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Thursday, August 13, 2020

HBCU’s Prepare to Reopen With the Help of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, United Negro College Fund, and Testing For America

HBCU black student covid

The importance of education is at the forefront of conversations these days with schools preparing to reopen this fall amid the COVID-19 pandemic. To help HBCU campuses to ensure that students feel safe, The Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF) and the United Negro College Fund (UNCF) have announced partnerships with Testing for America to support historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in their COVID-19 testing plans for students, faculty, and staff.

Since March, UNCF and TMCF have been working with their member schools on crisis management, stabilization, and now reopening campuses.

“All institutions must be able to test when they reopen for in-person instruction — whether this fall or 2021,” said UNCF President and CEO Dr. Michael L. Lomax. “TFA’s ability to link us to high-quality providers, coupled with other safety guidance and financial support, will help bring necessary, continuous and reliable testing to entire campus communities. We are happy to partner with TFA on this critical work to help our campuses and students successfully navigate this pandemic.”

“The Thurgood Marshall College Fund is confident our new partnership with Testing for America will bring abundant and accurate COVID-19 testing to our member-schools, helping them to safely reopen and protect our communities,” said TMCF President and CEO Harry Williams.

The program has been initiated at Delaware State University, and several more have become partners, with others waiting to join.

“The HBCU brand of excellence, education and care is specifically targeted to talented students who simply need an open door and a welcoming environment. We are home. And safety must be our priority,” said Delaware State University President Tony Allen. “Our relationship with Testing for America is the No. 1 driver of our ability to reopen our campus safely.”

Currently, TFA is having discussions with K-12 schools, other higher education institutions, and businesses that have plans on reopening. They are also seeking additional philanthropic supporters and major donors to sponsor testing initiatives.

“We don’t need to wait for new innovations. We have the technology now to dramatically increase access to meaningful, affordable, repeat testing to help us safely and permanently reopen schools, businesses and ultimately the US economy,” said TFA Founder Jason Yeung.

Current TFA partners include Cerner, a global healthcare technology company, and Illumina, the world leader in genomic sequencing, as well as other philanthropic donors.

“This is solvable, and this is scalable,” said Francis deSouza, chief executive officer of Illumina. “What Testing for America has launched is demonstrating this can be done successfully, and we are proud to be part of the solution that can enable testing at scale. We encourage others to reach out and join in.”



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Hotels and Resorts Are Now Offering Remote Work Packages To Attract Travelers

JW Marriott Cancun

Since the spread of COVID-19, the travel industry has been forced to completely change normal procedures in order to accommodate new social distancing provisions. Due to new travel restrictions, many within the industry are looking for new ways to attract customers and genearte revenue until regular leisure travel resumes. One way many hotels are doing this is by providing a space for remote workers so they can work on the go.

The viral outbreak has caused many corporations to change over to a work-from-home system, leaving many tirelessly cramped in their homes for long periods times. Countries like Bermuda and Barbados have begun to launch new digital nomad residency to allow travelers the option of living and working remotely on the island for up to a year.

Other travelers are opting to travel and bring their work with them on their short vacation due to the change and many hotels and resorts are creating new packages to attract this new crop of digital workers. In countries like Mexico, where Americans can still freely travel amid the global public health crisis, resorts such as the JW Marriott Cancun are offering beach “work stations,” modifying typical beach cabanas to accommodate remote workers.

Stateside, hotels like the Hyatt Centric Las Olas in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and the Hamilton Hotel in Washington, D.C., are now offering local residents day-passes and packages for private workspace and special amenities from after-work cocktails to private lunches to accommodate remote workers looking for work outside of the homes for a change of scenery.

Luxury establishments like The London West Hollywood are even offering monthly packages to convert hotel rooms into remote working spaces where guests can even enjoy a customized menu from the head chef specially for those working from home.

 



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Sarah Cooper gets Netflix special after going famous for trolling Trump

Earlier this Spring, the TikTok comedian went viral for her brilliant satirical lip-sync impressions of the current president

Lip-sync star, Sarah Cooper, is getting her own Netflix special after becoming a viral sensation with her parodies of President Donald Trump

Cooper will join forces with SNL alumna, Maya Rudolph, who will executive produce. Everything’s Fine will be directed by Natasha Lyonne of Russian Doll and Orange Is the New Black

READ MORE: As Trump plans to ban TikTok, Sarah Cooper continues to hilariously mock him

The special is due to arrive on the streaming site this fall. 

“Everything’s Fine” will feature “vignettes dealing with issues of politics, race, gender, class, and other light subjects,” Netflix said, with guest performers taking part in short interviews, sketches, and “more shenanigans.”

