don Ethan Hawke: ‘The most romantic thing I’ve done is have sex’ By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2017-12-16T14:00:03Z The actor, 47, on being an optimist, avoiding marriage advice and why other people make him anxiousI have so many bad habits it’s impossible to measure the worst. My son would say I don’t take enough care with how I dress, my daughter might say I work too much, and my wife that I can’t seem to help in the kitchen at all. But in my opinion I have none.As a former kid actor, I know how hard it is to turn that attention into anything but self-destruction. The heat of the spotlight makes ordinary temperatures real cold. Continue reading... Full Article Ethan Hawke Film Culture Life and style
don Law Firm Representing Lady Gaga, Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Others Suffers Major Data Breach By variety.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:53:35 +0000 Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks, a large media and entertainment law firm, appears to have been the victim of a cyberattack that resulted in the theft of an enormous batch of private information on dozens of celebrities, according to a data security researcher. The trove of data allegedly stolen from the New York-based firm by […] Full Article News cyber attack Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks
don Rory Stewart quits race to become London Mayor saying coronavirus crisis made it 'impossible' to campaign By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-06T08:06:00Z EXCLUSIVE: Independent candidate withdraws after difficult decision over job 'I really, really dreamed of' Full Article
don Don’t Fear the Robot - Issue 84: Outbreak By nautil.us Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 15:00:00 +0000 You probably know my robot. I’ve been inventing autonomous machines for over 30 years and one of them, Roomba from iRobot, is quite popular. During my career, I’ve learned a lot about what makes robots valuable, and formed some strong opinions about what we can expect from them in the future. I can also tell you why, contrary to popular apocalyptic Hollywood images, robots won’t be taking over the world anytime soon. But that’s getting ahead of myself. Let me back up.My love affair with robots began in the early 1980s when I joined the research staff at MIT’s Artificial Intelligence Lab. Physics was my college major but after a short time at the lab the potential of the developing technology seduced me. I became a roboticist.Such an exhilarating place to work! A host of brilliant people were researching deep problems and fascinating algorithms. Amazingly clever mechanisms were being developed, and it was all converging in clever and capable mobile robots. The future seemed obvious. So, I made a bold prediction and told all my friends, “In three to five years, robots will be everywhere doing all sorts of jobs.”But I was wrong.Again and again in those early years, news stories teased: “Big Company X has demonstrated a prototype of Consumer Robot Y. X says Y will be available for sale next year.” But somehow next year didn’t arrive. Through the 1980s and 1990s, robots never managed to find their way out of the laboratory. This was distressing to a committed robot enthusiast. Why hadn’t all the journal papers, clever prototypes, and breathless news stories culminated in a robot I could buy in a store?Let me answer with the story of the first consumer robot that did achieve marketplace stardom.RUG WARRIOR: Joe Jones built his “Rug Warrior” (above) in 1989. He calls it “the earliest conceptual ancestor of Roomba.” It included bump sensors and a carpet sweeper mechanism made from a bottle brush. It picked up simulated dirt at a demonstration but, Jones says, “was not robust enough to actually clean my apartment as I had hoped.”Courtesy of Joe JonesIn the summer of 1999, while working at iRobot, a colleague, Paul Sandin, and I wrote a proposal titled “DustPuppy, A Near-Term, Breakthrough Product with High Earnings Potential.” We described an inexpensive little robot, DustPuppy, that would clean consumers’ floors by itself. Management liked the idea and gave us $10,000 and two weeks to build a prototype.Using a cylindrical brush, switches, sensors, motors, and a commonplace microprocessor, we assembled our vision. At the end of an intense fortnight we had it—a crude version of a robot that conveyed a cleaning mechanism around the floor and—mostly—didn’t get stuck. Management saw the same promise in DustPuppy as Paul and me.We called our robot DustPuppy for a reason. This was to be the world’s first significant consumer robot and the team’s first attempt at a consumer product. The risk was that customers might expect too much and that we might deliver too little. We were sure that—like a puppy—our robot would try very hard to please but that also—like a puppy—it might sometimes mess up. Calling it DustPuppy was our