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    Alphabet just spun out out its quantum tech group, launching it as an independent company – TechCrunch

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    Quantum tech may be having its moment at long last.

    Consider that earlier this month, one of the few “pure play” quantum tech companies in the world, Rigetti Computing, went public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company or SPAC. It only narrowly missed becoming the first publicly traded company to expressly focus on commercializing quantum tech when another outfit, IonQ, went public through a SPAC merger in October. Meanwhile, another rival in the space, D-Wave, says it is also now planning to go public via SPAC.

    While movement toward the public markets is one indicator that quantum tech is progressing beyond the realm of the theoretical, an even stronger signal that it’s getting ready for its close-up ties to Alphabet, which said this morning that it’s spinning out its six-year-old quantum tech group, Sandbox AQ, into a standalone company.

    Jack Hidary, who was formerly the director of AI and quantum at Sandbox and is a longtime X Prize board member, will continue to lead the 55-person, Mountain View, California, outfit, which describes itself as an enterprise SaaS company that’s developing commercial products for telecom, financial services, healthcare, government, computer security and other sectors.

    Sandbox has also assembled an enviable cast of advisers, including former Alphabet Chairman and CEO Eric Schmidt; Blythe Masters, the former JPMorgan Chase exec who helped create credit default swaps; and John Seely Brown, the former chief scientist of Xerox PARC.

    Notably, too, Sandbox is rolling out with an undisclosed amount of “nine-figure” funding. Among its new outside investors is Breyer Capital, whose founder, Jim Breyer, has also joined Sandbox’s board of advisers. Section 32, Guggenheim Investments, TIME Investments and accounts advised by T. Rowe Price Associates are also in the investor mix.

    Certainly, market demand partly explains Alphabet’s decision to spin out Sandbox. According to Gartner, by next year, 20% of global organizations are expected to budget for quantum-computing projects, up from less than 1% in 2018.

    Among the customers already paying Sandbox for its computing power are Vodafone Business, SoftBank Mobile and the Mount Sinai Health System.

    But judging by a recent chat with Breyer, perhaps an even bigger driver of growing interest in quantum tech is the realization is that, while true, fault-tolerant quantum computing — meaning the ability to harness quantum physics to zip through numerous possibilities and determine a probable outcome — could be five or more years away, other related tech, like so-called quantum-sensing technologies — is fast becoming a reality.

    Indeed, rather than work on quantum computers, Sandbox is instead focused on how quantum tech intersects with AI, developing applications to strengthen cybersecurity platforms, among other things. In the company’s own words, “[T]here are many aspects of quantum physics and technology that can be commercialized in the near term with no need for quantum computers … using today’s high-performance computers.” The resulting “quantum simulations can address real-world business and scientific challenges across a broad spectrum of industries, from financial services and healthcare to aerospace and manufacturing to communications and materials science.” 

    The statements echo comments made by Breyer when we spoke a couple of weeks ago, when he told us that there are “tremendous national security opportunities for the quantum companies … But what I’m really excited about today from an investment standpoint is not necessarily the big super capital intensive quantum computers … but areas like quantum sensing.”

    Think of a very high-powered 1,000x light microscope that can be applied to medicine, Breyer had offered by way of explanation. “There are quantum sensing technologies today that are being piloted at some of our great hospitals in the United States that I think will revolutionize areas such as cardiology [and] drug discovery.”

    Indeed, suggested Breyer, while quantum computing platforms will eventually play a role in helping catch diseases faster, improve security systems and to protect all kinds of data — they might also be used to attack some of those systems, which is partly why larger organizations, including governments and corporations, are no longer waiting for those massive quantum computers to arrive — or shouldn’t be, in any case. “We need to get our arms around it,” he’d said.

    “There are quantum technologies now where — they’re not at the breakout point of where quantum computing will be in four or five years —  but are making a very big difference,” he said. The team at Sandbox, he suggested at the time, is among those leading the charge.

    Disgraced, fraudulent former social worker lived lavish lifestyle prior to firing, says coworker – Kelowna News

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    A young man who was in the care of Robert Riley Saunders for several years as a child took the stand Tuesday during the Gardiner hearing that is being held prior to sentencing of the former Kelowna social worker.

    A Gardiner hearing is held to determine disputed facts that will have an impact on sentencing.

