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Technology

Two Point Campus, Now On Game Pass, Is A Chill Time For Everyone

College management sim Two Point Campuswhich just came out on pretty much every gaming platform and Xbox Game Pass, is the sequel to 2018’s Two Point Hospital. Both games use an identical art style, similar UI, and contain the same mix of zany, weird sight gags and jokes. but-while Hospital was all about stressing you out over choices, Campus is more chill in how it lets you care for the students coming to your schools. The change works, but the game still has some UI issues and performance problems to iron out.

Two Point Hospital could get surprisingly intense. While the world is colourful, silly, and filled with weird diseases and jokes, balancing patient needs, staff demands, profits, and more during more intense moments isn’t funny at all. It’s hectic and exciting. However, it was also a game built for PC, and was intended to be a spiritual successor to the beloved Bullfrog classic ThemeHospital. While I loved Two Point Hospital, others were put off by how intense things could get, as well as the PC menus and UI. It was a great game, but built for a certain type of person.

Two Point Studios built Two Point Campus from the ground up to be a different type of management sim, removed from the demands of history and with console players in mind. This leads to a different kind of game. Two Point Campus isn’t here to stress you out. Instead, it offers a more relaxed and personal management sim in which you worry more about your students’ physical, social, mental, and emotional needs than say balancing the books or making sure nobody dies. The stakes here are certainly lower than when running an emergency room, and with breaks between school years, Campus will feel calmer and more inviting to folks who might not have grown up playing the old PC sims.

Some might be disappointed in the slower pace, but I’ve greatly enjoyed the change. This is a game where you can (and will) spend a lot of time fiddling with things. Moving objects, re-shaping classrooms, building lecture halls, adding dorm room decorations, and tinkering with layouts and hallways are all in your purview. And compared to the previous game, all of it is now much easier to do on a controller.

In my experience with the game’s first few levels, money isn’t too hard to come by if you are careful early on not to go into debt by building everything possible at once. So instead of worrying about profits, Campus quickly becomes a game in which you spend a lot of time just making sure your students are as comfy, healthy, and smart as they can be.

It’s quite a contrast to Two Point Hospital, in which your patients were merely walking piggy banks and you never really stopped to think about them as people. In Campusstudents feel more like actual humans, and because they stick around for a few years before graduation, you’ll start to develop more of a connection with a lot of them.

Your end goal is to help all your goofy students graduate.  (Screenshot: Two Point Studios / Kotaku)Your end goal is to help all your goofy students graduate. (Screenshot: Two Point Studios / Kotaku)

When my institution’s grades started to slip, I felt more invested in improving the college’s facilities to make sure all my young charges could get back to achieving higher grades. And when the kids got lonely, I’d make sure to listen to their individual needs and help them meet other students, so they could develop new friendships and romantic relationships.

It all culminates when they finally graduate. I felt an odd sense of pride as I watched them all march off to the nearby bus stop, diploma in hand. Well, I also felt a pang of fear, as I watched a ton of tuition fees vanish, too.

OK, so yes, this is still a management sim, and while the stakes are lower and the overall vibe of Campus is more chill, you still will need to keep an eye on your money if you want to build the biggest and most amazing three-star schools in the county. And because I cared more about my students, it made it harder for me to cut corners or hold back on things they all wanted, like more bathrooms or working showers. I mean, I still didn’t give them what they wanted all the time, and did have a tendency toward cramming them into tiny dorm rooms. But I felt bad about it, I swear!

Unfortunately, I also felt bad when playing on PC, as I ran into some performance issues and UI problems. None of them made the game unplayable, mind you, but still worth mentioning.

Laying out your campus becomes an exercise in managing space and function.  (Screenshot: Two Point Studios / Kotaku)Laying out your campus becomes an exercise in managing space and function. (Screenshot: Two Point Studios / Kotaku)

With a controller, the UI feels good, but mouse and keyboard suffer some quirks that I think can be fixed in a patch. At the moment they cause some annoyance. More than once I ended up selling a whole room by accident or misclicked the wrong item. And when my campus got too big, I noticed some slowdown, something I never noticed in Two Point Hospital or other similar games I’ve played on this same, very fast computer.

Hopefully, all of this can be fixed in the future. Considering how much support Two Point Hospital got post-launch, with tons of updates and DLC packs, I expect Campus to only get better over the next few months and years.

