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Donovan Mitchell hit with random PED test, league said 71-point performance shouldn’t have happened

Donovan Mitchell’s 71-point performance on Monday night didn’t come without a cost.

The Cleveland Cavaliers star was hit with a performance-enhancing drug test on Tuesday, he said on Twitter. The team confirmed the test to ESPN.

Now, tests are a normal occurrence for players through the league. They are usually hit with four random PED tests during the season, and then two more during the offseason. The key word there, though, is random.

While there’s no real way to prove otherwise, a test coming just hours after Mitchell’s historic performance certainly doesn’t feel random — which is likely why Mitchell found it so funny.

Mitchell led the Cavaliers back from a 21-point hole to beat the Chicago Bulls in overtime on Monday night with his franchise-record 71 points. That marked the most scored in a single game in the league since Los Angeles Lakers icon Kobe Bryant dropped 81 points against the Toronto Raptors in 2006. Mitchell’s performance was the eighth-highest scoring game in league history, and the most scored by anyone this season.

“It’s humbling. I’m speechless to be honest with you when you say that,” Mitchell said. “I think for me, not only did I do that but I did it in an effort where we came back and won. And it’s how we won. That’s really what, for me, it’s like man, this is nuts … I’m extremely blessed, humbled that I’m in that company, in that group.”

NBA: Donovan Mitchell’s 71 points shouldn’t have happened

Though it can’t be rescinded, the NBA said on Tuesday that Mitchell’s 71-point performance shouldn’t have actually happened.

Mitchell sent the game into overtime after he purposefully missed a free throw and tipped it back in in the final seconds on Monday night. The sequence was incredible.

Yet on Wednesday, the NBA said that Mitchell actually stepped into the foul lane early — which should have voided his basket and given the Bulls the win.

“One, it’s a clear violation,” Bulls coach Billy Donovan said after the game. “Unequivocally, he’s crossing the line on the basket before the ball ever touches the rim. That’s the first thing … And he just shot it and really kind of beat Patrick. And I think part of the reason why he beat Patrick is because he went in there too early.”

But, as that wasn’t called in the moment, there’s nothing that can be done.

Mitchell then dropped 13 points in overtime to get to 71 and take the win.

Players are generally hit with a PED test randomly four times during the season. Donovan Mitchell’s came immediately after he dropped 71 points on the Bulls. (Jason Miller/Getty Images)

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Donovan Mitchell’s miraculous record-setting basket Monday night shouldn’t have counted, NBA says

CLEVELAND, Ohio — NBA history shouldn’t have been made on Monday night.

At least, that’s what the NBA said after video review of the Cleveland Cavaliers’ 145-134 come-from-behind overtime win against the Chicago Bulls.

According to the NBA’s Last Two Minute Report — the league’s assessment of officiated events that occurred in the last two minutes of games that were at or within three points during any point in the last two minutes of the fourth quarter (and overtime, where applicable) — there were two incorrect calls. Both of them in Cleveland’s favor.

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The most notable and controversial came on Mitchell’s record-setting putback — a remarkable layup following a missed free throw that gave him a franchise-record 58 points and sent the game into OT.

With 4.6 seconds remaining and the Cavs trailing by two points, Mitchell deliberately missed his second freebie, darted toward the lane, collected his own rebound in midair and flipped in the basket.

A review of that play by the league on Tuesday afternoon showed that Mitchell stepped over the plane of the free throw line before the ball touched the basket — a violation of NBA rules.

Mitchell should’ve been called for a lane violation, negating the basket, keeping the Cavs behind by two and putting Mitchell at 56 points — one off his career-high and Cleveland’s single-game record that was previously shared by LeBron James and Kyrie Irving.

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Because the three-person officiating crew — Tony Brothers, JB DeRosa and Suyash Mehta — allowed the play to proceed in real time without a whistle, Mitchell’s magical moment counted and the game went into overtime, where Mitchell scored 13 more points, bringing his total to 71.

