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" ... Costly testing booths like these at Newark Liberty Airport will be replaced by more practical ... [+] pop-ups at future XpresCheck locations. (Photo by Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images) ... "
" ... For example, the virtual conference where I recently presented featured not only multiple session rooms to visit, but also a virtual lounge for networking and virtual booths that avatar-designed attendees could visit, ask questions and get more information. ... "
" ... For example, traditionally, if your business sold tickets to events, it would build physical ticket booths and maybe a website or first-party mobile app. Today, tickets in many cases aren’t so much a physical thing presented to an usher as a digital code that an usher scans. Likewise, tickets are less-often purchased in person as opposed to online, and reliance on a first-party website can be unnecessarily restrictive. It places the burden on the business to attract customers, whereas surfacing organically in social media, search engine results, and other digital experiences lets the business meet customers where they’re already assembled. ... "
" ... Towards the end of the exhibit, visitors can sit in booths that display video interviews with black prisoners like Anthony Ray Hinton who spent 30 years on death row for a crime he didn’t commit. You can sit face to face with their images and hear their stories of incarceration. On another wall, a sign tells visitors “you are standing on the site where former slaves were housed. In the words of Alice Walker, “healing begins where the wound was made.” With each person who visits the Legacy Museum, who faces these wounds of our past and is moved to change, we move one step closer to healing. ... "
" ... “The Voting Rights Act [of 1965] ensured that no American citizen and no election law of any State could deny access to the ballot box because of race, ethnicity, or language minority status. It took much courage and sacrifice to make that original Voting Rights Act into law, the courage and sacrifice of leaders such as Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Jr., Congressman John Lewis, to name a few. They paved the way to end discrimination and open the voting booths for millions of African Americans and other minorities who were previously denied the right to vote. In the 41 years—yes, it has been 41 years—since then, we have made tremendous progress. Thousands upon thousands of minorities have registered to vote. Minorities have been elected to hold office at the local level, at the State level, and the Federal level in increasing numbers. In short, the Voting Rights Act has worked. It has achieved its intended purpose. We need to build upon that progress by extending expiring provisions of the Voting Rights Act today. We owe it to the memories of those who fought before us… and we owe it to our future—a future where equality is a reality, a reality in our hearts and in our minds, not just the law—to reauthorize the Voting Rights Act.” ... "