Tag Archives: slashed

Stop what you’re doing – Guitar Center just slashed $700 off the Gibson Les Paul Traditional Pro V in their official Black Friday sale – MusicRadar

  1. Stop what you’re doing – Guitar Center just slashed $700 off the Gibson Les Paul Traditional Pro V in their official Black Friday sale MusicRadar
  2. I’ve looked through all 99 pages of the Guitar Center Black Friday sale – these are the 5 guitar deals I’d take home today Guitar World
  3. I’ve scouted out all 99 pages of the Guitar Center Black Friday sale – here are 5 guitar bargains I’m considering Guitar Player
  4. I have 10 Gibsons in my collection and this massive $700 off Les Paul Traditional Pro V Black Friday deal makes me want to add another Guitar World
  5. You only have 24 hours to save up to 25% on some of our favourite Epiphones at Guitar Center Guitar World
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Diversity, equity and inclusion jobs slashed at higher rate than others in recent layoffs – Fox Business

  1. Diversity, equity and inclusion jobs slashed at higher rate than others in recent layoffs Fox Business
  2. Have a little faith: When it comes to DEI, don’t forget about religious diversity | Partner Content Campaign Asia
  3. Diversity Officers Pink Slipped Like Never Before During Black History Month Daily Caller
  4. Diversity, equity, and inclusion jobs cut at higher rate than other roles – DEI workers claim positions are essential TheBlaze
  5. Diversity, equity, inclusion workers fret companies aren’t hiring them anymore: ‘Insane,’ ‘Pathetic’ Fox News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tesla owners were furious when Elon Musk slashed prices. Now they have to share their charging stations with you and they hate it – Yahoo Finance

  1. Tesla owners were furious when Elon Musk slashed prices. Now they have to share their charging stations with you and they hate it Yahoo Finance
  2. Biden admin bragged about building ‘made-in-America’ EV charging network, then waived ‘Buy America’ rules Fox Business
  3. Tesla Drivers Worry About Wait Times as Elon Musk Opens Up Supercharger Network The Wall Street Journal
  4. Tesla’s Supercharger Network Opening To All Brands Won’t Meet Growing EV Charging Demand CarScoops
  5. Why Tesla’s Superchargers Won’t Supercharge EV Stocks InvestorPlace
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Amazon just slashed $700 off one of the best OLED TVs in epic Super Bowl TV deal

Looking for the best Super Bowl TV deals? Well, Amazon is stepping up its game with this sale on Sony TVs and accessories.

The 55-inch Sony Bravia XR A80K for $1,298 (opens in new tab) is one of our favorite deals from this sale. It’s the successor to the XR A80J, which is one of the best OLED TVs we’ve reviewed. You can also get the 65-inch Sony X95K for $1,798 at Amazon (opens in new tab), which holds a spot in our best TV  guide for anyone looking for a large screen.

Update Jan 16: This Sony sale on Amazon is still live. 

Want to pair your TV with a soundbar? The Sony HT-A3000 is $498 at Amazon (opens in new tab) right now. This soundbar delivers crisp, clear dialogue and pairs excellently with Sony TVs.

There are more TV deals to be found, so keep reading and check out the whole Sony TVs and accessories sale at Amazon (opens in new tab).

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Risk of heart disease could be slashed with one tiny life change

By Alice Clifford via SWNS




© Provided by talker
(Ground Picture via Shutterstock)

Shaking less salt on your food at the table could reduce the risk of heart disease, according to a new study from Tulane University in New Orleans.

This risk drops even more with people who followed a DASH diet, which includes avoiding red and processed meats and instead eating vegetables, fruit, whole grains, low-fat dairy, nuts and legumes.

While the DASH diet has shown positive results in reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease, combining this diet with a low salt intake is an even better way to keep your heart healthy.

The results are regardless of people’s lifestyle and whether they have any pre-existing diseases.

High salt diets can cause a rise in blood pressure, or hypertension, which can lead to heart disease and stroke.

Nearly half of adults in the United States (47%, or 116 million) have hypertension, according to the CDC.

