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www.thurrott.com Evernote Lays Off Most of Staff, Triggering Fears of Closure

Evernote's new corporate parent has laid off most of the company's staff and will relocate all operations to Europe.

Evernote Lays Off Most of Staff, Triggering Fears of Closure
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The trio of galaxies known as the Draco Group, located in the northern constellation of Draco, the Dragon

Explanation from NASA:

"This tantalizing trio of galaxies sometimes called the Draco Group, is located in the northern constellation of (you guessed it) Draco, the Dragon. From left to right are face-on spiral NGC 5985, elliptical galaxy NGC 5982, and edge-on spiral NGC 5981, all found within this single telescopic field of view that spans a little more than the width of the full moon. While the group is far too small to be a galaxy cluster, and has not been catalogued as a compact galaxy group, the three galaxies all do lie roughly 100 million light-years from planet Earth. Not as well known as other tight groupings of galaxies, the contrast in visual appearance still makes this triplet an attractive subject for astroimagers. On close examination with spectrographs, the bright core of striking spiral NGC 5985 shows prominent emission in specific wavelengths of light, prompting astronomers to classify it as a Seyfert, a type of active galaxy. This impressively deep exposure hints at a faint dim halo along with sharp-edged shells surrounding elliptical NGC 5982, evidence of past galactic mergers. It also reveals many even more distant background galaxies."

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www.nytimes.com Governor Vetoes Louisiana’s Ban on Transition Care for Transgender Minors

Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, also vetoed two other recent bills related to gender expression and sexual orientation in schools and among young people.

Governor Vetoes Louisiana’s Ban on Transition Care for Transgender Minors

Archive Link from archive.today

Original link from The New York Times

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Tree of Darkness by Albert Dros
flic.kr Tree of Darkness

The result of chasing some thunderstorms in The Netherlands. I found this tree a while ago and I wanted to photograph it with a storm for a while. Yesterday some thunderstorms were in the right position (or maybe I was) and lined up. This shot was tricky though: It was still light around 5PM (sun...

Tree of Darkness

via Flickr

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Atheism @lemmy.ml dirtmayor @beehaw.org
www.theguardian.com German Catholic church ‘dying painful death’ as 520,000 leave in a year

Speed of departures has been driven by series of child abuse scandals and accusations of a cover-up

German Catholic church ‘dying painful death’ as 520,000 leave in a year
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www.nytimes.com Affirmative Action: Supreme Court Strikes Down Race-Based Admissions at Harvard and U.N.C.

In disavowing race as a factor in achieving educational diversity, the court all but ensured that the student population at the campuses of elite institutions will become whiter and more Asian and less Black and Latino.

Affirmative Action: Supreme Court Strikes Down Race-Based Admissions at Harvard and U.N.C.

Archive Link from Ghost Archive

Original link from The New York Times

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www.nytimes.com Judges Block Transgender Care Bans for Minors in Kentucky and Tennessee

The rulings extend a winning streak in court for transgender-rights advocates, who are trying to block new state laws that ban gender-transition care.

Judges Block Transgender Care Bans for Minors in Kentucky and Tennessee

Archive Link from archive.today

Original link from The New York Times

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www.nature.com Stop talking about tomorrow’s AI doomsday when AI poses risks today

Talk of artificial intelligence destroying humanity plays into the tech companies’ agenda, and hinders effective regulation of the societal harms AI is causing right now.

Stop talking about tomorrow’s AI doomsday when AI poses risks today

Article Link from Nature

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www.nytimes.com Simone Biles Signals a Return to Elite Gymnastics

Biles, a seven-time Olympic medalist, last competed at the Tokyo Games in 2021, when she withdrew from some events because of a mental block.

