Categories
Entertainment

Shawn Johnson Shares the Hardest A part of Parenting three Children Below 5

As someone who spent years voluntarily throwing her body around a four-inch beam four feet in the air, Shawn Johnson East has a pretty firm grip on what’s tough. 

But even she struggles with the balancing act that is parenting three kids under the age of 5. “I’d say the hardest part is catering to their attention need,” the Olympic gymnast confessed in an exclusive interview with E! News. “And I don’t mean that in a dramatic way. I truly want to be able to spend quality time with all three kids. And having three kids, you have to sacrifice time with each of them for the other.”

While she and husband of nearly eight years Andrew East, 32, try their best to give one-on-one attention to daughter Drew, 4, and sons Jett, 2, and Bear, 3 months, “It’s sometimes sad because I know Drew wants it, but I’m giving it to Jett, or Jett wants it, but I’m giving it to Bear.” 

Eventually, she continued, “I know it will average itself out. But we’re still figuring out those logistics.”

Categories
Health

UnitedHealth paid greater than $2 billion to suppliers after cyberattack

UnitedHealth Group Inc. headquarters stands in Minnetonka, Minnesota, U.S.

Mike Bradley | Bloomberg | Getty Images

UnitedHealth Group said Monday that it’s paid out more than $2 billion to help health-care providers who have been affected by the cyberattack on subsidiary Change Healthcare.

“We continue to make significant progress in restoring the services impacted by this cyberattack,” UnitedHealth CEO Andrew Witty said in a press release. “We know this has been an enormous challenge for health care providers and we encourage any in need to contact us.”

UnitedHealth disclosed nearly a month ago that a cyber threat actor breached part of Change Healthcare’s information technology network. The fallout has wreaked havoc across the U.S. health-care system. Change Healthcare offers e-prescription software and tools for payment management, so the interruptions left many providers temporarily unable to fill medications or get reimbursed for their services by insurers.

UnitedHealth, which provides care for 152 million people, said on Monday that it began releasing medical claims preparation software, which will be available to thousands of customers in the next several days. The company called it “an important step in the resumption of services.”

On Friday, UnitedHealth said it restored Change Healthcare’s electronic payments platform, after rebooting 99% of its pharmacy network services earlier this month. It also introduced a temporary funding assistance program to help health-care providers experiencing cash flow trouble because of the attack.

UnitedHealth said the advances will not need to be repaid until claims flows return to normal. Federal agencies like the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services have introduced additional options to ensure that states and other stakeholders can make interim payments to providers, according to a release.

A survey published by the American Hospital Association on Friday found that 94% of hospitals have experienced financial disruptions from the Change Healthcare attack. More than 60% of the 1,000 hospitals surveyed estimated the revenue hit to be around $1 million per day. Responses were collected between March 9 and March 12.

“We continue to call on Congress and the Administration to take additional actions now to support providers as they deal with significant fallout from this historic attack,” AHA CEO Rick Pollack said in the release.

The Biden administration announced Wednesday that it has launched an investigation into the company due to the “unprecedented magnitude of the cyberattack.”

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights is carrying out the inquiry. The OCR enforces the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act’s security, privacy and breach notification rules, which most health plans, providers and clearinghouses are required to follow to protect health information.

UnitedHealth hasn’t disclosed what kind of data was compromised in the attack, or whether it cooperated with the cyber threat actor in order to restore systems. The company said it’s been working closely with law enforcement and third parties like Palo Alto Networks and Google Cloud’s Mandiant to assess the breach.

Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

Categories
Technology

How hydrofoil boat startup Candela took a wild thought and made it fly

In 1906, inventor Enrico Forlanini launched the first hydrofoil boat on Lake Maggiore in the Italian alps. His contemporary innovator Alexander Bell later said a ride on Forlanini’s invention was “as smooth as flying.”

Fast forward a little over a century to 2014, when Gustav Hasselskog quit his corporate job because he was bored. Seeking a new challenge, he came up with the idea for his own flying boat, powered by electricity. People thought he was crazy — he’s gone on to prove them wrong.    

Swedish startup Candela has since built hundreds of hydrofoil boats, grown its team to over 220, and opened a factory in Stockholm the size of a football field. Now, it’s looking to branch out from recreational boating into a much bigger market: public transportation.

Candela recently started series production of an electric passenger ferry designed to whizz commuters around coastal cities faster and more sustainably than previously possible. 

Gustav Hasselskog, founder and CEO of Candela. Credit: Candela

Today, the startup secured €24,5mn in its latest, and possibly final funding round, as it hopes to achieve profitability next year. The round was led by French firm Groupe Beneteau, the world’s largest boat manufacturer, and brings Candela’s total raised to date to over €70mn. 

TNW Conference 2024 – Group ticket offer

Save up to 40% with our Group offer and join Europe’s leading tech festival in June!

“It has been a really tough time for startups recently, some great companies have gone under, which makes this raise a real vote of confidence in what we are doing,” Hasselskog tells TNW. 

Candela will now be firing on all cylinders (or should I say batteries) in the race to fill orders for the P-12 from cities across the globe. 

But how exactly did this startup manage to take such an ambitious idea and bring it to life? We went to Stockholm to find out.

Humble beginnings 

The idea for Candela first came to Hasselskog aboard his Bertram 25 Sportfisherman. This iconic American leisure boat from 1967 “was a beauty,” says the founder, who used to ride the craft around the lakes of his summer house (which he later sold to fund Candela).  

