Tag Archives: perfectly

Ex-Disney star Gina Carano blasts ‘unforgivable sin in Hollywood’: ‘A person who wouldn’t perfectly conform’ – Fox News

  1. Ex-Disney star Gina Carano blasts ‘unforgivable sin in Hollywood’: ‘A person who wouldn’t perfectly conform’ Fox News
  2. Gina Carano on Getting Sacked From Star Wars and Her Grudge Match With Disney Hollywood Reporter
  3. Gina Carano says ‘The Mandalorian’ star Pedro Pascal tried to help during online backlash: ‘Just put #transrights in your feed.’ Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Gina Carano addresses pronouns controversy and Disney lawsuit Entertainment Weekly News
  5. Gina Carano remains unapologetic about posts that got her fired from ‘Star Wars’ Gold Derby

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Blake Lively reacts perfectly to Ryan Reynolds’ joke wondering where she was during Super Bowl 2024 – New York Post

  1. Blake Lively reacts perfectly to Ryan Reynolds’ joke wondering where she was during Super Bowl 2024 New York Post
  2. Blake Lively Had the Cutest Response to Husband Ryan Reynolds’s Super Bowl Joke Yahoo Life
  3. Blake Lively Responds to Husband Ryan Reynolds’ Super Bowl Joke with ‘Honey, I’m Home’ Photo PEOPLE
  4. ‘Honey, I’m home!’ – Wrexham co-owner Ryan Reynolds ‘finds’ wife Blake Lively after Super Bowl party in Las Vegas alongside Taylor Swift & victorious Kansas City Chiefs Goal.com
  5. Blake Lively Responds to Ryan Reynolds Trolling Her About Super Bowl 2024 BFF Outing – E! Online E! NEWS

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Kelsey Grammer’s BBC interview cut short after being ‘perfectly happy’ to show support for Trump: report – New York Post

  1. Kelsey Grammer’s BBC interview cut short after being ‘perfectly happy’ to show support for Trump: report New York Post
  2. BBC reporter claims interview with Kelsey Grammer was cut short after he stated his support for Trump Fox News
  3. Kelsey Grammer BBC interview reportedly cut short as talk turned to his support of Donald Trump Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Kelsey Grammer’s BBC interview reportedly cut short after voicing his support for Donald Trump Entertainment Weekly News
  5. Kelsey Grammer has interview cut short after saying he’s ‘perfectly happy’ with Trump Toronto Sun

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Woman Perfectly Explains Why Working From Home Is More Productive Than Being In An Office, No Matter What CEOs Say – YourTango

  1. Woman Perfectly Explains Why Working From Home Is More Productive Than Being In An Office, No Matter What CEOs Say YourTango
  2. Young people who work remotely are unlikely to become CEOs: Suzy Welch Business Insider
  3. Gen Z remote workers are ‘probably not going to become CEOs’ and will likely fall behind, says NYU business professor Fortune
  4. Opinion | Work From Home Isn’t Always Good The New York Times
  5. Young people who work remotely are ‘probably not going to become CEOs’ and make tons of money, an NYU business professor says Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Analyst Who Perfectly Called Bitcoin Boom Issues Major Update to Crypto Traders – The Daily Hodl

  1. Analyst Who Perfectly Called Bitcoin Boom Issues Major Update to Crypto Traders The Daily Hodl
  2. Price analysis 4/5: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, ADA, DOGE, MATIC, SOL, DOT, LTC Cointelegraph
  3. Bitcoin And Crypto Are Suddenly Braced For A $1 Billion U.S. Earthquake After Ethereum, BNB, XRP, Cardano, Dogecoin, Polygon And Solana Price Surge Forbes
  4. Top Crypto Strategist Issues Bitcoin Warning, Says Only a Matter of Time Before BTC Witnesses Deep Correction The Daily Hodl
  5. Bitcoin, Ethereum Technical Analysis: BTC Moves Above $28500 as ETH Nears $2000 – Market Updates Bitcoin News Bitcoin News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rare Dinosaur Fossil Found With Perfectly Preserved Final Meal Inside : ScienceAlert

Around 120 million years ago, four-winged dinosaurs roughly the size of crows called Microraptors stalked the ancient woodlands of what is now China.

While researchers have studied several Microraptor specimens, there’s still a lot we don’t know about these feathered bird-like creatures – including what and how they ate.

Now an incredibly rare fossil has revealed the preserved final meal of one individual: and unexpectedly, it was a mammal.

