Saturday, 11 June 2016

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DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Scientists have found dangerous drug-resistant “super bacteria” off beaches in Rio de Janeiro that will host Olympic swimming events and in a lagoon where rowing and canoe athletes will compete when the Games start on Aug. 5.
The findings from two unpublished academic studies seen by Reuters concern Rio’s most popular spots for tourists and greatly increase the areas known to be infected by the microbes normally found only in hospitals.
They also heighten concerns that Rio’s sewage-infested waterways are unsafe.
A study published in late 2014 had shown the presence of the super bacteria - classified by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as an urgent public health threat - off one of the beaches in Guanabara Bay, where sailing and wind-surfing events will be held during the Games.
The first of the two new studies, reviewed in September by scientists at the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy in San Diego, showed the presence of the microbes at five of Rio’s showcase beaches, including the ocean-front Copacabana, where open-water and triathlon swimming will take place.
The other four were Ipanema, Leblon, Botafogo and Flamengo.
The super bacteria can cause hard-to-treat urinary, gastrointestinal, pulmonary and bloodstream infections, along with meningitis. The CDC says studies show that these bacteria contribute to death in up to half of patients infected.
The second new study, by the Brazilian federal government’s Oswaldo Cruz Foundation lab, which will be published next month by the American Society for Microbiology, found the genes of super bacteria in the Rodrigo de Freitas lagoon in the heart of Rio and in a river that empties into Guanabara Bay.
Waste from countless hospitals, in addition to hundreds of thousands of households, pours into storm drains, rivers and streams crisscrossing Rio, allowing the super bacteria to spread outside the city’s hospitals in recent years.
Renata Picao, a professor at Rio’s federal university and lead researcher of the first study, said the contamination of Rio’s famous beaches was the result of a lack of basic sanitation in the metropolitan area of 12 million people.
“These bacteria should not be present in these waters. They should not be present in the sea,” said Picao from her lab in northern Rio, itself enveloped by stench from Guanabara Bay.
Cleaning the city’s waterways was meant to be one of the Games’ greatest legacies and a high-profile promise in the official 2009 bid document Rio used to win the right to host South America’s first Olympics.
That goal has instead transformed into an embarrassing failure, with athletes lamenting the stench of sewage and complaining about debris that bangs into and clings to boats in Guanabara Bay, potential hazards for a fair competition.
SITUATION GETTING WORSE
Picao’s study, which has undergone internal reviews at Rio’s federal university, analyzed water samples taken between September 2013 and September 2014. Using 10 samples taken at five beach locations, the study found super bacteria were most present at Botafogo beach, where all samples were positive.
Flamengo beach, where spectators will gather to watch Olympic sailors vie for medals, had the super bacteria in 90 percent of samples. Ten percent of Copacabana’s samples had the microbes.
Ipanema and Leblon beaches, the most popular with tourists, had samples that tested positive for super bacteria 50 and 60 percent of the time, respectively.
The Oswaldo Cruz study of the Olympic lagoon, which was peer reviewed, is based on water samples taken in 2013. It found that the lake is a potential breeding ground for super bacteria and their spread through the city.
While the studies both use water samples that are from 2013 and 2014, Picao and other experts said they had seen no advances in sewerage infrastructure in Rio to improve the situation.
Valerie Harwood, an expert in recreational water contamination and antibiotic-resistant bacteria at the University of South Florida who was not involved in the studies, said that if anything, things were getting worse, as the super bacteria naturally spread by infecting other microbes.
The contamination has prompted federal police and prosecutors to investigate whether Rio’s water utility Cedae is committing environmental crimes by lying about how much sewage it treats. Investigators are also looking into where billions of dollars in funds went since the early 1990s, money earmarked to improve sewage services and clean Guanabara Bay.
Cedae has denied any wrongdoing. It said in an emailed statement that any super bacteria found at the beaches or the Olympic lagoon must be the result of illegal dumping into storm drains. Cedae said it carries out sewage treatment and collection in the entire “south zone” of Rio, where the bodies of water are located and where the water samples were taken.
‘LIKE CANDY’
Five scientists consulted by Reuters said the immediate risk to people’s health when faced with super bacteria infection depends on the state of their immune systems.
These bacteria are opportunistic microbes that can enter the body, lie dormant, then attack at a later date when a healthy person may fall ill for another reason.
Super bacteria infect not only humans but also otherwise-harmless bacteria present in the waters, turning them into antibiotic-resistant germs.
Harwood said the super bacteria genes discovered in the Olympic lagoon were probably not harmful if swallowed by themselves: they need to be cocooned inside of a bacterium.
“Those genes are like candy. They are organic molecules and they’ll be eaten up by other bacteria, other organisms,” Harwood said. “That’s where the danger is - if a person then ingests that infected organism - because it will make it through their gastrointestinal tract and potentially make someone ill.”
The presence of the super bacteria genes in the lagoon indicates the bacteria themselves had recently died or simply were not detected by testing, Harwood said.
Health experts say Rio’s poor wastewater management has already created endemic illnesses associated with sewage that disproportionately impact the city’s poor, including gastrointestinal and respiratory problems, Hepatitis A and severe heart and brain conditions.
Rio’s Olympic organizing committee referred questions on water quality to state authorities.
Rio state’s Inea environmental agency said in an emailed statement it follows the World Health Organization’s recommendations for testing recreational water safety, and that searching for super bacteria is not included in that. It also said there was a lack of studies about the bacteria in water and health outcomes.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks; Editing by Will Dunham)