In April 2020, Cooper went viral with her brilliant satirical lip-sync impressions of our current president. Her How to Medical video released on Twitter has been viewed more than 20 million times. In the video, she lip-syncs to Trump talking about the idea of using sunlight and disinfectant to cure coronavirus. 

42-year-old Cooper is a native of Jamaica who currently resides in New York City. 

Before her online success, she was a writer and correspondent on the CBS ALL ACCESS pilot OLD NEWS, produced by Stephen Colbert. Cooper also wrote the best-selling books “100 Tricks to Appear Smart in Meetings” and “How to be Successful Without Hurting Men’s Feelings.”

READ MORE: TikTok comic Sarah Cooper goes viral over Trump’s ‘amazing’ rally numbers

Cooper told The Daily Beast that she got into TikTok after being introduced to the short video sharing site by her nephew. 

She also said that making the videos is cathartic for her during the coronavirus pandemic. Her sister is a nurse and her mother has asthma and lives in Florida. 

She said that she started doing her Trump impressions after watching his daily virus briefings and said she noticed “that he has no idea what he’s talking about, and he can talk for so long about anything.” She said that she enjoys speaking truth to power by making people laugh. 

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Biden reveals campaign set fundraising record after VP announcement

Democratic finance director says Kamala Harris is a ‘fundraiser’s dream,’ who will be like a ‘shot of espresso’ for the campaign’s fundraising

It was an exciting 24 hours for Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for President, after announcing his running mate, Kamala Harris

READ MORE: Joe Biden introduces VP pick Kamala Harris at 1st campaign event

Biden added, “I think I know why.” 

The Delaware politician made the announcement as he and Harris appeared at their first public appearance as running mates. “I have no doubt that I picked the right person to join me as the next vice president of the United States of America, and that’s Senator Kamala Harris.” 

Sen. Kamala Harris (L) (D-CA), hugs Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden after introducing him at a campaign rally at Renaissance High School
(Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The campaign noted on Twitter that they raised $26 million, including from 150,000 first-time contributors. 

According to the New York Times, $10.8 million of those funds were raised in the first four hours after the announcement. Act Blue, the online fundraiser for the Democratic Party said that the flood of money broke the platform’s record. 

“This is a campaign that really fuels my hope because it is about knowing that this is fighting for something and not against something and it’s fighting for the best we are as a nation,” Harris told The New York Times. 

“It’s fighting for the best of who we can be.”

The fundraising further illustrates the excitement surrounding the historic announcement. Harris’ name continues to trend on social media channels since Tuesday. 

READ MORE: Kamala Harris shares video of Biden sharing VP news with her during call

Lisa Hernandez Gioia, a Democratic finance director, told The Times that Harris is a “fundraiser’s dream,” who will be like a “shot of espresso” for the campaign’s fundraising. 

Funds raised during campaign fuel all-important advertising campaigns. 

If Biden is elected, Harris would be the first African American, first Asian American and first woman to be vice-president. 

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A Plan to Turn Military Bases Into ‘Sandboxes’ for 5G

A top Trump adviser outlines a blueprint for experimenting with wireless tech on bases and using software to counter China's lead in hardware.

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Samsung's Galaxy Buds Live Review: Weird But Good

They won't grow a magic beanstalk, but the Galaxy Buds Live offer a unique fit, good sound with decent noise-canceling, and a price that's easy to stomach.

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Photoshop Will Help ID Images That Have Been … Photoshopped

Adobe is adding technology to tag images with metadata, part of an effort to identify deepfakes and other efforts at manipulation.

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She Helped Wreck the News Business. Here’s Her Plan to Fix It

Nandini Jammi’s advertiser boycotts scared brands away from journalism and into shady ad tech. Now she wants to teach marketers to think for themselves again.

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Should We Conserve Parasites? Apparently, Yes

A group of ecologists and biologists say the world's ticks, leeches, and tapeworms need love and conservation, too. Now they've got a 12-point plan.

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Mocimboa da Praia: Mozambique battles for port seized by IS

It says Islamists who seized a city near lucrative gas reserves are using local people as human shields.

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GAA: The African fishermen taking up gaelic football

A number of men from Ghana are taking up GAA after working in Ardglass for the last year.

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One IT Guy’s Spreadsheet-Fueled Race to Restore Voting Rights

This fall, thousands will show up to vote only to find out they’ve been purged. Lots of activists—and one Ohio man with lots of cats—are on a quest to fix that.

