Tag Archives: recommends

NVIDIA recommends Intel Raptor Lake CPU users to consult Intel in case of stability issues – VideoCardz.com

  1. NVIDIA recommends Intel Raptor Lake CPU users to consult Intel in case of stability issues VideoCardz.com
  2. Nvidia blames Intel for GPU VRAM errors, tells GeForce gamers experiencing 13th or 14th Gen CPU instability to contact Intel support Tom’s Hardware
  3. Intel investigating games crashing on 13th and 14th Gen Core i9 processors The Verge
  4. Nvidia issues important message to GeForce GPU and Intel CPU owners PCGamesN
  5. Intel’s 13th & 14th Gen CPU “Gaming Stability” Is Being Investigated As 10+ Chips Being Returned In Korea Each Day Wccftech

Read original article here

Stellar Blade Director Recommends Players Wear Clothes, Where Possible – Push Square

  1. Stellar Blade Director Recommends Players Wear Clothes, Where Possible Push Square
  2. Stellar Blade director recommends players make Eve wear actual clothes “as much as possible” in the action-RPG, instead of the NSFW ‘Skin Suit’ Gamesradar
  3. Stellar Blade Dev: “Fetishistic Elements Can Have Positive Effect” 80.lv
  4. IGN Apologizes To ‘Stellar Blade’ Developer Shift Up Corporation For Describing Game’s Protagonist Eve As “A Doll Sexualized By Someone You Would Think Has Never Seen A Woman” That Park Place
  5. IGN Offers Official Apology After French Branch Insults ‘Stellar Blade’ Director For Choosing To Create Attractive Female Protagonist Bounding Into Comics

Read original article here

Stellar Blade director recommends players make Eve wear actual clothes “as much as possible” in the action-RPG, instead of the NSFW ‘Skin Suit’ – Gamesradar

  1. Stellar Blade director recommends players make Eve wear actual clothes “as much as possible” in the action-RPG, instead of the NSFW ‘Skin Suit’ Gamesradar
  2. Stellar Blade Dev: “Fetishistic Elements Can Have Positive Effect” 80.lv
  3. IGN Apologizes To ‘Stellar Blade’ Developer Shift Up Corporation For Describing Game’s Protagonist Eve As “A Doll Sexualized By Someone You Would Think Has Never Seen A Woman” That Park Place
  4. “I don’t want to see something normal”: Stellar Blade Director Hyung-Tae Kim Made Eve Unrealistically Beautiful As He Wants To Play As Someone “Better looking than myself” imdb
  5. Stellar Blade Director Recommends Players Wear Clothes, Where Possible Push Square

Read original article here

ConcernedApe recommends a new save file for Stardew Valley 1.6 “to see everything in context” – Gamesradar

  1. ConcernedApe recommends a new save file for Stardew Valley 1.6 “to see everything in context” Gamesradar
  2. Stardew Valley creator says update 1.6 is finished as far as “major new content” goes, “absolutely” coming this year, and “likely” PC first Gamesradar
  3. Stardew Valley creator Eric Barone says he’s ‘done adding major new content’ to the 1.6 update, promises it will ‘absolutely’ be out this year PC Gamer
  4. Starfield Valley Update 1.6 Is “Larger In Scope” Than Originally Planned TheGamer
  5. Stardew Valley’s 1.6 update now in the “bug-fixing and polishing phase” Rock Paper Shotgun

Read original article here

CHOP vaccination expert recommends MMR vaccine after measles outbreak in Philadelphia – The Philadelphia Inquirer

  1. CHOP vaccination expert recommends MMR vaccine after measles outbreak in Philadelphia The Philadelphia Inquirer
  2. Measles outbreak involving cases at a Philadelphia day care center expands, health officials say CNN
  3. Measles Outbreak In Philadelphia Suggests Growing Problem Of Vaccine Hesitancy Forbes
  4. 8 confirmed cases of measles. Philly health officials urge residents to ‘do their part’ and get vaccinated NBC 10 Philadelphia
  5. In Philadelphia’s measles outbreak, a reminder of the importance of vaccines | Editorial The Philadelphia Inquirer

Read original article here

American Academy of Pediatrics Recommends Medication to Prevent RSV Be Given to All Infants and Urges Equitable Access – American Academy of Pediatrics

  1. American Academy of Pediatrics Recommends Medication to Prevent RSV Be Given to All Infants and Urges Equitable Access American Academy of Pediatrics
  2. AAP recommends all infants receive nirsevimab to fight RSV Contemporary Pediatrics
  3. Local pharmacies roll out newly FDA-approved RSV vaccine as early seasonal outbreak looms WJAC Johnstown
  4. What’s the difference between a vaccine and passive immunity from monoclonal antibodies? Dayton Daily News
  5. Getting Answers: CDC recommends new RSV vaccine approved by FDA Western Mass News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Biden-Harris Administration recommends $562 million investment to make communities resilient to climate impacts as part of Investing in America agenda – National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

  1. Biden-Harris Administration recommends $562 million investment to make communities resilient to climate impacts as part of Investing in America agenda National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  2. VP Kamala Harris in Miami to announce $562 million climate investment CBS Miami
  3. Harris announces over $550 million in recommended funding to ‘make communities resilient to climate impacts’ Fox News
  4. U.S. vice president to visit Miami, announce $562 million climate investment Yahoo News
  5. VP Kamala Harris visits University of Miami to announce $562M for climate resiliency WPLG Local 10
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Health Canada recommends limiting alcohol to just 2 drinks per week | Canada

New alcohol guidelines recommending that Canadians limit themselves to just two drinks a week – and ideally cut alcohol altogether – have prompted intense debate over risk versus enjoyment in a country where the vast majority of adults regularly consume alcohol.

The Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction (CCSA) this week called for a substantial reduction in consumption, warning that seemingly moderate drinking poses a number of serious health risks, including cancer, heart disease and stroke.

The new guidelines, funded by Health Canada, represent a dramatic shift from previous recommendations issued in 2011, when Canadians were told that low-risk consumption meant no more than 10 drinks a week for women and 15 drinks a week for men.

“We wanted to simply to present the evidence to the Canadian public, so they could reflect on their drinking and make informed decisions,” said Peter Butt, a professor of family medicine at the University of Saskatchewan and a member of the panel that drafted the guidelines. “It’s fundamentally based on the right to know.”

In its measurements, the CCSA considers a standard drink to be a 12oz (355ml) serving of 5%-alcohol beer, a 5oz (148ml) glass of 12%-alcohol wine or a shot glass of 40% spirits.

In the UK, the NHS recommends no more than six 6oz glasses of wine or six pints of 4% beer per week – ideally spread across three days or more. Health officials in the United States recommend no more than two drinks per day for men and only one for women.

But Canadian experts say that new research suggests three to six drinks a week should be considered moderate risk for both men and women, and seven or more drinks a week is high risk. In addition to elevated risk of colon and breast cancer, as well as heart disease and strokes, the CCSA also identified both injuries and violence as negative outcomes from drinking alcohol.

“This isn’t about prohibition. This is simply about reducing the amount one drinks,” said Butt.

The guidelines also warn that no amount of alcohol is safe when pregnant or trying to get pregnant. While abstinence during breastfeeding is the safest option, a standard drink occasionally does not significantly elevate risk.

The new guidelines were met with skepticism by some health experts.

“This type of research often marginalizes other considerations of health and wellbeing from alcohol,” said Dan Malleck, a professor of health sciences at Brock University.

“With their job as the Canadian Center on Substance Abuse and Addiction, there’s no space in there for considering there might be benefits. Their job is to find harm.”

Malleck described the guidelines as “irresponsible”, and said they risk creating “anxiety and stress” among Canadians who once saw themselves as moderate drinkers but now occupy a “high-risk” category.

“The research they’re using also ignores the enjoyment and pleasure and stress relief and collegiality associated with alcohol. None of those things are in the calculation whatsoever,” he said. “We aren’t just machines with inputs and output of chemicals or nutrition. We actually exist in a social space. And that has a significant impact on our health.”

Others, however, see the guidelines as an attempt to help Canadians better understand the realities of alcohol consumption.

“Alcohol is a psychoactive drug. Occasional use isn’t going to have really significant effects. Even if you occasionally use something like heroin, you probably wouldn’t see significant effects on your life. But that’s the thing: people aren’t using alcohol occasionally – they’re using it every day,” said Taryn Grieder, a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto.

“The hope is that people will moderate their usage and not drink every day, because we’ve seen research that has shown that alcohol is a carcinogen.”

Grieder says that there are components in alcohol that can be beneficial, but are typically only found in certain drinks.

“A glass of red wine a day might have some benefits. But not beer, not a shot of hard alcohol. I think people took this idea of alcohol possibly having health benefits and really ran with it.”

The CCSA also suggested there could be benefits in mandatory labelling of alcoholic beverages – warning of possible health risks and including guidance on consumption standards.

“It might help change the perception for people, with labels showing cirrhosis of the liver and the possible long-term effects that drinking can have,” said Grieder. “Everyone is different and some people metabolize alcohol differently.

“But these guidelines are for the average person, and the hope is that people will recognize the risks associated with use – and especially long-term use.”

Read original article here

Strength Train​ing for Women​:​ 3 Reasons Dakota Johnson’s Trainer Recommends It

  • Strength training has myriad benefits and is important for women.
  • Celebrity trainer Luke Worthington shared three of the biggest ones with Insider.
  • Resistance training can be empowering, help with fat loss, and reduce osteoporosis risk.

Strength training is hugely beneficial for people of any age, but historically it’s been seen as the reserve of men.

Data suggests that’s gradually changing, with more and more women trying resistance training for both the mental and physical health benefits.

UK-based personal trainer Luke Worthington is a vocal advocate for women lifting weights, having trained high profile women including Dakota Johnson, Winnie Harlow, Jodie Comer, and Naomi Campbell.

Luke Worthington is a personal trainer based in London.