“At first, I couldn’t believe it,” says vertebrate paleontologist Hans Larsson from McGill University in Canada, who found the fossil while looking through samples at museum collections in China.

“There was a tiny rodent-like mammal foot about a centimeter long perfectly preserved inside a Microraptor skeleton.”

Close up photograph of the mammal foot among the ribs of Microraptor. (Hans Larsson/McGill University)

“These finds are the only solid evidence we have about the food consumption of these long extinct animals – and they are exceptionally rare,” Larsson adds.

The first Microraptor fossil was found in Liaoning, China, in 2000. There are three known species, which lived in the early Cretacious period, and the fossil in question belongs to Microraptor zhaoianus.

Illustration of a Microraptor with a rodent. (Hans Larsson)

The Microraptors were among some of the first dinosaurs that were found with fully feathered wings on both its arms and legs – and alongside the famous feathered dinosaur Archaeopteryx, have reinforced theories that propose modern birds are closely related to categories of dinosaur.

While some studies have shown that Microraptors would have been capable of powered flight, it’s generally thought that they mostly used their wings to glide.

Up until now, the small dinosaurs had only been confirmed to eat birds, fish, and lizards, and they were thought to be arboreal hunters that glided down from the trees to capture prey.

Illustration of two Microraptors. (Durbed/Deviant Art/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)

The latest discovery expands on that idea, suggesting they were more likely to be opportunistic eaters that both scavenged and preyed upon a variety of vertebrates.

“We already know of Microraptor specimens preserved with parts of fish, a bird, and a lizard in their bellies. This new find adds a small mammal to their diet, suggesting these dinosaurs were opportunistic and not picky eaters,” says Larsson.

That’s a big deal, because although generalist carnivores are common and important stabilizers in today’s ecosystems – think of foxes and crows – this could very well be the first evidence of a generalist carnivores in a dinosaur ecosystem, Larsson and his team write.

It’s incredibly rare to find dinosaur fossils that preserve their last meal inside their stomach, they add. Out of all the carnivorous dinosaur fossils that have been found, we only know of 20 that contain their last meals.

The latest discovery takes that number to 21.

Understanding more about their diets isn’t just fascinating for those of us trying to imagine how the world looked 120 million years ago, it also provides important clues for the researchers working hard to understand exactly how dinosaurs left the land for the sky, and evolved into the true birds we see today.

“Knowing that Microraptor was a generalist carnivore puts a new perspective on how ancient ecosystems may have worked and a possible insight into the success of these small, feathered dinosaurs,” says Larsson.

The research has been published in The Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

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DART perfectly on track to smash into an asteroid

Six nights of observations by two powerful telescopes confirmed that the orbit of double asteroid Didymos is perfectly aligned for NASA’s asteroid-smashing DART spacecraft to arrive in late September. 

The observations, conducted in early July by the Lowell Discovery Telescope in Arizona and the Magellan Telescope in Chile, confirmed earlier orbit calculations from 2021. The new data comes as the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft is racing to the pair with plans to crash into the smaller rock, dubbed Dimorphos, to test a potential technique to deflect an asteroid that threatens Earth, which Didymos and Dimorphos do not.

“The measurements the team made in early 2021 were critical for making sure that DART arrived at the right place and the right time for its kinetic impact into Dimorphos,” Andy Rivkin, the DART investigation team co-lead at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland, said in a statement. “Confirming those measurements with new observations shows us that we don’t need any course changes and we’re already right on target.”

Related: NASA’s DART asteroid-impact mission explained in pictures

Didymos and its moon Dimorphos will make their closest approach to Earth in years in late September, passing at a distance of about 6.7 million miles (10.8 million kilometers) from the planet. During this time, on Sept. 26, the DART spacecraft will slam into the 560-foot-wide (170 meters) Dimorphos in an attempt to alter its orbit around the 0.5-mile-wide (780 m) Didymos. The experiment, the first ever attempt to change an orbit of an asteroid, might pave the way for a future planetary defense mission if an asteroid were ever to threaten Earth. 

Scientists need the detailed orbital parameters of the two space rocks not just to reliably guide DART to its target. After the impact, astronomers all over the world will measure the asteroids’ orbits again, to see how the orbit of Dimorphos sped up following the collision. The alteration might be rather minute and therefore extremely precise measurements of the initial configuration are required. 