way of setting expectations and hoping for patience if our robot wasn’t perfect out of the gate. Alas, iRobot employed a firm to find a more commercial name. Many consumer tests later, DustPuppy became Roomba. The thinking was the robot’s random motion makes it appear to be dancing around the room—doing the Rumba.Paul and I knew building a robotic floor cleaner entails fierce challenges not apparent to the uninitiated. Familiar solutions that work well for people can prove problematic when applied to a robot.Your manual vacuum likely draws 1,400 watts or 1.9 horsepower from the wall socket. In a Roomba-sized robot, that sort of mechanism would exhaust the battery in about a minute. Make the robot bigger, to accommodate a larger battery, and the robot won’t fit under the furniture. Also, batteries are expensive—the cost of a big one might scuttle sales. We needed innovation.Melville Bissell, who patented the carpet sweeper in 1876, helped us out. We borrowed from his invention to solve Roomba’s energy problem. A carpet sweeper picks up dirt very efficiently. Although you supply all the power, you won’t work up a sweat pushing one around. (If you supplied the entire 1.9 horsepower a conventional vacuum needs, you’d do a lot of sweating!)When designers festoon their robots with anthropomorphic features, they are making a promise no robot can keep. We realized that our energy-efficient carpet sweeper would not clean as quickly or as deeply as a powerful vacuum. But we thought, if the robot spends enough time doing its job, it can clean the surface dirt just as well. And if the robot runs every day, the surface dirt won’t work into the carpet. Roomba matches a human-operated vacuum by doing the task in a different way.Any robot vacuum must do two things: 1) not get stuck, and 2) visit every part of the floor. The first imperative we satisfied in part by making Roomba round with its drive wheels on the diameter. The huge advantage of this shape is that Roomba can always spin in place to escape from an object. No other shape enables such a simple, reliable strategy. The second imperative, visiting everywhere, requires a less obvious plan.You move systematically while cleaning, only revisiting a spot if that spot is especially dirty. Conventional wisdom says our robot should do the same—drive in a boustrophedon pattern. (This cool word means writing lines in alternate directions, left to right, right to left, like an ox turns in plowing.) How to accomplish this? We received advice like, “Just program the robot to remember where it’s been and not go there again.”Such statements reveal a touching faith that software unaided can solve any technical problem. But try this exercise (in a safe place, please!). While standing at a marked starting point, pick another point, say, six feet to your left. Now keep your eyes closed while you walk in a big circle around the central point. How close did you come to returning to your starting point? Just like you, a robot can’t position itself in the world without appropriate sensors. Better solutions are available today, but circa 2000 a position-sensing system would have added over $1,000 to Roomba’s cost. So, boustrophedon paths weren’t an option. We had to make Roomba do its job without knowing where it was.I design robots using a control scheme called behavior-based programming. This approach is robot-appropriate because it’s fast, responsive, and runs on low-cost computer hardware. A behavior-based program structures a robot’s control scheme as a set of simple, understandable behaviors.Remember that Roomba’s imperative is to apply its cleaning mechanism to all parts of the floor and not get stuck. The program that accomplishes this needs a minimum of two behaviors. Call them Cruise and Escape. Cruise is single-minded. It ignores all sensor inputs and constantly outputs a signal telling the robot’s motors to drive forward.Escape watches the robot’s front bumper. Whenever the robot collides with something, one or both of the switches attached to the bumper activate. If the left switch closes, Escape knows there’s been a collision on the left, so it tells the motors to spin the robot to the right. A collision on the right means spin left. If both switches close at once, an arbitrary decision is made. When neither switch is closed Escape sends no signal to the motors.TEST FLOORS: “Roomba needed to function on many floor types and to transition smoothly from one type to another,” says Joe Jones. “We built this test floor to verify that Roomba would work in this way.” The sample floors include wood, various carpets, and tiles.Courtesy of Joe JonesOccasionally Cruise and Escape try to send commands to the motors at the same time. When this happens, a bit of code called an arbiter decides which behavior succeeds—the highest priority behavior outputting a command wins. In our example, Escape is assigned the higher priority.Watching the robot, we see