voice Raising Student 'Voice and Choice' Is the Mantra. But Is It a Good Idea? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 06 Nov 2018 00:00:00 +0000 Educators are wrestling with tough questions as more schools embrace personalized learning and its accompanying belief in giving students more control over their academic experiences. Full Article Idea
voice Ford Creates 3D-Printed Locking Wheel Nuts Using Driver's Voice By www.pcmag.com Published On :: A soundwave is saved from a voice recording, converted into a circular pattern, and then used for the indentations on 3D-printed wheel nuts and keys. Full Article
voice The Nation's Top Teachers on Self-Care, Student Voice, and What They Would Say to Trump By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 24 Feb 2020 00:00:00 +0000 The four finalists for National Teacher of the Year say their fellow teachers are sharing their stories and their students' stories more than ever, and it's time for policymakers to listen. Full Article Teachingprofession
voice Commerce in conversation: Untapped potential in voice skill technology By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2019-11-08T03:13:00+05:30 Conversational commerce, as it is more popularly known, is any form of online communication that takes place during an e-commerce purchase. Full Article Brand Wagon
voice A new article, "Designer's Voice vol.1" has been added to "Design". By www.nikon.com Published On :: Wed, 03 Jul 2019 13:00:00 +0900 Full Article Technology & Design
voice Vivek Wadhwa, voice for women in Silicon Valley, is foiled by his tone By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2015-02-27T00:02:00+05:30 Silicon Valley has lately come to the realisation that it is not the meritocracy it has long pretended to be... Full Article India
voice ICICI Bank launches voice banking services on Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-20T15:36:00+05:30 This novel facility offers customers yet another way to connect with their bank from home at a time when they are advised to stay indoors in the wake of the nationwide lockdown, ICICI Bank said in a release. Full Article Banking & Finance Industry
voice Combating Covid-19: How voice AI apps can be a lifesaver today By www.financialexpress.com Published On :: 2020-04-09T05:00:00+05:30 Voice AI apps can help in prevention, detection and treatment of hundreds of patients at the same time, thus helping mitigate the shortage of doctors Full Article Industry Technology
voice Islamic Voice Insecure Cookie Handling By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Sat, 20 Mar 2010 02:20:37 GMT Islamic Voice suffers from an insecure cookie handling vulnerability. Full Article
voice Telegram Voicemail Hack Used Against Brazil's President, Ministers By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Fri, 26 Jul 2019 15:54:32 GMT Full Article headline hacker government phone spyware brazil
voice Design And Implementation Of A Voice Encryption System For Telephone Networks By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Mon, 01 Sep 2014 14:02:22 GMT This whitepaper goes into detail on design and implementation details for performing voice encryption on telephone networks. Written in Spanish. Full Article
voice Visual Voicemail For iPhone IMAP NAMESPACE Use-After-Free By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Tue, 21 May 2019 23:44:33 GMT Visual Voicemail for iPhone suffers from a use-after-free vulnerability in IMAP NAMESPACE processing. Full Article
voice Hearing from Heaven: How to Know the Voice of God (Justin Peters) (Selected Scriptures) By feeds.gty.org Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2019 00:00:00 Check here each week to keep up with the latest from John MacArthur's pulpit at Grace Community Church. Full Article
voice Procurement Policy Note 11/15 - Acceptance of unstructured electronic invoices by central government authorities (PPN 11/15) By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2015-06-29 From 30 June 2015, Central Government Departments, their Executive Agencies and Non-Departmental Governing Bodies (“in-scope organisations”) will have to accept “unstructured” electronic invoices from their suppliers for invo... Full Article
voice Lack of costs advice or estimates results in solicitors invoice being heavily reduced By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2020-04-02 Dunbar v Virgo Consultancy Services Limited [2019] EWHC B12 (Costs) Mr Dunbar instructed law firm Virgo Consultancy to assist a Greek legal team with a defence of his son, in a serious criminal offences action brought against him in Crete. A deposit... Full Article
voice Invoice hijacking fraud - Court adopts practical approach to assist recovery By www.eversheds.com Published On :: 2019-10-16 Email scams are becoming more and more difficult to spot. Hackers replicate genuine email traffic, posing as genuine suppliers providing invoices that appear genuine. It is often only when the supplier chases on payment, which as far as... Full Article
