NY prepared for tens of thousands of unvaccinated health workers to lose jobs

Terminated health care workers will not be eligible for unemployment.

A sign parodies the

Enlarge / Demonstrators hold signs during a protest against COVID-19 mandates in New York on Monday, Sept. 13, 2021. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

New York state has braced itself for the possibility of losing tens of thousands of unvaccinated health workers who fail to meet the state's Monday deadline for COVID-19 vaccination.

Last month, New York's health department announced that all health care workers in the Empire State would be required to receive at least their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine by September 27.

As of last week, 84 percent of New York's roughly 450,000 hospital workers were fully vaccinated, according to Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul's office. That leaves the fate of about 72,000 workers in question as the deadline passes. In addition, only 81 percent of staff in the state's adult care facilities and 77 percent of all staff at nursing home facilities were fully vaccinated as of last week.

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Leaked Android 12.1 build points to new features for foldables (and a bit more)

Google hasn’t released Android 12 yet, but it’s coming very soon. So what’s next? According to a report from xda-developers, Android 12.1. As the name suggests, this likely won’t be a major update, and Google probably won’t wait a full year to release it. Instead, it seems to be a smaller update with a number […]

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Google hasn’t released Android 12 yet, but it’s coming very soon. So what’s next? According to a report from xda-developers, Android 12.1.

As the name suggests, this likely won’t be a major update, and Google probably won’t wait a full year to release it. Instead, it seems to be a smaller update with a number of features designed for foldables, and it could be designed to launch alongside Google’s first phone with a foldable display, the long-rumored “Pixel Fold.”

xda-developers

Keep in mind that nothing is official until Google announces the operating system update and/or the Pixel Fold. But xda-developers has gotten their hands on a pre-release version of a new operating system which Google developers have been referring to by the code-name “sc-v2” or “Snow Cone version 2.” Since Snow Cone is the internal code-name that Google uses for Android 12, it’s likely that this will be branded as Android 12.1 rather than Android 13.

So what’s new? Head over to xda-developers for a complete breakdown, but here are some highlights:

  • Google is adding a desktop-like taskbar that can be used to switch between running apps or open apps in split-screen mode (with a drag and drop). The taskbar an be hidden when you don’t need it.
  • There’s a dual-pane layout that can display Quick Settings on the left and notifications on the right when a screen is large enough. On foldables this means you see everything when unfolded, or a more compact view when folded.
  • Some devices with high enough pixel density will also show a 3-column view for Quick Settings.
  • The Settings app is also dual-pane, with high level settings on the left and sub-menus on the right.
  • The Lock Screen can display a clock on the left and notifications on the right.

Google has also made some tweaks to the split-screen user interface for devices with larger displays, and the company has made some changes to the recent apps view, with the most recently used app now appearing larger than others.

While all of these features should make Android a little more usable on foldables and dual-screen devices without the need for vendor customizations like those that Samsung and Microsoft have implemented, I suspect they could also make Android into a slightly more tablet-friendly operating system. Google has long treated tablets as an afterthought while focusing primarily on phones… but now that the lines between those two categories are blurring, it makes sense that improvements designed for phones with tablet-sized screens will also benefit tablets.

According to xda-developers, another change coming in Android 12.1 could include the open sourcing of Android 12’s theme engine, which currently only allows Pixel phones to adjust their color scheme based on your wallpaper. By open sourcing this element, Google could make it easier for third-party phone makers to offer the same feature.

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Vorwurf Wahlfälschung: Ungewöhnliche Allianz protestiert in Moskau

Während sich Russlands Präsident Wladimir Putin mit den Führern der Duma-Parteien austauschte, protestierten Kommunisten, unabhängige Linke und Nawalny-Anhänger. Es kam auch zu Festnahmen.

Während sich Russlands Präsident Wladimir Putin mit den Führern der Duma-Parteien austauschte, protestierten Kommunisten, unabhängige Linke und Nawalny-Anhänger. Es kam auch zu Festnahmen.

Lilbits: Steam Deck, GPD Pocket 3, Stadia Phone Link and a Nokia Tablet

Valve is sending out Steam Deck dev kits to game makers for testing in order to ensure that as many PC games as possible can run on the handheld, Linux-powered gaming PC when it begins shipping to customers in December. Some of those game makers have started sharing images and short videos showing the console […]

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Valve is sending out Steam Deck dev kits to game makers for testing in order to ensure that as many PC games as possible can run on the handheld, Linux-powered gaming PC when it begins shipping to customers in December. Some of those game makers have started sharing images and short videos showing the console in action. And some… have shown a whole lot more.