    Saunders pleaded guilty to three of 13 charges in relation to the siphoning of hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments that should have gone to youth in his care, many of them Indigenous. Saunders was employed by the Ministry of Child and Family Development in Kelowna from 2001 until he was fired in 2018 after the thefts were uncovered.

    The witness detailed how he went on a trip to Ontario in 2013, not long before he turned 19 and would have aged out of care.

    He testified that Saunders initially denied the request to go to Ontario to see his father and uncle but then gave the okay after the youth’s older brother spoke to Saunders. However, when the youth tried to come back to B.C., things didn’t go as planned.

    He said when he and his dad showed up at the airport, the flight had been cancelled by Saunders. The witness said after his father “yelled at” Saunders over the phone a cheque was sent in the value of over $700 to buy a bed and other necessities, but that was the last support payment he received while in Ontario.

    Crown counsel asked the former foster child, who is now 26, if he requested that Saunders cancel the trip. He said no.

    Defence counsel Brian Fitzpatrick tried to suggest the youth stayed in Ontario because he wanted to, but the witness denied that, saying he hated it there.

    Earlier the Crown prosecutor showed the young man cheques which he agreed had his signature. But when she showed him sign-out sheets for other payments, he identified only one of the signatures as his own and said he didn’t recognize the other signatures in his name.

    A former colleague of Saunders also took the stand Tuesday.

    Despite working with him for 15 years, she said they did not have a close working relationship.

    She talked about his work ethic in the few years before he was fired, suggesting he was not there on time, often passed on his duties to others and sometimes was watching YouTube or hockey games in his office.

    The woman echoed Monday’s testimony from another co-worker as she described how Riley lived a lavish lifestyle for a social worker. She said he had a very nice home, a new boat, an expensive pickup truck, and mentioned a picture of a BMW for his teen son.

    Castanet learned in 2019 that the former social worker lied about his education.

    Saunders claimed he graduated from the University of Manitoba with a bachelor of social work and bachelor of arts in psychology degrees but the university’s executive director of public affairs told Castanet that there was no record of him graduating.

    Last year, the provincial government reached a settlement in a class-action lawsuit where it admitted Saunders harmed children in the MCFD’s care by way of “neglect, misappropriation of funds and failure to plan for the children’s welfare and, with respect to Indigenous children, failure to take steps to preserve their cultural identities.”

    Saunders remains out on bail.

    The Gardiner hearing is scheduled to continue for most of the week.

    Indianapolis Colts QB Matt Ryan says ‘time was right’ for change after 14 seasons with Atlanta Falcons

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    INDIANAPOLIS — Matt Ryan felt he would be a quarterback of one of only two teams next season: the Atlanta Falcons or Indianapolis Colts.

    His desire to play for a different team for the first time in his 14-year NFL career came last weekend after a Zoom call with Colts general manager Chris Ballard, head coach Frank Reich, offensive coordinator Marcus Brady and assistant quarterbacks coach Parks Frazier. The Falcons traded the 36-year-old Ryan to the Colts on Monday for a third-round pick in this year’s draft.

    “Their passion, their commitment, their professionalism, the accountability Chris has for himself and what he does, the empathy Frank has for my situation of understanding of being in a certain spot and done it for one way,” Ryan said Tuesday during his introductory news conference as the Colts new starting quarterback. “I just knew the roster they have and the belief in the way they do things, the time was right for me. I knew that it was time to go in a different direction.”

    Ryan had no idea where he would be playing next season last week. That’s because the Falcons were one of the teams considering a trade for quarterback Deshaun Watson, which definitely would have ended Ryan’s time in Atlanta. Ryan and the Falcons pushed his $7.5 million roster bonus that was due to him to Monday while they waited for Watson to make a decision on his future. Watson finally waived his no-trade clause to go to the Cleveland Browns, which meant the Falcons had to decide what to do with Ryan.

    “It’s definitely been a whirlwind of a week for sure on my end,” Ryan said. “This time last week we didn’t know how it was going to shake out. … I’ve been fortunate I’ve never been through a transaction or a roster move, which is commonplace and day to day for the majority of the locker room. … From the time it started last week until we sit here today, I thought everybody handled everything professionally. I didn’t like everything I heard, but you don’t always like what you hear sometimes.”