Archive Link from archive.today

Original link from The New York Times

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The 'Super Racist Stuff' Behind the DOJ Report on Minneapolis Police | CW: Racism | Time
  • Not sure what's going on, Archive/Original links seem to be working for me. Here's the text from the article for you:

    The 'Super Racist Stuff' Behind the DOJ's Report on Minneapolis Policing

    By Karl Vick June 16, 2023 5:22 PM EDT Damning as it was, most of what the U.S. Department of Justice announced about the Minneapolis Police Department on Friday had been documented a year ago by the state of Minnesota’s Department of Human Rights. Each report involved interviews with more than 2,000 people, and describes a police agency rife with excessive force, racial profiling, lack of accountability, military-style training—all the institutional shortcomings that allowed Derek Chauvin to think he could kneel on George Floyd’s neck for nine minutes. Chauvin after all had done something similar several times before without a word of reproach from a superior, much less another officer, noted Attorney General Merrick Garland from the podium in Minneapolis. He was in town to confirm that the Feds’ probe of what may now be one of the world’s most infamous police departments—an investigation that Garland had announced one day after Chauvin was convicted of Floyd’s murder—had indeed found a “pattern and practice” of policing that violated the Constitution. “The patterns and practices we observed made what happened to George Floyd possible,” Garland said. The 89-page report contains more than the metrics—that, for example, a Black motorist in Minneapolis is nearly six times more likely to be pulled over for no reason than a white motorist—that justify federal intervention in the form of a court-enforceable plan, to which the department agreed in principle, to reform an agency that had rotted from the inside. The report also offers specific glimpses of what that rot looks like. “For example,” reads page 44, “during a May 2020 protest following the murder of George Floyd, a lieutenant was caught on camera expressing racist assumptions about Black people: ‘I’d love to scatter ’em but it’s time to f—in’ put people in jail and just prove the mayor wrong about his white supremacists from out of state. Although, this group probably is predominantly white, cuz there’s not looting and fires.’ Another officer agreed.” The report notes that the lieutenant oversaw the department’s training in use of force, “a position where he had enormous influence.” In a Minneapolis precinct station in 2019, officers decorated a Christmas tree with a Newport cigarette pack, malt-liquor cans and a cup from Popeyes. “Super racist stuff,” the report quotes Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey lamenting to federal investigators. At the podium on Friday, Garland highlighted a 2015 traffic stop involving Somali-American teens. At one point, one of them told an officer, “You’re racist, bro.” “Yep, and I’m proud of it,” the cop replied, adding: “Do you remember what happened in Black Hawk Down when we killed a bunch of you folk? I’m proud of that. We didn’t finish the job over there. If we had, you guys wouldn’t be over here right now.” Beyond what’s contained in the report, examples abound. In one instance, even other police officers appear to have taken note of not just the racism but also the idea that expressing it would bring no consequences. In June 2013, in an incident not included in the DOJ report, two off-duty members of the Minneapolis Police Department’s SWAT team, an elite assignment, were drinking in Green Bay, Wis., and ended up in a street confrontation with several Black men. Offended Green Bay police released their incident report, which quotes one of the Minneapolis officers using racist slurs to refer to the other men and reproaching the local officers for not siding with “white guys.” The Minnesota officers, the report makes clear, expected their positions in law enforcement to protect them. The Green Bay incident would be cited by the attorney for the family of Terrance Franklin, a young Black man killed by Minneapolis SWAT officers the same year, as a possible window into the kind of culture tolerated in the department. Among the substantial evidence the family uncovered challenging the MPD’s account of his death was an audio recording of a SWAT officer shouting, “Come out little n—-r! Don’t go putting those hands up now!” That case, which was likewise not mentioned in the DOJ report, may be under review by the newly installed chief prosecutor for the county that includes Minneapolis. One of the shooters in it had supervised Chauvin in 2017, and allowed him to kneel on a 14-year-old boy for more than 10 minutes, body camera footage showed.

    “This is an example of the cancer that has infected this department,” Minneapolis Chief of Police Brian O’Hara said at the April news conference announcing the city was paying $7.5 million to that young victim. O’Hara took over in Minneapolis in November from Newark, N.J., which also was forced to reform under the auspices of a court-enforced consent decree negotiated with the Justice Department. The Minneapolis department cooperated in the DOJ investigation, and the new report acknowledges that some changes have already been made. “This is about trying to change the culture around policing,” O’Hara said on Friday, with the Attorney General behind him. “We will emerge as a beacon of light for the rest of the world.”

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