• Bookyourdata: Support / Executive Assistant to the CEO | Bookyourdata
    weworkremotely.com
    How to Apply(A "Loom" Video Required: Please Read):We want to hear your story! Heres how to stand out:Create a short Loom videoIn the video, explain:Your background and relevant experience.Why youre excited about working with Bookyourdata.How you can contribute to the CEOs success.What you learned about us after Googling Bookyourdata and why you think youre the right fit for this role. (Pro Tip: Please do your research about our company and create your own loom video.)Salary Range:The Opportunity:Were looking for a highly organized and proactive Executive Assistant to the CEO who can help drive efficiency and manage day-to-day operations. This is a unique opportunity to work closely with a visionary leader while contributing to a fast-growing company.Youll not only be the right-hand person to the CEO but also play a key role in ensuring the team operates smoothly and effectively.Key Responsibilities:Manage the CEOs daily schedule, including meetings, travel arrangements, and key deadlines.Serve as the first point of contact for internal and external communications on behalf of the CEO.Prepare reports, presentations, and materials for meetings.Handle administrative tasks, including email management and follow-ups.Coordinate with different departments to ensure seamless communication and project execution.Provide input on process improvements and help optimize the CEOs workflow.Act as a brand ambassador by ensuring all interactions align with Bookyourdatas mission and values.What Were Looking For:3+ years of experience in an Executive Assistant or similar administrative role.Exceptional organizational skills and the ability to multitask in a fast-paced environment.Strong verbal and written communication skills.Tech-savvy, with proficiency in tools like Google Workspace, Slack, and project management software.A proactive mindset, with a passion for problem-solving and driving efficiency.High level of discretion and confidentiality.Bonus: Experience working in a remote environment or with a CEO.Why Join Us?Competitive Compensation:Unlimited Paid Time Off (PTO):Flexible Working Hours:Work From Anywhere:Travel Perks:Professional Development:Recognition & Rewards:Home Office Allowance:Wellness Stipend:Growth Opportunities:Networking Opportunities:Ready to Apply?Take the first step toward joining Bookyourdata today! Show us your initiative and creativity by submitting your application now.Benefits:401(k)401(k) matchingDental insuranceFlexible scheduleHealth insurancePaid time offParental leaveProfessional development assistanceSchedule:Monday to FridayEducation:Bachelor's (Preferred)Experience:Microsoft Excel: 3 years (Required)Microsoft Powerpoint: 3 years (Required)Language:English (Required)Apply NowLet's start your dream job Apply now
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  • Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for March 29, #391
    www.cnet.com
    Here are hints and answers for the NYT Strands puzzle No. 391 for Saturday, March 29.
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  • Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for March 29, #657
    www.cnet.com
    Hints and answers for the New York Times' Connections puzzle for Saturday, March 29.
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  • What Caused the Magnitude 7.7 Myanmar and Thailand Earthquake?
    www.scientificamerican.com
    March 28, 20254 min readWhy Was the Earthquake in Myanmar and Thailand So Devastating?A magnitude 7.7 earthquake in Myanmar caused widespread shaking and likely considerable damage because of a lack of buildings built to withstand temblorsBy Robin George Andrews edited by Andrea ThompsonA resident carries belongings over debris next to a damaged building in Naypyidaw on March 28, 2025, after an earthquake in central Myanmar. Sai Aung MAIN/AFP via Getty ImagesOn March 28, at around midday local time, tens of millions of people in Southeast Asia felt the earth below their feet violently rupture. A magnitude 7.7 earthquake, centered just 12 miles away from Mandalay, Myanmar, shook the regioncausing streets to buckle, ancient pagodas to crumble, bridges to shatter and houses to collapse. Entire neighborhoods were devastated in a matter of seconds.The earthquakes energy release was comparable to that of several hundred nuclear weapon explosions. The magnitude of this event was so high that it was felt in neighboring countries, says Amilcar