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Friday, July 31, 2020

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Anchorage to enter “Four Week Reset” - KTUU

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Mayor Ethan Berkowitz has ordered Anchorage to enter what he described as a “battening down” phase, an effort meant to try to slow the spread of COVID-19, cases of which have risen sharply in Anchorage during the month of July.

Starting Aug. 3rd, bars and restaurants will be limited to take-out service only. Dine-in service will not be allowed. Mayor Berkowitz also announced Anchorage School District schools will not take place in classrooms and will be online for the first quarter.

Also, beginning Friday, July 31st, Anchorage Mayor Ethan Berkowitz has ordered masks or face coverings to be worn in more settings than previously required, including outdoor gatherings.

The announcement comes after Anchorage experienced what municipal Health Director Natasha Pineda described as the worst week yet for COVID-19 cases in the city.

In the month of July, 1,576 cases were detected among Anchorage residents, Pineda said during a noon-time press conference. Of those, 494 are considered recovered, while 1,088 cases remained active, Pineda said.

“We currently have 21 people actively hospitalized,” added Municipal Manager Bill Falsey.

The announcement comes amid an ongoing rise in COVID-19 cases and concerns over the potential for Anchorage’s hospital systems to become overwhelmed. Anchorage is a medical hub for critical cases statewide, and it is not uncommon for other communities to send patients in need of more critical care to the state’s largest city.

“The trend lines are not looking good,” Falsey said, explaining that one model shows that ICU bed capacity could be overwhelmed by September 17th. “This is not a path that we want to stay on,” he said.

“We have flattened the curve and we can do it again,” Berkowitz said.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Happening Now: Mayor Ethan Berkowitz to give COVID-19 community update

Posted by Channel 2 News, KTUU.com on Friday, July 31, 2020

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Coronavirus California: state sees record number of deaths on four separate days - The Guardian

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Coronavirus California: state sees record number of deaths on four separate days  The Guardian

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Four Pa. Republican lawmakers sign letter opposing federal bailout of states - PennLive

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Four Pennsylvania House Republicans have signed on to a national letter opposing a federal “bailout” of states, saying it would contribute to some states’ lack of fiscal discipline.

The letter, signed by over 200 legislators from states across the country, is circulating while the White House and Congress attempt to broker a second deal regarding federal coronavirus relief funding.

Three major sticking points to any potential deal include a second round of stimulus funding for all Americans, additional federal unemployment funding — which was reported to be significantly cut in advance of the bill’s introduction — and providing aid to states whose budgets were rocked by massive job losses and declines in tax revenue brought by the pandemic.

“While the economy has produced record revenues in recent years, sadly, states have also continued to accumulate massive amounts of debt and unfunded financial liabilities,” the letter reads. “A federal bailout would only encourage this cycle of debt and spending to continue. It would also send the wrong message to states that have made difficult spending choices and practiced fiscal discipline.”

Back home, Pennsylvania is dealing with a nearly $5 billion budget shortfall of its own. The state passed a temporary five-month budget in May, which will expire in November.

But that didn’t stop Rep. Cris Dush, R-Jefferson and Indiana counties, from signing on to the letter.

“There are states which have made financially prudent decisions that have allowed them to be in a position to weather the COVID situation on a much firmer foundation than those which have not,” Dush said.

“There are also states which appear to be using the situation to bail themselves out of the fiscal hole they had dug for themselves with regard to their public sector pension programs going back decades. As the letter indicates, I’m not one who believes in rewarding bad behavior.”

Reps. Frank Ryan, R-Lebanon County; Dawn Keefer, R-York County; and Gary Day, R-Berks County, also signed the letter.

But Rep. Matthew Bradford of Montgomery County, the ranking Democratic member on the House Appropriations Committee, blasted the move by some House Republicans as “callous and irresponsible.” He said the state’s “dire financial situation cannot be addressed without relief from the federal government.”

The letter “only elevates severe right-wing ideology over support for our first responders, educators, small business owners and public health workers, who have been life-sustaining and life-saving throughout this pandemic,” Bradford said.

Lyndsay Kensinger, a spokeswoman for Gov. Tom Wolf, said the four Pennsylvania signatories “have made it clear that they are in favor of cuts to services in Pennsylvania.”

Kensinger said Pennsylvania needs Sens. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., and Bob Casey, D-Pa., to “work across the aisle,” cut through partisanship and pass a federal stimulus bill that funds programs and helps the state and its counties and localities “fill budget holes caused by this crisis.”

“We need Republican leadership in the United States Senate to get serious about helping out the communities most affected by this global pandemic,” Kensinger said. “If they are not able to do this, we will likely see drastic cuts to the programs our citizens need the most caused by the partisan inaction that has been allowed to go on for too long now.”

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Lake Central to start school with four weeks of elearning - Chicago Tribune

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Lake Central to start school with four weeks of elearning  Chicago Tribune

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Four more Utahns die from COVID-19, and another 500 cases are reported - Salt Lake Tribune

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Editor’s note: The Salt Lake Tribune is providing free access to critical stories about the coronavirus. Sign up for our Top Stories newsletter, sent to your inbox every weekday morning. To support journalism like this, please donate or become a subscriber.

Another 500 Utahns have tested positive for COVID-19, the Utah Department of Health reported Friday — taking the rolling seven-day average well below the target of 500 that Gov. Gary Herbert set earlier this month.

Four more Utahns have died from COVID-19, UDOH reported — bringing the state’s overall death toll from the virus to 304.

Two of the people whose deaths were reported are Salt Lake County men, between the ages of 65 and 84, who were living in long-term care facilities. UDOH also reported the deaths of a Cache County man, also between 65 and 84 and living in long-term care, and a San Juan County woman, between 65 and 84, who was hospitalized at the time of her death.

Friday’s 500 new cases brings the state’s overall case count to 40,196.

The rolling seven-day average — which public-health experts use to gauge trends — was down to 457 cases per day on Friday. A week ago, the average was up to 627 cases per day. Three weeks ago, when the rate was at 583 per day, Herbert issued a challenge to Utahns to get the rate below 500 by Aug. 1, which is Saturday.

The state reported 4,543 new tests performed in 24 hours, bringing the number of Utahns tested since the pandemic began to 528,910. The rolling seven-day average of positive lab tests is at 9.9%

In the last seven days, the state has averaged 4,977 tests per day, well below the 6,609 tests per day the week before. State officials have suggested the Pioneer Day holiday, on July 24, may be one reason fewer Utahns got tested this week.

But the lull in testing appeared to continue through the week in Farmington, where a testing center at a University of Utah clinic drew scant traffic on Friday morning.

