Formally revealed a few hours after Saturday’s (May 30) launch, but spotted mere seconds after NASA crew members Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley began to circle the planet on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft, the sparkly third passenger sent “tremors” across social media.
“We did end up with one stowaway on board our vehicle when we launched today. It was not just Doug and I who accomplished the launch here,” said Behnken, addressing the reported sighting of a blue and pink creature on the ship. “We do have an Apatosaurus aboard.”
A long-necked, four-legged dinosaur that walked the Earth during the late Jurassic period 150 million years ago, the Apatosaurus had now achieved spaceflight.
Or at least a sequin-covered doll of the sauropod had, as one was now floating on board the commercial space capsule.
“We both have two boys who are super interested in dinosaurs,” said Behnken. “We collected up all the dinosaurs between our two houses and ‘Tremor,’ the Apatosaurus, got the vote from the boys to make the trip into space today with us.”
The SpaceX Demo-2 astronauts’ Apatosaurus “Tremor” was made by Ty, the same company that made Beanie Babies, as part of its Flippables line of sequin-covered, dual-color stuffed animals. (Image credit: Ty)
Made by Ty, the same company that made Beanie Babies, Tremor was one of the first dolls introduced in 2018 as part of the Flippables line. Tremor is covered in hundreds of small, dual-color sequins. Flip the sequins to one side and the dino turns a sparkly light blue. Flip them the other way and the Apatosaurus takes on a shiny shade of pink.
Although Ty probably did not have spaceflight in mind when creating the toy doll, Tremor made for a very visual “zero-g indicator.” At the point that the Demo-2 mission’s Crew Dragon (named “Endeavour”) reached orbit, the dinosaur began to float. A video camera aboard the capsule caught the scene as Behnken gave Tremor a nudge and sent it tumbling across the cabin (the doll was tethered to the empty seat next to Behnken’s to keep it from going too far).
NASA astronaut Bob Behnken with “Tremor” the Apatosaurus on board SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft in Earth orbit. (Image credit: NASA TV)
Zero-g indicators are a tradition that date back to the first person to fly into space, Soviet-era cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, who launched with a small doll on board his Vostok spacecraft in 1961. In the decades since, Russians and international crew members launching on Soyuz spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan have often flown small toys to serve as a visual cue for microgravity, a good luck talisman and a treat for their children.
Behnken and Hurley are each married to fellow astronauts. Behnken and Megan McArthur have a 6-year-old son, Theodore (Theo), and Hurley and Karen Nyberg have a 10-year-old son, Jack.
When Nyberg last flew in space in 2013, she made for Jack a stuffed dinosaur out of scraps of fabric that she found around the space station. Now it was Jack’s and Theo’s turn to send their Apatosaurus into space.
“That was super cool thing for us to get a chance to do for both of our sons, who I hope were super excited to see their toy floating around on board,” said Behnken. “I am sure they would rather be here, given the opportunity, but hopefully they are proud of this as well.”
Schools will now open on June 8 and not on Monday, June 1, the department of basic education said in a statement on Sunday evening.Â
The statement came just over an hour after a briefing on the readiness of schools to reopen by Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga was postponed to Monday morning.Â
According to the statement, three reports — from the heads of education department committee, the National Education Collaboration Trust and Rand Water — said that a number of schools would not be ready to open on Monday even though progress had been made in preparing schools. Rand Water has not yet supplied water to 3 500 schools in the country.Â
The reports were presented on Saturday at a meeting of the Council of Education Ministers, which is made up of the provincial education MECs.Â
The meeting concluded, according to the statement, that teachers, non-teaching staff and the school management team should be the only people to report to school on Monday and that learners should only return on June 8.
“This whole coming week must be used for the proper orientation and training of teachers, the mapping and ramping of all supply chain matters, and final touches to the readiness of the teaching facility for the arrival of learners,†read the statement.
The statement further said learners who had already arrived at boarding schools must remain there and that the schools must continue to orientate them on health and safety procedures.Â
Last week, MEC for education in Northern Cape Mac Jack announced that schools in that province would only open on June 8 and that teachers were expected to be back on June 3.Â
But schools in the Western Cape will reopen on Monday (June1). On Sunday evening, Western Cape department of education MEC Debbie Schafer and Premier Alan Winde tweeted that schools in that province will open on Monday as per Motshekga’s directive.Â
The province’s education department said in a statement that all measures were in place to enable learners to return to school on Monday and that it had spent R280-million on personal protective equipment.Â
“Given these preparations, and the enormous effort put in by teachers and non-teaching staff alike, it would be unfair to delay all schools from re-opening,†read the statement, which was sent out about 10 minutes after the basic education department stated that schools will only open a week later.Â
And at least one school in Eastern Cape, Nyanga High School, also tweeted on Sunday afternoon that tuition will commence on Monday (June 1).
Also on Sunday evening, the KwaZulu-Natal department of education said that MEC Kwazi Mshengu will visit schools in the Umgungundlovu district.Â
On May 19, Motshekga announced that the Cabinet and the National Command Council had approved the reopening of schools and that a phased-in approach would be used, starting with grades seven and 12.Â
The Mail & Guardian reported this week that in the coronavirus orientation guidelines for schools — a document the department released on its website — the phase-in system would happen in seven phases. The next grades to return to school will be grades six and 11, followed by grades five and 10, grades nine and four, grades eight and three, grades two and one and the last grade to return to school will be grade R.Â
But, in a government gazette on Friday Motshekga announced that early childhood development, grades R, three, six, 10 and 11 and also schools of skills years two and three as well as grades one, two, three and six in schools for learners with severe intellectual disabilities (SID) will return to school on July 6.
