Sunday
LeBron to make Lakers debut Sunday in San Diego
The wait is nearly over for fans looking to see LeBron James make his first start for the Los Angeles Lakers.
Lakers coach Luke Walton has announced that James will play in Sunday's preseason opener against the Denver Nuggets in San Diego. But just how many minutes he'll play has yet to be determined.
"It will be more than one and less than 48," said Walton on the Lakers' official website.
Lakers reporter Mike Trudell tweeted that James will likely play limited minutes.
Following practice earlier this week, James was asked about his plans for the Lakers' six-game preseason schedule. "I don't need preseason games [at this stage of my career] to get ready," he said. — Reuters
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Saturday
Online harassment a problem for many US teens — survey
A majority of US teenagers say they have been victims of online harassment or bullying, and that social media companies aren’t doing enough to fight the problem, a survey showed Thursday.
The Pew Research Center survey found that 59 percent of US teens reported being bullied or harassed online, and 63 percent said it was a major problem for people their age.
The most common type of harassment cited was name-calling, cited by 42 percent, while 32 percent said someone had spread false rumors about them on the internet and 16 percent said they had been the target of physical threats online.
Among teens surveyed, one in four said they had received unwanted explicit images, received queries about their whereabouts from people other than a parent or had explicit images of them shared without their consent.
“Name-calling and rumor-spreading have long been an unpleasant and challenging aspect of adolescent life. But the proliferation of smartphones and the rise of social media has transformed where, when and how bullying takes place,” said Monica Anderson, the lead researcher for the Pew report.
According to Pew, similar shares of boys and girls have been harassed online, but girls are more likely to be the targets of rumor-spreading or non-consensual explicit messages.
Teens from lower-income families are more likely than those from higher-income families to encounter certain forms of online bullying, Pew said.
Most young harassment victims feel that teachers, social media firms and politicians are doing a poor or fair job in addressing the problem of cyberbullying — an issue which has drawn the attention of US First Lady Melania Trump and Britain’s Prince William.
The teens believe parents are doing better — with 59 percent saying that parents are doing a good or excellent job in addressing online harassment.
One of the factors fueling online harassment is that many teens are on their phones or online so frequently. A previous Pew study showed 95 percent of US teens had a smartphone and nearly half were online “almost constantly.”
The latest report showed two-third of teens who say they are online almost constantly have been cyberbullied, compared with 53 percent of those who use the internet several times a day or less.
Pew said that 59 percent of parents interviewed during the research were worried about their teen being harassed or bullied online, and a similar percentage were concerned about their teen sending or receiving explicit messages.
The researchers surveyed 743 teens between the ages of 13 and 17 and 1,058 parents between March 7 and April 10. The estimated margin of error is five percentage points for the teen group and 4.5 points for the parents. CC
source: technology.inquirer.net
LISTEN: 10-year-old Colorado boy calls police for help in math homework
What would you do if you are stuck on an item in your math homework? F0r one 10-year-old boy, he thought it best to call the police.
The Fort Collins Police Services in Colorado shared on Tuesday one unlikely conversation they had with the boy, which was posted on Facebook.
The unidentified boy called authorities for “an emergency.” “I can’t figure out what 71 divided by 3,052 (sic) is,” the caller asked the police.
“What was the… how much?” the responder asked.
The police officer did not hesitate to help the young caller with his problem, telling the boy: “I think I can help you with that.”
“I don’t know how to do that off the top of my head either at the moment,” the officer explained. But he was determined to help the boy out.
Minutes later, the officer gave the boy an answer with the help of a calculator—42.98 or 43.
Their phone conversation ended with the officer asking, “Is that all you needed?” with the boy affirming and saying his thank you.
While the boy was happy he got his answer, the conversation proved that police are ready when you need their help. /ra
source: lifestyle.inquirer.net
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Thursday
Kaspersky warns of more fake supply chain attacks
More fake supply chain attacks are expected given the heightened cyberheist activities of the notorious Lazarus group, Russian cybersecurity firm Kaspersky Lab AO said Thursday.
Seonsgu Park, Kaspersky’s senior security researcher in the Global Research and Threat Analysis Team (GReAT), warned that more fake supply chain attacks are expected.
“With major attacks up its sleeves—such as the Bangladesh Bank heist and the WannaCry ransomware, to name a few—the Lazarus group is like a constant presence in the world of cybersecurity and it is getting quite adept at hiding and spreading its evil schemes,” said Park.
Kaspersky found that the Lazarus group—an advanced persistent threat (APT)—has developed new malicious operations which at first glance looks like a supply chain.
Dubbed as AppleJesus, the APT’s attack compromised users through the Trojanized trading application Celas Trade Pro, developed by a legitimate company Celas Limited.
Once Trojanized, a software is infected by a malware which, once activated, enables cybercriminals to spy on users, steal sensitive data, and gain backdoor access to systems.
“The extensive effort it exerts to create malware for the supposedly safer MacOS environment, and the intricate details needed to create a legitimate-looking application and software company, prove it is far from stopping,” said Park.
“There are more attacks to come, and we had better be ready because it won’t get any easier,” he warned.
Kaspersky said individuals should be more prudent in choosing third-party vendors and more cautious in trusting legitimate-looking software applications, certificates, and developers.
“We have observed how the Lazarus group has constantly evolved—from waging cyber espionage campaigns worldwide to financial attacks against major banks. Last year, we warned that they are not after your data anymore. And indeed, they aren’t,” said Park.
“These state-backed attackers are now ramping up the sophistication of their attacks and widening their reach to steal more money and trick the cybersecurity industry,” he said. —Jon Viktor Cabuenas/VDS, GMA News
source: gmanetwork.com
Wednesday
Tiger Woods winning adds to Ryder Cup buzz
SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France — Already the most intense competition in golf, the Ryder Cup doesn’t need help to boost the excitement.
Tiger Woods managed to take it to another level.
He looked like the Woods of old by leading the final 36 holes of the Tour Championship, not letting anyone near him until it was too late, a vintage performance made all the more remarkable by four back surgeries and a future that looked bleak only a year ago.
Woods was a vice captain at the Presidents Cup a year ago this week and said he envisioned a scenario where he never returned to competition. One PGA Tour event into his return, Jim Furyk selected him as a vice captain for the Ryder Cup.
And then he picked him for the team. And then Woods won for the first time in more than five years.
“It’s obviously a nice buzz for our team,” Furyk said Monday, a few hours after the American charter plane landed in Paris.
The entire U.S. team was on a charter that arrived in Paris at about 12:45 p.m. European captain Thomas Bjorn arrived late last week, as did a few of his players. Six of them were at East Lake for the Tour Championship. The first official day of practice is Tuesday.
Monday was as much a time to reflect on Woods as it was to rest up for a busy week at Le Golf National.
“I spent 25 years playing professional golf with Tiger Woods on the scene, and any time he does anything great, that’s a story. And that’s where we want to see him,” said Bjorn, the only player to be paired with Woods over 72 holes and beat him. That was in Dubai in 2001.
“He does so much for the game of golf,” Bjorn said. “Watching that last night, I thought it was brilliant. It was great for the greater aspect of the game.”
The television ratings show as much.