“Usually it’s a whole line,” said Nikki Gilmore, senior nursing director of ambulatory care for U. clinics, as she gestured toward the empty driveway near the testing tents. Gilmore estimated tests at the four U. sites were down 10% to 15% this week. The decline, she said, is “not crazy huge, but it’s noticeable.”

Gilmore noted that previous holidays have preceded testing lulls, followed by a spike after about a week.

“It’s just the roller coaster of COVID,” she said.

There are 213 people now hospitalized with COVID-19, UDOH reported. That includes 31 people who entered the hospital in a day. The total number of hospitalizations in Utah from COVID-19 is now 2,377.

As of Friday, the state considers 28,130 people “recovered” from COVID-19 — which, by health experts’ definition, means they are still alive at least three weeks after being diagnosed with the disease.

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Sound Advice: Office microphone works great at home, too - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Q: What do you recommend for a portable speakerphone accessory? I have been looking at the Jabra 710, but I would like to know if you have any other recommendations.

A: In addition to the Jabra 710, I would consider the Anker PowerConf (anker.com). It has received much critical acclaim as of late, and after trying it, I can see why. It is an exceptional speakerphone accessory as well as a standout value.

As you might conclude from the name, PowerConf is a contraction of Power Conference, and it is designed to excel in a conference environment. It has six microphones in a 360-degree array as well as innovative sound processing to eliminate echoes and improve voice clarity at both ends of the line. Originally marketed to offices, it offers a lot of value to the individual user, as well. I have found it to be a great improvement over my MacBook Pro audio when making Zoom calls. If you are working remotely, it is definitely something you will appreciate.

The PowerConf works via Bluetooth or a USB connection and has a battery with 24 hours of run time. Normally $129, it currently is only $99, making it less than one-third the price of the $314 Jabra 710 despite delivering similarly outstanding performance.

Toeing the line

Q: My kids bought me a JBL Flip 5 speaker, and I love the sound. Music played through it sounds far better than the speakers attached to my desktop PC. Is it possible to connect it to my PC?

A: This is very easy to do with most portable speakers. They have an auxiliary input that accepts a "line level" signal, which is found in pretty much every electrical device. Blu-ray and DVD players, CD players and VCRs all send a line level signal from their red/white RCA audio outputs. Computers, cellphones and tablets send line level signals from their audio outputs or headphone connections.

If you have a turntable with a built-in phono preamp, you probably will see a switch with two settings, "phono" and "line." The phono setting delivers the unaltered signal from the phono cartridge, which must be used with a phono preamp or the phono input of a receiver or amplifier. The "line" setting runs the electrical signal from the cartridge through the internal phono preamp, creating a line level signal that can be used with almost anything, including a portable speaker.

The line level audio signal is universal. If you use an RCA-to-miniplug cable, you can connect the audio outputs of a VCR, CD player or camcorder to a portable speaker. You can use a miniplug-to-miniplug cable to connect a computer to a portable speaker. If your turntable has an internal preamp with a line setting, you can set it to "line" and connect the turntable to a portable speaker.

All that being said, your JBL speaker is the rare exception that doesn't have an auxiliary input. But you still can use it via Bluetooth. If your computer doesn't have Bluetooth, you can connect a $25 Bluetooth transmitter to your computer audio output, and it will create a wireless signal compatible with the Flip 5.

Send questions to Don Lindich at donlindich@gmail.com. Get recommendations and read past columns at soundadvicenews.com.

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Browns cut four to drop to 80 players - Yahoo Sports

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Browns head coach Kevin Stefanski said on Thursday that the team will work in split squads for strength and conditioning work next week, but they won’t be over the 80-player limit when that work begins unless they sign some new players.

The Browns announced four cuts on Friday that drop them to that 80-players limit. The change from 90 to 80 players was made as part of the modifications to the Collective Bargaining Agreement negotiated by the NFL and NFLPA. Teams can have more than 80 players through August 16 as long as they work in split squads.

Wide receiver Tony Brown, linebacker Jermaine Grace, defensive end George Obinna and defensive tackle Justin Zimmer were the players dropped from the roster. The Zimmer move came was flagged with a non-football injury tag.

Zimmer played 30 snaps on defense last season and Grace played in 12 games for the Falcons while the other two players were undrafted free agent signings in Cleveland this offseason.

Browns cut four to drop to 80 players originally appeared on Pro Football Talk

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Four-For-Four: Perfect Day At The Plate For FAANGs As Apple, Amazon, Facebook Up Big Early - Benzinga

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 Ladies and gentlemen, the FAANGs have left the building.

It’s the last day of the month and the biggest earnings week of the quarter is wrapping up. Yesterday’s reports from the FAANGs mean all five are out of the way, and “blowout” is the word many analysts are using to describe Thursday’s results. Let’s face it: The message they sent was a very solid one for the market. Let’s see if the rest of Wall Street can build on their momentum. 

We’ll discuss the FAANGs in a minute, but first some new business. Stocks had a slightly higher tone in the pre-opening hours, with Nasdaq looking strongest thanks, of course, to the FAANGs. Apple Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL) rose more than 7% ahead of the bell, easily climbing above that $400 level it was banging its head against recently. Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) climbed 6%, and so did Facebook Inc (NASDAQ: FB). Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ: GOOGL) (NASDAQ: GOOG) was the laggard, down slightly. Overall, stocks faded a bit into the open. 

All the other indicators seem stuck in their usual modes, with gold up again and on the verge of testing $2,000 an ounce and 10-year Treasury yields down again and below 0.54%—the lowest level since March and just about the lowest ever. Crude keeps bouncing off of $40 a barrel.

There are some fresh earnings this morning, including a better than expected quarter from Caterpillar Inc (NYSE: CAT), whose shares rose 1% in pre-market trading. Merck & Co, Inc. (NYSE: MRK) is also up nicely in the pre-market hours after surpassing expectations and raising guidance.

It’s a different story in the oil patch, though, as both Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX) and ExxonMobil Corporation (NYSE: XOM) shares fell in the pre-market after reporting wider than expected losses. It was basically a foregone conclusion heading into earnings season that oil services were going to take it on the chin, but this morning’s punch still left quite a mark. 

An inflation reading today showed Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) prices slightly up in June, but not more than expected. The headline number rose 0.4% and core rose 0.2%. The Fed has said inflation isn’t a major concern right now. 

There’s one more data point before the weekend, as the University of Michigan sentiment report is due soon after the open. Consumer confidence earlier this week was below analysts’ expectations, and hopes aren’t too high for this sentiment data, either. 