“I loved that boat, but its V8 engine burnt an insane amount of oil and a huge hole in my wallet,” he tells TNW. A product developer by heart — and blessed with a lot of free time following self-imposed unemployment — Hasselskog began scheming an electric alternative.   

The problem was — and continues to be a major hurdle to electric transportation today — that batteries aren’t particularly energy-dense. For the equivalent energy capacity of one litre of petrol, you need around 15 kilograms of batteries.  

This is where hydrofoils come in. As water flows over the surface of the foil it creates an upwards force, lifting the boat out of the water. This reduces drag and allows the boat to travel faster. It also makes the craft more energy efficient. 

An image of Enrico Forlanini's hydrofoil boat National Geographic Magazine July 1911Italian inventor Enrico Forlanini became the first to build and successfully fly a hydrofoil boat. Credit: National Geographic Magazine July 1911/Wikimedia Commons

While the early pioneers were interested in hydrofoils for speed, it was the promise of efficiency gains that caught Hasselskog’s attention. He calculated that hydrofoils could reduce the energy consumption of a boat by up to 80%. That meant more range using less batteries, cutting costs and carbon emissions.

“That was the ‘aha’ moment when I thought ‘this could actually work’,” he says.  

Making the pitch 

Like many tech companies, Candela began working out of a garage. “We had to start small, be nimble,” recalls Hasselskog.  

“I was over 40 and I’d quit my corporate job to develop a flying boat despite having no experience as an entrepreneur or with boat building — as you can imagine it was a tough sell,” he says jokingly.

In his first attempt to raise money, the founder contacted over 90 VCs. He secured just two meetings. Those two investors eventually erred on the side of caution and said “no thanks.” 

Eventually he managed to convince one “crazy” angel investor to take the leap. “I had enormous luck,” he says. “I found someone who is probably more convinced than I am that anything can be done with the right knowledge.”

With the cash he hired three people and started developing the first prototype. Two years later, Candela got its first boat to fly. Two years after that, in 2019, they sold their first craft — the C-7. 

An image of Gustav Hasselskog test driving the first C-7 prototype hydrofoil boat. Credit: CandelaAn image of Gustav Hasselskog test driving the first C-7 prototype hydrofoil boat in 2018. Credit: Candela

That was the watershed moment. “We proved that this could be done,” says Hasselskog. 

A year later, the founder received a call from Chris Anderson, head of TED, the producer of the TedTalks series. At the time Hasselskog was an avid follower of Anderson’s podcast, TED Interview. “It was like being a small band and getting a call from Elvis Presley saying: you guys wanna jam?” he says. 

Anderson ended up investing €8mn to fuel Candela’s next stage of growth. That included building a bigger, better leisure boat, the C-8. The startup has since built and sold over 200 of the craft, which are 8 metres long and start at €290,000.

I had the chance to test the C-8 in Stockholm last month and it’s surprisingly easy to drive. You just hit the throttle and at around 16 knots, the hull automatically lifts out of the water. 

Once airborne it’s incredibly quiet, there’s almost no wake. Handling is no different from a normal boat. When you want to come to a stop you just slow down and the boat smoothly lands back on the water.   

The magic behind the C-8 is its computer-controlled hydrofoils that adjust 100 times-a-second, using data from sensors that gauge wave height and wind speed. This balances the boat even during sharp turns and choppy seas.

an image of the candela c-8 by golden gate bridgeThe C-8 driving under the Golden Gate bridge in San Francisco. Credit: Candela

While sales were going well for Candela, recreational boating is still a very niche market, especially at that price-point. “To have a real impact, I knew we had to branch out into public transportation,” says Hasselskog.

The P-12 functions in much the same way as the C-8, just on a bigger scale and for a totally new market. 

The e-taxi of the sea?  

There are currently around 35 diesel ferries slowly chugging their way around Stockholm’s waterways. Each can carry 300 passengers at a time but all of these vessels emit a lot of CO2 into the atmosphere and pollution into the water. 

Globally, shipping emits 3% of global carbon dioxide, more than air travel. In the EU, passenger ferries are responsible for 7% of that total — so urgent solutions are needed. 

Candela estimates a fleet of 120 of its 30-passenger shuttles could replace the city’s diesel ferries entirely. At $1.7mn (€1.5mn) a piece, that’s a big investment, but Hasselskog is bullish on the returns. 

“Unlike a lot of green technologies, the cost is lower, it’s cheaper to run, and cheaper to maintain,” he says. 

The first two P-12 shuttles will begin operating this summer on a route between the rapidly expanding suburb of Ekerö and Stockholm.

Ekerö residents currently have to undertake a 55-minute journey by bus, subway, or conventional ferry to reach the city centre. The Candela P-12 Shuttle will cover the 15km route in 25 minutes — saving commuters 50 minutes a day. (Its lack of wake has allowed it to gain an exemption from Stockholm’s 12-knot river speed limit). 

By only carrying 30 passengers, the shuttle just needs one personnel on board, as per regulations. A 90% reduction in fuel adds to the cost savings. 

All-in-all, Hasselskog estimates that operators will save 50% on operating costs when compared to traditional vessels.  

With a top speed of 30 knots (55km/h) and a range of 110 km on a single charge, the little ferries would be whizzing commuters around at over twice the speed currently on offer. 

Hasselskog envisions that Candela boats will eventually be used for on-demand service — akin to an Uber for boats. No need for timetables, commuters could instead make as many trips as they like, when they like. 

