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Spotify is launching a new, slimmed-down version of its app as it works to win more users in developing countries.The world's biggest music streaming platform on Tuesday launched "Spotify Lite" on smartphones running Google's Android operating system across Asia, Latin America, Africa and the Middle East.It has been designed for users with slower internet connections or older smartphones with less storage.At only 10 megabytes, the new platform will be easier to download and can be used separately from the existing app for both free and premium streaming services.Spotify Lite will initially be available in 36 countries including Brazil, Mexico, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and India, where Spotify made its debut earlier this year."We have been very focused on expanding the company into India [and] the Middle East," Cecilia Qvist, Spotify's global head of markets, said at a tech conference in Hong Kong on Tuesday."This is a fantastic app to serve those networks ... equally strong, equally loud, but purposely built for emerging markets," she added.Spotify went public last year and has enjoyed strong growth. Earlier this year, it hit 100 million paid subscribers worldwide, and within six days of launching in India in late February, it claimed one million new sign-ups.Since then, the Swedish company has tried to tailor its offerings to users in different countries, especially in areas where many people are just starting to come online. In India, for instance, Spotify is now available in five different languages, according to Qvist.Asked about the company's growth projections, she declined to share how many users Spotify hoped to acquire with the new offering."But I feel really good about this one," she added. "Streaming is still growing." 1766
TAMPA, Fla. — The convenience of smart speakers – like Amazon’s Echo, Google’s Home and Apple’s HomePod – could come at a price to your privacy and these popular tech tools may be recording you even when you’re not using them, the I-Team uncovered.Justin McDonald told I-Team Investigator Adam Walser that he loves his Amazon Echo. With simple commands, McDonald controls his ceiling fan, thermostat and smart tv without getting off his couch.“I think I have between 10 and 12 internet connected devices,” said McDonald, who regularly asks Amazon’s virtual assistant “Alexa” about the news, weather and stock reports. “It’s worked its way into our morning routines.”He even has an additional Echo in his infant son’s room.When asked what Alexa knows about him, Manatee County resident McDonald replied, “More than I’d like to know probably.”The I-Team asked Justin McDonald to listen to his own Amazon audio data, which can be accessed through Amazon’s privacy dashboard. 983
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, Colo. — Rescuers successfully dug out a person buried in an avalanche at Steamboat Resort in northern Colorado.A resort official 160
Right now, doctors at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are trying to figure out whether people who vape are at a higher risk for severe illness from COVID-19.Currently, vapers and smokers are not in the high-risk category. Doctors say coronavirus is a respiratory disease, which affects the lungs. People who vape or smoke already have weaker lungs. Last year, we saw many teens go to the hospital with lung illnesses associated with vaping.Dr. David Beuther, Chief Medical Information Officer at National Jewish Health says while vapers and smokers are at a greater risk, the risk of developing more severe complications is even greater. “I’d be more worried about you more than normal, but I think anybody that vapes, that inhales anything toxic into their lungs, is putting their lungs at risk, because it probably alters the immune system,” said Dr. Beuther. “It probably causes some irritation. It probably reduces your own lung’s ability to defend itself against this virus.Vaping may also contribute to more infections when people are using the device and exhaling.Dr. Beuther says while we try to stay six feet away from people, someone vaping may blow their cloud further than that and that could increase the risk of spreading the virus.Dr. Beuther encourages people to take this virus seriously and to consider quitting smoking. 1371
Science has identified in the plant kingdom the "missing link" of cellular immortality between human and single-celled animals, 140