NBC Sports Group said the overnight rating from the Tour Championship was 5.21, the highest-rated telecast in the 12-year history of the FedEx Cup playoffs, which cover 48 events featuring some of the strongest fields of the year.
That was the highest rating of the year this side of the majors, and the highest for the Tour Championship dating to 2000.
“In the end, whatever it is these 24 guys are going to do this week, the game of golf needs that boost of somebody like him that transcends the game to the masses,” Bjorn said. “So for everyone in golf, it’s brilliant.”
Now that Woods is back on his game, the hope for Furyk and the U.S. team is that he’s not back to Ryder Cup form.
For all that he has achieved — 80 victories on the PGA Tour, 14 majors, No. 1 in the world for 683 weeks — he has a 13-17-3 record in Ryder Cup matches, and he has played on only one winning team since his first one in 1997.
“We don’t fear anyone because we’ve played against them so many times before individually,” Bjorn said. “But we respect our opponents and know what we are up against. What stands on the other side we know is one of the strongest American teams of all time. … We do what we do as a European team, and then we go out and take that on the golf course, and that’s all 12 Americans. It’s not one individual.”
Europe has done it well over the years.
The Americans have not won the Ryder Cup away from home since 1993, a drought Furyk has been hearing about since he was appointed captain in January 2017. The Americans have confidence from winning big at Hazeltine two years ago — Woods was a vice captain that week — and from a team that boasts nine major champions.
That makes them favorites on paper. And that means little, as recent history would suggest. Even with the loss two years ago, Europe still has won eight out of the last 11 times dating to that ’93 American victory at The Belfry.
“I’m not sure you really need extra motivation in a Ryder Cup,” Furyk said. “Obviously, I think there’s a thorn in their side, and it’s been that since 1993, and there’s some veteran players that have played on a number of these teams that have never won on foreign soil. It’s not anything I need to mention in the team room. They are well aware of it, and they are well aware of how difficult it is to win in Europe.”
Furyk, meanwhile, did well not to add to the hyperbole over Woods winning again. Woods was trending in that direction, from the brief time he held the lead on Sunday at the British Open to his runner-up finish at the PGA Championship.
How much did Woods contribute to the buzz Sunday night?
The Americans had a room set aside in a hotel near the Atlanta airport for a team dinner before flying to France.
“We had a whole group of guys waiting in the team room, and then a giant roar when Steve Stricker walked in the room after his victory,” Furyk said with a laugh.
Stricker, a vice captain for the U.S. team, won a PGA Tour Champions event in South Dakota.
“Nice to have those two guys play so well, and start us off pretty well this week,” Furyk said.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Tuesday
Dolce & Gabbana explore DNA with star-filled cast
MILAN (AP) — Milan designers are embracing women of all shapes, sizes and ages, even if the young, thin model prevailed during this week’s previews for next spring and summer.
Marni’s runway included women of different sizes while Dolce & Gabbana continued their embrace of models in a range of ages and sizes for their DNA runway show on Sunday.
Highlights from Sunday’s show, the fifth day of previews of womenswear for next spring and summer:
Dolce & Gabbana pay tribute to heritage
Dolce & Gabbana retraced their DNA by bringing back some of their most famous models: Carla Bruni in a brocade suit, Monica Belluci in a fitted polka-dot dress, Eva Herzigova in a frothy black chiffon number, and a caped Isabel Rosselilni, who walked with her children Roberto and Elettra carrying her young son.
In the brand’s bid for inclusion, they sent grandmothers with granddaughters, husbands and wives, lesbian couples and curvy models, including Ashley Graham.
Cardi B kept a careful eye on the collection from her front-row seat, taking off her animal skin-covered D&G sunglasses to take in the steady stream of flash. Her eyes stayed glued on an embroidered shawl jacket with mini-skirt, mouthing, “I like that,” with a sassy shoulder shake.
The elaborate collection by Domenico Dolce & Stefano Gabbana displayed the designers’ unrivaled aptitude for over-the-top looks with a something-for-everyone range. There were pretty layered floral dresses with jeweled sandals, bejeweled biker jackets with tuxedo tails, raw jute fabrics in fringed day suits and tiered dresses in sparkly organza.
While the collection incorporated the duo’s well-known motifs, including prints of the Madonna, Sicilian references and floral prints, there was also a pointed message on one netted top: “Fatto a Mano,” or “handmade,” to underline the commitment to craftsmanship.
The designers also provided a subtle hint of an upcoming project for Milan and Rome: a Christmas market inside the Rinascente department stores featuring Dolce&Gabbana styled appliances and their own range of the Milan Christmas cake, panettone, with flavors from their beloved Sicily. The hints included a Santa Claus figurine carried by a model and a print that echoes the unique panettone tin.
The lightness of being Armani
Giorgio Armani’s collection for next spring and summer was meticulously sculptured out of iridescent, dreamy blue, gray and pink textiles that collect the light. The main point of contrast, a bright fuchsia, which has become the power color of the season in Milan.
The looks had what the designer called “a liquid lightness,” derived from a range of understated colors — save for a touch of fuchsia.
“It is all mixed and very subtle in terms of colors. The color this time gave form to the clothes,” Armani said backstage.
The silhouette was elongated, often with a layer of organza that wrapped the figure or was layered over trousers for a misty effect. A plexiglass bustier gave shape to a micro-pleated dress.
Armani continued his mastery of the jacket with fluid jackets over straight trousers, or slim-fitting leather jackets with trousers colorful water color prints, and blousons with a long layer of tulle spilling out. One dramatic cape-like jacket had exaggerated military detailing on the shoulders, worn over a shimmering organza fitted suit.
The collection had futuristic touches, from a cellophane look on footwear to mesh carryalls.
“This is a woman who wants to be noticed,” the designer said. “She doesn’t slink away dressed as a man.”
Armani saluted the crowd wearing a jacket and tie instead of his usual dark blue T-shirt or sweater.
“You didn’t recognize me, did you?” he joked backstage.
Marni’s wake up call
The fashion crowd woke up early Sunday for a fashion call, only to go back to bed in the Marni showroom. Designer Francesco Risso’s latest kooky seating arrangement was a series of beds in the shape of an amphitheater.
Risso was exploring the classics in more ways than one. The silhouette was mostly classic and tailored, with edgy touches that gave the collection the air of a desperate, punk housewife. But he also incorporated elements from the ancient classical world, including prints with architectural elements — a departure from Marni’s traditional florals — and jewelry shaped like the Venus de Milo.
The art was all in the construction. Skirts were swept up like a sarong, worn with off the shoulder bustiers, but with sturdy fabrics that suggest the city and not light beachy fare. Risso put a new twist on the Roman toga in sleek, form-fitting textiles. Bomber jackets had half belts sewn into the back. Full-skirted dresses had front panels, some left as a blank canvass, others with prints.
Risso included in his model casting average-size women, who made clear the collections can have a broad audience.
Colors ranged from soft creams and yellows to louder reds and blues. Eye wear were dramatic pointy sunglasses.
Mission celebrates heritage looking to future
Missoni treated the fashion crowd to a sweeping view of the new Milan skyline of skyscrapers by architects Zaha Hadid, Arata Isozaki and Daniel Libeskind to celebrate its 65th year.