@LionShieldGames

In other tech news, GPD continues sharing a few details at a time about the upcoming GPD Pocket 3 mini-laptop, Lenovo is set to launch at least five new laptops in China this week, and the company that revived the Nokia smartphone brand is hoping to do the same for Nokia tablets.

Here’s a roundup of recent tech news from around the web.

Roundup of Steam Deck dev kit teasers from game developers [GamingOnLinux]

Valve has been sending out pre-release Steam Decks to developers for testing, and we’re starting to see some real-world pictures and videos showing their games running on the Linux-powered handheld gaming PC.

Steam Deck handheld gaming PC preview [ali213]

GPD Pocket 3 hinge detailed [@softwincn]

GPD confirms that the upcoming Pocket 3 mini-laptop with an 8 inch display and Intel Tiger Lake processor will have a swivel-style hinge that lets you flip the screen so it faces backward and then fold it down over the keyboard for use in tablet mode.

Stadia phone Link: use your phone as a Stadia controller [9to5Google/YouTube]

Google’s Stadia game streaming platform is rolling out support for Phone Link, which allows you to use your phone as a touchscreen game pad to play games on your TV, PC, or other device. Or you can plug a controller into your phone to use it with Stadia.

Lenovo prepares to launch five new Windows 11 laptops in China [NotebookCheck]

Lenovo plans to launch 5 new Windows 11 laptops in China later this month, including models with Intel Tiger Lake-U and TGL-H chips or AMD Ryzen 5 U and H-series processors. It’s unclear which, if any models will be sold outside of China.

The first Nokia tablet in 7 years is coming [@NokiaMobile]

HMD is teasing a new Nokia-branded tablet with an announcement coming October 6. This could be the Nokia T20 10.36 inch tablet that leaked this summer, and it will be the first Nokia tablet since 2014.

Keep up on the latest headlines by following Liliputing on Twitter and Facebook and follow @LinuxSmartphone on Twitter and Facebook for the latest news on open source mobile phones.

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Honor MagicBook V 14 has a 90 Hz 3:2 display, a 5MP webcam, and Intel Tiger Lake-H35

Honor hasn’t been making laptops for very long, but the company which span off from Huawei last year is already making some interesting models. Case in point: the new Honor MagicBook V 14 is a laptop with a 14.2 inch, 2520 x 1680 pixel LTPS LCD display with a 3:2 aspect ratio and a 90 Hz screen […]

The post Honor MagicBook V 14 has a 90 Hz 3:2 display, a 5MP webcam, and Intel Tiger Lake-H35 appeared first on Liliputing.

Honor hasn’t been making laptops for very long, but the company which span off from Huawei last year is already making some interesting models. Case in point: the new Honor MagicBook V 14 is a laptop with a 14.2 inch, 2520 x 1680 pixel LTPS LCD display with a 3:2 aspect ratio and a 90 Hz screen refresh rate. And that’s just one of the things that makes this laptop unusual.

The Honor MagicBook V 14 goes on sale in China starting October 6 with prices starting at around $960.

Honor will offer three different configurations, all of which comes with a 35-watt Intel Tiger Lake-H35 processor, 16GB of LPDDR4x memory and 512GB of PCIe NVMe solid state storage:

  • Core i5-11320H for RMB 6,199 (~$960)
  • Core i5-11320H + NVIDIA GeForce MX450 for RMB 6,999 (~$1085)
  • COre i7-11390H + NVIDIA GeForce MX450 for RMB 7,999 (~$1240)

Each model will ship with Windows 11. They each have 60 Wh batteries. And they’re all Intel Evo-certified devices.

The laptop also has quad speakers, four microphones, and a 5MP front-facing camera with its own integrated image signal processing chip that Honor says can help with picture quality when you’re on video calls.

At a time when video conferencing has become more common then ever before, most existing laptop webcams are pretty awful. So it’s nice to see Honor (and a handful of other companies) starting to focus on camera quality for upcoming laptops.

Honor is also introducing a new set of MagicBook 16 and MagicBook 16 Pro laptops with 16.1 inch, 144 Hz LCD displays, AMD Ryzen 5000H processors, 16GB of RAM, 512GB of storage, and NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 or RTX 3050 graphics.

Prices for those models range from 4,999 RMB (~$775) for an entry-level MagicBook 16 with a Ryzen 5 5600H processor to 7,299 RMB (~$1130) for a MagicBook 16 Pro with a Ryzen 7-5800H processor and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 graphics.

via Sparrow News and GSM Arena

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Researchers use Starlink satellites to pinpoint location, similar to GPS

Researchers track six satellites to get location with accuracy of eight meters.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket soaring upward just after being launched.