To find out whether the frequency of adding salt to foods was linked with the risk of heart disease, researchers studied 176,570 participants from the UK Biobank.

Each participant filled in questionnaires about how often they add salt to food, not including salt used in cooking.






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(Ground Picture via Shutterstock)

They were also asked if they had changed their diets in the last five years and completed one to five rounds of 24-hour dietary recalls over three years.

The team also collected data about heart disease through medical history and data on hospital admissions, questionnaires and death register data.

Dr. Lu Qi, HCA Regents Distinguished Chair and professor at the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine at Tulane University in New Orleans, said: “Overall, we found that people who don’t shake on a little additional salt to their foods very often had a much lower risk of heart disease events, regardless of lifestyle factors and pre-existing disease.

“We also found that when patients combine a DASH diet with a low frequency of adding salt, they had the lowest heart disease risk.

“This is meaningful as reducing additional salt to food, not removing salt entirely, is an incredibly modifiable risk factor that we can hopefully encourage our patients to make without much sacrifice.”

The study also found that people with a lower frequency of adding salt to their food were more likely to be women.

They were also more likely to be white, have a lower body mass index, have moderate alcohol consumption, follow a DASH diet and be more physically active. They were also less likely to be current smokers.

The researchers discovered that the link of adding salt to foods with heart disease risk was stronger in participants of lower socioeconomic status, as well as in current smokers.

Dr. Sara Ghoneim, a gastroenterology fellow at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said: “The study is promising, builds on previous reports, and alludes to the potential impact of long-term salt preferences on total cardiovascular risk.”

She added “A major limitation of the study is the self-reported frequency of adding salt to foods and the enrolment of participants only from the UK, limiting generalizability to other populations with different eating behaviors.

“The findings of the present study are encouraging and are poised to expand our understanding of salt-related behavioral interventions on cardiovascular health.”

The study is published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

The post Risk of heart disease could be slashed with one tiny life change appeared first on Talker.

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Baidu’s robotaxi can drive without a steering wheel, car price slashed

Baidu unveiled on July 21, 2022, the sixth generation of its self-driving electric car built for ride-hailing rides — at a cost nearly 50% below that of a model announced last year.

Baidu

BEIJING — Chinese tech giant Baidu announced Thursday it has cut the price of its robotaxi vehicles by nearly half, lowering costs for a nascent business.

The new vehicle, the Apollo RT6, is an electric car that costs 250,000 yuan (about $37,313) to produce — without relying on a third-party manufacturer, Baidu said. That price is 48% less than the 480,000 yuan manufacturing cost announced last year for the Apollo Moon, made in partnership with state-owned BAIC Group’s Arcfox electric car brand.

The Apollo RT6 is set to start operating on China’s roads in the second half of next year under Baidu’s self-driving robotaxi business.

The company’s robotaxi business, called Apollo Go, received Beijing city’s approval in November to begin charging fares for rides within a suburban district. However, a human staff member must still sit in the car.

In April, municipal authorities loosened restrictions on whether the staff member had to sit in the driver’s seat, paving the way to fully eliminating the cost of a taxi driver. It remains unclear when the Chinese government would allow robotaxis to charge fares for rides without any human staff in the vehicles.

We are moving towards a future where taking a robotaxi will be half the cost of taking a taxi today.

Baidu said the company aims to produce 100,000 Apollo RT6 vehicles over an unspecified period of time.

“This massive cost reduction will enable us to deploy tens of thousands of [autonomous driving vehicles] across China,” Robin Li, co-founder and CEO of Baidu, said in a statement. “We are moving towards a future where taking a robotaxi will be half the cost of taking a taxi today.”

Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

Apollo Go operates in 10 cities in China, with plans to reach 65 cities by 2025, and 100 cities in 2030, the company said.

In addition to Baidu, start-ups such as Pony.ai and WeRide are testing robotaxi businesses in China.

To expand in China, companies need to test robotaxis and obtain licenses in each city they want to operate in, Elinor Leung, managing director of Asia telecom and internet research at CLSA, told CNBC earlier this week.