Luke Worthington



The qualified sports scientist, nutritionist, and strength and conditioning specialist has over 20 years’ experience in the health and fitness industry, and on January 9 launches a strength training app called 3×52. It’s designed with women in mind and based on his unique “3 x 52” philosophy.

Worthington told Insider about 85% of his clients over the last 10 years have been women, and they’ve all responded to strength training “very quickly and have found it very empowering.”

“It’s not that cardio isn’t worth it,” personal trainer Anna Victoria added. “Cardio has an important place in a balanced training routine, especially when it comes to our overall health, but there are benefits unique to strength training from which women especially could vastly improve their results and quality of life.”

A post shared by Anna Victoria (@annavictoria)

If you’re still on the fence about adding resistance to your workouts — be that with a barbell, dumbbells, kettlebells, or your bodyweight alone — Worthington shared some of the main reasons women should strength train, from reducing osteoporosis risk to fat loss.

1. Being strong makes daily tasks easier

Simply being stronger makes life easier, Worthington said.

When you are stronger, everyday tasks become easier, be it carrying a suitcase up a flight of stairs, picking up a child, or moving house, both experts said.

“The transfer over to the everyday tasks, being able to do things you couldn’t before, and feeling more empowered in that is key,” Worthington said.

Strength will also make all other activities easier, be it running, tennis, or ballet, and will reduce the injury risk from anything else you might do, Worthington said.

Consistent weight lifting can help people feel strong and capable both in the gym and outside it, Victoria said.

As well as boosted confidence, strength training can improve mental health. A May 2018 study in ​JAMA Psychiatry, for example, found that weight lifting reduced the frequency and severity of depressive symptoms and anxiety. 

2. Resistance training strengthens bones

Strength training can improve bone density and reduce the risk of osteoporosis, which is particularly important as you age and particularly for women who start losing more bone earlier than men, according to research.

Because of this, women are four times more likely than men to have osteoporosis and twice as likely to fracture a bone as they get older, according to a July 2011 study in Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research. 

“When you contract and extend a muscle while lifting weights, it places stress on the tendons that connect it to the bone,” Victoria said. “The bone responds to this tension by getting stronger. And increasing the load over time only makes them stronger (just like muscles), this is called Wolff’s Law.”

Not only can strength training delay the onset of osteoporosis but it can also reverse it, and it’s never too late to start, Worthington said.

He trains a 62-year-old woman who is actually healing holes in her pelvis, and this has been directly attributed to regular strength work. “She’s stronger than she’s ever been,” Worthington said.

3. Strength training helps create a lean, ‘toned’ physique

The concept of toning muscles in a myth, but creating the look many people describe as “toned” means building some muscle and having low enough body fat to see it, and strength training is essential for this.

If you have already built muscle, strength training can help you maintain it, while losing fat by eating in a calorie deficit can reveal muscle definition. If you haven’t built muscle yet, strength training — while eating enough — is the way to do that, Worthington said.

Strength training to build muscle can also help change your body composition, or muscle to fat ratio, by raising your resting metabolic rate, meaning you burn more calories at rest, which helps you lose fat, Victoria said. A June 2015 study in the ​Journal of Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport​ found that resistance training boosted participants’ resting metabolic rate after exercise, when compared to steady-state cardio. 

If you are in a calorie deficit to lose weight but don’t do any resistance training, you will lose both muscle and fat, meaning that although you may get smaller, you are likely to have what’s known as a “skinny fat” physique, Worthington said. To keep the muscle you need to repeatedly use it by strength training, he said.

“While cardio can also help reduce body fat, if you’re comparing them minute-for-minute, resistance training has a greater effect on age-related abdominal fat than cardio does,” Victoria said, citing a December 2014 ​study in the journal Obesity.

Read original article here

Jim Cramer recommends these 5 health care stocks in 2023

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday presented investors with a roster of health care stocks that should be on their shopping lists for next year.

“Wall Street likes profitable companies with consistent results, nice dividends and reasonably valued stocks,” he said, adding, “The biggest [health care] winners were boring, consistent operators with cheap stocks.”

related investing news

Cramer said that health care stocks have stayed relatively steady this year because they tend to be recession-resistant stocks — in other words, they perform well regardless of the state of the economy.

Here are his picks:

Danaher

  • Cramer predicted that the company will have a banner year in 2023 and called it “one of the best-run companies in any industry.”

Pfizer

  • Praising the vaccine maker’s acquisition of Arena Pharmaceuticals, Biohaven and Global Blood Therapeutics, he said that Pfizer stock is a steal.

UnitedHealth Group

  • Cramer said that he likes the “best-of-breed” managed health care stock.

Humana

  • He called the stock a “great turnaround story.”

Edwards Lifesciences

  • Cramer says he likes the stock because the company’s underlying business has been strong, despite the stock being down over 43% for the year. 

Disclaimer; Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Danaher and Humana.

Jim Cramer’s Guide to Investing

Click here to download Jim Cramer’s Guide to Investing at no cost to help you build long-term wealth and invest smarter.

Read original article here