“The before-and-after nature of this experiment requires exquisite knowledge of the asteroid system before we do anything to it,” Nick Moskovitz, an astronomer with Lowell Observatory in Arizona and co-lead of the July observation campaign, said in the statement. “We don’t want to, at the last minute, say, ‘Oh, here’s something we hadn’t thought about or phenomena we hadn’t considered.’ We want to be sure that any change we see is entirely due to what DART did.”

Apart from the obvious forces, such as the gravitational pulls of larger bodies, asteroid orbits can be influenced by more subtle phenomena, such as the pressure of solar radiation, the scientists said in the statement.

The orbit of Dimorphos around Didymos is expected to shorten by several minutes after the impact, as the moon moves closer to the bigger asteroid. By measuring the change with maximum precision, astronomers will be able to glean important information about Dimorphos’ structure and properties of the material it is made of. 

The recent measurement campaign determined the orbital period of Dimorphos around Didymos by observing the change in brightness that takes place when one asteroid passes in front of the other. It was, however, tricky to make enough observations, as skywatching conditions at this time of the year are not favorable due to the short summer nights coinciding with the rainy season in Arizona, the researchers said. Earlier this year, the asteroids were too far away from Earth to be observable.

“It was a tricky time of year to get these observations,” Moskovitz said. “We asked for six half-nights of observation with some expectation that about half of those would be lost to weather, but we only lost one night. We got really lucky. We really have high confidence now that the asteroid system is well understood and we are set up to understand what happens after impact.” 

Follow Tereza Pultarova on Twitter @TerezaPultarova. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook



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PicoStepSeq Is Small But Perfectly Formed

The Paspberry Pi Pico is what you might call the board of the moment, thanks to its combination of affordability, features, and continued availability during the component shortage. We have seen plenty of great projects using it, and the latest to float past is [todbot]’s PicoStepSeq, an extremely compact MIDI sequencer.

All the components are mounted on a PCB, with the sequencer’s eight steps selected by a row of buttons with integrated LEDs. The interface is via an SSD1306 OLED, and there is also a rotary encoder. Software comes courtesy of CircuitPython, and the output is delivered via a 3.5 mm TRS jack. Finally the whole is wrapped in a 3D printed enclosure.

The result is a sequencer that could almost be a product in its own right, and we think anyone whose interests lie in electronic music should find straightforward enough to build. All the files and information required to build your own can be found in the linked repository, and he’s placed a Tweet with a video online which we’ve embedded below the break.

Thanks [Abe Tusk] for the tip.



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Hidden home problem left ‘perfectly healthy’ 37-year-old woman with dementia

An Australian woman has revealed how a secret mold infestation in her Sydney home led her to being diagnosed with dementia and even forgetting her own name.

The constant wet weather that has plagued Australia’s east coast over the past 18 months means many residents are now acutely aware of just how quickly mold can take hold in the home – and how difficult it can be to get rid of.

While most people understand that mold is detrimental to our health, it is hard to know just how much of an impact it can have until you experience it first-hand.

Amie Skilton is one of the 25 percent of the Australian population that has a genetic vulnerability to mold toxins, meaning exposure to mold sets off a huge inflammatory response in her body and can even lead to organ damage.

However, the 42-year-old only found this out five years ago following a horrific experience with a moldy apartment in Manly.

Skilton, then 37, moved into the apartment in 2016 with her now-husband.

Amie Skilton has a genetic vulnerability to mold.
Amie Skilton

At the time she was “perfectly healthy”, having just completed a 9km fun run, been in the US twice to speak at two conferences and delivering 39 keynote addresses in the six months prior to moving in.

“My brain was fine and my body was fine,” Skilton, who works as a naturopath and nutritionist, told news.com.au.

What she and her partner didn’t know was that the waterproofing in the shower was messed up during a recent renovation and, as a result, water was leaking under the carpet and through the apartment every time it was used.

“I started getting sick, noticeably sick, about two months in,” she explained.

“It may have taken that long just because it was over summer and it was really sunny, we always had the windows open and we never registered that there was a leak at all.”

The result of the secret mold problem was a “systematic breakdown” of Skilton’s body.

The waterproofing of Amie Skilton’s shower had been damaged during a recent renovation.
Amie Skilton

“The first symptom that I noticed were allergies, chronic allergies, and I put on like 10 kilos out of nowhere,” she said.

“I’m also a nutritionist and literally been the same weight my whole life. I put on 10 kilos in a matter of months and had really bad fatigue.”

Over the course of a few months her brain functions also started to decline.

She had trouble focusing and working and, when she was in the depths of her illness, she was referred to a neurologist who diagnosed her with type three Alzheimer’s disease, also known as inhalational Alzheimer’s.