He became just the seventh player in NBA history to tally more than 70 points in a game — and first since Phoenix Suns swingman Devin Booker on March 24, 2017. Mitchell’s 71 points are tied with Elgin Baylor and David Robinson for the eighth-highest total in a single game in NBA history. It’s the most points scored in the NBA this season. Mitchell’s previous regular-season best was 46, hitting that number three times with the Jazz. He tallied 57 in the Bubble.

According to the NBA, none of that should’ve happened.

The only other incorrect call to appear on the Last Two Minute Report came moments earlier. With Cleveland down 128-125, and a little more than 10 seconds remaining, Mitchell drove right of the lane and dished to center Jarrett Allen under the hoop. The sequence ended with Allen’s jump-hook in the lane that cut Chicago’s lead to one point.

Only Allen should’ve been called for a travel.

The league said he lifted and re-planted his pivot foot before releasing the ball. Had that play been ruled correctly, the Bulls would’ve been in possession with a three-point lead.

The Last Two Minute Report assesses all calls and notable non-calls. According to the league’s definition, notable non-calls are generally defined as material plays directly related to the outcome of a possession. Similar to the instant replay standards, there must be clear and conclusive video evidence in order to make a determination that a play was incorrectly officiated. In this case, both misses qualified under those parameters.

Nonetheless, nothing changes in the official record book. Can’t rewrite history. The Cavs still won. Mitchell still joined the 70-point club. And he still became the Cavaliers’ single-game scoring recordholder, passing James and Irving.

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5 Android apps you shouldn’t miss this week

Welcome to the 465th Android Apps Weekly and the final edition in 2022. Happy new years, and here are the big headlines from the last week:

  • We asked our readers how well Google did this year. You all told us that you thought Google did pretty well this year, both in terms of hardware and software. Regarding stats, 48% of you said that Google had a good year, while only about 5% thought the year was a total failure. You can hit the link to see the more granular stats.
  • We also asked our readers when they sideloaded an app on Android last. Over 40% of our readers have sideloaded an app within the last month, and only about 15% have never sideloaded an app at all. We found that interesting since the common narrative is that sideloading is rare. Apparently, we have some rare readers.
  • Our own Adam Birney attempted to use Google Translate on a trip with some mixed results. For example, some of the traveler-friendly features don’t work offline. Adam outlined his experience with the various features working or not working, and you can read it at the link above.
  • Google is worried about Search. The number of AI tools and their surging popularity have the company a little on edge. Reportedly, the situation is a code red at Google. The worry is that AI responses give such tight answers that people won’t click on advertising links anymore, which would cause Google to lose a lot of money. Hit the link to keep reading, and we’ll keep monitoring to see what happens.
  • As per the norm, we have rounded up the best new Android apps, best new Android games, and most controversial apps and games from the last year. You can hit any of the links to check out our selections. Overall, there are 50 apps and games to scroll through, along with ten more controversial apps and games. It was a pretty exciting year with some interesting launches.

Alliance Alive HD Remastered

Price: $11.99

Alliance Alive HD Remastered is a remaster of the Nintendo 3DS game of the same name. It’s also available on Steam, Nintendo Switch, and iOS. The game is an RPG that takes place in a fantasy world. Players eventually wind up with nine characters, each one’s story interweaving with the other. Combat is turn-based and fairly indicative of JRPGs of its era. The game includes the whole story from the original, along with updated graphics, new features, and, of course, mobile controls. It’s a tad expensive at $11.99, but there are no ads or in-app purchases to tarnish the experience after that.

Mere Launcher

Price: Free

Mere Launcher is a minimalist launcher with larger icons. The home screen shows your favorite apps, with a simple shortcut to the app drawer where you can find everything. The app includes dark and light themes, a background tint function for improved contrast, and you can even orient the launcher landscape if needed. There aren’t a ton of extra features, but that’s normal for a minimalist app. It’s not half bad and worked well in our testing.

Frozen City

Price: Free to play

Frozen City is a city-building simulator. It’s set in a world that is beset by snow and ice, and that plays into the survival aspects of the game. You slowly build up your city, assign newly arrived survivors to do tasks, explore the wilderness, and survive the cold. It’s a fairly straightforward game without many twists and turns to annoy the player. There are microtransactions, but they aren’t terrible. Aside from some early game bugs, everything works pretty well.

