Tag Archives: scales

Berkshire Hathaway stock scales record as operating profit tops $10 bln – Reuters

  1. Berkshire Hathaway stock scales record as operating profit tops $10 bln Reuters
  2. Berkshire shares hit all-time high as investors cheer strong earnings, Buffett’s near-record cash pile CNBC
  3. Berkshire Operating Earnings Rise on Insurance Strength Bloomberg Television
  4. Warren Buffett is trying to tell us something about the economy with Berkshire Hathaway’s earnings and the $147 billion of cash on hand Fortune
  5. Berkshire Hathaway reports strong Q2 earnings; Inflation data to watch; Campbell Soup to buy Rao’s Yahoo Finance
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sam Altman just took a nuclear energy startup public for $500 million. Its CEO wants to provide ‘energy at planetary scales for a billion-plus years’ – Fortune

  1. Sam Altman just took a nuclear energy startup public for $500 million. Its CEO wants to provide ‘energy at planetary scales for a billion-plus years’ Fortune
  2. Oklo, an Advanced Fission Technology Company, to Go Public via Merger with AltC Acquisition Corp. BusinessWire
  3. OpenAI’s Sam Altman Is Taking a Nuclear-Energy Startup Public – WSJ The Wall Street Journal
  4. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman to take nuclear energy startup Oklo public Yahoo Finance
  5. Nuclear fission start-up backed by Sam Altman to go public Financial Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Do They Fear Large Crowds?’: In The Shadow Of War Against Ukraine, Kremlin Scales Back Victory Day Commemorations – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

  1. ‘Do They Fear Large Crowds?’: In The Shadow Of War Against Ukraine, Kremlin Scales Back Victory Day Commemorations Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  2. Russia throws more soldiers into Bakhmut meat grinder ahead of Putin’s Victory Day parade POLITICO Europe
  3. Moscow tightens security for May 9 parade over Ukraine risk – Kremlin Reuters
  4. Putin claims he’s cancelling public celebrations over safety fears. The truth is more humiliating The Guardian
  5. Russian regions scrap Victory Day parades amid fear of Ukraine strikes The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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God of War PC Scales Steam Sales Charts After Glowing Reviews

God of War is currently the second best-selling game on PC marketplace Steam, behind only the newly released Monster Hunter Rise. Despite originally launching all the way back in 2018, Sony is flogging Kratos’ Norse outing for £39.99/$49.99 on PC – while it’s available on the PlayStation 4 for practically pennies these days.

To be fair, Sony Santa Monica has done a good job porting the epic to PC, as we explained in our hands on earlier today. The game’s attracting rave reviews as a result: it currently commands a 93 on reviews aggregate website Metacritic, following 41 glowing critiques. That’s only a point less than the PS4 original achieved in 2018.

As mentioned above, you can read more about God of War’s PC port through here. Are you planning to wield the Leviathan Axe once more before Ragnarok arrives later this year? Call it back in the comments section below.



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Publix’s Iconic Entrance Scales May Soon Be History – CBS Miami

MIAMI (CBSMiami/AP) – If you live in South Florida, chances are you have weighed yourself or have seen someone, perhaps even a family member weighing themselves or even weighing a heavy suitcase at any number of Publix scales.

Well, now those wishing to know if their large suitcases are overpacked will have to rely on their own scales. That is because the supermarket chain is saying those entrance scales may become part of the past.

READ MORE: Aldo Amenta, South Florida Quadriplegic Who Gained Fame With Exoskelton At College Graduation, Does It Again

Those big historic and industrial-looking scales at the front of Publix Super Markets could land on the scrapheap of supermarket history one day, because the scale manufacturer stopped making them, a Publix Facebook post recently reported.

At least one new store that recently joined the grocery chain’s Florida outlets, opened without the scale. An associate said the new Publix located the Shoppes of Golf Village near Boynton Beach does not have one.

“The manufacturer ceased production in 2015, meaning that one day — although our wonderful repair shop keeps our remaining machines in great shape — the last Publix scale will retire,” an Aug. 19 Facebook post announced.

The scales, shaped like “lollipops,” have been a Publix Super Market fixture for 81 years, the post explained. When they made their first appearance, initially at the back of the store and later by the front doors, household scales were bulky and too expensive to own. Most people were weighed at the doctor’s office or Floridians went to Publix to check their weight. Over the years, the current scales are now four times bigger and costlier than their original counterpart.