Each ferry would operate non-stop for two and a half hours and then stop for an hour to charge. Because the boat is so energy efficient, its batteries aren’t even that big, only requiring a 200kW charger to power up (the same voltage as a Tesla supercharger). 

Full throttle

In addition to city commuting, Candela eyes inter-city and even international travel. Last year, it made the first ever high-speed crossing in an electric vessel between Malmö, Sweden, and Copenhagen, Denmark. The trip took just 30 minutes and cost €3 in electricity, says the company.   

In September, the team smashed the world record for the longest distance covered by an electric boat in 24 hours — 778 km — opening up new possibilities for even longer journeys, for instance, from Stockholm to Helsinki.  

For cities keen to decarbonise and give their residents quicker, more convenient travel options, the P-12 appears to be low-hanging fruit. 

“Now all we’ve got to do is ramp up production — fast,” says Hasselskog

Candela is currently recruiting 11 new people at its factory every month as it rushes to fill orders. Powered by a fresh batch of funding, its sights are set on its biggest phase of growth yet.  

Hasselskog says he feels humbled by how far Candela has come since he got that crazy idea ten years ago. For him, the fight to keep pushing against all odds is now baked into the company’s DNA.

“That spirit, that anything can be done, within the laws of nature, combined with an ability to stay reasonably happy in a constant shit-storm of failures and problems makes the people working at Candela different.”

Something makes me think that the grandfather of hydrofoiling, Enrico Forlanini, would also be proud of what became of his invention all these years later.  

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Science

BP Shareholders Sad With Inexperienced Technique – Watts Up With That?

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

h/t Doug Brodie

For too long activist green investors have been the tail wagging the dog.

Hopefully this is the start of a fightback:

Almost all of BP’s biggest shareholders are unhappy with its shift to green energy, an activist investor has claimed, amid a growing backlash over the oil giant’s focus on net zero targets.

Giuseppe Bivona, chief investment officer of Bluebell Capital, which has a minority stake in BP, said he had spent the past three weeks talking to many of the company’s top 30 investors.

He said: “With only the exception of one shareholder, I am still to find someone who supports BP in its entirety.”

Bluebell is spearheading a brewing investor revolt after sending a 30-page letter to the FTSE 100 company in January.

In the letter it urged BP to halt investment in renewable energy schemes, prioritise oil and gas production, and rewrite net zero targets to clarify that they will be achieved “in line with society”.

BP has been under increasing pressure over net zero commitments that have allegedly left shareholders £40bn poorer.

Mr Bivona said he plans to share negative feedback with BP on a no-name basis, which he said will “clearly expose them to the fact that many investors are sympathetic to what we are saying”. 

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2024/03/16/almost-all-top-bp-shareholders-unhappy-green-strategy/

Like this:

Like Loading…

Categories
Sport

Fiorentina GM Barone on life help after cardiac arrest

Mar 18, 2024, 11:41 AM ETJoe Barone was born in Italy but raised in New York. Marco Canoniero/LightRocket via Getty Images

Fiorentina general manager Joe Barone is on life support following a cardiac arrest, the club said on Monday.

Barone fell ill Sunday at the team hotel, shortly before Fiorentina’s match at Atalanta, and was rushed to a hospital in Milan. The match was subsequently postponed.

Fiorentina said Sunday night that Barone, who turns 58 on Wednesday, was in “critical but stable” condition.

On Monday, the club said Barone remains hospitalized in the cardiac intensive care unit at San Raffaele Hospital in Milan.

“Joe’s vital functions are being supported by artificial mechanical support techniques. No prognosis has been set,” the club said. “The Barone family, the Commisso family and all of Fiorentina thank San Raffaele and all of Prof. Alberto Zangrillo’s team for the work they have done since Joe was hospitalized.”

Barone was born in Italy but raised in New York. His wife, Camilla, rushed up from Florence on Sunday and his four children arrived from the United States on Monday morning.

Fiorentina coach Vincenzo Italiano and several of the players also went to the hospital on Sunday. Italian media reports that some of the players were present when Barone fell ill.

Two weeks ago, Fiorentina marked the six-year anniversary of the death of captain Davide Astori, who was found dead in his hotel room after a cardiac arrest before a match at Udinese.

Categories
Health

Wegovy coronary heart well being approval will not imply broad insurance coverage protection but

Victoria Klesty | Reuters

In the U.S., Wegovy is no longer just for weight loss.

The blockbuster drug — one of a handful of weight loss treatments to skyrocket in popularity over the last year — is now approved in the U.S. for heart health, too. But that may not translate to wider insurance coverage of the weekly injection drug from Novo Nordisk and similar obesity treatments just yet.

Some employers and other health plans are still reluctant to cover Wegovy due to its hefty $1,350 monthly price tag, which they say could significantly strain their budgets. They also have other questions, such as how long patients actually stay on the treatment. 

At the very least, some plans will take notice of Wegovy’s new approval and start assessing whether to cover the treatment when they next update their formularies, some insurance industry experts told CNBC. That could mean difficult decisions ahead for insurers and likely a patchwork system of coverage for Americans who are seeking treatment to navigate.

“The more benefits that come from weight loss drugs, I think the greater the pressure is going to be to start including those drugs in a formulary and cover them in standard insurance plans,” said John Crable, senior vice president of Corporate Synergies, a national insurance and employee benefits brokerage and consultancy. “But my gut tells me it’s going to take more to convince some insurers.”