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An Alexa Bug Could Have Exposed Your Voice History to Hackers

Amazon has patched the flaw, but its discovery underscores the importance of locking down your voice assistant interactions.

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Netflix on YouTube

Young Wallander | Official Trailer | Netflix
Uncover the case that made the man. Kurt Wallander (Adam PÃ¥lsson) fresh out of police academy witnesses a brutal crime and is pulled into solving it under the wing of superintendent Hemberg (Richard Dillane). SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/29qBUt7 About Netflix: Netflix is the world's leading streaming entertainment service with 193 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, documentaries and feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments. Young Wallander | Official Trailer | Netflix https://youtube.com/Netflix


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What a touch-free airplane bathroom is going to look like

From the door to the sink to the toilet itself, airplane bathrooms are a touch point catastrophe. That's going to change, say companies that are producing "touchless tech" to revamp the entire experience.

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Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Useful PuTTY Configuration Tips and Tricks

Putty is an opensource terminal emulator that supports several network protocols like Telnet, SSH, Rlogin, SCP, and Raw Socket. The initial version of putty is dated back to January 8, 1999, and designed for Windows

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How MIT built its own Covid-19 testing trailer

In mid-March, in response to the unfolding Covid-19 pandemic, MIT Medical quickly set up testing tents where essential workers and others who remained on campus could be safely screened for the novel coronavirus. In the tents, nurses and physicians administered nasal swabs while dressed in full personal protective equipment, or PPE.

It soon became clear that to safely test on a daily basis, medical workers needed to regularly replenish their PPE — a resource in short, desperate supply. There was also the possibility that, in doffing all that PPE at the end of an eight-hour shift, a nurse could risk inhaling any infectious particles that might cling to gowns, surgical masks, and face shields.

“One of the biggest challenges in Covid testing is [that] you place the one doing the testing at a not-insignificant risk,” says Brian Schuetz, MIT Medical’s chief of staff.

Weather conditions were also a challenge, as a late-March noreaster threatened to upend the tents. Looking to the hot summer months, Schuetz and his medical team knew that major adjustments would have to be made to improve the safety and comfort of both patients and staff.

“We made a decision early on that we had to think differently about how we did things,” Schuetz says.

Over two months, he and experts from across campus worked tirelessly to design and build MIT’s newest testing facility — a 60-foot trailer that is now operating as the main test site for asymptomatic members of the MIT community who need to return to campus.

Inside, the renovated trailer accommodates a check-in station and six testing bays. Floor-to-ceiling plastic partitions run the length of the trailer, keeping medical staff on one side, and those getting tested on the other. In each testing bay, a tester on one side of the partition can fit her arms into large rubber gloves that extend out to the other side, so that she can perform a nasal swab without either party coming in physical contact.

The trailer is also equipped with an upgraded HVAC system, calibrated so that the air on either side of the partitions will not mix. The two separate spaces within the trailer make it possible for medical staff to safely test people while wearing a simple surgical mask, rather than full PPE.

“The result is: The folks behind that plastic are very safe,” Schuetz says. “If we can make our team comfortable and patients comfortable, we can help everyone be safer.”

The trailer began operating in early July, with the capacity to test up to 1,500 people per day. MIT’s Information Systems and Technology group wired the trailer to MIT’s Covid Pass system, which allows an MIT member to access campus facilities if they have tested negative for the coronavirus. The trailer is designated as a testing site for asymptomatic members with access to the Covid Pass app.

The entire experience takes about two minutes. The nasal swabs are analyzed at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and results are entered into the Covid Pass system; those who have been tested can check their results via the app.

“One of the biggest challenges in this whole effort was figuring out how to get all these disparate pieces put together, and I think we’ve created a solution that works together to help the campus be safe,” Schuetz says. “It’s really an example of MIT at its best — innovation from the ground up.”

A race against time

That ground-up effort took off quickly, when Schuetz first approached Elazer Edelman, director of the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, looking for additional sources of PPE for the medical tents that were used initially.

“And Elazer said, ‘Wait a minute — MIT is the best place in the world to find people that can make exactly what we want,” recalls Martin Culpepper, professor of mechanical engineering and a member of MIT’s governance team on manufacturing opportunities for Covid-19.

So the medical team refocused their vision to test the MIT community, not in tents with medical staff in full PPE, but in a well-ventilated, weather-protected space.

Edelman connected with Culpepper, who reached out to campus workshops for material resources and expertise. Meanwhile, Schuetz worked with the Department of Facilities to acquire two trailers.

