Tag Archives: avoided

Helldivers 2 avoided PvP to reduce toxicity, so of course some players are being toxic anyway by fighting over shared resources and team-killing to steal weapons – Gamesradar

  1. Helldivers 2 avoided PvP to reduce toxicity, so of course some players are being toxic anyway by fighting over shared resources and team-killing to steal weapons Gamesradar
  2. Helldivers 2 Players Are Kicking Teammates Who Don’t Have ‘Meta’ Loadouts IGN
  3. Helldivers 2 Should Be Enjoyed, Not Optimized Or Farmed Kotaku
  4. Helldivers 2’s first big war isn’t suffering because of tough evac missions or medal-hoarding farmers—it’s the pass-or-fail reward structure that’s spoiling the fun PC Gamer
  5. As Helldivers 2 players lose ground to Automatons, attention turns to the XP farmers not helping: “We are handing bots planets like candy on Halloween” Gamesradar

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“I Hopefully Am Suffering More Than The Team”: How TMNT Director Avoided Crunch Conditions For Mutant Mayhem Animators – Screen Rant

  1. “I Hopefully Am Suffering More Than The Team”: How TMNT Director Avoided Crunch Conditions For Mutant Mayhem Animators Screen Rant
  2. Every ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’ Movie Ranked, Including ‘Mutant Mayhem’ Hollywood Reporter
  3. The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’ CGI genitals should not be forgotten Polygon
  4. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem Does This Better Than Most Superhero Movies Collider
  5. Cowabunga! ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem’ is franchise’s best ‘since their ’90’s heyday’ Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Chris Evans Explains Why He Has “Avoided Hosting ‘SNL’ Like the Plague for Years Now” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Chris Evans Explains Why He Has “Avoided Hosting ‘SNL’ Like the Plague for Years Now” Hollywood Reporter
  2. Captain America Actor Chris Evans Reveals Why He Refuses to Host Saturday Night Live ComicBook.com
  3. Captain America Himself Is Scared of Hosting ‘Saturday Night Live’ We Got This Covered
  4. Chris Evans Reveals the Reason Why He’s Never Hosted ‘SNL’ Just Jared
  5. Chris Evans Says He’s ‘Avoided Hosting ‘SNL’ Like The Plague For Years’: ‘It’s Terrifying To Me’ ETCanada.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Here’s Why Will Smith Avoided Watching Chris Rock’s Netflix Special – Okayplayer

  1. Here’s Why Will Smith Avoided Watching Chris Rock’s Netflix Special Okayplayer
  2. How Will Smith Feels About Chris Rock’s Comedy Special (Source) Entertainment Tonight
  3. Jada Pinkett Smith’s affair partner thought Chris Rock’s jokes were ‘funny’ New York Post
  4. Following Chris Rock’s Netflix Special, Mutual Friend Explains Why He And Will Smith Might Finally Be Able To Bury The Hatchet CinemaBlend
  5. ‘Drink Champs’ Denies Chris Rock’s Claim Of Calling Will Smith A “Bi**h” Yahoo Entertainment
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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How Apple Has So Far Avoided Layoffs: Lean Hiring, No Free Lunches

No company is certain to avoid significant cutbacks in an economic environment as volatile as the current one, and Apple isn’t immune to the business challenges that have hit other tech giants. It is expected next month to report its first quarterly sales decline in more than three years. Apple has also slowed hiring in some areas.

But the iPhone maker has been better positioned than many rivals to date in part because it added employees at a much slower clip than those companies during the pandemic. It also tends to run lean, with limited employee perks and businesses focused on hardware products and sales that have so far largely dodged the economic downturn, investors say.

An Apple spokesman declined to comment.

From its fiscal year-end in September 2019 to September 2022, Apple’s workforce grew by about 20% to approximately 164,000 full-time employees. Meanwhile, over roughly the same period, the employee count at Amazon doubled, Microsoft’s rose 53%, Google parent

Alphabet Inc.’s

increased 57% and Facebook owner Meta’s ballooned 94%.

Apple has about 65,000 retail employees working in more than 500 stores who make up roughly 40% of the company’s total workforce.

On Friday, Alphabet became the latest tech company to announce widespread layoffs, with a plan to eliminate roughly 12,000 jobs, the company’s largest-ever round of job cuts.