On August 3, grades four, five, eight and nine along with grades four and five in SID schools will also go back to school. The gazette was silent on grades one and two.Â
Five teacher unions, among them the South African Democratic Teachers Union, the National Teachers Union and the National Teachers’ Organisation of South Africa, have been consistently vocal about schools not being ready to open because they did not have systems in place to ensure the safety of teachers and learners. This week, school governing bodies added their voices to that of the unions.Â
In Motshekga’s original announcement, teachers were to have reported for work on Monday, May 25, but in most provinces they did not. This was largely because many schools had not received personal protective equipment. A survey by the five unions, which was completed on May 29, revealed that in most provinces preparations were still underway and therefore schools were not ready to open on Monday.Â
This follows a similar survey by the unions earlier in May, which concluded that there were still a lot of outstanding issues in schools to allow for their reopening.Â
A joint statement by the five unions and school governing body associations said that besides schools having not received personal protective equipment, they had not received the amended curriculum and that the issue of teachers with comorbidities had not been properly addressed.Â
“It is believed that the minister should retract her announcement to give the system more time to ready itself for a common re-opening, because, if not, we will see a haphazard re-opening situation,†read the joint statement.Â
South African universities are faced with a strange pair of problems. On one hand, universities and the department of higher education and training (DHET) claim that the higher education system is seriously short of PhD-qualified academic staff. Only about 35% of permanent academics have PhDs, though these are unevenly distributed among universities (Mouton et al, 2018) . Since only academics with PhDs can supervise new PhDs, there are also worries about how the academic profession is going to sustain itself in the long term. Universities are being encouraged to think of “innovative strategies†to recruit PhD-qualified academics to fill this gap.Â
But on the other hand, the universities already collectively host a few thousand postdoctoral fellows. These academics all have PhDs, and are required to conduct and publish academic research, but they are not university employees. They receive relatively low, stagnant, “scholarships†instead of salaries, pay no tax, receive no benefits, have no job security, are not counted as staff for employment equity purposes, and are not guaranteed a permanent job once their fellowship is finished. They are often paid through postgraduate funding offices, and in some universities are referred to as postdoctoral “students†even though they are not registered for any degree.Â
What are postdoctoral fellowships? Ideally, they are temporary appointments that allow an academic who recently graduated with a PhD to spend time (two to three years) publishing their research with few or no teaching and administration responsibilities, before moving on to a permanent academic post. Universities typically claim that this arrangement benefits both the university and the fellow: the university benefits by having its research productivity bolstered by the fellow’s publications; and the newly-qualified PhD-holder benefits from a period of “mentored training†in which to develop their research skills, under the supervision of a senior academic host, in preparation for an academic career and a permanent university job.Â
This ideal sounds great, but for a number of reasons the reality is often not so rosy. First, there is no guarantee that academics in postdoctoral positions will find a permanent job after a convenient two to three years. Although some postdocs do find permanent work reasonably quickly, others have been in postdoctoral positions for six or seven years at one or more universities. And there does not appear to be any structured career progression plan by which postdocs are absorbed into the permanent academic staff in any university. Â
In some ways, this mirrors patterns of academic casualisation in much of the Global North, where, in a collapsing permanent academic job market, postdoctoral fellowships and other kinds of insecure posts are absorbing the oversupply of PhD graduates who have no realistic chance of finding permanent academic work. In South Africa, however, the reasons for offering postdoctoral fellowships are less clear, as most academics already in permanent posts don’t have PhDs.Â
A second and related problem with the postdoctoral system in South Africa is that universities describe these fellowships as periods of “mentored trainingâ€, “apprenticeshipsâ€, “internshipsâ€, opportunities for “experiential learningâ€, and other similar language which presents fellows as perpetual learners. Whereas this superficially presents the universities as “helping to develop the academic pipelineâ€, in fact it undermines the professionalism of the work academics in postdoctoral positions do, as well as a sense of entitlement to appropriate remuneration for that work. Â
When universities say they are doing academics a favour by giving them experience — which will supposedly pay off sometime later in making them competitive for a permanent job — this justifies cheap scholarships instead of salaries with benefits. It also obscures the way that postdoctoral fellowships and other forms of temporary work are helping to createthe gap between finishing a PhD and getting a secure job, as much as they are now also claiming to fill that gap. Presenting postdoctoral fellows as learners who need more preparation for a future academic career also overlooks how many postdocs have already established themselves as accomplished academics in the absence of secure university employment. Â
If they are so short of PhD-qualified academics, why don’t universities then just hire all these postdoctoral fellows straight into permanent academic posts? Surely this is an obvious solution to all parties’ needs? Or is it? Are university managers just being un-proactive about staffing plans, or are there really two different logics at work here, such that complaints about the shortage of PhD-qualified permanent staff do not acknowledge the ways that recruiting academics into non-permanent positions is actually being incentivised by other aspects of the higher education system? Â
I have been in postdoctoral positions for three years now, and these questions have perplexed me for a long time. Because I have never had a permanent university job, and so have never participated in any university decision-making forums where postdoctoral policies are made, the reasons suggested below are my best guesses, informed by much reading and discussion with colleagues.Â
