• Hotel on Tile / Jimei Survey and Design
    www.archdaily.com
    Hotel on Tile / Jimei Survey and DesignSave this picture! Sun HaitingHotelsXi Cheng Qu, ChinaArchitects: Jimei Survey and DesignAreaArea of this architecture projectArea:260 mYearCompletion year of this architecture project Year: 2023 PhotographsPhotographs:Sun Haiting Lead Architect: Shengchen Yang More SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Text description provided by the architects. Beijing's siheyuan courtyard house is the most typical form of northern Chinese residential architecture. Early siheyuan featured strict spatial hierarchies, but with the development of society, they gradually transformed into large, communal-like courtyards, where these public spaces did indeed bring residents closer together, yet also deprived them of privacy.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!This project is an exploration by the client and designer of a new residential model for Beijing's Siheyuan. Despite the modest size of the project, the client hoped it could still accommodate both themselves and their friends, with excess rooms even potentially operated as a hotel. A "communal" lifestyle akin to that of "Friends" was envisioned, necessitating a shared living room space where everyone could gather and dine together, yet each person would have their own living unit.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!The building to be renovated is a standard single-courtyard siheyuan located in Chuziying Hutong, Tianqiao. The courtyard was enclosed years ago, transforming it into an indoor space. While this action completely altered the spatial structure of the classic siheyuan, it created more spatial possibilitiesSave this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessProject locationAddress:Xi Cheng Qu, ChinaLocation to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.About this officePublished on January 19, 2025Cite: "Hotel on Tile / Jimei Survey and Design" 19 Jan 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1025908/hotel-on-tile-jimei-survey-and-design&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • Got flu? Promising drug shortens symptoms
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 15 January 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00041-2Influenza viruses have not evolved resistance to suraxavir marboxil, which relieves cough, fever and other symptoms.
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  • www.reddit.com
    submitted by /u/Cyber_Sheep_Film [link] [comments]
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  • Hyper Light Breaker: How to Bring Teammates Back to Life
    gamerant.com
    Hyper Light Breaker can be a punishing game to get into. As you explore the Overgrowth, you'll encounter multiple threats from all directions. While going in with your friends in co-op can certainly make things easier, one wrong move can quickly send you back to the Cursed Outpost forcing you to restart your run.
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  • Anubis Game Demo will publish on Steam Next Fest! (24 Feb. 2025)
    gamedev.net
    Anubis Game Demo will publish on Steam Next Fest! (24 Feb. 2025)
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  • Explode Lets You Send Disappearing iMessages
    lifehacker.com
    The latest messaging app rising up the iPhone App Store charts is Explode. Explode helps you send disappearing (or "exploding") photos to your contacts on iMessage, designed to vanish after a few seconds. Like BeReal and Snapchat, the emphasis is on quick, one-to-one sharing that you don't have to think about too much.There's another important feature here, tooyour friends don't need to have the app installed to see what you're sending to them. They do, however, need to be on iMessagethis isn't something that's going to work on Android (you can't even jump to the web to view the message). Take your photo, set a timer, choose a contact. Credit: Lifehacker You'll need to provide your phone number and name to get started, and you can then add Explode to iMessage. All you need to do then is snap a picture (or pick one from your gallery), choose the time it'll be on screen for (between one and 10 seconds), and dispatch it. You can add some text on top of the image, or overlay some scribbles, and there's an the option to send a text-only image with a blank background.The recipient gets to tap on the image to open it, then once the allotted time has run out, the picture shatters into pieces and is gone foreverit's quite a cool effect. There is, of course, a premium subscription available: Pay $7.99 a month or $39.99 a year, and you get extra features like screenshot blocking and photo replays.There's very little in the way of settings and options here; Explode is designed to be as straightforward as possible. There is a history page where you can view pixelated versions of the images you've sent, and check up on who's viewed them, but that's it outside of the main photo-taking capabilities. Explode will show live activity, if you let it. Credit: Lifehacker Be warned, though, that the app is quite aggressive when it comes to using Live Activities on the iPhone: It will display a persistent activity on screen offering a month's premium subscription if you send three photos within an hour of first installing the app. You can disable Live Activities access for Explode (or any app) via the Apps menu in Settings, but it still feels a little intrusive as default behavior.Explode is the work of Nikita Bier, who is previously responsible for the apps Gas and TBHboth of which let you send compliments and ask questions anonymously, before they were shut down after being acquired (by Discord and Meta respectively). Disappearing photos are nothing new: It's what Snapchat is built on, and it's something you can do in apps like WhatsApp, Signal, and Instagram. However, the simplicity of Explode has a certain appeal, because there's nothing else to the app at alland no need to nag your friends to download the app as well. But then, if it continues to be successful, I wouldn't be surprised to see a host of extra features start to be bolted on.
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  • Apple's AirPods Max with USB-C drop to their lowest price yet
    www.engadget.com
    If you've been waiting for a deal on Apples flagship AirPods Max, now is the time to buy a pair. Amazon has discounted the USB-C model to $449, or 18 percent off their suggested $549 price. The retailer doesnt have every color available, but all those in stock blue, midnight, orange and purple are part of the promotion. The AirPods Max need no introduction, but its worth taking a moment to consider if they make sense to buy in 2025. No doubt, they sound great and offer tight integration with other Apple devices, but if you dont count the minor refresh Apple made this past September, the AirPods Max are now more than four years old. In that time, the competition has only gotten better; in fact, the AirPods Max arent even on Engadgets list of the best noise-canceling headphones you can buy in 2025. Even taking into account their current $100 discount, there are options like the Sony WH-1000XM5 that are better and cheaper. Still, theres a case to be made for the AirPods Max, particularly for someone deeply invested in Apples ecosystem. As easy as Sonys app makes pairing, the process is still nowhere near as easy and seamless as Apples native integration. If youre a frequent Siri user, the AirPods Max win there too. Just keep in mind Apple is likely to release a proper update to the AirPods Max later this year. Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/apples-airpods-max-with-usb-c-drop-to-their-lowest-price-yet-154204100.html?src=rss
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  • TikTok is no longer available in the US, but the ban could soon be reversed
    www.techradar.com
    TikTok is gone from app stores in the US, but it may well return when President Trump takes office.
