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Augmented reality giant Magic Leap is closing its Seattle office amid layoffs – GeekWire
Posted: May 14, 2020 at 5:19 pm
(Magic Leap Photo)
Update, 4:42 p.m. PT: A Magic Leap representative confirmed that the office has closed.
Original story: Magic Leap will close its Seattle satellite office, according to a new state filing, as the well-funded augmented reality startup sheds workers and pivots its focus to business customers.
A WARN notice filed with the Washington state Employment Security Department says that Magic Leap will close its Seattle outpost. The move will impact 39 workers beginning June 21, according to the notice.
In a April 22 blog post, Magic Leap CEO Rony Abovitz said the company cut staff amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Bloomberg reported that about 1,000 employees were let go, or about half of the workforce.
The secretive company, headquartered in Plantation, Fla., landed in Seattle four years ago. Its one of more than 125 out-of-town companies that have established engineering and research-and-development facilities in the Seattle region in recent years.
Magic Leaps Seattle office was led by Neal Stephenson, the famed science fiction author who became the companys chief futurist six years ago, along with Brian Schowengerdt, a longtime University of Washington professor who is its chief science and experience officer and co-founder.
The outpost hosted a group called SCEU, short for Self-Contained Existence Unit, a content-focused R&D squad led by Stephenson. It was also home to a developer relations team led by gaming veteran Tadhg Kelly, who left Magic Leap this month, according to his LinkedIn profile.
Weve contacted Magic Leap, Stephenson, and Schowengerdt for details about the Seattle office and will update this story when we hear back.
Magic Leap has generated immense interest over the years, and even more cash, raising more than $2.6 billion in its lifetime from heavy hitters including Google, Alibaba, Andreessen Horowitz, Paul Allens Vulcan Capital and others.
Virtual and augmented reality has found some traction with businesses but not as much with consumers. Even with the ongoing pandemic and more people staying at home, VR remains a niche product, Axios reported this week.
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How will you re-introduce your business to customers? – Trinidad Guardian
Posted: at 5:19 pm
Whenever a wild card becomes possible, the future planning playbook has to be rewritten. This quote by Tamar Kasriel, a retail futurist, speaks volumes. She was commenting that futurists had regarded the pandemic as a wild card. That is, an occurrence that would have big, worldwide impact, but a highly improbable event. Well, the event is here and were muddling our way through its big impact.
My focal point in this statement is about the rewriting of the playbook and in particular, the customer experience playbook. Customers have been cooing about their newly found freedom to transact business when and where they choose, using digital tools. As well, theyve been signalling their interest in seeing the coming attractions that businesses have in store for them, post lockdown.
Ive been curious about customers reactions to conducting business online. The majority of persons whove responded to my questioning have said that they have no intention of going back to the old way of doing business. One service provider declared to me recently that he would no longer be collecting a cheque for his services and that we should pay via direct deposit to his account. Multiply his migration by the thousands like him and we begin to see the scale of the shift to online technology. The adoption of digital tools has opened John Publics appetite for convenience and ease of doing business. This sentiment accords nicely with the expanded tools that will have to be rolled out as part of the new digital way of doing business.
Businesses, on the other hand, are trying to catch their breath and catch a break from the body blows inflicted by the disruption. Their big worry is the battle to cope with having to triage reputation excellence, public health management and economic survivability. As we look into the future and follow the arc of the disruption, theres even more disquieting news for businesses. Were seeing protracted economic upheaval looming in the distance. Whew and were only in the fifth month of the year. No pressure.
The pandemic has brought individuals, customers and businesses to their inflection points. Individuals are having deep, existential discussions with themselves about what matters. Customers are reflecting on whether they will continue to patronise their favourite retailer, given the retailers socially responsible and public safety track record during the pandemic. Businesses meanwhile, faced with some or all of this contextual intelligence, have to decide on the best landing points that will keep their customers happy, whilst navigating an largely unfamiliar network of new technology and operating systems.
Perceptive businesses will connect the huge display of humanity during this crisis, to customers need for more sensitive displays of concern from their favourite grocer or restaurant. Customers will be inclined to do business with businesses that have displayed a social conscience and not just revenue chasing behaviour.
