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Sunday, April 24, 2016

Prince Secretly Cremated By Family And Friends

Prince's body has been cremated and a small group of family and friends have attended a private ceremony in his memory.
The singer's publicist Yvette Noel-Schure said in a statement that those close to the 57-year-old had gathered "in a private, beautiful ceremony" on Saturday.
The statement said that a "musical celebration" would be held in future but the star's "final storage" was not for the public.
"We ask for your blessings and prayers of comfort for his family and close friends at this time," it added.
A staff member hands out flowers to fans from a memorial service that was held inside the Paisley Park
Prince was a Jehovah's Witness, meaning that his funeral needed to take place within a week of his death.
The statement did not say where the service had been held but Prince's sister Tyka Nelson and brother-in-law Maurice Phillips were both seen going into Prince's Minneapolis estate of Paisley Park on Saturday.
The singer's friends, including percussionist Sheila E, bass player Larry Graham and model Damaris Lewis, were also seen there.
Prince - real name Prince Rogers Nelson - was found dead in a lift at Paisley Park on Thursday. An autopsy was done on Friday but officials have not released the cause of his death, saying results could take days or weeks.
Giving an update on the latest in the police investigation into the singer-songwriter's death, Carver County Sheriff Jim Olson said: "There were no obvious signs of trauma on the body at all. We have no reason to believe at this point that this was a suicide."
Celebrity news website TMZ cited anonymous sources saying that Prince was treated for an overdose of the powerful painkiller Percocet while travelling home from concerts in Atlanta days before his death.
Meanwhile, Prince's former manager has claimed that the singer's sister Ms Nelson, 55, is not "business savvy" enough to handle the rights to her brother's huge estate.
Owen Husney's words come amid reports that Ms Nelson, Prince's closest living relative, could inherit his multimillion pound fortune and other items such as his vault of unreleased material.
"I'm sure Tyka is a great person. I would be remiss to think she has the music business savvy to be able to handle a body of work that's got to be worth $250 to 500m.
"Prince's music has never really appeared in commercials. God forbid someone gets hold of this thing and it winds up in some toothpaste commercial.
"I pray that he has left it in good hands with people who know what they're doing."

Saturday, April 23, 2016

How Amazon Delivers Packages in Less Than an Hour

At first, walking into Amazon’s new midtown Manhattan building feels just like entering any slick corporate office in the neighborhood. But pass the glowing marble-lined lobby and take the elevator to the fifth floor, and you suddenly find yourself surrounded by a bustling warehouse.

This facility is Amazon’s secret weapon that makes it possible to deliver packages in as quickly as an hour to locations in Manhattan, certain areas of Brooklyn, and Long Island City in Queens. New York is one of 20 cities across the U.S. where Amazon Prime Now, the company’s ultrafast delivery service, is available. Amazon customers who pay $99 a year for a Prime account can shop for anything from Ben & Jerry’s ice cream to last-minute Christmas gifts with near-instant delivery. The company even plans to play Santa Claus this holiday season, delivering packages just before midnight on Christmas Eve. This is especially important as Amazon gears up for what may be its biggest holiday season ever, as it’s expecting sales to grow between 14% and 25% compared to Q4 2014.

It’s borderline unbelievable that Amazon employees can find what they’re looking for in this 40,000 square foot storehouse, even though it’s a fraction of the size of the company’s 1.2 million square foot Phoenix facility. Bottles of Gatorade are stocked right next to children’s books, granola bars share a shelf with tech gadgets. It’s like looking at a foreign language that shares English’s Latin alphabet: The ingredients are familiar, their arrangement is not.

