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    The weekend’s best deals: Apple Watch Series 7, gift card bundles, and more

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    Ars Technica

    It’s the weekend, which means it’s time for another Dealmaster. Our latest roundup of the best tech deals from around the web includes a good price on the Apple Watch Series 7, as the 41mm variant of Apple’s flagship smartwatch is currently down to $339 at Amazon and Walmart.

    The Series 7 is the top pick in our guide to the best smartwatches: it has the same excellent build quality and robust software as any other Apple Watch, but adds a larger and always-on display, faster charging, and more advanced health tracking features like blood oxygen monitoring and ECG functionality. It’s still not the most in-depth activity tracker, it’s still for iPhone users only, and there’s no real need to upgrade if you already own a Series 6. But it remains a well-rounded wearable that works for both basic-but-useful health tracking and smartphone-style utility. And while the Apple Watch SE is a fine alternative for those on a tighter budget, it sacrifices the always-on display, a little processing power, the faster charging rates, ECG, and blood oxygen tracking by comparison.

    Note that only the green and “midnight” colors are available at this price. We’ve also seen the Series 7 fall into the $350-360 range a few times in recent months. Still, if you’ve been looking to take the plunge, this discount matches the lowest price we’ve tracked to date and comes in a good $60 below Apple’s MSRP.

    Elsewhere, our deals roundup includes a promotion at Target and Best Buy that gives you a bonus $10 in store credit when you spend $100 on an Apple gift card. We’ve seen this offer multiple times before, but if you use either retailer and plan on buying something directly from Apple anyway—whether it’s an iCloud or Apple Music subscription, an App Store download, or a new device at a physical retail store—this deal gives you a little something extra for no added cost. You’ll see each offer after adding the gift card to your cart.

    Besides Apple, we also have discounts on recommended noise-canceling headphones from Sony and Bose, smart displays from Google and Amazon, Microsoft’s Xbox Series S, Anker USB-C chargers, Tile item trackers, and several video games. Most notably, the latter includes a charity bundle at Humble that gives you several dozen PC games for a minimum of $40, with all proceeds going to humanitarian relief efforts for victims of the ongoing war in Ukraine. You can find our full curated list of deals below.

    Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

    Featured deals of the day

    The Apple Watch Series 7.
    Enlarge / The Apple Watch Series 7.

    Corey Gaskin

    Electronics deals

    Google's second-generation Nest Hub smart display.
    Enlarge / Google’s second-generation Nest Hub smart display.

    Corey Gaskin

    Sony's WH-1000XM4 is our top pick among noise-canceling headphones.
    Enlarge / Sony’s WH-1000XM4 is our top pick among noise-canceling headphones.

    Jeff Dunn

    Laptop and desktop PC deals

    The 2021 14-inch MacBook Pro.
    Enlarge / The 2021 14-inch MacBook Pro.

    Samuel Axon

    Nintendo's <em>Legend of Zelda</em> Game and Watch handheld.
    Enlarge / Nintendo’s Legend of Zelda Game and Watch handheld.

    Jeff Dunn

    Gaming deals

    Xbox Series S (left), next to Xbox Series X (right). The former doesn't include a disc drive and isn't as powerful, but it's significantly more affordable and can still play all your modern Xbox games, albeit typically at lower settings.
    Enlarge / Xbox Series S (left), next to Xbox Series X (right). The former doesn’t include a disc drive and isn’t as powerful, but it’s significantly more affordable and can still play all your modern Xbox games, albeit typically at lower settings.

    Sam Machkovech

    Video game deals

    The stylish, surprising, and shapeshifting <em>Nier: Automata </em>is one of our favorite action-RPGs in recent years.
    Enlarge / The stylish, surprising, and shapeshifting Nier: Automata is one of our favorite action-RPGs in recent years.
    <em>Bravely Default II </em>is worth a look for those craving for a more traditional turn-based RPG.
    Enlarge / Bravely Default II is worth a look for those craving for a more traditional turn-based RPG.

    Square Enix

    Accessories and miscellaneous deals

    ‘Bridgerton’ season 2 review: More yearning, less burning

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    CLEVELAND, Ohio — If the first season of “Bridgerton” lit a fire under you, season two is more of a slow burn.

    The steamy romance that made the lavish period drama one of the most popular and sexiest Netflix shows of all time? Gone. Breakout star Regé-Jean Page opted out of the series and leading lady Phoebe Dynevor has been relegated to recurring status.

    But, heavy sigh of relief, this Regency Era tale, from executive producer Shonda Rhimes and showrunner Chris Van Dusen, remains every bit of the soapy guilty pleasure you remember. Come for the fancy balls, costumes and pop songs remixed into orchestral bops, stay for the secrets, scandals and forbidden love!