But lets focus on the social conscience forces that are reshaping customer personas amidst this crisis. The next normal may demand that businesses re-introduce themselves with a renewed commitment to values that reflect kindness, care and concern for their customers, employees and social causes. As this customer friendly touch begins to gain traction, businesses that amplify simplicity and empathy actions will benefit.
Simplicity means that businesses will begin to pinpoint and expunge the majority of complexities associated with transactions. Will electronic signatures, chatbots, interactive teller machines, a single bank card that enables all transactions, contactless payments and self approved loans become commonplace? Will in-person visits to business places become a thing of the past? The answer is yes, in time. Bear in mind that while Trinidad and Tobago, as well as the Caribbean region are typically two to three years behind the rest of the world in digital adoption and adaptation, our acceleration into the digital age will continue. Slowly maybe, but surely.
An over-abundance of empathy has been on display at a national level. Customers in their citizen incarnations, have been extending goodwill and humanitarian assistance to those less fortunate and now are highly sensitive to the level of care that they expect, in turn, from businesses. What customers have been giving, they will now expect to receive. Businesses that are powered by a customer first philosophy, will not miss this marker. They would have already communicated to their people that nothing is too much trouble in service delivery.
So, let me address the elephant in the room. Are any of these service delivery notions new? Absolutely not! Are the customer expectations markers new? Again, absolutely not! Whats new is the context and the climate in which we now find ourselves. The ravages of the pandemic have caused people to recalibrate first, whats important and what matters to them. Next, to begin judging their service providers with a more deliberate yardstick that is connected to higher order values systems and how those values translate into the treatment of the customer.
Business leaders, as you continue to roadmap your navigation out of this lockdown, how will you translate lessons learnt into determining how you will re-introduce your business to your customers? Now is the time to decide how your business will stand out in a sea of sameness. Differentiation is power. Youre armed with intelligence, hindsight and insight. How will you use these three data sets to scale up your service excellence foresight?
We must not be simply good at making noise as we have in the past about service excellence. We now need to be good at making the moves to create a differentiated customer reality. By choice.
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There’s a Resurgence of Coronavirus Cases in China – Futurism
Posted: at 5:19 pm
A resurgence of coronavirus cases is starting to hit China, as well as other countries including South Korea and Germany, just as governments are starting to loosen restrictions. Even Wuhan, the Chinese city and epicenter of the now global pandemic, experienced a new cluster of five cases.
The trend has governments worried. Is this the much-feared second wave, or a sign of smaller and controllable valleys and peaks as testing becomes available to a larger number of people?
While its still too early to predict the scale of this second wave if it turns out to be one at all,as opposed to statistical noise it demonstrates that countries are shifting towards a whack-a-mole approach, putting out a number of smaller fires rather than instituting blanket rules to contain a nationwide spread.
Chinese authorities reported 17 new cases over the weekend, The Guardian reports, which is the second day of double-digit new cases and the highest in almost two weeks. Its a far cry from the four digit daily new cases the country experienced back in February but still an ominous trend for the deadly, highly-contagious virus.
Chinas new cases were largely isolated to regions in the northeast. Shulan, a city in Jilin province on the border to North Korea and Russia, had to be put back under partial lockdown over the weekend after officials reported 13 new cases. Other regions also had to be put under renewed lockdown over smaller outbreaks.
A number of new cases related to nightclubs in Seoul, South Korea also has authorities worried about a potential second wave. As a result, bars and clubs are again temporarily closed in the capital. The South Korean government even pushed back the reopening of schools.
But officials cautioned that the new cases do not necessarily mean a second wave is coming.
The first wave has not ended and had a break to start another pandemic, Jung Eun Kyeong, director-general of South Koreas Center for Disease Control told NBC News during a briefing on Monday.
Its not over until its over, noted South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Sunday, noting that South Koreans must never lower [their] guard regarding epidemic prevention.
Just as Germany decided to leave reopening measures to its individual 16 states, with citizens returning to restaurants and bars in some regions, authorities noted that the reproduction rate how many people an infected person ends up infecting in turn appeared to rise back to 1.1 in the European nation, ringing alarm bells.
Germanys center for disease control, however, claimed there was still uncertainty surrounding the latest estimates but noted that more data was critical. Federal rules in Germany state that any county with more than 50 new cases per 100,000 inhabitants will be locked down, CNN reports.