    The Falcons and Colts started trade talks on Friday, according to a source, before Ryan met with members of the Colts coaching staff Saturday. The quarterback came out of the meeting feeling like it was time for a change. Ryan threw for 59,775 yards and 367 touchdowns during his career with the Falcons, which also included him being named NFL MVP in 2016.

    “I’m also coming from a place that I was really, really fortunate to have been for 14 years and I want to start by thanking everyone in the Falcons organization, starting with [owner] Arthur Blank,” Ryan said. “It’s bittersweet for sure. I’m really appreciative of my time there. It’s sad to see it end, but I’m so excited to see what can happen here. What this team and organization is all about. It’s a real exciting day for me and my family.”

    Ryan highlighted some of the top quarterbacks to play for the Colts, including Johnny Unitas, Andrew Luck, Peyton Manning and Philip Rivers. Ryan will be the Colts’ sixth different Week 1 starting quarterback in as many years next season.

    The Colts hope Ryan is not only the next great quarterback to play for them, but also give them at least a couple of years in order to find his replacement at some point. The Colts restructured the final two years of Ryan’s deal, with the $53.9 million left on it being guaranteed in some form, a source told ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler.

    “I’ve said from the start, I’d like to play as long as I can, I feel really good,” Ryan said. “My body feels really good. I still feel like I can play at as high of a level that I have ever have as long as that is; nobody has a crystal ball to know exactly how long it’s going to be.”

    Ryan mentioned how Tom Brady and Matthew Stafford left the New England Patriots and Detroit Lions, respectively, and went on to win Super Bowls with their new teams (Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Los Angeles Rams) in their first seasons there. In order for the Colts to even start thinking about being a Super Bowl contender, they have to add more pieces on offense. Receiver, tight end and left tackle are high on the list of needs. The Colts have only been to the playoffs twice since 2014.

    “I understand I’m one part of this wheel and I need to pull my weight and do my job really well,” Ryan said. “It’s a pretty strong wheel that has been built [in Indianapolis]. That’s why I have to be a great teammate, do the best I can, whatever I need to do to help the guys. … I’m so fired up to get to work and get on the field with these guys and try to do my part to help this team win as many games as we can.”

    Dmitry Peskov, Putin spokesman refuses to rule out use of nuclear weapons if Russia faced an ‘existential threat’

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    In an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Tuesday, Dmitry Peskov repeatedly refused to rule out that Russia would consider using nuclear weapons against what Moscow saw as an “existential threat.” When asked under what conditions Putin would use Russia’s nuclear capability, Peskov replied, “if it is an existential threat for our country, then it can be.”

    Putin has previously hinted at using nuclear weapons against nations that he saw as a threat to Russia. Back in February, the Russian President said in a televised statement, “No matter who tries to stand in our way or all the more so create threats for our country and our people, they must know that Russia will respond immediately, and the consequences will be such as you have never seen in your entire history.”
    He then said in a televised meeting with Russian defense officials that “officials in leading NATO countries have allowed themselves to make aggressive comments about our country, therefore I hereby order the Minister of Defense and the chief of the General Staff to place the Russian Army Deterrence Force on combat alert.”

    When asked what Putin thought he had achieved in Ukraine so far, Peskov answered: “Well, first of all, not yet. He hasn’t achieved yet.”

    The spokesman also claimed that the “special military operation” — the Kremlin’s official euphemism for Russia’s invasion in Ukraine — was “going on strictly in accordance with the plans and the purposes that were established before hand.”

    Peskov also repeated Putin’s demands, saying that the “main goals of the operation” are to “get rid of the military potential of Ukraine,” to ensure Ukraine is a “neutral country,” to get rid of “nationalist battalions,” for Ukraine to accept that Crimea — annexed by Russia in 2014 — is part of Russia and to accept that the breakaway statelets of Luhansk and Donetsk “are already independent states.”

    He also claimed that Russia has only attacked military targets, despite numerous reports of Russian airstrikes against civilian targets sheltering ordinary Ukrainians.

    The interview comes as Western intelligence has reported that Russia’s operations have stalled in parts of Ukraine.

    What happens if you kill Miriel, the Pope Turtle, in Elden Ring?