voice Listen to the voice of Generation C — they have answers for Africa’s future By mg.co.za Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 19:00:00 +0000 Many young people already know how to deal with the problems the Covid-19 pandemic has wrought — they have been living with them all along The post Listen to the voice of Generation C — they have answers for Africa’s future appeared first on The Mail & Guardian. Full Article Coronavirus Education #FeesMustFall #PatriarchyMustFall #RhodesMustFall coronavirus coronavirus inspire coronavirus latest coronavirus outbreak coronavirus South Africa Covid-19
voice Fraud squad seize devices and files from suspect in €1m invoice scam By www.herald.ie Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 01:30:00 +0000 Fraud squad detectives have seized a number of electronic devices and documentation as part of a massive international probe into a €1m invoice redirect fraud. Full Article News
voice Voices from the Arab press: Ramadan television tales By www.jpost.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 13:08:54 GMT A weekly selection of opinions and analyses from the Arab media around the world. Full Article qatar ramadan Middle East voices from the arab press
voice Voices of HARMAN’s Wonderful Women in STEM By news.harman.com Published On :: Wed, 27 Mar 2019 14:30:00 GMT March has been an exceptionally exciting month here at HARMAN. Our celebrations of International Women’s Month encompassed inspirational stories across departments, geographies, cultures and continents. Campaigns and programs were successfully launched... Full Article
voice How is the Power of Voice Transforming our Relationship with Technology? By news.harman.com Published On :: Thu, 08 Nov 2018 16:00:00 GMT Voice-enabled technology has rapidly evolved from a novel concept to one that now plays a central role in our day-to-day lives. According to a recent report from Google, 72% of people who own voice-activated speakers say their devices are used as a part... Full Article
voice Delivering Beyond Expectations, HARMAN is disrupting the market with Audio and Voice technologies across the globe. By news.harman.com Published On :: Wed, 26 Jun 2019 15:31:00 GMT Companies across the globe are focused on delivering voice-enabled products to their customers. However, voice technology is a nascent, complicated one that few companies can develop internally, without any collaboration. Enter, HARMAN Embedded Audio. A... Full Article
voice Your Voice Carries Sexual Cues, Study Finds By www.medicinenet.com Published On :: Sat, 9 May 2020 00:00:00 PDT Title: Your Voice Carries Sexual Cues, Study FindsCategory: Health NewsCreated: 4/29/2013 6:36:00 PMLast Editorial Review: 4/30/2013 12:00:00 AM Full Article
voice COVID-19: APHA serves as trusted voice on outbreak science, funding By thenationshealth.aphapublications.org Published On :: 2020-05-01T05:00:17-07:00 Since December, when cases of a then-unknown respiratory disease were first reported in Wuhan, China, APHA has working to share information and ensure that public health has the resources it needs to address COVID-19. Full Article
voice Shellhaas RA, Burns JW, Barks JDE, Fauziya Hassan F, Chervin RD. Maternal Voice and Infant Sleep in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. Pediatrics. 2019;144(3):e30190288 By pediatrics.aappublications.org Published On :: 2020-05-01T01:00:46-07:00 Full Article
voice What I Wish My Doctor Really Knew: The Voices of Patients With Obesity [Reflections] By www.annfammed.org Published On :: 2020-03-09T14:00:11-07:00 Few health care professionals receive comprehensive training in how to effectively help their patients with obesity. Yet patients are often wanting, needing, and looking for help when they go to the doctor. We, as a group of patients with obesity, share our common experiences and needs when going to the doctor from a place of honesty and hope, with the assumption that clinicians want to know what their patients really think and feel. Our "wish list" for a treatment plan may represent an ideal, but our hope is that our language will speak to clinicians about how they can help their patients manage their obesity. Full Article
voice Voices in AI – Episode 109: A Conversation with Frank Holland By gigaom.com Published On :: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 12:00:35 +0000 About this Episode On Episode 109 of Voices in AI, Byron speaks with Frank Holland about the nature of intelligence and… Full Article ai Artificial Intelligence Blog intelligence Machine learning
voice Voices in AI – Episode 110: A Conversation with Didem Un Ates By gigaom.com Published On :: Thu, 02 Apr 2020 12:00:02 +0000 About this Episode On Episode 110 of Voices in AI, Byron speaks with Didem Un Ates, the Senior Director of AI… Full Article ai Artificial Intelligence Blog intelligence Machine learning