My Link Manager

Price: Free

My Link Manager is an app for organizing and managing your web browser bookmarks. This is an especially great app if you use a web browser that doesn’t support bookmarks or one that doesn’t allow you to sync them to a new device. It’s a fairly simple app overall. You put your links in there, organize them, and retrieve them when needed. There is an import and export function, so you can back them up. It also doesn’t require Internet access, making it a fully offline app. There really isn’t much wrong with this one, and it worked fine in our testing.

Ever Legion

Price: Free to play

Ever Legion is an idle RPG. The game sets the player off on an adventure to save their family from being turned into undead monsters. You collect heroes, let them do battle to level up, and progress through the game. As the genre suggests, the game plays itself in the background so you can grind while you sleep. The graphics are decent. We liked the world design more than the character design, but it’s a very Diablo-like experience, with dark color palettes. It competes with games like AFK Arena, and as long as the developer doesn’t mess up, it might actually succeed at it.


If we missed any big Android apps or games news or releases, tell us about it in the comments.
Thank you for reading. Try these out, too:

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Doctors Say You Shouldn’t Waste Your Money On This One Type Of Vitamin–It’s Practically Useless!

While it’s important to get as many nutrients as possible into your daily diet, we’re all bound to run into gaps and deficiencies sometimes. That’s where supplements come in. Supplements are a fantastic way to ensure your body is getting everything it needs to function properly and stay as healthy as possible. However, it’s important to note that not all supplements are created equally. In fact, there’s one kind of vitamin that experts say you should skip altogether. Believe it or not, it’s a multivitamin—especially the gummy kind.

To get down to the bottom of things and learn exactly why you may want to consider leaving those One-A-Days on the shelf next time you’re at the pharmacy, we spoke to holistic physician Sony Sherpa, MD. She told us that multivitamins typically don’t offer enough nutrients to make a difference, and gummy varieties are difficult for your body to absorb properly. Learn more below!

 

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Gummy multivitamins

For those of us who are always looking for shortcuts, gummy vitamins seem like the perfect solution to supplements. They’re supposed to give us all the vitamins and minerals we need—and they taste so good, we’d eat them like candy if we could. However, dear reader, we’re sad to tell you that many health experts agree on one thing about these delicious supplements: they’re virtually useless when it comes to health benefits. That’s right: neither multivitamins nor gummy vitamins are the most effective way to get your nutrients. When combined, they’re pretty much a waste of money for a few reasons. We’ll dive into exactly why below.

Downsides of multivitamins

While a multivitamin may sound like a great way to meet your daily quota for all of the important vitamins and nutrients your body needs to thrive, Dr. Sherpa warns that this isn’t necessarily the case. If you think it sounds too good to be true, you’re probably right. This is because this variety of supplement offers a small portion of the vitamins you need.

“Essentially, the vitamin contents of multivitamin tablets are greatly reduced because these supplements are manufactured in very large quantities,” Dr. Sherpa explains. “This allows for the inclusion of a small amount of each vitamin, rather than producing tablets with larger concentrations of only one or two vitamins. Consequently, multivitamins often do not contain nearly enough of any given vitamin to have a noticeable effect on our health.” So while you may feel like you’re providing your body with ample fuel, you might be hardly giving it anything useful at all.

Downsides of gummy vitamins

If multivitamins are somewhat useless on their own, they’re even less worth your money when they come in gummy form. As fun (and tasty) as gummy vitamins can be, Dr. Sherpa says they likely won’t do your health much good due to the fact that they offer low amounts of the vitamins you need.

“One major factor is that these types of vitamins typically contain lower quantities of vitamins and minerals since they are designed for children or young adults who typically require smaller doses of these nutrients ,” she explains.

But it isn’t just the low vitamin content of these supplements that makes them a poor choice. Dr. Sherpa says they’re also difficult for your body to absorb, thanks to all that sugar that makes them taste so good: “Gummy vitamins often have poor absorption rates due to their high sugar content, which can interfere with the body’s ability to absorb and utilize these nutrients. As a result, gummy vitamins may not be as effective at meeting our vitamin and mineral needs as other supplements,” she tells us. Say it ain’t so! Guess it’s time to invest in some big girl supplements and say goodbye to our candy-flavored fantasies.

