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2025-01-25
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By Stephen Beech Employees are suffering "techno-strain" as a result of digital systems making it difficult to switch off from work, warns a new study. Staff are experiencing mental and physical issues due to being "hyperconnected" through digital technology, according to the findings. Researchers from the University of Nottingham’s Schools of Psychology and Medicine conducted detailed interviews with employees from a variety of professions. They found that the cognitive and affective effort associated with constant connectivity and high work pace driven by the digital workplace is detrimental to employee well-being. The study is the final part of a research project exploring the "dark side effects" of digital working which include stress, overload, anxiety and fear of missing out. The results, published in the journal Frontiers in Organisational Psychology , highlight an "overarching" theme of "digital workplace technology intensity" as a result of digital workplace job demands. The research team says their findings indicate a "sense of burden" associated with working digitally which surfaced for most participants in perceptions of overload and feelings of being "overwhelmed" by the proliferation of messages, apps and meetings in the digital workplace. They say "fear of missing out" - or FOMO- on important information and contact with colleagues also contributed to stress and strain for digital workers, as did hassles encountered when using digital technologies. Study leader Elizabeth Marsh said: “Digital workplaces benefit both organizations and employees, for example by enabling collaborative and flexible work. "However, what we have found in our research is that there is a potential dark side to digital working, where employees can feel fatigue and strain due to being overburdened by the demands and intensity of the digital work environment. "A sense of pressure to be constantly connected and keeping up with messages can make it hard to psychologically detach from work." Fourteen employees were interviewed in detail and asked about their perceptions and experiences of digital workplace job demands and impacts to their health. Comments from interviewees included: “[It’s] just more difficult to leave it behind when it's all online and you can kind of jump on and do work at any time of the day or night.” Another participant said: “You kind of feel like you have to be there all the time. You have to be a little green light,” while another commented: “It's that pressure to respond [...] I've received an e-mail, I've gotta do this quickly because if not, someone might think “What is she doing from home?” In their analysis, the researchers explored potential underlying psychological, technological and organizational factors that may influence ways in which employees experience digital workplace job demands. The findings showed that participants' dark side experiences were particularly shaped by a pervasive and constant state of connectivity in the digital workplace, termed "hyperconnectivity." Those experiences contributed to a sense of pressure to be available and the erosion of work-life boundaries, according to the research team. They said the evidence also indicates that "hyperconnectivity" has become the norm among workers post-pandemic. PhD student Marsh said: “The findings underline the need for both researchers and professionals to identify, understand and mitigate the digital workplace job demands to protect the well-being of digital workers.” The research also makes practical suggestions for employers including helping workers improve their digital skills and empowering them to manage boundaries in the digital workplace. The team says their findings could also be used by IT departments to consider how to improve the usability and accessibility of the digital workplace, as well as reining in the proliferation of applications. Dr. Alexa Spence, Professor of Psychology, said: “This research extends the Job Demands-Resources literature by clarifying digital workplace job demands including hyperconnectivity and overload." She added: "It also contributes a novel construct of digital workplace technology intensity which adds new insight on the causes of technostress in the digital workplace. "In doing so, it highlights the potential health impacts, both mental and physical, of digital work.”Rico Carty, who won the 1970 NL batting title with the Atlanta Braves, has died