voice Voices in AI – Episode 111: A Conversation with Robert Brooker By gigaom.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Apr 2020 12:00:26 +0000 About this Episode On Episode 111 of Voices in AI, Byron discusses the nature of intelligence and Artificial Intelligence within the… Full Article ai Artificial Intelligence Blog intelligence Machine learning
voice Voices in AI – Episode 112: A Conversation with David Weinberger By gigaom.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 12:00:26 +0000 About this Episode On Episode 112 of Voices in AI, Byron speaks with fellow author and technologist David Weinberger about the… Full Article ai Artificial Intelligence Blog intelligence Machine learning
voice Carrie Fisher’s Inimitable Voice By www.thenation.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 09:59:06 +0000 Quinn Moreland Her books display a rare gift for making life’s bleakest moments less humiliating without diminishing their gravity. The post Carrie Fisher’s Inimitable Voice appeared first on The Nation. Full Article
voice Val Kilmer opens up about cancer treatment that lost him the use of his voice By uk.movies.yahoo.com Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 14:24:01 GMT Kilmer, a follower of Christian Science calls it: the “suggestion of throat cancer.” Full Article
voice Guided by Plant Voices - Issue 84: Outbreak By nautil.us Published On :: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 15:30:00 +0000 Plants are intelligent beings with profound wisdom to impart—if only we know how to listen. And Monica Gagliano knows how to listen. The evolutionary ecologist has done groundbreaking experiments suggesting plants have the capacity to learn, remember, and make choices. That’s not all. Gagliano, a senior research fellow at the University of Sydney in Australia, talks to plants. And they talk back. Plants summon her with instructions on how to live and work. Some of Gagliano’s conversations happened in prophetic dreams, which led her to study with a shaman in Peru while tripping on psychoactive plants.Along with forest scientists like Suzanne Simard and Peter Wohlleben, Gagliano raises profound scientific and philosophical questions about the nature of intelligence and the possibility of “vegetal consciousness.” But what’s unusual about Gagliano is her willingness to talk about her experiences with shamans and traditional healers, along with her use of psychedelics. For someone who’d already received fierce pushback from other scientists, it was hardly a safe career move to reveal her personal experiences in otherworldly realms.Gagliano considers her explorations in non-Western ways of seeing the world to be part of her scientific work. “Those are important doors that you need to open and you either walk through or you don’t,” she told me. “I simply decided to walk through.” Sometimes, she said, certain plants have given her precise directions on how to conduct her experiments, even telling her which plant to study. But it hasn’t been easy. “Like Alice, [I] found myself tumbling down a rather strange rabbit hole,” she wrote in a 2018 memoir, Thus Spoke the Plant. “I did doubt my own sanity many times, especially when all these odd occurrences started—and yet I know I do not suffer from psychoses.”Shortly before the COVID-19 lockdown, I talked with Gagliano at Dartmouth College, where she was a visiting scholar. We spoke about her experiments, the new field of plant intelligence, and her own experiences of talking with plants.PAVLOV’S PEAS: Monica Gagliano sketches a pea plant in her lab at the University of Sydney (above). She conducted experiments with pea plants to determine if, like Pavlov’s famous dogs, the plants learned to anticipate food. They did. “Although they do not salivate,” Gagliano says.Scene from the upcoming documentary, AWARE ©umbrellafilms.orgYou are best known for an experiment with Mimosa pudica, commonly known as the “sensitive plant,” which instantly closes its leaves when it’s touched. Can you describe your experiment?I built a little contraption that allowed me to drop the plants from a height of maybe 15 centimeters. So it’s not too high. When they fall, they land in a softly padded base. This plant closes its leaves when disturbed, especially if the disturbance is a potential predator. When the leaves are closed, big, spiny, pointy things stick out, so they might deter a predator. In fact, they not only close the leaf, but literally droop, like, “Look, I’m dead. No juice for you here.”You did this over and over, dropping the plants repeatedly.Exactly. It makes no sense for a plant or animal to repeat a behavior that is actually useless, so we learn pretty quick that whatever is useless, you don’t do anymore. You’re wasting a lot of energy trying to do something that doesn’t actually help. So, can the plant—in this case, Mimosa—learn not to close the leaves when the potential predator is not real and there are no bad consequences afterward?After how many drops did they stop closing their leaves?The test is for a specific type of learning that is called habituation. I decided they would be dropped continuously for 60 times. Then there was a big pause to let them rest and