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    If you’re one of the 12 million people who bought Elden Ring in the past few weeks, you have likely met Miriel, a.k.a. the Pastor of Vows, a.k.a. Pope Turtle, a.k.a. an instant addition to the Video Game Character Hall of Fame. Presumably, you befriend this rare, kind soul in the Lands Between. But Elden Ring is a game by FromSoftware, so you may have also wondered a thought so insidious that it must never be spoken: What would happen if I slay the Turtle Pope?

    Reader, learn from the mistakes of others. Do not kill the Turtle Pope.

    This is why we have the internet, after all. So others may make mistakes and thoroughly document them for our morbid curiosity. YouTubers like Indyrael have captured footage of Miriel being sliced and diced into turtle soup. Be warned, this video isn’t what I’d call a fun time.

    Somehow, even more than this video, the written account has calcified my heart and crumbled the organ to dust. On Reddit, user VG_Crimson published a horrific moment-to-moment retelling of turtle murder titled “I killed Pope Turtle, so you don’t have to.”

    Miriel has a tremendous repository of health and doesn’t appear concerned about the initial blows. They attempt to retreat into their shell but that is not possible, presumably because of their extra-large pope hat. Despite Miriel’s strength and confidence and kindness, eventually, the health bar can and will reach zero. That’s when the true punishment comes.

    Miriel doesn’t curse you, debuff your stats, or even do damage. Miriel weeps. “It’s a sad scream,” writes VG_Crimson, “much higher pitched than you’d expect from one of his size. You gain a couple of turtle neck meats and his bell bearing to buy whatever was available in his shop, but never again will he ask that you learn together.”

    FromSoftware games like Dark Souls have a long history of offering surprise rewards or terrifying punishment for players who push against its boundaries. But with Miriel, the game’s creators seem to understand that the biggest twist of killing Pope Turtle is for the game to change in no way beyond the absence of his adorable smile.

    The Lands Between have so few friends, protect the ones you have!

    Physicists Defy Haters, Create Tetragonal Ice

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    A bright blue laser light illuminates a sample.

    The research team used a laser to melt the ice.
    Photo: Chris Higgins

    A team of physicists recently discovered a new phase of water ice, after they put ordinary ice under extraordinarily high pressure and melted it before letting it refreeze. The previously unknown phase—called Ice-VIIt—is organized differently from typical water ice. It doesn’t occur naturally on Earth’s surface, but it may exist in the mantle or on distant moons and planets.

    Ice-VIIt has a tetragonal symmetry, as opposed to the cubic structure of the ice phase from which it forms, Ice-VII. That tetragonal structure also sets Ice-VIIt (the ‘t’ is for ‘tetragonal’) apart from the hexagonal symmetry of natural water ice (known as Ice-I). That means its crystal structure looks like a rectangular prism instead of a cube. The findings were published last week in Physical Review B.

    “The main significance is that the community that has been studying ice has been very adamant that cubic ice-VII is the dominant high-pressure phase,” said Zachary Grande, a physicist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and the study’s lead author, in an email to Gizmodo. “But we were able to use our new technique to obtain much more accurate measurements than anyone before, allowing us to observe this subtle quantum transition.”

    To synthesize the unique ice phase, the researchers froze a water sample under the quash of a diamond anvil cell, which pressed the water molecules between two diamonds. They used a laser to briefly melt the sample, before allowing it to freeze again in a new configuration. By squeezing the sample under pressures similar to those at Earth’s center, they forced Ice-VII into Ice-VIIt. Grande said that the newly discovered phase was similar enough to Ice-VII to be named similarly.

    ​​“Zach’s work has demonstrated that this transformation to an ionic state occurs at much, much lower pressures than ever thought before,” said Ashkan Salamat, also a physicist at UNLV and a co-author of the research, in a university release. “It’s the missing piece, and the most precise measurements ever on water at these conditions.”

    Ice-VIIt may occur naturally in the Earth’s mantle; though our planet’s interior is hot, high-pressure ices like Ice-VIIt have higher melting points. Instead of thawing out at 32° Fahrenheit, it takes 1,340° F heat to make the rare ice phase liquify.

    Ice-VIIt transitions to Ice-X, a phase that the team found will occur at just one-third the pressure physicists previously thought was necessary to induce the state. Grande said that the Ice X finding had even more extraterrestrial implications than the existence of Ice-VIIt.