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Kobe Sanders, Nevada beat Oklahoma St. for fifth place in CharlestonNorman Cook's mum has died, his son has confirmed. Norman - who is also known as Fatboy Slim - shares 24-year-old son Woody with radio presenter ex-wife Zoe Ball . And Wood shared the tragic news in a heartbreaking post on Instagram . He wrote: "Ups and downs of the year. My Granny Ros passed away on Christmas Day, She was an amazing woman and ‘was ready to start her next life.’ That kind of optimism and mentality really inspires me. Losing two Grandparents this year has really made me grow and made me focus a-lot more on family. "The ups: i’m having a blast in New York, was homesick on my Birthday and Christmas but i’ve been working really hard on music and it’s really paying off. My friends over here are so lovely and feel like family. Life always goes on x New year’s resolution is to make every second count... Safe travels Ros and thank you for everything" He shared an image of him reflecting and also a family snap alongside his thoughtful words. The death marked the second grandmother of Woody's to have died this year. In April, former Radio 2 host Zoe announced her mum, Julia, had passed . At the time, the DJ posted a series of final photos of her mum during a New Year's break in the Caribbean four months before her death. Zoe confirmed her mother's death after announcing her pancreatic cancer diagnosis in March. Captioning a picture of Julia on Twitter (X), following her death, Zoe wrote: "sleep tight dear Mama. thank you for teaching us how to love unconditionally, to always show courage and empathy, and how, even in the darkest of days, laughter is the greatest of gifts. we are bereft without you but will hold so tight to each other." Zoe and Woody recently spent time together following her exit from her Radio 2 breakfast show. Zoe was beaming as she shared a glimpse of her 'fairytale' Christmas in New York City with her daughter Nelly and son Woody. Zoe had flown over with Nelly to join her son overseas, with Zoe arriving only hours after she said goodbye to her fans on live radio. In images shared on her social media, Zoe had a ball as she went ice skating with her two children in Central Park. She also shared images of her with her kids in a restaurant as she smiled for the camera. Zoe wrapped up warm in black trousers, a cream-coloured sweat, a thick overcoat and a green scarf. She completed the cosy look with a beanie. Follow Mirror C elebs on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads .

WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump’s allies on Capitol Hill rallied around Pete Hegseth , Trump’s Pentagon pick, on Thursday even as new details surfaced about allegations that he had sexually assaulted a woman in 2017. The GOP embrace of Hegseth came as another controversial Trump nominee, Matt Gaetz, withdrew from consideration for attorney general. Gaetz said it was clear he had become a “distraction" amid pressure on the House to release an ethics report about allegations of his own sexual misconduct. An attorney for two women has said that his clients told House Ethics Committee investigators that Gaetz paid them for sex on multiple occasions beginning in 2017, when Gaetz was a Florida congressman. Fresh questions over the two nominees' pasts, and their treatment of women, arose with Republicans under pressure from Trump and his allies to quickly confirm his Cabinet. At the same time, his transition has so far balked at the vetting and background checks that have traditionally been required. While few Republican senators have publicly criticized any of Trump's nominees, it became clear after Gaetz's withdrawal that many had been harboring private concerns about him. Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin, who served with Gaetz in the House, said it was a “positive move.” Mississippi Sen. Roger Wicker said it was a “positive development.” Maine Sen. Susan Collins said Gaetz “put country first and I am pleased with his decision.” After meeting with Hegseth, though, Republicans rallied around him. “I think he’s going to be in pretty good shape,” said Wicker, who is expected to chair the Senate Armed Services Committee in the next Congress. Republican senators' careful words, and their early reluctance to publicly question Trump's picks, illustrated not only their fear of retribution from the incoming president but also some of their hopes that the confirmation process can proceed normally, with proper vetting and background checks that could potentially disqualify problematic nominees earlier. Gaetz withdrew after meeting with senators on Wednesday. Sen. Thom Tillis said Gaetz was “in a pressure cooker” when he decided to withdraw, but suggested that it would have little bearing on Trump’s other nominees. “Transactions — one at a time,” he said. As the Hegseth nomination proceeds, Republicans also appear to be betting that they won't face much backlash for publicly setting aside the allegations of sexual misconduct — especially after Trump won election after being found liable for sexual abuse last year. Hegseth held a round of private meetings alongside incoming Vice President JD Vance on Thursday in an attempt to shore up support and told reporters afterward: “The matter was fully investigated and I was completely cleared, and that’s where I’m gonna leave it.” A 22-page police report report made public late Wednesday offered the first detailed account of the allegations against him. A woman told police that she was sexually assaulted in 2017 by Hegseth after he took her phone, blocked the door to a California hotel room and refused to let her leave. The report cited police interviews with the alleged victim, a nurse who treated her, a hotel staffer, another woman at the event and Hegseth. Hegseth’s lawyer, Timothy Palatore, said the incident was “fully investigated and police found the allegations to be false.” Hegseth paid the woman in 2023 as part of a confidential settlement to head off the threat of what he described as a baseless lawsuit, Palatore has said. Wicker played down the allegations against Hegseth, a former Fox News host, saying that “since no charges were brought from the authorities, we only have press reports.” Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., said after his meeting with Hegseth that he "shared with him the fact that I was saddened by the attacks that are coming his way.” Hagerty dismissed the allegations as “a he-said, she-said thing” and called it a “shame” that they were being raised at all. The senator said attention should instead be focused on the Defense Department that Hegseth would head. It's one of the most complex parts of the federal government with more than 3 million employees, including military service members and civilians. Sexual assault has been a persistent problem in the military, though Pentagon officials have been cautiously optimistic they are seeing a decline in reported sexual assaults among active-duty service members and the military academies. Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, who will be the No. 2 Republican in the Senate next year, said after his meeting with Hegseth that the nominee is a strong candidate who “pledged that the Pentagon will focus on strength and hard power – not the current administration’s woke political agenda.” Senate Republicans are under pressure to hold hearings once they take office in January and confirm nominees as soon as Trump is inaugurated, despite questions about whether Trump’s choices will be properly screened or if some, like Hegseth, have enough experience for the job. Senate Armed Services Chairman Jack Reed, who will be the top Democrat on the panel next year, said the reports on Hegseth “emphasized the need for a thorough investigation by the FBI on the background of all the nominees.” It takes a simple majority to approve Cabinet nominations, meaning that if Democrats all opposed a nominee, four Republican senators would also have to defect for any Trump choice to be defeated. Trump has made clear he’s willing to put maximum pressure on Senate Republicans to give him the nominees he wants – even suggesting at one point that they allow him to just appoint his nominees with no Senate votes. But senators insist, for now, that they are not giving up their constitutional power to have a say. “The president has the right to make the nominations that he sees fit, but the Senate also has a responsibility for advice and consent,” said Republican Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota. In the case of Gaetz, he said, “I think there was advice offered rather than consent.” Mary Clare Jalonick, Stephen Groves And Kevin Freking, The Associated Press

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Russian Uranium Stake In Kazakhstan Sold To China Amid Western Sanctions RiskWASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump’s allies on Capitol Hill rallied around Pete Hegseth , Trump’s Pentagon pick, on Thursday even as new details surfaced about allegations that he had sexually assaulted a woman in 2017. The GOP embrace of Hegseth came as another controversial Trump nominee, Matt Gaetz, withdrew from consideration for attorney general. Gaetz said it was clear he had become a “distraction" amid pressure on the House to release an ethics report about allegations of his own sexual misconduct. An attorney for two women has said that his clients told House Ethics Committee investigators that Gaetz paid them for sex on multiple occasions beginning in 2017, when Gaetz was a Florida congressman. Fresh questions over the two nominees' pasts, and their treatment of women, arose with Republicans under pressure from Trump and his allies to quickly confirm his Cabinet. At the same time, his transition has so far balked at the vetting and background checks that have traditionally been required. While few Republican senators have publicly criticized any of Trump's nominees, it became clear after Gaetz's withdrawal that many had been harboring private concerns about him. Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin, who served with Gaetz in the House, said it was a “positive move.” Mississippi Sen. Roger Wicker said it was a “positive development.” Maine Sen. Susan Collins said Gaetz “put country first and I am pleased with his decision.” After meeting with Hegseth, though, Republicans rallied around him. “I think he’s going to be in pretty good shape,” said Wicker, who is expected to chair the Senate Armed Services Committee in the next Congress. Republican senators' careful words, and their early reluctance to publicly question Trump's picks, illustrated not only their fear of retribution from the incoming president but also some of their hopes that the confirmation process can proceed normally, with proper vetting and background checks that could potentially disqualify problematic nominees earlier. Gaetz withdrew after meeting with senators on Wednesday. Sen. Thom Tillis said Gaetz was “in a pressure cooker” when he decided to withdraw, but suggested that it would have little bearing on Trump’s other nominees. “Transactions — one at a time,” he said. As the Hegseth nomination proceeds, Republicans also appear to be betting that they won't face much backlash for publicly setting aside the allegations of sexual misconduct — especially after Trump won election after being found liable for sexual abuse last year. Hegseth held a round of private meetings alongside incoming Vice President JD Vance on Thursday in an attempt to shore up support and told reporters afterward: “The matter was fully investigated and I was completely cleared, and that’s where I’m gonna leave it.” A 22-page police report report made public late Wednesday offered the first detailed account of the allegations against him. A woman told police that she was sexually assaulted in 2017 by Hegseth after he took her phone, blocked the door to a California hotel room and refused to let her leave. The report cited police interviews with the alleged victim, a nurse who treated her, a hotel staffer, another woman at the event and Hegseth. Hegseth’s lawyer, Timothy Palatore, said the incident was “fully investigated and police found the allegations to be false.” Hegseth paid the woman in 2023 as part of a confidential settlement to head off the threat of what he described as a baseless lawsuit, Palatore has said. Wicker played down the allegations against Hegseth, a former Fox News host, saying that “since no charges were brought from the authorities, we only have press reports.” Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., said after his meeting with Hegseth that he "shared with him the fact that I was saddened by the attacks that are coming his way.” Hagerty dismissed the allegations as “a he-said, she-said thing” and called it a “shame” that they were being raised at all. The senator said attention should instead be focused on the Defense Department that Hegseth would head. It's one of the most complex parts of the federal government with more than 3 million employees, including military service members and civilians. Sexual assault has been a persistent problem in the military, though Pentagon officials have been cautiously optimistic they are seeing a decline in reported sexual assaults among active-duty service members and the military academies. Wyoming Sen. John Barrasso, who will be the No. 2 Republican in the Senate next year, said after his meeting with Hegseth that the nominee is a strong candidate who “pledged that the Pentagon will focus on strength and hard power – not the current administration’s woke political agenda.” Senate Republicans are under pressure to hold hearings once they take office in January and confirm nominees as soon as Trump is inaugurated, despite questions about whether Trump’s choices will be properly screened or if some, like Hegseth, have enough experience for the job. Senate Armed Services Chairman Jack Reed, who will be the top Democrat on the panel next year, said the reports on Hegseth “emphasized the need for a thorough investigation by the FBI on the background of all the nominees.” It takes a simple majority to approve Cabinet nominations, meaning that if Democrats all opposed a nominee, four Republican senators would also have to defect for any Trump choice to be defeated. Trump has made clear he’s willing to put maximum pressure on Senate Republicans to give him the nominees he wants – even suggesting at one point that they allow him to just appoint his nominees with no Senate votes. But senators insist, for now, that they are not giving up their constitutional power to have a say. “The president has the right to make the nominations that he sees fit, but the Senate also has a responsibility for advice and consent,” said Republican Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota. In the case of Gaetz, he said, “I think there was advice offered rather than consent.” Mary Clare Jalonick, Stephen Groves And Kevin Freking, The Associated Press

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Kobe Sanders tied a season high with 27 points as Nevada claimed fifth place in the Charleston Classic with a 90-78 victory over Oklahoma State Sunday afternoon in South Carolina. Sanders helped the Wolfpack (6-1) earn a second win following one-possession games against Vanderbilt and VCU. After hitting the decisive 3-pointer with five seconds left in Friday's 64-61 win over VCU, Sanders made 7 of 10 shots, hit three 3s and sank 10 of 13 free throws Sunday. Nick Davidson added 223 points as Nevada led by as many as 19 and shot 58.9 percent. Brandon Love contributed 11 on 5-of-5 shooting as the Wolfpack scored 46 points in the paint and scored at least 85 for the fourth time this season. Marchelus Avery led the Cowboys (4-2) with 15 points and Arturo Dean added 13. Robert Jennings and Abou Ousmane added 11 apiece but leading scorer Bryce Thompson