I did it again. But the plants were already re-opening their leaves after the first three to six drops. So within a few minutes, they knew exactly what was going on—like, “Oh my god, this is really annoying but it doesn’t mean anything, so I’m just not going to bother closing. Because when my leaves are open, I can eat light.” So there is a tradeoff between protecting yourself when the threat is real and continuing to feed and grow. I left the plants undisturbed for a month and then came back and repeated the same experiment on those individuals. And they showed they knew exactly what was going on. They were trained.This is who I am. And nobody has the right to tell me that it’s not real. You say these plants “understand” and “learn” that there’s no longer a threat. And you’re suggesting they “remember.” You’re not using these words metaphorically. You mean this literally?Yes, that’s what they’re doing. This is definitely memory. It’s the same kind of experiment we do with a bee or a mouse. So using the words “memory” and “learning” feels totally appropriate. I know that some of my colleagues accuse me of anthropomorphizing, but there is nothing anthropomorphic about this. These are terms that refer to certain processes. Memory and learning are not two separate processes. You can’t learn unless you remember. So if a plant is ticking all the boxes and doing what you would expect a rat or a mouse or a bee to do, then the test is being passed.Do you think these plants are actually making decisions about whether or not to close their leaves?This experiment with Mimosa wasn’t designed to test that specific question. But later, I did experiments with other plants, with peas in particular, and yes, there is no doubt the plants make choices in real decision-making. This was tested in the context of a maze, where the test is actually to make a choice between left and right. The choice is based on what you might gain if you choose one side or the other. I did one study with peas that showed the plants can choose the right arm in a maze based on where the sound of water is coming from. Of course, they want water. So they will use the signal to follow that arm of the maze as they try to find the source of water.So plants can hear water?Oh, yeah, of course. And I’m not talking about electrical signals. We have also discovered that plants emit their own sounds. The acoustic signal comes out of the plant.What kind of sounds do they make?We call them clicks, but this is where language might fail because we are trying to describe something we’re not familiar enough with to create the language that really describes the picture. We worked out that, yes, plants not only produce their own sound, which is amazing, but they are listening to sounds. We are surrounded by sound, so there are studies, like my own study, of plants moving toward certain frequencies and then responding to sounds of potential predators chewing on leaves, which other plants that are not yet threatened can hear. “Oh, that’s a predator chewing on my neighbor’s leaves. I better put my defenses up.” And more recently, there was some work done in Israel on the sound of bees and how flowers prepared themselves and become very nice and sweet, literally, to be more attractive to the bee. So the level of sugars gets increased as a bee passes by.SECRET LIFE OF PLANTS: Monica Gagliano says her experiences with indigenous people, such as the Huichol in Mexico (above), informed her view that plants have a range of feelings. “I don’t know if they would use those words to describe joy or sadness, but they are feeling bodies,” she says.Scene from the upcoming documentary, AWARE ©umbrellafilms.orgYou are describing a surprising level of sophistication in these plants. Do you have a working definition of “intelligence?”That’s one of those touchy subjects. I use the Latin etymology of the word and “intelligere” literally means something like “choosing between.” So intelligence really underscores decision-making, learning, memory, choice. As you can imagine, all those words are also loaded. They belong in the cognitive realm. That’s why I define all of this work as “cognitive ecology.”Do you see parallels between this kind of intelligence in plants and the collective intelligence that we associate with social insects in ant colonies or beehives?That kind of intelligence might be referred to as “distributed intelligence” or “collective intelligence.” We are testing those questions right now. Plants don’t have neurons. They don’t have a brain, which is often what we assume is the base for all of these behaviors. But like slime molds and other basal animals that don’t have neural systems, they seem to be doing the same things. So the short answer is yes.What you’re saying is very controversial among scientists. The common criticism of your views is that an organism needs a brain or at least a nervous system to be able to learn or remember. Are you saying neurons are not required for intelligence?Science is full of assumptions and presuppositions