Two Point Campus is a worthy follow-up to Hospital. While some may find Campus‘less hectic and high-stakes nature a drawback, I enjoyed the change of pace. I can always play Hospital if I want to save lives. Instead, Campus let me connect with students and a school in a way I really appreciated, which also subsequently made squeezing the kids for every penny they had a lot more challenging. I still did it, but I didn’t enjoy it. OK, I enjoyed it, but I never cackled about it. Not very much at least.

Categories
Entertainment

Westlife’s Brian McFadden unrecognizable after bee sting

A pop legend has shown off the shocking reaction he’s had to a bee sting.

Westlife singer Brian McFadden, 42, took to social media to show off the horrific aftermath of the sting, The Sun reports.

Lying in his hospital bed, Brian could be seen with a very swollen face and lips, and he wrote to his fans: “Stung by a bee and got an allergic reaction!! Owning that look! Free Botox and fillers!!!!!”

He could be seen in his hospital bed playfully singing ‘Sexy and I Know It’ by LMFAO.

Concerned fans and friends took to the comments to wish Brian a speedy recovery, with one person joking: “Looking swell,” and another said: “Omgggg feel better x”

A third person penned: “That’s awful hope you feel better soon! at least you’ve kept your sense of humor.”

Brian also shared separate photos of the timeline of his sting, from minor swelling to ending up in the hands of doctors.

He wrote: “The timeline of the sting to reaction. Still goin, ”and he showed how quickly the swelling came about, with his lips getting bigger and bigger and his eyes shrinking.

In the final snap, Brian can be seen with his thumbs up while gazing at the camera with a swollen face.

Brian shares children Molly Marie, 20, and 19-year-old Lilly-Sue McFadden with Kerry Katona and he has a daughter named Ruby Jean with his wife Danielle Parkinson.

He recently revealed that he missed out on a lot with his two daughters – and fought with his ex Kerry.

Opening up to Closer magazine, the Irish singer confessed that he regrets “not being there as much for his two eldest children”.

Brian said: “I was only a kid myself when I had Molly and Lilly, and I was at the height of my career in Westlife then – we were literally working 365 days a year, and there was no FaceTime so I couldn’t speak to the kids.

“I could only see them when I came home.

“So it was a lot harder and I missed out on a lot of the stuff that I would have loved to have seen with the girls.”

Luckily Brian and Kerry now have a better relationship, and the fact that the girls are older makes it easier to co-parent.

He added: “It’s very easy to co-parent now out children aren’t kids anymore. It was obviously a lot more difficult when they were growing up.”

This article originally appeared in The Sun and was reproduced with permission

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US

Courtney Clenney arrested months after boyfriend’s stabbing death

ABOVE: A look at today’s top headlinesLaw enforcement in Hawaii on Wednesday arrested social media model Courtney Clenney on a charge of second-degree murder with a deadly weapon.Hawaii County police said in a statement they assisted the US Marshals Service as they arrested the 26 -year-old in Laupahoehoe, which is on the Big Island. Officers used an arrest warrant issued by Miami-Dade County, Florida.She’s being held at the East Hawaii Detention Center while she waits for her initial court appearance in Hilo District Court on Thursday, police said.The police statement gave no details about the accusations against her, but the Miami Herald reported that Clenney is accused of fatally stabbing her boyfriend in April. Her Miami defense lawyer, Frank Prieto, told the Miami Herald that she was in Hawaii while in rehabilitation for substance abuse and post-traumatic stress disorder. “I’m completely shocked, especially since we were cooperating with the investigation and offered to voluntarily surrender her if she were charged,” Prieto said. “We look forward to clearing her name in court.” According to NBC News, the Miami Police Department has previously described Obumseli’s death as a domestic violence-related incident that involved a physical altercation and ended with a stabbing. Prieto has previously described the couple’s relationship as “clearly toxic” and said there is “clear evidence of self-defense in this matter.” “Obumseli attacked her and choked her that evening,” he said. “Courtney had no choice but to meet force with force.”A cousin of Obumseli has previously said the family has “no cause to believe that this was a case of self-defense,” adding: “Toby was raised by a very strong family , with strong morals, strong values. He does not come from that.” Clenney appeared on OnlyFans under the name Courtney Tailor and has 2 million followers on Instagram.

ABOVE: A look at today’s top headlines

Law enforcement in Hawaii on Wednesday arrested social media model Courtney Clenney on a charge of second-degree murder with a deadly weapon.