Until cities recognize each other’s testing records, robotaxi companies will need to raise more money to test more cars in different cities, she said.

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New Drug Slashed Deaths Among Patients With Severe Covid, Maker Claims

The drug was granted so-called fast-track status by the Food and Drug Administration in January, Dr. Steiner said. The designation is intended to prompt faster development and review of new treatments that address unmet medical needs and target serious or life-threatening conditions.

Dr. Steiner said the company plans to meet with the agency later this month and will be applying for emergency-use authorization for sabizabulin. An F.D.A. spokeswoman declined to comment, saying the agency did not confirm, deny or comment on pending applications.

No safety concerns related to the drug were identified in the course of the clinical trial, company officials said.

“Despite it being two and a half years into the battle, we are still working hard to get highly effective drugs into the mix to treat this specific population of patients, and this is a fairly dramatic improvement in 60-day mortality,” said Dr. Michael Gordon, one of the trial investigators and chief medical officer at HonorHealth Research and Innovation Institute in Scottsdale, Ariz.

But Dr. Gordon leavened his optimism with caution, saying he was eager to see more detailed analyses. Additional data were still being analyzed on Monday, including the proportion of treated patients without respiratory failure, the number of days they spent in intensive care, the length of their hospital stay and how long they were on mechanical ventilation.

“No drug works for everybody,” Dr. Gordon said. “The benefit that was seen is mortality — who is living and who is dying — not who is getting off oxygen, though I anticipate we will see improvement in other parameters, too.”

Patients on both arms of the multicenter trial received all standard care and treatment. The participants were in the United States, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Colombia and Bulgaria, and they had been infected with both the Delta and Omicron variants. The drug is effective regardless of the variant type, Dr. Gordon and company officials said.

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Dell just slashed this Nvidia RTX 3080 Alienware Aurora desktop by $714

Finding where to buy the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 is still a pretty daunting task. We’ve seen only sparse restocks over the last few months, and the coveted graphics card remains extremely elusive. That’s why getting an RTX 3080 via a pre-built PC desktop is often the easiest method of scoring Nvidia’s latest graphics tech.

The problem with that solution is that powerful PC desktops often verge on overpriced, which is where this epic deal comes in. Right now, you can get an Alienware Aurora Ryzen Edition R10 Desktop with Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 for $2,155 at Dell. That’s a massive $714 off its regular retail price of $2,869. It’s also the lowest price we’ve ever seen for this beastly configuration and one of the best early Presidents Day sales around. 

Don’t mistakenly believe that Dell has whacked an RTX 3080 into this desktop then used the demand surrounding the card as a license to skimp on the PC’s other components. Underneath the slick Dark Side of the Moon chassis, you’ll find an AMD Ryzen 9 5900 CPU, 16GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD for storing plenty of the best PC games. 

If you want even better performance, or perhaps plan on gaming and streaming at the same time, you can upgrade to 32GB of RAM for an extra $147. Although, for most users, 16GB of RAM is more than enough. You can also double your storage capacity to 2TB for an additional $274. AAA games file sizes are getting bigger every year, so this is definitely an upgrade worth considering. 

The Alienware Aurora R10 is capable of playing all the latest games at high settings, and will likely keep pace with gaming tech advancements for the foreseeable future. So, whether you’re looking to completely overhaul your PC gaming setup, or are new to gaming on a desktop, this deal is well worth considering.

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Vaccinating UK girls against HPV slashed cervical cancer rates, study finds

Vaccinating girls against HPV has dramatically reduced cervical cancer rates, British researchers have found. 

In a study published last week in The Lancet, the researchers followed the outcome of the Cervarix vaccine, which was introduced in England in 2008 and protects against the two most common types of HPV.

US CERVICAL CANCERS FALL BUT OTHER SEX-RELATED CANCERS RISE

Using data from a population-based cancer registry between January 2006 and June 2019, the study looked at seven groups of women between the ages of 20 and 64.

