Tag Archives: rip

Robert De Niro Says Part Of His Speech Excised At Gotham Awards Then Lets It Rip For ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Tribute – Watch – Deadline

  1. Robert De Niro Says Part Of His Speech Excised At Gotham Awards Then Lets It Rip For ‘Killers Of The Flower Moon’ Tribute – Watch Deadline
  2. Robert De Niro, Upset Trump Comments Were Cut From His Gotham Awards Speech, Lashes Out at the Former President Hollywood Reporter
  3. Robert De Niro says his speech was censored at Gotham Awards — so he read it anyway: ‘How dare they’ Entertainment Weekly News
  4. Robert De Niro accuses Gotham Awards of censoring his speech The A.V. Club
  5. Robert De Niro Says His Gothams Speech Was Censored, Anti-Trump Comments Removed Without Notice Variety
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Wheel of Fortune’ fans rip game show puzzle after another contestant ‘robbed’ of big prize – Fox News

  1. ‘Wheel of Fortune’ fans rip game show puzzle after another contestant ‘robbed’ of big prize Fox News
  2. ‘Wheel of Fortune’ Fans Blast Show After ‘Impossible’ Puzzle Costs Contestant $100,000 TV Insider
  3. ‘Wheel of Fortune’ Fans Roast Final Puzzle That Cost Contestant $100,000: ‘No One Says That’ Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Wheel of Fortune host Pat Sajak’s most bizarre on-set behavior revealed, including wrestling player into c… The US Sun
  5. ‘Wheel Of Fortune’ Fans Complain That This $100,000 Puzzle Was Too Obscure HuffPost
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Where Bill Belichick got the inspiration to rip Tom Brady in Patriots meetings – Pats Pulpit

  1. Where Bill Belichick got the inspiration to rip Tom Brady in Patriots meetings Pats Pulpit
  2. Tom Brady dismisses Bill Belichick Patriots credit debate: ‘Such a stupid conversation’ Fox News
  3. Tom Brady gets emotional as Bill Belichick heaps praise on his former QB: ‘The greatest … it was incredible’ Yahoo Sports
  4. Bill Belichick joined Tom Brady’s podcast for an expansive and emotional conversation Boston.com
  5. Ross Tucker Joins The Show // Halftime Show Performances // Is Tom Brady Actually Done? – 2/7 (Hour 2) 98.5 The Sports Hub
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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RIP Surface Duo—Microsoft reportedly gives up on the weird form factor

Enlarge / The Surface Duo 2 running Android 12L.

Microsoft

Windows Central’s Zac Bowden is the go-to reporter for any Microsoft Surface rumors, and his latest report is that Surface Duo 3 is dead, or at least, a device in the same mold as the Surface Duo 1 and 2 has been canceled. There might someday be a Microsoft device branded “Surface Duo 3,” but the Surface Duo form factor—a dual-screen device with a 360-degree hinge—is dead. The report says Microsoft is now working on a “more traditional foldable design, with a 180-degree hinge, internal foldable screen and external cover display”—so in the same vein as a Galaxy Fold.

The Surface Duo line made for two of the most awkward Android devices on the market. Instead of the tall, skinny displays that Android phones typically use, both Surface Duos used short, fat displays, making the Duo line the widest smartphones on the market. The original Surface Duo was planned to run the canceled “Windows 10x” OS, which would have taken advantage of the unique screen aspect ratio. When that OS was canceled, the project was salvaged as an Android phone, but those short, fat displays led to a lot of bad Android app layouts, with the limited vertical screen space further reduced by Android’s big headers and tab bars. It seems like Microsoft wanted to land on the same basic outline as a Moleskine notebook, but Android apps just aren’t designed for that aspect ratio. Plus, even when folded up, being dramatically wider than any other smartphone on the market also made it a literal pain to try to hold with one hand.

After two near-identical versions, Microsoft seemed to have been coming around to the “way too wide” line of thinking. The report says the canceled Surface Duo 3 would have had “narrower and taller edge-to-edge displays,” which would have put the phone in a more reasonable form factor.

Enlarge / The next Microsoft phone will be more like the Galaxy Fold, with one big foldable display. This one even runs Excel!