Wegovy is part of a class of drugs called GLP-1s, which mimic a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person’s appetite and help regulate blood sugar. Coverage for those treatments when used for weight loss is a mixed bag. 

Roughly 110 million American adults are living with obesity and approximately 50 million of them have insurance coverage for weight loss drugs, a spokesperson for Novo Nordisk said in a statement. The company is actively working with private insurers and employers to encourage broader coverage of those drugs, and is advocating for the federal Medicare program to start covering them, the spokesperson added.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is reviewing the FDA’s expanded approval of Wegovy and will share additional information as appropriate, an agency spokesperson said in an email.

The spokesperson added that state Medicaid programs would be required to cover Wegovy for its new cardiovascular use. By law, Medicaid must cover nearly all FDA-approved medications, but weight loss treatments are among a small group of drugs that can be excluded from coverage. Around one in five state Medicaid programs currently cover GLP-1 drugs for weight loss.

Some of the nation’s largest insurers, such as CVS Health’s Aetna, cover those treatments.

But many employers don’t. An October survey of more than 200 companies by the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans, or IFEBP, found only 27% provided coverage for GLP-1s for weight loss, compared with the 76% that covered those drugs for diabetes. Notably, 13% of employers indicated they were considering coverage for weight loss.

Downstream health effects

The Food and Drug Administration approved Wegovy for weight management in 2021. In a landmark decision earlier this month, the agency expanded that approval after Wegovy was found to cut the risk of serious cardiovascular complications in adults with obesity and heart disease.

The decision was based on a five-year, late-stage trial, which showed that weekly injections of Wegovy slashed the overall risk of heart attack, stroke and cardiovascular death by 20%. 

The approval demonstrates the significant downstream health benefits of Wegovy — and potentially similar drugs — for severe conditions caused by excess weight. Obesity increases the risk of several conditions, such as diabetes, heart disease and even some cancers. 

It also challenges what some health experts call an “outdated” narrative driving hesitancy among some insurers: that weight loss treatments offer only a cosmetic rather than a medical benefit. 

“We haven’t previously seen any anti-obesity medication decrease the risk of heart attack and stroke,” said Dr. Jaime Almandoz, a weight management and metabolism specialist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. “What we have is proof that treating obesity is essentially life-saving, and I think it really shifts the conversation.” 

An obesity patient takes a injection of weight loss medication.

Joe Buglewicz | The Washington Post | Getty Images

Some health experts argue that covering Wegovy and other GLP-1s for weight loss could reduce a plan’s health-care costs down the line and improve future health outcomes for patients. 

Shawn Gremminger, the president and CEO of the National Alliance of Healthcare Purchaser Coalitions, said employers would be “well disposed to cover” those drugs if they are effective at lowering long-term costs. Members of that group represent private, public, nonprofit and union and Taft-Hartley organizations that spend over $400 billion annually on health-care.

But he said that it will likely take years before employers have access to concrete data on the potential cost savings of covering those treatments. 

Gremminger added that employers are “a little bit less focused” on what covering weight loss drugs will mean for overall health-care spending 10 years from now. Their focus is on providing care to their current employees, some of whom will end up leaving the company down the line. 

Employers have other questions, too, including about longer-term data on GLP-1s for weight loss, and about patients stopping those drugs prematurely. It also isn’t clear to some employers whether patients have to stay on Wegovy for the rest of their lives or if they can eventually taper off of it, Gremminger said.

Obesity and heart disease are chronic diseases, which means most patients will have to keep taking Wegovy along with diet and exercise to maintain the health benefits. Novo Nordisk said, “not unexpectedly,” data from their clinical trials shows that people who took Wegovy regained weight when they went off the drug.

“This supports the belief that obesity is a chronic disease that requires long-term management, much like high blood pressure or high cholesterol, for which most patients remain on therapy long term in order to continue to experience the benefits of their medications,” Novo Nordisk said in a statement.

But Gremminger said the standard of care for the long-term use of weight loss drugs is “in flux.”

Considering the costs 

Faced with the dramatic cost of covering Wegovy and similar drugs, the state of North Carolina is paring back.

State employees will no longer have insurance coverage for GLP-1s when used for weight loss at the beginning of next month. In January, the board of trustees for the state’s health plan voted to exclude those drugs from coverage. The plan will still cover GLP-1s for diabetes, such as Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic, along with some older obesity drugs.  

North Carolina’s treasurer and a GOP candidate for governor, Dale Folwell, told CNBC the expanded approval of Wegovy last week doesn’t change anything.

“We’ve never questioned the efficacy of the drug. We’ve always questioned what we’re having to pay for it,” Folwell said. “Even as the scope of the use of this drug widens, it doesn’t change the cost.” 

North Carolina State Treasurer Dale Folwell attends the Republican Governors Association conference in Orlando, Florida, Nov. 16, 2022.

Phelan M. Ebenhack | AP

He said dropping weight loss drugs wasn’t a decision the board wanted to make, but it did so because the state’s plan is “under financial siege” due to Wegovy. That treatment cost the state’s health plan nearly $87 million last year, according to a state presentation from January. Overall, GLP-1 drugs for weight loss cost the plan roughly $102 million in 2023. 

An outside consultant projected a $1.5 billion loss by 2030 if the state plan continued to pay for those treatments. North Carolina also estimated that continuing to cover GLP-1s for weight loss would double the premiums for all 482,000 active employees and dependents on the plan, even those not taking the drugs. 

