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The workers managing Apples iCloud datacenter in China, employees of Apple-partner Guizhou Cloud Big Data, havent been able to see their families in a week, thanks to a lockdown of the city of Guiyang over covid-19 concerns, according to a new report from Bloomberg News. The datacenter is operating under a so-called closed loop system, which means that workers cant leave and are currently living at their workplace until the lockdown is lifted. And its not clear when the lockdown might be eased, or when the workers might get to see their families again. Faced with a dire situation, we need courageous people on the front lines, Guizhou Cloud Big Data said in a social media post on WeChat, according to an English language translation by Bloomberg. The datacenter, which opened in 2017, houses all Apple user data in China, including photos, videos, and documents that are stored in iCloud. Apple was required to contr [url=https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz]stanley cup[/url] act with Cloud Big Data, owned by the Chinese government, under a provision of Chinese law that forces all data on Chinese users to be held on Chinese soil. Residents in most of Guiyang, which has been touted in recent years as a tech hub to both foreign and domestic companies [url=https://www.stanley-cups.com.es]vaso stanley[/url] alike, have been banned from leaving [url=https://www.cup-stanley.at]stanley cup[/url] their homes, except to get tested for covid-19, over the past week. Apple did not immediately respond to emailed questions from Gizmodo early Thursday. China reported just 1,439 new cases of covid-19 and no new deaths on Thursday in the country of 1.4 b Xocz Planned Parenthood Protesters Rally Across the Country
Former Boston Red Sox player Pedro Martinez is honored prior to the game between the Boston Red Sox and Atlanta Braves at Fenway Park in Boston on May 28, 2014.Jared Wickerham鈥擥etty ImagesBy Jay Jaffe / Sports IllustratedJanuary 6, 2015 10:59 AM ESTOn Tuesday at 2 p.m. Eastern, the results of the BBWAA 2015 Hall of Fame election will be announced. If the ballots published thus far are to be believed, we ;re in for not only a bumper crop of honorees mdash; three, four, or even five players receiving at least 75 percent of the vote mdash; but also the kind of history we haven ;t seen in at least 60 years.A [url=https://www.stanley-tumbler.us]stanley mug[/url] s of Monday afternoon, 146 voters have made their ballots public thus far, via Ryan Thibs ; Hall of Fame Tracker, just over one-quarter of the electorate based on last year final vote total of 571. According to those ballots, fi [url=https://www.stanleycup.lt]stanley cup[/url] ve players have received at least 75 percent of the vote: newcomers Randy Johnson 98.6 percent , Pedro Martinez 98.0 percent and John Smoltz 87.8 percent and holdovers Craig Biggio 80.8 percent and Mike Piazza 79.4 percent . Via the Baseball Think Factory 2015 HOF Ballot Collecting Gizmo mdash; which unlike Thibs ; Tracker merely aggregates the totals instead of recording each individual ballot but has a slightly larger sa [url=https://www.stanley-tumbler.us]stanley thermos[/url] mple size 154 mdash; Piazza is down to 76.6 percent, but Biggio is up to 82.5 percent, and the other three are within a whisker of Thibs ; numbers 8230;This is an excerpt from an article

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