Remember that today is the deadline for Congress to act on some sort of stimulus plan before the old one runs out, and The Wall Street Journal headline today says the recent virus surge appears to have slowed consumer spending in recent weeks. Not good.

 FAANGs Go Four-for-Four

After an earnings barrage like last night, where do we even start?

Well, maybe by saying things look awfully healthy in the FAANG universe despite the horrendous Q2 the U.S. economy just suffered. AAPL, GOOGL, FB, and AMZN all probably got an assist to some extent from the stay-at home economy, but that’s not the only reason they’re advancing. Credit also goes to strong management teams who just proved their mettle in a crisis. 

The FAANG earnings are still the main focus as we start the new day, with three of the four that reported yesterday up ahead of the bell. Going in, there was fear that they’d suffer the “Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT)” syndrome—rising ahead of earnings on big expectations and then getting pushed down after the results—but they still delivered. 

You already know the main numbers—all four companies beat analysts’ expectations—so there’s no reason to repeat them all here. A few takeaways that really stuck out, however, were AAPL’s much better than expected iPhone sales in the June quarter, the same company’s success growing its business in Greater China, AMZN’s eye-popping bottom line beat, and a strong cloud performance from GOOGL.

It’s also interesting to see AAPL announce a four-four-one stock split, something that doesn’t happen too often these days. Maybe it’s the start of a trend. One published report did say that AAPL, once split, will go from first in the Dow Jones Industrial Average to 16th in price, which may slow the pace of the $DJI’s gains slightly. So that could be one side effect. 

There are some holes you could poke. AAPL didn’t share guidance for the current quarter, and GOOGL’s revenue fell for the first time in history. Also, AMZN’s closely watched Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud platform didn’t live up to analysts’ quarterly growth expectations. 

That’s being picky, though, in a quarter that turned into a blowout basically across the board for all four. Shares of three of them rose 1% to 5% in post-market trading immediately after the companies reported, with GOOGL the only one getting punished at all.

So What Risks do FAANGs Face?

So can these stocks—which together compose a pretty decent chunk of the S&P 500 Index’s valuation—continue to draw strength? It’s hard to bet against them based on their recent history and the way they’ve dominated the stay-at-home economy.

One argument against the bull thesis, maybe, is valuations. Even AAPL, traditionally a stock that traded on the low end of the valuation chain, is priced at around 30 times forward earnings projections. AMZN, unlike AAPL, has never been cheap and isn’t now, by any stretch of the imagination. 

Also, the “pull forward” effect, especially on device sales for AAPL, might be a factor in months to come. People snapped up Macs and iPads in the old quarter as businesses and schools sent workers and students home. How many more of these devices can they buy now? Some say the picture actually looks decent going forward in part because with kids at home, schools and parents will have to buy each child a device, rather than having kids share them at school. 

Meanwhile, sizzling cloud competition might be starting to level growth prospects in that space for individual companies. AMZN could be learning that up close and personal, judging from the AWS miss. Also, the soft broader economy could be hurting cloud demand from some sectors, like travel.

The weak economy could also start weighing more on advertising demand, with possible ramifications for FB and GOOGL. However, as one analyst pointed out Thursday on CNBC, GOOGL’s search platform is pretty horizontal, meaning it embraces most sectors around the world. If one sector is hurting, all the others don’t necessarily see the impact and stop spending on ads. GOOGL executives sounded cautiously optimistic on their call. 

In Other News...

Turning away from the FAANGs, the rest of the market had a weird day yesterday. The COMP definitely turned things around big time, rising about 200 points from its morning lows to its afternoon highs. The $DJI never got back on its feet after getting knocked down early on, though it did finish off its lows. 

Those economic numbers Thursday morning looked lousy, no question, and had a lot to do with the market’s early struggles. Most of us probably hope we’ll never see a gross domestic product (GDP) figure like that again, as the economy tanked at worse than a 30% annual rate in Q2. 

The question now is what’s next on the GDP front, and whether companies and consumers can expect better times ahead. The New York Fed’s “Nowcast” statistical model sees Q3 growth at a very nice 13.3%. That’s something investors should consider keeping an eye on, especially with the Fed on Wednesday citing some slowdown in the recovery. Will GDP estimates start to drop? We can only wait and watch. 

It’s tempting to say people aren’t seeing the forest for the trees, focusing so much on strong earnings from the FAANGs. That’s possible, but other major companies also had some good results yesterday. Some of the positive news came from Procter & Gamble (PG), Qualcomm (QCOM), PayPal (PYPL), and UPS (UPS). 

CHART OF THE DAY: FAANGS DELIVER A TROUNCING: It’s not even close. Through yesterday’s session, just before four of the “FAANGs” reported outstanding earnings, the FAANGs (NYFANG—candlestick) were already trouncing the S&P 500 Index (SPX—purple line) year to date. Can this huge divergence continue? Data Sources: NYSE, S&P Dow Jones Indices. Chart source: The thinkorswim® platform from TD Ameritrade. For illustrative purposes only. Past performance does not guarantee future results.  

A Couple More AAPL Slices: One of the folks with a great understanding of the Tech sector is Angelo Zino, from investment research firm CFRA. Speaking on our media affiliate, the *TD Ameritrade Network, late yesterday, Zino called AAPL earnings “as good as you could have hoped for,” with the exception of their lack of guidance. He called iPad and Mac sales, “absolutely phenomenal,” though he added it’s unclear if the heavy sales pace for those products could continue.

“Some of the June quarter strength is not sustainable,” because it reflected the initial burst of stay-at-home sales, Zino said. He expects “all eyes” to be on services in coming quarters, with wearables more of a factor, too. He also thinks iPhone sales could accelerate with the introduction of 5G, and noted that earnings comparables starting in the March quarter are going to look positive. 

Is Value Gaining Momentum? Over the last few weeks, we’ve talked a lot about the possible shift toward value stocks and away from “momentum” ones like the mega-techs. That trend didn’t really show up early this week, as Tech stocks ran away with the ball on Monday. When Tech proceeded to lose ground Tuesday the value names didn’t show up to play. Energy and Financials remained under pressure amid weak bond yields and falling crude prices, while small-caps also didn’t find much of a bid. Still, value has made up some ground on the charts vs. momentum this month. 

Going into the last session of July, some parts of the market that analysts have generally defined as being “value”—like Financials, Energy, and small-caps—had advanced 8%, 3% and 5%, respectively, vs. big-tech’s 5% move higher over the course of the month. 