    “If there are planets with a significant amount of water within their mantle, the planets would actually be bigger than we previously thought, since the water won’t compress,” Grande said, “and because of this, astronomers will need to re-evaluate the water supply in many of the large exoplanets that have been discovered in recent years.”

    The Webb Space Telescope may help that re-evaluation; among its many tasks is to study exoplanets in unprecedented detail. The telescope is expected to be operational by the summer.

    More: So Much Ice Has Melted, That the Earth’s Crust Is Shifting in Weird, New Ways

    The new journal hoping to serve as a big tent for antiliberal politics

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    When a group of ambitious young people wants to get rich, they start a business. When a group of ambitious young intellectuals wants to change the world, they start a little magazine.

    The latter is how we’ve gotten Compact, a new website subtitled — with perhaps a touch of cowardly vagueness — “a radical American journal.”

    What does the magazine mean by “radical”? To judge by the names associated with it and the pieces published on the journal’s first day in business, the answer is: full-spectrum antiliberalism.

    From the antiliberal right, there’s former New York Post op-ed editor Sohrab Ahmari, the scourge of drag queens and free speech defenders everywhere, and Matthew Schmitz, a former editor at the conservative-populist religious magazine First Things. Both are founding editors of the new journal. They are joined by right-wing contributing editors Adrian Vermeule, Liel Leibovitz, and Patrick Deneen, and by columnists Lee Smith and Christopher Caldwell. 

    From the antiliberal left, there’s founding editor Edwin Aponte, a self-described Marxist and founding editor of the left-wing website The Bellows. He is joined by various contributing editors, columnists, and authors with ties to the antiliberal left who also tend to dissent from core progressive pieties of the moment (including a focus on identity politics and intersectionality). Among them are British philosopher and feminist Nina Power, Swedish socialist Malcom Kyeyune, all-purpose philosophical troublemaker Slavoj Žižek, and antiestablishment journalist-gadflies Glenn Greenwald and Michael Tracey.

    On the home page, readers will find (among other items) a prickly movie review by Žižek; a defense of patriarchy by Power; separate polemics against hawkish foreign policy from both Ahmari and Schmitz; a frontal assault on “right liberalism” from Vermeule; a spirited defense of the centrality of male desire to great art (“The Case Against Aesthetic Castration”) by artist Adam Lehrer; an almost giddy epitaph for post-Cold War neoliberal consensus and “unipolarity” by Kyeyune; and a brief attack on “the unbearable phoniness of the free-speech wars” by Aponte.

    That’s a lot of vitriol. But what does it add up to? A brief “Note from the Founders” proclaims the journal in favor of “a strong social-democratic state that defends community — local and national, familial and religious — against a libertine left and a libertarian right.” Time will tell if the editors and writers associated with Compact are willing to do the hard work of exploring honestly the numerous tensions and contradictions contained within this political vision, and between this vision and the world in which we live.

    If the history of such “radical” magazines is any guide, they are more likely to devote their time, energy, and talents to firing heavy rhetorical artillery at what remains of the liberal center without doing much to define what kind of person or movement should, or should not, fill the resulting vacuum. They’ll prefer to keep their options open, in other words. As should the rest of us, as we ponder precisely what kind of politics Compact aims to advance — a politics that, so far at least, goes unnamed.  

    Dancing Musk hands drivers first Teslas from new German gigafactory

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    • Musk hands over first 30 cars at German plant
    • New orders from plant to be delivered from April
    • 3,500 workers on site, to rise to 12,000
    • Activists block plant entrance, motorway in protest

    GRUENHEIDE, Germany, March 22 (Reuters) – Elon Musk was cheered as he oversaw the handover of Tesla’s (TSLA.O) first German-made cars at its Gruenheide plant on Tuesday, marking the start of the U.S. automaker’s inaugural European hub just two years after it was first announced.

    Loud music played as 30 clients and their families got a first glimpse of their shining new vehicles through a glitzy, neon-lit Tesla branded tunnel, clapping and cheering as Tesla Chief Executive Musk danced and joked with fans.

    “This is a great day for the factory,” Musk said, describing it as “another step in the direction of a sustainable future”.