Carrera-Cevallos, an earthquake scientist at the Vicente Rocafuerte Secular University of Guayaquil in Ecuador. A 30-story skyscraper under construction in Bangkok600 miles from the quakes epicenterdisintegrated. According to estimates by the U.S. Geological Survey, there will be thousands, if not tens of thousands, of casualties, as well as tens of billions of dollars of economic damage.Many factors conspired to make this earthquake a disaster, including a lack of quake-proofing measures in buildings across the region. Few of the structures could withstand this monster of a temblor, which was a really big, shallow earthquakemeaning it occurred relatively close to the Earths surface, says Judith Hubbard, an earthquake scientist at Cornell University.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.What caused the Myanmar earthquake?Around 45 million years ago, the Indian tectonic plate collided with the Eurasian plate before the former started to descend beneath the latter. The crumbled crust in the middle is what we refer to as the Himalayas today. This mountain range, and the entire region, is filled with faults generated by that epic geological pileup. The Indian plate is still very slowly running into Eurasia, and those myriad faults take on a lot of stress as a result. From time to time, they rupture.The March 28 event was an especially gargantuan rupture along one specific schism. All available data so far strongly suggest a rupture on the Sagaing Fault, says Robin Lacassin, an earthquake scientist at the Paris Institute of Earth Physics. This is a major north-south strike-slip fault, one in which two blocks of the crust slide past each other (a bit like the San Andreas Fault in California). The Sagaing Fault is the main strike-slip boundary on that side of the Indian plate, Lacassin says. And it has been responsible for many strong and destructive earthquakes in the past.Cars pass a damaged road in Naypyidaw on March 28, 2025, after an earthquake in central Myanmar.Sai Aung Main/AFP via Getty ImagesHubbard points out that, just in May 2023, the very same fault ruptured and generated a magnitude 5.8 temblor, causing a modest degree of destruction. Its a particularly perilous fault, not least because Nay Pyi Taw, the capital city of Myanmar, lies directly atop it.Todays magnitude 7.7 rupture was exponentially more powerful than the 2023 event. Earthquakes are measured on the modified Mercalli intensity scale, which gauges the shaking intensity based on surface observations. Close to the epicenter, nearly a million people felt this quake as IX, or violent, on the scale: many buildings werent just damaged but also thrown about, with some literally shifted off their foundation.Slightly farther from the epicenter, the shaking ranked as severe or very strongand onlookers in Thailand were shocked to see buildings there receive damage as well. Preliminary data suggest that seismic waves traveled so far from the source because they were channeled along the southern section of the Sagaing Fault. This would explain the damage in Bangkok and reports that it was felt far away, Carrera-Cevallos says.Why was the Myanmar earthquake so damaging?Earthquakes like this are a horrific reminder of why disasters cannot purely be referred to as natural. Todays quake was powerful, yesbut the cities in the blast zone didnt stand a chance because of a decidedly human factor. This earthquake occurred in an area with no earthquake-resistant buildings and inadequate building codes, Carrera-Cevallos says.Although you cannot design a building to guarantee that it will hold up against the mightiest of earthquakes, you can fit dampeners into their architecture to allow them to safely sway in the event of a temblor. Even older structures can be retrofitted to include various forms of quake-resistant technology.The damage in Thailand is shocking but is unlikely to be too severe. The shaking there was less intense than in Myanmar, and the high-rise skyscraper that collapsed in Thailand was under construction, so it is probably an outlier. We can expect much worse in Myanmar, Hubbard says.Myanmars political situation will work against its recovery efforts. A military coup in 2021 and an ongoing civil war had already displaced millions of people from their homes. This quake is going to dramatically inflate that number, exacerbating an already extensive humanitarian crisis. Strong aftershocks will shake cities, towns and villages for several weeks to come, also impeding the likely chaotic recovery efforts.