Creative director Angela Missoni said she chose the terrace overlooking the City Life quarter and beneath Mario Bellini’s silvery sculpture “Comet”, because the view represented “the most futuristic place in Milan.”
“This place is a dream. This place summarizes the future,” she said.
The looks for men and women were delicate in tone, weight and structure.
For women, Angela Missoni constructed layered works, incorporating fresh detailing like tiered ruffles and braided overlays of yarn, for a playful touch. The men’s looks were relaxed and functional, including kimono tops, long T-shirts and cardigans. CC
source: lifestyle.inquirer.net
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Monday
India launches ‘Modicare,’ world’s biggest health scheme
NEW DELHI, India — India on Sunday launched the world’s biggest health insurance scheme which Prime Minister Narendra Modi said would cover some 500 million poor people.
The program, dubbed “Modicare,” promises health cover worth 500,000 rupees ($6,900) to every poor family to treat serious ailments.
The scheme is expected to cost the central and 29 state governments $1.6 billion per year in total. Funding will be increased gradually according to demand.
Modi handed medical cards out at the launch in Ranchi, capital of the eastern state of Jharkhand, calling it a historic day for India.
He called the scheme “a big step towards providing good quality and accessible healthcare to the poor of India. Over 100 million families will benefit.”
India’s overburdened public health system is plagued by a shortage of hospitals and doctors and most people use private clinics and hospitals if they can afford to.
But a private consultation can cost 1,000 rupees ($15), a huge sum for millions living on less than $2 a day.
More than 60 percent of the average family’s spending goes on medicines and healthcare, the government estimates.
Experts have praised the latest program but say it should have included primary day-to-day healthcare instead of just secondary and tertiary care for more serious and long term treatment.
“Modicare does not extend to primary healthcare, which, we believe, is the weakest link in the provision of public health in India,” Rajiv Lall and Vivek Dehejia of the IDFC Institute think-tank said in a column for the Mint newspaper.
“The crucial point is that poorly delivered primary care inevitably increases the burden on health and finance at the secondary and tertiary levels down the line,” they said. /ee
source: newsinfo.inquirer.net
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Saturday
Huawei gives out free power banks to people lining up for new iPhone
Huawei pulled a fast one over Apple when the company started giving out free power banks to people lined up to purchase a new iPhone in Singapore.
The event took place on the eve of Sept. 20 at Apple’s flagship Orchard Road store, the night before it opened its doors to customers. A long line of fans had camped outside the Apple store for a chance to be among the first to get one of the latest iPhones, reports CNET.
As people waited in line, Huawei representatives started giving out over 200 10,000-milliampere power banks for free. If that wasn’t cheeky enough, the Chinese phone maker also added a custom message on the free powerbanks’ packaging, which read, “Here’s a power bank. You’ll need it. Courtesy of Huawei.”
The company said the handouts were offers of “respite from the weather and grueling wait.” Singapore’s weather is known to go into the extremes, while the wait outside Apple stores following the launch of a new iPhone tend to be very long. The combination of both factors have the potential to test a person and his current smartphone’s endurance.
It is also worth mentioning that battery capacities for the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max are 2,658 and 3,174 milliamperes, respectively. Meanwhile, Huawei’s flagship P2 Pro boasts a generous 4,000-milliampere battery pack.
Huawei recently passed Apple as the second-biggest smartphone seller in July, according to a report by technology analyst company Canalys. Samsung maintained its position at the top at the time of the report.
Meanwhile, some Huawei users criticized the company on its Facebook page for handing out S$98 (around P3,900) power banks to iPhone users for free instead of Huawei users. Alfred Bayle /ra
source: technology.inquirer.net
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Thursday
Messi a man on a mission in the Champions League
BARCELONA, Spain — Lionel Messi looked every bit a man on a mission.
Messi started the Champions League in brilliant fashion Tuesday night, setting a record with his eighth hat trick in the competition to lead Barcelona to a 4-0 rout of PSV Eindhoven.
The outstanding performance was the first step toward Messi keeping his promise that the season would end with Barcelona lifting another European Cup.
Barcelona’s otherwise excellent 2017-18 campaign that ended with the Spanish league and Copa del Rey titles had one blemish: a shock 3-0 loss at Roma in the Champions League that squandered a 4-1 first-leg victory and meant elimination in the quarterfinals.
That made it three years in a row that Barcelona has been ousted in the quarterfinals of a tournament that Messi has helped it win four times, but not since 2015. Meanwhile, Barcelona has had to endure rival Real Madrid winning it three times in a row.
With that loss to Roma in April still hanging over the club, Messi addressed Barcelona’s fans at Camp Nou before the club’s traditional exhibition match to kick off the new season.
“If last season was very good with the Copa and La Liga, we all still feel bad about our exit from the Champions League and how it happened,” Messi told Barcelona’s supporters in August. “Today we promise to do everything we can to bring that beautiful and coveted cup once again to this stadium.”
Long after establishing himself as the club’s all-time leading scorer, Messi has finally taken on the role of undisputed team leader after inheriting the captain’s armband from Andres Iniesta.
That meant shedding his reticence to talk in public. And when he spoke out, he set the bar as high as possible.
Messi backed up his words against PSV to ensure Barcelona made a strong start in a tough Group B that also includes Tottenham and Inter Milan.
Now 31, Messi also knows that his best chances to win the World Cup are most likely behind him after another disappointment with Argentina this summer, meaning his final place in football history will likely depend on sustained excellence at Barcelona.
Messi’s first goal against PSV was a beauty as he used his left foot to lift a free kick over the wall and beyond the reach of goalkeeper Jeroen Zoet. He netted two more goals from passes by Ivan Rakitic and Luis Suarez.
“(Messi) takes extraordinary things and makes them routine,” Barcelona coach Ernesto Valverde said. “The free kick got us going. It was a majestic strike . I have never seen anything like him in my career. We have to pinch ourselves to realize that we are seeing a player that is one-of-a-kind.”
Messi’s first was his eighth goal from a free kick so far in 2018.
Rakitic said that when Messi steps up to take a free kick, “often times, you’re already thinking about where to celebrate it.”
Messi has scored twice from free kicks in six matches this season. He unlocked the Alaves defense to start a 3-0 win in the opening round of the Spanish league.
Barcelona will seek to keep its lead of the Spanish league and get a fifth win in as many rounds when it hosts Girona on Sunday. Messi will also be aiming to increase his tally of seven goals in six matches across all competitions.
Last season, Messi added to Barcelona’s 6-1 demolition of Girona by slotting a free kick under the defensive wall. He repeated that same trick to score against Alaves last month.
PSV coach Mark van Bommel, a former Barcelona player, tried to take away that option for Messi by ordering a player to get on his knees behind the defensive barrier to block a low strike. Messi clipped it over their heads instead.
“He put it right in the corner of the goal frame,” van Bommel said. “Technically, Messi is the best player in the world.”
Barcelona will have to wait three weeks before its next Champions League match, when it visits Tottenham in London.
source: sports.inquirer.net
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Sony PlayStation Classic announced for December 2018
With 20 games built in, including “Final Fantasy VII”, the PlayStation Classic is being listed at $99 (about P5,300), $129 CAN, €99, £89 and ¥9,980.