Part of the answer, surely, is that postdoctoral fellows are cheap for universities. Postdocs stipends — on average about R200 000 a year — are significantly lower than an average entry-level lecturer salary, come with no benefits, and increase only once every several years. If postdocs produce two journal articles a year, they will have more or less earned back their stipend in government subsidy. Â
 The DHET runs a cash-for-papers system: the higher education budget is distributed among universities in return for how many academic publications each one produces in DHET-approved journals and presses. In this way, academic publications have been turned into a form of currency which can be exchanged for real money. The value of an academic article varies from year to year according to the higher education budget, but is about R100 000.Â
Beyond cost, however, there are other benefits to universities in having a significant fraction of their academic workforce outside of permanent employment. It has been suggested that postdocs are being recruited to do research because permanent academics are too overworked with teaching and administration to do it themselves (Holley et al, 2018). Universities can plug this hole with postdoctoral fellows and other temporary academics who do the work not only for much cheaper, but in ways that make the university look better in formal measures of research output and employment equity. DHET ranks South African universities by giving each one a “per capita†output score that is calculated by dividing its postgraduate graduations and total research publications by its number of permanent staff only. Â
This is an incorrect understanding of “per capitaâ€, which effectively erases the contribution of non-permanent academics. The smaller the university’s permanent workforce, relative to its total research-producing population, the better its final score. So when postdoctoral fellows — who are not university employees — publish journal articles in the name of the university they are affiliated with, the university benefits by increasing its research output (and possibly its income) while not increasing the numbers of permanent academics it employs. The same applies to research published by students, temporary employees, and academics affiliated with departments but not employed by them: for ranking purposes, these authors are not counted.Â
Universities are also under pressure to increase the number of black South African permanent academics they employ, because white South Africans are still highly overrepresented in the academic ranks. Again, postdocs explicitly do not count for employment equity purposes, which means that academics who are not members of designated groups are eligible for postdoctoral positions even when they would not be the preferred candidates for permanent academic posts. Â
So postdoctoral fellowships enable universities to reap these academics’ publications, in exchange for government subsidy and/or a position in the rankings, while not needing to include them in the demographics of the permanent academic staff. Although universities often present postdoctoral fellowships as part of the “academic pipeline†by which the “next generation†of academics is being trained, this raises the major question of where universities expect these postdocs, who were not recruited with employment equity concerns in mind, to find employment after their fellowship is finished.Â
All of this raises the question of how and why university priorities and mandates are being set in such a way that they are basically unachievable by the ordinary complement of academic staff members on standard conditions of employment. Permanent academics have ballooning teaching, supervision and administration loads, partly as a consequence of dramatically increased class sizes over the past 10-15 years. Â
Instead of addressing this by employing more permanent staff to improve the staff:student ratio, or changing research output targets to be more realistic, university decision-makers appear to be outsourcing part of the universities’ core work to a low-paid and insecure peripheral academic workforce, and engaging in competition for competition’s sake. Again, postdoctoral fellows are not the only ones in this category; many others are doing lecturing and research work on various low-paid, fixed-term contracts.Â
In this way, South African universities have become like a face with two mouths. One mouth is worried about the shortage of PhD-qualified permanent academics, and wonders how this gap is going to be filled in the long term. The other mouth describes postdoctoral fellows as learners, trainees, interns and apprentices, and seems to have little intention of employing them, while reaping the benefits of their highly skilled work. This bifurcated system, where everyone works but only some are visible or counted in official measures, is creating a politics of appearances, where surface measures of success (e.g. a higher position in the rankings) have become more important than the conditions of the people actually doing the work. This is the upshot of instrumentalising academic work (Harley, 2017) — that is, giving it an exchange value which has nothing to do with the value that it had for the person who originally produced it.Â
Postdoctoral fellows are highly skilled academics, yet many have lost hope of ever finding secure work in South African universities. In a system which claims to need more PhDs, this seems a bizarre waste of the years of university education that have already been invested in them. Universities and DHET should think carefully about the perverse incentives that are encouraging the proliferation of insecure fellowships and short contracts, which are undermining the attractiveness of the academic profession and turning universities into exploitative organisations.Â
Philippa Kerr is an associate professor of psychology working on a six-month contract at the University of Oslo in Norway. Before that, she was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of the Free State. She plans to return to South Africa to begin a new postdoctoral fellowship later in 2020 and writes in her personal capacity
The richest 20% of Britons will have reduced their spending by around £23bn by the middle of June, according to analysis by the New Policy Institute that shows the coronavirus pandemic has allowed the better off an unprecedented opportunity to increase savings and pay down debts.
After three months of lockdown, reductions in the amount households spend on entertainment, sport, hair and beauty, eating and drinking and transport, those in the bottom fifth of the income scale will have reduced their spending by just £3.5bn.
Based on figures covering three months when much of the economy has been locked down, the study’s authors said the total of unspent money across all income groups is likely to reach £57bn.
As the government attempts to rein in its spending to prevent the public sector deficit from spiralling above 10%, the report will give ammunition to anti-poverty campaigners who argue the wealthy will be more able to afford higher tax rates to pay for the Covid-19 rescue measures.