Folwell said the state has been working with Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, the maker of similar treatment Zepbound, to reach an agreement on costs. But he noted that the companies have rejected the state’s recommendations “at every turn.” 

A spokesperson for Eli Lilly said the company is committed to working with health-care, government and industry partners “to help people who may benefit from Zepbound access it, but obstacles to that goal still exist.” The spokesperson added that policies around insurance have “not caught up to science.” 

Novo Nordisk said in a statement it urges Folwell and the state health plan to “put patients first” and reconsider the decision to drop weight loss drug coverage.

Novo Nordisk believes “denying patients insurance coverage for important and effective FDA approved treatments for obesity is irresponsible,” according to a company spokesperson, who said the company will continue to engage with state health plan officials to address any potential cost concerns.

Both drugmakers have launched programs to help patients, with or without commercial insurance coverage, afford their weight loss treatments.

Novo Nordisk says its savings program can help patients without insurance coverage save up to $500 per 28-day supply of Wegovy. The company also said roughly 80% of Wegovy patients in the U.S. with commercial coverage for the drug are paying $25 per month or less.

List prices of weight loss drugs before insurance

  • Wegovy from Eli Lilly: $1,059.87 per monthly package
  • Zepbound from Eli Lilly: $1,059.87 per monthly package
  • Saxenda from Novo Nordisk: $1,349.02 per monthly package

Increased competition in the weight loss drug market could force the two companies to drive down the costs of their injectable treatments, said Ceci Connolly, CEO of the Alliance of Community Health Plans. The organization represents regional, community-based health plans that cover more than 18 million Americans across the U.S. 

Health plans may also be more open to covering convenient and potentially cheaper oral versions of the drugs, which several drugmakers are racing to develop. Those cheaper options, though, are likely still years away. That includes cheaper generic versions of existing GLP-1s, along with treatments from rival drugmakers.

Coverage with cost controls 

More employers will likely start considering coverage of Wegovy following its expanded approval, according to Julie Stich, vice president of content at IFEBP.

But the plans that decide to include Wegovy when they next update their formularies will likely consider implementing certain requirements to control costs. Those requirements will look different for Wegovy’s two approved uses. 

Most employers that cover GLP-1s for weight loss already use cost controls, according to the October survey by IFEBP.

Nearly a third of companies said they used “step therapy,” which requires their members to try other lower-cost medications or means of losing weight before using a GLP-1. Around 16% of employers used certain eligibility rules, such as requiring employees to have a certain BMI, or body-mass index, to receive coverage. 

Fiordaliso | Moment | Getty Images

Other employers are using financial requirements, such as annual or lifetime spending caps for the treatments. For example, the Mayo Clinic’s employee health plan added a lifetime coverage limit of $20,000 for weight loss drug prescriptions filled after Jan. 1. 

Meanwhile some players in the insurance industry are trying to find ways to help health plans manage the costs of covering the treatments. 

Last week, Cigna’s pharmacy benefits management unit said it will limit spending increases for GLP-1s to a maximum of 15% annually for employers and other health plans. Currently, some of the company’s clients are seeing spending for those treatments rise 40% to 50% annually. 

If more health-care companies pursue similar efforts, their affiliated health plans could become more open to covering weight loss drugs “knowing that their risk will be limited in that way,” Stich said.

Categories
Entertainment

Shaunie Henderson Shares “Belief” Made Her Love Pastor Keion

Shaunie Henderson says she knew her new hubby, Pastor Keion, was the one because of the “trust” factor.

According to Atlanta Black Star, ‘The Basketball Wives’ executive producer admitted she’s experiencing feelings that she never has before.

RELATED: Whew! Shaq Goes Viral After Shooting His Shot At THIS Female Rapper (Photo)

On her pastor husband’s YouTube series, ‘Not Your Typical Bible Study,’ she expressed how she knew he was the one God chose for her.

How Shaunie Knew Pastor Keion Was The One

Past Keion asked Shaunie, “How do I know when I meet somebody, ‘that’s my person?’… you know like when the Lord showed you.”

She responded that trust played a major role. In addition to being challenged, which is something she didn’t feel prior to their romance.

“I have an answer for that, ’cause I knew this question,” she said.

“So trust was one. I could trust you. You challenged me and I received the challenge, I wasn’t like rebelling the challenge. I didn’t combat the challenge, I take on the challenge. And that was something that I didn’t feel before…”

What Shaunie Loves About Her New Marriage

In addition, Mrs. Henderson added, she enjoyed how they both sought to understand each other’s love language. It was also an element that was missing in previous relationships.

Shaunie and Shaquille O’Neal were married for nine years. The retired NBA player admitted he was unfaithful. Their marriage ended for this reason.

“I would fight for this relationship. I wanted to understand how you recieved love and you wanted to understand how I received love that’s…that was brand new to me too, to acutally take the time to learn how somebody receives love isn’t just loving them,” she explained.

Furthermore, the former basketball wife appreciates that they are each other’s biggest fan and how they can just hang out and be content.

“I can just be with you and do nothing and that’s important because when you love somebody you gotta love being with them,” she added.

The Hendersons tied the knot in Anguilla in 2021. After she married, Shaunie sent her last name O’Neal to the left.

In her upcoming memoir, ‘UNDEFEATED: Changing the Rules and Winning on My Own Terms,’ she addressed her past. However, the reality star was careful not to slam her ex-husband, Shaq.

She told People, “I always had a fear of sharing too much and of telling my story that involved anybody else.”