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  • Amid Trump Cuts, Climate Researchers Wait for the Ax to Fall
    www.scientificamerican.com
    March 28, 20254 min readClimate Researchers Wait for the Ax to FallClimate experts whose research is funded by federal grants hide, whisper and wait for their jobs to disappearThe Trump administration has slashed jobs and funding at the National Institutes of Health. Mark Wilson/Newsmakers/Getty ImagesCLIMATEWIRE | The National Institutes of Health has canceled grants for research on diversity, Covid-19 and vaccines. Climate scientists are hoping their work wont be next but fear it could be.We are holding our breaths because we know we are on their list of targets, said Marsha Wills-Karp, chair of the Johns Hopkins University Department of Environmental Health and Engineering. It feels like its been slash and burn. We are hopeful they wont get to climate, but we know its not likely.Researchers in her department have received NIH grants to study the effects of wildfire air pollution on preterm birth rates and how hotter weather is affecting the health of babies at birth, measured by their weight and potential complications. Theyre also studying how climate change is affecting nutrition.On supporting science journalismIf you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.At the University of Washington, Kristie Ebi is fearful that NIH could cut grants that fund studies about which populations are more vulnerable to extreme heat a project that the team is planning to expand to include the dangers of wildfire smoke.Were working to provide information that departments of health, communities and individuals can use, Ebi said. The more you know, the more of those lives you can save.None of those programs havent been cut yet. But theres reason to think they could be, and soon.Earlier this week, ProPublica reported on an internal NIH memo that outlined how the agency will no longer fund research on the health effects of climate change. It followed a story in Mother Jones showing that NIH had ended three climate-related programs, including the Climate Change and Health Initiative. The program was created in 2022 and has had annual congressional appropriations of $40 million, according to a December NIH report that was taken offline by the agency earlier this year.HHS is taking action to terminate research funding that is not aligned with NIH and HHS priorities, said Emily Hilliard, a department spokesperson.As we begin to Make America Healthy Again, its important to prioritize research that directly affects the health of Americans, she added. We will leave no stone unturned in identifying the root cause of the chronic disease epidemic as part of our mission to Make America Healthy Again.She did not respond to questions about whether HHS believes that research into the health effects of heat and other types of extreme weather are aligned with agency priorities or whether HHS believes that heat waves affect the health of Americans. NIH did not respond to a request for comment.Heat is the No. 1 weather-related killer in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an agency within HHS. Heat caused or contributed to at least 2,300 deaths in 2023, CDC records show.In addition to turbocharging temperatures, climate change can affect people's health by increasing the prevalence of vector-borne diseases and the number of wildfires, whose smoke has been shown to increase asthma and cause cardiovascular problems.Those connections have long been studied with funding from the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences. Then in 2022, NIH broadened the scope of federal funding for climate health research, directing each of the agencys 26 centers and institutes to study the dangers of climate change. At the time, the agency said a mounting number of assessments and reports provide undeniable evidence that climate change is resulting in direct and indirect consequences for human health and well-being.Most of the climate researchers contacted by POLITICO's E&E News declined to talk publicly about their funding, citing concerns about their grants being rescinded if they spoke to the media.One researcher who was awarded federal funding said some experts in the climate and health field are pausing work related to their grants, like hiring.Others have turned down speaking requests because they're concerned about attracting attention from the Trump administration. Their work often focuses on how extreme weather has disproportional effects on the health of communities of color, according to several researchers who were granted anonymity for fear of retribution. One said that they declined a speaking invitation to avoid accidentally us[ing] language we are not supposed to and then be told our language is not compliant with various executive orders on diversity and equality.Weve been told we need to comply with those executive orders as federal grantees, but its hard to do if you are funded for something that the name is something you are not allowed to say, the researcher said. No one wants to do a social media post or a webinar or an event that might get them in trouble.An annual conference hosted by NIH, Boston University and the Harvard School of Public Health was postponed earlier this month.Linda Birnbaum, who led the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences until 2017, said that during the first Trump administration, researchers were able to circumvent directives by wording grant applications as climate and health rather than climate change.It worked then. I dont think that will work anymore, she said.Reprinted from E&E News with permission from POLITICO, LLC. Copyright 2025. E&E News provides essential news for energy and environment professionals.