Samsung

With those plans dead, what is “considered a third-generation Duo internally” will be a more normal foldable smartphone, and it’s not clear if it will be branded “Surface Duo 3” or not. As we’ve argued in our review of the original device, outfitting the device with a continuous internal screen would be a big improvement over the dual-screen design. With one big foldable display, you could still get all of the dual-screen functionality via Android’s software split-screen mode but with the added benefit of also having one big screen for tablet apps, movies, games, and websites.

Besides the Android-incompatible form factor, Microsoft’s Android phones have had a host of other problems that the company will need to fix. The Surface Duos always felt like beta foldable devices, and that compromise might have worked if they weren’t the full price of a real foldable phone. The $1,400-$1,500 price tags were not competitive for what were basically two smartphones glued together, so you’ve got to wonder what is up with Microsoft’s supply chain. Microsoft’s Android software division has also been a hot mess, with the company outsourcing the Surface Duo 1 OS until two months before release and shipping a disastrously buggy build of Android as a result. Microsoft has since bought the team it was outsourcing its Android builds to, but so far, Surface Duo customers have seen a worst-in-class Android update record.

The report describes Microsoft as wanting to make its Android phone work better with Windows via an internal program called “Perfect Together” that is building Apple-style integrations between phone and laptops/desktops. Despite the failure of the Surface Duo, Bowden says that Microsoft is “all-in” with Android and “eager to expand its line of Android smartphone offerings” beyond the new foldable device. The report says Microsoft has prototyped several ideas for a “mainstream” slab-style Surface phone that might someday ship.

It sounds like we’ll be waiting a while for Microsoft’s next Android phone, with Bowden saying the foldable has “no concrete shipping window for the device in place yet either, meaning it’s unlikely to be ready in time for this fall.”

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R.I.P. Adam Rich, former child star of Eight Is Enough

Adam Rich
Photo: Stephen Shugerman (Getty Images)

Adam Rich, the former child star who played youngest sibling Nicholas Bradford on the ’70s sitcom Eight Is Enough, died at his home on Saturday, per the Associated Press. He was 54 years old.

Best known for his role on ABC’s Eight Is Enough, Rich also made appearances on other television series throughout the ’80s and ’90s, including The Love Boat, The Six Million Dollar Man, St. Elsewhere, and Baywatch. His last major role occurred in 2003, when he played himself in the David Spade comedy Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star.

Rich suffered from addiction issues that contributed to legal trouble over the years, including an arrest in 1991 for attempting to break into a pharmacy, per the AP. He was open about his experiences with mental illness; publicist Danny Deraney told the outlet that the actor’s depression “defied treatment.”

“Adam was simply a wonderful guy. He was kind, generous and a warrior in the fight against mental illness,” Deraney shared in a statement posted to Twitter. “Adam did not have an ounce of ego. He was unselfish and always looked out for those he cared about. Which is why many people who grew up with him feel a part of their childhood gone, and sad today. He really was Americas Little Brother.”

Rich’s television brother Willie Aames posted his own remembrance to Facebook (per People), writing, “This morning [my wife] Winnie woke me with the heartbreaking news of Adam Rich’s passing. I’m gutted. Adam was more than a colleague. He was very much my only little brother. A lifelong friend.”

“These last few years Adam had dreams of renewing his career. He was one of those kid actors that our generation will always remember. I can’t tell you how many parents have told me they named their first child ‘Nicolas’ after his Eight Is Enough character,” Aames wrote. “The diminishing fraternity of kids that grew up in the golden years of family television has lost another of our own. I will miss him deeply. Rest ‘A.R.’ You were the cutest TV kid of them all.”

Betty Buckley, who played the Bradfords’ stepmother on Eight Is Enough, also posted a tribute to her co-star. “Adam Rich was a light and my young pal for the four seasons I was blessed to work with him on Eight Is Enough. I adored him and loved working with him in our scenes together on the show. He was so sweet, funny, fresh and natural,” she shared in an Instagram post.

“He brought a lot of joy to all of us on the show and to our audiences,” Buckley continued. “Adam and I have remained friends all of these years. His love and support have always meant a lot to me. I am shocked by the news I received this morning of his death. Sending my love and deepest condolences to his friends and family. In recent years Adam dedicated himself to providing inspiration for others with mental and emotional illness. I will miss him greatly.”



