czwartek, 28 lipca 2016

Fwd: The Presidential Daily Brief - 07/26/2016

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From: OZY <Admin@email.ozy.com>
Date: Tue, Jul 26, 2016 at 1:31 PM
Subject: The Presidential Daily Brief - 07/26/2016
To: pascal.alter@gmail.com



The Presidential Daily Brief The Presidential Daily Brief
IMPORTANT
July 26, 2016
A Bernie Sanders supporter weeps during his speech at the Democratic National Convention, in which he told the crowd, "Hillary Clinton will make an outstanding president." Source: Getty
Can Bernie Bridge the DNC's Troubled Waters?
It's getting hot in here. Bitter Sanders backers interrupted the Democratic National Convention repeatedly last night, upset that Hillary Clinton's all but sealed the nomination. Frustrations flamed when comedian Sarah Silverman chided the #BernieOrBust crowd for "being ridiculous," though Cory Booker calmed diehards with a unifying chorus of "We Will Rise." Both Elizabeth Warren and Michelle Obama praised Clinton and emphasized hope and optimism. And Sanders himself earned the warmest welcome, thanking his delegates and urging them to pick Clinton, who "must become the next president of the United States."
Sources: CNN, OZY
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Knife Attack at Japanese Disabled Care Home Kills 19
It's Japan's worst massacre in decades. A suspect identified as Satoshi Uematsu reportedly smashed his way into the Tsukui Yamayuri En facility for the disabled in Sagamihara with a hammer, then restrained a guard and stabbed patients in their beds, killing 19 and injuring 25 more, most of those seriously. Uematsu, who's turned himself in, was a former employee at the facility and reportedly told police he wanted disabled people to "disappear." Mass murder is extremely rare in Japan and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has sworn further investigation.
Sources: BBC, AP, Japan Times
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Australia Orders Inquiry Over Treatment of Underage Detainees
Was there "a culture of cover-up"? National broadcaster ABC aired a report on Don Dale Youth Detention Centre in Darwin that showed CCTV footage of juvenile prisoners being stripped naked, hooded, shackled and teargassed. The report shines a light on the treatment of Australia's aboriginal population and their high imprisonment rate: 96 percent of incarcerated juveniles in the Northern Territory are indigenous. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has called for a swift response, but others worry it'll be hard to change Australia's affinity for hardline detention policies. 
Sources: The Guardian, Reuters
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Brexit Means Revisions to Beer Business Merger
Resentment had been bubbling. Last November, Anheuser-Busch InBev, the world's largest brewing company, agreed to buy London-based competitor SABMiller for £44 per share. But with the pound sterling's post-Brexit plunge, that offer doesn't look so good anymore. So AB InBev, which does business in euros, has now agreed to boost the deal to £45 per share, which they say is the final offer. U.S. regulators have already sanctioned the merger, so now it's up to SABMiller, which will formally review the new terms before giving an answer.
Sources: FT (sub), WSJ (sub)
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Briefly
Priest and armed assailants killed during hostage situation at church in France. (BBC)
More than a dozen die in Mogadishu bombing claimed by al-Shabab. (Al Jazeera)
Fort Myers shooting not thought to be terror-related. (Daily Beast)
Florida judge: Bitcoin isn't money. (TechCrunch)
Michael Jordan speaks out about police violence. (NYDN)
OZY & Predix from GE bring you an inside look at the future of digital industries.
How Your City Is Changing In Ways You Didn't Even Know
You live, you work, you play - and quietly, behind the scenes, city leaders tinker with new infrastructure to welcome you to a new kind of future. Already, cities are using cameras to monitor traffic flow and sensors to scan the air for pollution. But as urban digital infrastructure evolves, cities are finding new ways to improve our lives, from allowing cities to identify infrastructural trouble spots to enabling street lights with wifi.
Sources: OZY | GE ON DIGITAL INDUSTRY
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INTRIGUING
Pilots Complete First Solar-Powered Circumnavigation
This is their moment in the sun. Solar Impulse 2 has touched down in Abu Dhabi 16 months after it left, though the solar-powered craft spent only 505 hours actually in the air. The flight, which used no traditional fuel, included long breaks during the 16-leg journey to let the pilots rest and to avoid bad weather. "We have traveled 40,000 kilometers without fuel. Now it's your turn to take it further," said pilot Bertrand Piccard on the runway, encouraging others to become more energy efficient.
Sources: The Verge, Huffington Post
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Science Touts Cockroach Milk as 'Superfood'
It does a body good, once you get over the gag reflex. Researchers say a protein crystal resembling milk from Diploptera punctata -  the only cockroach to birth live young - is more than four times as nutritious as cow milk. How, you may ask, do you find a small enough bucket to milk a cockroach? The answer, of course, is you don't. Instead, the scientists who sequenced the crystal are planning to stimulate yeasts to recreate it in a lab, letting them mass produce the "milk" - and maybe feed the world's hungry.
Sources: Popular Science, NY Magazine
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Where Young Men Without Degrees Spend Their Time
What's a guy to do? Discontented older white men without college degrees have the bleakest outlook on our country's future - and they're Donald Trump's core voters. But what about men under 35, the future of this demographic? Nowadays, their employment rates are disproportionately low and they're likely to be living with parents and playing a lot of video games. While research says they're happy, they're also largely skipping out on developing careers and relationships, which could make them even less content when the next Trump comes along.
Sources: The Atlantic
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Board Game Boom Sees Designers Go Wacky
It ain't grandma's bingo. With the expansion of gaming, designers are in it to win it. Over the past year, tabletop game sales have jumped 20 percent, which means Dungeons and Dragons, Cranium and Pictionary - a few classics - just aren't cutting it anymore. New game designs involve increasingly creative twists to keep the industry on the upswing, and with crowdfunding enabling amateur designers to break into the market, competition is growing. Which is why a game with a name like Unexploded Cow could be the next big hit.
Sources: NPR
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Twitter Adds Baseball and Hockey Broadcasts to Lineup
It's a whole new ballgame. The social media giant announced a deal to stream NFL games a few months ago, and now users will be able to watch MLB and NHL games on Twitter as well. The site's had its ups and downs this year, with several major shareholders selling big chunks of stock. Free baseball and hockey games are just the latest curveball in a series of expansions designed to draw in new users, which could boost follower numbers for both baseball and Twitter.
Sources: Wired
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Your 8 must reads to get you ahead of the curve
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4 Key Democrats on the Future of Their Party
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