Dan Corry, a former economic adviser to Gordon Brown and co-author, said: “While it is a matter of judgement exactly what to count, our estimate compiled using official statistics, suggests that the top fifth of households, numbering 5.5m, will have reduced their spending by some £23bn if the lockdown were to last for three months. Those in the second highest fifth of households will have reduced their spending by around £14bn over one quarter.â€
Corry, who is chief executive of the New Philanthropy Capital thinktank, said spending on some items, like food to eat at home, will have gone up, and some debts may have been paid off and many households will have suffered a drop in earnings.
“But overall, the evidence is clear: the amount which households near the top of the income distribution have saved since the lockdown began is huge. By way of comparison: £23bn is equal to 4.5% of GDP, 48% of what the government gets in over a quarter from basic, higher and additional rate income tax payers combined.â€
Earlier this month the Bank of England said bank deposits soared by £13.1bn in March, a record monthly rise. The figures covered only the first 10 days of the lockdown. If the rate of increase was replicated over 90 days, the total would reach £127bn.
Steve Barwick, director of the DevoConnect thinktank, which co-sponsored the report, said: “Our total figure is half that at £56.5bn which shows we have been cautious and it is possibly an underestimate.â€
The top fifth of earners cut almost £15bn of spending on just three areas – holidays and accommodation, travel and transport, and eating and drinking out.
Earlier this year Richard Murphy, a professor in political economy at City University in London, said a wealth tax could raise up to £174bn a year to help cope with the Covid-19 crisis if the government taxed wealth at the same rate as income.
He said richer households had benefited from a system that taxed income at almost 10 times the rate of wealth.
The Covid-19 pandemic has brought into question the future direction in local government systems and practices. Specifically, it has presented an opportunity to reassess the participation of vulnerable communities in local government decision-making. Undoubtedly, poor participation of certain groups or communities in decision-making leads to a disconnect between the services provided and needs of people.Â
This new focus evokes the imperative for considering alternative mechanisms of participation to complement the traditional local government processes, such as integrated development planning and municipal budgeting. Within this larger need for fundamental change sits poor service delivery — water, electricity, sanitation and waste management — in informal settlements.Â
It is generally agreed that local government has the mandate to bring the government closer to people, deliver services in an equitable and efficient manner and meet the needs of citizens. This suggests greater inclusion of marginalised groups in decision-making and in accessing quality services, but reality shows a different picture. Professor Marie Huchzermeyer’s research on informal settlements and the right to the city unveils the discrepancy in services. Â
Similarly, the United Nations’ report on the 2018 Review of SDGs implementation reveals that Goal 11 which prioritises inclusivity, safety and sustainability, is still not realised. Not to mention Indicator 11.3 which seeks to enhance inclusivity and participatory planning by 2030. The report underlines that many regions still struggle to improve public participation mechanisms (it applies to local government) and that so far only Eastern and South-Eastern Asia show real improvement, followed by Australia. Of course, other regions such as Europe and North America are also considered to have fared better. Â
Despite the fact that there is scant evidence showing the extent to which African citizens influence policy decisions, many studies reveal poor participation of citizens. Professor Steven Friedman shines light on this discrepancy in his book Power in action: democracy, citizenship and social justice. He observes that only few people collectively influence decision-making hence, “elites create the state in their image, making it serve their own needsâ€. This suggests exclusion of vulnerable people and highlights the need to improve participation mechanisms and give a voice to those whose plight is currently heightened by Covid-19.Â
In South Africa, local government has generally been labelled as weak and inefficient, despite progressive policy and legislative framework, such as the Constitution and the Local Government Municipal Systems Act 2003, informing public participation. Many researchers have revealed the disjuncture between progressive policies, processes and their implementation. For instance Alison Todes and others in their publication Including women? Disjuncture between voice, policy and implementation in integrated planning assert that integrated development plans (IDPs) have not necessarily served as an effective space for marginalised groups to meaningfully participate in formulating plans and influencing development practice.
Planact, a non-profit organisation promoting inclusive local governance processes, has witnessed institutionalised spaces of engagement as ineffective or poorly utilised. A recent study further reveals the gap in community participation. Consequently, all too often residents have reverted to protests to amplify their voice regarding services they need. Municipal IQ which offers municipal assessments observes that there were 218 recorded service delivery protests across South African municipalities in 2018. These protests are often characterised by violent behaviour stemming from the exclusion from local government decisions.
It can be argued that the ongoing exclusion in decision-making has contributed to the present urgency for access to basic services, such as water and sanitation — residents in informal settlements struggle to adhere to the health measures, such as frequent hand washing, necessary to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Furthermore, high-population densities and sharing of facilities by multiple households render physical distancing impossible and increase residents’ risk of exposure to contaminated surfaces. These challenges make rethinking of local government participation mechanisms even more pressing.Â
The recent speech by President Cyril Ramaphosa provides a pointer to the government’s willingness to embrace systemic change in the near future: “Our new economy must be founded on fairness, empowerment, justice and equality. It must use every resource, every capability and every innovation — service of the people of this country.†This is a positive statement and Planact considers the call an important one for all spheres of government and civil society. Reimagined participation mechanisms are integral to that change.
How can participation in local government be improved?
Planact advocates selected alternatives municipalities can adopt to improve the participation of informal settlements in local government.
