Category: Travel

  • IMF’s top economist expects a global recovery in second half of 2021

    Most developed countries should start to return to normal by the second half of the year as Covid vaccinations accelerate, the top forecaster at the International Monetary Fund said Tuesday.“It’s a very dark and difficult winter, but there is light at the end of the tunnel,” IMF chief economist Gita Gopinath told CNBC’s Steve Liesman in a “Squawk on the Street” interview. “In terms of the outlook, what is true as of now is that we’re starting out the year at a somewhat stronger point than we had expected into 2020, which is a good thing. But right now, it’s a race between the virus and the vaccine.”In its most recent forecast, released in October, the IMF said it expects global growth in 2021 to rebound to 5.2% after a 4.4% contraction last year. The U.S. growth estimate was at 3.1% for 2021 off a 4.3% decline in 2020.The agency soon will update that outlook, though Gopinath did not indicate whether an upgrade was likely.Though the vaccine rollout has been slow, Gopinath still expects most developed countries to be covered by this summer. Gopinath cautioned that the recovery will be at different speeds. Globally, she sees full coverage by the end of 2022.“There is the vaccine and stimulus-driven recovery that one would expect in the second half of the year,” she said.Countries that handled the virus better in its early stages have seen stronger recoveries. Gopinath cited China in that regard, while she said some Latin America countries have lagged.“What we’re seeing is that having an early enough lockdown … helps bring about the recovery somewhat faster,” she said. “But there is no simple solution with how to deal with this pandemic.”Governments and central banks have provided trillions in stimulus since the Covid pandemic declaration in March.While there’s been some speculation that the Federal Reserve and its counterparts could start dialing down their measures sometime this year if inflation starts to pick up, Gopinath said that’s not likely.“I expect central banks to be pretty cautious about rolling back any support,” she said.

    Source: IMF’s top economist expects a global recovery in second half of 2021

  • Interactive Career Guides

    RG Richardson Interactive Restaurant Guides keeps you up to date with careers, restaurants, real estate, money, banking and cities worldwide.

    Never out of date. Searching in 10 languages.

    student interactive banking
    Latest definitions!

    Interactive finance, money and banking dictionaries and notes. Enhance your Financial literary with all the current definitions.

    What is happening in your city?

    Interactive city guides help you find out about everything going on in your city.

    Interactive Restaurant Guide keeps you up to date with who is open or closed, dine in or take out.

    Interactive Career Guides

    Here are the resources to help you throughout the process, from identifying a promising opportunity and writing a resume to interview with potential employers and negotiating a job offer. Get expert tips and advice for landing the right role for you. There are hundreds of job boards, both generic and niche, as well as aggregators, social media channels, networking groups and staffing company websites to choose from.

    Stop using paper guides and brochures! Since 2015 using the power of the internet RG Richardson City Guides has published over 230 guides, glossaries and notes. No typing, search with over 10,900 links on hundreds of topics on everything you need to know about your city in over 10 languages and available in 190 countries! Never out of date and very fast with 5G! Google App (IOS and Android) for phone, pad, pc and Kindle on Amazon.