    The second season opens in the same manner as the first: at the start of London’s annual marriage mart with Queen Charlotte (Golda Rosheuvel) looking to select this season’s “Diamond,” aka the most eligible bachelorette of the season. It’s a decision followed closely by Lady Whistledown (voiced by Julie Andrews), the TMZ of the ton, and Anthony Bridgerton (Jonathan Bailey). Seems the eldest and most serious of the Bridgerton siblings is finally ready to settle down and find a wife.

    Enter Edwina Sharma (Charithra Chandran), a beautiful, kind and well-read young woman who has just arrived for the marriage season from India along with her protective sister, Kate (Simone Ashley), and devoted mother, Mary (Shelley Conn). Anthony sees her perfectly suited for the role of his Viscountess. Their courtship begins, much to the dismay of Kate, who after an exhilarating initial encounter with the Viscount, realizes he doesn’t love her sister and is only looking to check a box.

    The two swear themselves as enemies and bicker constantly, that is, when they’re not busy exchanging stolen glances at each other. You need not a passing grade in Romance Novel 101 to know where this is headed. What is required, however, is a great deal of patience. Their romance moves at a pace you’d expect of two people who value duty, responsibility and propriety over pesky endeavors like love, passion and honesty. Poor Edwina, who deserves so much better than this.

    In episode five of last season, the Duke of Hastings uttered those now four iconic words to Daphne, “I burn for you.” The best season two can offer at the same point in time is Anthony telling Kate, rather matter of factly, “You are the bane of my existence and the object of all my desires.” But before anything untoward can happen, she storms off, something she does frequently this season, leaving the viewer to live to swoon another day.

    This more methodical approach to the central romance gives some of the other characters more room to breathe and a chance to shine. Lady Featherington (Polly Walker) makes quite a comeback after being cast as the villain last season. Left desperate and near penniless after the death of her husband, her scheming and clawing for the survival of her and her daughters in London society by any means necessary amid the arrival of a new Lord Featherington provides the series with its most entertaining moments of the new season. Walker is clearly having a blast in the role and will you too watching her.

    Just as surprising is the transformation of Penelope (Nicola Coughlan) from observant wallflower to cold-blooded pot-stirrer and, gulp, the season’s real villain. Her secret identity as Lady Whistledown puts her on a crash course with best friend Eloise Bridgerton (Claudia Jessie), who is as determined as ever to unmask the town gossip. The pursuit leads her to an unlikely and dangerous new relationship. The emotional fallout is devastating and hits harder than you might expect, a credit to both actresses.

    Still, there’s a reason the novel on which this season is based is called “The Viscount Who Loved Me.” The love story between Anthony and Kate is indeed tortured and can be maddening to watch at times as their actions, or more accurately, inaction constantly digs them deeper into an untenable situation. But it’s never not interesting. Bailey, perhaps the least compelling Bridgerton of season one, injects the Viscount with complexity and depth this time around, aided by flashbacks that recount the circumstances of his father’s death. Ashley gives Kate a disarming combination of vulnerability and strength thanks to an uncanny ability to act with her eyes and face as much as with her voice. Their performances draw you in, their chemistry so palpable that when they finally surrender to it, the result is a crescendo of passion that is, yes, worth the wait.

    Turns out yearning can be just as satisfying as burning. It just takes a little longer.

    All eight episodes of “Bridgerton” season two will be available on Netflix starting March 25

    NASA Perseverance Rover’s Self-Driving Capabilities Put to the Test in Rush to Martian Delta

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    NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover looks back at its wheel tracks on March 17, 2022, the 381st Martian day, or sol, of the mission. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

    The rover’s self-driving capabilities will be put to the test this month as it begins a record-breaking series of sprints to its next sampling location.

    NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover is trying to cover more distance in a single month than any rover before it – and it’s doing so using artificial intelligence. On the path ahead are sandpits, craters, and fields of sharp rocks that the rover will have to navigate around on its own. At the end of the 3-mile (5-kilometer) journey, which began March 14, 2022, Perseverance will reach an ancient river delta within Jezero Crater, where a lake existed billions of years ago.

    This delta is one of the best locations on Mars for the rover to look for signs of past microscopic life. Using a drill on the end of its robotic arm and a complex sample collection system in its belly, Perseverance is collecting rock cores for return to Earth – the first part of the Mars Sample Return campaign.

    “The delta is so important that we’ve actually decided to minimize science activities and focus on driving to get there more quickly,” said Ken Farley of Caltech, Perseverance’s project scientist. “We’ll be taking lots of images of the delta during that drive. The closer we get, the more impressive those images will be.”

    Perseverance Mars Rover Route to Jezero Crater Delta

    NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover will follow the proposed route to Jezero Crater’s delta shown in this animation. The delta is one of the most important locations the rover will visit as it seeks signs of ancient life on Mars. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS/University of Arizona

    The science team will be searching these images for the rocks they’ll eventually want to study in closer detail using the instruments on Perseverance’s arm. They’ll also hunt for the best routes the rover can take to ascend the 130-foot-high (40-meter-high) delta.