“I didn’t want to disrespect someone else’s story, even if it was a part of mine, but as I get older and do more things in the entertainment industry, I found that people have a misconception of who I am,” she added.

Shaunie’s book will be released in May 2024.

RELATED: Shaunie O’Neal & Pastor Keion Henderson Are Now Engaged!

 

Categories
Science

Little Purple Dots in Webb Pictures Turned Out to Be Quasars

In its first year of operation, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) made some profound discoveries. These included providing the sharpest views of iconic cosmic structures (like the Pillars of Creation), transmission spectra from exoplanet atmospheres, and breathtaking views of Jupiter, its largest moons, Saturn’s rings, its largest moon Titan, and Enceladus’ plumes. But Webb also made an unexpected find during its first year of observation that may prove to be a breakthrough: a series of little red dots in a tiny region of the night sky.

These little red dots were observed as part of Webb’s Emission-line galaxies and Intergalactic Gas in the Epoch of Reionization (EIGER) and the First Reionization Epoch Spectroscopically Complete Observations (FRESCO) surveys. According to a new analysis by an international team of astrophysicists, these dots are galactic nuclei containing the precursors of Supermassive Black Holes (SMBHs) that existed during the early Universe. The existence of these black holes shortly after the Big Bang could change our understanding of how the first SMBHs in our Universe formed.

The research was led by Jorryt Matthee, an Assistant Professor in astrophysics at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria (ISTA) and ETH Zürich. He was joined by researchers from the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, the Cosmic Dawn Center (DAWN), the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), the Niels Bohr Institute, the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy (MPIA), the Centro de Astrobiología (CAB), and multiple universities and observatories. Their findings were published in a study recently published in The Astrophysical Journal.

This image shows the region of the sky in which the record-breaking quasar J0529-4351 was observed by the ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile. Credit: ESO

Scientists have known for some time that Supermassive Black Holes reside at the center of most massive galaxies. And whereas some are relatively dormant, like the SMBH located in the center of the Milky Way (Sagittarius A*), others are extremely active and are growing at the rate of several Solar masses a year. These fast-growing black holes power particularly luminous Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) – or quasars – which become so bright they temporarily outshine all the stars in their disk, the brightest of which are known as quasars.

Quasars are among the brightest objects known to astronomers and can be seen at the very edge of our expanding Universe. In recent years, though, astronomers have spotted several quasars and SMBHs in the early Universe that are larger than cosmological models predict. As Matthee explained in a recent ISTA press release:

“One issue with quasars is that some of them seem to be overly massive, too massive given the age of the Universe at which the quasars are observed. We call them the ‘problematic quasars.’ If we consider that quasars originate from the explosions of massive stars–and that we know their maximum growth rate from the general laws of physics, some of them look like they have grown faster than is possible. It’s like looking at a five-year-old child that is two meters tall. Something doesn’t add up.”

Mathee and his team identified the population of little red dots while studying images taken during the EIGER and FRESCO surveys, a large and medium first-year JWST campaign in which Mathee was involved. The EIGER campaign was specifically designed to search for rare blue supermassive quasars and their environments, and not for quasars in the early Universe. However, Webb‘s Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam) can acquire emissions spectra from all objects in the known Universe. These objects had been previously observed by Hubble and mistaken for regular galaxies.

JWST’s near-infrared view of the star-forming region NGC 604 in the Triangulum galaxy. Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI

But thanks to the NIRCam’s resolution, the ISTA-led team identified them as SMBHs almost by accident. According to Mathee, this accidental discovery could have profound implications for astronomy and cosmology:

“Without having been developed for this specific purpose, the JWST helped us determine that faint little red dots–found very far away in the Universe’s distant past–are small versions of extremely massive black holes. These special objects could change the way we think about the genesis of black holes. The present findings could bring us one step closer to answering one of the greatest dilemmas in astronomy: According to the current models, some supermassive black holes in the early Universe have simply grown ‘too fast’. Then how did they form?”

The team was able to make the distinction between galaxies and small quasars thanks to NIRCam’s detection of deep-red emission lines (aka. H? spectral lines) that are produced when hydrogen atoms are heated. They also found that the lines they observed had a wide-line profile, which they used to trace the motion of the hot hydrogen gas. “The wider the base of the H? lines, the higher the gas velocity,” said Mathee. “Thus, these spectra tell us that we are looking at a very small gas cloud that moves extremely rapidly and orbits something very massive like an SMBH.”

Just as important were the redshift values they obtained for these SMBGs (Z= 4.2-5.5), which indicate these objects existed more than 12 billion years ago – roughly 1 billion years after the Big Bang. Furthermore, they observed that these SMBHs were not overly massive like those visible in nearby galaxies today. As Mathee indicated:

“While the ‘problematic quasars’ are blue, extremely bright, and reach billions of times the mass of the Sun, the little red dots are more like ‘baby quasars.’ Their masses lie between ten and a hundred million solar masses. Also, they appear red because they are dusty. The dust obscures the black holes and reddens the colors.”

Long exposures made with the Hubble Space Telescope show brilliant quasars flaring in the hearts of six distant galaxies. Credit: NASA/ESA

Eventually, the outflow of hydrogen gas will puncture the clouds of dust and gas that surround and obscure massive black holes (“dust cocoon”), and these smaller SMBHs will evolve into much larger ones. Thus, Mathee and his team hypothesized that the little red dots are small, red versions of giant blue SMBHs in the phase that predates the “problematic quasars.” Through follow-up observations, astronomers can conduct detailed studies of these baby SMBHs, which could lead to a better understanding of how problematic quasars come to exist.

