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You may resume your procrastination. After nearly a 90-minute outage on Tuesday, YouTube service has been restored, but not before causing some to express their frustrations out on the company. According to the Down Detector, the outage was felt by coast-to-coast by thousands of users. The reports started coming in of YouTube's outage around 9:15 p.m. ET on Tuesday. By 10:45 p.m. ET, users were reporting that they were able to view programming once again. There is no word on what caused YouTube service to go out. YouTube is the second-most visited website on the internet. According to YouTube, it has 1 billion active users, making up almost one-third of the internet.Some on social media did no react well to Tuesday's events. 784
-- including the American Civil Liberties Union and NARAL Pro-Choice America -- are participating in #StopTheBans protests nationwide.Rallies will take place at noon local time 179

It’s a change Melaine Grein could feel in her joints even before the snow began to fall.“I can feel it in my ankle and I know the weather is going to change before it even does just because it hurts. It’s really stiff,” Grein said.Grein hurt her ankle a couple of years ago and says she’s been able to feel temperature changes in it ever since.“It’s just affected by the weather, cold, rain, everything,” she said. “I’ve told my friend before that I think it’s going to rain and then it did.”Grein isn’t the only one who says she can feel the weather change. Many people with arthritis pain say they can feel it in their joints or bones.At Englewood Primary Care in the Swedish Medical Center, Dr. Scott Joy says it isn’t an urban myth when people say they can feel the weather change.“Big changes in temperature can change blood flow through the body,” Joy said. “Any time we get a large weather system moving through the area it changes the pressure, and people who have chronic joint pain will often notice more joint pain.”A big temperature change can affect three groups of people in particular: those with heart disease, asthma or arthritis. The weather can pose serious health risks for all three groups, which is why Joy says it’s important to be prepared.For people with heart disease, it’s important to have all of your medications on hand and to take them as prescribed. Joy says it’s also a good idea to have some nitroglycerin on hand.If people experience pain in their chest or shortness of breath with the weather change, it’s important to seek medical help.“These are things that can actually lead to death and serious morbidity and mortality. It can lead to unnecessary ER visits, it can lead to long hospital stays, it can even lead to stays in the intensive care unit if you have a severe event,” Joy said.For people with asthma, along with having their chronic inhaler on hand, it’s important to keep a rescue inhaler nearby since the weather change can trigger some inflammation in the upper airways.For those with chronic joint pain, it’s important to have an anti-inflammatory on hand in case the temperature change causes pain.For everyone else, it’s important to bundle up and protect your skin.“You are at real risk for skin damage and dry skin and frostbite,” Joy said.As always, Joy says it’s also a good idea to stay hydrated as well and don’t overexert yourself.This story was originally published by 2433
and warms hearts.Earlier this month, firefighters met a vibrant kindergartner, Mya Slater, during a safety town presentation at Rimer Elementary. 147
With wildfires impacting many American wineries, many winemakers are having tougher times testing their grapes.“Everything is so bad, it’s funny,” said Ashley Trout, owner and operator of Brook and Bull Cellars in Walla Walla, Washington.With professional labs that test grapes for smoke taint back logged for more than a month, Trout is now literally taking matters into her own hands, testing grapes during a natural fermentation process and using her senses to spot signs of smoke taint.Trout says instead of waiting five weeks for results from a lab, she’s now getting them in five days on her own.With more challenges in the industry, wine experts say more winemakers are trying creative techniques.“Everybody is going back to the drawing board thinking, 'Okay, what can I do, what will compliment this wine I’m making,’” said Anita Oberholster, Ph.D., with the University of California, Davis viticulture and enology program.She says wildfires have forced many wineries to go back to the basic of wine making.“People are throwing their recipe books away,” Oberholster said. “If you can, rather do hand picking than machine harvesting because it’s more gentle on the grapes.”Oberholster estimates about 20% of the grapes grown in 2020 were not harvested, which could cause this multi-billion dollar industry to raise its prices.Back in the vineyards, Trout is reluctantly adjusting to this new norm.“I have never wanted to make wine in a bucket before,” she said.With wildfires still raging across the West Coast, the area that produces 85% of America’s wine, winemakers like Trout will be feeling the impacts long after the smoke settles.“It’s 2020,” she said. “So, we’re going to make some bucket wine and see how it goes.” 1738
来源:资阳报