“We order trailers for construction projects all the time, and it’s nothing out of the norm, except now we’re in the middle of a pandemic, and there are not a lot of trailers out there,” recalls Paul Murphy, director of special projects in the Facilities Campus Construction team. “But everyone stepped up and knew how important this was, and within four days, we had two trailers, which normally could take months with this type of fit-out.”

Culpepper met with Tasker Smith, technical instructor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering, and Jennifer O’Brien, technical instructor in the Department of Architecture, who together drew up a testing space designed for the larger, 60-foot trailer, based on initial conversations with medical staff. 

“The early stages were all about napkin sketches, cardboard, duct tape, and bubblegum — whatever it takes to help you wrap your mind around this thing quickly,” Smith says.

O’Brien built a rough model of a testing bay and invited several nurses and physicians to test it out.

“Having experience building custom furniture, I thought there might be needs they will find that they have, that they weren’t going to think of ahead of time,” O’Brien recalls. “I realized that, for example, based on the wide range of height and shoulder width of testers, that existing designs found online at the time might not be comfortable for everyone.”

So she made a crucial adjustment to the final design, building the gloves into an extra panel in each bay’s window that can be adjusted up and down to accommodate a tester’s height. The team then worked with Culpepper to acquire materials for the actual build.

“At that time, the whole world was realizing they needed to source clear-sheet plastic to shield people interacting with one another, like cashiers and students, so there was a big scramble,” O’Brien says. “We were racing against time, and had to get this thing up and running as fast as possible, to manage a larger MIT population as soon as they started returning to campus.”

While she and Smith started building out the trailer’s physical layout with the help of campus construction crews, Culpepper worked with Facilities engineers to optimize the trailer’s HVAC system.

“We ran all sorts of calculations on how much air had to be turned over at a certain time, with the number of individuals who would occupy both sides of the trailer,” Murphy says.

The team designed a positive pressure HVAC system that pumps 700 cubic feet per minute of outdoor air through one side of the trailer’s plastic partition, in a way that keeps one side at positive pressure, and the other at negative pressure — a balance that prevents air on either side from mixing. A large, custom-built exhaust stack blows the air out about 12 feet above the trailer.

So far, about 4,000 people have been tested in the trailer. The eventual goal is to have all members of the community working and living on campus be tested up to twice a week, with the trailer as a key component of that stategy. Schuetz notes, however, that the evolution of testing technologies, medical guidance, and prevalence of Covid-19 in the broader Massachusetts community will likely result in changes to the testing strategy over the coming months.  

Looking to a hopeful future, Schuetz suggests the trailer can be configured for other purposes, such as testing people for antibodies, or even, administering a vaccine.

“It’s not over now that it’s built,” adds O’Brien, who with Smith, is assembling a packet of sharable specs for anyone interested in building similar facilities. “It continues to be a versatile design, and we are still here on campus if needed, to update it.”



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Over 1,000 students in Georgia school district under quarantine

Several teachers protested the district’s plan to reopen schools on Aug. 3, some even resigned due to safety concerns.

More than 1000 students have been quarantined in a Georgia school district due to possible coronavirus exposure since in-person classes resumed last week.

The Cherokee County School District, which serves more than 42,000 students and is located north of Atlanta, is also closing a second high school due to a COVID-19 outbreak, Business Insider reports. 

“Since we’ve reopened, and as of this morning, there have been 59 positive COVID-19 tests confirmed among our students and staff, which have led us to mandate two-week quarantines for 925 students and staff,” Superintendent Dr. Brian V. Hightower said in a Facebook post. 

Read More: Companies test antibody drugs to treat, prevent COVID-19

“We are not hesitating to quarantine students and staff who have had possible exposure – even if the positive test was prompted by possible exposure rather than symptoms, as all positive cases can lead to the infection of others,” he added.

“Our transparency to our community is far beyond any requirements by the Department of Public Health, but we believe our community benefits from our longstanding commitment to transparency. We don’t need social media to tell us to be transparent – it’s who we are because we care about our community,” said Hightower.

Read More: Nearly 100K children test positive for COVID-19 as schools reopen

The message below is from Superintendent of Schools Dr. Brian V. Hightower:When we announced plans to reopen schools…

Posted by Cherokee County GA School District on Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Several teachers and parents protested the district’s plan to reopen schools on Aug. 3, some even resigned due to safety concerns, others criticized the county’s refusals to ‘made masking for students.”

“My personal fear is that I’m going to die before my career is over, that this tiny virus is what’s going to take me out, and not old age or some horrific accident,” said science teacher Olivia Vacid. “I don’t understand the county’s refusal to mandate masking for students”

According to a list the district created, nearly 1,200 students and staff are currently under a mandatory two-week quarantine, NBC News reported.