was held to seven points on 1-of-9 shooting as Oklahoma State shot 42 percent and 73.2 percent (30-of-41) at the line. After Avery's 3 forged a 12-12 tie with 13:41 remaining, Nevada gradually gained separation. The Wolfpack took a 24-15 lead on Chuck Bailey's jumper in the paint with 8:28 left but the Cowboys inched back, getting within 33-31 on a dunk by Avery with 4:11 left. Another Bailey jumper staked Nevada to a 40-33 lead by halftime. Nevada began pulling away early in the second half as it scored eight in a row for a 52-40 lead on a basket by Love with 16:44 left. A 3 by Sanders opened a 62-43 lead with 14:06 remaining before Oklahoma State charged back. After Nevada made eight straight shots, the Cowboys countered with 11 straight points and trailed 62-54 with 11:19 left on a 3-pointer by Avery. Thompson made his first basket by sinking a jumper with 10:37 left to get Oklahoma State within 64-56 left, and Keller's triple cut the margin to 70-64 nearly three minutes later. The Cowboys were within 78-72 on a basket by Avery with 3:56 remaining, but he fouled out about a minute later and the Wolfpack outscored Oklahoma State 12-6 the rest of the way as Sanders sank five free throws. --Field Level Media

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Eknath Shinde Leads Shiv Sena to VictoryAwareness session on education system held Rawalpindi:An awareness session was held here on Tuesday at Women University Rawalpindi, Sixth Road, under the auspices of the Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (BISE) and Punjab's Cantab Publishers, regarding the transition of exams in Punjab to a conceptual examination model. Punjab Education Minister Rana Sikander Hayat graced the event as the chief guest. The session was attended by Chairman BISE Rawalpindi Muhammad Adnan, Chairman Lahore Board Mian Zahid, Chairman HEC Dr. Mukhtar Ahmed, Secretary Higher Education Dr. Farrukh Naveed, Vice-Chancellor Women University Rawalpindi, CEO Education Rawalpindi Amanullah Khan, Controller of Examinations Rawalpindi Board Tanveer Asghar, Professor Shazia Naeem, Dr. Naeem, vice-chancellors of other universities and, teachers, and a large number of distinguished guests. Dr. Mukhtar Ahmed emphasised the importance of proper education and training for students to guide them in the right direction. Professor Shazia Naeem stated that Pakistani children are not lacking in talent; however, instead of turning them into rote learners, we need to equip them to face new technologies through conceptual learning. Dr. Naeem highlighted that there is no shortage of opportunities in Pakistan. While governments create policies, their implementation often lags behind. He stressed the vital role of teachers, as they bear the significant responsibility of educating and training students. Without proper training for teachers, students cannot be guided effectively. He further added that the education system needs to transition matriculation to O-level and intermediate to A-level standards, emphasising the need for changes in examinations. Teachers are tasked with shaping the nation, and the curriculum is the core of any institution. Dr. Naeem stated that we need children equipped with modern technology and able to benefit from it. The current education system must change, as it does not prepare children for self-reliance. This is the era of computers, where robots have started to take over many tasks. He also referenced Lord Macaulay's examination methods, where questions were based on critical thinking, contrasting them with the lack of such practices in current education. Despite having a comprehensive National Education Policy, implementation is hindered by the monopoly of the textbook board. Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz and Education Minister Sikander Hayat are seriously working on introducing conceptual exams for students and have established a task force for this purpose. Conceptual learning, they believe, will enable children to compete in modern technology. The Education Minister announced that the government is launching a teacher training program and highlighted the need for practical learning. He stated that school and college heads will be empowered and all issues in the education department will be resolved within the next three months. Collaboration with Google is also underway to transform the system. Only education, he said, can produce good citizens and good human beings.Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee should resign, demands BJP's Suvendu AdhikariDeVito, Giants Lifeless in Week 12 Loss