“Black holes and SMBHs are possibly the most interesting things in the Universe. It’s hard to explain why they are there, but they are there,” Mathee concluded. “We hope that this work will help us lift one of the biggest veils of mystery about the Universe.”

Further Reading: ISTA, The Astrophysical Journal

Like this:

Like Loading…

Categories
Technology

ASML backs €110M Dutch deeptech fund for quantum, semiconductors

The pride and joy of the Dutch tech ecosystem, ASML, has featured heavily in the news this past couple of weeks, after news broke the government was scrambling to keep the company in the country.

However, ASML’s plans to potentially relocate due to difficulty securing talent and infrastructure bottlenecks does not mean it is not still actively supporting the Dutch tech ecosystem.

The company has just contributed an undisclosed amount to Eindhoven-based DeepTechXL’s €110mn fund. The VC is  looking to invest in deeptech startups in the fields of quantum technologies, photonics, semiconductors, and other complex mechanical engineering.

“DeepTechXL is much more than an investment fund for ASML,” CEO Peter Wennink told the Financieele Dagblad on Thursday. “It is a wonderful example of a collaboration between various actors in the Dutch deep tech ecosystem, who have united behind a long-term vision.”

DeepTechXL was founded in 2022, and has since invested in eight companies. These include quantum computing cryogenic cable developers Delft Circuits, supercontinuum generation laser maker Superlight, and Gilbert Technologies, which is making electro hydro-dynamic atomisation pulmonary drug inhalers.

The fund’s aim is to select companies “at the forefront of technology,” DeepTechXL’s managing partner Teska van Vuren told the FD. She added that they are working on solutions for “major social themes,” such as healthcare, cybersecurity, and the energy transition.

In addition to ASML, DeepTechXL’s new fund is backed by PME, the Dutch pension fund for the metal and technology industry. Other investors include the Brabant Development Company, TNO, Invest-NL, Philips, the Technical University of Twente, and various Dutch families.

Categories
Sport

The Patriots’ destiny hinges on a quarterback and the NFL draft

  • Mike Reiss, ESPN Staff WriterMar 17, 2024, 06:00 AM ET

    Close

      Mike Reiss is an NFL reporter at ESPN and covers the New England Patriots. Reiss has covered the Patriots since 1997 and joined ESPN in 2009. In 2019, he was named Massachusetts Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sports Media Association. You can follow Reiss on Twitter at @MikeReiss.

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Quick-hit thoughts and notes around the New England Patriots and NFL:

1. All about QB: Former Patriots linebacker Rob Ninkovich, who still resides in Massachusetts, has been tuned in to local sports-talk radio over the last week. He’s noted how the general fan and media response to the Patriots’ moves in the first week of free agency have been negative.

Ninkovich, who has seldom hesitated to criticize his old team in his former role as an ESPN analyst, views it a bit differently.

“I hear people saying they’re re-signing all these guys and they were 4-13 last year, so why would they do that? To me, the guys they targeted and brought back, I think they are key pieces. And they’re getting guys out of the building they think are the reason they were a four-win team,” he said.

“But the biggest thing to me is that no matter what they did, it’s the draft that is going to make or break their offseason. This could be a home run. At the same time, the scary part is that if they draft a quarterback at No. 3, and he’s not the guy, they’re in major trouble.”

Ninkovich succinctly sums up why director of scouting Eliot Wolf, who has the final personnel say in the first year of the post-Bill Belichick era, is among the NFL executives with the brightest spotlight shining on him.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

The bottom line: If Wolf and the Patriots’ coaching and scouting staffs ultimately have conviction in a quarterback at No. 3, they should race their card up to commissioner Roger Goodell on April 25, and then have offensive coordinator Alex Van Pelt and quarterbacks coach T.C. McCartney immediately put a developmental plan in place for him.

Many assume the choice would be between LSU’s Jayden Daniels and North Carolina’s Drake Maye if the Bears select Southern California’s Caleb Williams at No. 1. Michigan’s J.J. McCarthy, Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. and Oregon’s Bo Nix are also among the highly-rated QBs with first-round potential, with one NFL executive predicting that McCarthy and Penix could go higher than some currently anticipate.

Ninkovich is still studying the quarterbacks and is open to multiple scenarios for the team, including trading down and/or picking a prospect at a different position.

One week into free agency, Ninkovich sees some positive signs for the Patriots, but believes everything is secondary to what is to come.

“I like the moves across the board, but it’s the draft, and what they decide at quarterback, that will ultimately determine how the team comes together and if they’re trending in the right direction,” he said.

2. Ridley reax: Receiver Calvin Ridley, who chose to sign a four-year, $92 million deal with the Titans over offers from the Jaguars and Patriots, shared insight into his decision-making process on Friday. He said it was his hope to return to Jacksonville, but when things weren’t working out, the Titans had the combination of money and on-field elements he was looking for — which included a receiver in DeAndre Hopkins to play opposite of and help bring out the best in him.

No shame for the Patriots, who were aggressive with their pitch, but it’s reflective, in part, of the reality that the top of the receiver depth chart includes JuJu Smith-Schuster, Kendrick Bourne, DeMario Douglas, Tyquan Thornton and Jalen Reagor.