What the Tech? It’s been a while since we had a technical discussion. After making a new post-COVID intraday high near 3280 last week, the SPX has settled back below 3250, and remains kind of range-bound. There really hasn’t been a lot of willingness to try and re-test the February highs above 3300. At the same time, the Fed’s willingness to use all its tools, as it basically said this week, probably puts a decent floor under the SPX at around 3000, where it bottomed and then bounced last month.

There were a couple of scary days for the market in June, but that hasn’t repeated itself. Instead, the markets seem to be grinding their way slowly higher, but without much enthusiasm from buyers above current levels. CFRA says it sees near-term SPX support at 3212 and below that at 3124. The index needs to stay above 3124 to keep the positive momentum going, CFRA said. CFRA added that major indices continue to “oscillate back and forth without gaining much momentum in either direction.” Perfectly put.

TD Ameritrade® commentary for educational purposes only. Member SIPC.

Photo by Sara Kurfeß on Unsplash

© 2020 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

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The sound of trains never grows old - Argus Leader

While I am still lying in bed, I hear the trains-a-coming, and quite enjoy their sounds because they are connected to many of my memories.

This is a story from a few years ago, but, one that I like and hope you do, too!

We have so many sounds in our community that when we hear them, we know how lucky we are to live in Dell Rapids and can actually “hear” what is going on every day. The sounds from the quarry blasts, the sounds of the train being loaded to haul the rock to many far distances, the sounds of trees being trimmed or cut down and the street cleaners coming by with the big brushes gathering all the debris and hauling it away.

I like the sound of the train best.

The first train that I rode on was the 'Galloping Goose' that would leave Egan every day at 10 a.m. and head to Flandreau, six miles away.

For 20 cents, my girlfriends and I would hop on and take a seat in the First class caboose. We would just get settled in, and then the train would be slowing down for us to get off at Flandreau.

Then the train, which hauled everything like grain, coal, mail, cattle, sheep, and a few passengers, would continue on the trip to Pipestone. From there, after changing it’s direction on the turn table, it would head to Madison.

At about 8:30 p.m., it would be stopping about three miles south of Egan at the junction. That is where teenager Dave would be waiting to join on the trip to Sioux Falls, where it would arrive about 10:30.

Dave would then start to walk to his sister and husband’s home several blocks from the train station, where he would spend a few days. One time the police stopped him because it was past curfew, but, then they were kind enough to drive him to his destination.

One wonderful, warm, sunny day, my girlfriend, Jean, and I decided we should make a picnic lunch and meander down to the pasture where we could sit and have our picnic. In those young years, we didn’t have too many pressuring issues.

We tried not to make eye contact with the cows. We soon heard the train coming, which went right below our pasture about a block away. Bright idea! We decided to run as fast as we could and get under the trestle and watch the bottom of the train as it went over us!

Have you ever sat under a trestle and watched a train from above? The closer it came, of course, the rumble sounded like the whole train would crash in on us. We were both so scared that we couldn’t move, but, actually, I was able to get out from under but could do nothing to help Jean. I was laughing too hard. I don’t know why I laugh when danger is close. I guess it is better than crying!

Like the time I was driving down Cliff Avenue with nonchalant Dave sitting next to me and I didn’t see any lights, nor hear any horn until I was about two feet from the tracks. The train that was coming saw me and pulled the horn as loud as a bomb warning. Fire flew out from my tires from braking as hard as I could, and luckily, stopped just in time to see the conductors wild look on his face.

I said to Dave, “Did you see that train?” He said, “not until I hit my head on the roof of the car!"

Dave and I spent part of our honeymoon on a train going from Omaha to San Diego. Of course, we were very excited until we realized this train was packed with so many servicemen that there were no seats available for us. We had to sit in the aisles on our suitcases (what is now called luggage) most of the way.

We were all stuck in there like sardines in a can. It was hot and miserable, to say the least. I didn’t think that I would ever ride on a train again, but, after two years, Dave had served his duty overseas, and we had a baby!

We were home in Egan for furlough. Then we did take a train again back to San Diego, but, we had a comfortable compartment with plenty of room for a tiny baby.

We were happy!

This train I loved.

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Washington Post: USPS workers sound alarm about new policies that may affect 2020 mail-in voting - CNN

Citing multiple postal workers and union leaders, the Post reported that parts of the country are experiencing at least a two-day delay in receiving mail, including for express mail, as a result of the US Postal Service's new policies.
The current backlog is worsening to the point where workers fear they won't be able to locate all voters' ballots in time for them to be processed, the newspaper reported.
The new procedures for the USPS were laid out in a memo earlier this month and come under the leadership of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a longtime Donald Trump supporter and fundraiser, who stepped into his role in June.
Trump has been a vocal critic of several states' expanding mail-in voting, despite using that option to cast his own ballot. As he currently trails his 2020 rival Joe Biden in the polls, Trump claimed on Thursday that delays processing the mail-in votes would undermine the legitimacy of the November 3 election and suggested delaying it, though the power to set the election date lies with Congress. There is no evidence of widespread voter fraud associated with vote by mail.
In a statement to CNN Thursday, the USPS acknowledged some "temporary service impacts" from the recent changes but disputed concerns that its cost cutting and efficiency measures put in place by DeJoy will interfere with timely delivery of mail-in votes.
"To be clear however, and despite any assertions to the contrary, we are not slowing down Election Mail or any other mail. Instead, we continue to employ a robust and proven process to ensure proper handling of all Election Mail consistent with our standards," USPS spokesperson David Partenheimer said.
The new policies include hours being cut back within the US Postal Service, according to the memo obtained by CNN that shows talking points given to USPS managers across the country on July 10.
According to the memo, overtime, including late trips and extra trips by USPS workers, is no longer authorized or accepted. This is explained as a cost cutting measure that could save the financially struggling USPS around $200 million.
"One aspect of these changes that may be difficult for employees is that, temporarily -- we may see mail left behind or mail on the workroom floor or docks ... which is not typical," reads the memo.
The memo states any mail left behind will be reported with the "root causes" of the delays addressed the next day, with the intention of the volume of delayed mail shrinking over time, but the reality of that remains unclear as the changes are new.
The Washington Post reported that bins of mail otherwise ready for delivery have been left in post offices due to the scheduling and route changes, and letter carriers are sorting more mail themselves, increasing the delivery time. US Rep. Andy Kim of New Jersey last week wrote to DeJoy, saying that his constituents have been experiencing delivery delays for more than three days.
DeJoy said in a statement Monday that the Postal Service is in a "financially unsustainable position" and that the agency needs to "take a fresh look at our operations and make necessary adjustments" to operate efficiently.
Partenheimer said in the statement that any "such impacts will be monitored and temporary as the root causes of any issues will be addressed as necessary and corrected as appropriate."
He went on to say that DeJoy is not beholden to the influence of Trump and that the "notion that the Postmaster General makes decisions concerning the Postal Service at the direction of the President is wholly misplaced and off-base."
The USPS' financial struggles are not new, but the coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated the problem and taken its toll on the agency's employees. Former Postmaster General Megan Brennan had warned the agency would run out of money by September if financial assistance wasn't provided.
On Wednesday, the Treasury Department announced that it reached an agreement with USPS on the "terms and conditions" for $10 billion in the form of loans -- funding the department and President Donald Trump had blocked unless the USPS made reforms.
"While the USPS is able to fund its operating expenses without additional borrowing at this time, we are pleased to have reached an agreement on the material terms and conditions of a loan, should the need arise," Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement.
The union's president, Mark Dimondstein, had previously told CNN that receiving the emergency funding the USPS requested is crucial for postal workers to continue doing their job, including ensuring vote by mail ballots are handled properly.
"If the funding doesn't come through, everything we do, including vote by mail will be much harder," Dimondstein told CNN.