Alphabet’s cut follows a wave of large layoffs at Amazon, Microsoft and Meta. The tech industry has seen more than 200,000 layoffs since the start of 2022, according to Layoffs.fyi, a website that tracks cuts in the sector as they surface in media reports and company releases.

The last big round of layoffs at Apple happened way back in 1997, when co-founder

Steve Jobs

returned to the company, which then cut costs by firing 4,100 employees.

So far, Apple’s core business has shown itself to be resilient against broader downturns in the market. The other four tech giants have suffered amid slowdowns in digital advertising, e-commerce and PCs. In its September quarter, Apple reported that sales at its most important business—the iPhone—advanced 9.7% from the previous year to $42.6 billion, surpassing analyst estimates.

After a period of aggressive hiring to meet heightened demand for online services during the pandemic, tech companies are now laying off many of those workers. And tech bosses are saying “mea culpa” for the miscalculation. WSJ reporter Dana Mattioli joins host Zoe Thomas to talk through the shift and what it all means for the tech sector going forward.

Apple may face a rougher December quarter, which it is scheduled to report on Feb. 2, as the company encountered manufacturing challenges in China, where strict zero-Covid policies damped much economic activity. Many analysts expect that demand hasn’t subsided for its iPhones and as the company continues to ramp back up manufacturing, demand is anticipated to move to the March quarter.

The company’s business model hasn’t been totally immune to broader slowdowns. Revenue from its services business continued to slow, growing 5% annually to $19.2 billion in the September quarter, shy of the gains posted in recent quarters.

Tom Forte,

senior research analyst at investment bank D.A. Davidson & Co., said he expects Apple to reduce head count, but it might do that quietly through employee attrition—by not replacing workers who leave. The company could move in the direction of making other cuts or adjustments to perks that are common in Silicon Valley. Apple doesn’t offer free lunches to employees on its corporate campus, unlike other big tech companies such as Google and Meta.

Some of the tech giants cutting jobs have spent heavily on projects that are unlikely to turn into strong businesses anytime soon, said Daniel Morgan, a senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust Co., which counts Apple among its largest holdings. “Both Meta and Google are terribly guilty of that,” he said.

Meta has been pouring billions of dollars into its Reality Labs for its new ambitions in the so-called metaverse. Meta Chief Executive

Mark Zuckerberg

has defended the company’s spending on Reality Labs, suggesting that virtual reality will become an important technological platform.

After announcing the layoffs, Alphabet Chief Executive

Sundar Pichai

said the company had seen dramatic periods of growth during the past two years. “To match and fuel that growth, we hired for a different economic reality than the one we face today,” he wrote in a message to employees on Friday.

Apple also is working on risky future bets, such as an augmented-reality headset due out later this year and a car project whose release date is uncertain, but at a more measured pace.

Write to Aaron Tilley at aaron.tilley@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Biden ‘confident’ rail strike will be avoided though congressional hurdles loom



CNN
 — 

President Joe Biden said Tuesday he is “confident” a rail strike will be avoided while meeting with the top four congressional leaders, though any one senator could slow down the process of approving legislation that would avert such a strike – and at least one said he was planning to do so.

“I asked the four top leaders in Congress to ask whether they’d be willing to come in and talk about what we’re gonna do between now and Christmas in terms of legislation and there’s a lot to do, including resolving the train strike,” Biden said while meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

“It’s not an easy call but I think we have to do it,” Biden said. “The economy is at risk.”

On Monday, Biden called on Congress to “immediately” pass legislation to avert a railroad shutdown by officially adopting a September tentative agreement approved by labor and management leaders. Rank-and-file members of four unions have rejected the agreement and are prepared to go on a railroad strike on December 9 without either a new labor agreement or congressional action.

Biden, a longtime labor ally, along with Labor Secretary Marty Walsh and other administration officials helped unions and management reach a tentative deal averting a freight railroad strike in September.

A railroad strike could clog supply chains and lead to a spike in prices on necessities such as gasoline and food – dampening an economy that many fear is heading toward a recession. It could also cost could cost the US economy $1 billion in its first week alone, according to an analysis from the Anderson Economic Group.

Michael Baldwin, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, one of the four unions whose members voted no on the deal, said Tuesday that Biden has let the union and its members down.

“We’re trying to address an issue here of sick time. It’s very important,” Michael Baldwin, the president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, told CNN’s Jim Sciutto on “Newsroom.” “This action prevents us from reaching the end of our process. It takes away the strength and the abilities that we have to force bargaining or force the railroads into a situation to actually do the right thing.”

