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Officers respond to shooting along 11th Street in Des Moines minutes before incident near 23rd Street – Local 5 – weareiowa.com

Moments after leaving the first scene, Local 5 learned of a police presence just five minutes away along 23rd Street.

DES MOINES, Iowa Officers are at the scene of a different incident along 23rd Street in Des Moines Wednesday night after responding to a shooting just five minutes away.

Two people were injured following a shooting near the 1700 block of 11th Street, according to officers with the Des Moines Police Department.

Details are minimal, but Local 5's Eva Andersen confirmed there were three police cruisers and a crime scene investigation unit at a residence in the area.

Jefferson Avenue is blocked off at the 11th Street intersection while officers investigate.

Moments after leaving the area of the shooting, Local 5 learned of another police presence just five minutes away along the 1800 block of 23rd Street.

Our crews observed what appeared to be bullet casings in the street. Evidence markers are also visible.

Officers are blocking off the area.

Local 5 will update this story as more information becomes available. Download theWe Are Iowa appor subscribe to Local 5's"5 Things to Know"email newsletter for the latest.

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Officers respond to shooting along 11th Street in Des Moines minutes before incident near 23rd Street - Local 5 - weareiowa.com

E4 to Participate in Textarossa to Develop Technologies for Energy-Efficient HPC – HPCwire

SCANDIANO, Italy, April 29, 2021 E4 Computer Engineering announces its participation to TEXTAROSSA (Towards EXtreme scale Technologies and Accelerators for HW/SW Supercomputing Applications for exascale), a project co-funded by the European High Performance Computing (EuroHPC) Joint Undertaking to drive innovation in efficiency and usability of high-end HPC systems.

TEXTAROSSA aims to achieve a broad impact on the High Performance Computing (HPC) field both for pre-exascale and exascale scenarios. Within the TEXTAROSSA consortium, E4 will develop innovative heterogeneous HPC platforms powered by the latest generation processors, reconfigurable hardware accelerators and integrating innovative EU-developed cooling equipment. The members of the consortium will test and deploy on these platform advanced algorithms, innovative methods and user-oriented software applications for classic HPC domains as well as for emerging domains in High Performance Artificial Intelligence (HPC-AI) and High Performance Data Analytics (HPDA).

To achieve high performance and high energy efficiency on near-future exascale computing systems, a technology gap needs to be bridged: increase efficiency of computation with carefully selected components and equipment coupled with new arithmetics, as well as providing methods and tools for seamless integration of reconfigurable accelerators in heterogeneous HPC platforms. TEXTAROSSA aims at tackling this gap through applying a consistent co-design approach to develop heterogeneous HPC solutions, supported by the integration and extension of IPs, of programming models and tools derived from other European research projects where the partners TEXTAROSSA are contributing.

TEXTAROSSA, co-funded byEuropean High-Performance Computing Joint Undertaking(JU) and by the Italian Ministero dello Sviluppo Economico (MISE), is coordinated by the Agenzia Nazionale per le Nuove Tecnologie, lEnergia e lo Sviluppo Economico Sostenibile(ENEA) and leverages the expertise of 17 partners located in 5 European countries. The project will run for 3 years with the objectives of

Within TEXTAROSSA and applying a co-design approach, E4s is tasked to develop the IDV (Integrated Development Vehicles), mirroring and extending the European Processor Initiatives ARM64-based architecture. The advanced technologies developed by the partners during the project will be tested and validated on the IDV. To drive the technology development and assess the impact of the proposed innovations, from node to system levels, TEXTAROSSA will use a selected but representative number of HPC, HPDA and AI applications and demonstrators covering challenging HPC domains such as general-purpose numerical kernels, High Energy Physics (HEP), Oil & Gas, climate modelling, as well as emerging domains such as High Performance Data Analytics (HPDA) and High Performance Artificial Intelligence (HPC-AI).

In addition to the technological objectives, TEXTAROSSA aims at fostering the European competitiveness in the development and deployment of advanced solutions for science and industry and make available indispensable tools and systems in the competitive and critical field of HPC. TEXTAROSSA will also provide valuable data to the co-design and development teams of the European Process Initiative (EPI), of which E4 is a member, and constitutes a testbed for mature a EU-developed, innovative two-phase cooling technology enabling this technology to be available in different architectures.