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RIP To These 14 Games That Died In 2022

The graveyard is expanding, y’all.
Image: Bandai Namco / Blizzard / Codemasters / Ubisoft / Kotaku / Odette Villarreal (Shutterstock)

There was a time, back in the day, where you’d just buy a finished game and played it. No day-one updates or extra patches—it was simple. These games couldn’t “die” because they simply…existed. But as MMOs and live-service games (or “games as a service”) began to proliferate, requiring online servers and constant support from developers to keep things up and running, so too has the number of games that’ve hit in the graveyard. Please, bow your heads as were solemnly mark this year’s casualties.

There were quite a few, too, from racing sims like Dirt Rally and Project Cars to battle royales like Hyper Scape and massively-multiplayer online role-playing games such as Tera. Not every game on this list is “dead” in the traditional sense, with some still having minor functionality that makes them somewhat playable, but all are no longer receiving developmental resources or updates, effectively making them dead games.

Read More: 12 Games Killed In 2021 That Prove Preservation Is Vital

With that, here are 14 games that died in 2022:


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RIP Passwords? Passkey support rolls out to Chrome stable

Enlarge / Please don’t do this.

Getty Images

Passkeys are here to (try to) kill the password. Following Google’s beta rollout of the feature in October, passkeys are now hitting Chrome stable M108. “Passkey” is built on industry standards and backed by all the big platform vendors—Google, Apple, Microsoft—along with the FIDO Alliance. Google’s latest blog says: “With the latest version of Chrome, we’re enabling passkeys on Windows 11, macOS, and Android.” The Google Password Manager on Android is ready to sync all your passkeys to the cloud, and if you can meet all the hardware requirements and find a supporting service, you can now sign-in to something with a passkey.

Passkeys are the next step in evolution of password managers. Today password managers are a bit of a hack—the password text box was originally meant for a human to manually type text into, and you were expected to remember your password. Then, password managers started automating that typing and memorization, making it convenient to use longer, more secure passwords. Today, the right way to deal with a password field is to have your password manager generate a string of random, unmemorable junk characters to stick in the password field. The passkey gets rid of that legacy text box interface and instead stores a secret, passes that secret to a website, and if it matches, you’re logged in. Instead of passing a randomly generated string of text, passkeys use the “WebAuthn” standard to generate a public-private keypair, just like SSH.

Enlarge / The passkey process works a lot like autofill.

Ron Amadeo

If everyone can figure out the compatibility issues, passkeys offer some big advantages over passwords. While passwords can be used insecurely with short text strings shared across many sites, a passkey is always enforced to be unique in content and secure in length. If a server breach happens, the hacker isn’t getting your private key, and it’s not a security issue the way a leaked password would be. Passkeys are not phishable, and because they require your phone to be physically present (!!) some random hacker from halfway around the world can’t log in to your account anyway.

You can authenticate a Chrome instance with iOS across ecosystems, but you’ll need to use a QR code.

Google

So let’s talk compatibility. Today passkeys essentially require a portable device, even if you are logging into a stationary PC. The expectation is that you’ll use a smartphone for this, but you can also use a Macbook or iPad. The first time you set up an account on a new device, you’ll need to verify that your authenticating device—your phone—is in close proximity to whatever you’re signing in to. This proximity check happens over Bluetooth. All the passkey people are really aggressive about pointing out that sensitive data isn’t transferred over Bluetooth—it’s just used for a proximity check—but you’ll still need to deal with Bluetooth connectivity issues to get started.

When you’re signing in to an existing account on a new device, you’ll also need to pick which device you want to authenticate with (probably also your phone)—if both of these devices are in the same big-tech ecosystem, you’ll hopefully see a nice device menu, but if not, you’ll have to use a QR code.

Enlarge / Chrome’s passkey support by OS, which incredibly does not include Chrome OS.

Google

Second big issue: Did everybody catch that OS listing at the top? Google supports Windows 11 with passkeys—not Windows 10—which is going to make this a tough sell. Statcounter has Windows 11 at 16 percent of the total Windows install base, with Windows 10 at 70 percent. So if you happen to make a passkey account, you could only log in on newer Windows computers.