    But first, Perseverance needs to get there. The rover will do this by relying on its self-driving AutoNav system, which has already set impressive distance records. While all of NASA’s Mars rovers have had self-driving abilities, Perseverance has the most advanced one yet.

    “Self-driving processes that took minutes on a rover like Opportunity happen in less than a second on Perseverance,” said veteran rover planner and flight software developer Mark Maimone of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, which leads the mission. “Because autonomous driving is now faster, we can cover more ground than if humans programmed every drive.”

    How Rover Planning Works

    Before the rover rolls, a team of mobility planning experts (Perseverance has 14 who trade off shifts) writes the driving commands the robotic explorer will carry out. The commands reach Mars via NASA’s Deep Space Network, and Perseverance sends back data so the planners can confirm the rover’s progress. Multiple days are required to complete some plans, as with a recent drive that spanned about 1,673 feet (510 meters) and included thousands of individual rover commands.

    Some drives require more human input than others. AutoNav is useful for drives over flat terrain with simple potential hazards – for instance, large rocks and slopes – that are easy for the rover to detect and work around.

    Thinking While Driving

    AutoNav reflects an evolution of self-driving tools previously developed for NASA’s Spirit, Opportunity, and Curiosity rovers. What’s different for AutoNav is “thinking while driving” – allowing Perseverance to take and process images while on the move. The rover then navigates based on those images. Is that boulder too close? Will its belly be able to clear that rock? What if the rover wheels were to slip?

    Upgraded hardware allows “thinking while driving” to happen. Faster cameras mean Perseverance can take images quickly enough to process its route in real-time. And unlike its predecessors, Perseverance has an additional computer dedicated entirely to image processing. The computer relies on a single-purpose, super-efficient microchip called a field-programmable gate array that is great for computer vision processing.

    “On past rovers, autonomy meant slowing down because data had to be processed on a single computer,” Maimone said. “This extra computer is insanely fast compared to what we had in the past, and having it dedicated for driving means you don’t have to share computing resources with over 100 other tasks.”

    Of course, humans aren’t completely out of the picture during AutoNav drives. They still plan the basic route using images taken from space by missions like NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Then, they mark obstacles such as potential sand traps for Perseverance to avoid, drawing “keep out” and “keep in” zones that help it navigate.

    Another big difference is Perseverance’s sense of space.

    Curiosity’s autonomous navigation program keeps the rover in a safety bubble that is 16 feet (5 meters) wide. If Curiosity spots two rocks that are, say, 15 feet (4.5 meters) apart – a gap it could easily navigate – it will still stop or travel around them rather than risk passing through.

    But Perseverance’s bubble is much smaller: A virtual box is centered on each of the rover’s six wheels. Mars’ newest rover has a more sensitive understanding of the terrain and can get around boulders on its own.

    “When we first looked at Jezero Crater as a landing site, we were concerned about the dense fields of rocks we saw scattered across the crater floor,” Maimone said. “Now we’re able to skirt or even straddle rocks that we couldn’t have approached before.”

    While previous rover missions took a slower pace exploring along their path, AutoNav provides the science team with the ability to zip to the locations they prioritize the most. That means the mission is more focused on its primary objective: finding the samples that scientists will eventually want to return to Earth.

    More About the Mission

    A key objective for Perseverance’s mission on Mars is astrobiology, including the search for signs of ancient microbial life. The rover will characterize the planet’s geology and past climate, pave the way for human exploration of the Red Planet, and be the first mission to collect and cache Martian rock and regolith (broken rock and dust).

    Subsequent NASA missions, in cooperation with ESA (European Space Agency), would send spacecraft to Mars to collect these sealed samples from the surface and return them to Earth for in-depth analysis.

    The Mars 2020 Perseverance mission is part of NASA’s Moon to Mars exploration approach, which includes Artemis missions to the Moon that will help prepare for human exploration of the Red Planet.

    JPL, which is managed for NASA by Caltech in Pasadena, California, built and manages operations of the Perseverance rover.

    SONDERMANN | Honors for all or honors for none? | Colorado Politics

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    Eric Sondermann


    It is quite something to behold the lengths to which we will go in the all-consuming, quasi-religious pursuit of equity.

    In schools across America, honors programs are under attack along with the practice of grouping students by their ability or proficiency in a given subject.

    Look to New York City which is eliminating its gifted and talented program. Or to Virginia which is weighing a proposal to eliminate all accelerated math classes before 11th grade. Or to Seattle, reliably a source of lunacy, where an effort is underway to phase out honors and advanced placement courses.

    That Seattle undertaking comes a couple of years after the school district incited a donnybrook over the assertion that math education is inherently racist. As if the answer to three plus three somehow depends on the color of your skin.

    Colorado is now becoming an epicenter of these debates and misguided efforts as well.