Classic adventure game “Final Fantasy VII” is among the first five titles announced for the PlayStation Classic’s on-board library ahead of a Dec. 3 launch.
Nintendo has already found great success with the $59 (about P3,100) NES Mini and $79 (about P4,300) SNES Mini, and now PlayStation is responding with a sub-$100 shrunk-down retro console of its own.
Five entries to the PlayStation Classic’s on-board games library were revealed upon announcement.
Revolutionary Japanese role-playing game “Final Fantasy VII” is joined by racing title “R4: Ridge Racer Type 4”, fighting game “Tekken 3”, hybrid 2D and 3D wild west adventure “Wild Arms”, and first-person jump-and-run excursion “Jumping Flash”.
At the time, each one was well-received and recognized for a particular technical accomplishment.
At 45 percent of the 1994 PlayStation’s size, the PlayStation Classic adopts a similar form factor to its Nintendo equivalents.
It replicates the original console’s design, a top-loading CD bay now decorative rather than functional, while RGB display cable ports have been replaced with an HDMI output for HD screens.
Like the Nintendo Mini range, the PlayStation Classic ships without the USB AC adaptor needed to power it up, but does include the required USB cable as well as two control pads.
Those controllers are modelled on the PlayStation’s original pads and, because of that, omit the dual analog stick set-up introduced with the 1997 Dual Analog and 1998 DualShock controllers.
That omission is thought to rule out 1999’s iconic “Ape Escape” from the retro console’s 15 unannounced games, as it relied upon the presence of analog controls.
Similarly, “Metal Gear Solid” featured a sequence that depended on controller vibration, another feature introduced with the Dual Analog.
And with a games library limited to 20, it is not yet clear whether the PlayStation Classic will be vulnerable to the sort of simple software hacking process that allows NES and SNES Mini owners to add unlicensed games.
A release date of Dec. 3, 2018 coincides with the PlayStation’s 24th birthday. JB
source: technology.inquirer.net
Tuesday
Macron announces changes to France’s health care system
PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday unveiled plans to make France’s health care system, considered one of the best in the world, more efficient and sustainable for the next 50 years.
Macron announced organizational changes at hospitals, in the recruitment of doctors, and a better use of digital technologies to provide health care to patients across the country, regardless of where they live.
Macron said “a lot of our neighbors envy the excellence of our health care system. We are attached to our model which associates hospital medicine — public and private — and private medical practice.”
France came out number 1 in a World Health Organization report comparing 191 countries in 2000.
But the country’s health care system is struggling with increasing costs and lack of doctors in some rural region and poor neighborhoods.
One short-term measure consists in hiring 400 family doctors — paid by the state— in so-called “medical deserts.”
The current rule that sets quotas on the number of students in medicine, dentistry and pharmacy will be abolished in 2020.
Hospitals will be classified into in three categories: local health care, specialized care and ultra-specialized care — each focusing on its priorities, to optimize patient care.
Private doctors and other health care professionals will be required in the coming years to organize themselves into “communities” to be able to respond to daily emergency calls from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day in their geographic area — leaving hospitals for only the most serious cases.
The set of measures is estimated to cost 3.4 billion euros ($4 billion) by 2022.
“My ambition is clear: I want what we call the health care system to be one of the pillars of the welfare state of the 21st century,” Macron said. “A health care system that prevents and protects against today’s and tomorrow’s health risks.”
France’s health care system involves a state-funded health insurance that reimburses patients for most medical interventions and medicines prescribed by a doctor.
France’s health insurance budget in 2018 is 195.2 billion euros ($229 billion) — financed by taxes.
In addition, the French can also apply to private insurance to increase their health coverage. /ee
source: newsinfo.inquirer.net
Monday
Co-founder of cloud-computing firm Salesforce buys Time magazine for $190 million
Washington — Time Magazine is being sold by Meredith Corp. to Marc Benioff, a co-founder of Salesforce, and his wife, it was announced Sunday.
Meredith announced that it was selling Time magazine for $190 million in cash to Benioff, one of four co-founders of Salesforce, a cloud computing pioneer.
Meredith had completed the purchase of Time along with other publications of Time Inc. earlier this year.
The Benioffs are purchasing Time personally, and the transaction is unrelated to Salesforce.com, where Benioff is chairman and co-CEO and co-founder. The announcement by Meredith said that the Benioffs would not be involved in the day-to-day operations or journalistic decisions at Time. Those decisions will continue to be made by Time’s current executive leadership team, the announcement said.
“We’re pleased to have found such passionate buyers in Marc and Lynne Benioff for the Time brand,” Meredith president and CEO Tom Harty said in a statement. “For over 90 years, Time has been at the forefront of the most significant events and impactful stories that shape our global conversation.”
Meredith, the publisher of such magazines as People and Better Homes & Gardens, had put four Time Inc. publications up for sale in March. Negotiations for the sale of the three other publications — Fortune, Money and Sports Illustrated — are continuing.
The prospective sale is expected to close within 30 days. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Benioff said he and his wife were investing “in a company with tremendous impact on the world, one that is also an incredibly strong business. That’s what we’re looking for when we invest as a family.”
The purchase of Time by Benioff continues a trend of acquisitions of old-line media institutions by wealthy tech giants. The Washington Post was purchased by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos in 2013 for $250 million.
Time, like other magazines, has struggled with continued declines in print advertising and newsstand sales.
Started by Yale University graduates Henry Luce and Briton Hadden, Time first went on sale in March 1923. /vvp
source: business.inquirer.net
Sunday
Jimi Hendrix’s ‘Electric Ladyland’ to get expanded 50th anniversary release
Previously unreleased demos, alternate takes and an unreleased live album are among the features of an upcoming 50th anniversary release of the Jimi Hendrix Experience classic 1968 album “Electric Ladyland”.
The planned Deluxe Edition box set will be available as either a 3CD/1 Blu-ray set or a 6LP/1 Blu-ray set, both including the original double album, newly remastered from the original analog tapes, as well as “Electric Ladyland: The Early Takes”, presenting demos and studio outtakes from the time the album was recorded.
Also included will be a new 5.1 surround sound mix of the entire original album by Hendrix’s original engineer Eddie Kramer, and “Jimi Hendrix Experience: Live At the Hollywood Bowl 9/14/68”, a never-before-released recording of the band just weeks before the release of “Electric Ladyland”.
The Blu-ray also includes the feature-length documentary “At Last… The Beginning: The Making of Electric Ladyland”.
Finally, the release will include a full-color, 48-page book of Hendrix’s handwritten lyrics, a poem and instructions to his record label, plus never-before-published photos from the recording sessions shot by Eddie Kramer.
The new cover art, a Linda (McCartney) Eastman photograph of the band and children at the Alice In Wonderland statue in Central Park, is said to have been Hendrix’s preferred choice for the album’s cover image.
“Electric Ladyland Deluxe Edition” will be released Nov. 9 and can be pre-ordered now. JB
source: entertainment.inquirer.net
Friday
Apple shows off costliest iPhone yet
CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA — Apple unveiled three new iPhones on Wednesday, including its biggest and most expensive model yet, as the company sought to widen the product’s appeal amid slowing sales.