The partners will constantly upload the contents on the website http://www.textarossa.eu

Cosimo Gianfreda, CTO of E4 Computer Engineering: Over the years, E4 has pursued the strategy to be at the leading edge of the cost-effective technology. Our products have been designed taking into account the requirements of the end users and with the goal to make these systems user-friendly while providing top performance at the lowest TCO. The IDV (Integrated Development Vehicles) developed by E4 in TEXTAROSSA will represent a key testbed for validating innovative technologies and a significant leap in proposing high-tech and energy-efficient solutions.

TEXTAROSSA is both a technological challenge and a significant opportunity to develop new products to better serve the needs of our customers. The technological challenges have always been addressed by the E4 R&D Lab, where we test on a daily basis new equipment and new components. E4 brings this know-how and expertise in TEXTAROSSA within a consistent co-design approach. The expertise of our team will be applied in the development of the IDV (Integrated Development Vehicles), which will be thoroughly tested with real-life and emerging applications in a data-center like environment., says Daniele Gregori, Scientific Coordinator of E4 Computer Engineering.

E4 Computer Engineering

E4 Computer Engineering creates and supplies hardware and software solutions for High Performance Computing, Cloud Computing (Private and Hybrid), containerization, High Performance Data Analytics, Artificial Intelligence, Deep Learning and Virtualization. The growth of recent years has led the company to complete its offer with the inclusion of various open-source technologies such as OpenStack, Kubernetes, and tools for the implementation of a CI / CD toolchain.

http://www.e4company.com

Source: E4 Computer Engineering

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E4 to Participate in Textarossa to Develop Technologies for Energy-Efficient HPC - HPCwire

Letter: Calling out the misinformed, on the right and left, about COVID-19 – Eagle-Tribune

To the editor:

Bill Maher has long been a lonely voice of reason in American pop culture, a left-leaning but principled libertarian, and a victim himself of cancel culture from ABC back in 2002 before we even called it that.

Once again, he is that voice among a din of partisan hackery and coopted science," throwing elbows at both parties in a recent episode of Real Time (as "Politically Incorrect with Bill Maher" has been rebranded and known on HBO since 2002).

"When all of our sources for medical information have an agenda to spin us, yeah, you wind up with a badly misinformed population, including on the left," Maher told viewers. "Liberals often mock the Republican misinformation bubble, which is a real thing, but what about liberals? You know, the high-information, by-the-science people?"

So almost 70% of Democrats are wildly off on the fundamental question of how many cases of COVID lead to hospitalization; 1-5% is the correct answer; 28% of Democrats polled said 20-49%; 41% of Democrats think 50% or more cases of COVID lead to hospitalizations - a margin of error of 1,000%.

"(Democrats) also have a greatly exaggerated view of the danger of COVID to and the mortality rate among children, all of which explains why today the states with the highest share of schools that are still closed are all blue states," Maher continued. "So if the right-wing media bubble has to own things like climate change denial, shouldn't liberal media have to answer for, 'How did your audience wind up believing such bunch of crap about COVID?'"

Maher ended with a parting shot at the now far-left Atlantics constant beach-shaming "even though it's increasingly looking like the beach is the best place to avoid (COVID), and pointed out how Florida Gov. Rick DeSantis apparently reads books and got COVID right while the lionized Democrat governor of New York is taking time off from his victory lap book tour on COVID leadership to be federally investigated for malfeasance in managing the pandemic in his state.

So, just a friendly reminder to my fellow Americans: When politics go off the rails in America - and this is not the first time they have nor will it be the last - bend your ear toward us nominally partisan Libertarians and carry on.

Nick McNulty

Windham

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Letter: Calling out the misinformed, on the right and left, about COVID-19 - Eagle-Tribune

Indiana’s top elections official admits fundraising error – Chicago Daily Herald

INDIANAPOLIS -- Indiana's top elections official has acknowledged violating state political fundraising rules with the launch of her 2022 election campaign.

Republican Secretary of State Holli Sullivan requested contributions as she announced her campaign Monday - five days earlier than allowed under changes to state law signed by Gov. Eric Holcomb that day.

Sullivan, who was appointed secretary of state by Holcomb in March and is vice chair of the Indiana Republican Party, said she was seeking a full four-year term to 'defend the integrity of Indiana's elections.'

State law prohibits candidates for state offices from fundraising during the legislative sessions when the two-year state budget is drafted. Lawmakers extended their meeting deadline from the typical April 29 until November so they can return to approve new election districts.

'The Committee to Elect Holli Sullivan has determined that it made an improper solicitation of campaign funds,' Sullivan's campaign said in a statement. 'These public solicitations have been removed and all contributions have been returned.'