Pelosi said Tuesday the chamber could vote as soon as Wednesday on legislation to adopt the September tentative agreement and avert a possible rail strike. Once passed, Senate action could occur later this week or next, several Senate sources have told CNN. The Senate is expected to have the votes to break a filibuster on the bill to avert a potential railway strike, the Senate sources also said. There are likely to be at least 10 Republicans who will vote with most Senate Democrats to overcome a 60-vote threshold.

After the meeting, McConnell expressed openness to backing the legislation, and told reporters “We’re gonna need to pass a bill.”

But any one senator can slow the process down as timing agreements to move along legislation typically require unanimous consent from all 100 members of the chamber. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, an independent who caucuses with Democrats, criticized the proposed deal to avert a rail strike on Tuesday. Sanders reiterated his threat to slow down rail measure unless he gets sick-leave amendment vote in a tweet Tuesday afternoon.

“At a time of record profits in the rail industry, it’s unacceptable that rail workers have ZERO guaranteed paid sick days. It’s my intention to block consideration of the rail legislation until a roll call vote occurs on guaranteeing 7 paid sick days to rail workers in America,” he wrote.

Any one member can delay a quick vote and potentially put off final action until after the December 9 deadline to avert a strike.

Some Republicans are still skeptical of congressional intervention, arguing they would rather the issue be dealt with administratively.

Maine Sen. Susan Collins, a frequent swing vote, told CNN that the measure “deserves careful consideration.”

“I’m going to wait and listen to the debate at lunch today before reaching any kind of conclusion,” she said.

Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst, a member of GOP leadership, also told CNN she was still evaluating the plan.

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Nikolas Cruz has avoided the death penalty. Here’s what’s next for him now



CNN
 — 

Here’s what we know: Nikolas Cruz, the now 24-year-old who admitted to killing 17 people in Florida’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in February 2018, has avoided the death penalty.

A jury on Thursday recommended he be sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, a decision which enraged many of the victims’ families who said Cruz being allowed to live is not justice served.

“Life in prison is NOT punishment! That is exactly what he wanted,” Max Schachter, the father of 14-year-old Alex Schachter, who was murdered in the massacre, wrote on Twitter. He said the decision means Cruz will likely be protected while in custody, be able to “read, draw, receive phone calls & mail,” while “his 17 victims suffered in fear” before he killed them.

These are the Parkland school shooting victims

There is still much we do not know about what the rest of Cruz’s life in prison will look like, most of which will likely be sorted out once he is formally sentenced early next month.

But here is what could come next:

‘Ruling is another gut punch’: Father of Parkland victim speaks after Cruz jury recommendation

The jury’s recommendation Thursday is just that: a recommendation and not an official sentence. Since Thursday, jurors have come forward about what they described were intense deliberations, and one juror reported feeling threatened; an allegation the local sheriff’s office is now investigating.

Broward Circuit Judge Elizabeth Scherer is expected to formally sentence Cruz November 1 at 9 a.m., but under Florida law, the judge cannot depart from the jury’s recommendation of life in prison.

Victims and family members are expected to speak before the sentence is delivered.

But as far as the sentence itself, the jury’s recommendation is final, Broward County Public Defender Gordon Weekes said in a Thursday news conference, adding in the state, “victims have a constitutional right to be heard at every stage of the proceeding.”

“The court is going to respect that right and give them an opportunity to be heard. And we appreciate that, and we recognize that, and that should be followed,” Weekes said. “However, we have to also recognize the jurors in the case sat through a number of days of very, very difficult, traumatic evidence, and they heard it all, and they weighed it all, and they rendered a verdict. We have to respect that.”

Cruz also has the right to make a statement in the sentencing if he chooses to, according to Janet Johnson, a Florida criminal defense attorney.

Cruz, who has been in jail in Broward County since 2018, also has been sentenced to 25 years in state prison after he pleaded guilty to attacking a jail officer in November of that year.

He will likely remain in county custody for a couple weeks after his sentence is handed down before he is then placed in the custody of Florida’s Department of Corrections and transported to one of several reception centers in the state.

On Thursday, Weekes said Cruz will likely be taken to the South Florida Reception Center.

He will spend several weeks at the reception center “getting physical examinations, mental health examinations,” Johnson said. “They’ll look at his record, they’ll look at the level of crime that he’s convicted of, which is obviously the highest, and they’ll recommend a facility somewhere in the state.”