READ MORE:

3 Supplements Every Woman Over 40 Should Be Taking For A Longer Life, According To Doctors

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What is the best way to get vitamins?

So, if multivitamins and gummy vitamins aren’t all they’re cracked up to be, how should you get your daily dose of vitamins and minerals? Unfortunately there’s no easy shortcut. Dr. Sherpa says the most effective way to get nutrients is always straight from the food you eat. “The best way to ensure that we get the proper amount of vitamins and minerals is to focus on a healthy, well balanced diet that includes plenty of fruits, vegetables, lean protein, and whole grains,” she notes.

However, this doesn’t mean that all supplements are a waste of money. If you find you’re missing certain vitamins and minerals from your diet, the right one can really come in handy—just don’t rely on them for everything. “Supplements are there to fill any gaps in our diet and help us to stay healthy, but they should not be the sole source of these nutrients,” Dr. Sherpa explains.

As far as the best way to ensure your body is absorbing all the beneficial nutrients you provide it with, she offers some advice: “Along with a healthy diet, it is also important to exercise regularly and avoid smoking and excessive alcohol consumption, as these behaviors can interfere with our ability to absorb and utilize vitamins and minerals. Taking care of your body is a life-long effort, and making good choices about nutrition is a crucial part of that process,” she concludes. Noted! 

READ MORE:

Why People Who Are Deficient Of This Mineral Struggle To Lose Weight

3 Superfoods You Should Be Eating Every Day For A Healthier Body Over 40, According To Doctors

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12 Signs Of Cognitive Decline That Shouldn’t Be Ignored

Some aspects of getting older are inevitable, and brain aging is one of them. No matter how diligently you care for your brain, a certain amount of change in cognitive function (e.g., struggling to multitask or recall someone’s name) is normal and expected.

However, the line between typical “senior moments” and signs of serious cognitive decline can be somewhat subjective and difficult to define. This intermediate zone between normal brain aging and dementia is called mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and it can be a cause for concern—once signs of MCI begin to crop up, they can progress into dementia (typically in the form of Alzheimer’s disease) at an annual rate of 8% to 15%.

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Conservatives blast Musk critics saying billionaires shouldn’t run media outlets: ‘Stop attacking Bezos’

Liberals with verified Twitter accounts flooded the social media platform to take issue with the idea of billionaires purchasing social media companies, prompting their conservative critics to point out that many Democrats have been silent about similar billionaire purchases in the past.

“Elon Musk buying twitter is bad,” former Democratic congressional candidate Nina Turner tweeted this week. “Billionaires owning media outlets is bad. Billionaires buying politicians is bad. We wonder why ‘the rich get richer while the poor get poorer’ remains true?”

“When multi-billionaires take control of our most vital platforms for communication, it’s not a win for free speech. It’s a win for oligarchy,” former Clinton administration labor secretary Robert Reich posted on Thursday.

Conservatives on social media responded to the tweets by pointing out that Democrats have supported the Washington Post being owned by billionaire Jeff Bezos and have been less critical about the wealth of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey.

TRUMP TO STAY ON HIS TRUTH SOCIAL AMID ELON MUSK TWITTER TAKEOVER

Elon Musk attends the 2022 Met Gala at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 2, 2022, in New York City.  (Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue / Getty Images)

“Translation: Leftists liked the old billionaire more than the new billionaire, because the former billionaire silenced everyone who disagreed with Leftists,” Republican Sen. Ted Cruz tweeted in response to Reich.

“Stop attacking Bezos Zuckerberg and Dorsey you know your guys,” CPAC Chair Matt Schlapp tweeted. 

WHAT I WOULD DO IF I WERE ELON MUSK TAKING OVER TWITTER: LET FREEDOM REIGN

Tesla CEO Elon Musk smiles as he addresses guests at the Offshore Northern Seas 2022 (ONS) meeting in Stavanger, Norway ((Photo by Carina Johansen / NTB / AFP/ Getty Images / Getty Images)

Musk finalized his $44 billion acquisition of Twitter on Thursday and posted a letter to advertisers outlining his vision for the company.

