All posts tagged: Engaging

New Scientist recommends the engaging Native Nations by Kathleen DuVal

New Scientist recommends the engaging Native Nations by Kathleen DuVal

The history of North America’s Indigenous peoples is fraught with stereotypes – and often seen through a European lens. In Native Nations, historian Kathleen DuVal, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, sets the record straight, as she weaves together centuries of development to show how Indigenous groups have interacted with a shifting world. From the Medieval Warm Period to the last glacial period, she shows how climate change shaped their agricultural and water management techniques. We also discover engineering marvels like the great mounds of Cahokia in modern Illinois and the Huhugam’s canal network in Arizona. From astronomical calendars to smallpox’s spread after colonisation, DuVal’s book centres Indigenous peoples themselves, tearing down misconceptions. If you are, like me, a fan of historical non-fiction, or keen on fresh views of ecology, botany, archaeology (and more), Native Nations will be an engaging read. Kelsey HayesChief Subeditor, London   Topics: Source link

US Starts Engaging Drugmakers on Putting Trump’s MFN Pricing Into Law

US Starts Engaging Drugmakers on Putting Trump’s MFN Pricing Into Law

By Michael Erman and Mariam ⁠Sunny March ⁠19 (Reuters) – The U.S. ⁠government has begun engaging pharmaceutical companies as ​it works to build consensus around legislation to write ‌President Donald Trump’s most-favored-nation ‌drug pricing policy into law, HHS chief counsel ⁠Chris ⁠Klomp said on Thursday. U.S. patients by far pay the ​most for prescription medicines, often nearly three times more than in other developed nations, and Trump has been ​pressuring drugmakers to lower their prices to what people ⁠pay ⁠elsewhere. As part of that ⁠effort, ​the administration has reached agreements with 16 major drugmakers to ​slash prices ⁠of their medicines for the government’s Medicaid program and for cash payers. “We’re also beginning to read in pharmaceutical companies to help them understand the nature ⁠of the legislative text, to see if they can buy ⁠in, if there’s a version we might reach,” Klomp said at a conference held by Stat News. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. last month appointed Chris Klomp as chief counselor at the U.S. Health and Human Services to oversee all operations …

As other Iran‑allied groups are engaging in the Mideast war, Yemen’s Houthis hold back

As other Iran‑allied groups are engaging in the Mideast war, Yemen’s Houthis hold back

CAIRO (AP) — Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels have so far remained on the sidelines as the Iran war widens across the Middle East, raising questions about why — and when the battle-hardened group might join the fight. Iran has retaliated against the United States and Israel with missiles and drones, targeting American military bases and other locations in Gulf Arab countries, disrupting trade routes, choking fuel supplies and threatening regional air traffic. Iran’s new supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, suggested on Thursday in his first written statement since succeeding his father, who was killed in the war’s opening salvo, that Iran may open up new fronts in the conflict — a sign, analysts say, the Houthis may get involved soon. Until now, the Houthis have been reluctant to fight, fearing assassinations of their leaders, internal divisions in Yemen and uncertainties over weapons supplies, the experts said. But that may change as Iran seeks to increase pressure on global oil supply routes through potential attacks by the Houthis, who have had previous success targeting oil facilities …

Friction review: Engaging look at friction shows how it keeps our world rubbing along

Friction review: Engaging look at friction shows how it keeps our world rubbing along

Athletes wearing a friction-reducing swimsuit dominated the 2008 Beijing Olympics Adam Pretty/Getty Images Friction: A biographyJennifer R. Vail, Harvard University Press IN 2009, World Aquatics banned a specific type of swimsuit from all international competitions in water sports, ruling that it gave athletes an unfair advantage. The development of this swimsuit included using NASA’s testing facilities and sophisticated computer software. Some versions had ultrasonically welded seams instead of traditional stitches. Swimmers who wore the suit broke 23 of the 25 world records set at the Beijing Olympics in 2008. What was it that made this gear so influential such that wearing it ultimately became unsportsmanlike? The secret was that it was an excellent way of reducing the friction between the swimmer’s body and the water. This is one of many examples of how the seemingly annoying and unglamorous force of friction plays an unexpectedly important part in our world, one captured by Jennifer R. Vail in her book Friction: A biography. Vail is a tribologist, a scientist who studies the friction, wear and lubrication of …

An engaging smart bird feeder for all the family

An engaging smart bird feeder for all the family

What is the Birdbuddy Pro Solar Smart Bird Feeder? Bird feeders are a great way to encourage more visitors to your garden. But depending on where you place them, it’s not always easy to see who is stopping buy. That’s where smart bird feeders come in. They have built-in cameras, and send pictures and videos to your smartphone. The Birdbuddy Pro Solar Smart Bird Feeder is the best one that I have tested. It’s a premium design, costing about £250. This is a far sight more than the standard feeders you can pick up in from your local garden centre, however, it includes access to an app which uses AI to identify bird species. A basic level of access is free, or you can pay monthly for higher resolution footage and enhanced functionalities. Finally, the feeder has a solar-powered roof, which can extend its battery life on sunnier days. So, keep reading to find out what it’s like to use – and whether it successfully attracts and identifies different birds. JUMP TO: I tested 15 …

Why singing, dancing and engaging with art is good for your health

Why singing, dancing and engaging with art is good for your health

A night at the theatre could do you a world of good MIGUEL RIOPA/AFP via Getty Images Getting involved in the arts isn’t just a pleasurable pastime; it also appears to keep us healthier – and now we may know why. In the largest study of its kind, scientists have shown that engaging in creative activities is linked to beneficial changes in proteins involved in reducing inflammation and keeping the brain healthy. “We have discovered a whole host of new biological pathways that help to explain the relationship between the arts and health outcomes,” says Daisy Fancourt at University College London. Over the past decade, evidence has been accumulating that taking part in musical, theatrical or other creative arts can have powerful health benefits. Dance programmes, for example, help people with Parkinson’s disease walk, while children who engage with the arts have a lower risk of depression. Previous research also suggests that people who are more involved in the arts tend to have lower levels of inflammation, which is linked to better physical and mental …

Tech Corporations Engaging in “Human Fracking”

Tech Corporations Engaging in “Human Fracking”

Getty Images / halbergman Social media algorithms keep us all hopelessly engaged. The data these platforms gather on us enable feeds to become fine-tuned to our exact interests, on top of turning our smartphones into glorified ad delivery devices. All this seems to be reaching its zenith with AI chatbots, which can masquerade as a close friend, therapist, doctor, and any subject matter expert all at once — keeping many users engaged in hours-long talks as they take the AI’s responses as personal gospel. In sum, the advent of personal digital technologies, and our ensuing addiction to screens, means that nearly every aspect of our being can be codified, and therefore commodified. Now, one historian is calling this new way of extracting money from human beings “human fracking” — a term that aptly conjures the image of something that is wildly destructive and which works mainly by force-feeding. “Just as petroleum frackers pump high-pressure, high-volume detergents into the ground to force a little monetizable black gold to the surface,” writes D Graham Burnett, a professor …