CEO Tim Cook showed off the iPhone XS Max, which has a bigger screen than the one on last year’s dramatically designed model, the iPhone X.
The iPhone XS Max will cost about $1,100, topping the iPhone X, which at $1,000 seemed jaw-dropping at the time. An updated iPhone X, now called the XS, stays at $1,000.
As with the iPhone X, both new phones have screens that run from edge to edge, an effort to maximize the display without making the phone too awkward to hold.
Increasingly larger screens
The screen needs no backlight, so black would appear as truly black rather than simply dark. The Max model looks to be about the size of the iPhone 8 Plus, though the screen size is much larger.
The iPhone XS Max, which will be available on Sept. 21— with orders open the week before—represents Apple’s attempt to feed consumers’ appetite for increasingly larger screens as they rely on smartphones to watch and record video and to take photos wherever they are.
By making more expensive iPhones, Apple has been able to boost its profits despite waning demand as people upgrade phones less frequently.
IPhones fetched an average price of $724 during the April-June period, a nearly 20-percent increase from a year earlier.
Apple also showed off a cheaper iPhone, called the iPhone XR. It has a traditional, lower-quality screen and an aluminum body; it’s physically smaller than the iPhone 8 Plus but has a bigger screen. It’ll cost roughly $750 and come out on Oct. 26.
All three new models join the iPhone X in getting rid of the home button to make room for more screen. They will have facial-recognition technology to unlock the device.
Target: affluent households
Although it didn’t sell quite as analysts anticipated, the iPhone X still emerged as the most popular in Apple’s lineup, according to Cook.
That emboldened the company to aim an even more expensive device at the affluent households that tend to gravitate to its products, especially in the United States and Europe.
For everyone else, many of whom are still using iPhones they purchased several years ago, there’s the XR.
“I am going to go out on a limb and say the XR is going to become Apple’s top-selling iPhone,” said analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights.
“It is a smart strategy to keep more people in the Apple ecosystem and get even more people to come into it,” Moorhead added. — AP
source: technology.inquirer.net
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Thursday
Man steals dead neighbor’s card to pay bills, buy P422,000 worth of pizzas
As if in the spirit of the saying “desperate times call for desperate measures,” a 24-year-old man in Belfast, Northern Ireland hid the fact that his neighbor has been dead for two years, proceeding to steal her bank card to pay for his bills and buy his day-to-day provisions. That included P420,000 worth of food from a pizza restaurant chain.
Robert Sharkey pleaded guilty to ten out of the 11 crimes he was charged with at Belfast Crown Court yesterday, Sept. 11 after the body of his neighbor, 68-year-old Marie Conlon was discovered, as reported by Belfast Telegraph on the same day. The only charge Sharkey denied was breaking into Conlon’s house and stealing her Bank of Ireland debit card.
Sharkey pleaded guilty to the charge preventing the lawful burial of a corpse between August 2015 and October 2017. While he claimed he did not steal Conlon’s Bank of Ireland debit card, he admitted that he had stolen her First Trust debit card.
He also confessed to six separate counts of fraud by false representation by means of his unauthorized use of Conlon’s First Trust debit card, the report said. Apparently, he used Conlon’s card to pay for his electricity and land bills. He also used the said card to buy his groceries from a local supermarket, mobile phone credit and food from Domino’s Pizza worth 5,988.39 pounds (around P422,000).
He also pleaded guilty to the other charges, including breaking into Conlon’s house and stealing batteries, tools and a coffee mug, as well as stealing her 100 pounds (about P7,000) cash.
Judge Geoffrey Miller Queen’s Counsel (QC) released him under a continuing bail but the suspect has to attend the upcoming Sept. 24 hearing on the charge he denied, the report stated. The charges he pleaded guilty to will be heard on Oct. 12. Kate Matriano/JB
source: lifestyle.inquirer.net
Got P59,000? Apple shows off its most expensive iPhone yet
CUPERTINO, California — Apple unveiled three new iPhones on Wednesday, including its biggest and most expensive model yet, as the company seeks to widen the product’s appeal amid slowing sales.
CEO Tim Cook showed off the iPhone XS Max, which has a bigger screen than the one on last year’s dramatically designed model , the iPhone X. It’ll cost about $1,100 (more than P59,000), topping the iPhone X, which at $1,000 seemed jaw-dropping at the time. An updated iPhone X, now called the XS, stays at $1,000.
As with the iPhone X, both new phones have screens that run from edge to edge, an effort to maximize the display without making the phone too awkward to hold. The screen needs no backlight, so black would appear as truly black rather than simply dark. The Max model looks to be about the size of the iPhone 8 Plus, though the screen size is much larger.
The iPhone XS Max, which will be available on Sept. 21 — with orders open the week before — represents Apple’s attempt to feed consumers’ appetite for increasingly larger screens as they rely on smartphones to watch and record video and to take photos wherever they are.
By making more expensive iPhones, Apple has been able to boost its profits despite waning demand as people upgrade phones less frequently. IPhones fetched an average price of $724 during the April-June period, a nearly 20 percent increase from a year earlier.
Apple also showed off a cheaper iPhone, called the iPhone XR. It has a traditional, lower-quality screen and an aluminum body; it’s physically smaller than the iPhone 8 Plus but has a bigger screen. It’ll cost roughly $750 and come out on Oct. 26.
All three new models join the iPhone X in getting rid of the home button to make room for more screen. They will have facial-recognition technology to unlock the device.
Although it didn’t sell quite as analysts anticipated, the iPhone X still emerged as the most popular in Apple’s line-up, according to Cook. That emboldened the company to aim an even more expensive device at the affluent households that tend to gravitate to its products, especially in the U.S. and Europe.
For everyone else, many of whom are still using iPhones they purchased several years ago, there’s the XR.
“I am going to go out on a limb and say the XR is going to become Apple’s top-selling iPhone,” said analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights. “It is a smart strategy to keep more people in the Apple ecosystem and get even more people to come into it.”
The next major update to the iOS will be released next Tuesday, followed a week later by a Mac software update. Both will be free to install.
Apple also announced updates that push its Apple Watch further into medical device territory. It has a larger screen and a built-in heart sensor that the company said can detect irregular heart rates and perform an electrocardiogram. The latter feature has been cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the company said.
Ben Wood of CCS Insight said getting U.S. regulatory clearance for that is a milestone that underscores the company’s leadership in health and fitness. Typically, smartwatches are marketed as consumer devices, not medical ones needing clearance.
These features will be available to U.S. customers later this year, but Apple did not say when it would make it to the rest of the world.
In addition, Apple said the Series 4 Apple Watch will also be able to detect when someone falls — and can tell the difference between a trip and a fall. If it detects a fall and the user doesn’t respond in a minute, it’ll automatically call for help. This feature may be especially attractive to older people or those with elderly parents worried about falling when no one is around to help.
source: technology.inquirer.net
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LOOK: Google throwback on its first office in Palo Alto
September 2018 sees Google celebrate its 20th anniversary.
To mark the milestone, we’ll be looking back at the early days of one of tech’s biggest success stories with a selection of pictures from the firm’s beginnings.
