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NEWS | Help Fight Covid-19 Using Your Smartphone

The Vodafone Foundation and Imperial College London have utilised their successful DreamLab smartphone app, which was launched in the UK in 2017 to help fight cancer, to aid research into Covid-19, and you can help. Read on to find out how.

Help Fight Covid-19 Using Your Smartphone

Brits can help power the research by simply downloading the app onto their smartphones and leaving it to run overnight whilst it’s on charge.

DreamLab crowdsources processing power from smartphones whilst you sleep to create a virtual supercomputer which processes millions of calculations for scientists at Imperial College London. This decreases the time it would normally take the researchers to process the calculations manually, reducing what could take 300 years to just three months.

The project uses Artificial Intelligence to trawl through data and identify existing drugs and food molecules that could benefit those with the infectious disease.  The more people that plug in, the quicker possible treatments will be found. No personal data from the user’s device is affected or used in any way.

Understanding the Corona-AI project

The Corona-AI project is split into two phases:

  1. Phase 1 will identify existing drugs and food-based molecules with anti-viral properties that may benefit those with Covid-19.
  2. Phase 2 will optimise combinations of these drugs and food molecules to provide potential drug treatments and nutritional advice for those with Covid-19.

Once the research is complete, it will be made available to the medical profession to facilitate clinical trials. In addition, any food-related findings will be translated into dietary advice that can be implemented by the medical community for patients recovering from Covid-19.

Vodafone is urging everyone to come together and support the new Corona-AI project – the more people that plug in every night, the quicker potential treatments for those with Covid-19 will be found. 

How to download the app

To download the app, search for DreamLab in the App store for iOS or Play Store for Android. 

Vodafone customers can activate DreamLab for free using either mobile data or Wifi connectivity.  Those on other networks will be asked how much data they would like to donate to power the app, or can connect via Wifi.  

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Minnesota wants anglers to go lead-free to help loons


(Minnesota DNR)

COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. — The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is launching a new program to encourage anglers to switch to lead-free fishing equipment as a way to save the state bird, the loon.

The campaign was created with money from the federal government’s settlement with BP over the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, Minnesota Public Radio News reported.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service awarded Minnesota agencies more than $ 6 million from the settlement to help support its loon population after researchers found traces of oil and the chemicals used to disperse the spill in the feathers, eggs and blood of birds in Minnesota.

About $ 1.2 million will go toward the public awareness campaign called “Get the Lead Out” over the next three years.

But State Sen. Bill Ingebrigtsen, R-Alexandria, chair of the Minnesota Senate’s Environment and Natural Resources Finance Committee has temporarily delayed the funding so his committee can hold a hearing on the program. He expects approval soon.

In the meantime, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is moving forward. It has already posted a website that lists more than three dozen companies where anglers can find lead-free fishing equipment that won’t harm loons.

While some states have total or partial bans on the use of lead sinkers and jigs, Minnesota’s lead-free campaign is voluntary.

Carrol Henderson, who retired from the state DNR in 2018, led a seven-year study that found Minnesota’s loons were affected by the BP oil spill. He says loons are especially susceptible to lead poisoning because they swallow pebbles at the bottom of lakes to help them grind up their food.

“When they accidentally pick up a lead jig or sinker off the bottom, all it takes is one split shot or one jig to kill the loon from lead poisoning,” Henderson said.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency estimates lead poisoning causes about 14% of loon deaths in the state.

“It’s something that’s totally avoidable if people simply learn to shop for nontoxic jigs and sinkers,” Henderson said, pointing out various lead-free alternatives made from materials like tin, steel, bismuth or tungsten.

Tags: Fishing, Loons, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Good Gear: Buy a Flannel, Help Save the Ocean

United By Blue

On a muddy shore, five volunteers dig for tires. A dozen comb the beach for old water bottles and railroad ties. Several cut tree branches entangling vehicle carcasses. A person operating a skid-steer loads a barge with torched pieces of a boat’s steam tank, while another hauls decrepit trash from an amusement park that burned down in 1927.

For decades, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection struggled with the cost and scope of cleaning up Burlington Island, a 300-acre slice of land in the Delaware River, south of Bristol. The island had become an Army Corps dump site and by 2012, the chemical pollution was so bad that the Burlington, New Jersey, mayor banned all recreational use. Enter an unlikely hero: outdoor apparel brand United By Blue.

United By Blue

United By Blue hosts cleanups throughout the year.

In February 2019, a cleanup crew from the outdoor-lifestyle brand spent two weeks removing 96,100 pounds of trash from the island. This marked a milestone for founders Mike Cangi, 31, and Brian Linton, 32. With the help of more than 30 volunteers and team members and a paid crew of Public Works staff, private contractors and city employees, United By Blue executed a large-scale, logistically challenging cleanup that had stymied local resources for years.