The state Department of Public Health reports that Georgia is currently averaging more than 60 COVID-19 related deaths a day.

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Stepmom of officer who killed Rayshard Brooks accused of racist conduct

The complaint alleges she ‘engaged in blatantly racist conduct’ and suggested one staffer stop dating Black men.

Melissa Rolfe, the stepmother of the former Atlanta, Georgia, police officer involved in the shooting death of Rayshard Brooks, is being sued for defamation. 

In June, Rolfe was fired from her HR position at Equity Prime Mortgage LLC following complaints of creating an “uncomfortable and hostile working environment,” according to the lawsuit filed by the Atlanta-based firm on Tuesday, New York Post reports.

The complaint alleges she “engaged in blatantly racist conduct,” called employees “savages,” “dingbats” and “f–king bitches,” and suggested one black staffer “upgrade [her] standards” and stop dating Black men because they’re “weak.” She also claimed an employee was hired because she “must suck d–k really good.” 

Read More: Officer who shot Rayshard Brooks files lawsuit, vacations in Florida

“Not surprisingly, Rolfe lost people’s confidence in her ability to perform her job as an HR Director and was fired,” the lawsuit states.  

The termination sparked outrage among conservatives on social media after Rolfe embarked on a “smear campaign” with congressional candidate Marjorie Taylor Greene. They launched “a national media firestorm” to push the lie that she was fired because of her stepson, former officer Garrett Rolfe, was charged with the murder of Brooks, the filing says.

Rolfe and Greene are accused of “seeking to exploit the death of Rayshard Brooks for their own personal gain.”

Read More: Former Atlanta officer who shot Rayshard Brooks released on bond

Rayshard Brooks theGrio.com
Rayshard Brooks (Screenshot from Reconnect documentary)

“The smear campaign mobilized a furious social media mob and prompted death threats, a boycott, and enormous reputational and financial harm to [Equity Prime Mortgage],” the firm said in the lawsuit.

The pair “knew that their smear campaign was based on a lie, but they intentionally disregarded the truth to capitalize on national attention related to Rayshard Brooks’s death,” the lawsuit claims.

“We were targeted with death threats, hate mail, and a boycott because of a national media firestorm based on statements by Marjorie Greene’s campaign and Melissa Rolfe,” said the company’s CEO, Eddy Perez.

“We are committed to setting the record straight and defending our good name.”

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3 men arrested for harassing, threatening R. Kelly’s accusers

The singer’s defense attorney said the artist had ‘no involvement whatsoever’ in a plot to silence victims.

Several of R. Kelly’s associates have been arrested for allegedly threatening, harassing and trying to bribe women who accused the singer of sexual abuse. 

According to a complaint filed by U.S. attorneys, three men connected to the disgraced R&B star tried to intimidate several women by firebombing a victim’s father’s car, offering a half-million-dollar bribe, and releasing sexually explicit photos online, NBC New York reports. Richard Arline Jr., Donnell Russell and Michael Williams were charged Wednesday for “re-victimizing his accusers.” 

Arline is said to be a longtime friend of Kelly, who offered one accuser $500,000 to keep quiet about her experience with the hitmaker. Russell, a former manager and adviser to the artist, released sexually explicit photos of a victim after she filed a lawsuit against R. Kelly. He reportedly published the images on a Facebook page and shared them during a YouTube live vlog in January.

Read More: Prosecutors want R. Kelly jury to be anonymous

Williams is related to Kelly’s former publicist. In June, he set fire to an SUV belonging to the father of an accuser, according to prosecutors.

“These crimes shock the conscience,” said Peter Fitzhugh, a special agent-in-charge with Homeland Security Investigations, who worked on Kelly’s sex crimes case in New York. “The men charged today allegedly have shown that there is no line they will not cross to help Kelly avoid the consequences of his alleged crimes—even if it means re-victimizing his accusers.”

Defense attorney Steve Greenberg said on Twitter that R. Kelly had “no involvement whatsoever” in a plot to silence victims.

Read More: ‘Surviving R. Kelly’ producer Dream Hampton to helm Tulsa race massacre docu-series

As theGRIO previously reported, Kelly is currently awaiting trial in Chicago’s Metropolitan Correctional Center. After the coronavirus pandemic hit America, he asked a judge for bail in April in fear of contracting the virus. U.S District Judge Ann Donnelly denied the request on April 7, concluding that she had “no compelling reasons” to release Kelly and that he was still a flight risk, according to USA Today.

R. Kelly is also facing racketeering and sex crime charges in New York.

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