    This past week, we learned that the Cherry Creek school district will stop recognizing high school valedictorians. Though that is but a singular honor and pales in significance to misplaced policies in the name of social justice that will impact thousands of students.

    To be clear, the people behind such policy agendas are often well-motivated even if they misread human nature. It is inarguable that there is a persistent, recently accelerating achievement gap between children from upscale homes and those from at-risk circumstances. Further, it is undeniable that race and ethnicity play a role in this equation as does our country’s collective history of discrimination.

    No reasonable person disputes the problem. But the question is how best to address and remedy it. Is it accomplished by raising those at the academic bottom or by lowering those performing at the top? Do we level up or level down?

    Far too many such initiatives result in only the latter, a reduction of learning to the lowest common denominator.

    Denver’s George Washington High School finds itself at the center of this clash. The place has long resembled two schools in one building with an acclaimed International Baccalaureate program sharing space with a far more ordinary high school of underwhelming achievement.

    In the name of equity, the school has opened IB classes to students not interested in or capable of completing the full program. The result, per parents and other observers, has been an entirely predictable softening of rigor and expectations.

    At the same time, George Washington along with other Denver public high schools are moving to an approach branded “honors for all” which requires all freshmen and sophomores to take “honors” classes in civics, geography and English regardless of their interest or aptitude.

    Taking a standard class with kids of all abilities and calling it “honors” does not make it academically uplifting. In fact, all too often and unsurprisingly, it penalizes true honors students and reduces the content to the rudimentary and ordinary.

    At the same time, such wishful thinking does a disservice to many students who struggle academically and perhaps come to class with less intellectual capacity. None of that is to be looked down upon. The sin is in forcing square pegs into round holes by pretending that one size fits all.

    This is where a high-achieving, highly-impressive senior at George Washington enters the story. I met Kalina Kulig last fall while judging a televised high school debate competition that she won. Recently, Kalina penned a remarkably mature column on this topic for the Denver Post. It is recommended reading.

    (Full disclosure: I helped Kalina reach out to the Post and place her column.)

    Kalina’s dissent resulted in a number of meetings and plenty of consternation around the school. They may not have been full-on Chinese-style struggle sessions, but one gets the idea. While not overtly mentioned, the issue of race was never far from the surface.

    Such discussions and even controversies are now in full bloom at South and other high schools across Denver.

    As to the district administration, it is no exaggeration to say it is committed to this path and relentlessly on message. Even if the message defies experience.

    In an interview, Denver Deputy Superintendent of Academics Tamara Acevedo managed to get the word “rigor” or “rigorous” into almost every sentence. She insists that this policy will not result in a “dumbing down” of classes. Acevedo speaks of “ramping up expectations and rigor” and says that families and students “can expect the same level of rigor or more.”

    Give the district an “A” for aspirations and a “D-minus” for understanding inevitable outcomes. “Honors for all” is about to become “honors for none.”

    No doubt, the district’s focus should be on elevating low-performing students. That task has been difficult and elusive most everywhere. Part of the answer lies in expanding innovation schools and proven, high-performing charters as well as paying the best teachers more to take on the toughest assignments. All of that is at odds with the new thrust of district leadership.

    The most gifted youth should be nurtured, valued and challenged without compromise. Their brainpower, and often the twice-exceptional manner they present, is its own kind of special need. Too often, they become bored to death by the mundane and unchallenging, and thus disengage. Given the world this next generation will inherit, their brightest and most able will carry a special burden.

    With respect to Garrison Keillor, modern America is not Lake Wobegon, all men are not good-looking, and all children are not above average. The differential in human intelligence has not changed all that much over the years. Not every student is honors worthy, despite grade inflation and shelves full of participation trophies.

    By all means, we should adhere to the observation of President George W. Bush as to “the soft bigotry of low expectations” and strive to remove race and ethnicity as obstacles to academic success.

    But that is an exercise of raising floors rather than lowering ceilings. How hollow will equity be if the future brain trust and workforce are all equally, equitably pared down and mediocre?

    Credit reporting agencies will wipe most medical debt

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    Equifax (EFX), Experian (EXPGF) and TransUnion (TRU) will eliminate billions of dollars from the accounts of consumers who faced unexpected medical bills that they were unable to pay. The three firms said they made the move after months of research.

    “Medical collections debt often arises from unforeseen medical circumstances. These changes are another step we’re taking together to help people across the United States focus on their financial and personal well-being,” the companies said in a joint statement.

    The announcement follows research from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau showing that Americans had racked up $88 billion in medical debt on consumer credit records as of June 2021. It’s the most common debt collection credit account on credit records, the CFPB said.

    Medical debt can be volatile and unpredictable, and can negatively affect many financially secure consumers. Black, Hispanic, young and low-income consumers are most likely to be impacted by medical debt, the bureau said.