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Revolutionary New Product Gives Hope to Those Suffering From Chronic Snoring (Even This Stubborn Guy!)

I’ll admit it – I (used to) snore. Badly. Badly enough that my wife not only complained, but was also afraid that I had Sleep Apnea. And I was afraid too. Afraid that I was going to have to don the dreaded CPAP mask. Really? A CPAP? I’m only in my 40’s. I’m not ready for that. But yea, I snore. Plus, I felt tired – all the time.

I denied it for a while, like most men do. Then my wife pretty much forced me to look into the CPAP breathing mask to cure my snoring. I hated the thought of it. I hated the thought of setting it up. The noise. The obvious uncomfortable restriction. And I hated the thought of travelling with it (taking a CPAP on vacation has to be a serious buzzkill). But I didn’t know of any alternative.

Until now.

Truth be told, I can be stubborn. I put off doing anything about my snoring for years. My wife was unhappy, but hey, *I* didn’t hear myself snore, so I figured it was no big deal. But the sleep apnea thing woke me up (pardon the pun). I finally relented, and said I’d do some research. And that’s when my eyes were opened. I not only learned a lot about snoring and Obstructed Sleep Apnea (OSA), I also found a great solution that didn’t require a CPAP.

Here’s What I Found:

To start, I learned that snoring is a big problem, and an indicator of OSA, which leads to all manner of health problems, like:
  • Acid reflux
  • Frequent nighttime urination
  • Memory loss
  • Stroke
  • Depression
  • Diabetes
  • Heart attack
So I continued to research and found a case study – one that changed everything. It was published by Eastern Virginia Medical School’s Division of Sleep Medicine in the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, and concludes that wearing a simple chin-strap is not only the simplest treatment for snoring and OSA, but it’s also the most effective.

Better than CPAP devices…

Better than nasal strips…

And certainly better than snoring.

Should I try it? Are you kidding?

A simple chin strap? I raced at the chance – I mean, why not try it?

And BAM – that was it. My snoring and sleep apnea were instantly cured.

The chin-strap (known as MySnoringSolution) is simplicity combined with advanced medical thinking, and the results are impressive. It works by supporting the lower jaw and tongue, which prevents obstructions of the airway (this is the most common cause of snoring and sleep apnea). Bottom line: it works.

Yea yea yea, I know this revolutionary chin strap is not the most attractive piece of bedtime wear you can find, but it’s a million times better than a CPAP machine, and my wife is happy (and you know what they say about happy wives…). Plus, the lightweight material is very comfortable. I don’t even know it’s there.

Thousands of people have used the MySnoringSolution chin-strap to get a quieter, better night’s sleep. I know I’m sleeping deeper than ever – this simple chin strap has changed my life.

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You can only buy the “My Snoring Solution” Chinstrap from This Website. Best of all, it’s now being offered in a “2 for 1” deal (that’s buy one, get one free), and also comes with a 100% satisfaction guarantee.

You have zero to lose, except snoring. If you want to stop snoring, give this a try.

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Aged 35 He Speaks 11 Languages - Luca Lampariello's 11 Tricks To Learn Any Language

This article is a wake-up call for all those who dream of becoming multilingual: just do it! Luca Lampariello talks about where he finds the motivation for learning languages, and how he’s learned 11 so far.