a complex behavior emerge from these simple rules. The robot moves across the floor until it bumps into something. Then it stops moving forward and turns in place until the path is clear. It then resumes forward motion. Given time, this random motion lets the robot cover, and clean, the entire floor.Did you guess so little was going on in the first Roomba’s brain? When observers tell me what Roomba is thinking they invariably imagine great complexity—imbuing the robot with intentions and intricate plans that are neither present nor necessary. Every robot I build is as simple and simple-minded as I can make it. Anything superfluous, even intelligence, works against marketplace success.The full cleaning task contains some extra subtleties. These require more than just two behaviors for efficient operation. But the principle holds, the robot includes only the minimum components and code required for the task.A few months from product launch, we demonstrated one of our prototypes to a focus group. The setup was classical: A facilitator presented Roomba to a cross section of potential customers while the engineers watched from a darkened room behind a one-way mirror.The session was going well, people seemed to like the robot and it picked up test dirt effectively. Then the facilitator mentioned that Roomba used a carpet sweeper mechanism and did not include a vacuum.The mood changed. Our test group revised the price they’d be willing to pay for Roomba, cutting in half their estimate from only minutes earlier. We designers were perplexed. We solved our energy problem by eschewing a vacuum in favor of a carpet sweeper—and it worked! Why wasn’t that enough for the focus group?Did you guess so little was going on in Roomba’s brain? Every robot I build is as simple-minded as I can make it. Decades of advertising have trained consumers that a vacuum drawing lots of amps means effective cleaning. We wanted customers to judge our new technology using a more appropriate metric. But there was no realistic way to accomplish that. Instead, our project manager declared, “Roomba must have a vacuum, even if it does nothing.”No one on the team wanted a gratuitous component—even if it solved our marketing problem. We figured we could afford three watts to run a vacuum motor. But a typical vacuum burns 1,400 watts. What could we do with just three?Using the guts of an old heat gun, some cardboard, and packing tape, I found a way. It turned out that if I made a very narrow inlet, I could achieve the same air-flow velocity as a regular vacuum but, because the volume was miniscule, it used only a tiny bit of power. We had a vacuum that actually contributed to cleaning.DUST PUPPY: Before the marketers stepped in with the name “Roomba,” Joe Jones and his colleague Paul Sandin called their floor cleaner, “DustPuppy.” “Our robot would try very hard to please,” Jones writes. But like a puppy, “it might sometimes mess up.” Above, Sandin examines a prototype, with designer Steve Hickey (black shirt) and intern Ben Trueman.Courtesy of Joe JonesThere’s a moment in the manufacturing process called “commit to tooling” when the design must freeze so molds for the plastic can be cut. Fumble that deadline and you may miss your launch date, wreaking havoc on your sales.About two weeks before “commit,” our project manager said, “Let’s test the latest prototype.” We put some surrogate dirt on the floor and let Roomba run over it. The dirt remained undisturbed.Panic ensued. Earlier prototypes had seemed to work, and we thought we understood the cleaning mechanism. But maybe not. I returned to the lab and tried to identify the problem. This involved spreading crushed Cheerios on a glass tabletop and looking up from underneath as our cleaning mechanism operated.Our concept of Mr. Bissell’s carpet sweeper went like this: As the brush turns against the floor, bristle tips pick up dirt particles. The brush rotates inside a conforming shroud carrying the dirt to the back where a toothed structure combs it from the brush. The dirt then falls into the collection bin.That sedate description couldn’t have been more wrong. In fact, as the brush turns against the floor, a flicking action launches dirt particles into a frenetic, chaotic cloud. Some particles bounce back onto the floor, some bounce deep into the brush, some find the collection bin. The solution was to extend the shroud around the brush a little farther on the back side—that redirected the dirt that bounced out such that the brush had a second chance to pick it up. Roomba cleaned again and we could begin cutting molds with a day or two to spare.Roomba launched in September 2002. Its success rapidly eclipsed the dreams of all involved.Did Roomba’s nascent reign end the long robot drought? Was my hordes-of-robots-in-service-to-humanity dream about to come true?In the years since iRobot released Roomba, many other robot companies have cast their die. Here are a few: Anki, Aria Insights, Blue Workforce, Hease Robotics, Jibo, Keecker, Kuri, Laundroid, Reach Robotics, Rethink Robotics, and Unbounded Robotics. Besides robots and millions of dollars of venture capitalist investment, what do all of these companies have in common? None are in business today.The commercial failure of robots and robot companies is not a new phenomenon. Before Roomba, the pace was slower, but the failure rate no less disappointing. This dismal situation set me looking for ways around the fatal missteps roboticists seemed determined to make. I settled on three principles that we followed while developing Roomba.1. Perform a Valuable TaskWhen a robot does a specific job, say, mowing your lawn or cleaning your grill, its value is clear and long-lasting. But over the years, I’ve seen many cool, cute, engaging robots that promised great, albeit vague, value while performing no discernable task. Often the most embarrassing question I could ask the designer of such a robot was, “What does your robot do?” In this case the blurted answer, “Everything!” is synonymous with “Nothing.” The first principle for a successful robot is: Do something people want done. When a robot’s only attribute is cuteness, value evaporates as novelty fades.2. Do the Task TodayMany robots emerge from research labs. In the lab, researchers aspire to be first to achieve some impressive result; cost and reliability matter little. But cost and reliability are paramount for real-world products. Bleeding edge technologies are rarely inexpensive, reliable, or timely. Second principle: Use established technology. A research project on the critical path to robot completion can delay delivery indefinitely.3. Do the Task for LessPeople have jobs they want done and states they want achieved—a clean floor, a mowed lawn, fresh folded clothes in the dresser. The result matters, the method doesn’t. If a robot cannot provide the lowest cost, least arduous solution, customers won’t buy it. Third principle: A robotic solution must be cost-competitive with existing solutions. People will not pay more to have a robot do the job.A few robots have succeeded impressively: Roomba, Kiva Systems (warehouse robots), and Husqvarna’s Automower (lawn mower). But I started this article with the question, why aren’t successful robots everywhere? Maybe the answer is becoming clearer.Robot success is opportunistic. Not every application has a viable robotic solution. The state of the art means only select applications offer: a large market; existing technology that supports autonomy; a robotic approach that outcompetes other solutions.There’s one more subtle aspect. Robots and people may accomplish the same task in completely different ways. This makes deciding which tasks are robot-appropriate both difficult and, from my perspective, great fun. Every potential task must be reimagined from the ground up.My latest robot, Tertill, prevents weeds from growing in home gardens. A human gardener pulls weeds up by the roots. Why? Because this optimizes the gardeners time. Leaving roots behind isn’t a moral failure, it just means weeds will rapidly re-sprout forcing the gardener to spend more time weeding.Tertill does not pull weeds but attacks them in two other ways. It cuts the tops off weeds and it uses the scrubbing action of the wheels to kill weeds as they sprout from seeds. These tactics work because the robot, unlike the gardener, lives in the garden. Tertill returns every day to prevent rooted weeds from photosynthesizing so roots eventually die; weed seeds that are constantly disturbed don’t sprout.Had Tertill copied the human solution, the required root extraction mechanism and visual identification system would have increased development time, added cost, and reduced reliability. Without reimagining the task, there would be no solution.Robots have a hard-enough time doing their jobs at all. Burdening them with unnecessary features and expectations worsens the problem. That’s one reason I’m always vexed when designers festoon their robots with anthropomorphic features—they make a promise no robot can keep. Anthropomorphic features and behaviors hint that the robot has the same sort of inner life as people. But it doesn’t. Instead the robot has a limited bag of human-mimicking tricks. Once the owner has seen all the tricks, the robot’s novelty is exhausted and along with it the reason for switching on the robot. Only robots that perform useful tasks remain in service after the novelty wears off.No commercially successful robot I’m aware of has superfluous extras. This includes computation cycles—cycles it might use to contemplate world domination. All of the robot’s resources are devoted to accomplishing the task for which it was designed, or else it wouldn’t be successful. Working robots don’t have time to take over the world.Robots have been slow to appear because each one requires a rare confluence of market, task, technology, and innovation. (And luck. I only described some of the things that nearly killed Roomba.) But as technology advances and costs decline, the toolbox for robot designers constantly expands. Thus, more types of robots will cross the threshold of economic viability. Still, we can expect one constant. Each new, successful robot will represent a minimum—the simplest, lowest-cost solution to a problem people want solved. The growing set of tools that let us attack ever more interesting problems make this an exciting time to practice robotics.Joe Jones is cofounder and CTO of Franklin Robotics. A graduate of MIT, he holds more than 70 patents.Lead image: Christa Mrgan / FlickrRead More… Full Article