    Medical debt concerns have heightened since the Covid-19 pandemic hospitalized millions of people, and CFBP Director Rohit Chopra has been publicly critical of medical debt collections by credit reporting agencies. On March 1, Chopra said the CFPD will be “closely scrutinizing” the Big Three credit reporting agencies.

    “We expect them to take seriously their role as major actors in the credit reporting system — a system whose integrity and accuracy can determine the financial futures of hundreds of millions of people,” Chopra said.

    Starting July 1, paid medical collection debt will no longer be included on consumer credit reports. Millions of Americans had credit scores previously lowered because debts paid after being sent to collections could appear on credit reports for up to seven years.

    More changes are expected. It will now take one year before unpaid medical collection debt appears on a consumer’s report, instead of six months, the previous standard.

    The three companies also said that starting in the first half of 2023, medical collection debt less than $500 will no longer be included on credit reports.

    Good to be back with tour group traveling in Spain | Lifestyle

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    Lia Thomas finishes 8th in 100-yard freestyle, final race of collegiate swimming career 

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    Transgender UPenn swimmer Lia Thomas finished in eighth place in the 100-yard freestyle  race at the NCAA Division I women’s championships, making for a disappointing final race of her controversial college swimming career. 

    Thomas, 22, swam 48.18 seconds on Saturday night, less than a second slower than her qualifying time of 47.37 seconds, which was a personal best. 

    She had come in fourth place in the preliminary race, only 0.10 seconds behind third-place University of Alabama swimmer Morgan Scott and one second behind first-place University of Virginia swimmer Gretchen Walsh.

    Walsh, a freshman, came in first on Saturday night’s race, her first individual NCAA championship.    

    As a fifth-year senior, Thomas came into the event with the 10th fastest record, which she set at the Ivy League Championships in February.  

    Thomas has endured months of backlash for having what critics say is an unfair advantage. The UPenn swimmer was met with cheers, boos and notable silence during the championships races.  

    After the race, Thomas celebrated alongside Yale swimmer Iszac Henig, who identifies as a transgender man but has not started hormone therapy, making him eligible to compete in the women’s race. Henig tied for fifth.

    Both swimmers wrote ‘Let trans kids play’ on their arms during Saturday’s races.   

    Lia Thomas, 22, (pictured on Saturday) swam 48.18 seconds – finishing in eighth place in the 100-yard freestyle race at the NCAA Division I women’s championships, the final race of her collegiate swimming career

    Saturday's race marks the end of Thomas' swimming with the University of Pennsylvania

    Saturday’s race marks the end of Thomas’ swimming with the University of Pennsylvania 

    Thomas, in the sixth row, swam less than a second slower than her qualifying time of 47.37 seconds, which was a personal best she reached earlier on Saturday

    Thomas, in the sixth row, swam less than a second slower than her qualifying time of 47.37 seconds, which was a personal best she reached earlier on Saturday

    Thomas’ ranks in the NCAA Championships 

    500y prelims – 1st

    500-yard finals – 1st 

    200m prelims – 2nd

    200m finals –  5th

    100y prelims – 4th

    100y finals – 8th 

    Source: NCAA

    Hening, who said that he and Lia ‘are friends’ told ESPN that the message on the athlete’s arms was to stand in solidarity with trans athletes at all sporting levels. 

     ‘We’re not allowed to have anything on our clothes, but the rules don’t say anything about our skin,’ he said. ‘So I took the platform I was hoping to have to say that trans athletes are just like any other athlete.’ 

    Thomas did not speak to the media following Saturday night’s race.  

    Thomas has had parents and Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72, among other former professional athletes such as tennis great Martina Navratilova, weighing in with their thoughts about her ability to compete in the NCAA championships. 

    The controversial swimmer also pulled out second place in the 200m preliminary race, but only pulled fifth in the finals. 

    Throughout most of the season, Thomas has remained mum, rarely speaking about the mass amounts of criticism thrown her way. On Thursday, however, after winning first place, she told ESPN that she tries to ‘ignore’ the brutal commentary. 

    ‘I try to ignore it as much as I can, I try to focus on my swimming, what I need to do to get ready for my races, and I just try to block out everything else,’ she said. 

    ‘It means the world to be here, to be with two of my best friend and teammates and be able to compete.’ 

    An activist also claimed Thomas was ‘not a woman’ from the poolside on Friday. 

    The UPenn swimmer was the first transgender athlete to win a Division I title after pulling in first in the 500-yard, but when the young swimmer stood on top of the podium, she was met with near-silence, while second-place winner University of Virginia swimmer Emma Weyant was met with wild applause and many deeming her the ‘real’ winner. 

    Thomas is competing within the rules, as she has completed a year of testosterone suppressants, as she starting to transition during the pandemic. 

    However, the rules will more than likely change come next season, where transgender females will have to undergo three years of suppressing testosterone in order to compete against biological women. 

    The NCAA ruled it would be wrong to implement the new rules mid-season, thus allowing Thomas to complete her final season. 