When people meet someone who speaks many languages fluently, the first reaction is often one of slight bewilderment. Multilingualism is generally considered cool yet difficult to achieve, especially if second, third and fourth languages are acquired later in life. As an advocate of language learning, I of course agree that it’s cool, but I challenge the assumption that it’s difficult.
My name is Luca Lampariello. Here I would like to deviate from the well-trodden route to how I learned 11 languages and concentrate on why I learned these languages. Seasoned language learners will all tell you that motivation is fundamental, so where can one find this motivation and how can it be bolstered?
Language learning is about much more than heaps of books and hours of study. It’s about travelling to marvellous places, meeting inspiring people, enjoying delicious food and embarking on innumerable journeys of self-discovery. I derive my motivation to learn more languages from these experiences; the experiences that these languages make possible.
"I agree that language learning is cool, but I challenge the assumption that it’s difficult."

Learn English English

Lesson learned: Languages cannot be taught, they can only be learned. Having someone or something to aid with the process is of great benefit. Find a guide, not an instructor.
English was already a world language by the time I turned 10 in 1991. Its study was mandatory. I struggled at first. I didn’t like the teacher, grammar explanations confused me, and the material was monotone. I thought I’d never learn it. Then my parents decided to hire a private English tutor. I was 13 and she was wonderful. She didn’t simply instruct me in the language, but helped me discover it - she set me on the right path to learning and, most importantly, learning to love language.
I started reading a lot of books in English. My aunt bought me The Hardy Boys for my birthday and after that there was no looking back. The combination of reading books, watching movies every day and talking to my tutor once a week for two years worked wonders. By the age of 15 I was fluent in English and in possession of a thick American accent.
"Learning is a treasure that will follow its owner everywhere." ‒ Chinese Proverb

Learn French French

Lesson learned: A language is a door to an entire world which is wholly worth exploring. So let your guard down and fall in love! With the language, with the country, with a person, or even with the food. There’s no greater motivation!
I started learning French around the same time as I started learning English and encountered many of the same problems. That all changed at the age of fourteen, however, when I discovered that I could watch French TV. I started watching two hours every day after dinner. By the age of 15 I was fluent in French. A few hours of television a day did more than the previous three years in middle school. In 2010 I moved to Paris. Living there for three years enabled me to gain invaluable insights into French culture: history, traditions, jokes, cultural references, and a respect for French pride in their cuisine and language.
"Language is the road map of a culture. It tells you where its people come from and where they are going" – Rita Mae Brown

Learn German German

Lesson learned: If you find a method you like and which works for you, you can start learning any language by yourself. There is no one best method to learn a language. Find something that is effective for you. And above all, experiment!
German was the first language I started learning completely on my own. I don’t remember exactly why I embarked on this journey, but I remember I had no idea how to learn German. I spent a couple of months using a dusty grammar book dislodged from my grandmother’s bookcase. Gothic letters cascaded down the page imploring me to repeat vacuous grammar drills. I quickly became disheartened.
Then I saw a commercial on TV about a language series in 4 languages and decided to give it a go. While using it, I came up with my method: a special technique to absorb the basic patterns of any language in a light, natural and fun way. This method came to me organically, and I quickly realised that it was effective for me. After using it for a year and a half, I met a bunch of Germans while on vacation. I will always remember their faces as they repeatedly asked in bewilderment, “Wie kannst du so gut Deutsch?!” (how can you speak German so well?). This reaction and the resulting, privileged connection were enough to fuel my passion to perfect my German. From that moment on I started reading insatiably. The language had become an integral part of my life.
"If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his own language, that goes to his heart." ‒ Nelson Mandela

Learn Spanish Spanish

Lesson learned: Language learning offers you profound insights into your own, native language. If you learn a language similar to yours, speak it from the beginning. It’s easier than you perhaps imagine.
Spanish and Italian are like two sisters; different and yet similar at the same time. One common myth in Italy is that Spanish is easy: that you just have to speak Italian and add an “s” to every single word. The overall structure of the two languages is similar, but there are a fair few disparities in terms of pronunciation, intonation and idiomatic usage. In 2007 I did an exchange in Barcelona. Although I was immersed in a predominantly Catalan environment, I was living with a lively Spanish girl from Malaga and often went out with a lot of other Spanish people. The language simply rubbed off. By the time I came back to Rome, Spanish had become a part of me.
"Those who know nothing of foreign languages know nothing of their own." ‒ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Learn Dutch Dutch