First, supportinginformal settlement clusters to participate inlocal governance processes. This could amplify their voices and reduce the elite’s dominance in decision-making processes.Â
Second, supporting the creation of neutral spaces/alternative spaces where the clusters and other movements can communicate with the municipality. This could complement the quick consultations conducted during IDP/municipal budgeting processes which least benefit vulnerable communities. As asserted by institutional theorists, such as Douglass North, informal rules should be supported to engender formal institutions.Â
Third, providing elaborative feedback sessions with informal settlement clusters at different intervals of a year. The current feedback on the coronavirus situation provided by the government points to the feasibility and significant role of feedback sessions in governance.
Fourth, recognising and institutionalising social audits to establish relationships between service delivery and resources meanwhile also promoting the monitoring of service providers by communities.Â
The monitoring of basic services by residents of informal settlements, the Asivikelane Initiative, demonstrates this aspect.
Lastly, strengthening public awareness campaigns using media that includes community radio stations to encourage the inclusion of disadvantaged communities.Â
What does systemic change mean for civil society organisations?
Currently, the government is speaking to civil society organisations to help them address the problems faced by informal settlements during this pandemic. Although the focus is mainly on pressing issues, this has paved the way to strategically influence future actions. Planact is cognisant that systemic change regarding participation mechanisms at local government level will require strategic advocacy through targeted interventions. A pressing question that cannot be ignored is whether the various government departments and municipalities will retain the current momentum in addressing service delivery issues and collaboration with civil society organisations post-Covid-19?Â
Non-governmental organisations therefore will need to carefully strategise their interventions aimed at bolstering the government’s response to the issues beyond this period. A coalition of non-governmental organisations and stakeholders needs to capitalise on the government’s current willingness to embrace systemic change as reflected in the president’s statement. To this end, NGOs need to re-engineer their advocacy approach for the Post-Covid 19 era, while also looking inward and solidifying collaborative interventions.Â
A first critical move would be the discarding of the silo approach, which has a long track record of failing to catalyse significant systemic change.
The active involvement of all stakeholders is critical for shifting the stifling systems that continue to exclude vulnerable communities.If grasped, systemic change in the post-Covid-19 era could benefit the majority of residents in informal settlements in South Africa, thus resulting in the country becoming a cynosure for best public-participation practices.Â
Dr Hloniphile Simelane is a development practitioner at Planact. She is also a visiting researcher at the University of Witwatersrand’s School of Architecture and Planning
South Africa has been in level 5 and level 4 lockdown for about 70 days now and most of us have settled in a work-from-home routine. It wasn’t easy but just look at us.
Most employees adjusted to working with having kids, pets and partners around; we’ve overcome erratic Wi-Fi connections, power outages and a thousand other challenges.
While many initially planned for a short term work-from-home routine, it’s now becoming clear that we may have to continue like this for some time to come.
It’s about time we take our work-from-home skills to the next level, let’s call it WFH 2.0. Google suggests following these suggestions to master this WFH business.
WFH 2.0: Getting things done
Image via Adobe Stock
Use Google Groups to stay in touch
An email list that includes all your team members lets you quickly share information, and a chat room can be used for faster-moving discussions. It’s super easy to create an email list.
Use Google Groups to create an online group for your team, which will enable you to email each other, host group discussions, collaborate on projects, organise meetings find people with similar hobbies.
Google Drive: Sharing permissions
Update sharing permissions on important documents to ensure that collaborators can easily edit and comment as needed. A document can be shared for collaboration with up to 100 people.
Take this one step further by creating a shared drive where your team can store, search, and access files from any device. From Google Drive, simply click on the ‘New’ button. You can also change member access levels, or remove certain members.
Practising good workplace etiquette
Just because your team isn’t at the office doesn’t mean they’re not busy. It’s always a good idea to check calendars before scheduling meetings. You can read more about accessing someone’s calendar here.
You can also set up working hours in Calendar to inform your co-workers of your own availability. Simply go to Settings, then General and select Working Hours. From there, select Enable Working Hours and select the days and time.
Image via Google
Schedule meetings now
Set up calendar invites, create an agenda ahead of time. Simply go to your Google Calendar to create events, or sync invites straight from the email or third-party application.
You can also attach relevant docs to the invite from withing the Calendar before sharing it with all relevant parents. If anyone isn’t familiar with video conferencing, simply point them to Google’s how-to guide.
This is a useful feature because if a team member tries to schedule a meeting with you outside of your working hours, they’ll receive a warning notification.
Find the right set-up for you
You might need to try a few different configurations before you discover how to stay focused and not distract others. I’ve personally come to rely integrations with Google Calendar (such as Monday, Trello and ToDoist) to stay on top of things.
If, like me, you’re not all that fond of video calls and conferencing, Google’s blog post with six useful tips might just be the thing you need to take you from video-call-hesitant to video-call-pro.
If you need some help settling in with WFH 1.0, follow this link to learn about sticking to a work schedule, finding the right spot for your home office and how not to be the “just quickly†person.
The on-again, off-again communication skills of the Education Department have tried and tested the patience of many South Africans on Sunday – but we’ve finally got an answer to a burning question, and it’s better late than never. Schools in Mzansi will not open on Monday 1 June as initially planned, the ministry has confirmed.
When will children return to school in South Africa, and on what date?
The postponed briefing has been pushed back to 11:00 on Monday – hours after schools were due to return for their first day. Luckily, some form of common sense prevailed and on Sunday evening, the Education Department gave us all an update. Schools will remain closed for the week ahead, reopening only on Monday 8 June.
Apart from the change in dates, it’s likely that most of the plans set down by Angie Motshekga and her colleagues will remain in place. Grade 7 and Grade 12 students will be the first back through the doors in eight days’ time, and they will be followed by different year groups as the weeks roll on.