Cervarix protects against two strains of human papillomavirus, or HPV, which can cause cancer. Since 2012, the U.K. has also been using another vaccine called Gardasil that protects against four types of HPV and was not evaluated in the paper.

In the study, three vaccinated cohorts were compared with earlier cohorts that were not eligible for HPV vaccination. 

A type of Gardaisl is currently the only vaccine distributed in the U.S.
(Credit: iStock)

The study found that cervical cancer rates were 87% lower in girls getting the shot at age 12-13, 62% lower in girls 14-16 and 34% lower in girls 16-18, compared with previous unvaccinated generations.

“We estimated that by June 30, 2019, there had been 448 fewer than expected cervical cancers and 17,235 fewer than expected cases … in vaccinated cohorts in England,” the researchers wrote.

WHO LAUNCHES STRATEGY TO EXPEDITE END OF CERVICAL CANCER

“It’s been incredible to see the impact of HPV vaccination, and now we can prove it prevented hundreds of women from developing cancer in England. We’ve known for many years that HPV vaccination is very effective in preventing particular strains of the virus, but to see the real-life impact of the vaccine has been truly rewarding,” Peter Sasieni, the lead author, said in a statement to King’s College London.

“Assuming most people continue to get the HPV vaccine and go for screening, cervical cancer will become a rare disease. This year we have already seen the power of vaccines in controlling the COVID-19 pandemic. These data show that vaccination works in preventing some cancers,” he said. 

According to the World Health Organization, there are more than 100 types of HPV, of which at least 14 are cancer-causing. 

Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women globally, with an estimated 570,000 new cases in 2018.

In the U.S., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that HPV is the most common sexually transmitted virus, with about 43 million infections reported in 2018.

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Cancer may take decades to develop after a person is infected with HPV.

A type of Gardasil that protects against nine types of HPV is currently the only vaccine distributed in the U.S., according to the CDC.

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Older iPhone prices slashed: All the discounts and which phones Apple’s getting rid of

The iPhone 12 is newly discounted now that the iPhone 13 has been unveiled.


Sarah Tew/CNET

This story is part of Apple Event, our full coverage of the latest news from Apple.

Apple on Tuesday unveiled its latest slate of flagship phones: the iPhone 13, Mini, Pro and Pro Max (here’s how each of the iPhone 13 variants compare). With the new launch, some of the company’s older phones will get lower prices and others will no longer be sold by the tech giant. 

Prior to Tuesday’s announcement, the iPhone 12, iPhone 12 Mini, iPhone 12 Pro, iPhone 12 Pro Max, iPhone 11 and iPhone XR were available for purchase through Apple’s website. The second generation of the budget-friendly iPhone SE, which was unveiled in the spring of 2020, was also available. 


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Here are price changes after the Sept. 14 event:

  • iPhone 12 64GB: from $799 to $699
  • iPhone 12 128GB: from $849 to $749
  • iPhone 12 256GB: from $949 to $849
  • iPhone 12 Mini 64GB: from $699 to $599
  • iPhone 12 Mini 128GB: from $749 to $649
  • iPhone 12 Mini 256GB: from $849 to $749
  • iPhone 11 64GB: from $599 to $499
  • iPhone 11 128GB: from $649 to $549

Here are the phones Apple has stopped selling on its website:

Apple’s upcoming operating system, iOS 15, is compatible with many of its older devices, including the iPhone XS and XS Max, iPhone XR, iPhone X, iPhone 8 and 8 Plus, iPhone 7 and 7 Plus, iPhone 6S and 6S Plus, iPhone SE and SE 2, iPod Touch (seventh generation) along with the full iPhone 12 and iPhone 11 lineup. 

For more about Apple’s new operating system, here’s everything to know about iOS 15, how to download the iOS 15 public beta and the three things you need to know before installing. If you’re considering buying a new iPhone soon, check out CNET’s list of best iPhones in 2021, how the iPhone 13 compares with the iPhone 12 and what’s the difference between each model in the iPhone 13 lineup.

CNET’s Richard Nieva contributed to this report.

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