In 1999, Google, which had fewer than 10 employees, left Susan Wojcicki’s garage for its first office, located nearby at 165 University Avenue in Palo Alto, California.
A few months later, the firm — a victim of its success — had outgrown the office and moved once again, this time to Mountain View, a few miles away.
source: technology.inquirer.net
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World Cup winner Lloris fined $65,000 for drunk driving
LONDON — World Cup-winning France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris has been fined 50,000 pounds ($65,000) and banned from driving for 20 months for drunk driving.
The Tottenham goalkeeper was pulled by over by police in central London last month when his Porsche was veering toward parked vehicles before going through a red light. Police discovered vomit in the car and Lloris had to be helped out.
Lloris, who was in goal when France beat Croatia in the World Cup final, admitted to the charge of drunk driving during a London court appearance on Wednesday.
David Sonn, the lawyer representing the player in court, says “the spectacular fall from grace is not lost on Mr. Lloris.”
source: sports.inquirer.net
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Wednesday
Apple to broaden iPhone lineup with more screen
SAN FRANCISCO – Apple is expected to unveil on Wednesday new iPhones, playing up eye-grabbing edge-to-edge screens in a bid to strengthen its position in a largely saturated global smartphone market.
Apple has remained mum about revelations planned for the event at its spaceship campus in Silicon Valley, but the timing fits its pattern of annually introducing iPhone updates.
In a first for Apple, the event will be streamed live on Twitter.
Speculation includes talk that Apple will introduce three new iPhone models infused with features from a premium iPhone X that debuted last year with a $1,000 price tag.
Top among those features will likely be edge-to-edge screens that promise to provide about 30 percent more viewing space without increasing the size of overall handsets.
“I think they are trying to set a new high bar,” analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights & Strategy said of new iPhones expected to offer more display without increasing the size of the handset.
“The big thing is going to be how they fit such a massive screen into such a small device.”
One new iPhone was likely to be priced slightly lower than the X model to “capture the next wave of buyers” in markets such as China, western Europe and the US, according to Moorhead.
While the iPhone has made Apple the world’s most valuable company, worth more than $1 trillion, it has slipped to third place among smartphone makers as Chinese-based Huawei has grabbed the number two spot.
Still, analysts say Apple has a formula that works with a loyal customer base and steady sales.
“Apple doesn’t have to prove anything, other than that they are willing to segment the market more,” Technalysis Research chief analyst Bob O’Donnell said, while pointing out that the company will likely be “offering a wider array of choices.”
Two of the iPhone models predicted to debut on Wednesday were expected to have prices higher than the iPhone X, which has been a hot seller.
While iPhone sales have slowed, Apple profits have risen along with the average purchase price of its handsets.
The newest and priciest iPhone “didn’t help Apple grow its user base but handsomely contributed with dollars to top line, bottom line and market cap,” Counterpoint Research analysts said in a note Tuesday.
Taking on Galaxy
Samsung, the world’s biggest smartphone maker, last month unveiled its latest flagship handset, the Galaxy Note 9, and next month Apple rival Google will hold an event at which it is likely to showcase new Android-powered top-end Pixel phones.
Google took to making its own smartphones to showcase the capabilities of the Android operating system that it makes available free of charge to handset makers. Android smartphones have come to dominate the market.
Apple’s event comes with the global smartphone market largely saturated, without a major catalyst for sales ahead of a likely rollout of 5G, or fifth generation wireless networks, expected in 2019.
Research firm IDC expects worldwide smartphone shipments to decline 0.7 percent in 2018 to 1.455 billion units, with growth likely to resume as 5G devices become available.
“We still believe the smartphone market has some healthy growth in the years to come, although finding and competing in those markets and segments is increasingly more challenging,” said IDC analyst Ryan Reith.
Apple has sold more than a billion iPhones since the first model was unveiled by late co-founder Steve Jobs in 2007.
The company is in the unique situation of controlling the hardware and software in its mobile devices, with content for users required to go through its App Store that takes a percentage of revenue.
Finding new streams
With the smartphone market showing little room for growth, Apple has been working to diversify its revenue streams with software, services and other devices including its smartwatch.
The event may see the Apple Watch getting its first significant redesign since its launch three years ago.
“I think that in the long run the watch will be a much larger business than people give it credit for; where Apple can iterate and grow,” analyst Stephen Baker of NPD said.
Apple chief executive Tim Cook has touted fitness and health features of the company’s smartwatch, which dominates that market.
The culture-changing company behind the iPod, iPhone and iPad hit a historic milestone last month, becoming the first private-sector company to surpass $1 trillion in market value.
The landmark was the latest victory for Tim Cook, who faced skepticism when he took over as chief executive in 2011 from Jobs just before his death. /kga
source: technology.inquirer.net
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Tuesday
Millions in US prepare for potentially catastrophic Florence
RALEIGH, N.C. — Millions of Americans are preparing for what could become one of the most catastrophic hurricanes to hit the Eastern Seaboard in decades.
Hurricane Florence is carrying winds of up to 140 mph as a Category 4 storm. It is expected to strengthen and possibly become a Category 5 storm Tuesday before closing in on North or South Carolina on Thursday.
Mandatory evacuations have been issued for parts of South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia, including the entire coast of South Carolina.
Since reliable record-keeping began more than 150 years ago, North Carolina has been hit by only one Category 4 hurricane: Hazel, with 130 mph winds, in 1954.
source: newsinfo.inquirer.net
Monday
NFL: Aaron Rodgers returns from injury, Packers beat Bears
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Slowed by a sore knee, Aaron Rodgers picked up the pace behind center.
Remarkably, the two-time NFL MVP was more effective against the Chicago Bears after returning from what initially looked like a serious injury.
The hobbling quarterback threw three touchdown passes in the fourth quarter after returning from injury, and the Green Bay Packers overcame a 20-point deficit for a thrilling 24-23 win over the Bears on Sunday night.
Rodgers connected with receiver Randall Cobb for a catch-and-run through the secondary for a 75-yard touchdown and the go-ahead score with 2:13 left in the game.
“You’ve seen it time and time again. That guy’s a warrior,” Cobb said.
Rodgers was hurt in the second quarter after slipping to the turf while under pressure from linebacker Khalil Mack and defensive lineman Roy Robertson-Harris. The lineman landed on Rodgers, who grabbed the back of his left leg. He had ACL surgery on his left knee in college.
Rodgers was carted back to the locker room. Doctors determined he did not suffer a major injury and cleared him to return in the second half.
The Packers had to make a slight adjustment with their normally mobile quarterback limited to the pocket.
“Got to get the ball out. Can’t be moving around a whole lot back there,” Rodgers said. “And we did a good job mixing things up in the second half with some of our quicker-hitter stuff and actually some of our more vertical stuff, too.”
Rodgers also had touchdown passes to Geronimo Allison (39 yards) and Davante Adams (12 yards) in completing the rally from a 20-0 deficit with 9:14 to go in the third quarter.
Rodgers finished 20 of 30 for 286 yards, including 17 of 23 for 273 yards in the second half.
“Obviously, that’s a tough one for us. It stings,” coach Matt Nagy said after his Bears debut.