Lesson learned: There is no such thing as a useless language. They will all come in handy sooner or later, so don’t let others determine what you learn. Allow yourself to be guided by your own interests and convictions.
I met Lotte, a Dutch girl, whilst camping in Northern Sardinia. She didn’t speak much English and we both became frustrated at our inability to communicate. We still had a great time together, but something was missing: a sense of incompleteness kept nagging at me, so I decided to learn Dutch. Lotte and I lost touch, but the language stayed with me. People insisted that Dutch was a completely useless language - they all speak English - but I stuck to it. I read books and magazines that my friends would bring back from the Netherlands. I knew I would use the language sooner or later, and have been proved right. Now I speak Dutch every day with my Dutch housemate. Speaking and expanding Dutch has become easy, effortless and interesting. The old adage that one must move to a country to learn the language is simply not true.
"Learn everything you can, anytime you can, from anyone you can; there will always come a time when you will be grateful you did." ‒ Sarah Caldwell

Learn Swedish Swedish

Lesson learned: Start working on pronunciation from the very beginning to avoid developing bad habits. Be flexible. If a language has an idiosyncratic feature, work on it more from the start.
I had been thinking about learning a Scandinavian language for quite some time when my Italian girlfriend at the time bought me a Swedish course for my birthday. Swedish sounds incredibly musical to my ears due to its peculiar intonation, but I found it quite difficult to grasp at the beginning. In 2004 I went to Stockholm for the first time and was immediately enamored by Swedish culture. I kept speaking Swedish, mostly with Norwegians, and watched movies and read books - mainly thrillers, as the Scandinavians are excellent at that. And the best thing of all? If you know Swedish, most Scandinavians will understand you, and you suddenly have access to a fascinating culture and way of thinking.
"To have another language is to possess a second soul." ‒ Charlemagne

Learn Russian Russian

Lesson learned: If you are about to give up on a language, actively search for something that reignites your desire to learn. Go to the country, meet someone, watch a movie, make a YouTube video. Anything goes.
After a few Romance and Germanic languages, I wanted to learn something new. Russian seemed exotic to me: incredibly rich, elegant and intriguingly complex. Thinking in Russian was tantamount to solving a mathematical conundrum for every sentence. My mind boggled as to how native Russians deal with it every day. I had nobody to help me and after 8 months I began to think that it had perhaps been a mistake to learn Russian. I had barely made any progress. I didn’t do much for 3 long years, and then I posted a video on YouTube speaking Russian. The response astonished me. Not in my wildest dreams did I imagine so many people would leave such enthusiastic comments. Russians think that their language is difficult and inaccessible, so when they hear somebody uttering a couple of sentences they explode with joy. I subsequently started speaking Russian on a regular basis and slowly began to navigate my way confidently through Russian’s grammar maze.
"Learning is a treasure that will follow its owner everywhere." ‒ Chinese Proverb

Portuguese

Lesson learned: You can learn two languages at the same time provided that you organize your time and energy well.
I started learning European Portuguese at the exact same time as Mandarin. I had never learned two languages at the same time, and so I gave myself very precise guidelines. Portuguese, like Spanish, came very naturally to me. I focused on pronunciation, which can be tricky. Unstressed vowels are barely pronounced and sentences often seem like an uninterrupted sequence of consonants. Portuguese can even sound like Russian to untrained ears as a consequence. I often get asked why I opted for European Portuguese and not Brazilian Portuguese, which is much more widely spoken. The truth is that I often don’t choose a language. I let languages choose me.
"Language is the blood of the soul into which thoughts run and out of which they grow." ‒ Oliver Wendell Holmes

Learn Polish Polish

Lesson learned: Travel is a truly great motivator. Travel as much as you can, whenever you can. It will open doors and push you to learn languages.
I visited Poland in 2012 for the second time in my life and simply fell in love with the country and its people. Other than using my bilingual translation technique, I also started speaking it from the very beginning by setting up a weekly language exchange with Michal, a Polish guy I had met in the summer of 2012. I highly recommend this approach if you are learning a slavic language and you already speak another one. Although Russian and Polish are quite different in many ways, the overall structure is the same, and knowing one helps enormously with learning the other. After a year I was relatively fluent in Polish and I made a video on YouTube with Michal on a visit to Poland. The video didn’t go unnoticed. A journalist interviewed me for a magazine and I ended up on Polish TV one year later.
"One language sets you in a corridor for life. Two languages open every door along the way." ‒ Frank Smith