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    Although German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who also attended the event, lauded the gigafactory as the future of the car industry, it has faced opposition and some environmental activists blocked the factory’s entrance while displaying banners flagging its high water use. read more

    Two protestors abseiled from a motorway sign near the factory, blocking traffic for hours after the event.

    Musk had hoped to begin output from the factory eight months ago, but licensing delays and local concerns around the plant’s environmental impact held up the process.

    Tesla was forced to service European orders from Shanghai while it awaited its German licence, adding to rising logistics costs at a time when it was struggling with industry-wide chip shortages and other supply chain disruptions.

    It got the final go-ahead from local authorities on March 4 to begin production in Germany, provided it met conditions ranging from its water use to air pollution controls.

    The plant opening came on the same day as the top U.S. securities regulator urged a federal judge not to let Musk back out of an agreement requiring that his Twitter use be monitored, which the Tesla chief executive considers part of a campaign of harassment. read more

    RACE WITH VW

    The new owners received the Model Y Performance configuration, a vehicle costing 63,990 euros ($70,491) with a 514 km (320 miles) range, Tesla said, adding that new orders from the plant could be delivered from April.

    Tesla said that around 3,500 of the plant’s expected 12,000 workers have been hired so far.

    At full capacity, the plant will produce 500,000 cars a year, more than the 450,000 battery-electric vehicles that German rival Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE) sold globally in 2021.

    It will also generate 50 gigawatt hours (GWh) of battery power, surpassing all other plants Germany.

    For now, Volkswagen still has the inside track in the race to electrify Europe’s fleet, with a 25% market share to Tesla’s 13%. Musk has said ramping up production would take longer than the two years it took to build the plant. read more

    JPMorgan predicted Gruenheide would produce around 54,000 cars in 2022, increasing to 280,000 in 2023 and 500,000 by 2025.

    Volkswagen, which has received 95,000 EV orders in Europe this year, is planning a new 2 billion euro EV factory alongside its existing facility in Wolfsburg and six battery plants across Europe.

    But its timeline lags Tesla’s, with the EV factory due to open in 2026 and the first battery plant in 2023.

    ($1 = 0.9086 euros)

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    Reporting by Victoria Waldersee, Nadine Schimroszik; Editing by Jan Harvey, Edmund Blair, Alex Richardson, Alexander Smith and Jan Harvey

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Short on space for veggies? Smaller varieties thrive in pots | Lifestyle

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    For many gardeners, a large property with rows of green peppers and sun-kissed tomatoes as far as the eye can see is just a dream. Many of us either don’t have much soil to call our own, have limited mobility, or are new to gardening and feel intimidated.

    But sometimes, smaller is better. I encourage even those who have large properties to start small, increasing the size of their gardens gradually to avoid the weeds and neglected plants that often result when expectations don’t quite align with reality.

    The best way to start small is to plant vegetables in containers. And the good news is that in response to the gardening renaissance of the past few years, plant breeders have been scaling down the size of many edibles to accommodate people gardening on rooftops, fire escapes, patios and balconies.

    Seek out dwarf or compact varieties of your favorite vegetables. Despite their small statures, most have been bred to produce prolific harvests.

    Crops like the aptly named Pot-a-peño peppers, Spacemaster cucumbers, Little Gem and Tom Thumb lettuces, Kitchen Minis Red Velvet tomatoes, Thumbelina carrots, Slim Jim and Patio Baby eggplants, Baby Head cabbages, Bush Baby squash, Peas-in-a-pot and Sugar Baby watermelons won’t disappoint.

    And most herbs will grow perfectly well in a pot, as will plants that grow vertically, like pole beans.

    The containers, potting mix and location of your plants are just as important to your success as the varieties you select.

    Container-grown plants require more water and fertilizer than their in-ground counterparts, so select deep pots; their greater soil volume will retain moisture longer and reduce watering tasks.

    Clay and terracotta absorb and evaporate water quickly, so metal, plastic, resin and glazed pottery containers are better choices. All containers should have drainage holes in the bottom to allow excess water to escape and help prevent fungal diseases and root rot.

    Never use garden soil in containers; it’s too heavy and can harbor pests and diseases. Opt instead for a high-quality, organic, soilless potting mix, and add an organic, granular fertilizer if the mixture doesn’t already contain one. After planting, top the soil surface with one-half to 1 inch of mulch to reduce evaporation, keep soil temperature even and prevent weed seeds from taking hold.