MACK ATTACK: A Chicago defense featuring newly acquired star linebacker Khalil Mack dominated until the third quarter. Mack had a 27-yard interception return for a touchdown against backup quarterback DeShone Kizer in the second. He had a strip-sack that led to another turnover. He had pressure in the backfield on a play in which Rodgers hurt his left knee.
This from a player who missed the entire preseason. The Bears acquired Mack last week in a trade with the Oakland Raiders.
“I prepared all offseason for the first game of the season and I wanted to … make an impact,” Mack said. “But you want to win these games. That’s the only thing on my mind. I hate losing.”
FAST START: An offensive-minded coach, Nagy had the aggressive Bears’ offense pushing the Packers around the field in the first half. Mitchell Trubisky was 23 of 35 for 171 yards. He also ran for 32 yards on seven carries, including a 2-yard touchdown run in the first quarter. It turned out to be the only offensive touchdown the Bears would score all night. The Packers’ defense, in new coordinator Mike Pettine’s first game, held the Bears to two field goals in the second half.
“You know we talked about finishing and we didn’t do that,” Nagy said.
COMEBACK COMPLETE: Nick Perry sacked the Bears’ Mitchell Trubisky on fourth-and-10 with 58 seconds to complete the comeback. It was memorable start to the Packers’ 100th season. Sunday marked the first time in franchise history that the Packers won after trailing by 17-plus points entering the fourth quarter, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
MORE RODGERS: Packers coach Mike McCarthy said he was prepared to go with Kizer to start the second half until getting the word from the team doctor in the tunnel.
“His performance speaks for itself,” McCarthy said.
Rodgers said he knee was swollen after the game. The Packers plan to run more tests on their QB on Monday, though Rodgers seems very optimistic to about his availability for next week’s game against Minnesota.
“No, I’m planning on playing,” Rodgers said.
OTHER DEBUTS: Chicago’s Allen Robinson had four catches for 61 yards on seven targets in his debut as the Bears’ top receiver. … TE Jimmy Graham had two catches for eight yards on four targets after joining the Packers as a free agent in the offseason from the Seattle Seahawks.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Saturday
Djokovic tops Nishikori for 8th US Open final
Novak Djokovic reached his eighth U.S. Open final by beating Kei Nishikori 6-3, 6-4, 6-2.
Djokovic is bidding for his third title at Flushing Meadows and 14th Grand Slam trophy overall.
The No. 6-seeded Djokovic missed last year’s tournament with an injured right elbow.
He will face Juan Martin del Potro in Sunday’s final. Del Potro advanced when Rafael Nadal retired after the second set with a knee injury.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Friday
The Hidden Costs of Data Breaches and How to Avoid Them
Today’s society has grown all too accustomed to hearing yet another well-known company listed in the headlines as the latest victims of a massive data breach. By the time we hear this news, the company-and often its customers-have already suffered losses. Some of these losses are obvious, like the loss of data stolen by hackers. There are also significant hidden costs of data breaches that were recently calculated as high as $350 million in a July 2018 global study conducted by IBM.
The hidden costs of data breaches include:
Lost business:
While a company is recovering from a data breach, their systems might be down or compromised. Some companies elect to cease operations all together until security can be restored. The cost of this lost business adds up by the second. Most of these breaches stem from a malicious or criminal attach (instead of a glitch or human error) so in addition to repairing the damage, cybersecurity professionals must also shore up the vulnerabilities that allowed the attack to happen in the first place.
Lost time:
While the damage accrues quickly, the process to identify and contain a breach often does not. According to this latest report, companies took an average of 197 to identify a data breach. Once identified, it takes an average of 69 days to contain the breach. If companies were able to contain a breach faster (i.e. in less than 30 days), they saved over $1 million dollars. There’s also the hidden cost of shifting employee resources and time during a breach or containment period. Work and focus on current projects often shuts down as all hands on deck address the crisis. In the cast of a large company, this can also demand an entire marketing campaign to message the results of the breach and company response to customers.
Lost reputation:
The reputational damage caused by a data breach can be the most painful to bear for companies. These costs are often hidden because it’s difficult to capture clients who would have been had they not heard of a company’s breach. Customers also seem to react and respond differently depending on the type of data lost in a breach. In a 2011 study on the impact of data breach on company reputation, most people surveyed were more concerned if their personal, confidential information was lost or stolen compared to their employee files. They also estimated that it would take 8 months to 1 year for a company to recover from the damage caused by a breach. Communicating a breach early, thoroughly, and providing updates to customers were noted as best practices to preserve and regain reputation following a breach.
Recognizing the hidden costs of data loss should provide additional motivation to pursue a dedicated data loss prevention strategy. Whether you own a company or have your data saved by hundreds of companies, we’re all impacted by data breaches. Challenge the companies that you trust your data with to protect it as if it was their own.
source: securedatarecovery.com
Thursday
Lost generation? 2008 global financial crisis still weighs on Millennials
Marco Saavedra had just graduated from college in 2011 three years after the global financial crisis erupted and just as the Occupy Wall Street movement was picking up steam.
Like many in his generation, Saavedra faced slim pickings for jobs after college, a fate that has left millennials with a wealth gap that economists fear they won’t ever recover.
It has also left them more skeptical about government, worried about the future and more activist.
Saavedra, 28, who is undocumented, joined the Occupy chapter in Ohio, and now works at his family’s restaurant in the Bronx in New York City, where he is active in immigrant rights campaigns.
Laura Banks, 31, never had any interest in demonstrating, but also has bad memories from her early 20s of going to job fairs where there were almost no jobs. Friends lost jobs and her father, an attorney, had trouble finding clients.
“We felt very cornered. We feel like we’re behind,” said Banks, who now works as a project manager for Express Scripts in St. Louis.
She married last year but has doubts about having kids, in part due to fear of another financial crash.
‘Lost generation’?
Saavedra and Banks are part of the millennial generation, which includes people born between 1980 and 1996, now the biggest cohort in the United States, a status that makes marketers salivate.
But the group also is burdened by high student debt loads, that with the scarcity of jobs during the Great Recession has resulted in lengthy post-collegiate sojourns in their parents’ homes and lingering doubts about the future.
The group is at risk of becoming a “lost generation,” the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis warned in a report in May that tracked how the cohort’s wealth accumulation lagged historical norms for people in their 20s and 30s.
Although it spared no generation, the 2008 financial meltdown was more calamitous for young adults because there was no way to recoup the debt they took on for education, cars and credit cards.
“Because none of these types of debt finance assets that have appreciated rapidly during the last few years — such as stocks and real estate — they received no leveraged wealth boost like that enjoyed by the older cohorts,” the report said.
Crushing student debt was among the rallying cries of Occupy Wall Street, a movement led largely by young adults who blamed the crisis on corporate greed and a rigged system that benefited the “one percent” at the expense of everyone else.
The group gained its greatest visibility during the almost-two month occupation of Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan before police evicted activists and removed tents in November 2011.
Although much more low profile today, Occupy Wall Street still has a presence on Twitter, where it touts progressive environmental policies, criticizes gentrification and lambasts President Donald Trump over immigration and other issues.
Iffy on capitalism?
But the movement and the crisis have had long-lasting impacts on the millennials’ outlook.
