressive. As a result there has always been a great disparity in salaries between taxpayers, even ones operating in the same industry in the same regions of the country, and this disparity has not gone unnoticed by the Treasury Department.

In 2005, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA)issued a report examining the payroll tax advantage that S corporations enjoyed over sole proprietorships. The report, which analyzed S corporation tax returns filed in 2000, revealed the following:

Following the 2005 TIGTA report, a case against an accounting firm, JD & Associateswas heard by the tax court - it did not end well for the taxpayer. In JD & Associates,Jeffrey Dahl was the sole shareholder of an accounting firm taxed as an S corporation. Dahl was a CPA with over 20 years of experience. He was responsible for making the firms hiring decisions, paying its bills, maintaining its books and records, preparing its tax returns, and preparing and reviewing tax returns for the firms clients. The courts in JD increased the salary almost 300 percent in each of the years under consideration.

In 2009, a U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report to the Senate Committee on Financeechoed the concerns expressed in the TIGTA findings. The GAO report noted that in 2003 and 2004 combined, S corporations had underreported their shareholder compensation by $24.6 billion, with corporations with fewer than three shareholders responsible for nearly all the underreporting.

CONVINCED YET??Following the 2009 report to the Senate Finance Committee, a case against another CPA, Davis Watson was heard by the tax court - it too, did not end well for the taxpayer.

DO YOU THINK THAT THE GOVERNMENT WAS SENDING A CLEAR MESSAGE TO THE BUSINESS COMMUNITY BY TAKING ACTION AGAINST ACCOUNTANTS AND CPAS? I do.

DO YOU THINK THAT THEY LOOKED AT THE ACCOUNTANT'S CLIENTS AFTERWORD? Better believe they did.

SO HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH?Whereas JD & AssociatesandWatsonaffirmed that the IRS had the authority to reclassify distributions as wages, it still left practitioners and taxpayers largely on their own in determining a reasonable amount of salary to pay.

EnterSean MCalary LTD, INC.First, let me say, this also did not end well for the taxpayer. However, in this 2013 case against a realtor in southern California, the Tax Court finally provided some bright lines and insights for taxpayers and practitioners to better support decisions related to setting S Corp salaries. The case highlights the factors that the court will weigh in making its reasonable salary determination, including:

Caroline Montgomery, CPA (NC License Number 39017), MSA, is tax manager and partner of Adam Shay CPA, PLLC. The most rewarding part of what she does is helping business owners and individuals achieve their goals, all while working with a dynamic team that is growing quickly. The firm focuses on a proactive approach by encouraging clients to minimize taxes via income tax planning and projections, or by focusing on other areas of their business as part of the firm's Virtual CFO services. The firm also offers tax preparation, fraud and forensic accounting and tax issue resolution services. She moved to Wilmington in 2014 and started at the firm in 2015. Caroline graduated with her her undergraduate and graduate degree in 2010 from East Carolina University. She is actively involved with NourishNC as their Treasurer and enjoys volunteering with various organizations throughout New Hanover County. In her free time, Caroline enjoys spending time with her husband, Mike, and dog, Mason, as well as travelling and going to the beach.

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The S Corporation: The Evolution Of Self-Employment Taxes And The Reasonable Salary by Caroline Montgomery | Sponsored Insights - Greater Wilmington...

Virginia’s 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution, Concludes Commemorative Year Showcasing 400 Years Of Virginia History And Its Indelible Impact On…

The 2019 Commemoration has generated tangible results and laid the foundation for a legacy that will last well-beyond the commemorative year. More than 2 Million individuals participated in 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution events, exhibitions and programs. A full economic impact study is currently underway and final results will be released in Q1 2020. With a focus on employing technology to reach new and younger audiences the 2019 Commemoration generated more than 36 Million social media impressions and secured more than 23 Billion traditional earned media impressions that fueled awareness among Virginia and national audiences. The Commemoration's educational programming reached more than 14,000 Virginia students and educators.

More than $100 Million in combined economic impact is attributed to Commemoration and visitor spending since July 2016, and cumulative jobs supported by the Commemoration are projected to exceed 1,000. The 2019 Commemoration received a total of $23.3 million from state appropriations since fiscal year 2016 and leveraged public funding to secure an additional $4.3 million from more than 40 private donors to support the five-year commemoration cycle of planning, promotion and execution.