Hawaii County police said in a statement they assisted the US Marshals Service as they arrested the 26-year-old in Laupahoehoe, which is on the Big Island. Officers used an arrest warrant issued by Miami-Dade County, Florida.

She’s being held at the East Hawaii Detention Center while she waits for her initial court appearance in Hilo District Court on Thursday, police said.

The police statement gave no details about the accusations against her, but the Miami Herald reported that Clenney is accused of fatally stabbing her boyfriend in April.

Her Miami defense lawyer, Frank Prieto, told the Miami Herald that she was in Hawaii while in rehabilitation for substance abuse and post-traumatic stress disorder.

“I’m completely shocked, especially since we were cooperating with the investigation and offered to voluntarily surrender her if she were charged,” Prieto said. “We look forward to clearing her name in court.”

According to NBC News, the Miami Police Department has previously described Obumseli’s death as a domestic violence-related incident that involved a physical altercation and ended with a stabbing.

Prieto has previously described the couple’s relationship as “clearly toxic” and said there is “clear evidence of self-defense in this matter.”

“Obumseli attacked her and choked her that evening,” he said. “Courtney had no choice but to meet force with force.”

A cousin of Obumseli has previously said the family has “no cause to believe that this was a case of self-defense,” adding: “Toby was raised by a very strong family, with strong morals, strong values. He does not come from that.”

Clenney appeared on OnlyFans under the name Courtney Tailor and has 2 million followers on Instagram.

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Categories
Technology

5 tips to avoid getting lost in Minecraft in 2022

Since Minecraft worlds are so massive and generate for millions of blocks in every direction, losing your way can happen on occasion. This is especially true for newer players who may not have their bearings quite yet.

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Fortunately, there are several strategies to employ that can prevent players from getting lost. Some tactics require items, while others simply demand players to use a little know-how.

Either way, any and all of these tricks are super helpful for both beginners and veterans who may just be returning to the game after a lapse in playing.

Note: This article is subjective and reflects the opinions of the writer.


Minecraft: Tips to remember to avoid getting lost

1) Keep a compass on hand

A compass in Minecraft (Image via Mojang)
A compass in Minecraft (Image via Mojang)

The compass is one of the most helpful items in Minecraft, and it costs very little to make.

Created via four iron ingots and a piece of redstone dust, compasses will always point towards the world spawn. This ensures that players can return to the point where they first arrived in the world.

Furthermore, players can link compasses to lodestone blocks in order to point them to certain locations if the world spawn isn’t preferred.

Compasses can be looted from certain generated structures, including villages, strongholds, shipwrecks, and ancient cities.


2) Using a map

Maps are excellent at keeping track of one's surroundings (Image via Mojang)
Maps are excellent at keeping track of one’s surroundings (Image via Mojang)

Players can create maps in Minecraft either by combining nine pieces of paper in Bedrock Edition or eight pieces of paper and a compass in Java and Bedrock Edition. Maps begin blank, but when players use the item, the map will begin to fill.

As players progress through the area that the map details, they’ll uncover more of the area. Initial map sizes are limited, but players can use cartography tables to increase the amount of ground that maps cover. These items can even keep track of buildings and other locations of note, making them invaluable for beginners in particular.

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3) Mark Your Way

Tall towers can mark a player's path (Image via Mojang Bug Report)
Tall towers can mark a player’s path (Image via Mojang Bug Report)

As players travel through their Minecraft world, it never hurts to keep some extra easy-to-collect blocks on hand. Specifically, these can be used to create tall structures or other large landmarks for players to look back on if they get lost.

Granted, these landmarks’ effectiveness will depend on how closely they’re built together and how far a player’s render distance is set, but they can be incredibly helpful.

For example, if a player is lost in a forest biome, they can climb to the top of a nearby tree, look to the sky for their last-placed tower, and make their way back to it.


4) Use Console Commands

Console commands can return players to a certain point (Image via Mojang)
Console commands can return players to a certain point (Image via Mojang)

If Minecraft players don’t mind having cheats enabled, they can use console commands to keep their bearings no matter where they find themselves in the world.

Players can use commands like /locate to find specific biomes or structures they may be looking for. They can also use the /teleport or /tp command to immediately appear at certain coordinates.

It’s even possible to return to the world spawn or a player’s set spawn point like a bed by using “/tp @s” and then entering the coordinates of the player’s spawn. If players get lost in their Minecraft world, teleporting and other helpful commands can greatly help.