The chosen facility is determined by “reviewing the seriousness of (the inmate’s) offenses, length of sentence, time remaining to serve, prior criminal record, escape history, prison adjustment, and other factors,” according to the Florida Department of Corrections website.

“The most serious offenders with the longest sentences and those least likely to adjust to institutional life are placed in more secure facilities,” the corrections department website noted. Based on those evaluations, the individual is then transferred to the facility deemed most appropriate.

Because Cruz is a high-risk offender, he will likely be placed in a prison with other high-profile or “very dangerous criminals,” Johnson said.

“But he wouldn’t be isolated, which of course, is a real threat for him because there may be people who want to do ‘prison justice,’ who didn’t feel that the sentence he got in court was enough,” Johnson added.

According to a corrections department handbook, there are several custody classifications of inmates, among them, close custody for inmates who “must be maintained within an armed perimeter or under direct, armed supervision when outside of a secure perimeter.”

The corrections department did not respond to CNN’s questions regarding what kind of custody Cruz may be placed under.

Lead defense attorney Melisa McNeill also hinted about the dangers Cruz will face in prison during her closing arguments in the death penalty trial, saying he will “wait to die” in a facility, “either by natural causes or whatever else could possibly happen to him while he’s in prison.”

And in a news conference following the jury’s recommendation, Linda Beigel Schulman, the mother of geography teacher Scott Beigel, who was killed in the high school, said Cruz will “have to look over his shoulder (in prison) every minute of the rest of his life.”

“I hope he has the fear in him, every second of his life, just the way he gave that fear to every one of our loved ones, who he murdered,” she said. “He should live in that fear, and he should be afraid every second of the day of his life.”

Parents of Parkland victims, including Schachter, have pointed to parts of life Cruz will still get to experience while in prison their children were robbed of.

It includes receiving mail and seeing visitors, which he will likely have the right to do, Johnson said. He could also have a tablet through which he will be able to email and text others, Johnson added.

The department of corrections website pointed out inmates and their families are allowed to communicate through “interactive, stationary kiosks available in general population housing units, as well as tablets.” Those services are available in all the major correctional institutions in Florida, according to the site.

“And you can see the argument (of the victims’) families saying, ‘We don’t get to do that,’ ” Johnson added. “And it’s understandable.”

The corrections department also did not answer CNN’s question about what kind of mental health treatment Cruz may receive while in prison.

During the trial, the Broward County Sheriff’s Office released more than 30 pages of writings and drawings by Cruz which revealed disturbing thoughts he’s had while in custody, focusing on guns, blood and death. On one page, Cruz wrote: “All I want is to go to death row. I don’t want life. Please help me go to death row.” On another, he addressed his family, telling them he is sad and is hoping to die of a heart attack by taking painkillers and through extreme eating.

Also while in jail, Cruz drew pictures of bullets, guns and people being shot. He wrote he “never wanted to be alive,” and he hopes he dies and never wakes up and “my life is painful, always has always will” be.

His defense team argued Cruz is a “brain-damaged, mentally ill” individual who, among other conditions, suffered from fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, stemming from his mother’s substance and alcohol abuse during pregnancy, McNeill said during closing arguments.

And Cruz appeared to control his behavior in the courtroom, McNeill said, because “he’s medicated, and he’s under psychiatric care. He’s being treated by the jail psychologist.”

Cruz will receive a psychiatric examination when he arrives at the reception center, Johnson said, which will help determine his diagnosis and what medication he may require.



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Melatonin should be avoided in kids unless prescribed: experts

The American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) is urging parents to consult a health care professional before starting their child on melatonin, according to a recent health advisory. 

“While melatonin can be useful in treating certain sleep-wake disorders, like jet lag, there is much less evidence it can help healthy children or adults fall asleep faster,” said Dr. M. Adeel Rishi, vice chair of the AASM Public Safety Committee and a pulmonology, sleep medicine and critical care specialist at Indiana University Health Physicians, in a press release.  

“Instead of turning to melatonin, parents should work on encouraging their children to develop good sleep habits,” he added.

Those sleep habits include “setting a regular bedtime and wake time, having a bedtime routine and limiting screen time as bedtime approaches.”

Our bodies naturally produce the hormone melatonin to regulate our sleep, per the health advisory. 

It is available as an over-the-counter medication and often advertised as a sleep aid — but there “is little evidence that taking it as a supplement is effective in treating insomnia in healthy children,” according to the sleep academy, which is headquartered in Darien, Ill. 