Ever the supermarket innovator, George Jenkins saw the scarcity of weighing machines as an opportunity to bring in the customers.

On its blog, The Publix Checkout, a further history of the green scales was posted in 2016.

When Jenkins “founded Publix in 1930, he embarked on setting Publix apart from the competition by offering services and value to customers in things not seen around other grocery chains like his ‘food palace’ in 1940 equipped with air conditioning, frozen food cases and many other innovations,” wrote blogger Aijana W.

“However, there’s one perk about shopping in Publix that’s been a part of the company since the beginning and still remains to this day: the weighing scales. The difference with Publix scales? It was completely free for our customers,” the blogger wrote.

In a 1988 interview with Jenkins, the company founder said, the scales “were very popular. Even back then people were conscious of their weight.” He added, more than 5 million customers weighed themselves in Publix’s during the first year of business.

And it’s not just Publix writers who have been pushing the lore of the 2831 People Weigher by Mettler Toledo, which still manufactures other weighing systems for laboratories, industry and food retail.

In a May 30, 2018, report by the Tampa Bay Times, the writer noted that these relics of a bygone era have been entertaining and enthralling Floridians and tourists for decades.

READ MORE: Geminid Meteor Shower To Peak Monday Night To Early Tuesday

Some recalled childhood weights taken at Publix as milestones.

He added, others liked to announce their light weigh publicly to anyone within earshot. And even visiting non-Floridians enjoyed the novelty on annual vacations. Others took to Twitter to question the accuracy of the scales after seeing their pounds display on the big round dial.

Spata wrote, “In a 1988 feature in the Orlando Sentinel, writer Donna Bouffard, with the help of store employees in Winter Park, identified seven recurring categories of scale users, including ‘pickpockets,’ who set aside keys, change and wallets; ‘bashfuls,’ who go to great lengths to make sure nobody is looking; ‘hoppers,’ who leap on in a single bound; and ‘mechanics,’ who insist this thing must be broken.

Looking for a job?:Publix to hire 30,000 associates companywide in fourth quarter

“They all ring true 30 years later, employees say, with the addition of a category: the “footloose,” or those who remove their shoes, and sometimes socks,” Spata wrote.

All the fun and pleasant — or unpleasant — memories of the scales are not over yet.

The ritual of tipping the big green scale should remain a tradition for many Publix shoppers for some time throughout Florida. In the Publix seven-state operating area, only Florida ever had the scales and as of September, the Sunshine State has 828 Publix stores, about two-thirds of its outlet across the Southeast.

Grocer wars?:Publix, Kroger jockey for position in ever-changing home delivery market. They’re not alone

Even if many of them become unrepairable, the scale from the original Winter Haven store is donning the corporate headquarters in Lakeland in a historic display.

Publix representative Brian West told the Times, “For the foreseeable future, they will remain part of our Florida stores.”

Until they all disappear except for the original one, Publix did stockpile enough parts to keep the old ones on life support as long as possible — so step on, but step lightly.

MORE NEWS: ‘Tis The Season To Decorate Safely For The Holidays

(© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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Wall St scales record peaks on earnings cheer; Fed meeting in focus By Reuters

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 19, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

By Devik Jain and Shashank Nayar

(Reuters) – Wall Street’s main indexes climbed to record highs on Tuesday, getting a boost from a string of encouraging earnings reports, while investors anticipated the Federal Reserve’s next meeting where policymakers are expected to announce the withdrawal of pandemic-era stimulus.

Shares of Under Armour Inc (NYSE:) jumped 15.5% after the athletic apparel maker raised its annual revenue and profit forecasts.

Arista Networks (NYSE:) surged 19.9% to scale a new peak as brokerages raised their price targets on the cloud infrastructure supplier’s stock following strong third-quarter results.

Simon Property Group (NYSE:) added 5% after the mall operator raised its 2021 forecast for profit and quarterly dividend.

Economy-sensitive Dow Jones Transports index soared 5.5% to hit an all-time high, lifted by an 88.6% surge in shares of car-rental firm Avis Budget (NASDAQ:).

Seven of the 11 major S&P sectors advanced, with technology rising the most.

Mega-cap technology names Apple Inc (NASDAQ:), Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:) and Google-owner Alphabet (NASDAQ:) Inc rose to help offset declines of 3.2% in shares of Tesla (NASDAQ:) Inc.