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Four Peaks Brewing Co. to Donate School Supplies to 10000 Teachers This Summer - Brewbound.com

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PHOENIX, AZ – Four Peaks Brewing Co., Arizona’s largest brewery, announced today the 2020 launch of Four Peaks For Teachers, the brewery’s annual fundraiser to support teachers by providing them with free kits full of school supplies.

Created in 2011 by Four Peaks co-founder Jim Scussel, Four Peaks For Teachers was conceived to help reduce the financial burden on teachers in the Southwest, many of whom spend hundreds of dollars on school supplies each year without reimbursement. Using direct donations and funds raised through beer sales, Four Peaks purchases the supplies teachers need most, from scissors and staplers to pencils and paper, and builds kits to hand out for free in multiple cities and states. This year, the brewery’s goal is to distribute 10,000 kits to teachers in Arizona, New Mexico, and Nevada.

“It’s humbling to see how Four Peaks For Teachers has grown to impact more and more teachers over the years,” Scussel says. “But it’s also frustrating that the financial burden on teachers only keeps growing. Teachers have one of the toughest and most important jobs in the country, and it’s hard to believe they’re asked to do that job without the supplies they need. They need support now more than ever. ”

Starting in July, Four Peaks will set aside a portion of sales of its flagship Scottish ale, Kilt Lifter, for the Four Peaks for Teachers program. Customers located outside Four Peaks’ distribution footprint can also make a direct, tax-deductible donation to the program at fourpeaksforteachers.org. In August, the funds raised will be used to purchase, fill, and distribute kits of school supplies to 10,000 teachers. The more Kilt Lifter sold and the more direct donations made, the more supplies that can be included in each kit.

After expanding Four Peaks For Teachers outside Arizona for the first time last year, Four Peaks has added even more kit pickup locations in 2020. Teachers will be able to pick up supplies in the following cities:

  • Arizona: Flagstaff, Havasu, Kingman, Laveen Village, Litchfield Park, Marana, Mesa, Phoenix, Prescott Valley, Scottsdale, Sierra Vista, Tempe, Tucson, Yuma
  • Nevada: Las Vegas
  • New Mexico: Albuquerque, Las Cruces, Farmington, Santa Fe

Teachers interested in reserving a free school supply kit can do so at fourpeaksforteachers.org.

Jess Neill, a teacher and instructional coach for the Laveen Elementary School District, has participated in Four Peaks for Teachers since the program’s inception nine years ago. She says the program is vital—especially for new teachers.

“First-year teachers legitimately have nothing,” Neill says. “They don’t realize they need things like staplers, or scissors, and their school districts might not provide them.”

Part of why Four Peaks for Teachers is so great, she says, is because the kits that are donated come with those things young teachers assume they’re automatically given. And the costs of those items adds up. Neill says that she spent $1,000 on supplies during a nine-month period early in her teaching career, and though the school district she’s in currently is much better about providing equipment for teachers, she still spends hundreds of dollars a year on extra supplies for her students.

“In an ideal world, we wouldn’t need Four Peaks for Teachers,” says Neill. “But it’s good to know we have it.”

More information about Four Peaks For Teachers can be found at fourpeaksforteachers.org.

###

About Four Peaks Brewing Co.

Based in Tempe, Arizona, Four Peaks Brewing Co. has helped define craft beer in the Southwest since its founding in 1996. Our hometown pride and heritage are at the heart of our pubs in Tempe and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. Our brewers are committed to creating exceptional beers meant to be shared, and have 24 combined medals at the Great American Beer Festival and World Beer Cup to show for it. Anchored by the flagship Kilt Lifter Scottish-style ale, Four Peaks brands are currently available in Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Hawaii, Texas, California, Colorado, and Utah. Visit fourpeaks.com for more.

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New Par-3 Golf Course Has Sound System Installed Like Irrigation - Forbes

Four Big Tech Stocks Add $214 Billion in Market Value After Crushing Analyst Estimates - Barron's

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One day after the CEOs of four of the world’s biggest tech companies — Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Alphabet —were peppered with hostile questions about their business practices in a House subcommittee hearing that dragged on for more than five hours, all four companies posted stronger-than-expected June quarter results, driving their stock prices higher.

It was a clean sweep. Four for four.

Depending on how you want to look at it, today’s flurry of strong earnings reports either justifies the interest in the companies expressed by regulators and legislators, or it demonstrates why investors have generally reacted to the added scrutiny by ignoring it and focusing instead on their continued stellar financial performance.

Read more:

Let’s do a quick review.

Apple crushed it...The company posted revenue of $59.7 billion, with profits of $2.58 a share, way above the Street at $52.1 billion and $2.09 a share. Apple saw strength in all of its vertical markets, with an especially strong quarter for Macs and iPads—and it could have sold even more had it not been supply constrained. Apple (ticker: AAPL) also tipped its hand on the 5G iPhone launch—it’s coming in October. In late trading, the stock rallied 6%, topping $400 a share for the first time. But it won’t stay there: Apple also declared a four-for-one stock split, which shouldn’t really matter, but plays to the investors in the cheap seats. As for the App Store, the topic of most questions to CEO Tim Cook yesterday, it had record revenue in the quarter.