Mandarin Chinese

Lesson learned: Don’t be intimidated by a language’s reputation.
I had heard that Chinese is notoriously difficult, and that’s why I had never contemplated learning it. Pushed by the unexpected success of my first YouTube videos, I wanted a new challenge. I started learning Mandarin Chinese in my own way, but I faced completely new challenges.
If somebody tells you that Chinese is impossible to learn by yourself, as I once heard someone say, I can assure you that it is absolutely not true. It has its own complex aspects, but also some refreshingly easy ones as well. If you know how to tackle tones and Chinese characters the right way, Chinese is, in the long run, not harder than any other language, and the reward of speaking it is immense. You come into contact with an incredible culture, and the Chinese are often pleasantly surprised if you speak their language well.
"The limits of my language are the limits of my world." ‒ Ludwig Wittgenstein

Japanese

Lesson Iearned: Some languages have completely new features, so be flexible and adapt your learning method to the language. If your approach is not working, change it! Don’t give up. Don’t give in.
When I started learning Japanese, I wanted a new challenge, but I didn’t imagine it would be so hard. I couldn’t even build simple sentences because the structure in Japanese was so completely different from any language I had ever learned. I initially thought that this problem was just temporary and could be solved by speaking more regularly, but this simply wasn’t the case. Japanese feels like my biggest challenge yet, but I’m confident that I will get there. I just need to recalibrate my approach and live the language.
"A different language is a different vision of life." ‒ Federico Fellini

Conclusion

Discovering a method to learn foreign languages is, without a doubt, one of the best things that has ever happened to me. Learning languages is an exhilarating experience. I didn’t do it by simply spending time at home staring blankly at verb tables. I did it by getting out there and living.
Speaking multiple languages is not and shouldn’t be an intellectual performance. It is an act of love towards yourself and others which helps you discover the amazing diversity of human nature as well as discovering the multiple facets of your personality. To those who ask me why I like learning so many languages I always reply: “I don’t live to learn languages, I learn languages to live a better life”.

Motivated to learn another language?

Start learning today!

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this from my hotel room overseeing the Russian Foreign Ministry’s iconic main building, a gigantic Stalinist-style skyscraper that was built as one of Moscow’s famous “Seven Sisters” between 1947 and 1953. Having witnessed the rise and fall of the Soviet empire, the building has recently re-emerged as a global power broker, particularly when it comes to the Middle East.
However, for an outsider, Moscow’s foreign policy seems intensely confusing to say the least. For instance, Russia remains the only power in the world (aside from Iran) that backs Syria’s dictatorship, a brutal regime that justifies its actions by claiming it is a victim of its anti-Israeli, anti-American position.
Yet this Russian support did not prevent Moscow from giving a warm welcome recently to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was visiting to mark the 25th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries. This comes just weeks after announcing that Israel does not intend to ever return the Golan Heights - which it seized in 1967 - to Syria.
Another oxymoron, in which Russia may be similar to many Middle Eastern countries, is the awkward love / hate relationship with the United States. I must admit that upon visiting Moscow for the first time, the sight of the golden arches of McDonalds and other popular US brands almost everywhere was a real shocker.
It is not only Russia’s history of communism that makes these sights awkward. It is the current, intense local media coverage of bilateral relations, which makes one feel like the two nations are still at war. Asked about Moscow’s peculiar foreign policy, some local journalists and political analysts are full of praise, adding that it is pragmatism at its very best and ensures Russian interests are always served.
However, one expert candidly said these “Cold War tactics” ensured that people rally behind the flag and do not pay attention to the worsening economy since the collapse of the ruble in 2014.
The dispute over Syria