Passkeys get stored in each platform’s built-in keystore, so that’s Keychain on iOS and macOS, the Google Password Manager (or a third-party app) on Android, and “Windows Hello” on Windows 11. Some of these platforms have key syncing across devices, and some do not. So signing in to one Apple device should sync your passkeys’ access to other Apple devices via iCloud, and the same goes for Android via a Google account, but not Windows or Linux or Chrome OS. Syncing, by the way, is your escape hatch if you lose your phone. Everything is still backed up to your Google or Apple account.

Google’s documentation mostly doesn’t mention Chrome OS at all, but Google says, “We are working on enabling passkeys on [Chrome for] iOS and Chrome OS.” There’s also no support for Android apps yet, but Google is also working on it.

Enlarge / The Chrome passkey screen looks just like the normal password manager, but without the text boxes.

Google

Now that this is actually up and running on Chrome 108 and a supported OS, you should be able to see the passkey screen under the “autofill” section of the Chrome settings (or try pasting chrome://settings/passkeys into the address bar). Next up we’ll need more websites and services to actually support using a passkey instead of a password to sign in. Google Account support would be a good first step—right now you can use a passkey for two-factor authentication with Google, but you can’t replace your password yet. Everyone’s go-to example of passkeys is the passkeys.io demo site, which we have a walkthrough of here.

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Watch NASA’s Artemis 1 Launch Abort System rip into space

Rage against the dying of the light in this new video.

NASA’s Orion spacecraft cockpit shines in pink from the glow of its Launch Abort System (LAS) tower, ripping away from the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and spacecraft stack. This all happened as planned during the epic launch of the Artemis 1 mission to the moon Nov. 16. 

The movie-like moment, which looks like a scene from “Interstellar” or “Star Wars,” shows the LAS flying away from the cockpit within sight of a mannequin astronaut that is testing out radiation and other space hazards before humans climb on board.

Lockheed Martin, which built the Orion spacecraft, shared the cockpit view on Twitter (opens in new tab) on Friday (Dec. 1), anticipating what astronauts will see with their own eyes starting with Artemis 2’s expected journey around the moon in 2024. Lunar landing mission Artemis 3 will follow as soon as 2025, with more Artemis program missions in the works.

In photos: Artemis 1 launch: Amazing views of NASA’s moon rocket debut 

The SLS Launch Abort System generates enough thrust to lift 26 elephants off the ground, according to NASA statistics (opens in new tab). That’s more power than what is available to five F-22 jets. 

NASA’s version of ‘The Force’ is needed to pull astronauts away from the SLS rocket swiftly and safely in case of emergency. If the launch brings the crew to space without incident, however, the LAS tower tears away into space to reduce the mass of the capsule before its trip to the moon.

A fact sheet illustrating NASA’s Launch Abort System for the Orion Spacecraft. (Image credit: NASA)

Epic video from throughout Artemis 1 has kept the public riding along with the spacecraft around the moon and towards Earth again, bringing amazing live views of the lunar surface and our distant planet that left NASA engineers “giddy” with joy. 

Orion is expected to splash down Dec. 11, after following in the footsteps of generations of missions featuring their own abort systems.

Related: The 25 scariest spaceflight moments show dangers in orbit and beyond

Most space systems with humans on board have been fitted with ejection seats or launch abort towers through crewed history, with the exception of latter missions of the space shuttle that instead had mission abort options with the crew remaining inside the vehicle.

Perhaps the most dramatic use of a real-life abort using a launch escape tower was the Soviet Union’s Soyuz T-10-1 launch on Sept. 26, 1983. Russian space journalist Anatoly Zak says the system saved the lives of the launching crew as it pulled them away (opens in new tab) from an exploding rocket still on the launch pad. 

The latest crewed abort on Oct. 11, 2018 during Soyuz mission MS-10 to the International Space Station did not use the escape tower, as that had been already jettisoned, but the crew used an alternate abort mode to make it back to ground swiftly and safely. (You can listen in to the abort as it happened in the video above.)

Private space providers have their own escape systems on their rockets, as was demonstrated during a dramatic Blue Origin uncrewed launch failure of the New Shepard system on Sept. 12, 2022. The emergency escape system pulled the capsule safely away from the booster, which was presumably destroyed, during launch. Blue Origin is investigating the cause and plans to launch people to space again no earlier than 2023, after having conducted six crewed missions with no incident.