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  • InZoi developer resolves to strengthen internal review processes following bug which allowed players to run over and kill children
    www.eurogamer.net
    InZoi developer resolves to strengthen internal review processes following bug which allowed players to run over and kill children"These depictions are highly inappropriate and do not reflect the intent and values of InZoi."Image credit: Krafton News by Victoria Kennedy News Reporter Published on March 28, 2025 Krafton has patched out a bug in its early access release of InZoi, which allowed players to run over children with a car and kill them.Please note, the paragraphs below contain descriptions of gameplay some may find disturbing. Read on at your own discretion.8 Wholesome 2025 Cosy Games. Watch on YouTubeEarlier this week, a post on the InZoi subreddit titled "I don't think that Krafton realises that you can run over children in inZOI" had started making the rounds. Attached to this post was a clip from the game, showing a player hitting a child with the front of their car.Once the car hit the child, the child was then launched ragdolling across the ground in front of them, with the impact ultimately killing them.While the developer previously confirmed characters in InZoi could die from getting hit by a car, with game director Hyungjun 'Kjun' Kim warning players they "might want to be careful" near the road, it was never said that children would also be subjected to this death.Krafton has now addressed this bug. In a statement shared with Eurogamer, a Krafton spokesperson said:"This issue was caused by an unintended bug that has been resolved in the latest patch. These depictions are highly inappropriate and do not reflect the intent and values of inZOI. We understand the seriousness of this matter and age-appropriate content and we are strengthening our internal review processes to prevent similar incidents in the future." Image credit: KraftonOur Matt has been playing InZoi, and while he appreciated its "expansive customisation" and "richly detailed worlds", he was a touch disappointed with Krafton's life-sim game."The trouble is, it's all so soulless its flashiness failing to mask a lack of personality. Where The Sims feels tuned for maximum chaos and carnage (sometimes exhaustingly so), InZoi barely mustered a single memorable event in the six hours I played. I milled about its empty streets, trudged around its handful of notable landmarks, sang a song in a park, and unsuccessfully tried to strike up a friendship with strangers before returning home," he wrote in Eurogamer's InZoi impressions feature."By the time I'd tired of redecorating and had clicked on everything in my apartment at least twice, I was genuinely wondering how I was going to fill the rest of my virtual day as InZoi's clock glacially slow even on its fastest setting - ticked on by."
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  • X Goes Down for Thousands of Users
    variety.com
    In what appears to be a widespread outage for many X users, the social networking site owned by Elon Musk was experiencing technical problems and displaying errors Friday.According to outage tracking website Downdetector.com, as of 2:46 p.m. ET Thursday, more than 53,000 complaints had been filed about X. About half (54%) of user error reports said they had issues accessing the X app, with others complaining about the ability to access the site.On the web, users saw the error message, Something went wrong. Try reloading when they tried to access posts. Related StoriesThe problems appeared to have been resolved less than half an hour later.X, formerly known as Twitter, most recently suffered rolling outages on March 10, which Musk blamed on a massive cyberattack against the platform.Popular on VarietyBefore that, the last major X outage happened in August 2024, when 66% of users reported experiencing problems with the app, website and server connection. Other past issues have included the impairment of key features in July 2023, and the March 2024 crashing of Ron DeSantis Twitter Spaces live audio event during his official announcement that he would be running for U.S. president.Musk acquired Twitter in October 2022 for $44 billion and laid off about 80% of its employees. In May 2024, the website officially became X.com and the twitter.com domain was retired. Musk, who is also the CEO of Tesla and Space X, rebranded Twitter as X in July 2023.
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  • www.wsj.com
    submitted by /u/Majano57 [link] [comments]
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  • Nintendo Showcases Every Switch Direct Game In New Infographic
    www.nintendolife.com
    Which ones will you be buying?Just in case you need a little reminder of which games were showcased during the recent Direct showcase, Nintendo has once again created a handy infographic.Displaying most major announcements from the 30-minute presentation, we've got the likes of Metroid Prime 4: Beyond, Everybody's Golf Hot Shots, Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream, Rhythm Heaven Groove, and many more. The Direct might have felt somewhat underwhelming for some of you, but you can't deny that Nintendo's got a pretty solid line-up of upcoming games.Read the full article on nintendolife.com
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  • Atelier Yumia's Strong Start Makes It The Fastest-Selling Game In Series History
    www.nintendolife.com
    Ate(lier) and didn't leave a crumb.Just one week after launch, Koei Tecmo has confirmed that the catchily-titled Atelier Yumia: The Alchemist of Memories & the Envisioned Land has become the fastest-selling title in series history.Confirmed in a celebratory post on Twitter, the publisher revealed that Yumia has sold an impressive 300,000 units worldwide in its first seven days, quicker than any other series entry has managed to date.Read the full article on nintendolife.com
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