...so did Amazon…Did you think you were the only one getting more Amazon packages? The company’s $88.9 billion in sales was almost $8 billion above the high end of the company’s original guidance range. Profits at $10.30 a share were about five times the Street consensus. AWS revenues were a hair light, but nobody is paying attention to that. September quarter guidance beat Street expectations as well. The stock (AMZN) rallied 5% in late trading.

...and Facebook…Remember how investors were ignoring the advertiser boycott? Well, here’s why. The social network posted revenue of $18.7 billion and profits of $1.80 a share, above the Street consensus at $17.3 billion and $1.39. The company now has a remarkable 3.14 billion people using at least one of its networks— Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram and Messenger—40% of the population of the Earth. The company noted that the ad boycott is not materially affecting July revenue. After hours, the stock (FB) is up 6.2%, to $249, just a hair below its record intraday high at $250.12.

...as did Alphabet. Google’s parent (GOOGL) was the laggard, with a gain of just 0.5% after hours. Like the others, the search giant beat estimates, with revenue of $38.3 billion and profits of $10.13 a share, ahead of the Street at $37.3 billion and $7.94 a share. But revenue was actually down 2% from a year ago, the result of a downturn in the digital advertising market. YouTube’s ad business grew 6%, though, and Google Cloud revenue jumped 43%. The company also announced a $28 billion stock repurchase plan.

In late trading, the four companies together added $214 billion in market value. And somewhere, House members are planning another hearing.

Write to Eric J. Savitz at eric.savitz@barrons.com

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Housing fair home Honka Huomen introduces sound design into living - GlobeNewswire

Press release 
Free for publication on 31 July 2020 at 9:30 am

Housing fair home Honka Huomen introduces sound design into living

“Sounds have an undeniable effect on wellbeing,” says designer Aki Päivärinne.

“Sounds are present in our lives constantly, but at the same time they are alien to us. The soundscape I created for the Honka Huomen house is suggestive of what effect sound design can have on people’s living environment and, for example, relaxation sessions,” says designer Aki Päivärinne. Sound design that has been used in commercial premises now enters the home. In the Honka Huomen house at the Tuusula Housing Fair, it is part of the solutions that nourish all the senses. 

“Not just acoustics, but sound design has been found to have an effect on people’s wellbeing. The significance of sound within a space should be given more thought, because we spend a lot of time in the built environment,” says Aki Päivärinne from Granlund. The designer has created soundscapes in a number of places – amusement parks, airports, grocery stores – but this is the first time he has been designing them for a home.  

The breathable natural materials and ecological log construction of Honka Huomen inspired him: “The sound material fluctuates from one delicate state to the next. The work was inspired by the architecture of the house, creating a sense of flow. The work is composed of natural sounds and the changing seasons and how we experience them. Some of the elements include a brook, rapids, summer night at a lake, the top of a fell, and a swamp. I’ve recorded autumn rain among birches, a wintery fell landscape and a snowy forest in January, when snow is falling off the branches,” says Aki Päivärinne.

“My idea was to observe psychoacoustical conditions, that is, how people hear things and how I might add to that. In the cool-down room in Honka Huomen, you can enjoy a book while listening to water in its different states. As to the kitchen, I wanted to include sounds of flowing water, sounds we associate with freshness and cleanliness. In the spacious living room, you can hear the changing seasons. Sound design can help you recover, wind down.”

Beautiful source of sound

Honkarakenne is implementing the audio work together with Genelec.  A total of eight of these active speakers, manufactured in Iisalmi, have been integrated inconspicuously into the structures. The G Series speakers in the living room and kitchen are made of recycled aluminium. The domestic content is more than 80%.

“Genelec is a forerunner not only in sound quality but also speaker design. The speakers, designed by Harri Koskinen, have already attained classic status. I admire them daily at my own studio,” says Aki Päivärinne.

A smart log home for good living

The house design at the fair has been guided by a holistic wellbeing theme. “We are looking for living solutions that improve the residents’ quality of life. Honka Huomen takes care of its residents, itself and the environment. We wanted to create a home where it’s easy to slow down and take it easy even during your busy daily life,” describes Honkarakenne’s Marketing Director Sanna Huovinen.

The modern log house, designed by Chief Architect Anne Mäkinen, fits into a small plot in an urban environment. The primary themes of the interior is peace and tranquillity. Interior designer Maru Hautala only chose natural materials and safe materials with an M1 emission classification, and favoured domestic manufacturers. The landscape pours in through the large windows, and in the cool-down area between the living room and the sauna wing, you will be enveloped not only by Aki Päivärinne’s soundscape but also artist Kreetta Järvenpää’s multi-layer plant installation. Works of art by Katja Hyytiälä adorn the walls. The healthy indoor air smells of clean wood. 

Living quality is monitored by smart building technology that maintains an appropriate level of humidity and optimises the heating and ventilation. Honka Huomen’s good indoor air has been ensured already from the construction stage, covering the building’s entire life cycle.  

Honka Huomen was built for the Housing Fair to accept its new residents. The house will be sold during the Fair. 

Invitation to the press 

A warm welcome to see Honka Huomen and its designers behind it on the media day of the Housing Fair, on Friday, 31 July 2020 at 12.30–1.00 pm. We will discuss the home’s effect on wellbeing. Property 41, Isokarhunkierto 11. 

Honkarakenne’s other property at the Fair, the most accessible home in Finland, consisting of Villa Mikael and Villa Sanni (properties 6a and 6b), will be presented at 9.30–10.00 am. 

Sign in here.

Aki Päivärinne

Aki Päivärinne is a sound designer, sound branding professional, composer, saxophonist and sound artist. He has created soundscapes in the following, among others: Metsä / Skogen shop, the Aukio Square at Helsinki Airport, Helsinki Central Library Oodi, K Group’s grocery departments and the Sports Museum of Finland, to be re-opened in autumn 2020. The sound work for Honka Huomen is Päivärinne’s first one for a home environment, and it is realised in cooperation with Genelec. 