Enlarge / SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying 60 Starlink satellites launches from the Kennedy Space Center on October 6, 2020, in Cape Canaveral, Florida. (credit: Getty Images | NurPhoto)

Signals from SpaceX Starlink broadband satellites can be used to pinpoint locations on Earth to within eight meters of accuracy, engineering researchers reported in a new peer-reviewed paper. Their report is part of a growing body of research into using signals from low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellites for navigation, similar to how GPS works.

This technology won't replace your smartphone's map application any time soon, and this initial experiment apparently required 13 minutes of tracking six Starlink satellites to pinpoint a location on Earth. But researchers were able to achieve the locational feat without any help from SpaceX, and they say the test proves the method could be used for navigation.

"The researchers did not need assistance from SpaceX to use the satellite signals, and they emphasized that they had no access to the actual data being sent through the satellites—only to information related to the satellite's location and movement," an Ohio State News article said.

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Cox Plans to Challenge $1 Billion Piracy Verdict Over ‘Concealed Evidence’

Internet provider Cox Communications believes that several record labels may have concealed key information at the 2019 piracy trial, which led to a $1 billion verdict. The ISP plans to ask the court to vacate the verdict because key copyright infringement evidence appears to have been recreated years after the alleged offenses took place.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

cox logo newInternet provider Cox Communications has been on the sharp end of several piracy lawsuits in recent years.

The biggest hit came three years ago when the Internet provider lost its legal battle against a group of major record labels.

$1 Billion Verdict

A Virginia jury held Cox liable for pirating subscribers because it failed to terminate accounts after repeated accusations, ordering the company to pay $1 billion in damages. This landmark ruling is currently under appeal. In addition, Cox plans to challenge the verdict through another route as well.

A few days ago Cox’s attorneys asked for permission to intervene in the lawsuit several music companies filed against rival ISP Charter. This case is pretty similar to the Cox lawsuit. In both cases, the ISPs are accused of failing to disconnect subscribers who were repeatedly flagged as copyright infringers.

The copyright infringement notices are key evidence in both cases. These notices were sent by MarkMonitor which monitored what pirated files were being shared through BitTorrent. To confirm that these files were indeed pirated, they were downloaded and verified by Audible Magic’s fingerprinting technology.

Recreated Evidence?

The allegedly infringing files were central to prove direct copyright infringement. During the Cox trial, the music companies presented a hard drive that contained the files, suggesting that those were the original songs that were pirated between 2012 and 2014.

However, based on information that surfaced in the Charter lawsuit, Cox now believes that this hard drive evidence was recreated at a later date. This information wasn’t disclosed at trial and Cox accuses the music companies of misrepresenting key evidence.

“[I]t appears that Plaintiffs failed to produce to Cox certain documents related to a key exhibit underlying Plaintiffs’ showing of direct infringement: A hard drive allegedly containing contemporaneously downloaded files that Plaintiffs claim were infringed by Cox’s subscribers.

“Having concealed the nature of this exhibit, Plaintiffs misrepresented it at trial, where they ultimately obtained a $1 billion verdict,” Cox adds.

Filed Downloaded in 2016?

At the trial, Cox already tried to get more information on the origin of the files on the hard drive. The metadata showed that the drive itself was created in 2016, but witnesses suggested that the infringing files were original.

However, based on evidence from the Charter case, Cox now believes that the files were not downloaded and verified when the infringement notices were sent, but years later.

“[D]iscovery in this action has revealed a strong likelihood that Plaintiffs in Cox concealed materials and information that would have demonstrated that all the files on the hard drive were downloaded in 2016 — and not as contemporaneous verification of alleged infringement before the notices were sent between 2012 and 2014.”

Cox is now asking the court for permission to intervene in the Charter lawsuit so it can obtain the required information, which is not publicly available.

Vacate the $1 Billion Verdict

The alleged misrepresentations harmed Cox’s trial defense, the ISP argues. The company plans to address this in a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(3), where it will ask the court to vacate the $1 billion damages award.

Rule 60 motions can be used in court to correct clear mistakes and omissions. In this case, Cox believes that the hard drive misrepresentations are sufficient to throw out the entire verdict.

A copy of Cox’s motion to intervene in the Charter cases is available here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Cox Plans to Challenge $1 Billion Piracy Verdict Over ‘Concealed Evidence’

Internet provider Cox Communications believes that several record labels may have concealed key information at the 2019 piracy trial, which led to a $1 billion verdict. The ISP plans to ask the court to vacate the verdict because key copyright infringement evidence appears to have been recreated years after the alleged offenses took place.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

cox logo newInternet provider Cox Communications has been on the sharp end of several piracy lawsuits in recent years.

The biggest hit came three years ago when the Internet provider lost its legal battle against a group of major record labels.

$1 Billion Verdict

A Virginia jury held Cox liable for pirating subscribers because it failed to terminate accounts after repeated accusations, ordering the company to pay $1 billion in damages. This landmark ruling is currently under appeal. In addition, Cox plans to challenge the verdict through another route as well.