A major battleground of this new Cold War is Syria, where Moscow and Washington - along with most Gulf states - back opposing sides. Ironically, despite Russia’s military involvement, the average citizens you meet here are not able to locate Damascus on a map, let alone distinguish between regime loyalists, Al-Nusra and ISIS.
However, not everyone here is as detached. Almost a year ago, Russia’s Orthodox Church controversially described Moscow’s involvement in Syria as a “holy war,” though it later claimed its position was distorted by the media.
Experts I spoke to say Russia’s backing of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is a matter of principle, citing Moscow’s concern for global stability and a lack of desire to see the Libyan debacle (for which they blame US involvement) being repeated in Syria.
If this is the case, one could safely deduce that Moscow would have no issue with Assad’s removal if it is done in a way that preserves Syria, or what is left of it. At least this is what should be understood from the recent comments of the Foreign Ministry’s official spokesperson Maria Zakharova. In March, she told the local Sputnik News agency that Russia backs a legitimate authority in Syria, “not Assad personally.”
This was perceived as a positive sign by many in the Syrian opposition and among their Gulf backers. However, there seems to be conflicting views and more than one say in Moscow when it comes to this issue. Some advisors may feel this would be too much of a compromise, and a victory to the US-backed side. As such, more senior Russian officials have made it clear that it they won’t force Assad to leave, particularly if he is reelected by his people (or what remains of them).
Gulf states oppose any solution that does not guarantee the removal of the Iran-backed Assad, particularly following their massive financial, military and - most importantly - personal investment in this matter since 2011.
Yet things are changing, and there is a new, dynamic government in Saudi Arabia that is eager to move things forward. While Riyadh continues to maintain its position that Assad should be removed either by diplomatic or military means, we have seen unprecedented determination not to allow differences with Moscow on this matter to affect overall relations.
Close cooperation between Riyadh and Moscow cannot but be helpful, particularly when it comes to regional and oil-market stability. Most recently, Russia has proposed to mediate between the Saudis and Iranians.
Though neither Tehran nor Riyadh has jumped on the offer, the mere fact that Moscow made such a proposal is interesting. For its part, Saudi Arabia has repeatedly maintained that it wants good relations with Iran, but that it must stop meddling in its neighbors’ internal affairs.
Russia also seems ready to play a bigger role in Israeli-Palestinian talks. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reportedly brought up the Arab Peace Initiative during Netanyahu’s recent visit. However, without reconciliation between Palestinian factions Hamas and Fatah, Israel will always have an excuse to stay away from the negotiating table.
I leave Moscow with a much better grasp of its positions. However, given that I was there to participate in a media forum, I cannot but say that signing bilateral media agreements with the likes of the discredited Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) will not help clarify Russia’s positions in the Middle East.
Regardless of whether it can convince the Arab street of its stance, Moscow would benefit much more from a stronger presence on mainstream and credible Arabic media outlets. This cannot be achieved by partnering with a state-owned news agency that has, in the midst of a civil war, reported that tourism is on the rise in Syria. The only thing on the rise in the country is terrorism; it is only by closer cooperation with the Gulf that this can be stopped.
*This blog was originally published in Al Arabiya News.

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Maybe people are basically good after all. Impraise is a Dutch startup that built an app for collecting feedback on co-workers. It’s used by companies like Atlassian, Ogilvy and Elsevier, with about 90% of that feedback generated anonymously.
While the feedback sent within the Impraise app is anonymous, senders are asked to rate how positive the feedback they sent was. On a scale from one to 10, for example, feedback rated 10 would mean the sender just sent extremely positive feedback to a co-worker.
We asked Impraise to analyze what sort of feedback people gave their co-workers. The company pulled 230,000 instances of feedback from the last 18 months. Impraise improbably found that nearly 92% of feedback was positive. Feedback is considered positive when it’s rated six or better on a normalized 10-point scale (each Impraise customer can modify the scale, so it’s not always 10 points).
Bas Kohnke, Impraise’s chief executive and co-founder, says the majority of its customers are based in the US, UK or the Netherlands. Most customers using Impraise ask for feedback once every two weeks, he said. The results from Impraise are also somewhat skewed in favor of younger tech companies, which Kohnke says make up the majority of its customers.
Impraise wants to create a “feedback culture” for its customers, Kohnke says. “People are often not comfortable giving feedback,” he says. “That’s where anonymity comes into play,” he says. Impraise may be providing human resources departments with a much needed solution.Gallup has found that nearly 70% of American workers don’t feel engaged at work. That’s contributing to employees quitting because of ineffective or infrequent communication.