The fears come just as countries are starting the long process of a return to normalcy while maintaining health and safety measures including social distancing and encouraging the wearing of face coverings.
Disneyland in Shanghai reopened to the public on Monday, albeit with enhanced health and safety measures. The first restaurants reopened in Germany over the weekend. Earlier this month, South Korea announced that baseball and soccer matches are expected to start up again, albeit without stadium audiences.
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Ramdesivir, hailed as cure for COVID-19: is history repeating itself? – National Herald
Posted: at 4:59 pm
In June 2002, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) approved Oseltamivir for prophylaxis and treatment of influenza. In 2005 SE Asia witnessed another corona virus (H5N1) outbreak avian or bird flu. Panic mongers went on an overdrive and projected up to 200 million deaths. Governments across the globe stockpiled the drug worth billions of dollars in a bid to prepare to meet the pandemic. It turned out to be unnecessary and ended in an anti-climax. Deaths due to the bird flu epidemic did not exceed a few hundred.
In 2009 we had another outbreak of coronavirus, this time the Swine Flu(H1N1). In no time, the WHO declared the A/H1N1 influenza a pandemic. The National Institute for Health and Care Exellence (NICE), the CDC, the WHO, and the ECDC were also quick to recommend the use of Oseltamivir both for treatment as well as prophylaxis. WHO included the drug in the list of essential medicine.
A red flag was raised in 2009 itself by Keiji Hayashi, a Japanese physician. He pointed out that the key piece of evidence for the conclusion--that Tamiflu reduced the risk of secondary complications such as pneumonia--was based on a manufacture-authored, pooled analysis of 10 manufacturer-funded trials, 8 of which were unpublished.
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COVID-19: Ministry of Ayush starts clinical trials for Ashwagandha and 4 other Ayurvedic herbs for coronavirus treatment; Here is what you need to…
Posted: at 4:59 pm
In a recent positive development, Ministry of Ayush, in collaboration with the Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR) has started clinical trials testing formulation of four important Ayurvedic herbs in fighting the novel coronavirus. The medicines under study include ashwagandha, guduchi, yasthimadhu, peepli and another formulated drug, 'Ayush 64'.
The trials, which will be done on health workers first will be conducted in high-risk zones identified by the Arogya Setu App first. Reports say that over 50 lakh people from cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Ahmedabad and Pune will be a part of the clinical trial. Ayush ministry is also studying the impacts of Ayush-based prophylactic interventions in some preventive cases. In the first phase, patients are likely to be administered ashwagandha and later, the other drugs will be given to patients, depending on how they react or severity of the symptoms.
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A Wafer-Thin Practice | Hans Boersma – First Things
Posted: at 4:59 pm
Who would have thought that a virus would make us reflect deeply on what it means to be the church? Yet COVID-19 has brought into sharp relief the basic divide in North American Christianity between those who think of the church as a voluntary association of like-minded individuals and those who believe it is the real body of Christ, into which we are incorporated. The emphasis on the individual in large swaths of contemporary culture results in an anemic ecclesiology, as the recent crisis makes clear.
John Williamson Nevin, one of the key representatives of German Reformed Mercersburg theology, sharply attacked the revivalism of his day, commenting in his 1849 article on The Sect System: The sect mind . . . in proportion as it has come to be unchurchly and simply private and individual is always necessarily to the same extent unsacramental.
Abraham Kuyper, the great Dutch Reformed theologian and statesman, observed in his 1898 Lectures on Calvinism that Calvinism, by praising aloud liberty of conscience, has in principle abandoned every absolute characteristic of the visible Church. He described it as a liberty of conscience, which enables every man to serve God according to his own conviction and the dictates of his own heart.
Baptist theologian Curtis Freeman, in his 2014 book Contesting Catholicity, similarly laments soul competencythe radical emphasis on individual consciencewhich, beginning in the nineteenth century, has come to dominate Baptist theology.
Nevin, Kuyper, and Freeman all share the same concern about the inversion of the relationship between the church and the believer.
The Internet has been abuzz lately about virtual communion: Why not have the priest do his thing in front of the camera, while we partake by ourselves looking into the screenwith social distance serving as one of the few remaining ritual demands? Why forgo the heavenly manna now that we have the technological know-how to make it rain down virtually into the privacy of our homes?
