Tag Archives: deployed

At least half of the 30,000 elite paratroopers Russia deployed in Ukraine have been killed or wounded, UK intel says – Yahoo News

  1. At least half of the 30,000 elite paratroopers Russia deployed in Ukraine have been killed or wounded, UK intel says Yahoo News
  2. Russian General’s Leak of Elite Casualties ‘Endorses’ 50% Loss Figure: U.K. Newsweek
  3. Prigozhin-Linked Firms Continue To Sign Hefty State Contracts, Even After Mutiny Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  4. UK Defense Ministry: Nearly half of Russian paratroopers deployed to Ukraine likely killed or wounded Yahoo News
  5. Putin’s Men Inflict Fire Damage On Kyiv; Wipe Out 97 Artillery Units, 11 HIMARS Hindustan Times
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Emergency Slide Accidentally Deployed After Delta Air Lines Boeing 767 Diverted To Salt Lake City – Simple Flying

  1. Emergency Slide Accidentally Deployed After Delta Air Lines Boeing 767 Diverted To Salt Lake City Simple Flying
  2. Delta flight bound for LAX from JFK makes emergency landing moments before plane’s slide deploys, injuring crew member New York Post
  3. Delta plane flying from JFK to LAX lands in Salt Lake City due to maintenance issues ABC4 Utah
  4. Airline employee injured after emergency slide deploys in plane KTLA Los Angeles
  5. Emergency slide on Delta plane heading to LA accidentally deploys after diverting to Salt Lake City KABC-TV
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BSF deployed in Amritsar after twin blasts; Police, Rapid Action Force hold flag march | Watch – Hindustan Times

  1. BSF deployed in Amritsar after twin blasts; Police, Rapid Action Force hold flag march | Watch Hindustan Times
  2. Third blast in a week near India’s Golden Temple, five arrested Al Jazeera English
  3. India: Five arrested in Punjab after third blast near Golden temple within a week | WION News WION
  4. Amritsar blasts: 1.1 kg explosive, radical literature seized from 5 arrested; Punjab Police probing motive, foreign links The Tribune India
  5. Blasts near Golden Temple, Amritsar: Probe on to track explosives’ source The Tribune India
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The Iranian drones deployed by Russia in Ukraine are powered by stolen Western technology, research reveals – CNN

  1. The Iranian drones deployed by Russia in Ukraine are powered by stolen Western technology, research reveals CNN
  2. Ukraine used ‘kamikaze drone’ in Putin ‘assassination attempt’ : Report | Latest News | WION WION
  3. Who’s Behind the Drones Found Near Moscow? Newsweek
  4. Russia’s Lancet UAVs ‘Wreak Havoc’ On Ukrainian Military; Reports Say Four S-300 Launchers, One Anti-Aircraft Gun Destroyed EurAsian Times
  5. Russian military troops, even cooks, are training to shoot down drones Business Insider
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When Russian Troops Got Stuck In a Minefield Near Vuhledar, They Deployed A ‘Flamethrower’ Rocket Launcher. The Ukrainians Blew It Up. – Forbes

  1. When Russian Troops Got Stuck In a Minefield Near Vuhledar, They Deployed A ‘Flamethrower’ Rocket Launcher. The Ukrainians Blew It Up. Forbes
  2. Russian Missiles Hit Ukraine From Black Sea As U.S. Accuses Moscow Of ‘Crimes Against Humanity’ Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  3. New Russian offensive in Ukraine: An expert explains Putin’s emerging offensive Vox.com
  4. What to Know About Russia’s Anticipated Offensive in Ukraine TIME
  5. What Happened in Vuhledar? A Battle Points To Major Russian Military Problems Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Cygnus cargo ship trying to reach ISS with only 1 solar array deployed

A private cargo ship’s trip to the International Space Station (ISS) isn’t going as planned.

Northop Grumman’s robotic Cygnus cargo ship launched toward the ISS this morning (Nov. 7) from Virginia, packed with more than 4.1 tons (3.7 metric tons) of food and other supplies for the astronauts aboard the orbiting lab. 