Elijah Mhlanga is a spokesperson for the education department. He confirmed that schools are “80% ready†for reopening, but not all facilities are prepared to move forward together this week.
“We received a report from the consortium of service providers coordinated by the National Education Collaboration Trust on the external evaluation and monitoring of the state of readiness. Rand Water, as an implementing agent delivering water to 3,500 schools, also presented its report.â€
“The Heads of Education Departments Committee also presented a summary. All three reports converged on the fact that a substantial number of schools would not be ready for the reopening tomorrow, albeit tremendous progress had been made by most provinces, which overall reflected 80% state of readiness.â€
Covid-19 has removed the veil on real poverty in South Africa, showing us all what we have normalised: rampant unemployment and extreme poverty. It was always there; the immediate coronavirus crisis has just reminded us of it.
In the world right now, civil society is being called on more and we need to collaborate and connect. Civil society in the past three decades in South Africa has become less influential. Before Covid-19 were we really heard? Were we really working together? In the past six weeks during lockdown, however, I have seen organisations come together to alleviate human suffering in a similar way to how they fought against apartheid.
The work happening on the ground in South Africa has been driven by nongovernmental organisations, the challenge remains in working together with the government. The recent call by the government to stop civil society distributing food came as a shock.
My one question is this – why does it take a pandemic to get us to work together? My other questions are what happens after this crisis? How do we continue supporting each other? How do we continue with the work that we do?
A beacon of hope at this devastating time has been our youth. Activate, a youth network with more than 4 500 “activators†who have gone through leadership training programmes, has watched these young people go out into their communities and be part of the solution, not the problem. Bear in mind these are the same people who are watching their promises of a future slip away once again, as the economy is crushed.
I live in awe at how many young people in South Africa have asked: “What can we do?†in response to this virus. Young people are starting soup kitchens, gathering and distributing food parcels, training their elders in physical distancing; helping with screening; being a source of information on WhatsApp groups by translating Covid-19 information into their own languages so everyone can understand; they are out there on the frontlines of this battle against an invisible enemy. They didn’t even wait to be deployed, they just went out there and started creating change. That is what it is all about.Â
The challenges facing civil society are great. Extraordinary leadership will be required in the months going forward by nongovernmental organisations. It is time for people to come together with the youth and communities across the divide and ensure that the goodwill and ubuntu that has arisen, will continue to rise and spread, so we can build the South Africa we truly want for everyone.Â
Good can come out of this crisis if we continue doing good.
These are unprecedented times, and the role of media to tell and record the story of South Africa as it develops is more important than ever. But it comes at a cost. Advertisers are cancelling campaigns, and our live events have come to an abrupt halt. Our income has been slashed.
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WASHINGTON — When Trump first addressed the nation as its president on Jan. 20, 2017, he depicted the nation’s cities as domestic combat zones and declared “this American carnage stops right here and stops right now.”
Back then, it was hyperbole at best. But it’s become reality on his watch, and he has encouraged further violence.
More than 100,000 Americans have lost their lives, and another 40 million their livelihoods, amid a coronavirus pandemic to which Trump was slow to react. Against that backdrop, cities across the country are now combustible cauldrons of fear, anger, fire and tear gas as Trump has responded to the violence with threats and little evidence of understanding its cause.
Since the police killing of George Floyd, a black man, in Minneapolis last week, Trump has largely thrown rhetorical Molotov cocktails over the front lines of the national uprising from the safety of his White House bunker.
In other words, the president met protests against state violence with calls for more of it.
He has threatened protesters in the park across the street from his home with “vicious dogs” and “ominous weapons,” suggested that looters in Minneapolis would be shot as he referred to protesters as “thugs,” and prepared the Pentagon to use military force against American citizens. Those words provide cover to other elected officials and law enforcement officers who are escalating rather than de-escalating confrontations, like the Minneapolis police who shot tear gas and rubber bullets at crowds Saturday.
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Some political leaders are pleading with Trump to do no more harm, and with protesters not to give him the power to focus on their actions rather than those of police officers in Minneapolis and systemic injustice.
“There are times where you should just stop, and this is one of those times,” Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, a Democrat, said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” Sunday of Trump. “He’s making it worse. This is not about using military force. This is about where we are in America. We are beyond a tipping point in this country, and his rhetoric only inflames that, and he should sometimes just stop talking.”
On NBC’s Meet the Press, Bottoms said it’s fine for a president to address the American public, but “this president has a history of making matters worse.” She spoke specifically of his response to the fatal 2017 Charlottesville, Virginia, clash between white supremacists and counter-demonstrators, when Trump said there were “fine people” on “both sides.”
For the most part, political leaders at the local and state level say they are hoping to calm civil unrest in a turbulent moment.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, also a Democrat, said during a Sunday news conference that “violence never works” and that it distracts from the goals of the protesters.
“When you are violent, it creates a scapegoat to shift the blame,” Cuomo said. “It allows the president of the United States to tweet about looting rather than the murder by a police officer.”
It’s not just Democrats who wish Trump would refrain from roiling the boiling pot.
“Trump is far more divisive than past presidents — his strength is stirring up his base, not calming the waters,” said Dan Eberhart, a major Republican donor who lives in Arizona. “President Trump’s use of the word ‘thugs’ on Twitter may have expressed what some Americans were thinking but was ill-advised and could only serve to exacerbate the situation and weaken his credibility with the protesters.”