The Jesuit patristic scholar Henri de Lubac has a few things to teach us about virtual communion in his 1947 book Catholicism. It is a lengthy broadside against individualism in the Catholic tradition. It may seem odd for a Catholicespecially a pre-Vatican II Catholicto worry about people prioritizing the individual over the church. But he did, and his worries are eerily relevant to the rush toward virtual communion among todays tech-savvy evangelicals.
De Lubac was troubled by a Eucharistic individualism that he believed had shaped the mindset of many of his Catholic contemporaries. Convinced as they were that the body of Christ in the Eucharist was the true body (corpus verum), all that seemed to matter was to partake. Once the miraculous medicine of immortality had been ingested, one might as well turn back down the aisle and walk out of church, for the one and only reason for going to Mass had now been performed. De Lubac was agitated, rightly I think, with the individualismyes, the selfish consumerism and greedin this Eucharistic spirituality.
The underlying premise of the embrace of virtual communion is that form and matter, media and message can (and perhaps ought to) be disentangled from each other. Our technological age makes its own, unique demands, and so, for many, to insist on eating the body (the Eucharist) as a body (the church) betrays unhealthy Luddite technophobia.
De Lubac countered the gnostic demon at work. He asked his readers to think about what it means to eat the body (the Eucharist) as a body (the church), pointing out the close link between embodiment and community. Turning to 1 Corinthians 10:1617 (The bread that we break, is it not a participation in the body of Christ? Because there is one bread, we who are many are one body, for we all partake of the one bread), de Lubac pointed out that for Saint Paul, participation (koinnia, communion) of the body of Christ (the Eucharist) turns us into the body of Christ (the church).
All this talk of the body of Christ is no mere metaphor. Saint Augustine, in his famous Sermon 227, writes about the Eucharist: If you have received worthily, you are what you have received, for the Apostle says: The bread is one; we though many, are one body. The African bishop seems to suggest that believers, by partaking of communion, are transubstantiated (well, changed) into the body of Christ. When we eat Christ, we become Christ.
The Christian tradition has typically treated body and body (Eucharist and church) as mutually dependent. On the one hand, the Eucharist makes the church. This seems to be the Pauline logic of 1 Corinthians 10 and of Augustine in Sermon 227. On the other hand, the church makes the Eucharist: We offer up our giftsour entire livesin Christ on the altar. Body and body depend on each other. Neither can go it alone. The reason is simple: The two are one flesh (Eph. 5:31).
Eating and drinking in front of the screen usually indicates a theology of real absence: Neither consecrated bread nor epicletic invocation of the Spirit is required if communion is a mere mental exercise. Indeed, a memorialist communion celebration is virtual by definition, even if it takes place in a church.
Which raises an interesting question: Could we do virtual consecration? True, the priest would not be able to put his hand on the bread and the wine on my coffee table at home, but hey, such pesky manual acts predate YouTube and Zoom by quite a few centuries, and surely by now theyve become obstacles that stand in our way? How central could the sense of touch really be?
Come to think of it, why did it take us so long to get with the times? Why limit YouTube to the COVID-19 pandemic? If consecration works regardless of place, why set physical foot in the church ever again? Heres a modest proposal: Lets have one clericwe could ask the archbishop of Canterbury or the bishop of Romedo his consecrating thing, while the rest of us chill in our TV rooms, giving thanks for the great sacrifice. Actually, is it even necessary to turn to the screen for Franciss latest clip? Surely, watching him elevate the host isnt of the essence of things, as long as I know that he has consecrated also the bread on my plate.
I agree. Its a gnostic argument ad absurdum. But the reason it works is that every stepincluding the very first oneis an exercise in spirituality that treats the Eucharist as a consumer service satisfying my individual religious demands rather than as the chief act of divine worship through which were transfigured so as to become the body of Christ that we eat.
The individualism of pre-Vatican II Catholics is different from that of contemporary evangelicals. The former stems from an over-reliance on real presence: As long as I myself have partaken of the true, Eucharistic body of Christ, I might as well discount the mystical body of the church. The latter is (most of the time) connected to a belief in real absence: If Christ is not bodily present, then our communal, bodily presence can hardly be of significance.