that we don’t question. But who said the brain and the neurons are essential for any form of intelligence or learning or cognition? Who decided that? And when I say neurons and brains are not required, it’s not to say they’re not important. For those organisms like ourselves and many animals who do have neurons and brains, it’s amazing. But if we look at the base of the animal kingdom, sponges don’t have neurons. They look like plants because when they’re adults, they settle on the bottom of the ocean and pretty much just sit there forever. Yet if you look at the sponge’s genome, they have the genetic code for the neural system. It’s almost like from an evolutionary perspective, they simply decided that developing a neural system was not useful. So they went a different way. Why would you invest that energy if you don’t need it? You can achieve the same task in different ways.Your food is psychedelic. It changes your brain chemistry all the time. Your critics say these are just automatic adaptive responses. This is not really learning.You know, they just say plants do not learn and do not remember. Then you do this study and stumble on something that actually shows you otherwise. It’s the job of science to be humble enough to realize that we actually make mistakes in our thinking, but we can correct that. Science grows by correcting and modifying and adjusting what we once thought was the fact. I went and asked, can plants do Pavlovian learning? This is a higher kind of learning, which Pavlov did with his dogs salivating, expecting dinner. Well, it turns out plants actually can do it, but in a plant way. So plants do not salivate and dinner is a different kind of dinner. Can you as a scientist create the space for these other organisms to express their own, in this case, “plantness,” instead of expecting them to become more like you?There’s an emerging field of what’s called “vegetal consciousness.” Do you think plants have minds?What is the mind? [Laughs] You see, language is very inadequate at the moment in describing this field. I could ask you the same question in referring to humans. Do you think humans have a mind? And I could answer again, what is the mind? Of course, I have written a paper with the title “The Mind of Plants” and there is a book coming called The Mind of Plants. In this context, language is used to capture aspects of how plants can change their mind, and also whether they have agency. Is there a “person” there? These questions are relevant beyond science because they have ethical repercussions. They demand a change in our social attitude toward the environment. But I already have a problem with the language we are using because the question formulated in that way demands a yes or no answer. And what if the answer cannot be yes or no?Let me ask the question a different way. Do you think plants have emotional lives? Can they feel pain or joy?It’s the same question. Where do feelings arise from, and what are feelings? These are yes or no questions, usually. But to me, they are yes and no. It depends on what you mean by “feeling” and “joy.” It also depends on where you are expecting the plant to feel those things, if they do, and how you recognize them in a human way. I mean, plants might have more joy than we do. It’s just that we don’t know because we’re not plants.We have only talked about this from the scientific perspective, which is the Western view of the world. But I’ve also had a close relationship with plants from a very different perspective, the indigenous world view. Why is that less valuable? And when you actually do explore those perspectives, they require your experience. You can’t just understand them by thinking about them. My own personal experience tells me that plants definitely feel many things. I don’t know if they would use those words to describe joy or sadness, but they are feeling bodies. We are feeling bodies.Science is full of assumptions and presuppositions that we don’t question. You’ve studied with shamans in indigenous cultures and you’ve taken ayahuasca and other psychoactive plants. Why did you seek out those experiences?I didn’t. They sought me. So I just followed. They just arrived in my life. You know, those are important doors that you need to open and you either walk through or you don’t. I simply decided to walk through. I had this weird series of three dreams while I was in Australia doing my normal life. By the time the third dream came, it was very clear that the people that I was dreaming of were real people. They were waiting somewhere in this reality, in this world. And the next thing, I’m buying a ticket and going to Peru and my partner at the time is looking at me like, “What are you doing?” [laughs] I have no idea, but I need to go. As a scientist, I find this is the most scientific approach that I’ve ever had. It’s like there is something asking a question and is calling you to meet the answer. The answer is already there and is waiting for you, if you are prepared to open the door and cross through. And I