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18 votes
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Planning is GREAT: Britain was supposed to be the most prepared country in the world. Then an unexpected enemy arrived
6 votes -
‘No Time To Die’ delayed to Easter weekend 2021 as pandemic takes grip at box office
4 votes -
New open-source test tube rack helps COVID-19 testing lab tame thousands of samples
7 votes -
Nobel Prizes to go ahead amid pandemic – less razzmatazz, with this year's winners missing out on the swanky gala in Stockholm surrounded by royalty and Sweden's glitterati
7 votes -
Japanese sex business operator sues state over virus cash handout snub
7 votes -
Mortality rates from COVID-19 are lower in unionized nursing homes
11 votes -
How the pandemic forced mental health care to change for the better
6 votes -
What factors have made Germany relatively successful in managing the coronavirus crisis?
4 votes -
As the first major blockbuster to release since the start of the pandemic, Tenet opens to $20 million at US box office and nears $150 million internationally
15 votes -
Technology has been promising the dream of a cocooned future, and our pandemic isolation is giving us the rare opportunity to see where this road leads
12 votes -
United States House subcommittee releases coronavirus task force reports kept secret by the White House
18 votes -
Meet the “menu engineers” helping restaurants retool during the pandemic
7 votes -
Coronavirus: France sees 'exponential rise' in cases
7 votes -
In the midst of the pandemic, loneliness has leveled out
4 votes -
How to think like an epidemiologist
6 votes -
America is following disastrous Trump advice to slow down testing
10 votes -
The endgame of the Olympics: What if the Olympic Games never come back?
9 votes -
RV life booms during the pandemic
9 votes -
The workforce is about to change dramatically
16 votes -
Coronavirus: Iran cover-up of deaths revealed by data leak
13 votes -
Melbourne placed under stage four coronavirus lockdown, stage three for rest of Victoria, as State of Disaster declared
17 votes -
Canadian drivers with US licence plates harassed by fellow Canadians
9 votes -
Why has the Republican response to the pandemic in the USA been so mind-bogglingly disastrous?
11 votes -
A risky bet by America’s mall owners: Plucking retailers out of bankruptcy to salvage a pandemic-hit industry
7 votes -
A second coronavirus death surge is coming
11 votes -
How well did sci-fi predict the details of this pandemic?
One of the favorite subjects of horror sci-fi — right up there with aliens, deadly asteroids and the machines taking over — has always been the deadly pandemic. One of the things I'm surprised at,...
One of the favorite subjects of horror sci-fi — right up there with aliens, deadly asteroids and the machines taking over — has always been the deadly pandemic.
One of the things I'm surprised at, is how close so many of those old sci-fi books and movies were. No, there are no zombies (...yet), no enraged psycho-killer chimps ... but on so many of the basics — how it spreads, the incredibly widespread piles of misinformation, all the ancillary political BS, right along with the courageous healthcare workers and medical researchers out there on the front lines, battling for a cure before it's too late ...
and etc.
How about a discussion thread to compare and contrast what the sci-fi got right, and wrong?
ETA: Alternatively, if we've already had this conversation and I just missed it, somebody please point me in the right direction, and then never mind about this thread?
11 votes -
US Coronavirus data has already disappeared after Donald Trump administration shifted control from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
6 votes -
Sydney's Crossroads Hotel COVID-19 cluster genomically linked to Melbourne outbreak
4 votes -
Hawaii grapples with Great Depression-level unemployment as tourism plummets
21 votes -
Sweden has become the world’s cautionary tale
24 votes -
Victoria reimposes lockdowns on Greater Melbourne region plus Mitchell Shire as coronavirus cases rise by record amount
9 votes -
Do Americans understand how badly they’re doing?
28 votes -
People complain that going to the shore is a careless act during a pandemic, but the science so far suggests otherwise
7 votes -
Study finds hydroxychloroquine may have boosted survival, but other researchers have doubts
5 votes -
The tyranny of the mask?
8 votes -
How hotel quarantine let COVID-19 out of the bag in Victoria
4 votes -
COVID-19 pandemic timeline—How the coronavirus started, spread and stalled life in New Zealand
3 votes -
Imagine if the National Transportation Safety Board investigated America’s response to the coronavirus pandemic
9 votes -
Melbourne's local coronavirus lockdown begins with 300,000 people facing tighter restrictions in Victorian capital
5 votes -
Into the fog: How Britain lost track of the coronavirus
6 votes -
The rapid sharing of pandemic research shows there is a better way to filter good science from bad
7 votes -
Some New Zealanders find a harsh homecoming amid concern about importing coronavirus after months of lockdown sacrifice by ‘team of five million’
12 votes -
How the USA’s massive failure to close the digital divide got exposed by the coronavirus
5 votes -
The pandemic’s worst-case scenario is unfolding in Brazil
9 votes -
Australian Defence Force to send 1,000 personnel to assist Victoria in coronavirus response
5 votes -
Victoria records Australia's first coronavirus death in over a month, as cases in Vic rise by twenty yesterday and the state's reproduction number climbs to 2.5
8 votes -
How the coronavirus could reshape architecture
6 votes -
Why NASA's Mars Perseverance rover is essential despite the coronavirus pandemic
4 votes -
Victoria will bring back tougher coronavirus restrictions, limiting gatherings in homes to five people, in a bid to address a recent spike in case numbers
News article: Victoria will bring back tougher coronavirus restrictions, limiting gatherings in homes to five people, in a bid to address a recent spike in case numbers. Statement from Victoria's...
Statement from Victoria's Premier:
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"around half of [Victoria's] cases since the end of April have come from transmission inside someone’s home."
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"From 11:59pm on Sunday, the number of visitors you can have at your home will reduce to five."
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"Outside the home, families and friends can meet in groups up to ten."
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"restaurants, pubs, auction halls, community halls, libraries, museums and places of worship will all stay at a maximum of 20 people in any one space until 12 July."
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"Businesses that were set to open on Monday like gyms, cinemas, theatres and TABs can do so – but again, only with a maximum of 20."
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"Community sport for kids and non-contact competition for adults can proceed as planned."
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"those who can work from home [should] continue to do so at least until 31 July."
9 votes -