Some of the president’s tweets, said Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., on “Fox News Sunday,” were “not constructive tweets, without any question.”
Despite the president’s own escalation of the tensions, Trump is blaming anti-fascist activists known as “Antifa” for the outbreak of violence. Calling the members of the group “gutless Radical Left Wack Jobs,” he said in a Sunday tweet that Antifa will be declared a terrorist organization by his administration.
Likewise, Democrats have pointed their fingers at white supremacists, arguing that they are taking advantage of the conflict to fuel the conflagration.
But neither set is as influential as the president of the United States.
Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican who has criticized Trump over the federal response to coronavirus and other matters, said the president’s reaction to the protests has been counterproductive.
“It’s not lowering the temperature,” Hogan said on CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday. “It’s sort of — it’s sort of continuing to escalate the rhetoric. And I think it’s just the opposite of the message that should have been coming out of the White House.”
Trump is realizing the “American carnage” he envisioned when his presidency began.
Jonathan Allen
Jonathan Allen is a senior political analyst for NBC News, based in Washington.
Arm has revealed its latest crop of CPUs and GPUs, set to be used in Android phone processors later this year and in 2021. From Qualcomm and Huawei to Samsung and MediaTek, we’re expecting all the major silicon players to use the new tech.
Speaking of these chip companies, what should we expect from them and the mobile SoC industry at large next year?
A massive leap in CPU power (for some)
The next generation of Android processors could see the biggest CPU performance leap in quite some time, as the new Cortex-X1 Arm CPU prioritizes power over efficiency. This strategy means you can expect a power increase of up to 30% compared to the Cortex-A77 used in Qualcomm, Samsung, and MediaTek’s flagship chipsets. In fact, the Cortex-X1 is expected to be up to 23% more powerful than the Cortex-A78, announced alongside the X1.
Arm has stated that the Cortex-X1 might only be available to specific chipset makers, meaning some chip brands might be left without the hefty CPU. So expect a rather uneven playing field among Android phones if for example, Qualcomm gets access to this Arm CPU but Samsung or MediaTek don’t.
What to expect from GPUs in 2021
Arm’s Mali-G78 GPU is a modest upgrade over the Mali-G77 seen in Samsung and MediaTek’s high-end chips. So truth be told, mobile gamers might not see a major real-world difference between the two GPUs.
This puts Arm in a rather interesting situation in 2021, especially in light of Samsung’s decision to work with AMD on smartphone GPUs. Back in July last year, Samsung said the new GPU tech will be implemented in products that launch “two years down the road,†which means it’s eyeing a 2021 launch date.
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Combine Samsung and AMD’s partnership with Qualcomm’s traditionally beefy Adreno graphics, and it seems like Arm GPUs aren’t exactly hot property right now at the high end.
In saying so, the company’s Mali-G68 is the first Arm GPU in an upper mid-range family, sharing the same features as the Mali-G78 and slotting in above the Mali-G5X series. We’ve previously seen the likes of Xiaomi use a flagship Arm GPU (albeit with four cores) to great effect in the Redmi Note 8 Pro. So hopefully the G68 bring even more graphical grunt to mid-range phones.
GPUs are more important than ever in the age of high refresh rate screens, and we’re also starting to see even $200 to $300 phones offer 90Hz or 120Hz displays. High refresh rates don’t mean much if the GPU struggles to keep up, so that’s another reason why we’re glad to see the Mali-G68 plug the gap between budget and flagship mobile processors.
A switch to more efficient designs
Credit: David Imel / Android Authority
The manufacturing process used to make each chipset (measured in nanometers) is another important factor, with smaller designs equaling less power consumption. We’ve seen top-end mobile processors shrink from 28nm designs in early 2014, all the way to 7nm right now.
High-end Android phone processors are due for a switch to even smaller 5nm designs in 2021, and we’re expecting major players to all hop aboard this bandwagon. But mid-range chips usually lag behind in this regard, so they might offer 7nm or slightly bigger designs for a while yet.
New CPUs also tend to offer efficiency improvements, and Arm’s Cortex-A55 is the lightweight CPU of choice for all silicon makers, being paired with more powerful CPUs. The Cortex-A55 is long in the tooth though, having first been revealed in 2017. Unfortunately, Arm hasn’t revealed a successor to it yet, which is disappointing as it’s probably more efficient to use the newer heavyweight cores for many tasks instead. Hopefully we see a successor next year, as it could provide a major upgrade for $100 to $150 phones.
What about 5G?
Credit: David Imel / Android Authority
The shift to 5G brought with it a few aches and pains, and power consumption is one of these issues. Fortunately, the aforementioned shift to 5nm designs means new 5G chipsets will consume less power.
We’re also expecting to see the likes of Qualcomm adopt integrated modems in their flagship chipsets, enabling notable efficiency gains as well. And when combined with the switch to 5nm designs, we can expect next year’s 5G flagships to be kinder on battery life than this year’s devices.
Qualcomm’s latest X60 modem also brings a number of enhancements, such as 5G Voice-over-NR capabilities, and improved carrier aggregation for better speed and stability. The US chip giant is also bringing smaller mmWave modules to smartphones in 2021, with smaller components meaning more room for (you guessed it) bigger batteries.