"It has truly been an honor to serve as the Executive Director of Virginia's 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution. I am so very proud, and appreciative, of our talented staff and dedicated team of advisors, sponsors, partners and volunteers who worked tirelessly to plan and execute a year-long commemoration of national and international significance," said Kathy Spangler, Executive Director, 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution. "The entire Commonwealth of Virginia can be proud of the results the 2019 Commemoration achieved. Our 20+ signature events, legacy projects, education initiatives and statewide community programs brought 400 years of Virginia history to life with inclusive and authentic storytelling that catalyzed important conversations about democracy, diversity and opportunity, and facilitated the growth and development of partner institutions that will have a lasting legacy for years to come."

If you missed the 2019 Commemorative year events, you can still engage in American Evolution legacy projects, which include: the Virginia History Trails, Virginia Women's Monument, Pocahontas Reframed Storytellers Film Festival, Dance Theater of Harlem's Passage, Virginia to America videos series, educational resourcesand the Fort Monroe Visitor and Education Center.

The 2019 Commemoration showcased pivotal 1619 Virginia events that set America on a course towards the ideals of democracy, diversity and opportunity. These 1619 Virginia events include the first representative legislative assembly, the arrival of the first Africans to English North America, the recruitment of English women in significant numbers, the first official English Thanksgiving, and the entrepreneurial and innovative spirit of the Virginia Colony.

For more information about American Evolution, visit: https://www.americanevolution2019.com/and check out the 2019 Commemoration blogfor powerful insights and anecdotes from participants and partners discussing the lasting impact of the 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution.

About the 2019 CommemorationThe 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution highlights events that occurred in Virginia in 1619 that continue to influence America today. Featured programs, events and legacy projects will position Virginia as a leader in education, tourism and economic development. American Evolution commemorates the ongoing journey toward the key ideals of democracy, diversity and opportunity. Dominion Energy is an American Evolution Founding Partner and Altria Group and TowneBank are Virginia Colony Partners.

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Virginia's 2019 Commemoration, American Evolution, Concludes Commemorative Year Showcasing 400 Years Of Virginia History And Its Indelible Impact On...

Big Data Professionals Give 11 Predictions for Cloud’s Evolution in 2020 – Database Trends and Applications

The cloud was on everyones mind this past year; with so many questions rising surrounding how to secure cloud environments to what type of cloud is best for the organization.

Cloud computing has revealed countless new dimensions to IT. There are public clouds, private clouds, distributed clouds, and hybrid, multi-cloud architectures.

An actual hybrid cloud will allow for large and small and critical and casual workloads to be seamlessly transitioned between on-premise private cloud infrastructure and any public cloud employed by any organization based on whatever criteria a customer architects. The current output of new technologies has this space exploding with possibilities.

Here, executives of leading companies offer 11 predictions for what's ahead in 2020 for cloud.

The Cloud Disillusionment blossoms because the meter is always running: Companies that rushed to the cloud finish their first phase of projects and realize that they have the same applications they had running before that do not take advantage of new data sources to make them supercharged with AI. In fact, their operating expenses actually have increased because the savings in human operators were completely overwhelmed by the cost of the cloud compute resources for applications that are always on. Ouch. These resources were capitalized before on-premise but now hit the P&L. - Monte Zweben, CEO, Splice Machine

Multi-cloud strategies increase the demand for application management tool adoption: Multi-cloud strategies are here to stay. Companies are increasingly adopting more than one platformeither for financial leverage or to create a time-to-market or feature race between the platforms. To remain competitive, public cloud providers must offer unique features or capabilities differentiating them from competitors. This has created an upsurge in new and more complex technologies, increasing the need for application performance management tool adoption. 2020 will bring an ever-increasing demand for APM tools and services.- David Wagner, senior manager, product marketing application management, SolarWinds