An April 2016 poll released by Harvard University Kennedy School’s Institute of Politics showed that just 41 percent of 18 to 29-year olds supported capitalism, higher than the 33 percent that supported socialism, but a low enough number to turn heads.
John Della Volpe, director of polling at the Kennedy School, said millennials remember how the crisis harmed their parents and others who played by the rules.
Della Volpe senses broad support among young adults for “compassionate capitalism” to address glaring problems including gross inequality and a compromised campaign finance systems.
“I think they have a different definition of the American dream, which is less around economics and more around flexibility and happiness,” he said.
Major political parties have largely failed to ignite millennial interest, with two exceptions, Barack Obama’s successful 2008 campaign and the 2016 campaign of Bernie Sanders, the white-haired Socialist who gave Hillary Clinton an unexpectedly tough battle for the Democratic nomination.
Support for Trump is somewhat lower among millennials compared to the broader US population, but some of the same trends hold, Della Volpe said. For example, Trump polls best among white millennials without a college degree, mirroring the broader US trend.
Democratic socialists scored an unexpected victory in New York in late June, when 28-year-old Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a Sanders supporter, unseated 10-term Democratic Rep. Joseph Crowley, in the Bronx in New York City.
Ocasio-Cortez told The Daily Show’s Trevor Noah that she favored greater taxes on the wealthy and livable wages for workers as part of a “moral and ethical economy.”
“Us as millennials, we came of age during a time when 9/11 happened in middle school, the financial crisis happened in college,” she said. “We have never really known or grown up in a time of economic prosperity.”
Saavedra helped organize an event for Ocasio-Cortez at his parent’s restaurant in the South Bronx, La Morada, which is not far from her congressional district.
The restaurant is staffed with undocumented workers and proclaims its solidarity with its immigrant-rich neighborhood with a “Resiste” (“Resist!”) sign on the exterior.
The family was able to rent the space in 2009 due to vacancies amid the crisis — one positive from that period, Saavedra said.
While he may never be able to vote, he plans to remain politically active.
“If there’s anything that my organizing has taught me it’s that there’s a lot of other ways to petition and to march and to rally that make political change, even if it’s not in a tangible vote.”
Fears for the future
Banks, meanwhile, have low expectations for government, especially after the 2016 presidential campaign between Trump and Clinton, which she called “the most toxic, hateful thing I’ve ever seen.”
And she took away lessons from the crisis on personal finance. She was shocked when she and her husband received approval for a mortgage of four times the amount they wanted, but they rejected the sum.
“When the housing market crashed, what I saw was a lot of Americans living beyond their means and a lot of banks acting irresponsibly,” Banks said.
“I’m really scared to have kids,” she added. “I’m afraid the market will collapse again in the next couple of years.” /vvp
source: business.inquirer.net
Wednesday
Amazon is 2nd US company to reach $1 trillion market value
NEW YORK — Amazon on Tuesday became the second publicly traded company to reach $1 trillion in market value, hot on the heels of iPhone maker Apple.
The milestone is another sign of Amazon’s swift rise from an online bookseller to a behemoth that sells toilet paper, TVs and just about anything. In its two decades, Amazon has expanded far beyond online shopping and into health care, advertising and cloud computing.
Its growth has boosted the fortunes of its founder and CEO, Jeff Bezos. His 16 percent stake in Amazon is now worth more than $160 billion. Forbes magazine placed him at the top of its list of billionaires for the first time this year, surpassing Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and investor Warren Buffett.
Amazon’s stock has increased almost 600 percent in the last five years, including a more than 70 percent surge so far in 2018 alone. On Tuesday morning, the stock climbed enough to push the company’s valuation pass the $1 trillion mark, although it dropped back slightly after that. The stock closed at $2,039.51 Tuesday, about $11 short of keeping its valuation above $1 trillion.
Apple topped the $1 trillion mark in early August. Saudi Arabia’s national energy company, Aramco, is widely believed to be worth much more than either Amazon or Apple.
Amazon’s growing power has made it a target of politicians. President Donald Trump has said the company should pay the U.S. Postal Service more in shipping costs. And U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders has frequently noted the disparity between what Amazon’s warehouse workers make and Bezos’ vast fortune. Amazon has remained publicly silent about Trump’s criticism, but has called Sanders’ comments “misleading.”
Bezos started Amazon after leaving a hedge fund in 1994. He called Amazon the “Earth’s biggest bookstore” at the time, but it quickly added more products and eventually opened up a marketplace where others could list and sell their goods.
Amazon has cemented customer loyalty through its Prime membership program, offering fast, free shipping as well as music and video streaming perks. In April, Bezos disclosed for the first time that Amazon had more than 100 million paying Prime members around the world.
Wall Street has become very enthusiastic about Amazon’s businesses outside of retail. Amazon Web Services provides cloud computing services to companies and governments, and Amazon’s advertising division makes billions by selling ads to companies that want their products to show up when shoppers search on the site.
Those profitable businesses have helped offset the high costs associated with running its online store. Amazon saw its quarterly profit soar past $2 billion for the first time earlier this year as the online shopping, cloud computing and advertising businesses all kept growing.
Amazon is also building its physical presence: Its purchase last year of the Whole Foods grocery chain gave it hundreds of stores at which to promote its gadgets and offer discounts tied to Prime memberships. It has opened more than a dozen brick-and-mortar bookstores, and has plans for more cashier-less Amazon Go convenience stores.
It’s also been trying to have more control over how its packages are delivered. Under a program announced this summer, contractors around the country can launch businesses that deliver Amazon packages. The move gives Amazon more ways to ship its packages to shoppers without having to rely on UPS, FedEx and other delivery services.
Amazon’s latest push has been in the health care industry. It has formed a venture with JPMorgan Chase and Berkshire Hathaway to figure out ways to attack rising health care costs for their U.S. employees and possibly for many more Americans. It also announced plans to buy the online pharmacy PillPack, but hasn’t revealed what it plans to do with it.
source: business.inquirer.net
Samsung might release foldable screen device within the year
A new type of foldable smartphone from Samsung may get revealed before the end of 2018.
The CEO of the Korean manufacturer, DJ Koh, said they plan to reveal a new device with a foldable screen before the year ends, as reported by CNBC.
More than just a tablet-like device, Koh hinted that the new smartphone will have unique features to differentiate itself from standard smartphones and their larger tablet counterparts.
“Every device, every feature, every innovation should have a meaningful message to our end customer. So when the end customer uses it, (they think) ‘wow, this is the reason Samsung made it’,” said Koh at the IFA 2018 consumer electronics and home appliances trade show in Berlin, which started in Aug. 31 and will run until Sept. 5.
The mysterious foldable device, previously codenamed “Valley,” was mentioned on a report by The Wall Street Journal last July. It suggested the company had been working on the OLED-based technology for several years. The advances in OLED technology, which the smartphone giant currently has a lead in terms of maturity, suggest a single-screen device with a flexible and foldable display.
With standard, single-screen smartphone technology coming to a plateau with end-to-end screens, and notch or notchless designs, it would make sense for the Korean manufacturer to introduce a new kind of smartphones for consumers to fawn over. However, it will still come down to whether consumers can afford it and if they think it’s worth the price. Alfred Bayle/JB
source: technology.inquirer.net
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