    Jenner slammed the NCAA for allowing the college student to compete. 

    Although she said she had ‘no problem’ with Thomas herself, Jenner said the 22-year-old ‘was taking it easy’ in the 500-yard race in order to not break Katie Ledecky’s record – which Thomas is nine seconds short of. 

    Earlier this month, Jenner also said its ‘just not fair’ to allow biological boys to compete in women’s sports.   

    Thomas (above) has been met with harsh criticism since the start of the competition, with several high-profile people, such as transgender Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72 - who did not transition until 2015 - and tennis star Martina Navratilova, 65, speaking out against Thomas' eligibility to compete against biological women. Thomas is, however, competing within the current NCAA rule, which will change after this season

    Thomas (above) has been met with harsh criticism since the start of the competition, with several high-profile people, such as transgender Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72 – who did not transition until 2015 – and tennis star Martina Navratilova, 65, speaking out against Thomas’ eligibility to compete against biological women. Thomas is, however, competing within the current NCAA rule, which will change after this season 

    Olympian and reality TV star Caitlyn Jenner, 72, slammed the NCAA for 'not being tough enough' with the rules and allowing the University of Pennsylvania swimmer to compete. 'What I've said from the beginning [are] the rules aren't tough enough,' she said. 'Just being on testosterone depressants for a year or two, whatever the rules are now, they keep changing, obviously, it is not enough'

    Martina Navratilova, who is widely considered one of the greatest tennis players of all-time, spoke out against Thomas being allowed to compete as an equal against women - hours before Thomas became the first transgender NCAA champion on Thursday

    Olympian Caitlyn Jenner, 72, (left) slammed the NCAA for ‘not being tough enough’ with the rules and allowing the UPenn swimmer to compete. ‘Just being on testosterone depressants for a year or two, whatever the rules are now, they keep changing, obviously, it is not enough.’ Martina Navratilova, who is widely considered one of the greatest tennis players of all-time, spoke out against Thomas being allowed to compete as an equal against women

    ‘I don’t think biological boys should compete in women’s sports – we have to protect women’s sports,’ Caitlyn said. ‘That’s the bottom line.’ 

    Pink News slammed the reality TV star, calling her ‘anti-trans’ for her rhetoric on the UPenn swimmer. 

    However, Jenner didn’t shy away from the controversy and responded back on Twitter, writing: ‘No, I just had the balls to stand up for women and girls in sports,’ she wrote. 

    Another high-profile athlete Martina Navratilova, who is considered one of the greatest tennis players of all-time, spoke out amid Thomas’s historic victory on Thursday. She suggested transgender women who are competing against biological women should have an asterisk next to their wins. 

    ‘It’s not about excluding transgender women from winning ever,’ the 65-year-old said. ‘But it is about not allowing them to win when they were not anywhere near winning as men.’

    ‘You try to keep it as close as possible to what it would had been, were you born in the female biological body in the first place,’ she said.

    ‘And even saying that, people take exception to – biological female. People don’t even want to use those words.

    ‘I don’t know what else to say. Other than that.’

    On Friday, a British campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen, who lobbies against ‘woke’ policies on transgender people, went viral after a row in the stands during Thomas’ swimming competition, where she told a woke spectator that the 22-year-ld is ‘not a woman.’ 

    Keen, who was in the stands, can be heard telling a male spectator: ‘Is he the same as the other girls in the pool?’

    Signs and rowdy spectators have been seen at the competition demoting Thomas' wins and podium placements. A woman was seen holding a 'say no to males competing as females' sign at the competition on Friday. Also on Friday, British activist Kellie-Jay Keen got in a row with another spectator and said Thomas was 'not a woman'

    Signs and rowdy spectators have been seen at the competition demoting Thomas’ wins and podium placements. A woman was seen holding a ‘say no to males competing as females’ sign at the competition on Friday. Also on Friday, British activist Kellie-Jay Keen got in a row with another spectator and said Thomas was ‘not a woman’ 

    The man replies: ‘Every body is different.’

    Keen says: ‘No. Are you saying he doesn’t have male organs? I’m a woman – that is not a woman. Do you have ovaries? I’m a woman, and that is not a woman.’

    The man counters: ‘Let me ask you, are you a biologist?’

    Keen replied: ‘Oh my God – don’t be ridiculous. I’m not a vet, but I know what a dog is. You rely on stupid arguments, because you don’t have an argument.’

    Parents have long spoken out about their disagreement with Thomas competing at all, as the swimmer competed as a male for the first three years of collegiate swimming. 

    The swimmer, who went by Will before transition, was ranked in the low 400s in men’s swimming, but had skyrocketed to first in women’s. 

    THE RULES ON TRANSGENDER ATHLETES AND WHEN THEY CAN COMPETE FOR GENDER THEY ARE SWITCHING TO 

    Lia Thomas started taking hormone therapy while she was still competing as a male back in May 2019. 