In truth, the bodily presence of Christ in the wafer and the bodily presence of the believers in church are two sides of the same coin. Eucharist via Zoom evacuates the (ecclesial) body even while confecting the (Eucharistic) body. Its a practice that puts asunder what God has joined together.
Catholic and evangelical expressions of consumerist individualism may be located on opposite sides of the theological spectrum, but both fail to recognize that body and body, Christ and the church, are one and the same. When it comes to prioritizing the individual over the church, the difference is, well, wafer-thin.
Hans Boersmais the Saint Benedict Servants of Christ Professor in Ascetical Theology at Nashotah House.
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Senate privacy hawks score a win that delays surveillance renewal – POLITICO
Posted: at 4:55 pm
FISA is a Watergate-era law that serves as the foundation for national security probes and governs federal surveillance, both domestically and of Americans abroad. Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) offered the amendment that lawmakers adopted Wednesday.
BREAKING: BIG win tonight for the protection of Americans privacy and civil liberties! Leahy tweeted after the vote. Tomorrow we turn to the underlying bill, and then on to House.
Approval of the amendment marked a legislative coup for privacy advocates and civil libertarians, who have struggled lately to maintain the legislative gains they had achieved after former NSA contractor Edward Snowden leaked details about the governments most secret spying programs.
Wednesdays successful push also adds a new wrinkle to what has become a months-long saga to renew intelligence authorities that expired on March 15 after Congress left town in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic without reaching an agreement.
Sen. Mike Lee. | Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images
Once the bill returns to the House, its unclear if the change will mollify privacy advocates enough to allow for a quick approval. House Republicans, who have spent weeks demanding that the chamber return to normal business, could also push to reopen a broader debate over changes to FISA.
My sense from my House counterparts was this is a carefully crafted compromise and that it could potentially unravel if it comes back with this amendment, Virginia Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, told POLITICO.
But Warner, who voted against the reform measure, noted that 75 House Democrats voted against the renewal bill the first time in March and that with the amendment, maybe it could pick up more.
Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the former GOP whip, said that it could be the House will just take it up and pass it, but declined to speculate on when that might be.
Lee, who had lobbied Trump to veto the House bill if it reached his desk, said in a statement that the reform measure will help bring some much-needed oversight and accountability to FISA.
More work still needs to be done, but this is good reform in the right direction, and I look forward to final passage of this FISA reform legislation, the Utah Republican added.
The Senate is expected to pass its version of the bill on Thursday, but first lawmakers will have to vote on an amendment by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), which is expected to fail. Paul, a close Trump ally, has also pushed the president to veto the legislation.
Paul has indicated that he would continue to urge a veto unless all three reform amendments were adopted.
Before notching their victory, privacy-minded lawmakers were dealt a setback Wednesday, when they came up one vote shy of approving an amendment that would have protected Americans internet browsing and search history from federal surveillance.
As far as I can tell we lost because there were some people absent, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), who co-sponsored the measure with Sen. Steve Daines (R-Mont.), told POLITICO. I intend to keep coming back to make sure that any administration cant spy on [Americans] and violate the Constitution.
The bill incorporates new privacy provisions into FISA and imposes new requirements on the FISA court system. It also permanently ends a deactivated NSA program that had allowed the countrys largest intelligence organization to obtain, with judicial approval, Americans phone records in terrorism probes.
Under an agreement struck in March, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell can introduce up to three amendments of his own to undercut or weaken the others. However, he declined to do so Wednesday.
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More Doctors Speak Out AGAINST Face Masks If No Health Benefit, What is the Real Reason They are Mandated? – stopthefud
Posted: at 4:55 pm
Ironically, as coronavirus deaths continue to decline in the US and as more states are opening up, there appears to be an increase in mask wearing. Are the face masks going to prevent the spreadof the virus? Will they protect people from the virus? Or may they actually cause harm to some people?
Oreven: are they a new form of virtue signaling, a show of submission to the authorities? Could mandatory face mask requirements be the prelude to mandatory vaccines and other measures in the near future?
Plenty of prominent MDs including Fauci not long ago have condemned the mass masking of America. Are they right?
Watch the Ron Paul Liberty Report as Dr. Ron Paul addresses this issue.