don French Education Minister Says School Reopenings Will Be Done 'Very Progressively' By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:39:04 -0400 France's minister of education, Jean-Michel Blanquer, talked with NPR about the gradual reopening of schools, which will be voluntary. Still, many parents and administrators are against the plan. Full Article
don Don't blame bats for COVID-19, says University of Saskatchewan researcher By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 14:11:46 EDT A U of S researcher says there is no evidence that COVID-19 jumped to humans from bats. Full Article News/Canada/Saskatoon
don Coronavirus: Protective costumes from Chernobyl donated to help healthcare workers By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-15T06:40:09Z Protective gear from The Crown, The Young Pope and Vikings have also been sent to key workers Full Article
don Gangs of London, review: An unholy combination of EastEnders and The Raid that never quite gels By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-23T13:23:20Z There's a lot to love about the fantastical and immaculately choreographed violence, but Sky's buzzy crime thriller otherwise tends to wallow in giggle-inducing melodrama Full Article
don Big Night In: Coronation Street's Liz McDonald crashes EastEnders sketch By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T09:32:25Z Liz McDonald crashed the Queen Vic's virtual pub quiz Full Article
don Andy Cohen speaks out against 'discriminatory' rules barring gay and bisexual men from donating blood during coronavirus crisis By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T18:25:09Z 'My blood could save a life, but instead it's over here boiling' Full Article
don Jimmy Kimmel at Home: Arnold Schwarzenegger interview interrupted by donkey and a tiny horse By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-26T11:07:00Z Actor's pets have made star appearances in previous videos Full Article
don Gavin and Stacey's Nessa on social distancing: 'Just because you don't feel ill don't mean you're not infectious, you could be riddled' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-26T08:02:00Z 'Oh, what's occurring? Not a lot other than a global pandemic' Full Article
don Big Bang Theory: Jim Parsons had 'no idea' where career would go after saying goodbye to Sheldon Cooper By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-29T13:26:43Z Parsons stars in Ryan Murphy's new Netflix series, Hollywood Full Article
don Ricky Gervais jokes about toilet paper shortages: 'as long as I've got booze, I don't care' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-29T13:37:10Z 'If people are fighting over toilet rolls instead of booze, there's something wrong,' laughed the comedian Full Article
don Ricky Gervais branded a 'visionary' for predicting Donald Trump's infamous disinfectant comments By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-30T08:30:48Z 'Ricky, you were way ahead of the curve!' Full Article
don Gordon Ramsay allegedly leaves neighbours furious after ignoring coronavirus lockdown rules: 'He's out all the time' By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-02T07:37:00Z TV chef is said to have been seen 'multiple times in several places' Full Article
don Hafthor Julius Bjornsson: Game of Thrones star says he 'could have done more' after breaking deadlift world record By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-03T06:15:00Z He lifted one kilogram more than previous record holder to earn the feat Full Article
don Gangs of London viewers outside UK call for subtitles as they can't understand British accents By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-03T10:28:00Z 'Without subtitles and the British accent, its a no from me' Full Article
don Tiger King's Joe Exotic reportedly set to ask Trump for a presidential pardon By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-05T08:54:58Z US president had previously suggested he would 'take a look' at the scandalous case Full Article
don Strictly Come Dancing: Brendan Cole says show is 'hideous' when dancers and celebrity partners don't get on By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-05T10:36:12Z Judge Craig Revel Horwood recently said 2020 series could go ahead without studio audience Full Article