    Interactive Career Guides searches using the power of the internet, continuously updated and never out of date.
    All editions use the power of the internet with 8 search engines and over 10,900 links. Use your browser to search for a city in your language with 10 different languages available. Point and click that is it and with a 5G network, it is very fast! You can now avoid spelling mistakes and language difficulties making your search accurate and simple enough for everybody to use. One thumb required, simply click the icon and your search is done. Read everything you want to know and it is never out of date. Don’t want to read, watch it all as it searches YouTube too!
    Restaurant guides have extensive restaurant (barbecue, buffet, bistro, cafeteria, fast food, fine dining, pub, ethnic restaurants) searches. Sit in the coffee shop and start searching away on their WiFi and start using our interactive city search guides with multiple languages!
    For PC, Mac, Pad, iPhone or mobile IOS and Android phone enabled search tool with multi-search engine capability built right in.
    RG Richardson guides search for careers, food, hotels, real estate, historical sites, sports, transportation, concerts, even public toilets and water closets. Find everything that’s fun to do; with travel planning, maps and car rentals.
    Good for tourists, travellers, vacationers and business persons who have just moved to town, and even long-term residents who want to stay on top of what’s new and current in their area or city.
    These guides are great for those with disabilities; pick and click with one thumb, no typing!
    Finance interactive notes, dictionaries and glossaries for economics, financial, markets, money and banking for students and professionals.
    Financial literacy is the ability to understand and effectively apply various financial skills, including personal financial management, budgeting, and investing. Financial literacy helps individuals become self-sufficient so that they can achieve financial stability.
    Career and job interactive search guides for cities worldwide.
    Real estate interactive housing, apartments, condominiums, vacation properties and commercial property guides for cities worldwide.
    All guides search in 10 languages including Chinese, French, German, Spanish, Russian, Arabic, Indian, Portuguese and Japanese!
    R.G. Richardson City Interactive Guides using the power of the internet. Over 200 guides are available in 190 countries worldwide.

    Published in Canada by:
    eComTechnology/RGRichardson

    Assign Centre, ISBN Division
    Library and Archives Canada
    Author R.G. Richardson
    Victoria, BC. V8R 5G9
    Updated 1/2021

  • PDT Facebook/Twitter suspension

    On January 7, following the violent white supremacist riots that breached the US Capitol, Twitter and Facebook both suspended President Donald Trump from their platforms. The next day, Twitter made its suspension permanent. Many praised the decision for preventing the president from doing more harm at a time when his adherents are taking cues from his false claims that the election was rigged. Republicans criticized it as a violation of Trump’s free speech.

    It wasn’t. Just as Trump has the First Amendment right to spew deranged nonsense, so too do tech companies have the First Amendment right to remove that content. While some pundits have called the decision unprecedented—or “a turning point for the battle for control over digital speech,” as Edward Snowden tweeted—it’s not: not at all. Not only do Twitter and Facebook regularly remove all types of protected expression, but Trump’s case isn’t even the first time the platforms have removed a major political figure. 

    Following reports of genocide in Myanmar, Facebook banned the country’s top general and other military leaders who were using the platform to foment hate. The company also bans Hezbollah from its platform because of its status as a US-designated foreign terror organization, despite the fact that the party holds seats in Lebanon’s parliament. And it bans leaders in countries under US sanctions.

    At the same time, both Facebook and Twitter have stuck to the tenet that content posted by elected officials deserves more protection than material from ordinary individuals, thus giving politicians’ speech more power than that of the people. This position is at odds with plenty of evidence that hateful speech from public figures has a greater impact than similar speech from ordinary users. 

    Clearly, though, these policies aren’t applied evenly around the world. After all, Trump is far from the only world leader using these platforms to foment unrest. One need only look to the BJP, the party of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, for more examples.

    Though there are certainly short-term benefits—and plenty of satisfaction—to be had from banning Trump, the decision (and those that came before it) raise more foundational questions about speech. Who should have the right to decide what we can and can’t say? What does it mean when a corporation can censor a government official? 

    Facebook’s policy staff, and Mark Zuckerberg in particular, have for years shown themselves to be poor judges of what is or isn’t appropriate expression. From the platform’s ban on breasts to its tendency to suspend users for speaking back against hate speech, or its total failure to remove calls for violence in Myanmar, India, and elsewhere, there’s simply no reason to trust Zuckerberg and other tech leaders to get these big decisions right.

    Repealing 230 isn’t the answer 

    To remedy these concerns, some are calling for more regulation. In recent months, demands have abounded from both sides of the aisle to repeal or amend Section 230—the law that protects companies from liability for the decisions they make about the content they host—despite some serious misrepresentations from politicians who should know better about how the law actually works. 

    The thing is, repealing Section 230 would probably not have forced Facebook or Twitter to remove Trump’s tweets, nor would it prevent companies from removing content they find disagreeable, whether that content is pornography or the unhinged rantings of Trump. It is companies’ First Amendment rights that enable them to curate their platforms as they see fit.