Elizabeth Howell is the co-author of “Why Am I Taller (opens in new tab)?” (ECW Press, 2022; with Canadian astronaut Dave Williams), a book about space medicine. Follow her on Twitter @howellspace (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).



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RIP Google Hangouts, Google’s last, best chance to compete with iMessage

Today, November 1, 2022, Google Hangouts is scheduled for death. The phone app has been individually booting people off the service since July, but the last vestiges of Hangouts, the web app, will be shut down today. Hangouts was—for a brief period—Google’s best, most ambitious, most popular messaging effort, but 5 billion downloads later, Google is moving on. Hangout’s next of kin, Google Chat, should have all of your messages and contacts automatically imported by now, but the new service is a faint shadow of the original plan for Hangouts.

The closing of Hangouts is the latest chapter in the mess that is Google’s messaging history. Google Talk launched 17 years ago, and Google still doesn’t have a competitive message platform. Part of the reason we’re on Google’s 10 millionth messaging app is that there is a solid, stable home for messaging inside Google. The 2022 messaging lineup is a great example. You’ve got the Google Workspace team making Google Chat—that’s Google’s business team making a Slack competitor—and then there’s Google Messages—a carrier-centric sort-of-competitor to Apple’s iMessage—which seemingly grew out of the Android team. Is the team that makes Android more or less important than the team that makes Gmail and the rest of the Google apps? Both have their understandable reasons for chasing messaging, but splitting the Google user base across two incompatible products makes it tough for either project to gain any traction. Besides those two big projects, there’s also still Google Voice, and a bunch of siloed messaging services in apps like Google Photos and Google Pay.

Once upon a time, Google tried to fix this. Messaging was supposed to have a real home at Google, and that home was supposed to be (cue dramatic thunderclap) Google+. Back in 2011, Google’s then-CEO Larry Page decided social was the future and spun up the Google+ project across the company. The head of G+ got the title “Senior Vice President” making him one of the eight-ish people that reported directly to Page, enshrining Google+ as one of the main pillars of Google. This division was supposed to take full ownership of messaging, and it launched its messaging project—Google+ Hangouts—two years later.

Hangouts, which was codenamed “Project Babel,” was charged with the task of—get this—unifying Google messaging portfolio. Google had four messaging apps at the time, Google+ Messenger, Google Talk, Android’s SMS app, and Google Voice. Hangouts launched in 2013, and by the end of the year integrated SMS messages. By 2014, the app was fully operational, and featured Hangouts Messages, SMS, and Google Voice all in one app, all available from your phone or anywhere on the Internet. With the release of Android 4.4 in 2013, there was no standalone Android SMS app. Hangouts was the only default SMS option.

Google had built its iMessage clone, and it was an incredible service. All your communication was available from a single messaging app in one, easy-to-use interface. Google also had tangible advantages over iMessage, thanks to wide cross-platform compatibility. Hangouts was on Android, iOS, the web, and inside Gmail. That meant the service natively worked on phones, watches, cars, tablets, web browsers, and even Google Glass at one point. Google would probably have a decent footing in messaging today if it just kept updating and investing in Hangouts.

Hangout’s home was already falling apart in 2014, though. Amid complaints that Google+ was a “ghost town,” the knives came out for the service. Google+ SVP and driving force behind the project, Vic Gundotra, left Google, and that same day reports came out that Google+ resources would be drastically cut, and the forced, Google-wide integration of G+ would end. Hangouts was stuck in a dying division, and while some projects like Google+ Photos managed to spin out into a stable landing spot, Hangouts did not, and by 2015 you would regularly see complaints from customers that the project was underfunded.

The other “problem” with Hangouts is that it was a strike against cell carriers. Combining SMS and an over-the-top messaging service into one app was something the carriers didn’t like. They wanted something focused on SMS and only SMS, so users wouldn’t dare be tempted to not use a carrier product. Google caved and introduced the standalone Google Messages in the next Android release. With Google’s lack of organization and fortitude, Hangouts’ reign as Google’s top, all-in-one messaging service only lasted about a year. Hangouts has kept on trucking as the abandoned, zombie product that was still better than the plethora of new messaging services Google would release afterward, and today, it’s finally being put down.

