Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Algernon"


6 mentions found


Elon Musk last week announced his company Neuralink has implanted its first chip in a human test subject. AdvertisementInterest from potential test subjects is rather slim, as is: just 2% would "definitely" consider getting a computer chip implanted in their brain "within the next year," below the margin of error for the poll. Overall, just 5% of respondents would at all consider getting a chip in the next year. Men were more than three times as likely as women (13% vs 4%) to be down for a commercially produced brain chip eventually. All told, 19% of respondents who said they read Dune would get a commercially available brain chip, and 11% of respondents who said they read Dune would get one this year.
Persons: Elon, , Elon Musk, Richard Foreman Jr, it's, Flowers, Algernon, Frank Herbert's, Algernon — Organizations: Service, Democrats, Independents, Summit Entertainment Locations: Silicon
There are no federal regulations protecting workers in extreme heat. Biden announced plans to protect workers last week with more enforcement of heat-safety violations. "I urge the administration to move quickly to create this national heat standard to protect workers on the job. Last year, business groups sued Oregon over extreme heat worker protection rules, arguing the state overstepped its statutory authority in requiring employers to pay workers during breaks. However, some experts believe that investments to protect workers, such as rearranging shifts or changing uniform colors, pay off since workers can be more productive in the longer run.
Persons: Biden, Marc Freedman, Algernon Austin, Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, haven't, Austin Organizations: Service, United States Chamber of Commerce, New York Times, OSHA, Center for Economic, Policy Research, Research, Labor Department, National Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, Department of, Democratic, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Safety, UPS, Asuncion Valdivia Heat, American Farm Bureau Federation, National Demolition Association Locations: Wall, Silicon, California , Colorado, Washington, America, Oregon, Texas, California , Michigan, Georgia, Asuncion Valdivia
There are no federal regulations that protect workers in extreme heat, contributing to losses in productivity. "There's of course the worst case, the risk of death, but there is the risk of injury with the rise in temperature and reduced work hours. How much heat impacts productivityPlenty of studies show that extreme heat can crush economic activity across a variety of sectors. Long-term exposure to extreme heat, the authors write, causes inflammation and cardiovascular pressure. Workers in high-exposure industries worked about an hour less when the temperature was above 85 degrees Fahrenheit compared to the 76-80 degrees Fahrenheit range.
Persons: Algernon Austin, Biometeorology, Austin Organizations: Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Center for Economic, Policy Research, Economics, Workers, International Locations: Wall, Silicon, New Orleans, Nashville, California
THE COUNTRY OF THE BLIND: A Memoir at the End of Sight, by Andrew LelandAfter reading Andrew Leland’s memoir, “The Country of the Blind,” you will look at the English language differently. You will even look at the word “look” differently. While posing considerable challenges, this has given him what most authors of nonfiction crave: a definitive Big Topic. For now, Leland is mostly a visitor to the “country of the blind,” a title borrowed from an H.G. He’s studied its customs and concerns, and his liminal state lets him act as tour guide to an oblivious sighted citizenry.
Persons: Andrew Leland, Andrew Leland’s, Leland, Charlie, “ Flowers, Algernon, , he’s, Wells, He’s
Can Literal Mall Rats Save the Mall?
  + stars: | 2023-05-09 | by ( Claudia Rosenbaum | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
When Alia Mahmud visited Westfield Annapolis Mall in February 2022, she didn’t go to buy clothes, or to watch a movie or to even meet up with her girlfriends. She was looking for rats. A week earlier, Ms. Mahmud saw a post online about a pack of rodents at the SPCA of Anne Arundel County, whose shelter opened an outpost at the mall in September 2020. When she arrived at the new location and approached the rat enclosure, she saw Snoofles, Algernon and Ikit, 5-month-old sisters who perked up and pressed their pink noses through their crate to get a better look at Ms. Mahmud and her boyfriend. “They kind of ran up to us and said hi,” said Ms. Mahmud, 32, a school therapist in Alexandria, Va. “They melted our hearts with how little, affectionate and outgoing they were from the beginning.”But it wasn’t until a meet-and-greet days later when Ms. Mahmud finally decided to take them home, where Snoofles proceeded to run down her shirt.
WTO rules against U.S. in Hong Kong labelling dispute
  + stars: | 2022-12-21 | by ( Reuters Staff | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
FILE PHOTO: A logo is seen at the World Trade Organization (WTO) headquarters before a news conference in Geneva, Switzerland, October 5, 2022. REUTERS/Denis BalibouseUntil 2020, the United States had treated Hong Kong, which is a separate WTO member, in the same manner as before it passed from British control in July 1997. A three-person WTO adjudicating panel found that the United States violated an obligation towards Hong Kong, by giving it less favourable treatment than other WTO members in terms of marks of origin on its products. The United States said it had applied an exception allowing for measures to protect a country’s “essential security interests”. The Hong Kong government welcomed the ruling and said it had affirmed its special status as a separate customs territory.
Total: 6