The Rise of the Hybrid Cloud Infrastructure -- Putting the Right Data in the Right Place: Today when people refer to the cloud, they usually mean the public cloud. In 2020, the term cloud might become more nuanced as private clouds rise in popularity and organizations increasingly pursue a hybrid cloud storage strategy. Organizations with large-scale storage needssuch as those in healthcare, scientific research, and media and entertainmentface unique challenges in managing capacity-intensive workloads that can reach tens of petabytes. Private clouds address these challenges by providing the scale and flexibility benefits of public clouds along with the performance, access, security and control advantages of on-premises storage. In 2020, well see more organizations taking advantage of private clouds in a hybrid cloud infrastructure storing frequently used data on-prem while continuing to utilize the public cloud for disaster recovery.- Jon Toor, CMO, Cloudian

Best-of-Breed cloud is coming under the name of Hybrid: Public cloud vendors have extortionately high prices. The public cloud makes sense for small-and-medium sized businesses. Those businesses dont have the scope to amortize their engineering spend. Public clouds dont make sense for technology companies. Companies like Bank of America have gone on record as saving 2 billion dollars per year by not using the public cloud. A best-of-breed architecture envisions building blocks within the technical stack, then selects not from a single cloud vendor, but from the variety of service providers. Assumptions that a given cloud provider has the lowest or best prices, or that the cost of networking between clouds is prohibitive, becomes less and less true. - Brian Bulkowski, CTO at Yellowbrick Data

Organizations will grapple with scaling multi-cloud, hybrid, edge/fog and more: In 2020, in-memory computing will disrupt both NoSQL and traditional database technologies, and streaming analytics will emerge as the preferred approach for data integration. Low-latency in-memory platforms for streaming will define a new paradigm for performance in this space, further disrupting traditional approaches. Multi-cloud will also emerge as the preferred strategy to build and integrate applications. In response, enterprises will increasingly need to support and scale multi-cloud, hybrid cloud and edge/fog, and turn to new approaches to achieve real-time machine learning at enterprise scale. - John DesJardins, VP of solution architecture & CTO, Hazelcast

More enterprises will have production cloud data lakes. With the maturation of the technology stack overall and more ML frameworks becoming mainstream, the cloud data lake trend, which began a few years ago, will continue to accelerate. Well see more enterprises with production data lakes in the cloud running meaningful workloads for the business. This trend will pose more pressure on the data privacy and governance teams to make sure data is being used the right way. - Okera CTO and co-founder, Amandeep Khurana

The biggest advantage presented by modern cloud technology is the ability for small to mid-size companies to level the playing field: Thanks to the cloud, organizations no longer require the assets previously required to implement enterprise solutions and technology large budgets, massive server farms, and a workforce dedicated to maintenance. Typically, when organizations want to implement new tech, they analyze the infrastructure cost associated to determine what is fiscally possible. Instead, organizations that want to harness the benefits provided by the cloud should start by defining strategic objectives and recognize that the cloud is going to provide access to solutions and new technology at a fraction of the on-premises cost. Dont let infrastructure costs be the impeding factor to implementing new tech. What the cloud now does is disintermediate the bar of access to, and drive adoption of, new technology. This is why the cloud growth line has been exponential, not linear. So, in 2020 and beyond we can expect cloud to be a huge asset that will allow small to mid-size businesses to get access to the same solutions, information, and data that was only before available to large enterprises. - Himanshu Palsule, chief product & technology officer, Epicor

Cloud data warehouses turn out to be a Big Data detour: Given the tremendous cost and complexity associated with traditional on-premise data warehouses, it wasnt surprising that a new generation of cloud-native enterprise data warehouse emerged. But savvy enterprises have figured out that cloud data warehouses are just a better implementation of a legacy architecture, and so theyre avoiding the detour and moving directly to a next-generation architecture built around cloud data lakes. In this new architecture data doesnt get moved or copied, there is no data warehouse, and no associated ETL, cubes, or other workarounds. We predict 75% of the global 2000 will be in production or in pilot with a cloud data lake in 2020, using multiple best-of breed engines for different use cases across data science, data pipelines, BI, and interactive/ad-hoc analysis. - Dremio's CEO Tomer Shiran