One reason the Patriots were hot on Ridley — he totaled 768 yards on passes thrown outside the numbers last season, which was the fifth most in the NFL. In 2023, the Patriots ranked second to last in the NFL in receiving yards on passes thrown outside the numbers, according to ESPN Stats & Information. New England’s 1,581 receiving yards on passes thrown outside the numbers last season was more than only the Jets (1,515).

One NFL executive acknowledged the Patriots’ need, but also noted how the 29-year-old Ridley wasn’t always assignment sound in Jacksonville while viewing him more as a solid receiver than a top-tier option.

Calvin Ridley said he is excited about joining a team that is trying to be good. But he admitted he really wanted to stay with the Jaguars. But the money with the #Titans was good so he came. pic.twitter.com/Hi8PJr1ptD

— TURRON DAVENPORT (@TDavenport_NFL) March 15, 2024

3. Patriots’ approach: The most frequent question from underwhelmed social-media followers over the last week has been, “What is the Patriots’ free-agent plan?”

Many expected more, perhaps because head coach Jerod Mayo had previously said they would “burn some cash” to bring in talent. Whether the Patriots’ approach will prove to be the right one is fair to debate, and my opinion is summed up this way — they have a lot of holes to fill, some of their best players had contracts expiring, and if they didn’t make it a priority to re-sign them they would be digging themselves an even deeper hole because it’s unrealistic to think more of a free-agent splurge on others would immediately cure all their issues. So they had to work hard basically just to stay in neutral.

As Bill Belichick used to say, the team-building process continues over the course of the year and they still have A LOT of work to do, which is expected to include starting extension talks with promising fourth-year defensive tackle Christian Barmore.

4. Judon’s deal: When the Patriots restructured outside linebacker Matthew Judon’s contract last August, which reduced his 2024 base salary to $6.5 million as some of his money was moved into 2023, it set the sides up to return to the negotiating table this offseason.

Now, with the first wave of free agency over, it opens a window for the sides to work toward a resolution, which they’ve begun to preliminarily explore. Judon’s return from a torn biceps that limited him to four games last season adds a layer to any discussions, as the team will likely want to protect itself with incentives that reward Judon for being on the field.

5. Hooper report: What are the Patriots getting in nine-year veteran tight end Austin Hooper, who they signed to a one-year deal with a base value of $3 million?

One NFL source intimately familiar with him said: “He isn’t a ‘Y’ that you’d consistently put on the line and ask to block, but more of a traditional ‘F’ type receiving tight end — a position blocker at best, and more back side of the runs. You want to make sure you’re not putting him on a defensive end too much; he’s not a road-grader but he’ll compete. He’s better as a blocker than what they had last year in [Mike] Gesicki, who was really more of a receiver than a tight end. He does have the ability to get open, with decent speed and hands.”

6. Takitaki intel: Linebacker Sione Takitaki, who inked a two-year deal with a base value of $6.6 million and maximum value of $10.2 million in New England, had grown into a team leader and signal-caller during his five-year tenure with the Browns. Wolf, the Patriots’ director of scouting, was one of Takitaki’s biggest boosters when working for the Browns and a primary reason the team selected him in the third round of the 2019 draft.

Best of NFL Nation

• Wilkins embraces Raiders culture
• Panthers resetting in free agency
• Saquon, Giants weren’t built to last
• Why Packers chose Jacobs over Jones
• Can Jets replace Huff’s sack production?
• Zack Moss could be win-win for Bengals

One scouting report from a personnel executive familiar with Takitaki’s style of play described him as “active, not the fastest, but sees the game pretty well; versatile, can rush and blitz — a very solid third or fourth linebacker.” Takitaki had an opportunity to return to Cleveland on a one-year deal, but the Patriots’ willingness to commit to a two-year pact contributed to his decision to depart.

7. Gibson’s skillset: Patriots offensive coaches had identified former Washington running back Antonio Gibson as a top target, with his pass-catching and route-running ability top assets. That highlights, in part, how the new regime was looking for more of a contrast between top running back Rhamondre Stevenson and his backup than they had last season with Ezekiel Elliott. One NFL executive saw value in the signing as long as Gibson picks up the offensive system and shows the ability to pass protect — which can be challenging to project.

8. Trade deadline/emergency QB: The NFL’s annual meeting begins Sunday, March 24 in Orlando, and seven teams (Steelers, Browns, Lions, Jets, Eagles, 49ers, Commanders) have suggested a change to the league’s bylaws regarding the trade deadline, according to a league source. Last season, the trade deadline was after Week 8 games, and the aforementioned clubs are proposing to push it back either by one or two weeks.

What to know for the 2024 NFL draft

• Mock drafts | DraftCast’s top prospects
• Rankings: Kiper | Miller | Reid | Yates
• QB Hot Board | First-rounders
• Position ranks | Full order | Read more

The Bills are also proposing a bylaw change that would allow a quarterback to be elevated from the practice squad for a game, and then be listed as the third/emergency quarterback. Under the current rules, a third/emergency quarterback designation is only allowed for quarterbacks on the permanent 53-man roster.

9. They said it: “I think I’d trade down and take the best player, non-quarterback. I don’t think this roster is set to take a quarterback. There are too many holes.” — ESPN analyst Dan Orlovsky, on Tuesday’s NFL Live program, regarding the Patriots and the No. 3 pick.

10. Did you know: Quarterback Jacoby Brissett is set to become the 30th player to have at least two different stints with the Patriots since 2000, assuming he is on the 2024 opening-day roster and appears in a regular-season game.