“The reason I acquired Twitter is because it is important to the future of civilization to have a common digital town square, where a wide range of beliefs can be debated in a healthy manner, without resorting to violence,” Musk posted on Twitter. “There is currently great danger that social media will splinter into far right wing and far left wing echo chambers that generate more hate and divide our society.”

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The Twitter logo is seen on a sign on the exterior of Twitter headquarters in San Francisco, California, on October 28, 2022. – After months of controversy, Elon Musk is now at the head of one of the most influential social networks on the planet, wh (Photo by Constanza Hevia/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Musk added that the social media platform “cannot become a free-for-all hellscape” and that he will focus on adhering to the “laws of the land” while also fostering an environment that is “warm and welcoming to all.”



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5 Signs of Depression You Shouldn’t Ignore

Summary: Researchers provide a list of five things to look out for that can signal depression.

Source: University of Colorado

It can be painful to watch a friend struggle with their mental health.

Here are some common symptoms of depression to watch for and ways to support a friend or loved one who is struggling.

1. Difficulty getting out of bed

It’s perfectly normal to enjoy sleeping in or spending time in bed. However, if it has become difficult to find the motivation to get out of bed or get ready in the morning, this could be a sign of depression. Depression can make us feel fatigued and physically drained to the point where even small tasks, like getting up in the morning or showering, can feel exhausting or difficult to do.

2. Sleeping habits

The physical and mental exhaustion that comes with depression can also affect our sleeping habits. Changes in sleep can show up in a number of ways. Sometimes this means sleeping throughout the day, using sleep as a way to pass the time or preferring sleep to other daily activities.

Other times, sleep changes can create bouts of insomnia, which can make it difficult to fall asleep or stay asleep at night. Missing out on quality, restful sleep can increase our anxiety levels and intensify feelings of distress. Sometimes, this creates a cycle where our anxious thoughts keep us awake and negatively impact our sleep, which then leads to more anxious thoughts.

3. Changes in appetite

Our appetite and eating habits can also be impacted by depression. Some people may experience an increased appetite, while others have less of an appetite or may not be hungry at all.

If you are noticing changes in your sleep habits, like the ones listed above, you may also notice changes in the way you eat. This is because sleep helps regulate our hunger hormones, which help to keep us from over- or undereating.

4. Persistent irritability or mood swings

Depression can cause us to experience outbursts and mood swings. One minute we’re angry, the next we’re crying uncontrollably, or we shut down and go numb. Changes in our mood can switch in a moment’s notice.

See also

Depression can cause us to experience outbursts and mood swings. Image is in the public domain

Sometimes these changes can be triggered by small or insignificant challenges, and other times they may come about completely unprovoked. If you notice a pattern of irritability or mood swings that last more than a few days, it may be linked to depression.

5. Difficulty experiencing joy or connection

When we’re depressed, it can take all of the enjoyment out of the things we love and make it more difficult for us to connect to those closest to us. We may begin to lose interest in hobbies, friendships, schoolwork, social activities, sex or life in general.

When we find that we are no longer enjoying or finding pleasure in the things we used to enjoy, this can be a sign of depression. We may also isolate ourselves from close friends, family members or others who care about us, which can perpetuate the symptoms of depression.

Note: If you are currently experiencing one or more of these symptoms, it’s okay to seek support. If you are having thoughts of suicide, call the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988.

About this depression research news

Author: Press Office
Source: University of Colorado
Contact: Press Office – University of Colorado
Image: The image is in the public domain

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Steve Jobs’ Daughter Was Right. I Shouldn’t Have Bought the iPhone 14.

  • I bought the new iPhone 14 Pro Max the day after it went on sale in Apple stores.
  • I got $640 back by trading in my iPhone 13 Pro Max, but I still had to pay another $780. 
  • I was excited about the “Dynamic Island” feature, but I should have listened to Eve Jobs.