    Instead, repealing Section 230 would hinder competitors to Facebook and the other tech giants, and place a greater risk of liability on platforms for what they choose to host. For instance, without Section 230, Facebook’s lawyers could decide that hosting anti-fascist content is too risky in light of the Trump administration’s attacks on antifa.

    What does it mean when a corporation can censor a government official? 

    This is not a far-fetched scenario: Platforms already restrict most content that could be even loosely connected to foreign terrorist organizations, for fear that material-support statutes could make them liable. Evidence of war crimes in Syria and vital counter-speech against terrorist organizations abroad have been removed as a result. Similarly, platforms have come under fire for blocking any content seemingly connected to countries under US sanctions. In one particularly absurd example, Etsy banned a handmade doll, made in America, because the listing contained the word “Persian.”

    It’s not difficult to see how ratcheting up platform liability could cause even more vital speech to be removed by corporations whose sole interest is not in “connecting the world” but in profiting from it.

    Platforms needn’t be neutral, but they must play fair

    Despite what Senator Ted Cruz keeps repeating, there is nothing requiring these platforms to be neutral, nor should there be. If Facebook wants to boot Trump—or photos of breastfeeding mothers—that’s the company’s prerogative. The problem is not that Facebook has the right to do so, but that—owing to its acquisitions and unhindered growth—its users have virtually nowhere else to go and are stuck dealing with increasingly problematic rules and automated content moderation.

    The answer is not repealing Section 230 (which again, would hinder competition) but in creating the conditions for more competition. This is where the Biden administration should focus its attention in the coming months. And those efforts must include reaching out to content moderation experts from advocacy and academia to understand the range of problems faced by users worldwide, rather than simply focusing on the debate inside the US.

    As for platforms, they know what they need to do, because civil society has told them for years. They must be more transparent and ensure that users have the right to remedy when wrong decisions are made. The Santa Clara Principles on Transparency and Accountability in Content Moderation—endorsed in 2019 by most major platforms but adhered to by only one (Reddit)—offer minimum standards for companies on these measures. Platforms should also stick to their existing commitments to responsible decision-making. Most important, they should ensure that the decisions they make about speech are in line with global human rights standards, rather than making the rules up as they go.

    Reasonable people can disagree on whether the act of banning Trump from these platforms was the right one, but if we want to ensure that platforms make better decisions in the future, we mustn’t look to quick fixes.

    Jillian C. York is the author of the forthcoming book Silicon Values: The Future of Free Speech Under Surveillance Capitalism and the director for international freedom of expression at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

  • Choosing a Good Restaurant Guide – Stocking Stuffer

    How to choose a Good Restaurant Guide a real stocking stuffer

    Sometimes, all we want to do is get a table and eat. But once in a while, to make of our eating out an experience is quite enjoyable. Some of us know exactly what to look for. But for those who have not much clue in making your restaurant visit a memory to cherish, here are some tips for a great restaurant experience.

    1. Location of the Restaurant

    Choose a restaurant you can walk to. When you want to have a great time, driving afterwards can pose a real problem. Choose a restaurant that is close by where you can easily walk or where it is easy to get a cab. Another 50 bucks for a cab to go to a restaurant adds unnecessary expense.

    Of course, it is different when the location is truly superb: a lake, seaside, riverside or a spectacular view of the mountain or an architectural gem. But food must be excellent to enjoy a $50 cab ride value.

    A Neighbourhood Restaurant?

    2. Ambience Matters

    Sometimes, the restaurant may be beautiful but the décor is not to your taste. It jars your senses. Go to a place where you enjoy the general atmosphere.

    Do they play music? How loudly? Check out the people who go to the restaurant. If you find it pleasant to be around these people as you eat your dinner, then go book a table. Maybe a specific table away from the kitchen doors and not under the air conditioner.