    Under USA Swimming rules, athletes had to have recorded low levels of testosterone for 36 months to compete in the female category. 

    That meant that Thomas didn’t qualify for the NCAA championship, if they followed USA Swimming rules – as they originally said they would.  

    But the NCAA said that she would be allowed to compete because they were refusing to adopt the threshold this year. 

    Last month, the NCAA committee said: ‘The subcommittee decided implementing additional changes at this time could have unfair and potentially detrimental impacts on schools and student-athletes intending to compete in 2022 NCAA women’s swimming championships.’ 

    It is unclear what they will do next year, however.  

    Glass Tumbler Found In Woman’s Urinary Bladder 4 Years After Use As Sex Toy

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    Oh, that’s where that glass tumbler went. A case report published in the journal Urology Case Reports described how doctors found a glass tumbler that a 45-year-old woman had misplaced about four years earlier. And urine for a surprise as to where they found this glass tumbler. Here’s a hint. It wasn’t in the woman’s cupboard.

    When you need a doctor to find something that you’ve lost, chances are something’s gone quite wrong. After all, you don’t tend to call your doctor every time that you can’t find your Spiderman underwear. In this case, the woman had been suffering urgenturia for about a year before eventually going to the emergency room. Now, urgenturia may sound like a cafeteria when you want food very quickly. But instead it is a feeling of urinary urgency, a continuing sensation of needing to empty your bladder. It’s called urgency because the words “I really have to pee” aren’t usually followed by “let’s take a leisurely stroll in the park” or “can you tell me that really long story about your thumbtack collection again?”

    Urinary urgency is a common symptom of a urinary tract infection (UTI) because when your bladder walls get irritated they often begin to contract or spasm. The case report, authored by a team from the Academic Hospital Habib Bourguiba in Sfax, Tunisia (Ahmed Chaabouni, Ahmed Samet, Mohamed Fourati, Houcem Harbi, Mohamed Amine Mseddi, and Mourad Hadjslimene), indicated that the woman had received treatment for bladder infections several times previously. However, each time no one had taken a closer look at her bladder.

    While the woman was in the emergency room, a urinalysis on a sample of her urine found both red blood cells and lots of white blood cells. This might have been expected for a typical UTI. However, an X-ray of her pelvic area revealed something even more unusual: an object that appeared shaped like a glass. And nothing in your pelvis should be shaped like a glass, regardless of what you may nickname your genitals.

    The woman then underwent surgery to remove this object from her bladder. And the surgery revealed a glass more than half full situation. It was a glass tumbler that had apparently been sitting in her bladder for a while because it was encased in calcified material. The picture in the following tweet shows what doctors had extracted from her bladder:

    All told, this combination glass tumbler and bladder stone measured 8 cm by 7 cm by 8 cm. That’s a fairly large stone as eight centimeters is about one-twentieth the height of Napoleon. With this glass tumbler successfully removed from her bladder, the woman was able to leave the hospital after two days and apparently had no problems afterwards.

    Whenever you find a glass tumbler in someone’s bladder, you typically should have follow-up questions. After all, bar or kitchen items shouldn’t just randomly appear in one’s bladder. Upon questioning from the doctors, the patient mentioned that she had used the glass tumbler as a sex toy four years prior, inserting it into her vagina. Apparently, she hadn’t removed the glass tumbler from her vagina. Over time, this object probably caused inflammation and the breakdown of the tissue between her vagina and her bladder. The following diagram shows how your bladder sits in front of your vagina:

    This tissue breakdown then may have allowed the glass tumbler to slowly migrate from her vagina into her bladder. When a tunnel forms between your bladder and your vagina, it’s called a vesicovaginal fistula. A fistula is any abnormal connection between two body parts. The prefix “vesico-” stands for something involving your bladder, and the suffix “vaginal” not surprisingly stands for something involving your vagina. That’s why you should avoid anything called vesico-pancakes.

    In general, it’s a bad idea to put anything into your vagina that don’t belong in your vagina. Your vagina isn’t a suitcase or a treasure chest. Instead, it’s a much more complex body part that’s lined with acid-producing bacteria. These microbes help maintain specific conditions in your vagina such as a pH level that can range from 3.8 up to 5 depending on your age. Putting anything not designed to go in there could disrupt these conditions, leading to tissue damage, infection, or both. That’s why legitimate sex toys should be designed in a way that minimizes disruptions to your vagina.

    Moreover, it’s a good idea to keep track of whatever you happen to put into your vagina. This doesn’t necessarily mean creating a spreadsheet along with graphs and pie charts. Or maintaining an accurate inventory of every single item in your house just to make sure nothing went into you without you knowing it. However, it does mean that your vagina should not be the same as Las Vegas. Whatever happens in there shouldn’t necessarily stay in there. Instead, make sure that you remove what’s been put in your vagina within a reasonable amount of time. And if you have to ask yourself, “who was the President when I put this in there,” you’ve probably waited too long.