Genelec product information

Living room speakers:
2 pcs Genelec G Three speakers
1 pc Genelec F Two speakers

Kitchen speakers:
2 pcs Genelec G Two speakers

Washroom and cool-down room speakers:
3 pcs Genelec AIW25 speakers

Multi-room control:
3 pcs Sonos Port link units

For more information: 
Markku Syrjäpalo, Domestic Sales Manager, Genelec Oy, tel. 050 545 2670, markku.syrjapalo@genelec.com
www.genelec.fi 

Energy-efficient home 

Honka Huomen (property 41) and Villa Mikael & Villa Sanni (property 6) are being monitored by the state’s sustainable development company, Motiva, in the Energy Efficient Home project. The project will follow the energy efficiency of three homes in the Housing Fair for two years. Honka Huomen is in energy efficiency class of ‘B’, only a small step from ‘A’, which is an excellent achievement for a house built entirely of logs. Villa Mikael, built using the Honka Frame pillar beam technique, has a preliminary energy efficiency rating of ‘A’. Read more: https://www.energiatehokaskoti.fi/kohteet/seurantakohteet

Honkarakenne Ltd

Honkarakenne Ltd supplies high-quality, healthy and ecological log homes, holiday homes and public buildings. Its buildings are made from Finnish solid wood under the Honka® brand. The company has delivered 85,000 buildings to over 50 countries. We manufacture our home packages in Finland, at our own factory located in Karstula. In 2019, Honkarakenne Group's consolidated net sales totalled EUR 47.5 million, of which exports accounted for 34%. www.honka.fi 

Additional information and interview requests

Sanna Huovinen, Marketing Director, Honkarakenne Ltd, +358 (0)40 1978 707, sanna.huovinen@honka.com 
Heidi Kaunokoski, Marketing Manager, Honkarakenne Ltd, +358 50 524 9687, heidi.kaunokoski@honka.com

Learn more about Honka Huomen (property 41)

Instagram @honka_huomen
https://www.honka.fi/fi/huomen/
Photos: https://honka.com/en/media/


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Thursday, July 30, 2020

New $1,000 Stimulus Package Proposed: A Family Of Four Would Receive $4,000 - Forbes

Tunedly Makes Sound-Waves of Change by Closing Its Doors on Election Day - PRNewswire

NEW YORK, July 30, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- From the minor 1965 hit, "Voice Your Choice," by The Radiants, to James Brown's brilliant mix of social conscious and liquid funk titled, "Funky President" in 1974, to Jeezy's "My President" in 2008, election-themed songs have long been a staple of the music industry.

Music is, of course, the universal language. But, what if there is a tool so powerful in the nation's struggle for progress, it deserves all the support, tenacity and focus we can muster? Would that tool be important enough to justify making the music stop – if only for a day?

Yes, say a growing number of influential music industry organizations, including Tunedly, (www.tunedly.com) a global innovative online music production and publishing source.

These socially aware companies have joined a non-partisan coalition called "Stop the Music, Get Out the Vote," an initiative to get all companies in the music industry to pledge to close their offices on Election Day and encourage their employees to use that time to vote.

Why does this matter? Election Day is not a federal holiday in America. No one should have to choose between working and voting. No one should be made to feel as though voting is a risk or trade off with work obligations.

Participating organizations have pledged: "If we say that voting is the primary responsibility of any of our employees on Election Day; if we say that voting is more important than just another day at the office; if we say it is more important than promoting a new record or signing a deal, then the first Tuesday after the first Monday of November will no longer be just another Election Day for the music industry."

Chris Erhardt, CEO and co-founder of Tunedly, explains why his company's participation in the initiative (www.stopthemusicgetoutthevote.org) is important. "It really comes back to the idea of always being a company that leads with our values," he says.

Erhardt, a passionate entrepreneur understands and appreciates the importance of freedom in America. The right to vote safeguards those freedoms.

Tunedly is one of the 18 initial companies who signed the pledge to "Stop The Music, Get Out The Vote." For the upcoming election this fall, Tunedly will give all its staff and U.S.-based session musicians the day off so they can get out and cast their ballots.

"The hope is that we can make Election Day into a day of activism, and through our collective action, inspire music fans throughout the nation to say in one voice that the right to vote is paramount," Erhardt says.

And, just maybe, he says, an aspiring songwriter will be inspired enough by the effort to write the next great election-themed tune that will encourage others to vote.

Contact:
Rich Bonnin
888-684-8064
[email protected]

SOURCE Tunedly

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Stocks are set to jump Friday after tech giants post strong earnings, Nasdaq futures gain nearly 1% - CNBC

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Stock futures jumped on Thursday night, priming Wall Street to end the week on a high note as some of the biggest tech stocks — Facebook, AmazonAlphabet and Apple — reported quarterly results that beat high expectations. 

Nasdaq 100 futures traded 0.9% higher. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures gained 173 points, or 0.7%. S&P 500 futures climbed 0.5%.

Apple reported a blowout quarter, with overall sales expanding by 11%. Apple also announced a 4-for-1 stock split

"Apple's earnings report was breathtaking," said Andrew Smith, chief investment strategist, Delos Capital Advisors. "Double-digit revenue growth during a quarter which saw most of the U.S. economy shutdown is remarkable. This earnings report shows that Apple is firing on all cylinders. Apple's stock crossed the symbolic $400 a share threshold in after-hours trading, boosted by a four-for-one stock split, which was icing on the cake for investors."

Amazon, meanwhile, traded 5.3% higher as the company saw its sales skyrocket during the coronavirus pandemic. Facebook shares rallied more than 7% after the bell as the social media giant posted revenue growth of 11% even amid the coronavirus pandemic slowdown. The company also issued stronger-than-expected sales guidance for the current quarter. 

Google-parent Alphabet also posted better-than-expected results, sending the stock up 0.4%. The stock's performance was muted relative to the other Big Tech names as the company's overall revenue decline in its history. Revenues for Google Cloud were also just below analyst expectations. 

"The numbers were amazing relative to expectations," said Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer at Bleakley Advisory Group. "We'll see after their conference calls what has been priced in and what hasn't."

With those gains, the four stocks were set to add about $200 billion to their total market cap, bringing it to more than $5 trillion

Big Tech has been the stalwart on Wall Street this year. Amazon and Apple are up 65.2% and 31%, respectively, in 2020. Facebook and Alphabet have risen more than 14% over that time period. 

The Dow and S&P 500 both fell on Thursday after the U.S. government released data showing the biggest quarterly gross domestic product contraction on record for the country. The Dow dropped more than 200 points and the S&P 500 ended the day down 0.4%. U.S. GDP contracted by 32.9% during the second quarter, surpassing a record drop from mid-1921

— CNBC's Patti Domm contributed to this report.

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Four keys to building your startup - TechCrunch

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At last week’s Early Stage virtual event, founders and investors shared some of their best insights about startup building and what they’re looking for in their next investments. We’ve assembled a compilation of insights covering different elements of entrepreneurship from a handful of founders and VCs:

  • Jess Lee, partner at Sequoia Capital on identifying your customer
  • Garry Tan, managing partner at Initialized Capital on finding the right problem
  • Ann Miura-Ko, co-founding partner at Floodgate on product-market fit
  • Ali Partovi, Neo founder and CEO on hiring

Jess Lee, partner, Sequoia Capital: Start with your customers

Jess Lee has a whole framework for describing customers as if they were characters in a film.