Source: More Doctors Speak Out AGAINST Face Masks If No Health Benefit, What
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Why isnt Ron DeSantis getting as much love as other governors? The Florida Insiders have some ideas – Tampa Bay Times
Posted: at 4:55 pm
Gov. Ron DeSantis finds himself in a peculiar position while managing the biggest crisis of his political career.
The Republican leader is still more liked than disliked in Florida, but his popularity has fallen ever since he announced the first coronavirus cases in the Sunshine State.
Similarly, most Floridians think DeSantis has handled this emergency well, but governors in other states are getting much higher marks for their coronavirus response, according to the latest Washington Post/Ipsos poll. Seventy-one percent of Americans approve of how their governor is facing this challenge; but in Florida, 60 percent feel the same about DeSantis.
Why is this? And what can DeSantis do about it?
For answers, the Tampa Bay Times surveyed more than 200 of the states most plugged-in politicos campaign operatives, fundraisers, party officials, lobbyists, political scientists and more from both side of the aisle. They were allowed to weigh-in anonymously to encourage honesty from people closely involved in the political process. Most arent strangers to distress and some deal with crisis management full-time.
When the Times polled the Florida Insiders in March, about 60 percent gave DeSantis an A or B for his response to the coronavirus. Asked to grade him again two months later, the As and Bs dropped to half, while the Ds and Fs have doubled to 30 percent.
Several pointed out this is an unprecedented global crisis with imperfect solutions, and difficult decisions will always leave some people unhappy.
People want to blame someone for anything that does not go as planned and he is at the top, one Republican said. Long after this is over I think people will appreciate his measured step by step approach.
Added another: He had no place to go but down, but he still remains highly popular.
But many others from both parties said DeSantis has suffered from unforced errors and a partisan approach. Other governors appear to have won over bipartisan support despite making tough public health and economic choices. About 86 percent of Ohioans support Republican leader Mike DeWines coronavirus response, for example, and 81 percent of New Yorkers are behind Democrat Andrew Cuomo of New York.
Meanwhile, six in 10 of Floridians approve of DeSantis coronavirus approach.
Some Democrats and independents who were pleasantly surprised by the governor earlier in his term became disenchanted with his response to COVID-19, explained one Insider not affiliated with either party. During a crisis, many people expect strong executive action and DeSantis instead waited several weeks to issue a stay at home order (objectively, this may or may not have been a good strategy, but it is not what the majority of Floridians wanted to see at that time). So despite the fact that Florida is doing pretty well on COVID-19 deaths compared to the other states, DeSantis is not getting much credit yet."
Bringing in people from the other side of the aisle could have united the state around his response, one Democrat said. Allow everyone to have a voice because it makes it harder to criticize him from a partisan lens with Democrats are at the table.
Several Insiders said DeSantis needed to show more empathy and compassion. Others said his criticism of experts and the media appeared petty. One veteran Republican called DeSantis, Tone deaf."
I get he doesnt understand the plight of the average Floridian, but his team should stop telling him what he wants to hear.
The most frequently discussed theory for DeSantis lower polling is his close relationship to President Donald Trump. The word Trump came up nearly 60 times in the responses from the Florida Insiders.
Democrats, and even some Republicans, are vexed why DeSantis has chosen this moment to realign himself with Trump, whose response to coronavirus has polarized the country. According to the Washington Post poll, 43 percent of Americans almost exclusively Republicans approve of Trumps efforts to halt the virus.
DeSantis "has been acting and speaking more Trump-like, said one Republican who otherwise gave DeSantis high marks. People think hes lost some of his original independence. His advice? Be bold, follow science and not politics. Stop trying to sound like Trump.
Or, as another Republican put it: Kissing Trumps a-- is a losing strategy. Put Florida over your 2024 ambitions.
Many said DeSantis hasnt recovered from perceptions formed during his early missteps. In the first weeks of the crisis, DeSantis shared confusing, and sometimes conflicting, information with the public. It could take his office hours, even days, to clarify information. His orders often vexed local officials, many of which couldnt get the governor on the phone.
If ever faced with a similar crisis, DeSantis should, Work with cities and counties from day one, one Democrat suggested.