    When selecting a spot for containers, consider that most edibles require a minimum of 6 hours of sunlight daily. Greens, carrots, beans and beets can get by with less, so are good choices for partly shady sites.

    Herbs should be planted in pots no smaller than a half-gallon in size; dwarf cultivars of cabbage, cucumbers, lettuces and peas do best in 2-gallon containers; and dwarf carrots, eggplants, peppers, squash and tomatoes require 5-gallon containers that are at least 15-inches wide. Plant watermelons in 8- to 10-gallon pots.

    Potatoes can be grown in bushel baskets; add a plastic liner in which you’ve poked drainage holes, and top with a layer of pebbles before adding potting mix.

    Apply a water-soluble fertilizer to vegetables once every week to 10 days throughout the season. Herbs typically don’t require additional fertilizer beyond that incorporated at planting time.

    Check the soil for moisture daily by sticking your finger 2 inches deep and watering when it feels dry near the roots. Less-frequent, deep waterings trump daily sprinkles. Apply water slowly until it drains from the bottom, and aim for moist, but not soggy, soil.

    With the right plants and a little planning, you’ll find even a small space can reap a large harvest.

    Jessica Damiano writes regularly about gardening for The Associated Press. A master gardener and educator, she writes The Weekly Dirt newsletter and creates an annual wall calendar of daily gardening tips. Send her a note at jessica@jessicadamiano.com and find her at jessicadamiano.com and on Instagram @JesDamiano.

    Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

    Possibility of Commissioner exempt list still looms for Deshaun Watson

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    Getty Images

    Many assume that Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson eventually will be suspended for the civil and criminal allegations that have been made against him. The number — 22 civil complaints and two additional criminal complaints who did not sue Watson — is large enough to be troubling on its face. Whatever the critical mass of complaints that will naturally cause concern, 24 is on the wrong side of it.

    The league knows this. Some have concluded that the failure of the league to take action against Watson means that the league won’t, at least not until the 22 civil cases are resolved. That’s possibly a misreading of the situation.

    The league hasn’t placed Watson on the Commissioner exempt list (a fancy label for paid leave) because it hasn’t had to. He didn’t try to play for the Texans in 2021. He wasn’t traded to a new team that would have tried to put him on the field. Now with the Browns, he won’t play until August at the earliest.

    The league has made the Personal Conduct Policy more than broad enough to permit paid leave, even in the absence of criminal charges. “When an investigation leads the Commissioner to believe that a player may have violated this Policy by committing any of the conduct identified above,” the Policy explains, “he may act where the circumstances and evidence warrant doing so. This decision will not reflect a finding of guilt or innocence and will not be guided by the same legal standards and considerations that would apply in a criminal trial.”

    The key words are “may have violated.” With 24 people accusing Watson of sexual misconduct during massage therapy sessions and Watson’s lawyer admitting that some massage therapy sessions did indeed become voluntary sexual encounters, there’s enough for the Commissioner to conclude that Watson “may have violated” the Personal Conduct Policy.

    Remember, Ben Roethlisberger was suspended six games (reduced to four) in 2010 for two sexual misconduct allegations, neither of which resulted in criminal charges. In 2017, Ezekiel Elliott was suspended six games for domestic violence allegations that ended in neither criminal nor civil claims. The league can, and will, do whatever it chooses — and the decisions quite often will be driven not by notions of fairness and justice but by balancing the P.R. consequences of taking action and not taking action.

    On Monday, I suggested that the league should tell Watson that he can either settle the cases and take an unpaid suspension to start the season or keep fighting the cases and be placed on paid leave until they are resolved. I now believe the league won’t do that. The league won’t do that because the league doesn’t do that. It doesn’t telegraph its plans or tip its hand.

    The league has learned to keep its head low and its mouth shut in these matters, or as long as it can. The league will act when the time comes to act. And I’m currently confident that, if 22 civil cases remain pending against Watson when it’s time to play games, Watson won’t be playing in those games.

    The league won’t tell Watson or the Browns that. The league will expect Watson and the Browns to figure it out on their own. And the league will shed no tears and make no apologies if/when they decide to place Watson on paid leave, if Watson fails to get the cases settled before football season rolls around.