did.What did you do in Peru?The first time I went, I found this place that was in my dream. It was just exactly the same as what I saw in my dream. It was the same man I saw in my dream, grinning in the same way as he was in my dream. So I just worked with him, trying to learn as much as I could about myself with his support.This was a local shaman whom you identify as Don M. And there was a particular plant substance, a hallucinogen, that you took.I did what they call a “dieta,” which is basically a quiet, intense time in isolation that you do on your own in a little hut. You are just relating with the plant that the elder is deciding on. So for me, the plant that I worked with wasn’t by itself a psychedelic in the normal way of thinking about it. But of course, all plants are psychedelic. Even your food is psychedelic because it changes your brain chemistry and your neurobiology all the time you eat. Sugars, almonds, all sorts of neurotransmitters are flying everywhere. So, again, even the idea of what a psychedelic experience is needs to be revised, because a lot of people might think that it’s only about certain plants that they have a very strong, powerful transformation. And I find that all plants are psychedelic. I can sit in my garden. I don’t have to ingest anything and I can feel very altered by that experience.You’ve said the plant talked to you. Did you actually hear words?When you’re trying to describe this to people haven’t had the experience, it probably doesn’t make much sense because this kind of knowledge requires your participation. I don’t hear someone talking to me as if from the outside, talking to me in words and sound. But even that is not correct because inside my head it does sound exactly like a conversation. Not only that, but I know it’s not me. There is no way that I would know about some of the information that’s been shared with me.Are you saying these plants had specific information to tell you about your life and your work?Yeah, I mean, some of the plants tell me exactly how wrong I was in thinking about my experiments and how I should be doing them to get them to work. And I’m like, “Really?” I’m scribbling down without really understanding. Then I go in the lab and try what they say. And even then, there is a part of me that doesn’t really believe it. For one experiment, the one on the Pavlovian pea, I was trying to address that question the year before with a different plant. I was using sunflowers. And while I was doing my dieta with a different tree back in Peru, the plant just turned up and said, “By the way, not sunflowers, peas.” And I’m like, “what?” People always think that when you have these experiences, you’re supposed to understand the secrets of the universe. No, my plants are usually quite practical. [laughs] And they were right.Do you think you are really encountering the consciousness of that plant? Maybe your imagination has opened up to see the world in new ways, but it’s all just a projection of your own mind. How do you know you are actually encountering another intelligence?If you had this experience of connecting with plants the way I have described—and there are plenty of people who have—the experience is so clear that you know that it’s not you; it’s someone else talking. If you haven’t had that experience, then I can totally see it’s like, “No way, it must be your mind that makes it up.” But all I can say is that I have had exchanges with plants who have shared things about topics and asked me to do things that I have really no idea about.What have plants asked you to do?I’m not a medical scientist, but I’ve been given information by plants about their medical properties. And these are very specific bits of information. I wrote them in my diary. I would later check and I did find them in the medical literature: “This plant is for this and we know this.” I just didn’t know. So maybe I’m tapping into the collective consciousness.What do you do with these kinds of personal experiences? You are a scientist who’s been trained to observe and study and measure the physical world. But this is an entirely different kind of reality. Can you reconcile these two different realities?I think there are some presuppositions that a scientist should just explore the consensus reality that most of us experience in more or less the same way. But I don’t really have a conflict because I find this is just part of experimenting and exploring. If anything, I found that it has enriched and expanded the science I do. This is a work in progress, obviously, but I think I’m getting better at it. And in the writing of my book, which for a scientist was a very scary process because it was laying bare some parts of me that I knew would likely compromise my career forever, it also became liberating because once it was written, now the world knows. And it’s my truth. This is how I operate. This is who I am. And nobody has the right or the authority to tell me that it’s not real.Steve Paulson is the executive producer of Wisconsin Public Radio’s nationally syndicated show “To the Best of Our Knowledge.” He’s the author of Atoms and Eden: Conversations on Religion and Science. You can subscribe to TTBOOK’s podcast here.Lead image: kmeds7 / ShutterstockRead More… Full Article