Tesla’s top boss Elon Musk said the electric car maker had not signed a contract with Hertz.

“The interest remains high for most of the FAANG stocks and really technology as a whole and investors are more interested in holding these names than selling them for gains,” said Rick Meckler, partner at Cherry Lane Investments in New Jersey.

Spotlight is now on the Fed’s policy meeting starting Tuesday, with the U.S. central bank expected to approve plans to start tapering its monthly bond purchases, while focus will also be on commentary about interest rates and how sustained the recent surge in inflation is.

“Today the economy is in a much better footing and with inflation at current levels we don’t need such amount of accommodative policies and a taper in turn will send a signal to the market that the economy is better off,” said Michael Sheldon, chief investment officer at RDM Financial Group at Hightower in Westport, Connecticut.

“The risk for the market, however, will arise next year and if inflation remains higher for a longer duration it will lead the Fed to be more aggressive or step up the timetable for rate increases that could lead to some instability in markets.”

An unprecedented amount of monetary and policy stimulus has helped Wall Street bounce back strongly from a pandemic-driven recession last year. Coupled with that, a largely upbeat third-quarter reporting season has also helped drive U.S stocks to record highs this week.

At 12:00 p.m. ET, the was up 95.92 points, or 0.27%, at 36,009.76, the was up 13.38 points, or 0.29%, at 4,627.05, and the was up 26.37 points, or 0.17%, at 15,622.28.

Pfizer Inc (NYSE:) gained 4.5% after the drugmaker raised its full-year sales forecast for the company’s COVID-19 vaccine to $36 billion.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers for a 1.41-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and for a 1.44-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.

The S&P index recorded 50 new 52-week highs and four new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 148 new highs and 28 new lows.



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Barack Obama scales back 60th birthday party over Covid concerns | Barack Obama

Barack Obama is scaling back the big bash planned for his 60th birthday because of concerns about the national rise in Covid-19 cases, a spokesperson said on Wednesday.

“Due to the new spread of the Delta variant over the past week, the president and Mrs Obama have decided to significantly scale back the event to include only family and close friends,” Hannah Hankins, a spokesperson for the former president, said in a statement. “He’s appreciative of others sending their birthday wishes from afar and looks forward to seeing people soon.”

About 700 people, including Oprah Winfrey and George Clooney, were expected to gather this weekend at the former president’s mansion on Martha’s Vineyard, an island in Massachusetts.

David Axelrod, a former top Obama adviser, told the New York Times that guests were asked if they were vaccinated and to provide the results of a Covid-19 test close to the event.

But in the past two weeks, the White House and local governments have been adjusting Covid-19 guidance on masks and gatherings as cases of infections rise in every state.

About 52% of the US population has not received the first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Vaccines are highly effective against hospitalization and death for all current variants, but vaccinated people with so-called breakthrough infections can transmit the virus. Scientists are still trying to understand the rates of infections in vaccinated people and how likely they are to spread it to someone else.

The Massachusetts governor, Charlie Baker, said on Tuesday he was not invited to Obama’s party and would have declined the invitation anyway. “I think 700 people at an event like that is not a good idea,” said Baker, who said he was concerned about older people and people with illnesses that put them more at risk of a serious Covid-19 infection.

Baker said: “For some of us, we don’t fall into those categories, maybe it’s not as big a deal, especially if you’re vaccinated. But even if you are vaccinated among some of those more vulnerable populations, we should all be very careful.”

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Obama scales back plans for 60th birthday party amid coronavirus concerns

Former President Barack Obama has scaled back plans for a Martha’s Vineyard 60th birthday party to which hundreds of guests had been invited, citing revived concerns about the coronavirus.

Hannah Hankins, a spokeswoman for the former president, said in a statement obtained by Fox News that the “outdoor event was planned months ago in accordance with all public health guidelines and with covid safeguards in place.” 

“Due to the new spread of the delta variant over the past week, the President and Mrs. Obama have decided to significantly scale back the event to include only family and close friends. President Obama is appreciative of others sending their birthday wishes from afar and looks forward to seeing people soon.”

Obama’s birthday is Wednesday but the party had been scheduled for this coming Saturday.

News of the birthday party –  which will reportedly include 475 of the former president’s closest guests – drew the ire of critics on social media, who characterized the move as hypocritical in light of the new guidance on the delta variant.