For the past decade or so, I’ve been one of Apple’s best customers. I’ve bought every new iPhone since I made the switch from a BlackBerry to the iPhone 4S.

This year has been no exception. I bought an iPhone 14 Pro Max, 256 GB, in Silver, the day after it was released on September 17. I got $640 back by trading in my iPhone 13 Pro Max, but I still had to pay $780.

After a couple of weeks of playing with my new toy, I can confidently say there are no big surprises to be found, apart from the “Dynamic Island”. That’s Apple’s fancy name for the dead space between the selfie camera and Face ID sensor now used for “consolidating your notifications, alerts, and activities into one interactive place”.

My colleague Antonio Villas-Boas can tell you all about the technical aspects of Apple’s latest products, so I will concentrate on what it’s been like to use.

Steve Jobs’ daughter was right

Ultimately, Eve Jobs, the daughter of Apple cofounder Steve Jobs, was right when she posted a meme on Instagram that joked the iPhone 14 is eerily similar to the previous model.

It reads: “Me upgrading from iPhone 13 to iPhone 14 after Apple’s announcement today,” while showing a man holding up a shirt identical to the one he’s wearing.

Eve Jobs posted on Instagram poking fun at the iPhone 14.

Instagram



While the newest series of smartphones has several new software features, I’m disappointed that there isn’t more to it. 

I admit I was very excited about the iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max going fullscreen – especially now the notch has gone.

I’ll also concede that the Dynamic Island feature is very cool indeed. I like that you can simply press it when listening to music and it takes you back to the application. It could have been used more effectively, however. 

Having had the iPhone 13 Pro Max, I can’t see a difference that makes it actually worth upgrading for, apart from Dynamic Island. Maybe the smartphone has simply got as good as it’s fundamentally going to get?

The Dynamic Island on the iPhone 14 Pro can expand to offer useful functionality.

Apple



Nonsense

I always find excuses to justify splashing hundreds on a new smartphone: using my iPhone for work, documenting reporting trips, ensuring the battery lasts all day, and that it can support all the things I’ve got to do on it. Let’s call that exactly what it is: nonsense.

Even a now-ancient iPhone 8 (from way back in, erm, 2017) could do the job. However, there’s an appeal to having the latest mobile phone, and it’s nothing more than a way to brag to your friends. 

Apple CEO Tim Cook was asked last month by Vox Media’s LiQuan Hunt if Apple would adopt RCS, a messaging app developed by Google for Android smartphones, so his mom could see the videos he sends her. Cook told him to buy his mom an iPhone, The Verge reported. 

It’s not just an iPhone that Cook thinks everyone should own when there are also AirPods, iPads, MacBooks and the Apple Watch to buy as well. And yes, I do own all of those devices as well, of course.

While I’ve always said I don’t think I could switch from an iPhone to an Android, plenty of people have done so and somehow survived. Maybe it’s time I took an iOS holiday too? 

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FDA vaccine adviser says healthy young people SHOULDN’T get another COVID booster

A top vaccine expert and pediatric doctor is cautioning parents of healthy young people to hold off getting the new COVID booster shot, saying it can carry risks and its efficacy hasn’t yet been proven. 

Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and a member of the Food and Drug Administration’s Vaccine Advisory Committee, said he’s not fully sold on the benefits of a third shot outweighing the harm.

‘Who really benefits from another dose?’ Offit said on CNN. 

He did acknowledge that studies have shown people who are over 65, immuno-compromised or have a chronic ailments are less likely to be hospitalized with the virus if they’ve had a third or even fourth shot.

The newly developed dose, called a bivalent vaccine, is a cocktail of the original coronavirus strain combined with parts of the omicron BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants. The hope being that people would be able to fight a broader range of more highly contagious virus mutations. 

But writing in the Wall Street Journal earlier this week, Offitt said preliminary data suggested the new bivalent vaccines were actually worse at warding off COVID infections than the first generation of shots. 

He highlighted data comparing Moderna’s original COVID vaccine and its new bivalent update. Of a test group given both shots, 11 people who’d received bivalent vaccines contracted the virus, while just five people who received the original ‘monovalent’ shot caught COVID. 

