| | | | | | U.S. PROTESTS | | What you need to know about the coronavirus today | Virus disappearing Down Under
Australia is on course to have largely eradicated the coronavirus by July, as the country’s most populous state announced the removal of restrictions on community sports. New South Wales has gone for two weeks without any cases of community transmission. New Zealand lifted all restrictions except international border controls after declaring on Monday that it was free of the coronavirus.
Tracing app inspired by U.S. school project
Singapore reached out to a Stanford University student, Rohan Suri, in January to understand his experiences and considerations while developing a prototype for a contact tracing app called kTrace as a high school project in 2014. Suri developed the prototype with a schoolmate as the Ebola epidemic ravaged western Africa.
He spent February and March volunteering on Singapore’s TraceTogether app alongside fellow Stanford students Nikhil Cheerla and Daniel Lee, giving Singapore a roadmap by sharing kTrace’s code and providing advice on stronger privacy protections.
Now, Suri has co-founded another app called Zero, which aims to attract users by bundling contact tracing technology with a safety-rating tool for shops and restaurants based on measures such as occupancy limits and mask rules.
How Germany’s Merkel tamed the virus
A rare inside view of how Angela Merkel handled the pandemic shows how, in Germany as in the United States and elsewhere, COVID-19 is exposing deep tensions between nationalist and collaborative styles of leadership.
A visit to the Chinese city of Wuhan – the ground zero of the pandemic - last September helped shape Merkel’s response to COVID-19. If the disease forced a metropolis of 11 million people to quarantine itself and come to a complete stop, people close to her said, she saw that it must be serious.
Quick lockdown and widespread testing are two elements that have been widely credited by epidemiologists for keeping Germany’s reported fatalities lower than many countries. | | | | | | Reuters reporters and editors around the world are investigating the response to the coronavirus pandemic.
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