Sources previously told The Hill that the guest list included Oprah Winfrey and George Clooney.

Prior to the cancelation, plans were for guests to be tested for the coronavirus and to be admitted only if they were already vaccinated, according to reports.

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But the former president faced criticism that the party might become a “super spreader” event.

Fox News’ Julius Young contributed to this report

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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Bad Astronomy | Cosmic web filaments have been seen glowing at large scales for the first time.

For the first time, astronomers have obtained large-scale images of the cosmic web — the incredibly ancient scaffolding of dark matter and hydrogen gas out of which galaxies in the Universe were formed.

This material is so far away and so incredibly faint that it took one of the largest telescopes in the world coupled with one of the most powerful cameras to see it at all. But what they found in their images was the very framework of the Universe.

The Universe formed about 13.8 billion years in a sudden and colossal burst of expanding space and energy. In many ways it was like an explosion, though an explosion of space, not in space: It was the creation of space itself. It was crammed full of energy and matter, and the distribution wasn’t smooth. Some places had a teeny bit more matter in them than others. These over- and under-dense regions were incredibly small; a typical denser spot might be 1 part in 100,000 more dense than its neighbor. But that was enough to create all the structure we see in the Universe today.

These overdense regions had enough gravity to overcome the expansion of the Universe, and began to collapse. Dark matter — a still mysterious substance that doesn’t react with or emit light, but has mass and gravity — attracted material around it, and started forming long, thin, interconnecting filaments of material, like a web. “Normal” matter, the stuff we’re made of, was pulled toward these filaments, and collected on them. Matter flowed along the filaments due to gravity, piling up and forming galaxies, clusters of galaxies, and even immense superclusters, clusters of galaxy clusters, the largest scale structures in the known Universe.

All these from tiny fluctuations in the fabric of space!

The problem is seeing this original structure, the original filaments that formed the cosmic web. They’d be loaded with hydrogen gas and glowing, but this all happened so long ago that it has taken over 13 billion years for the light from them to reach us. They’re faint. There’s been some success in detecting them, though.

Quasars, intensely bright galaxies blasting out radiation as their central supermassive black holes gobble down matter, can be used to find them, for example. As the quasar light passes through that primordial hydrogen gas, some of the light is absorbed in characteristics ways, and we can see that absorption in the quasar light. But that only shows you where that gas is in an extremely narrow spot on the sky, and even if you do this with hundreds of quasars the map you get is literally spotty.

Some of that gas has also been seen glowing (what we say is in emission), but only near where bright galaxies are lighting it up. Again, it’s a very localized detection in a special location. What astronomers needed was a map of this material in typical spots in the Universe, representative of the cosmos as a whole.

And that’s what they now have. A few years ago astronomers used the massive 8.2-meter Very Large Telescope (VLT) with the MUSE camera to look at the same spot in the sky Hubble observed to create the the Ultra-Deep Field, an area of the sky about the same size as a grain of sand held at arm’s length… but in which Hubble saw over 10,000 galaxies.

When they observed this field with VLT/MUSE they saw lots of hydrogen gas, so they were encouraged to take deeper observations. Much deeper: Over the course of 8 months they took a staggering 140 hours of usable images on that single spot on the sky. And these weren’t just images, either. They took spectra, breaking the light up into individual colors. Hot hydrogen gas in the early Universe glows at a characteristic color in the ultraviolet called Lyman-α (Lyman-alpha, or LyA for short). By the time this light reaches us billion of years later it’s redshifted to the near-infrared. By looking at the exact wavelength observed, the redshift and therefore the distance to that LyA gas can be determined.

And what they found were long filaments of glowing hydrogen gas, some of it over 13 billion light years away, structures forming when the cosmos was less than a billion years old!

They actually found clumps and filaments from 11.5 to 13+ billion light years away from Earth, some of them well over 10 million light years long and only a few hundred thousand light years wide. They found over 1,250 individual spots where LyA was emitted, some of which were grouped into 22 large overdense regions of LyA emission which had between 10 and 26 distinct clumps in them. Those clumps represent galaxies and clusters in the very earliest stages of forming, not long after the formation of the Universe itself.