“To the untrained eye it may look random,” says Stephenie Landry, Amazon’s worldwide director of Prime Now. Yet Amazon’s “pickers,” employees who locate and package items for each order, move decisively and swiftly as they work. Their pace quickens still at the sound of a gong, the starting gun in the race to complete a one-hour delivery.
It’s tempting to think of the pickers as similar to New York City’s veteran cabbies, all with maps of their territories seemingly baked into their brains. But like many of today’s taxi drivers, their hunt is is aided by technology. “We have high-tech algorithms that we have taken from our normal fulfillment centers, and we use them in this smaller building,” says Landry. “It takes the picker on the fastest path possible to grab all of the items.”
This combination of human dexterity and technology makes it possible for Amazon to get items out the door almost immediately after an order is placed. Speed is particularly essential for one-hour deliveries, as most of the 60-minute window may be needed for travel — especially here in New York, with its unpredictable traffic and public transportation jams.
“Where we gain the efficiency is actually getting the stuff really quick,” says Landry. “So we don’t need to spend time worrying about how to arrange [items]; we spend time worrying about how to get it in a bag really fast and out to customers.”
Once the items are packed and ready to be delivered, they’re handed off to couriers for delivery. These couriers are a mix of Amazon’s own employees as well as professional delivery services that Amazon has partnered with. The courier’s job is to get the order to the recipient as quickly as possible, especially if it’s a one-hour delivery. This means couriers will often deliver packages by foot, bicycle, public transportation, or car depending on which mode of transportation is the fastest.
Only a fraction of the items Amazon sells are stored at its smaller facilities. Typically, the New York location is full of household products like groceries as well as seasonal items. In the winter, for instance, you’re more likely to find shovels and ice scrapers on the shelves. That will change in the spring, when customers are looking for garden hoses and leaf blowers. One new addition: Various types of alcohol, ready for one-hour delivery throughout Manhattan.
“The things that are ordered in general for ultrafast [delivery], whether that be one hour or two hours, are things that people don’t associate with Amazon today,” says Landry. “The things we choose to sell are changing all the time.”
While Amazon dominates the online retail space, its on-demand delivery service has plenty of competition from a host of startups. Postmates promises deliveries in under an hour from a wide range of stores in more than 100 cities around the country. Car-hailing service Uber is dipping its toes into the delivery pool with UberRush, a similar service. Instacart is another startup that allows customers to schedule a grocery delivery in as quickly as an hour.
For its part, Amazon says it’s staying focused on the future. The company is eyeing even quicker delivers made possible by package-hauling drone aircraft, despite logistical and regulatory challenges. Through Prime Air, Amazon hopes to get orders from warehouse to recipient in 30 minutes or less.
“Ten years ago people thought two-day shipping seemed really fast,” Landry said. “We think two-hour shipping and one-hour shipping will be the standard.”

Prince death: Singer cremated in private ceremony

Prince has been cremated with a small, private service for family, friends and musicians, his publicist has confirmed.
The cause of his death is still unknown and the results of Friday's autopsy could take at least four weeks.
Prince, 57, was found dead in a lift on his Paisley Park estate on Thursday, where fans are still paying tributes.
Officials said there was no sign of trauma on the body and no indication the death was suicide.
Publicist Anna Meacham said the singer's "final storage" would be kept private.
"A few hours ago, Prince was celebrated by a small group of his most beloved: family, friends and his musicians, in a private, beautiful ceremony to say a loving goodbye," she said.
Among the people who attended the ceremony were percussionist Sheila E, bassist Larry Graham and Prince's sister Tyka Nelson.
Prince's innovative music spanned rock, funk and jazz. He was at his peak in the 1980s with albums like Dirty Mind, 1999 and Sign O' The Times. He sold more than 100m records.
The singer was last seen at about 20:00 on Wednesday night (01:00 GMT on Thursday) and was found unconscious by some of his staff at about 09:30 the next morning.
Prince had been rushed to hospital in Illinois six days earlier, while flying home from a concert in Georgia, but was treated and released a few hours later.
Born Prince Rogers Nelson in 1958, he was a prolific writer and performer from a young age - reportedly writing his first song when he was seven.
He was also an arranger and multi-instrumentalist, and recorded more than 30 albums. Hits included Let's Go Crazy and When Doves Cry.
In 1984, he won an Oscar for the score to Purple Rain, a film in which he also starred.
Throughout his career he had a reputation for secrecy and eccentricity, once changing his name to an unpronounceable symbol. 
Prince's latest album, HITnRUN Phase Two, was released last year and he had been touring as recently as this month.