Qualcomm’s rival MediaTek is also poised to improve its 5G capabilities in the future. The company still doesn’t support mmWave just yet, but previously told Android Authority that it was working on a solution.
Connectivity to get upgrades
Wi-Fi 6 has come to a variety of phones in 2019 and 2020, as some of the latest high-end and upper-mid range processors sport the standard. We’ve even seen the tech come to the budget-focused Snapdragon 460 chipset, although phones with that chip are only due closer to the end of the year.
Just when more chipsets and phones adopt Wi-Fi 6, we’ve got Wi-Fi 6E entering the fray. Don’t expect much faster speeds, but it should ease congestion and result in reduced latency. The first phones with Wi-Fi 6E are dependent on processor support, so we’ll need to wait and see if upcoming Snapdragon, Dimensity, and Kirin chips gain this feature.
In saying so, Qualcomm announced Wi-Fi 6E support in its new FastConnect 6700 and 6900 connectivity suites. FastConnect is Qualcomm’s brand name for the wireless connectivity components in its recent Snapdragon chips, so this means we can definitely expect Wi-Fi 6E in its upcoming premium mobile processors.
Bluetooth is another important connectivity feature and many high-end chipsets support Bluetooth 5.1, with some upper-mid range SoCs grabbing this feature too. However, we’ve already seen the first processor packing Bluetooth 5.2 support in the Snapdragon 768G, with Qualcomm later adding that Bluetooth 5.2 was coming to the aforementioned FastConnect suites.
Bluetooth 5.2 brings enhancements like Low Energy Audio (LE Audio) for more power-efficient wireless audio, Audio Broadcast support as well as the LC3 codec. Again, this will require new SoCs if you want in on this action. But the new standard means you’re getting better audio quality and more reliable connections than relying on proprietary AptX connectivity, so it’s definitely worth the wait.
Machine learning in 2021
It seems like every major chip manufacturer has a neural processor of some kind in 2020, with Huawei, MediaTek, Qualcomm, and Samsung all sporting NPUs, APUs, or AI accelerators. We’ve seen virtually all flagship Android processors offer AI silicon, while brands have also moved to bring this hardware to the mid-tier.
However, one trend we’ve noticed is that chipset makers aren’t bringing machine learning hardware to low-end processors right now. We aren’t expecting to see this change in 2021, as CPU and GPU advancements mean many machine learning tasks can be run at a brisk pace without a dedicated neural processor. Furthermore, CPU and GPU upgrades also mean that machine learning tasks aren’t as big a drain on the battery as they used to be.
Nevertheless, as smartphone brands keep pushing the envelope with offline inference tasks like Live Caption, augmented reality, and ultra high-resolution processing, we expect more chips to offer dedicated silicon.
What does this all mean for Samsung Exynos?
The Exynos 990 garnered a ton of negative attention due to the real and perceived gap between it and the Snapdragon 865 chipset. But there’s reason to believe that 2021 will be a rebuilding phase for Samsung’s chipmaking unit.
Aside from the aforementioned partnership with AMD for graphics, Samsung’s CPU efforts have also been shaken up. The firm’s Austin custom CPU unit was shut down late last year, which means future Samsung CPUs are almost 100% guaranteed to use Arm Cortex technology.
It seems like a good time for Samsung to drop its own CPUs in favor of Arm CPUs, as the Cortex-X1 seems to have a similar performance-focused philosophy to the Korean brand’s CPUs. We don’t know if we’ll see the first Samsung Exynos chipset with AMD graphics in 2021, but you might want to keep your expectations in check for the first product. After all, this is AMD’s first foray into modern smartphone GPUs.
Where do these developments leave Huawei?
Huawei’s HiSilicon division has been a saving grace ever since the Huawei ban kicked in, giving the manufacturer in-house chip manufacturing capabilities. And this was vitally important with Qualcomm not being allowed to supply the firm, as HiSilicon processors helped to address this gap.
Unfortunately, Washington’s draconian decision to now cut Huawei off from its chip producers means the firm is in dire straits as far as Android processor supply is concerned. The Chinese brand said that it had been building a stockpile of chipsets, and the new US amendment still apparently allows for some chips currently in production to be shipped to Huawei. But this will significantly affect the company’s ability to develop the latest and greatest technology. What’s the point of designing a chip if your chip producer can’t actually manufacture it for you?
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One possibility is that Huawei turns to alternative chip producers like Samsung or smaller foundries in China. But this will be contingent on these producers not using a significant amount of US know-how to make processors. However, it’s believed Huawei has turned to Chinese foundry SMIC to produce some chips. But these are 14nm designs rather than anything close to 7nm seen on current flagship SoCs.
Another deciding factor for Huawei’s 2021 aspirations is its relationship with silicon designer Arm, as the Chinese brand uses Arm CPUs and GPUs in all its in-house processors. At the time the US trade ban was initiated in May 2019, Arm said that it was complying with the regulations. But the chip designer was then quoted as saying in October 2019 that Huawei has access to next-generation technology.
The latest Arm CPUs and GPUs are clearly a mix of evolution and revolution for the company, with the Cortex-A78 and Mali-G78 being in the former camp. Meanwhile, the Cortex-X1 and Mali-G68 represent new ventures for the Android processor landscape. But this is just the tip of the iceberg for 2021.
Between Huawei’s silicon troubles, Samsung ditching custom CPUs and adopting AMD GPUs, and maturing 5G technology, 2021 is clearly shaping up to be a big year for the industry.
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