The launch went smoothly, but Cygnus encountered some trouble after separating from its Antares rocket ride: The freighter has managed to unfurl just one of its two solar arrays. 

Mission team members are working to troubleshoot the glitch, but Cygnus may still be able to power its way to the space station for a scheduled Wednesday (Nov. 9) meetup even if a fix isn’t found.

“Northrop Grumman has reported to NASA that Cygnus has sufficient power to rendezvous with the International Space Station on Wednesday, Nov. 9, to complete its primary mission, and NASA is assessing this and the configuration required for capture and berthing,” NASA officials wrote in a brief update today (opens in new tab).

Related: Facts about the International Space Station

This Cygnus vehicle, named the SS Sally Ride after the first American woman to reach space, will deliver more payload by mass to the ISS than any previous Northop Grumman freighter, if all goes as planned.

SS Sally Ride’s cargo manifest includes 3,608 pounds (1,637 kilograms) of crew supplies, 2,375 pounds (1,077 kg) of vehicle hardware, 1,873 pounds (850 kg) of science gear, 145 pounds (66 kg) of spacewalk equipment and 172 pounds (78 kg) of computer resources, NASA officials said.

Among the many science experiments flying on the cargo ship is a 3D printer known as the BioFabrication Facility (opens in new tab), which is designed to print organ-like tissues in microgravity, and a study that will assess how the space environment affects ovarian cells.

Cygnus is one of three robotic spacecraft that currently ferry cargo to the ISS, along with Russia’s Progress vehicle and SpaceX’s Dragon capsule.

Cygnus and Progress are expendable craft that burn up in Earth’s atmosphere when their time in orbit is up. Dragon, by contrast, returns to Earth in one piece for future reuse.

Mike Wall is the author of “Out There (opens in new tab)” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).



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The best burns Twitter’s lawyers deployed to deny Elon Musk’s claims

So I don’t know entirely what’s in Elon Musk’s counterclaims against Twitter — they are still under seal — but I did get an inkling today, when Twitter dropped its response. It’s spicy! Rather than let Musk get his complaints out first, Twitter went ahead and released a blow-by-blow response, the better with which to dunk on Elon along the way.

I do love this:

The Counterclaims are a made-for-litigation tale that is contradicted by the evidence and common sense

Usually legal documents have arcane, passive-aggressive digs at the other party in them. Twitter’s lawyers, however, came out swinging in their reply to Musk’s counterclaims. Maybe that’s because they know how many people will read these documents; maybe it’s just because they’re interpersonally mean.

We picked our favorite passages in the paperwork, and are showcasing them here for anyone who might be interested.

So you may recall that Musk’s putative reason for bailing on Twitter was because of Twitter’s “false and misleading statements.” Those statements have to do with spam and bot accounts, and were part of what Musk’s lawyers brought to bear during the hearing that established an October trial date.

Twitter briefly walks the court through its process, its paperwork, and its disclosure statements in previous SEC filings. “Musk does not identify any false or misleading statement of fact in this disclosure,” Twitter notes. So where are his weird numbers coming from? Well, they don’t know, because:

Musk is not measuring the same thing as Twitter or even using the same data as Twitter.

Twitter goes on to suggest Musk is deliberately distorting these numbers to “make waves.” And then it says, “Who’s the bot now, hot stuff?”

Musk’s “preliminary expert estimates” are nothing more than the output of running the wrong data through a generic web tool. … Confirming the unreliability of Musk’s conclusion, he relies on an internet application called the “Botometer”— which applies different standards than Twitter does and which earlier this year designated Musk himself as highly likely to be a bot.

I cannot explain quite how funny I find this? Musk’s fancy, secret, “proprietary” analysis of Twitter data was a website called Botometer.

This is, for my money, the funniest part of the document. Here are some things Twitter is willing to admit are true:

Twitter admits that Musk is a Twitter user and has founded several companies.