Woman upset after London airport forces her to dump breast milk — all four gallons of it

Aviation officials at London’s Heathrow Airport forced a nursing mother to dump nearly four gallons of breast milk, including a sizable amount that was frozen, the woman says.

But Jessica Coakley Martinez didn’t just cry over it. She penned an outraged open letter on Facebook that has resonated with working mothers everywhere.

“I normally would not post something this personal, but I do not remember the last time I felt so justly upset,” she writes.

In her posting, she documents the travails of breastfeeding while holding down a job that requires her to be away from her infant on a 15-day trip. Breast feeding, she says, is so important to her and her child’s well-being that she takes extraordinary steps to nurse without interfering with her work. She says she felt like a failure when, realizing she might not be able to keep up the pace, she had to use formula. Then she recounts what happened when she tried to bring her “giant block of breast milk” back home.

“You made me dump nearly 500oz of breastmilk in the trash,” she writes in the Facebook posting. “You made me dump out nearly two weeks worth of food for my son.”

The limit for liquids in carry-on luggage is 100 milliliters, or approximately 3.4 ounces, according to regulations posted on Heathrow’s Web site. Larger amounts must go in checked luggage, it says. That’s stricter than the U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which says baby formula, breast milk, and juice in quantities larger than 3.4 ounces can go in carry-on luggage.  The TSA also advises passengers to tell them at the beginning of the screening process that they’re carrying baby formula, breast milk, or juice in excess of 3.4 ounces.

Coakley Martinez’s open letter to Heathrow security says she became tearful and “irate” because she felt as if no one in security was interested in compromise. She writes that she was willing to let go of the liquid milk, but tried to make the case that she should have been allowed to carry on more than 300 ounces of frozen milk because it was no longer in liquid form. But officials would not relent.

“Rules and procedures at airport security are rarely universally enforced because similar to police officers, a significant aspect of your job is public trust and engagement, which includes using your judgment regarding appropriate enforcement in complex situations,” she says.

Heaven knows why aviation security wouldn’t let her leave the checkpoint and return so that she could stow the offending breast milk in her checked luggage, as she says she was willing to do. Or why they confiscated her stash as a “non-compliant item,” she writes.

“I can’t even count the number of times I’ve seen people attempt to bring on a unique souvenir that is deemed a potential weapon and they’re sent back out to check it so they can keep it. It happens. A lot,” she writes. She also talks about all the times she was allowed to evade normal security screening, or that others were let by.

To be fair, aviation security officials often have to deal with special pleading. No one likes the onerous and occasionally absurd screening regulations that come with the age of terrorism, and more than a few people think they are special and somehow above following them. (MY penknife isn’t a threat. MY belt is just a belt. MY liquids are really just hair conditioner. Etc.) It’s also true that sometimes there are lapses in procedures.

And, yes, it’s just breast milk, and, yes, this is an absurdity that Monty Python would have loved to mock. But the context here is that all of us now inhabit a crazy world in which the bad guys have found ingenious ways to harm others with items that appear to be utterly harmless.

Clearly, Coakley Martinez took great pains to build up an ample supply of breast milk. But as precious it was, it’s also hard to understand why she would not have ensured that she complied with the rules. Would anyone try to lug four gallons of Coca Cola onto an aircraft these days? Frozen or not?

Clearly, Coakley Martinez took great pains to build up an ample supply of breast milk. But as precious it was, it’s also hard to understand why she would not have ensured that she complied with the rules. Would anyone try to lug four gallons of Coca Cola onto an aircraft these days? Frozen or not?

That said, it’s also hard to imagine why the airport security officials didn’t work with her to find a compromise. The science is settled on why breast feeding is important for an infant’s health. Women shouldn’t have to feel like criminals for nursing –even if they’re inside a court of law, as happened last week. And women are right to fight for acceptance of the practice everywhere, and to be militant when others try to shame them or prevent them from doing it.