IT will begin to take a more methodical approach to achieving cloud native status: Running cloud native applications is an end goal for many organizations, but the process of getting there can be overwhelming especially because many companies believe they have to refactor everything at once. More IT departments will realize they dont need to take an all or nothing approach, and a process founded on baby steps is the best way to achieve cloud native goals. In other words, well start to see more IT teams forklift applications into the cloud and then implement a steady, methodical approach to refactoring them. - Chris Patterson, senior director of product management, Navisite

Major Cloud Providers Will Find a Bullseye on Their Backs: As more and more organizations move their critical systems and data to the cloud for efficiency, scalability, and cost reduction, cloud provider infrastructure will increasingly become a high payoff target. A target, that if compromised, could have devastating effects on the economy and national security. In 2020, we believe state adversaries will redouble their efforts to attack cloud systems. Whether the defenses in place will withstand the attacks remains to be seen. - Greg Conti, senior security strategist, IronNet Cybersecurity

A Meteoric Rise: Cloud Security Adoption to Accelerate in 2020: The coming year will usher in an even greater adoption of cloud security, with a material change in attitude and organizations fully embracing the cloud. As organizations increasingly access enterprise applications like Box, Salesforce, etc., its no longer practical for them to VPN back to the stack to remain secure while accessing these services in the cloud. With this move to the cloud comes countless security risks. Not only will we see more companies jump on the bandwagon and shift their applications and operations to the cloud, but we will also see the security stack move to the cloud and more resources dedicated to securing the cloud, such as cloud councils. -Kowsik Guruswamy, CTO,Menlo Security

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Big Data Professionals Give 11 Predictions for Cloud's Evolution in 2020 - Database Trends and Applications

The evolution of web design in the 2010s – The Next Web

Creative web design in the 00s was dominated by websites made with Flash. Sites such as tokyoplastic, Whos We Studios, Get The Glass, and We Choose the Moon set pulses racing across the globe.

However, in 2010, that was all about to change. A double whammy pretty much wiped Flash out in one fell swoop.

In April 2010, Steve Jobs wrote his Thoughts on Flash and the aftershock was of epic proportions. Almost overnight, Flash became the darkness of the web and was shunned widely. Many defined this moment as The Death of Flash.

With the 2010 launch of Google Creative Labs The Wilderness Downtown, an interactive short film for Arcade Fires We Used to Wait track, utilizing Googles Chrome Browser, Google Maps and most importantly HTML5, the final nail was hammered into Flashs coffin.

On the one hand, it seemed as though the rug had been pulled out from beneath Flash but, this game changing website from Google showed what could be achieved without the need for any browser plug-ins. This was a defining moment in the future of web design.

Credit: The Wilderness Downtown, 2010By 2012 the web design landscape further changed as brands no longer needed a website presence, as the new way to reach their audiences would be via social media, especially with new branded Facebook Pages, and the ability to tap into over 1 billion active Facebook users, which, in itself was an incredible statistic as, at that time, there were 2.5 billion active internet users.

Googles Chrome browser became the browser of choice for most new, creative, and cutting-edge websites and the Google Creative Labs team, again, pushed the entire web design landscape forward by launching a next generation project that merged the boundaries of online and offline.

Chrome Web Lab, was an example of what the future of digital could hold. Here you could visit the Science Museum in London to experience five experiments in real time, or, you could get the experience, live via your browser, 24 hours per day.

Credit: Chrome Web Lab, 2012As we hit 2014, Mozillas WebGL had established itself as the cutting-edge solution for visual prowess on desktop and with the release of iOS 8, the masses could finally be reached on mobile browsers too. In the same year WebVR via Oculus Rift showed a glimpse of virtual reality on the web, but the entry level hardware was an issue for many and was changed when Google, also in 2014, launched their DIY VR headset, Google Cardboard.

Whilst VR was beginning to really take off, especially the hype around it, it was about time mobile browsers could support 3D. The timing couldnt have been more perfect with the launch of Retina HD displays on the iPhone 6 and 6+ in September 2014.

We were also seeing more creativity happening outside of the browser window and interactive work being taken into the real world with real-time interaction. Unnumbered Sparks, a project by Aaron Koblin allowed visitors to use the web on their smartphone to paint vibrant trails of light on a massive aerial sculpture.