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  • Labor Department fines more slaughterhouses for child labor
    www.fastcompany.com
    The problem of kids working in dangerous slaughterhouses continues to be a concern as the Labor Department announced its third agreement this week with a company in the industry agreeing to pay a penalty and reform its practices to help ensure it wont hire underage workers again.On Thursday, the Department said investigators found that another slaughterhouse cleaning company called QSI had employed 54 children at 13 meatpacking plants in eight states on overnight shifts sanitizing the industrial carving and slicing machines companies use to produce beef and chicken between 2021 and 2024. This is at least the fourth example of one of these cleaning contractors being caught employing kids in the last two-and-a-half years. QSI will pay a $400,000 penalty.QSI disputes the way the Department describes the problem and points out that investigators werent able to find any current juvenile workers and didnt require a formal court agreement with ongoing monitoring like they did a couple years ago with the most egregious offender: thePSSI cleaning companythat ultimately paid more than $1.5 million and agreed to changes.Earlier this week, Perdue Farmsagreed to pay$4 million after children were found working at one of its chicken processing plants in Virginia. One day earlier, meatpacking giant JBS Foods also agreed to pay $4 million and make changes to try to keep kids from getting jobs at its plants.All three of these announcements come just days before President-elect Donald Trump takes office, but they follow a number of other child labor investigations in the meatpacking industry in the past few years. To Debbie Berkowitz, who was a top OSHA official in the Obama administration, the flurry of announcements this week helps solidify the Biden administrations legacy of trying to stamp out child labor in this very dangerous meat and poultry industry while putting the new administration on notice.Youre just going to have to keep an eye on whether this administration decides to make a total U-turn and say, its okay for children to be exploited in these dangerous industries and get injured and die and have their futures robbed, said Berkowitz, who is now a fellow at Georgetown University focused on labor issues.Whats the problem?Its against the law for anyone under the age of 18 to work at a dangerous job like a meatpacking plant, but ever since the PSSI investigation was announced in the fall of 2022 investigators keep finding more examples of it. Over the past fiscal year the department found more than 4,000 children in all industries employed in violation of federal child labor laws.That PSSI case got started after one 13-year-old suffered a serious chemical burn from the caustic chemicals used to clean the JBS plant in Grand Island, Nebraska, every night. But then investigators found more and more examples of PSSI employing children.That prompted additional investigations and abroad callfor the meatpacking industry to tighten up its hiring practices to make sure kids dont get hired. Sometimes the major meat companies, like JBS, Tyson Foods, Cargill, and Smithfield Foods, have pointed to contractors as the ones with hiring problems, but officials maintain that the big companies are responsible for all their contractors taking appropriate precautions.The Department of Labor is determined to stop our nations children from being endangered in jobs for which they should never be hired and to leverage our enforcement work to affect industries, said Solicitor of Labor Seema Nanda.Some of the settlements included a Mississippi processing plant, Mar-Jac Poultry, that paid a$165,000 penaltyfollowingthe death of a 16-year-old boy. In May 2023, a Tennessee-based sanitation company, Fayette Janitorial Service LLC,agreed to pay nearly $650,000in civil penalties after a federal investigation found it illegally hired at least two dozen children to clean dangerous meat processing facilities in Iowa and Virginia.In addition to the federal investigations some states got involved. Last fall, Smithfield Foods, one of the nations largest meat processors,agreed to pay$2 million to resolve allegations of child labor violations at a plant in Minnesota,Whats new?The Labor Department said that QSI, which is based in Chattanooga, Tennessee, as part of a company called the Vincit Group, employed children on overnight shifts at 13 meat processing plants in Collinsville, Alabama; Livingston, California; Harbeson and Georgetown, Delaware; Milford, Indiana; Ottumwa, Iowa; Canton and Winesburg, Ohio; Shelbyville and Morristown, Tennessee; and Temperanceville, Virginia. The Department didnt name the companies that own those plants.QSI spokesman Dan Scorpio said he doesnt believe thats accurate because investigators didnt provide details of the violations the company could verify. QSI has a zero-tolerance policy for any employment of underage workers, he said. We have taken extensive steps over the last two and a half years to strengthen our hiring and compliance practices as we continue to serve our customers with integrity and excellence.Perdue was employing children at a Virginia plant using dangerous knives and other tools to slaughter chicken.The JBS agreement didnt include a finding that children were working directly for that company, but there have been examples at its plants.The Department of Labor has made clear that too often, companies look the other way and claim that their staffing agency, or their subcontractor or supplier is responsible. But everyone has a responsibility to keep childrenour most vulnerable workerssafe, the Department said.What is being done?The Labor Department has more than 1,000 open child labor investigations it is pursuing. And every one of these settlements includes a set of standards for hiring practices that the Labor Department believes will help keep kids from getting hired.That includes steps like training all managers about how to spot underage applicants and avoid hiring them. False identification documents continue to be a problem. Companies are also expected to require all of their subcontractors to take precautions.Companies are also expected to set up hotlines where people can report any child labor concerns. And the Labor Department expects them to maintain accurate records of all their employees including their birth dates and work they do.And companies should discipline anyone who does hire children in violation of labor laws.___This story has been corrected to show that Berkowitz works at Georgetown University, not George Washington University.Josh Funk, Associated Press
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