    Sometimes, you have to work when you’re in a restaurant. For meetings where you need to discuss serious deals, go to restaurants that have private rooms.

    Mood, Music, and Art in the Restaurant

    3. Particular Cuisine Paired With the Right Wine

    There are evenings when you just want a particular cuisine. And if that restaurant is the only one available where you live, there is really not much choice. After coming back from Asia, many folks just go for that big chunk of beef. The revenge of the tidbits, they say.

    Other evenings, the menu has to be titillating to your taste buds. Especially when the restaurants are all clustered in an area and you have choices.

    The wine list is also important. In some restaurants, the wine list consists of highly-priced bottles of six wines all from France. Over overpriced bottles from you don’t know where.

    But often, there are two or three choices for a particular cuisine. Check out if their chef comes from the country where that cuisine is from. You are more likely to get the real thing and not the stylized version of it. There is nothing wrong with stylized cuisine as some of the real ones are hard to take anyway.

  • Long Before Tex-Mex, a 15,000-Year-Old Cuisine Left Its Mark – Gastro Obscura

    50 MILES NORTH OF AUSTIN lie the remains of a gravel floor and wall. While it may seem unassuming, it’s what’s left of the oldest-known house in North America. Just outside the home is a cooking site strewn with the ancient traces of meals cooked with fire. This is where the history of what can be called Texas Mexican food begins, and where it gets its character as comida casera, or home-cooked food.The house is one of the extraordinary findings at the Gault Archaeological Site. Between 1999 and 2002, researchers recovered an astonishing 1.4 million artifacts in the area, among them the house floor, which researchers speculate could date back as far as 15,000 years. The burnt rocks outside are even older, at 20,000 years.

    Source: Long Before Tex-Mex, a 15,000-Year-Old Cuisine Left Its Mark – Gastro Obscura

  • Good News: Trump’s ANWR Oil-Lease Sale Was a Failure | Outside Online

    interactive restaurant guideOn Wednesday, while a mob of domestic terrorists stormed the U.S. Capitol, something else undemocratic was going on: the Trump administration was holding the first-ever sale for oil leases in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). And, like the attempted coup, it was a complete failure—one that’s likely to lead to permanent protections for the country’s last unspoiled wilderness. “Today’s sale reflects the brutal economic realities the oil and gas industry continues to face after the unprecedented events of 2020, coupled with ongoing regulatory uncertainty,” said Kara Moriarty, president and CEO of the Alaska Oil and Gas Association, an industry advocacy group, in an emailed statement. The auction raised just $14.4 million, falling well short of the $1.8 billion the Department of the Interior forecast last January. Only 11 of the 22 tracts offered sold, approximately 550,000 of the one million acres put up for sale. Proceeds will be split between the federal government and the state of Alaska.

    Source: Good News: Trump’s ANWR Oil-Lease Sale Was a Failure | Outside Online

  • End to Planned Obsolescence Would Stem ‘Torrential’ E-Waste – The Energy Mix

    Economics 101 for mobile device developers seems to involve making sure their devices need to be replaced every few years. But consumers are demanding better as the rapidly escalating environmental and social harms associated with smart phone production become ever more clear.Those short-lived phones, tablets, and laptops come with a profound social cost, reports CBC News, citing a 2018 McMaster University study finding that 85 to 95% of the carbon footprint of a smart phone is generated during its production.Like this story?

    Interactive restaurant search
    Take out?