It gets better. They also found lots of fuzzy LyA emission well outside those clumps, what’s called extended emission. Simulations of the way matter clumped together in the very early days of the Universe indicate this extended emission is caused by the birth of billions of dwarf galaxies, ones much smaller than our own Milky Way. These are called ultra-low luminosity emitters because they’re extremely faint, some only a few thousand times the brightness of our Sun. Given that the Milky Way is many billions of times more luminous than the Sun you can appreciate how faint these dwarf galaxies are, and how many of them there must be to light up that diffuse gas.

These galaxies are extremely young; we see the light from them when they were less than 300 million years old. Again, for comparison, the Milky Way is over 12 billion years old, so we are seeing a slice of the Universe when it was practically an infant.

On top of all this they found that of all their sources in the VLT/MUSE data, 30% were not seen in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, meaning these are even fainter objects than Hubble could spot. That’s not hugely surprising, since VLT is far larger than Hubble and can collect more light. But it’s still quite the achievement.

As an astronomer I’m amazed that all of this was even possible to do, let alone find that it matches simulations of the way we think the early Universe would behave. That’s a critical point: Using just math, physics, and observations of the sky, we’ve been able to predict what the Universe was like when it was very young… and find that we’re right!

I hear people denigrating science all the time, poo-pooing results as mere guesses. But it is in fact and in truth the best method we have to understand objective reality, that which exists outside of us. It is a phenomenally successful method, and these new observations are more evidence of that

You may deny science if you like, but you’re going up against the Universe itself. You might want to think carefully on that position.

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Gravity May Play a Tiny But Important Role in The Microworld of Particle Physics

Launch yourself from a great enough height and it won’t take long to see which would win in a battle between gravity and the forces that bind solid ground.

Gravity’s relative weakness, at least compared to the strength of electromagnetism and the nuclear forces, appears to limits its power to phenomena on the vast scales of planets and galaxies.

 

For this reason, together with the challenge of marrying general relativity with quantum physics, physicists tend to hand-wave gravity’s role in the formation of particles by fudging it with a rather arbitrary correction factor.

Two physicists from the Institute of Gravitation and Cosmology at the Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) are now rethinking gravity’s place among the building blocks of nature, searching for solutions to equations that would give this small force a bigger role in explaining how fundamental particles could emerge.

At first glance, it seems like an unnecessary search. For a typical elementary particle, like an electron, its electromagnetic pull is 10^40 times stronger than its gravitational might.

Including gravity’s effects when describing an electron’s movements around an atom’s nucleus would be like taking a mosquito’s impact into account when discussing a car crash.

Researchers Ahmed Alharthy and Vladimir V. Kassandrov think the mosquito might be more important than we give it credit for, at least on the mind-blowingly small level of the Planck scale.

“Gravity can potentially play an important role in the microworld, and this assumption is confirmed by certain data,” says Kassandrov.

 

Established solutions to fundamental field theory equations in curving spacetime appear to leave room for a small but non-zero influence of gravity when we zoom in close. As distances shrink, gravity’s tug eventually becomes comparable with that of attracted charges.

There are also models describing solitary waves forming in quantum fields in which the tiny effect of gravity could well help reinforce the wave.

The duo went back to semi-classical models of electromagnetic field equations, swapping out the hand-waved correction typically used and applying rules that allow them to tweak some quantities while ensuring others remain fixed.

By slotting in quantities defining the charge and mass of known elementary particles, the team went on the hunt for solutions that added up.

For the most part, there were no clear situations where gravity seemed necessary, at least for known particles.

But there were scenarios as distances shrank to around 10^-33 metres for charged objects with a mass of 10^-5 grams where solutions appeared.

The theorists aren’t sure if their answers describe anything we might find in the Universe, though they do set some limits on a spectrum that corresponds with hypothetical semi-quantum particles called maximons.

 

Pushing the mathematics further, as electric charge vanishes into nothingness on the smallest of scales, and masses grow to a stellar-magnitude, it’s clear that gravity becomes a key factor in the emergence of some objects from the quantum landscape.

That might sound like a flight of fancy, but such neutral matter-waves are the very things that make up hypothetical objects known as boson stars.

For now, gravity will continue to be reduced to a begrudging side-note in particle physics, its tiny force a mathematical complexity providing no appreciable benefit in its solving.

One day, we just might need to give the weakest of the four fundamental forces its due on the Universe’s smallest scales.

“In the future, we would like to shed light on this problem that is intriguing for physicists but extremely complex from the point of view of mathematics,” says Kassandrov.

This research was published in Universe.

 

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