His most confusing order was his most important one: the April 1 directive to effectively shut down the state. Hours after he issued it, DeSantis quietly signed a second executive order that attempted to clarify what localities could do on their own. It didnt.
One Republican offered this advice to DeSantis: Dont put things in executive orders that you dont mean. No waffling, no walking back.
He should have implemented more frequent, robust and regular briefings from the (emergency operations center) to demonstrate that he is fully and completely engaged, with all hands on deck, said another Republican. I hate to say it, but any success of Floridas having flattened the curve is more related to luck than proactive, decisive action.
Some suggested the lack of transparency has turned public opinion. Before the virus even arrived, DeSantis declined to share coronavirus testing figures. Then he waited a day to announce the states first two positive cases.
For weeks, his administration shielded cases at nursing homes and assisted living facilities from the public, and only relented when news organizations sued.
Crisis comms 101: Get facts out there, one Republican said. Dont hide info consumers expect and deserve.
DeSantis is also juggling two crises at once: the coronavirus and an unemployment system failing to deliver benefits to hundreds of thousands of people out of work. DeSantis inherited a broken website not equipped to handle so many claims, but it has nonetheless created a public relations nightmare for the current office holder.
Almost 40 percent of Insiders said former governor-turned-U.S. Sen. Rick Scott is to blame for that mess, and about 35 percent faulted both Republicans. Only three out 200 respondents said DeSantis was solely responsible.
This is the first time people have had the opportunity to observe how he handles situations that actually affect them, a Republican said. And the unemployment compensation debacle is reflecting on him even though he is trying to explain it away by blaming Rick Scott.
Others said the media has made it difficult for DeSantis to change the narrative around his response, even as DeSantis has found his footing, as one put it. For example: His strategy to reopen Florida sooner than many states, but not as aggressively as his counterparts across the South, struck the right balance, many Insiders said.
Hes earned some serious scrutiny but I think the national media has piled on him while hes been better than at least half the GOP governors in this country, one Democrat wrote. I believe hes been wishy-washy and too slow at times. I also dont like his naked political appeals to his base with his demagogic rhetoric about New York. But I think his drop in popularity is due to a one-sided media storm no other elected official in the country has faced including the President.
About 58 percent of respondents said May 4 was the right time for DeSantis to restart Floridas economy; 38 percent said it was too soon. Public health experts have cautioned that reopening too much, too quickly could lead to a second wave of coronavirus cases.
A majority also said that DeSantis Phase One plan for reopening allowing some customers at restaurants, stores and museums, but keeping bars, gyms and movie theaters closed was just right. Three in 10, mostly Democrats, thought the plan is too aggressive with so many people still infected. The rest, mostly Republicans, said DeSantis should have restarted more of Floridas economy.
The media, by and large, portrayed the governor as indecisive and waffling, even though, by not imposing strict sanctions, he was being very decisive, one Republican said. He just could not get his message through to the people in any meaningful way.
This month, 92 Democrats, 94 Republicans and 14 people registered no party affiliation or with another party responded to the poll. This months Florida Insiders are:
Joseph Abruzzo, Erin Aebel, Liz Alarcon, Tom Alte, Jason Altmire, Fernand Amandi, Peter Antonacci, Scott Arceneaux, Donna Arduin, Dave Aronberg, Brad Ashwell, Jon M. Ausman, Roger Austin, Tim Baker, Ryan Banfill, Christina Barker, Michael Barnett, Scott Barnhart, Patrick Baskette, Ashley Bauman, Geoffrey Becker, Samuel Bell, Allan Bense, Wayne Bertsch, Ron Bilbao, Barney Bishop III, Greg Blair, Katie Bohnett, Bill Bunkley, Alex Burgos, Dominic M. Calabro, Kristy Campbell, Tim Canova, Gabriela Castillo, Betty Castor, Kevin Cate, Mitch Ceasar, Alan Clendenin, Brad Coker, Gus Corbella, Brian Crowley, Husein Cumber, Carlos Curbelo, David Custin, Justin Day, Hayden Dempsey, Richard DeNapoli, Pablo Diaz, Victor DiMaio, Victor DiMaio, Tony DiMatteo, Michael Dobson, Paula Dockery, Doc Dockery, John Dowless, Bob Doyle, Pete Dunbar, Barry Edwards, Eric Eikenberg, Mike Fasano, Peter Feaman, Mark Ferrulo, Damien Filer, Marty Fiorentino, Mark Foley, Mark Foley, Kirk Fordham, Towson Fraser, Keith Frederick, Ellen Freidin, John French, Jack Furnari, Wayne Garcia, Stephen Gaskill, Josh Geise, Steve Geller, Richard Gentry, Julia Gill Woodward, Susan Glickman, Brian Goff, Susan Goldstein, Alma Gonzalez, Ron Greenstein, Thomas Grigsby, Joe Gruters, Stephanie Grutman Zauder, Mike Hamby, Marion Hammer, Chris Hand, Mike Hanna, Abel Harding, James Harris, Alexander Heckler, Rich Heffley, Bill Helmich, Cynthia Henderson, Laura Hernandez, Don Hinkle, Jim Holton, Jim Horne, Tyler Hudson, Yolanda Jackson, Aubrey Jewett, David Johnson, Jeff Johnson, Christina Johnson, Eric Johnson, Eric Jotkoff, Fred Karlinsky, Joshua Karp, Henry Kelley, John Konkus, Chris Korge, Jeff Kottkamp, Kartik Krishnaiyer, Stephanie Kunkel, Jackie Lee, Bill Lee, Matt Lettelleir, Beth Leytham, Shannon Love, Nikki Lowrey, Javier Manjarres, Roly Marante, William March, Daniela Martins, Beth Matuga, Nancy McGowan, Kathy Mears, Andrea Mercado, David Mica, Jamie Miller, Paul Mitchell, Travis Moore, Lucy Morgan, John Morgan, Samuel Neimeiser, Meredith ORourke, Stephanie Owens , Maurizio Passariello, Alex Patton, Brandon Patty, Darryl Paulson, Jorge Pedraza, Juan Penalosa, Evelyn Perez-Verdia, Rachel Perrin Rogers, Joe Perry, Ron Pierce, JC Planas, Van Poole, Evan Power, David Ramba, David Rancourt, George Riley, Jim Rimes, Franco Ripple, Patrick Roberts, Jason Rosenberg, Sarah Rumpf, Ron Sachs, April Salter, Tom Scarritt, April Schiff, Jack Seiler, Mel Sembler, Stephen Shiver, Kyle Simon, Alex Sink, Patrick Slevin, Stephanie Smith, Adam Smith, Eleanor Sobel, John Stemberger, Alan Stonecipher, Amber Stoner Nunnally, Nancy Ann Texeira, Phillip Thompson, Cory Tilley, Greg C. Truax, Frank Tsamoutales, Greg Turbeville, Christian Ulvert, Jason Unger, Karen Unger, Matthew Van Name, Steven Vancore, Nancy Watkins, Screven Watson, Kevin Watson, Jonathan Webber, Susie Wiles, Marley Wilkes, Mike Williams, Rick Wilson, Jamie Wilson, Leslie Wimes, Jon Woodard, Eric Zichella, Christian Ziegler, Mark Zubaly,
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Why isnt Ron DeSantis getting as much love as other governors? The Florida Insiders have some ideas - Tampa Bay Times
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New Releases And Eshop Discounts Week 20 – N-Europe
Posted: at 4:51 pm
Posted 14 May 2020 at 14:35 by Dennis Tummers
Test your reflexes and rhythm feeling by dancing along with Hatsune Miku, the digital J-pop superstar.Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Mega Mixis a rhythm game where you can play along to catchy J-pop songs using button, touch or movement input.
Ion Furyis a true blast from the past, as it runs on the ancient Build game engine, the same one that poweredDuke Nukem 3Dback in the days. This first person shooter is the prequel to the 2016 gameBombshelland once again you will take on the bad guys as Shelly "Bombshell" Harrison.
As always the full list of new games can be found on the bottom of this article, after the highlights for this week's new releases, pre-downloads and sales.
Highlights: New Game Releases
Highlights: New Pre-Loads
Highlights: Sales
Highlights: Permanent Price Drops
Download versions of packaged software
Nintendo Switch download software
Nintendo Switch downloadable content
Nintendo Switch demos
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New Releases And Eshop Discounts Week 20 - N-Europe
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