Offit warned that the Biden administration that ‘overselling’ the new bivalent vaccines without more data could ‘erode the public’s trust’ in them.  

Dr. Paul Offit, right, cautions that there are still risks for healthy young people that should be considered before getting the COVID booster shot

Sean Bagley, 14, seen here, recently got the bivalent vaccine in Skippack Pharmacy in Schwenksville, Penn.

He explained that the FDA’s recent approval of a the new vaccine cooked up by Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech comes with little assurances and some risks.

‘A healthy young person is unlikely to benefit from the extra dose,’ he said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have reported that vaccine side-effects, like myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, and pericarditis, an inflammation of the heart’s outer lining, are rare, but they most often occur in adolescents and young men.

Myocarditis can even be fatal, with young people far less likely to suffer a severe COVID infection than older people.  

President Joe Biden declared the covid-19 pandemic is ‘over’ in an interview with CBS News

‘When you are asking people to get a vaccine, I think there has to be clear evidence of benefit,’ he said, adding that it’s unrealistic to have clinical trials of the latest dose. ‘You’d like to have, at least, human data,’ he said. So far, the only tests on the new shots have been done on lab mice.

‘Right now they’re saying we should trust mouse data,’ he said, ‘and I don’t think that should ever be true.’

Offit voted against approval of the new vaccine. 

‘If there’s not clear evidence of benefit, then it’s not fair, I think, to ask people to take a risk no matter how small,’ Offit said.

The doctor recently cautioned that pushing the new shot without the supporting evidence risks ‘eroding the public’s trust.’

He said the studies regarding the bivalent vaccine so far were ‘underwhelming.’ 

The increased emphasis on boosters is at odds with President Joe Biden’s recent announcement that ‘the pandemic is over.’

‘The pandemic is over,’ Biden told 60 Minutes. ‘We still have a problem with COVID. We’re still doing a lot of work on it. But the pandemic is over. If you notice, no one’s wearing masks. Everybody seems to be in pretty good shape, and so I think it’s changing.’

The president’s declaration runs counter with what his administration’s health officials have been saying.

‘We have a virus out there that’s still circulating, still killing hundreds of Americans every day,’ White House COVID-19 response coordinator, Ashish Jha, said at a September 9 press briefing. 

‘I think we all as Americans have to pull together to try to protect Americans … and do what we can to get our health-care system through what might be a difficult fall and winter ahead.’

He also may have submarined his own $22.4 billion request to Congress to continue the fight against the virus.

There have been about 54,000 new cases of the virus on average over the last two weeks, according to Johns Hopkins University, with about 400 Americans succumbing to the virus every day.



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You can uninstall iOS 16 Rapid Security Response updates, but you probably shouldn’t

Apple will let you remove the security patches installed by iOS 16’s Rapid Security Response system, which can install patches without the need to fully update your iPhone (or even without having to restart it, in some cases). According to a support document spotted by MacRumors, you can remove a Rapid Security Response update by going to Settings > General > About, then tapping on the iOS Version. From there, you’ll be presented with a “Remove Security Update” button.

The document doesn’t give any examples of why you’d need to uninstall one of the patches, leaving your phone open to the vulnerability it protects against. It’s easy to imagine a few special circumstances where the feature could be useful, perhaps if one messes up some special work-related software or management tools, for instance. Otherwise, it’s one of those features that most people should probably never use unless they have a very specific reason and fully understand what they’re doing — kind of like the new extreme Lockdown Mode, which is included to protect users from “highly sophisticated” targeted cyberattacks.

Rapid Security Response is turned on by default, although you can turn off the updates by going to Settings > General > Software Update > Automatic Updates and toggling “Security Responses and System Files.” If you do so, you’ll have to wait for full iOS updates to get the security patches. Again, I’d personally recommend against turning the feature off unless you have an explicit reason to, given how many of Apple’s recent updates have patched out pretty serious vulnerabilities.

The system is also coming to macOS in Ventura, which hasn’t been officially released yet — so far, Apple’s support documents for its desktop OS don’t mention whether you’ll be able to roll back those updates as well.

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