'"If we die, we die for Christ": Florida megachurch pastor encourages congregation to keep coming to service
[...] "Do you believe God would bring his people to his house to be contagious with the virus? Of course not," Maldonado, a Trump supporter, said to his congregation[...]
"This service is usually packed. So now they're home in a cave afraid of the virus, that you want to transmit the virus," Maldonado continued. The Herald noted the venue "appeared half empty."
[...] Maldonado was selected to pray for the president as part of the "Evangelicals for Trump" rally in January.'
https://www.alternet...2LyMNtwAPHg9a5I
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Will spring breakers become super-spreaders?
As Florida officials move to expel the hundreds of thousands of spring breakers who ignored calls for social distancing, public-health specialists are nervously wondering what will happen once the party's over.
For much of this week, revelers continued to cram four and five to a hotel room, swarm beaches over hundreds of miles of coastline, and then gather shoulder-to-shoulder in bars and clubs – almost a model process for spreading contagious diseases.
Now, with their campuses likely shuttered, most spring breakers will return to hometowns across the country where any exposure to coronavirus could set off a contagion, public-health experts warned.'
https://www.politico...onavirus-140609
'Coronavirus May Mean Automation Is Coming Sooner Than We Thought
[...] Xing referenced a CNN article about why toilet paper, of all things, is one of the items people have been panic-buying most (I, too, have been utterly baffled by this phenomenon). But maybe there'd be less panic if we knew more about the production methods and supply chain involved in manufacturing toilet paper. It turns out it's a highly automated process (you can learn more about it in this documentary by National Geographic) and requires very few people (though it does require about 27,000 trees a day—so stop bulk-buying it! Just stop!).
The supply chain limitation here is in the raw material; we certainly can't keep cutting down this many trees a day forever. But—somewhat ironically, given the Costco cartloads of TP people have been stuffing into their trunks and backseats—thanks to automation, toilet paper isn't something stores are going to stop receiving anytime soon.
Automation For All
Now we have a reason to apply this level of automation to, well, pretty much everything.
Though our current situation may force us into using more robots and automated systems sooner than we'd planned, it will end up saving us money and creating opportunity
[...]
[...] "This is an opportunity for automation to happen at the last mile," said Xing. Delivery drones, robots, and autonomous trucks and vans could all play a part. In fact, use of delivery drones has ramped up in China since the outbreak.
Speaking of deliveries, service robots have steadily increased in numbers at Amazon; as of late 2019, the company employed around 650,000 humans and 200,000 robots—and costs have gone down as robots have gone up.
ARK Invest's research predicts automation could add $800 billion to US GDP over the next 5 years and $12 trillion during the next 15 years. On this trajectory, GDP would end up being 40 percent higher with automation than without it.
[...] tools like DataRobot and H2O.ai are democratizing artificial intelligence by allowing almost anyone, not just data scientists or computer engineers, to run machine learning algorithms. People are codifying the steps in their own repetitive work processes and having their computers take over tasks for them.
As 3D printing gets cheaper and more accessible, it's also being more widely adopted, and people are finding more applications (case in point: the Italians mentioned above who figured out how to cheaply print a medical valve for coronavirus treatment).'
https://singularityh...CgAQm5HfGxibrW4
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 22 March 2020 - 03:00 AM