don Donald Glover to reunite with Community cast for virtual table read and Q&A By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-08T08:33:06Z The show ran for six seasons from 2009 to 2015 Full Article
don Tiger King's 'Texas-sized' team asks Donald Trump to pardon Joe Exotic By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-08T13:48:00Z Joseph Maldonado-Passage was sentenced in January to 22 years in prison Full Article
don Rosie O'Donnell Reveals She's Helping Michael Cohen With Trump Tell-All Book... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:38Z Rosie O'Donnell Reveals She's Helping Michael Cohen With Trump Tell-All Book... (First column, 7th story, link) Full Article
don Don Shula, coach who led Dolphins to NFL's only perfect season, dies aged 90 By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-04T15:02:00Z Head coach died ‘peacefully at home’ say DolphinsShula recorded only two losing seasons in long career in MiamiDon Shula, the head coach with the most wins in NFL history, has died at the age of 90.Shula is most famous for leading the 1972 Miami Dolphins to the only undefeated NFL season in history. The team said in a statement on Monday that Shula had “died peacefully” at home. Related: Favre says Packers 'burned a bridge' with Aaron Rodgers in NFL draft The Greatest.Thank you for everything, Coach Shula. pic.twitter.com/7eXY4ZOKn6 Continue reading... Full Article Miami Dolphins NFL Miami Florida US sports US news Sport
don NFL moves 2020 London games back to US during Covid-19 pandemic By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-04T15:45:26Z Jaguars, Falcons and Dolphins had been set for LondonGame set for Mexico City will now be played in United StatesThe NFL has decided to move its international games back to the US for the 2020 season as the sports world deals with the Covid-19 pandemic.The league had scheduled four games in London and one in Mexico City, but they will now be moved back to the stadiums of the host teams. Related: Don Shula, coach who led Dolphins to NFL's only perfect season, dies aged 90 Continue reading... Full Article NFL Wembley stadium Jacksonville Jaguars Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham Football US sports Sport
don 'A Freudian nightmare': Madonna's Blond Ambition tour turns 30 By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-08T12:00:26Z Three decades on, the controversy-courting concert tour is still shaping the ways female artists express their sexualityModern Toss on Blond Ambition tour ...In Toronto, Madonna simulated masturbation on a velvet bed under the watchful eye of the Canadian police, who threatened her with arrest if her show went ahead. In Italy, unions called for a general strike if Madonna performed, and Pope John Paul II declared her concert “one of the most satanic shows in the history of humanity”. The Blond Ambition tour, which turned 30 years old last month, remains among the most controversial tours of all time. Related: The Guide: Staying In – sign up for our home entertainment tips Continue reading... Full Article Pop and rock Madonna Music Culture
don Helen Garner: 'I may be an old woman, but I'm not done for yet' By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-08T20:00:38Z In this extract from her Griffith Review essay the author wrestles with ageing and the deep need to keep writingWhy did they ask me for an essay about stopping writing? And why did I say yes? Did I tell someone I’d stopped? Have I stopped? I could, if I wanted to, couldn’t I? I’m 77 and I’m pretty tired. And lately I think I’ve copped what the French call “un coup de vieux”: a blow of old. I’ve got arthritis in my left wrist, my right knee gives twinges, and my left foot sometimes aches and stabs all day. Other days, nothing hurts at all. I don’t know what this means. I am an old woman. Continue reading... Full Article Helen Garner Books Ageing Culture Australian books Grandparents and grandparenting Family
don Real Housewives star Kara Keough donates baby's organs after her son dies tragically during birth By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-15T11:21:33Z McCoy is Keough's second child with her husband, Kyle Bosworth Full Article
don Ed Sheeran 'donates over £1 million to local charities' By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-15T13:19:59Z The singer has reportedly handed over cash to good causes in his hometown of Suffolk Full Article
don Piers Morgan slams 'prima donna millionaire' Victoria Beckham for furloughing fashion brand staff By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-20T07:25:00Z Beckham is also sacrificing her own pay Full Article
don Madonna updates debut album cover artwork to include surgical mask By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-20T13:49:56Z The Queen of Pop shared the picture on Instagram Full Article