It’s a unique tack for a brand that sells T-shirts and totes, but it’s the one Cangi and Linton always envisioned for United By Blue. Founded nearly a decade ago as an environmental conservation organization, business has always come second for the brand. “We took that approach from day one, and it still holds true today,” Cangi says. “Businesses have a responsibility to be changemakers. We want to do more than just sell things.”

Cangi and Linton met in 2009 when the former, a sophomore business student at Temple University in Philadelphia at the time, interned at Sand Shack, a sustainable jewelry and apparel company Linton founded in 2006. The company donated 5 percent of its proceeds to ocean conservation, a mission that was dear to Linton, who grew up snorkeling, diving and raising fish (at one point, he had 30 tanks in his childhood bedroom) in Singapore and Japan. Ocean conservation also resonated with Cangi, who spent his summers on the Jersey shore.

United By Blue founders Brian Linton and Mike Cangi

United By Blue founders Brian Linton and Mike Cangi.

But both Cangi and Linton wanted to do more than cut a check. They wanted a way to measure the tangible, lasting impact of a business while creating products they would wear themselves. And so in 2010, when Cangi was 23 and Linton 24, they closed Sand Shack and started United By Blue with a mission: For every product purchased, United By Blue would remove one pound of trash from oceans and waterways.

Nine years later, United By Blue still prioritizes its environmental mission over business goals. But Cangi admits the decision has not always been easy. For example, their wholesale margin shrunk from 60 percent to just 15 percent in 2011 due to the higher cost of using banana-fiber bags instead of plastic bags and paper for packaging. Meanwhile, the total cost of each cleanup runs between $ 2,000 and $ 5,000. To continue investing in their environmental goals, Cangi and Linton had to raise the price of some of their products. They continue to cut costs in manufacturing where they can and look for partners like Cascadian Farm Organic and EcoSmartPlastics to donate food and supplies to the cleanup events.

Not compromising its environmental mission has been the key to United By Blue’s ability to make a quantifiable impact. As of October, more than 14,000 volunteers have cleaned up more than 2 million pounds of trash at 270 United By Blue-hosted cleanups.

Learn how to join a cleanup

“If we can change mindsets at the volunteer level, those people become the changemakers in their own communities,” Cangi says. “Our long-term goal is not just about removing trash, but the education piece of these cleanups where people are becoming more aware of the issues facing the environment, specifically the oceans, and then being able to leave with actionable changes.”

It jibes with the company’s original mission and its newest goal: eliminating all plastics from its supply chain and business operations by World Oceans Day in June 2020. United By Blue has committed to eliminating all poly bags, swift tags, bubble bags, plastic shrink wrap and plastic tape.

Ultimately, Cangi and Linton want to eliminate the need for their mission altogether. “We gave the ocean a solution by picking up trash before it gets out there, and now we want to give the consumer tools to keep going,” Cangi says. United By Blue sells reusable meal kits, straws and totes, and its brass provide other businesses with lessons about eliminating waste in the manufacturing processes. “That’s how we can have an amplifying impact over the next 10 years.”

Editor’s note: In November, United By Blue partnered with REI Co-op as part of #OptOutside, hosting cleanups ahead of Black Friday and selling limited-edition Opt to Act DIY cleanup kits (a mesh trash bag, protective gloves and bandana) for $ 10.

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Acknowledge what is here in Wisconsin and help maintain those natural resources and opportunities 


Wisconsin is known as a destination location to gather numerous wild things, whether it be flora or fauna.  Sometimes so designated by ranking; other times simply by numbers and enthusiasm with which people come here to spear lake sturgeon, shoot deer, flush ruffed grouse, train dogs, view prairie chickens and enjoy the autumn scenery.

All too often some take these resources for granted; or worse, believe it to be theirs alone.

But there’s more to do than admire and walk away. We must inform the biologists and politicians that we mostly like what we have. Thank them, too, or offer suggestions for minor changes.

Keep in mind, too, that seasons, bag limits and possession limits are set using scientific data, as well as social and tourist data, with science usually being front and center, carrying most weight.

We appreciate other states making accommodations for nonresidents and those guys should appreciate Wisconsin doing the same.

Because we lead or share the lead in the nation in many outdoors recreation categories, it is important to not short-change funding and protection for Wisconsin’s outdoors.

Let’s keep Wisconsin Wisconsin.

Categories: Wisconsin – Jerry Davis
Tags: Jerry Davis, Wisconsin Outdoor News

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

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