Credit: Unnumbered Sparks, 2014In 2015 a first for websites happened. Over 43 percent of the worlds population were now active internet users and even though the amount of users was still rising, the amount of websites dropped from 1 billion to 863 million. This was one of the biggest indicators of how brands were turning their backs on traditional websites and promotional microsites and were throwing their budgets into social media.

Responsive websites and mobile first thinking was seeing a rise in cookie cutter websites and single page parallax scrolling websites, thanks to the likes of Nike Better World, launched four years earlier in 2011.

By the middle of the decade we witnessed an exodus of sorts by the most creative in the industry, agencies, and individuals, shifting their focus away from websites and into real world interactions and experiential projects. Many moved into film and games and away from the web entirely.

In 2016, we saw artificial intelligence come to the web and AR become a household acronym with the launch of Pokmon GO, a location-based augmented reality game that took the world by storm.

The game was released on July 6 for Android and iOS and was downloaded more than 10 million times within a week. It became the fastest growing app in history with an estimated 45 million active users in the US at its peak.

Credit: Pokmon GO, 2016In 2017 Adobe announced the true end of Flash, that by the end of 2020 they would stop updating and distributing the Flash Player.

The creative web experiences of the past had become non-existent and the huge focus for brands remained with the power of social media as could be seen with the Game of Thrones HBO Fire & Ice Facebook Live Video event, which saw millions of fans from around the world, myself included, trying to melt a huge block of ice by live commenting FIRE or DRACARYS to add extra flame power.

A further glimpse of how websites were no longer the way to engage audiences, other than becoming informational portals, Audis Enter Sandbox became a traveling in-store installation that let you test drive an Audi Q5 in virtual reality, on a self made track made out of sand. The physical sandbox itself was turned into a virtual playground using a depth-sensing camera which rendered the sandbox into a 3D environment that you could explore with the Q5. The brief of the project was to bring back the joy from distant memories of playing with cars in a sandbox.

We also began to see the first branded experiences using HoloLens (after its official launch in 2016) for the Smurf film franchise, which turned the real world into an augmented Smurf playground. The Lost Village immersed fans in the world of Smurfs via the HoloLens experience in ways we hadnt seen before, with the little characters sprouting up out of the floor and around the user.

There was a time when everyone wanted or needed a website, but with the likes of Instagram, you no longer needed a website. In some ways, Instagram became the website of choice for many, especially the new wave of influencers.

With the launch of Instagram Stories in August 2016, it didnt take long for some to create a hack that would transform the social platform into a DJ Simulator. The official Bacardi Instagram account could be transformed into a set of turntables by simply clicking on the Bacardi logo and then controlling the turntables was as simple as skipping back and forth within the story to jump between different clips of scratches, beats and samples.

By 2018 projects like World Draw would capture audiences in group experiences and would attract over 300,000 creators from all over the world and would command festival like big screen interactive experiences.

Credit: World Draw, 2018

As we approach the end of the decade the one overriding factor is that the most exciting creativity we are seeing is not sat at a desk in front of a screen. The likes of Hive Drive gives us a glimpse of where creativity is heading with its Hive Drive location-based AR experiment that lets people explore a virtual beehive behind a window.

By walking around the windows, passersby can interact with the bees in the hive to learn more about bees and their role in the ecosystem in a fun and fact-filled way.

As we enter 2020, we can clearly see how the terms digital and interactive no longer mean a world online. Digital is no longer confined to web browsers as it was for so many years. The future of web design within the browser itself is limited and could easily go right back to the first website by being purely informational and less experiential. The interactive experiences that connect us on a more emotional level are happening in our daily lives and outside of the confines of web browsers.

With AR, in particular, we will become the browsers of the past and the window of the future as we explore new virtual worlds where our physical bodies become the only hardware required.

Published December 19, 2019 20:00 UTC

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The evolution of web design in the 2010s - The Next Web

SVG Summit:DTV Audio Group Conclave Reflects the Evolution Evident on the Video Side – Sports Video Group

Virtualization, new ways of capture, and a glimpse ahead to Tokyo 2020 topped the agenda

The annual SVG Summit this week continued a trend of growing attendance, as broadcast sports undergoes an inflective round of changes, from 4K to immersive audio, and the term broadcast itself hints of incipient antiquity as streaming becomes the basis for a growing percentage of content distribution.