State Libertarian Party Chairman Evan McMahon said 'If you are vying to be elected to head the office that oversees elections and enforces campaign finance laws it would probably be a good idea to not break those laws."

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Indiana's top elections official admits fundraising error - Chicago Daily Herald

McNeely: McConaughey for governor? | Opinion | news-journal.com – Longview News-Journal

Could Academy Award-winning actor Matthew McConaughey displace Republican Gov. Greg Abbotts bid in 2022 for a third four-year term?

According to a Dallas Morning News/University of Texas at Tyler poll taken April 6-13, in a choice between McConaughey, Abbott and an unnamed someone else, the actor got 45% to Abbotts 33%, with 22% for someone else.

Of the 1,126 poll respondents, 37% identified themselves as Republican, 30% as Democrats, and 33% with no party affiliation. The polls margin of error is plus or minus 2.92%.

Abbotts job approval rating was 50% among all respondents, with 36% disapproving and 15% saying neither.

McConaughey got the support of 66% of the Democrats against Abbott and a third party, 44% of independents, and 30% of Republicans.

The actor has said hed be a fool not to at least consider the possibility of running for governor of his home state.

But McConaughey has yet to say which partys banner hed run under, if any, describing himself as an aggressive centrist.

Im a Meet You in the Middle man, he told the Austin American-Statesman in March. He said no single party has exclusive ownership of various political issues and virtues.

Other interesting information turned up by the poll of Texans included that Democratic President Joe Biden has a 52-41 job approval rating.

On abortion, more than half of Texans oppose U.S. Supreme Court repeal of the 1973 landmark Roe v. Wade decision that largely left it to women to decide whether they want to carry a pregnancy to term. Opponents of repeal were 61%; 37% wanted it done away with.

House Bill 1927, to allow carrying a handgun in Texas without a permit or training, was passed 87-58 by the Texas House on April 16. But in the recent poll of Texans, 58% are against it, while 26% favor it.

The bill must pass the Senate before it can go to the governor for approval or disapproval.

But Senate presiding officer, Republican Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, has said the bill doesnt have enough votes to clear that body, and Abbott declined to say his attitude toward the bill until it reaches his desk.

Congress 6 replacement: The May 1 special election to fill the Congressional District 6 seat in southeast Tarrant County, including most of Arlington and Mansfield, and all of Ellis and Navarro counties south of Dallas County, has drawn 23 candidates.

The vacancy was due to the Feb. 7 death of Republican U.S. Rep. Ron Wright from COVID-19.

The 11 Republicans running include Wrights widow Susan, a longtime Republican Party activist, thought to be leading the pack a few weeks ago.

But another GOP candidate is state Rep. Jake Ellzey of Waxahachie, who won his Texas House seat last year after losing a Republican primary runoff to Wright in 2018.

Among the 10 Democratic contenders is Jana Sanchez, who won the 2018 Democratic primary runoff, but lost in November to Ron Wright.

There is also a Libertarian candidate and an Independent.

A runoff is expected, since none of the 23 candidates are likely to top the 50% necessary to avoid one.

The earliest date for which the runoff can be set by Gov. Greg Abbott is May 24.

The runoff winner will begin serving upon being declared, but will immediately face a crowded re-election battle.

Several of the losing candidates May 1 will probably likely just continue running for the 2022 election in the Republican district trending Democratic.

And, this is slated to be the once-a-decade redistricting of legislative and congressional districts.

The U.S. Census Bureau reported figures Monday of the 2020 U.S. headcount. Texas will pick up two new congressional districts from other states for the 2022 election year, due to population shifts. Texas is the only state to gain more than one.

That will boost the number of Texas districts from 36 to 38, which probably will scramble districts in urban areas.

Its entirely likely that some of the candidates may not live in District 6 after the redistricting, but thats OK.

To run for Congress, a candidate just has to be at least 25, a U. S. citizen and a resident of the state. Thats it.

In fact, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram checked candidate data, and found eight candidates four Democrats, three Republicans and the lone Libertarian dont reside within the districts boundaries.

But some did, or have worked in the district for years,

So, some with an eye on a seat in Congress: this might be an ending or a continuation or a beginning.

Let the political contests continue.

Dave McNeely is an Austin-based columnist who covers Texas politics. His column appears Thursday.

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McNeely: McConaughey for governor? | Opinion | news-journal.com - Longview News-Journal