As it progressed, simple things like leaving the house would become an arduous task because she would forget where her keys were and once she found them an hour later she would have misplaced her phone.

“Some days I couldn’t figure out how to get dressed. I would look at clothes and I just be really confused as to like how to put them on,” she said.

Skilton had a Vespa that she would ride down to the local shops, but while she was out she would forget where she parked and when she finally found her bike the keys would be in the ignition.

But the scariest symptom she had was the day she couldn’t recall her own name.

“I went fill out a form one day and I was staring at the box that said my name and I was like what is it again? I was staring at it, searching for it,” she said, describing the horror of forgetting something so “deeply personal”.

Amie Skilton’s health problems got so bad she forgot her own name.
Amie Skilton

Because she and the doctors she was seeing didn’t know of the growing mold problem in her house, all the tests they did were coming back fine.

She said mold-related afflictions are one of those conditions that not many health professionals are trained in, meaning most people end up being diagnosed with things like chronic fatigue syndrome or fibromyalgia because they have similar symptoms.

She said normal blood tests aren’t enough to show what is actually wrong.

“This is exactly what happened. Everything came back fine, white blood cell counts fine, red blood cell counts were fine,” Skilton said, adding most doctors brushed her off and told her there was nothing wrong with her.

‘Under the carpet there was all this black mold’

Skilton said there were a few serendipitous things that happened at the same time to make her realize that her home could be the cause of all her problems.

For some people, it can take years to be diagnosed, but for her it happened in a matter of months.

She first started realizing something was really wrong in February 2017 and by May, the penny had dropped.

What first tipped her off was an online post from one of her friends explaining how her husband had the mold gene and they just found a leak in their Bondi apartment that had been causing mold and impacting his health.

This prompted Skilton to recall the strata asking if a plumber could check out their bathroom when they first moved in because there was a leak in the garage below and they believed it could be coming from their apartment.

The plumber came and left and they never heard anything again, so, naturally, she thought everything was fine.

Once she remembered this, Skilton called in a building biologist to do an assessment of the unit who mapped out the leak and discovered the water had gone under the carpet and all the way into their bedroom and study.

“The carpet looked totally fine on top but when she lifted it there was all this black mold. When we finally stripped back our mattress cover the mattress was green,” she said.

When she confronted the real estate, they acknowledged they knew the leak was coming from her apartment and had known for five months.

The owner had reportedly been arguing with strata this whole time about who should have to pay to fix the problem.

“So they left us in there knowingly, which is probably the thing that enrages me the most. They knew and it was poisoning us,” she said.

A building biologist discovered that water was leaking under Amie Skilton’s carpet.
Amie Skilton

Once she knew all of this, Skilton was able to get the right things tested, which are specific inflammatory markers and a particular group of genes encoded by something called the human leukocyte antigen.

Once she got the results for all of those tests back it became “100 percent clear that, not only was the place leaky and moldy, but also my immune system had reacted in the way we know my genetics would dictate in the face of mold.”

Five years on, Skilton is now living in an un-water damaged home in northern NSW. Her brain function has returned to normal, she has her energy back and she is no longer suffering any of the horrific symptoms she was experiencing.

She is now a qualified Mold Testing Technician and aims to use her knowledge to educate others.

The 42-year-old revealed one of her clients had such a horrific reaction to mold exposure over a number of years that she fell into a coma for three years.

The woman, who also has Lyme disease, lived in a home where the bathroom leaked through her bedroom wall for years.

Mold testing eventually found the home contained not only an enormous quantity of mold, but some of the most toxic strains.

She became so sick as a young teenager that her body eventually began shutting down and she fell into a coma.

Skilton was connected with her when the woman was 27, but the nutritionist said at first she believed she was a child because her body had such a severe reaction to the prolonged mold exposure that it impacted her development.

What do you if you think you are reacting to mold toxins

Skilton said there are two main ways you can go about determining if you have a mold problem in your home that is impacting your health.

“You can either get a building biologist to check your home or a certified mold testing technician. All building biologists have done that training but not all mold testing technicians have gone on to do the rest of the building biology stuff,” she explained.

You can also be tested to see if you have the gene that makes you susceptible to mold exposure, which can usually be done for about $100 or $150 depending on the lab.

“You’re going to see a GP, you would want to see one who is an integrative GP or practices functional medicine,” Skilton said.

While some mold cases are more severe than others, there are some things you can do to keep on top of mold growth in your home.