Melatonin has less oversight because it’s regulated by the Food and Drug Administration as a “dietary supplement” — and research has found that the melatonin content in supplements is not uniform, according to the press release.

One 2017 Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine study examined the melatonin content in approximately 30 supplements. It found that over 71% of supplements did not meet the label claims.

The study found the most significant variability in melatonin content in chewable tablets, which is the form mostly likely used in children.

This study “found that the actual content in these supplements was very inaccurate,” said Dr. Baljinder S. Sidhu, a pulmonologist and sleep specialist who is the co-owner of Pacific Coast Critical Care Group in Southern California.

“While this may not be a big deal for adults, this could have a significant impact on small children,” he said.

He advises the use of melatonin with caution.

“One of the more surprising facts I share with my patients is that over-the-counter melatonin is not closely regulated,” Sidhu added.

Pediatric melatonin ingestions reported annually to U.S. poison control centers increased by 530% during 2012–2021, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Instead of giving their children melatonin, parents should work on encouraging good sleep habits, said one specialist.
Shutterstock

“The availability of melatonin as gummies or chewable tablets makes it more tempting to give to children and more likely for them to overdose,” added Rishi in the press release. 

“Often, behavioral interventions other than medication are successful in addressing insomnia in children,” he added.

The American Academy of Sleep Medicine shares the following important tips.

1. Melatonin should be kept out of reach of children.

2. Parents should discuss the topic with a health care professional before starting the medication.

3. Parents need to know that “many sleep problems can be better managed with a change in schedules, habits or behaviors rather than taking melatonin.”

If parents are going to give their child melatonin, the sleep academy recommends verifying that the product has the USP Verified Mark for safety reasons.

“Melatonin is never a first-line treatment in children,” Sidhu told Fox News Digital.

“Insomnia is not uncommon in children as they develop after the age of 2,” he added.

“This resistance to bedtime can be difficult to manage and even has a diagnosis we call ‘limit-setting insomnia,’ which can be generally managed with bedtime routines.”

He reminds people that while melatonin can be used for certain sleep disorders, such as ADHD and other chronic health conditions that affect sleep as well as autism, it should always be recommended and managed by a physician first. 

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Report: Trey Lance avoided compound fracture of ankle

Getty Images

Sunday was a rough day for 49ers quarterback Trey Lance as he suffered a season-ending ankle injury in the first quarter of their 27-7 win over the Seahawks.

49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan announced that Lance would miss the rest of the year after breaking his ankle on a running play. The injury was reminiscent of the one that Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott suffered in the 2020 season, but Lance avoided one aspect of Prescott’s injury.

Tom Pelissero of NFL Media reports that Lance did not suffer a compound fracture on Sunday. That doesn’t change his outlook in terms of returning this season, but it should allow him to avoid some potential complications during his recovery.

That recovery will begin in earnest after Monday’s surgery on the ankle. Jimmy Garoppolo will be quarterbacking the 49ers now that Lance is out of commission.



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Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Todd Bowles — LT Donovan Smith, WR Chris Godwin avoided serious injuries

ARLINGTON, Texas — Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Todd Bowles said Monday that left tackle Donovan Smith has a hyperextended right elbow and his availability will be dictated by his pain tolerance level.

Bowles also said he does not believe Pro Bowl wide receiver Chris Godwin’s hamstring injury — which he suffered in the second quarter — is “as serious as we thought it was.”

It was Godwin’s first game back since recovering from a torn ACL and MCL, which he suffered Dec. 19 last season, and undergoing surgery Jan. 3.

“It all depends on how his treatment goes and how he heals,” Bowles said of Godwin. “But hopefully we’ll have him back sooner rather than later.”

Smith left the 19-3 Bucs victory over the Dallas Cowboys in the second quarter following a Micah Parsons sack and did not return.

“He’s pretty sore right now,” Bowles said of Smith, the Bucs’ starting left tackle in his eighth season. “We’ll monitor him during the week.”

Bowles said it is possible that Smith can play this week.

“We’ll see how he feels, yeah,” Bowles said.

The Bucs face the Saints on the road this week and have not had a regular-season win at New Orleans since Sept. 9, 2018.

The Saints’ defense has largely dictated the outcome of recent games against the Bucs, with New Orleans delivering a 9-0 shutout in Tampa last season.

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