A few days ago Cox’s attorneys asked for permission to intervene in the lawsuit several music companies filed against rival ISP Charter. This case is pretty similar to the Cox lawsuit. In both cases, the ISPs are accused of failing to disconnect subscribers who were repeatedly flagged as copyright infringers.

The copyright infringement notices are key evidence in both cases. These notices were sent by MarkMonitor which monitored what pirated files were being shared through BitTorrent. To confirm that these files were indeed pirated, they were downloaded and verified by Audible Magic’s fingerprinting technology.

Recreated Evidence?

The allegedly infringing files were central to prove direct copyright infringement. During the Cox trial, the music companies presented a hard drive that contained the files, suggesting that those were the original songs that were pirated between 2012 and 2014.

However, based on information that surfaced in the Charter lawsuit, Cox now believes that this hard drive evidence was recreated at a later date. This information wasn’t disclosed at trial and Cox accuses the music companies of misrepresenting key evidence.

“[I]t appears that Plaintiffs failed to produce to Cox certain documents related to a key exhibit underlying Plaintiffs’ showing of direct infringement: A hard drive allegedly containing contemporaneously downloaded files that Plaintiffs claim were infringed by Cox’s subscribers.

“Having concealed the nature of this exhibit, Plaintiffs misrepresented it at trial, where they ultimately obtained a $1 billion verdict,” Cox adds.

Filed Downloaded in 2016?

At the trial, Cox already tried to get more information on the origin of the files on the hard drive. The metadata showed that the drive itself was created in 2016, but witnesses suggested that the infringing files were original.

However, based on evidence from the Charter case, Cox now believes that the files were not downloaded and verified when the infringement notices were sent, but years later.

“[D]iscovery in this action has revealed a strong likelihood that Plaintiffs in Cox concealed materials and information that would have demonstrated that all the files on the hard drive were downloaded in 2016 — and not as contemporaneous verification of alleged infringement before the notices were sent between 2012 and 2014.”

Cox is now asking the court for permission to intervene in the Charter lawsuit so it can obtain the required information, which is not publicly available.

Vacate the $1 Billion Verdict

The alleged misrepresentations harmed Cox’s trial defense, the ISP argues. The company plans to address this in a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(3), where it will ask the court to vacate the $1 billion damages award.

Rule 60 motions can be used in court to correct clear mistakes and omissions. In this case, Cox believes that the hard drive misrepresentations are sufficient to throw out the entire verdict.

A copy of Cox’s motion to intervene in the Charter cases is available here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Honor Pad V7 is a mid-range tablet with a 90 Hz display and pen support

The Honor Pad V7 is an Android tablet with a 10.4 inch, 2000 x 1200 pixel LCD display featuring a 90 Hz refresh rate, a MediaTek Kompanio 900T processor, and up to 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage. Honor is launching the tablet this week in China, where it’s up for pre-order for about […]

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The Honor Pad V7 is an Android tablet with a 10.4 inch, 2000 x 1200 pixel LCD display featuring a 90 Hz refresh rate, a MediaTek Kompanio 900T processor, and up to 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage.

Honor is launching the tablet this week in China, where it’s up for pre-order for about $310 and up. The company is also offering optional accessories including a pressure-sensitive pen and a keyboard.

Honor’s latest tablet is less powerful than the Honor Tab V7 Pro that launched last month – that model has a MediaTek Kompanio 1300T processor, a 2560 x 1600 pixel display with a 120 Hz refresh rate, and support for up to 256GB of storage. But prices for that model range from about $400 for a WiFi-only model with 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage to $571 for an 8GB/256GB model with 5G support.

The Honor Pad V7, meanwhile, comes in three pricing options:

  • 6GB/128GB WiFi-only for about $310
  • 8GB/128GB WiFi-only for about $355
  • 6GB/128GB WiFi + 5G for about $400

Each model has a microSD card reader for removable storage, support for WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.1, quad speakers, and a 13MP rear camera and 8MP front-facing camera. It’s powered by a 7250 mAh battery and supports up to 22.5 watt fast charging.

Honor is a Chinese smartphone, tablet, and laptop maker that used to be a sub-brand for Huawei until that company sold off its Honor division late last year in an effort to avoid some of the US sanctions that have hit Huawei and restricted its access to technologies originating in the US including microprocessors and even Google’s Android operating system (or at least the parts that aren’t open source, like the Google Play Store).

And while it’s unlikely that the Honor Tab V7 will be widely available in North America anytime soon, the tablet does ship with Android 11 software and Honor’s MagicUI 5.0 user interface.

via MySmartPrice and GizmoChina

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