Beaumont Tiles’ Manager for Adhesive and Tools, Trevor Grindley, said silicone in the bathroom is the main place where mold and mildew start to grow.

this can spread into the grout lines, particularly in wet areas like the shower due to grout’s porous composition,” he said.

“If epoxy grout hasn’t been used, most other grout lines would not resist mold or mildew without using an impregnating sealer which can provide deep and lasting protection with an invisible finish.”

Grindley said bathroom additions like underfloor heating can fight mold by drying out your bathroom.

“Ensuring adequate ventilation is another way to fight mold,” said Grindley.

“If you have an exhaust fan or an open window in your bathroom, this can help to prevent mold growth in your bathroom.”

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Never-before-seen crystals found in perfectly preserved meteorite dust

A close-up image of one of the new crystals taken using an electron microscope. (Image credit: Taskaev et al.)

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Researchers have discovered never-before-seen types of crystal hidden in tiny grains of perfectly preserved meteorite dust. The dust was left behind by a massive space rock that exploded over Chelyabinsk, Russia, nine years ago.

On Feb. 15, 2013, an asteroid measuring 59 feet (18 meters) across and weighing 12,125 tons (11,000 metric tons) entered Earth‘s atmosphere at around 41,600 mph (66,950 km/h). Fortunately, the meteor exploded around 14.5 miles (23.3 kilometers) above the city of Chelyabinsk in southern Russia, showering the surrounding area in tiny meteorites and avoiding a colossal single collision with the surface. Experts at the time described the event as a major wake-up call to the dangers asteroids pose to the planet.

The Chelyabinsk meteor explosion was the largest of its kind to occur in Earth’s atmosphere since the 1908 Tunguska event. It exploded with a force 30 times greater than the atomic bomb that rocked Hiroshima, according to NASA (opens in new tab). Video footage (opens in new tab) of the event showed the space rock burning up in a flash of light that was briefly brighter than the sun, before creating a powerful sonic boom that broke glass, damaged buildings and injured around 1,200 people in the city below, according to Live Science’s sister site Space.com (opens in new tab)

In a new study, researchers anlyzed some of the tiny fragments of space rock that were left behind after the meteor exploded, known as meteorite dust. Normally, meteors produce a small amount of dust as they burn up, but the tiny grains are lost to scientists because they are either too small to find, scattered by the wind, fall into water or are contaminated by the environment. However, after the Chelyabinsk meteor exploded, a massive plume of dust hung in the atmosphere for more than four days before eventually raining down on Earth’s surface, according to NASA. And luckily, layers of snow that fell shortly before and after the event trapped and preserved some dust samples until scientists could recover them shortly after. 

Related: Diamond hauled from deep inside Earth holds never-before-seen mineral 

The researchers stumbled upon the new types of crystal while they were examining specks of the dust under a standard microscope. One of these tiny structures, which was only just big enough to see under the microscope, was fortuitously in focus right at the center of one of the slides when one team member peered through the eyepiece. If it had been anywhere else the team would likely have missed it, according to Sci-News (opens in new tab).  

After analyzing the dust with more powerful electron microscopes, the researchers found many more of these crystals and examined them in much greater detail. However, even then, “finding the crystals using an electron microscope was rather challenging due to their small size,” the researchers wrote in their paper, which was published May 7 in The European Physical Journal Plus (opens in new tab)

A computer model showing a massive cloud of dust in the atmosphere leftover from the Chelyabinsk meteor explosion in 2013. (Image credit: NASA Goddard’s Scientific Visualization Studio)

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The new crystals came in two distinct shapes; quasi-spherical, or “almost spherical,” shells and hexagonal rods, both of which were “unique morphological peculiarities,” the researchers wrote in the study. 

Further analysis using X-rays revealed that the crystals were made of layers of graphite — a form of carbon made from overlapping sheets of atoms, commonly used in pencils  — surrounding a central nanocluster at the heart of the crystal. The researchers propose that the most likely candidates for these nanoclusters are buckminsterfullerene (C60), a cage-like ball of carbon atoms, or polyhexacyclooctadecane (C18H12), a molecule made from carbon and hydrogen. 

The team suspects that the crystals formed in the high-temperature and high-pressure conditions created by the meteor breaking apart, although the exact mechanism is still unclear. In the future, the scientists hope to track down other samples of meteorite dust from other space rocks to see if these crystals are a common byproduct of meteor break-ups or are unique to the Chelyabinsk meteor explosion.

Originally published on Live Science.

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