Twitter admits that its business is complex.

Twitter admits that Musk is a Twitter user and has over 100 million followers

Twitter admits that it detects and removes spam from its platform

But “Twitter otherwise lacks knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief” as to whether Musk believes in free speech and open debate, whether he appreciates Twitter as a town hall, or that Twitter was a natural option for him to invest in. Later, Twitter admits that “Musk Tweets frequently.” It does so once in those words and once like this:

Twitter admits that Musk actively uses Twitter and that many people believe that open discourse is essential to a functioning democracy.

Does Twitter believe open discourse is essential to a functioning democracy? Dunno, but they can’t form beliefs on whether, to Musk, “eliminating free speech is a cure worse than the disease.”

Twitter admits that it did not provide the information in the April 28, 2022 press release to the Musk Parties before the Merger Agreement was signed and before the parties had a non-disclosure agreement in place.

Sorry, this might be the low-key funniest of “Twitter admits,” which is: yeah, we didn’t give him the press release till he signed the NDA. Now, this is in response to Musk complaining that he didn’t get a heads’ up when Twitter announced it miscounted its daily active users for several years. But it does seem pretty sensible to me not to tell anything to people with strong Twitter habits and poor impulse control until they’ve signed NDAs.

Or maybe it’s this one. Musk’s lawyers wrote that because Musk thought due diligence was “costly and inefficent,” so he didn’t do it.

Twitter avers that the Musk Parties declined to undertake any due diligence prior to signing the Merger Agreement.

Man, I mean, sometimes it just stings when your opponent agrees with you, huh?

Twitter admits that on July 8, 2022 Defendants purported to terminate the Merger Agreement, that Twitter subsequently filed litigation seeking specific performance of the Merger Agreement, and that Defendants have filed counterclaims.

Oh yes, good, Twitter admits this case exists.

Okay, so remember the will-he-or-won’t-he dance about Musk joining the board? Twitter does!

Musk abruptly changed his mind about joining Twitter’s board (after first negotiating an offer to join the board, accepting it in writing, and Tweeting that he was “looking forward” to taking the position), notified Mr. Agrawal of the same, and also notified Mr. Agrawal of his intent to make an offer to buy Twitter.

Because Musk didn’t identify any false or misleading statements Twitter made, Twitter has gotten snitty about his withdrawal from the acquisition:

Musk just now invented this new pretext for avoiding the merger agreement, as these supposed inaccuracies are nowhere mentioned in his July 8 letter to Twitter explaining the bases for his purported termination of the merger agreement, nor in any other communication with Twitter since signing the merger agreement. In any event, Twitter never made the disclosures he now asserts are false.

In Musk’s claim, his lawyers write that “Twitter’s primary business is operating a microblogging social media network where users share 280 character messages called ‘tweets.’” Twitter denies this, hilariously.

[Twitter’s] primary product, Twitter, is a global platform for real-time self-expression and conversation, including in the form of Tweets. Twitter further avers that Tweets have a maximum length of 280 characters.

I wonder what “social network” and “microblogging” mean to Twitter’s lawyers?

I don’t think this one needs more context, honestly. I’m just surprised not to see an actual emoji in the filing:

On May 16, 2022, Mr. Musk publicly replied to that Tweet Thread with a poop emoji.

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NATO: Here’s where Alliance forces are deployed across Eastern Europe

NATO has four multinational battalion-size battlegroups in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, which operate on a rotational basis. Each is led by the UK, Canada, Germany or the US, and contains troops from several member countries. The alliance said last month that all four groups are “robust and combat-ready forces.”

Its Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has also said it is prepared to rapidly reinforce that presence further by sending additional forces and capabilities into the area.

And the NATO deployments are supported by US troops.

The US has its own bases in Lithuania and Romania, along with several in Poland. President Joe Biden last week formally approved the deployment of 3,000 more US troops to Poland, Germany and Romania, with 8,500 others personnel on heightened alert.

NATO does not have any troops in Ukraine, and no plans have been announced to send troops from the alliance into the country.