    Saudi Aramco full-year profit more than doubles on soaring oil prices

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    An employee looks on at Saudi Aramco oil facility in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia October 12, 2019.

    Maxim Shemetov | Reuters

    Saudi Arabian oil giant Aramco reported blowout full-year earnings on Sunday, posting a more than doubling in year-on-year net profit to $110 billion.

    Aramco’s 2021 net income increased by 124% to $110 billion in 2021, compared to $49 billion in 2020, citing higher crude oil prices, stronger refining and chemicals margins, and the consolidation of its chemicals business, SABIC’s, full-year results. 

    The numbers were in line with expectations, with analysts surveyed by Reuters forecasting net income of $109.7 billion for the full year. Shares rose 4% Sunday on the news, according to Reuters data.

    “Our strong results are a testament to our financial discipline, flexibility through evolving market conditions and steadfast focus on our long-term growth strategy, which targets value growth for our shareholders,” Aramco CEO Amin Nasser said in the results release.

    Surging oil

    Aramco benefitted from surging oil prices during 2021, with international benchmark Brent crude rising above $80 a barrel by the end of the year, up roughly 50% for the 12-month period. Supply shortages added to a complex slew of factors driving major uncertainty across the energy and commodity complex, even before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

     “Although economic conditions have improved considerably, the outlook remains uncertain due to various macro-economic and geopolitical factors,” he added.

    Aramco also declared a fourth quarter dividend of $18.8 billion, to be paid in the first quarter of 2022. The dividend is covered by a rise in free-cash flow to $107.5 billion in 2021, compared to $49.1 billion in 2020. 

    Aramco said it would recommend that $4 billion in retained earnings be used to pay bonus shares to investors, subject to approval. Under the recommendation, shareholders would receive one bonus share for every 10 shares owned. As a result, the total dividend for 2021 is $75 billion in cash, in addition to bonus shares. 

    Capital expenditure boost

    The company also said it would invest to increase crude oil production capacity to 13 million barrels per day by 2027, expand its liquid to chemical production, and look to increase gas production by more than 50% by 2030. 

    Aramco has also said it wants to achieve net-zero Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions across its wholly-owned operated assets by 2050. Scope 1 refers to direct emissions from sources owned or controlled by the company, while Scope 2 covers indirect emissions from the generation of purchased power consumed by the company.

    Capital expenditure in 2021 was $31.9 billion, an increase of 18% from 2020, primarily driven by increased activities in relation to crude oil increments, the Tanajib Gas Plant and development drilling programs. Aramco expects 2022 capital expenditure to be approximately $40-50 billion, with further growth expected until around the middle of the decade. 

    The figures are a stark contrast from the company’s 2020 earnings, which saw a 44% drop on the previous year due to demand collapse brought on by the coronavirus pandemic. 

    Nasser at the time described Aramco’s 2020 financial year as one of its most “challenging years” in recent history. 

    Vanced developers issue statement addressing wild rumors about the app’s demise

    0

    While the story of YouTube Vanced (later just Vanced) seems like it’s mostly over after the app shuttered operations, the folks behind the beloved mod apparently still have more to say. Several rumors have spun up regarding the app’s demise, so on Saturday, the team behind Vanced posted an article on anonymous blogging platform Telegra.ph titled “Vanced Discontinuation.” It purported to brief anyone “having trouble understanding the reason” why the application was discontinued.

    The post dismissed rumors that Vanced was stopped for reasons related to NFTs or a shoutout from a media group and also claimed the takedown had nothing to do with allegations of piracy or issues with ad-blocking. Additionally, in response to rumors that Vanced devs were Russian, the post stated that “[none] of the team members are in Russia or Ukraine, nor do they have any links to those countries.”

    ANDROIDPOLICE VIDEO OF THE DAY

    Vanced also denied that their app had any “illegal” features, then gave what the folks behind the app say are the “actual” reasons they received a cease and desist letter:

    • Vanced is discontinued for “legal reasons” as vanced was infringing the logo and branding of the original YouTube app as the logo resembles the original logo in a similar way and was used without taking prior permission from Google for using the branding.
    • We were asked to remove all links for the distribution of any vanced apps that results in the decision of discontinuation.

    The statement went on to say that the team behind Vanced would never reveal the app’s source code to the public. Doing so could “cause serious complications for us.” Also, forget about ever downloading the app again. All links to a downloadable version of Vanced have been deleted and the Vanced team says they can’t help with alternate methods of grabbing a version of the app, either.

    Vanced concluded by asking disappointed fans of the app not to attack anyone over its demise and to alert them to any other false information. So, there you have it for Vanced, the original — RIP. One of the reasons so many loved Vanced is because the app had alternative features that YouTube could probably use, and some of them were pretty damn good — check them out here.



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