“The way to think about it is as a fictional character who represents a particular user type that might use your product or company or your brand in a particular way,” she said. “And many companies have multiple personas.”

A more scientific way is thinking of your customers as a cluster of data points. The persona that emerges is at the center of that cluster.

Image Credits: TC Early Stage

“So if you map out all of the possible customers, you tend to see these clusters and then you describe who the person is at the center of that cluster,” Lee said.

What makes a good persona is someone who feels useful for product design but also memorable. That means creating a persona that has a clear story with real pain points, she said.

“And that’s the most important thing,” she said. “What do they care about and what problems are you trying to solve?”

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How a Historian Stuffed Hagia Sophia’s Sound Into a Studio - The New York Times

Turquoise carpets covered the marble floor, with its geometric designs. White drapes concealed the mosaic of the Virgin and Christ. Scaffolding obscured crosses and other Christian symbols.

Footage broadcast around the world last week captured some of these striking changes to Hagia Sophia, the Byzantine cathedral in Istanbul, which served as a mosque under Ottoman rule before becoming a museum in 1934. On the orders of Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, it is now once again used as a mosque.

But for a group of scholars, scientists and musicians, Hagia Sophia’s rededication as a Muslim place of worship threatens to cloak a less tangible treasure: its sound. Bissera Pentcheva, an art historian at Stanford University and an expert in the burgeoning field of acoustic archaeology, has spent the past decade studying the building’s extravagantly reverberant acoustics to reconstruct the sonic world of Byzantine cathedral music. Ms. Pentcheva argues that Hagia Sophia’s mystical brilliance reveals itself fully only if it is viewed as a vessel for animated light — and sound.

Credit...Nevzat Yildirim/Anadolu Agency, via Getty Images

“The void is a stage,” she said in a recent interview over Zoom.

Conducting research inside this contested monument has required a mixture of diplomacy, ingenuity and technology. Turkish authorities forbade singing inside Hagia Sophia, even when it was operated as a museum. Now that the building falls under the jurisdiction of religious authorities, that ban will harden, and further research may be even more difficult.

But Ms. Pentcheva’s existing work culminated last fall in the release of “The Lost Voices of Hagia Sophia,” an album that brings to life the stately mystery of Byzantine cathedral liturgy, bathed in the glittering acoustics of the space for which it was written — even though it was recorded in a studio in California.

For about 20 years, it has been possible to superimpose the acoustics of a particular space onto recorded music during postproduction. A pioneer was Altiverb, a plug-in software that draws on a large library of virtual spaces so that a recorded track can be retrofitted to seem like it was done in, for example, the Berlin Philharmonie or the King’s Chamber inside the Great Pyramid of Giza.

But in what has become known as live virtual acoustics, processors and speakers provide the acoustic feedback of a particular space in real time, so that musicians can adjust their performance as if they were really in another building.

Jonathan Abel, a consulting professor at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics at Stanford, devised a plan with Ms. Bissera that allowed her to capture vital information about the acoustic properties of Hagia Sophia with the help of a balloon, discreet recording equipment and a cooperative security guard.

In the winter of 2010, Ms. Pentcheva obtained permission to enter what was then a museum at dawn, when Istanbul was quiet. She persuaded a guard to stand in a spot that would have been occupied by singers during the Byzantine era and to pop a balloon. In the meantime, she stationed herself where a privileged member of the public might have experienced mass. Microphones captured the explosion of sound and the ensuing wash of reverberations.

Ms. Pentcheva was allowed to capture only four such pops over two visits. But those bursts of sound yielded a wealth of data.

Credit...Bissera V. Pentcheva

“That little balloon pop brings back all the information about the material and the size of the space,” Mr. Abel said. “You can think of a human voice as being made up of a whole bunch of balloon pops. Each voice drags behind it a bunch of impulse responses, like streamers behind a wedding car.”

The balloon noises, along with maps of the interior, allowed Mr. Abel to identify what he called the acoustic fingerprint of the building, including the multidirectional refraction of sound as it bounces off the dome and marble colonnades. His computer simulation was then integrated into a set of microphones and speakers.

Thus the members of Cappella Romana, a vocal ensemble based in Portland, Ore., specializing in Byzantine chant, recorded “The Lost Voices” in a space that persuasively mimicked the acoustics of Hagia Sophia — with its luscious reverberation, cross echoes and amplification of particular frequencies.

Alexander Lingas, a musicologist and the music director of Cappella Romana, said that the live virtual acoustics were transformative to his understanding of the group’s repertory. The long reverberation time dictated slower tempos. Basses singing drones made subtle pitch adjustments to match frequencies of maximum resonance.

Mr. Lingas said that some pieces only “made sense” inside the simulated acoustics. One example featured on the album is a cherubic hymn that likens the singers to angels.

“The music is designed to convey that,” Mr. Lingas said. “But I remember editing this piece and thinking, ‘My, this is really strange.’” Yet, he added, as the group rehearsed it with the virtual acoustics, a pattern of repeated undulating motifs built up rippling momentum until, as he described it, “the sound essentially achieved liftoff.”

Ms. Pentcheva believed that in Byzantine cathedral chant, reverberation was key to invoking the divine presence. She pointed to the exuberant amount of melisma in the repertory, where a single syllable is stretched over multiple notes. In the liquid acoustics of Hagia Sophia, words sung in this way blur, the way a line drawn in ink bleeds on wet paper.

“Rather than containing this smearing of semantics, the music itself actually intensifies it,” Ms. Pentcheva said. “So there is this process of alienation and estrangement from the register of human language that happens in Hagia Sophia, and is a desired goal.”

In Greek Orthodox rites, Ms. Pentcheva argued, acoustics and chant interact in a way that “is not about sound carrying information, but sound precipitating experience. It is a fully corporeal investment.”

The recording provides a glimpse of that experience. Phrases chanted in unison leave a ghostly imprint. Rhythmic shudders and grace notes set off blurry squiggles of overlapping echoes. Chords unfurl in reverberant bloom.

The acoustic drama of Hagia Sophia would have unfolded alongside the changing light and curling smoke of burning incense, enveloping the senses. The effect is described in a 6th-century description of the building by Paul the Silentiary, an aristocrat and poet at the court of Justinian.

“He speaks about a human action that brings into presence the divine reaction, the divine voice,” Ms. Pentcheva said. “In a sense that is the reverberation of the space: After the human voice stops singing, the building continues.”

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