don Beyoncé teams up with Twitter CEO to make huge coronavirus donation By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T05:58:00Z The superstar has made a donation through her BeyGood foundation Full Article
don Noel Gallagher releases 'lost' Oasis song Don't Stop... By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-30T06:28:41Z The musician discovered the song while searching through unmarked CDs at his home Full Article
don Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher donate planeload of PPE for NHS staff By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-30T11:02:00Z The donation included 50,000 protective coveralls and 100,000 masks Full Article
don Spot the difference: Gordon Ramsay swaps clothes with daughter in hilarious TikTok video By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-02T16:00:00Z Gordon Ramsay and his daughter swapped clothes in a hilarious TikTok video where they pretend to cook together. Full Article
don Millie Bobby Brown supports 'nation's heroes' with £15,000 donation to NHS charities By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-05T20:12:05Z Stranger Things star Millie Bobby Brown told NHS staff to "keep up the brilliant work" as she made a £15,000 donation to staff on the frontline of the coronavirus pandemic. Full Article
don Cool and creative London florists which deliver to your door By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-03-23T13:19:00Z Brighten up your new WFH space with some fragrant florals Full Article
don Run 5, Donate 5 challenge: How to get involved in the Run For Heroes to raise money for the NHS By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-15T09:34:00Z Coronavirus: The Symptoms Full Article
don Designer Destinations: Piece of White's designer on living in Vietnam and why London is her favourite city By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-02-28T15:01:00Z Laura Hampson talks to Zeynep Tansug about growing up in Turkey and family ski holidays to Aspen Full Article
don Pregnant in a pandemic: what you do and don't need to know By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-20T09:44:33Z Always consult your midwife and get kitted out online — resident expert Karen Dacre has a guide to growing a human in lockdown Full Article
don London's best pollen apps By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2013-06-13T09:20:00Z We're in the middle of pollen season now, with grass, tree and weed pollen creating runny noses and "bless yous" all round. At this irritating time of the year our smartphones are here to rescue us — so don't get caught out by an unexpected pollen count if you miss the breakfast news. Here are the five best pollen apps — all of which just happen to be free to boot Full Article
don London Fashion Week will be digital-only for first time By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-21T07:11:00Z As both menswear and womenswear combine for the digital event, could this spell the end for runway shows permanently? Full Article
don The tech behind London's new NHS Nightingale hospital By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-17T14:42:00Z A fully-connected hospital had to be built in only seven days Full Article
don Stay Wild: meet the London-based female co-founders turning ocean plastic into sustainable swimwear By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-28T10:06:00Z Stay Wild is on a mission to create truly sustainable and ethical swimwear that's well-designed and flattering for all women Full Article
don Wizz Air resumes London flights to European destinations despite lockdown By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-25T12:17:00Z The Government has faced pressure from airline bosses, tour firms and passengers to offer certainty around refunds for cancelled Easter and summer holidays. Full Article
don University Challenge quizmaster Brandon Blackwell's exclusive 20-question test By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-28T12:55:08Z Gone quiz-crazy in lockdown? University Challenge quizmaster Brandon Blackwell shares his top tips for triumph Full Article
don Bvlgari to donate 160,000 units of hand sanitiser to the NHS in May By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-28T14:42:51Z The Italian jeweller is extending its efforts to the UK Full Article
don Karlie Kloss, Usain Bolt and Eminem have all donated items to this raffle for Covid-19 By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-29T15:20:49Z Nab yourself some one-of-a-kind pieces Full Article
don Amsterdam to London Eurostar launch delayed due to coronavirus pandemic By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-30T08:15:02Z The new route was scheduled to launch today Full Article
don Meet the London photographer capturing his neighbours' intimate isolation moments By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T14:31:00Z With permission, of course Full Article