
Neue Star-Wars-Serie: The Bad Batch läuft nächstes Jahr auf Disney+
Die neue Star-Wars-Serie The Bad Batch ist ein Ableger der Animationsserie The Clone Wars und wird exklusiv für Disney+ produziert. (Star Wars, Disney)
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Die neue Star-Wars-Serie The Bad Batch ist ein Ableger der Animationsserie The Clone Wars und wird exklusiv für Disney+ produziert. (Star Wars, Disney)
Seit drei Wochen befindet sich die Familie Rejall aus Gütersloh in Corona-Quarantäne. Ein Testergebnis liegt immer noch nicht vor. Bettina Rejall schildert gegenüber Telepolis ihre Situation
Vier Versuche waren notwendig, bis eine Telepolis-Anfrage beantwortet wurde – irgendwie
Arevo hat mit dem Superstrata Ion ein gedrucktes E-Bike vorgestellt, dessen Rahmen aus thermoplastischem Material besteht. (E-Bike, Technologie)
Jaguar Land Rover wollte den Jaguar XJ als Elektroauto eigentlich Anfang 2021 bauen. Daraus wird nun nichts. (Jaguar Land Rover, Technologie)
Der Autohersteller Fisker will an die Börse gehen und Volkswagens Plattform für Elektroautos für seinen SUV verwenden. (Elektroauto, Technologie)
2-door, 4-door, and Sport variants, 7 trim levels, and a ton of customization.
Preproduction versions of the all-new 2021 Bronco family of rugged, all-4x4 SUVs,. They include (left) Bronco two-door in Cyber Orange Metallic Tri-Coat, Bronco four-door in Shadow Black, and Bronco Sport in Rapid Red Metallic Tinted Clearcoat. [credit: Ford ]
On Monday night, in a coordinated advertising blitz across ABC, ESPN, and the National Geographic channel, as well as on YouTube and social media, Ford debuted its new Bronco SUV. The company is reviving the Bronco nameplate after a hiatus of 24 years, with new two-door, four-door, and Bronco Sport models on offer, all with four-wheel drive designed for off-road ability.
The two- and four-door Broncos comes in seven different trim levels, with another five trims available for the Bronco Sport, and there's a bewildering array of customization available to suit just about every possible taste. Well, almost every—we're sad to report there are no plans to offer the range as a hybrid, plug-in hybrid, or battery electric vehicle. So if you were hoping for some electrification, now's the time to head to the comments instead of reading on.
Whether two-door (starting at $29,995) or four-door ($34,995), the Bronco comes equipped with Ford's 2.3L EcoBoost turbocharged four-cylinder engine as standard. That sends 270hp (201kW) and 310lb-ft (420Nm) to all four wheels via a seven-speed manual Getrag transmission. I mean, we say seven-speed, but it's more like a six-speed plus an extra-low 6.588:1 ratio for use when the blacktop has run out and you want to go rock climbing without getting out of the vehicle.
Part of an ongoing White House battle against health experts.
Enlarge / CDC Director Robert Redfield at an event focused on discussing how to safely reopen schools. (credit: Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)
The United States has seen a dramatic surge in coronavirus infections with less than two months to go before the start of the school year. With little indication that the country has even started to flatten the curve, there are serious questions about which areas of the country are positioned to open schools safely. But, for reasons that remain unclear, the Trump administration has a firm answer: all of them.
Over the past couple weeks, the administration exerted pressure on the Centers for Disease Control, instituted restrictive rules for foreign college students, and had several senior administration figures, including Trump himself, join in the push to have schools open. The push places the administration at odds with public health experts and its own CDC, which advises a far more cautious approach, as revealed in an internal document that leaked over the weekend.
At an event on Monday, President Trump reiterated his administration's message, saying, "Schools should be opened—kids want to go to schools." But, in keeping with his administration's approach to health policy, he followed that up with an evidence-free and likely false statement: "You're losing a lot of lives by keeping things closed."
WHO expert warns school reopening shouldn’t become a “political football.”
Enlarge / American Academy of Pediatrics President Dr. Sally Goza (center) attends a meeting with US President Donald Trump, students, teachers, and administrators about how to safely reopen schools during the novel coronavirus pandemic in the East Room at the White House July 07, 2020, in Washington, DC. (credit: Getty | Chip Somodevilla )
The American Academy of Pediatrics has clarified its stance on school reopening amid the COVID-19 pandemic after the Trump administration repeatedly used the academy’s previous statement to pressure school systems to resume in-person learning in the fall.
The AAP, in a joint statement with three large education organizations, emphasized that school reopening should be informed by science and safety—“not politics.” It also directly responded to a President Trump’s threat of withholding funding from schools who did not reopen, calling the move a “misguided approach.”
The point was echoed Monday by Michael Ryan, an infectious disease expert with the World Health Organization, who implored countries not to let school reopening become a “yet another political football.”
Nicht runde Zahlen seien schrill, so eine Studie, und lenken die Aufmerksamkeit auf die Zahl und genauere Vergleiche, was die Wirksamkeit einer Produktwerbung oder einer gesundheitlichen Empfehlung in Zeiten einer Pandemie beeinträchtigen könnte