That was evident at the DTV Audio Group (DTVAG) meeting on the first day of the two-day Summit. It began with an acknowledgment that televisions infrastructure is more virtualized and fungible than ever; its necessary to move more quickly than ever when it comes to audio, as one opening comment put it. And the trend toward virtualization extends to microphones and consoles and to distribution.

Virtualization of audio processing was brought to the fore in a presentation by Ben Davis, sales manager, North America, Waves Audio, which develops plug-ins digital models of the kinds of processors that once filled racks in control rooms and remote trucks and now reside as code on laptops. Issues of reliability have long been addressed, with these types of processors now common not only in music production but also in live-sound and concert applications, which have the same criticality as live sports.

The DTV Audio Group panel on Audio and Communications for Virtualized Remote Production: (from left) Glenn Stilwell, audio operations manager, Pac-12 Networks; Thomas Carlisle, senior broadcast engineer, Sneaky Big; Karl Malone, director, sound design, NBC Sports and Olympics; Mark Stephens, global tech lead, media and entertainment partners, AWS

In addition, Davis pointed out, virtualized plug-ins reduce weight and, by extension, cost on remote productions, and they offer standardization of processing between truck and studio. Moreover, the large pool of plug-ins developed over the past several years more than 300 just from Waves has seen the arrival of units intended for broadcast use: for example, the Dugan Automixer and WNS noise suppression have been applied by networks like ESPN, by leagues including the NBA, and at such events as the US Open Tennis Championships. A forthcoming super rack of plug-ins will offer a slew of processing with >7-ms latency, round trip, Davis stressed.

A look at how audio and communications are being virtualized in remote production revealed a consensus around the need for the A1 to better manage the audio teams and make clear what the audio elements will be in a communications system well ahead of an events start time. Thats becoming easer, it was agreed, with remote production increasingly moving onto networked infrastructure. Also, more production is being done in a REMI-type environment, in which participants on a comms network range from onsite to in the plant, all needing simultaneous and reliable communications. Ultimately, much of comms and other audio tasks will migrate to a cloud-based environment, once concerns about latency are addressed, but this particular discussion ended with acknowledgement of the need for the next generation of audio engineers to be as fluent in IT as in sound.

Microphones arent getting virtualized but are becoming more flexible. Shure explained how its MXA910 ceiling array of microphones developed for corporate applications was recently installed under the scoreboard at Torontos Scotiabank Centre. On the same panel, Sennheiser outlined how its Sports Microphone Array could ultimately interface with Lawos Kick ball-tracking system in the form of a cross-branded productized version of the two platforms.

An examination of sound design and integrated post and graphics workflows for Dolby Atmos in live sports production underscored the need to build workflows with objectified audio in mind, preparing for a time when personalized broadcasts allow viewers to customize their television-sound experience by changing and moving the location and types of such elements as languages and announcers.

A look toward next summers 2020 Tokyo Olympics indicated deployment of more remote production than ever for an Olympics show, and with a full IP routing core. NBC Sports will operate eight control rooms in Stamford, CT, (twice as many as were constructed for the 2004 Athens Games). Notably, the broadcaster will present eight events in 1080p HDR and Atmos immersive sound, including the Opening and Closing Ceremonies, gymnastics, diving, and golf.

Audio for esports, broadcast sports hottest development, appropriately closed the DTVAG session, foreshadowing some of what was to come at a larger esports panel the next day. Unsurprisingly, esports infrastructure is increasingly migrating into cloud environments, and its sound will follow but will almost certainly remain stereo, limited by the apps (mainly Twitch) largely used to distribute it and by the fact that so much esports content is consumed via mobile devices by users wearing earbuds.

But one major change in the esports industry is that the leading leagues, such as Overwatch, have successfully lobbied for teams to build and play in home arenas, versus the centralized venues that have in recent years hosted most major tournaments. The era of home and away esports games is slated to begin broadly in 2020, making esports even more resemble conventional sports structures.

Plus a change, plus cest la mme chose.

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SVG Summit:DTV Audio Group Conclave Reflects the Evolution Evident on the Video Side - Sports Video Group