Startup with a Lincoln connection is automating cattle feedingIt’s embarrassing that it took a guy from New York to teach me a cool piece of ecological history in a local spot I’ve been to multiple times. And via YouTube, no less – egad! The spot is Dublin Pond, also called Dublin Lake, which is halfway between Peterborough and Keene perfect for casual kayaking. The New Yorker, from Binghamton not the Big Apple, is named Caelan Kelley with a one-man YouTube channel called Atlas Pro . And the biological history involves the silver trout, an almost-certainly-extinct species that I had never heard of. I'm not alone in my ignorance, it seems. One comment under his video is even from a ranger at Monadnock State Park who says the story of the silver trout was news to them. As part of his research, Kelley went to Christine Lake near Groveton, one of two places where this species was once known to exist. “I talked to people at Christine Lake and none of them knew what I was talking about. Not a single person knew about the silver trout, and they were old-timers,” Kelley told me. So how did Kelley learn about it? From an earlier video. The Atlas Pro channel holds more than 120 of his videos that he has made about “geography, geology, biology, and ecology” over five years, with titles ranging from “Is there a rainforest in West Virginia?” to “Antibiotic resistance” to “Why species don’t exist.” The silver trout video is a sort of spin-off from earlier work on extinct North American species. As Kelley explained it, he hopes to do a video about every one of them and decided to start with an example a few hours from home, the silver trout. The last confirmed sighting of this smaller relative of the brook trout was in Dublin Pond in 1930, so that’s where he headed. Before we get to that search, a word about his excellent video, which runs just over an hour. I say excellent both because of content and appearance. Article continues after... Cross|Word Flipart Typeshift SpellTower Really Bad Chess It could easily have been made by a documentary team with a tight script, good pacing and plenty of research, presented with production values that WMUR-TV would be happy to emulate. Yet Kelley, 27, who has a degree in environmental science rather than anything in digital production, says he did the whole thing himself using standard software packages: the drone shots, the cool animations, the underwater videos, the voice-overs and the studio shots of him talking. For those of us who remember splicing Super-8 film (am I dating myself?) it’s a startling example of what modern video technology can do. It’s also an example of modern video journalism from a business standpoint. Kelley says he started the channel in college and it has produced his only income since he graduated via YouTube’s ad algorithms plus donations via platforms like Patreon. No media company or support staff are involved. I am used to hearing about financial success from solo video channels involving porn or fake outrage and hate speech. Seeing it happen with local ecology and history is a very pleasant surprise. Now back to the ecology. The silver trout was never numerous or widespread, only found in two New Hampshire ponds, but it was sufficiently recognized that there was debate a century ago whether it was a species or not. Nonetheless, by 1939, Kelley reported, New Hampshire Fish and Game surveyed the Connecticut River watershed without finding a single one. What happened? With help from Milo Rossi, another environmental-focused YouTuber, Kelley explores the question, starting with why silver trout never seemed to exist outside a couple of small, separated ponds. One possible scenario: They were stranded in those ponds when huge Ice Age lakes disappeared as the glaciers retreated, and isolation turned them into a separate species. He also discusses why the silver trout disappeared. Reasons include overfishing once Europeans arrived – the video includes eye-popping details of backing a truck into the lake and loading up the bed with fish – plus competition from introduced species such as the rainbow trout and bass. Those stresses could easily have been fatal to a species that existed only in small, isolated populations. There’s also the possibility that silver trout cross-bred with other types of trout, meaning its DNA may lurk in modern fish even if the species is gone. The video ends with a bit of philosophizing as Kelley walks among some lake-bottom boulders that exactly match descriptions of silver trout spawning areas from a century ago. “There’s something about seeing a very real and tangible space where an extinct animal once lived and reproduced ... (which) made this seem very real. As if I was looking at the ruins of someone’s old home that had burned down,” he mused. More importantly, Kelley asked in the video, could the fish still be lurking somewhere in the waters of New Hampshire? Spoiler alert: Not that he could find in a few days of paddling and wading and filming, although his efforts are well worth watching: “To make it rewarding you have to see the failures, too.” Kelley says the real hope is that the video will be a spur for others. “I’m just some guy with a GoPro ... one person with a very limited set of skills,” he told viewers in the video. “Now that you too know exactly where and when to find this fish, more people can take part in trying to find silver trout.” Even if you don’t find the silver trout – and you probably won’t – it’s a great excuse to get out on the water. And if you do find something, I want to hear about it! David Brooks can be reached at dbrooks@cmonitor.com

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