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The computer brain learns everything from its human users—and so it learns all the stereotyping too.
An 18-year-old high school senior from Virginia, Kabir Alli, shared a video on Twitter showing the discrepancy between searching for “three black teenagers” versus “three white teenagers” on Google. While the former pulled up police mugshots, changing one word—”black” to “white”— yielded smiling, youthful photos.
The video generated a tweetstorm, with over 67,000 retweets and comments from people calling Google out on the racial bias. This isn’t the first time Google search results have irked people. Another Twitter user had noticed similarly discriminatory results when searching for professional and unprofessional hairstyles for work.
The search giant was also criticized for allowing an anti-semitic Chrome plugin to exi
Alli does not believe Google is racist but he does expect the company to bear some responsibility. “I understand it’s all just an algorithm, based on most visited pages, but Google should be able to have more control over something like that,” he told USA Today.
The Silicon Valley behemoth maintains that its search results have very little to do with the company and its programmers—it’s all about the algorithm. “Algorithms rely on more than 200 unique signals or ‘clues’ that make it possible to guess what you might really be looking for,” the company says in a blog post, listing things like the freshness of content, your region and page rank as factors.
“Our image search results are a reflection of content from across the web, including the frequency with which types of images appear and the way they’re described online,” a Google spokesperson said. “This means that sometimes unpleasant portrayals of sensitive subject matter online can affect what image search results appear for a given query. These results don’t reflect Google’s own opinions or beliefs–as a company, we strongly value a diversity of perspectives, ideas and cultures.”
Google is a mirror: The algorithm works with what it’s given—a persistent bias in society manifests itself in the online landscape in the form of meta-tagged images.
Alli acknowledged the shortcomings in his interview with USA Today. “It shouldn’t be so difficult to find normal non-offensive pictures of three black teenagers. That search sort of portrays us as a whole and those pictures are not us. We have a lot to offer and that search does not do us any kind of justice.”

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Apple now, and his Apple is an open book—comparatively, anyway.
Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) kicks off June 13 at 10am PT in San Francisco. Thus far, early leaks and interviews have given us a pretty good idea of what’s to come. At this rate, the only thing left to speculate on is the musical guest. (Our bet’s on Broods.)
Unlike past years, it appears the theme of this year’s keynote is software. Here’s what to expect:

App Store changes

In a series of interviews this week, marketing head Phil Schiller revealed a number of changes coming to the App Store.
  • Perhaps the biggest is how app subscriptions will work. Currently, Apple only lets news, cloud, dating, and streaming apps offer subscriptions to users, but the company will open up the business model to all app categories. Furthermore, Apple’s share of subscription revenue, presently at 30%, will fall to 15% after a user has subscribed for one year. Developers will be able to set prices depending on geography.
  • The App Store will introduce ads that show up at the top of search results (no ads will be displayed to those 13 and younger though), and the featured section of the App Store will exclude apps that users have already installed on their devices.
  • Apple has streamlined the app review process, so apps will make their way to the App Store faster.

Apple Music redesign

In uncharacteristic Apple fashion, its music-streaming app has been labeled “lousy,” “fussy,” and “a usability nightmare.” That (hopefully) will be changing soon. In addition to unveiling a new design that’s more intuitive, Apple Music is expected to integrate downloads (the iTunes business) and expand its radio service. The company might also remove the app’s social feature Connect.

Apple Pay via iMessage

Messaging has been all the buzz at Facebook’s, Microsoft’s, and Google’s developer conferences, and Apple is expected to follow suit. One enhanced iMessage capability will be an extension of Apple Pay that will let users transfer money to other people, similar to Venmo.

iMessage for Android

Here’s a wild card: On Thursday, a rumor started circulating that Apple was planning to bring iMessage to Android. If so, it wouldn’t be the first Apple app on Google’s mobile operating system. Apple Music made its way to Android last year.

Even more secure iCloud

After Apple’s flashy showdown in the US with the FBI, over the status of locked phone used by one of the San Bernardino shooters, the company reportedly started working on even stronger security measures that would be hackproof. Apple used its stage at the iPhone SE event in March to reassure the public of its dedication to privacy, and it wouldn’t be surprising if some of these new features were previewed at WWDC.

Siri for Mac

Apple’s intelligent assistant is already on the iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and Apple TV. It’s time now for Siri to make its debut on the Mac. According to 9to5Mac’s Mark Gurman, Siri for Mac will live at the top-right corner of the menu bar. When clicked, Siri will begin listening for commands. On newer versions of the operating system, users will be able to activate the assistant by saying “Hey Siri,” without having to click a button if they enable the feature and their computers are plugged into power.

MacOS

Breaking from Apple’s naming convention for its computer operating systems, the company is expected to rebrand OS X to MacOS. The change will add uniformity to the names of Apple’s operating systems, which include iOS, tvOS, and watchOS.

tvOS 2, watchOS 3