So it’s easy to sympathize with Coakley Martinez’s predicament. If the rules on airport security are too stringent, then let’s change them — but it’s also worthwhile to see things from the perspective of the men and women who try to enforce them.



Obama counsels Black Lives Matter activists: ‘You can’t just keep on yelling’

LONDON — President Obama, speaking to young activists and leaders at a town hall meeting here Saturday, offered some unsolicited guidance to those pressing for change back home and had some tough words for the Black Lives Matter movement.

The president was asked about the social movements that made him change his mind about issues in the White House. He credited the campaign for marriage equality for gay Americans for leading him to reverse his position, and then he pivoted to the Black Lives Matter movement.

The young black activists have been “really effective in bringing attention to problems” of the criminal justice system and police violence, Obama said.

But he cautioned that the group’s leaders had been too dismissive of elected officials. “Once you’ve highlighted an issue and brought it to people’s attention … then you can't just keep on yelling at them. And you can't refuse to meet because that might compromise the purity of your position,” Obama said.

Obama met with civil rights activists, including representatives of the Black Lives Matter movement, in February at the White House to discuss criminal justice reform. Aislinn Pulley, one of the co-founders of the group’s Chicago chapter, declined the invitation. “I could not, with any integrity, participate in such a sham that would only serve to legitimize the false narrative that the government is working to end police brutality and the institutional racism that fuels it,” Pulley wrote in an essay for Truthout, an online news organization.

Obama didn’t mention Pulley on Saturday, but he criticized some Black Lives Matter activists who, he said, were unwilling to negotiate with elected leaders.

“The value of social movements and activism is to get you at the table, get you in the room, and then to start trying to figure out how is this problem going to be solved,” Obama said. “You, then, have a responsibility to prepare an agenda that is achievable, that can institutionalize the changes you seek.”

The president also noted that he was speaking from experience. "I started as a community organizer trying to pressure politicians into getting things done," he said. "And now I’m on the other side."


Study finds US suicide rate highest in 30 years

In 2014, 13 people out of every 100,000 took their own lives, compared with 10.5 per 100,000 in 1999.

According to the report, the number of suicides in the US has been on the rise since 1999 for everyone between the ages of 10 and 74 but the increase was particularly pronounced among the country's white middle-aged population.

The report showed that the overall suicide rate in the country rose by 24 per cent from 1999 to 2014.

The suicide rate for white middle-aged women, ages 45 to 64, jumped by 63 percent over the same period and it rose by 43 percent for white men in that age range.

CDC experts did not offer an explanation for the steep rise in the number of "white" suicides.

The report did not break down the suicides by education level or incomes but previous studies showed rising suicide rates among white people without university degrees.

"This is part of the larger emerging pattern of evidence of the links between poverty, hopelessness and health," Robert D Putnam, a professor of public policy at Harvard, told the New York Times.

In the recent years several studies showed that deaths from drug overdoses, suicides, liver disease and alcohol poisoning has surged in the uneducated white population in the US.

According to the CDS's latest study, the suicide rate declined for just one racial group in the US: black men. And it declined for only one age group: men and women over 75.


Beyoncé By Sheryl Sandberg


Beyonce Knowles TIME 100
Paola Kudacki for TIME

She's the boss

Beyoncé doesn’t just sit at the table. She builds a better one. Today she sits at the head of the boardroom table at Parkwood Entertainment.
In December, she took the world by surprise when she released a new album, complete with videos, and announced it on Facebook and Instagram. Beyoncé shattered music-industry rules — and sales records.
One song includes words by novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: “We say to girls, ‘You can have ambition, but not too much.’ ” Beyoncé has insisted that girls “run the world” and declared, “I’m not bossy, I’m the boss.” She raises her voice both on- and offstage to urge women to be independent and lead.
In the past year, Beyoncé has sold out the Mrs. Carter Show World Tour while being a full-time mother. Her secret: hard work, honesty and authenticity. And her answer to the question, What would you do if you weren’t afraid? appears to be “Watch me. I’m about to do it.” Then she adds, “You can, too.”