    The biggest contributor to that footprint: High emissions associated with the discovery and extraction of the rare-earth minerals essential to a smart phone’s function. As mining ravages local ecosystems, spreads air and water pollution, and attacks biodiversity, e-waste is also a growing concern. CBC cites recent UN research revealing that the waste stream is turning into a torrent, “comprising 53.6 million tonnes in 2019, up 21% in just five years.” Currently, only 17.4% of global e-waste is recycled.Then there are the established links between smart phones and conflict, as well as human rights abuses like unsafe working conditions and the infringement of water and land rights.But also well-established is a pervasive sense among consumers that we “have to” keep upgrading. “I think people understand that they’re sort of sort of locked into a racket with technology like phones and televisions and computers, where there’s no such thing as a device that you keep for a long time,” said Greenpeace USA special projects manager Rolf Skar. In a 2018 survey of 2,200 Canadians, adds CBC, “44% kept their electronic devices for fewer than three years and 61% kept their devices for fewer than five years.” Also revealed in the survey: more than 80% of respondents felt that “home appliances and electronics were in most or some cases designed to have a short lifespan.”Certainly, the companies producing the devices want us to think that. Sometimes, they actually make it so.Citing a 2017 Greenpeace USA report, CBC writes that high-end phones, especially the Samsung Galaxy 8, which contains edge-to-edge glass on both sides, seem to have literally been built to break. And when many devices do break, they simply aren’t repairable: Greenpeace found that it was impossible to replace the battery or display in nearly 70% of the 40 top-selling gadgets.CBC says Greenpeace also flagged “efforts by Apple and Sony to block environmental standards to encourage the design of devices that are easier to repair, upgrade, and disassemble for recycling.”While the extent to which Big Tech explicitly pursues a doctrine of planned obsolescence remains uncertain, Apple’s decision to settle a recent class action lawsuit alleging that its software upgrades were designed to slow down older iPhones is revelatory. The company agreed to pay US$500 million to plaintiffs in March.Along with lawsuits, emerging right-to-repair laws will also play a critical role in stemming the tide of e-waste. A slate of EU laws are due to be enacted this year, all intended to counter aggressive barriers to easy repair, such as “soldering major components together, refusing to sell replacement parts, and threatening to void your warranty if you open the device, using proprietary screws,” writes CBC. Some manufacturers, such as the Dutch social enterprise company Fairphone, are tackling the issue on the design front, with innovations like modular, fixable devices. And then there is us. Équiterre notes that many phone plans regularly entice customers to purchase new devices. Consumers need to stop taking the bait, and instead pressure providers to convert customer loyalty points “into advantages that don’t involve buying something,” CBC writes.

    Source: End to Planned Obsolescence Would Stem ‘Torrential’ E-Waste – The Energy Mix

  • An eye-opening look into America’s criminal justice system | Bill Gates

    My last holiday books list included a novel called An American Marriage which really stuck with me over the previous year. I was deeply touched by its story of a husband torn away from his wife by a false accusation that lands him in prison. The book did a beautiful job of showing how incarceration can devastate a family, even after release from prison.As moving as the book was, the story was fiction. But the idea of a family torn apart by mass incarceration is not. If you’re interested in learning more about the real lives caught up in our country’s justice system, I highly recommend The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander. It offers an eye-opening look into how the criminal justice system unfairly targets communities of color—and especially Black communities.

    Source: An eye-opening look into America’s criminal justice system | Bill Gates

  • The 25 Greatest Superyachts of the Last 100 Years – Robb Report

    A Century of Sea ChangeLike the rest of the world, yachts have seen remarkable transformations in design and technology in the last 100 years. As our list shows, the shapes and sizes range widely depending on the decade of their launch. The streamliner-look of the 1920s gave way to the stacked wedding-cake design of the last half of the 20th century, while the last 20 years have seen more futuristic shapes. What all these yachts share, however, is their owners’ passion to create yachts that are unique, often breathtaking and, most importantly, majestic. Here are our 25 favorites in chronological order.

    Source: The 25 Greatest Superyachts of the Last 100 Years – Robb Report

  • Best European train journeys to try in 2021 | The Independent

    If 2020 taught us anything, it taught us how to slow down. And what better way to take that skill into the New Year than with a spot of train travel?While flying might be quick, it’s normally not that pleasant – whereas picking the right rail journey can be an absolute delight, connecting you with destinations across Europe alongside the best views in the business.And Europe is ramping up its rail offering even further in 2021, with a slew of new routes to try. Here are some of the best train journeys to take next year.

    Source: Best European train journeys to try in 2021 | The Independent