But although Ukraine is not a NATO member, the alliance also provides strategic-level advice to the country and has described the relationship as “one of the most substantial of NATO’s partnerships.”

Other assets at NATO’s disposal in the region include a missile defense system in Romania, designed to “detect, track, engage, and destroy” ballistic missiles in the atmosphere. A similar facility in Poland is set to become operational this year.

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New drugs deployed against Covid

An experimental Covid-19 treatment pill called molnupiravir being developed by Merck & Co Inc and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics LP, is seen in this undated handout photo released by Merck & Co Inc and obtained by Reuters May 17, 2021. [Merck & Co Inc/Handout via Reuters]

Greece is bolstering its defenses against Covid-19 and helping ease the pressure on the national health system with the introduction of home deliveries of antiviral drugs to high-risk patients, which began last Tuesday. These antivirals are prescribed in the early stages of the disease and their purpose is to prevent a serious deterioration.

Patients have shown a strong interest and already in the first three days of the program’s implementation, 384 applications were submitted for the procurement of the drugs. Most of these applications (359) were approved and the drugs were delivered by courier to the patients.

However, experts have been quick to stress that the new drug options can in no way replace the role of vaccines.

“The availability of new treatments should not be a cause for complacency about vaccinations,” Deputy Health Minister Mina Gaga said in comments to Kathimerini.

“The vaccine remains our main weapon in the fight against the pandemic,” she said, adding that “new antiviral drugs, if given in the first few days after diagnosis, can help older people with serious health problems who are at risk for serious illness.” 

Greece currently has 5,700 doses of Molnupiravir antivirals by Merck (MSD) available and will receive an additional 25,000 doses as soon as the drug is approved by European regulators, which is expected within a month.

Eligible patients are those with a positive rapid or molecular test, while the application must be submitted within three days from the time of diagnosis.

It is administered mainly to people over the age of 65, those with a body mass index over 35, transplant recipients, hemodialysis patients, cancer patients and people with chronic kidney or liver disease, diabetes, hypertension, respiratory disease or heart failure, etc.

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Webb Space Telescope’s Mirrors Are Fully Deployed

The Webb Space Telescope completed its complex mirror deployment this week, and the observatory is getting tantalizingly close to completing its journey to L2, where it will orbit the Sun a million miles away from Earth.

Webb is traveling to the second Lagrange point, a position in space that will allow the telescope to use minimal fuel to stay in position. From L2, the telescope will observe the early universe and exoplanets in the infrared and near-infrared wavelengths. The telescope is expected to overhaul our understanding of the universe’s birth and evolution, as it will peer farther back in time than the Hubble Space Telescope, Webb’s predecessor, which was launched in 1990.

Webb rocketed to space on December 25 from French Guiana and has since traversed 860,000 miles. During this journey, the telescope been steadily unfurling; to make it practical to launch, engineers had to fold it up like a caterpillar in a chrysalis. In careful steps, it has unfurled its sunshield and deployed its mirrors, with the latter step fully completed this week.

Webb has 18 primary mirror segments (the primary mirror is the big honeycomb structure that stands perpendicular to the sunshield) and a secondary mirror; the mirror segments are adjustable and had to be individually shifted from their launch configuration to their positions for scientific observations. NASA Administrator Bill Nelson confirmed the completed mirror deployment on Wednesday.

Tiny incremental adjustments to the mirror positions will happen over the next several months to get everything into the right optical alignments for observation, according to the Webb deployment schedule. But now that deployment is done, only one major step remains: the fuel burn to insert the telescope at L2. This is the final fuel burn by Webb during its deployment schedule, though future burns will happen occasionally to correct the telescope’s orbit.

The telescope should be orbiting L2 by January 23, after which it will have five months of commissioning to prepare it for scientific observations. The telescope’s million-mile journey is just the preamble to a brilliant scientific career, which could last some 20 years. 

More: New Video Shows Webb Space Telescope’s Goodbye to Earth



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