voice Stephen Fry lends voice to children's mindfulness app from BBC By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-07T07:41:33Z The app aims to help young children look after their mental health Full Article
voice Stephen Fry teams up with CBeebies as he voices new mental health game for children By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-06T14:07:00Z CBeebies tapped the mental health campaigner to narrate the new game Full Article
voice Lili Reinhart is set to voice a character in 'The Simpsons' By www.film-news.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 06:21:00 +0100 The 23-year-old actress has revealed via Instagram that she'll be voicing the part of an eight-year-old girl in an upcoming episode Full Article
voice Peter Bonetti: Ron 'Chopper' Harris pays tribute to 'proper gentleman' who never raised his voice By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-13T06:15:00Z Chelsea legend Ron Harris has paid tribute to former goalkeeper Peter Bonetti, the 'proper gentleman' and 'fitness fanatic' who led by example in west London. Full Article
voice From Liverpool icon to LaLiga legend: Spanish football loses its voice with passing of Michael Robinson By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-29T03:38:00Z Michael Robinson was smiling until the very end. "I'm still battling away," he said as he walked up the steps to take his commentary position at the Benito Villamarin for Real Betis against Real Madrid in LaLiga last month. Full Article
voice Coronavirus: Inclusive choir finds voice in lockdown By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 23:04:51 GMT The Soundabout Inclusive Choir is helping to overcome the isolation felt by some people with special needs. Full Article
voice The Voice contestants team up for NHS song after coronavirus stopped live shows By www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk Published On :: Sun, 3 May 2020 14:26:01 +0000 The show was postponed last month because of the COVID-19 pandemic Full Article Celebs
voice Justice Department Files Antitrust Lawsuit Against Bazaarvoice Inc. Regarding the Company’s Acquisition of PowerReviews Inc. By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 10 Jan 2013 15:03:26 EST The Department of Justice filed a civil antitrust lawsuit today against Bazaarvoice Inc. challenging the company’s June 2012 acquisition of PowerReviews Inc. Full Article OPA Press Releases
voice Justice Department Issues Statement on U.S. District Court Ruling That Bazaarvoice’s Acquisition of PowerReviews Violated Antitrust Laws By www.justice.gov Published On :: Fri, 10 Jan 2014 11:13:01 EST "We are pleased that the court, after carefully weighing all of the evidence, agreed with the Justice Department that Bazaarvoice’s acquisition of PowerReviews was likely to extinguish price competition and substantially diminish the pace of innovation in the market for product ratings and reviews platforms," said Assistant Attorney General Baer. Full Article OPA Press Releases
voice Department of Justice Proposes Remedy to Address Bazaarvoice’s Unlawful Acquisition of PowerReviews By www.justice.gov Published On :: Wed, 12 Feb 2014 20:14:37 EST The Department of Justice today submitted to the court a proposed remedy to address Bazaarvoice Inc.’s unlawful acquisition of PowerReviews Inc., following the Jan. 8, 2014, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California finding that Bazaarvoice violated Section 7 of the Clayton Act when it acquired PowerReviews, its closest and only serious competitor. Full Article OPA Press Releases
voice Justice Department and Bazaarvoice Inc. Agree on Remedy to Address Bazaarvoice’s Illegal Acquisition of PowerReviews By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 24 Apr 2014 17:15:50 EDT The Department of Justice and Bazaarvoice Inc. have agreed on a remedy that will address Bazaarvoice’s illegal acquisition of PowerReviews Inc. by requiring Bazaarvoice to divest the assets it acquired from PowerReviews and adhere to other requirements to fully restore competition in the provision of online product ratings and reviews platforms. Full Article OPA Press Releases
voice So, You're Not Talking Much In Quarantine. Here's How To Keep Your Voice Healthy By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 07:59:00 -0400 With social distancing, many people are speaking less and their voices sound raggedy. NPR's Scott Simon talks with speech pathologist Sandy Hirsch, about keeping the voice sounding as it should. Full Article
