Easing coronavirus lockdown could lead to 'resurgent' second wave
Scientists have warned that the coronavirus outbreak "could easily resurge" when lockdown measures are relaxed.

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How smartphone apps could save lives (and the economy)
By enabling daily self-diagnosis, contact tracing and research, smartphone apps could be the key to quickly beating the coronavirus -- but there's one problem.

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The sun in 'ultra-HD' - scientists reveal sharpest images ever
The highest-ever resolution images of the sun have been revealed by British scientists working alongside NASA researchers.

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Microsoft just fixed PowerPoint: You&re going to love Presenter Coach

I&ve come to loathe PowerPoint over the years. I once was a competitive speaker and watching people use this product & and the bad habits I&ve developed using it & has been like fingernails on a chalkboard. It has historically been a tool that promoted stupid things, like creating audience-abuse slides that no one could read and presentations where the presenter read the slide to the audience. People, and I include myself, found it so easy to build presentations they&d wait until the last minute and then get in front of an audience with little or no rehearsal or preparation, resulting in substandard performance.

But last month, Microsoft unveiled a whole bunch of enhancements, features, and improvements for Office 365, now called Microsoft 365. If you blinked, you may have missed something named Presenter Coach, which could turn PowerPoint into a tool that ensures presentation quality. These features will roll out over the next several weeks; I can hardly wait.

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Could biometric ID cards offer a lockdown exit strategy?
Identity cards have been mandatory only twice in British history - during the two world wars - moments of enormous national emergency.

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Delays, deals and drastic actions: Microsoft responds to the pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic has postponed the Tokyo Olympics, scrubbed all college sports and silenced presidential campaign rallies, so it shouldn't be any surprise that the crisis has also upended plans Microsoft once had set in similar stone.

But because of the work-at-home mandate set by many businesses, Microsoft has faced other pressures by dint of its place as the maker of Windows and Office, two technology cornerstones of modern corporations.

[ Related: Why Microsoft should postpone Windows 10's next feature upgrade, 2004 ]

Along with rivals Google and Apple, Microsoft was among the first U.S. firms to send employees home, one of the first to start tearing up calendars. Since early March, it's made a score and more changes to product timelines, launched deals specific to work-at-home or the pandemic, and taken action to shutter stores and symposiums.

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