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Analysis: As U.S. stocks rip higher, investors hunt for signs of market bottom

NEW YORK, Oct 19 (Reuters) – Some gauges of the stock market’s health are showing that the latest rally in U.S. equities may be the start of a sustained move higher, though many investors are hesitant to jump on board until there are signs inflation is cooling.

Few can blame them for being skeptical. The current gain – which has seen the S&P 500 bounce about 6.5% last week’s fresh intraday low for 2022 – comes on the heels of several rebounds throughout the year that eventually crumbled. Meanwhile, markets have been gripped by stomach churning volatility lately that has wrongfooted bulls and bears alike.

If anything, the macroeconomic picture has only grown more dire, as stronger-than-expected U.S. inflation ratchets up expectations for Fed hawkishness and recession fears grow, fueling investor reluctance to participate in the recent upswing.

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Still, there have been glimmers of hope. Some gauges that flashed warnings throughout the year ahead are more positive, while the S&P 500’s recent pattern of big upside moves echoes those seen in prior market bottoms. Some standout U.S. earnings reports and ebbing worries around systemic risk around Britain’s budget woes have also underpinned the rally.

“There are some signs of a bottom,” said Ed Clissold, chief U.S. strategist at Ned Davis Research. “In terms of whether or not it is the bottom, there is still more to prove for the market.”

The S&P 500 has bounced repeatedly this year only to hit new lows

Improving market breadth, which shows whether a significant amount of stocks are moving in unison, is one signal that has heartened investors.

Just 34% of stocks hit new 52-week lows last week along with the S&P 500’s low, according to Todd Sohn, technical strategist at Strategas, compared to 43% when the index made its low on June 16.

At the same time, measures of investor sentiment – including a monthly fund manager survey by Bank of America Global Research – show the highest pessimism in years, a contrarian indicator that has been a bullish signal for stocks historically.

The crowd sentiment poll compiled by Ned Davis Research, a composite indicator that includes investor surveys, option data and asset analysis, recently fell to a level that had coincided with stock reversals in March 2020 and 2011.

“If we can get some better news on the economic/inflation/Fed front there could be a pretty powerful rally,” Clissold said.

Reuters Graphics

Mark Hackett, chief of investment research at Nationwide, points to the S&P 500 posting five days of gains of about 2% or more in the past month through Monday, noting a similar pattern occurred ahead of bottoms in 2020 and 2009.

Widespread investor pessimism, improved valuations and a seasonally strong period for stocks are among factors leading Hackett to conclude that “we are awfully close to the bottom assuming we don’t have some sort of massive deterioration from here.”

Morgan Stanley strategist Michael Wilson, who has been bearish on stocks throughout the year, this week said a “tradable tactical rally looks likely,” with S&P 500 rising to as high as 4,000 “as good a guess as any.” The index closed at 3,719.98 on Tuesday.

Not all indicators are telling a bullish story, including the comparatively contained Cboe Volatility Index (.VIX), known as Wall Street’s fear gauge. Reversals in stocks since 1990 have come after the index hits an average of 37, which has signaled a bout of fearful selling that then paves the way for bullish investors to take the market higher.

However, the index has not been above that level since March even as the S&P 500 continued making new lows. It was last around 30.

“What’s happening is the VIX is in this high but not super-high range and you never get that complete ‘pukage’ in the markets,” said Michael Purves, chief executive of Tallbacken Capital.

VIX is above longterm median but below levels reached in other bear markets

Sohn, of Strategas, is also eyeing the balance between puts, which are typically bought for downside protection, and calls. The put/call ratio is yet to approach a 10-day average of at least 1.2 that has historically indicated that “you are more in the ballpark of panic and fear and close to a market low,” he said.

The current bear market has also been less severe than many past downturns. The S&P 500 slid as much as 25.4% this year, while bear markets since 1929 have seen an average decline of 35%, according to BofA.

Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics

Markets have bottomed when “investors have begun to contemplate materially looser monetary policy over the next six to 12 months, when a trough for economic activity is in sight, or when valuations already fully reflect a credible ‘bear case’ scenario,” analysts at UBS Global Wealth Management wrote on Monday.

“Today, we do not believe these conditions have been fulfilled.”

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Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Additional reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Josie Kao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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