voice Hong Kong, a Democratic Voice in China By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Feb 2, 2020 Feb 2, 2020Hong Kong is unique. While the writer Han Suyin’s description—“a borrowed place, on borrowed time” —seemed redundant upon the return of the territory to China on July 1, 1997, the former British colony appears to be perpetually exposed to uncertainty over its future. Despite long months of sociopolitical crisis and violence, Hong Kong has once again shown that it has lost none of its personality. Amidst the climate of upheaval and faced with a Chinese regime determined to obstruct any hopes of democracy, the people of Hong Kong have managed to attract international and media attention, marking them out from any other Chinese territory—including those that enjoy special status: Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Macao, and even Xinjiang, where nearly a million people from the minority Uyghur ethnic group are confined to “re-education” camps. No other Chinese region has been able to attract such attention. Full Article
voice Hong Kong, a Democratic Voice in China By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Feb 2, 2020 Feb 2, 2020Hong Kong is unique. While the writer Han Suyin’s description—“a borrowed place, on borrowed time” —seemed redundant upon the return of the territory to China on July 1, 1997, the former British colony appears to be perpetually exposed to uncertainty over its future. Despite long months of sociopolitical crisis and violence, Hong Kong has once again shown that it has lost none of its personality. Amidst the climate of upheaval and faced with a Chinese regime determined to obstruct any hopes of democracy, the people of Hong Kong have managed to attract international and media attention, marking them out from any other Chinese territory—including those that enjoy special status: Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Macao, and even Xinjiang, where nearly a million people from the minority Uyghur ethnic group are confined to “re-education” camps. No other Chinese region has been able to attract such attention. Full Article
voice Hong Kong, a Democratic Voice in China By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Feb 2, 2020 Feb 2, 2020Hong Kong is unique. While the writer Han Suyin’s description—“a borrowed place, on borrowed time” —seemed redundant upon the return of the territory to China on July 1, 1997, the former British colony appears to be perpetually exposed to uncertainty over its future. Despite long months of sociopolitical crisis and violence, Hong Kong has once again shown that it has lost none of its personality. Amidst the climate of upheaval and faced with a Chinese regime determined to obstruct any hopes of democracy, the people of Hong Kong have managed to attract international and media attention, marking them out from any other Chinese territory—including those that enjoy special status: Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Macao, and even Xinjiang, where nearly a million people from the minority Uyghur ethnic group are confined to “re-education” camps. No other Chinese region has been able to attract such attention. Full Article
voice Hong Kong, a Democratic Voice in China By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Feb 2, 2020 Feb 2, 2020Hong Kong is unique. While the writer Han Suyin’s description—“a borrowed place, on borrowed time” —seemed redundant upon the return of the territory to China on July 1, 1997, the former British colony appears to be perpetually exposed to uncertainty over its future. Despite long months of sociopolitical crisis and violence, Hong Kong has once again shown that it has lost none of its personality. Amidst the climate of upheaval and faced with a Chinese regime determined to obstruct any hopes of democracy, the people of Hong Kong have managed to attract international and media attention, marking them out from any other Chinese territory—including those that enjoy special status: Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Macao, and even Xinjiang, where nearly a million people from the minority Uyghur ethnic group are confined to “re-education” camps. No other Chinese region has been able to attract such attention. Full Article
voice Hong Kong, a Democratic Voice in China By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Feb 2, 2020 Feb 2, 2020Hong Kong is unique. While the writer Han Suyin’s description—“a borrowed place, on borrowed time” —seemed redundant upon the return of the territory to China on July 1, 1997, the former British colony appears to be perpetually exposed to uncertainty over its future. Despite long months of sociopolitical crisis and violence, Hong Kong has once again shown that it has lost none of its personality. Amidst the climate of upheaval and faced with a Chinese regime determined to obstruct any hopes of democracy, the people of Hong Kong have managed to attract international and media attention, marking them out from any other Chinese territory—including those that enjoy special status: Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Macao, and even Xinjiang, where nearly a million people from the minority Uyghur ethnic group are confined to “re-education” camps. No other Chinese region has been able to attract such attention. Full Article