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5) Use Map Mods

JourneyMap is a fantastic map mod (Image via frankv_/CurseForge)
JourneyMap is a fantastic map mod (Image via frankv_/CurseForge)

If all else fails, it may not be a bad idea to download a map mod and install it to avoid getting lost. Awesome mods like JourneyMap provide players with a minimap to help them keep their bearings while also featuring a larger version viewable in a web browser.

On the larger map, players can mark points of interest or spawn points, and the map is refreshed automatically over time so that players always have up-to-date information on their surroundings.


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Categories
Sports

Ken Hinkley will coach Port Adelaide in 2023 says David Koch, Power contract

Port Adelaide president David Koch has emphatically declared Ken Hinkley will see out his current contract and coach the club in 2023.

A question mark had been hovering over Hinkley and his position at the Power, despite being contracted to the club until next year and his defiant AFL 360 interview on Monday night where he said he expected to be at Alberton next year.

Amid mounting criticism over Hinkley’s coaching from fans, Koch said earlier this week “every single person’s role” would be assessed at the end of the season, which has seen the Power drop out of finals contention after back-to-back preliminary final runs.

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Koch spoke on 5AA radio on Monday and conceded the club was “not afraid to make change.” His comment from him, “turn it around or watch out”, fueled speculation there could be sweeping changes to the club’s football department.

But Koch confirmed to 7 News Adelaide on Thursday night Hinkley would remain at Alberton.

Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley with Chairman David Koch.Source: Twitter

“Obviously, for all of us, this season has been a major disappointment … (and) as we always do, we’ll thoroughly assess our football program at season’s end,” Koch told 7 News Adelaide.

“But, as the club has maintained all year, Ken Hinkley is contracted and will be our coach in 2023

“Prior to this season, Ken led us to two consecutive preliminary finals.

“Some will argue we should make a change based on our performance this season alone and that Ken has never taken the team to a grand finale.

“But we base decisions on all the information in front of us.

“We believe Ken gives us the best chance of successfully rebounding next season, of successfully attracting new talent and football department resources to make us better.”

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Speaking on Fox Footy’s AFL 360 on Thursday night, St Kilda champion Nick Riewoldt said it was a “big backflip” from Koch that should never have happened.

“I like it from the point of view that it provides fodder for all of us to talk about, but Ken Hinkley must get to the end of the week and think: ‘What did I just go and endure – and for what?’” a passionate Riewoldt said on AFL 360.

“So Kochie comes out on Monday saying what he said after the CEO, the footy manager, everyone else in the club has been on the same page – and five days later he backflips on the statement? He could’ve said on Monday what he said tonight, but he chose not to – and by omission, he put Ken Hinkley under ridiculous, undue pressure this week. It was really poor.

“I think Ken’s probably got a reasonable tolerance for it now after all of this time, but I’d be scratching my head.”

Hinkley is Port’s second longest serving coach, behind the club’s sole AFL premiership coach in Mark Williams.

In his 10 seasons in charge, Hinkley has steered the Power to finals in four seasons and has a 60.8 per cent win rate from his 212 games as coach.

When asked directly on AFL 360 if he felt any uncertainty as coach after Koch’s “turn it around or watch out” comments, Hinkley replied: “No, no I don’t”.

Koch statement awkward for Hinkley? | 01:36

“David (Koch) himself has said that he expects me to be coaching Port Adelaide in 2023, as I do and that’s what I am preparing for,” he said.

“I think I’ve been given enough assurances (he’ll see out his deal) through the season, not that I needed them to be fair.

“We all get there’s a finish line for everyone at some point.

“But as I sit here tonight, I’m more than confident that that won’t be at the end of 2022.”

Hinkley said despite the outside pressure, his players “100 per cent” continued to back him in for an 11th season in 2023 – and final year of his current contract — saying:

“My players, they play for me every week. They play for us every week.

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Categories
US

Karine Jean-Pierre roasted over ‘Orwellian’ tweet touting ‘0% inflation’

President Biden’s top spokesperson was accused of lying on Wednesday in a tweet touting “0% inflation in July” — even as federal data indicated that the consumer price index rose by 8.5% year over year.

“We just received news that our economy had 0% inflation in July,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre tweeted on Wednesday.

“While the price of some things went up, the price of others, like gas, clothing, and more, dropped.”

Jean-Pierre also hailed the dip in gasoline prices, which she called “the fastest in a decade” which was “saving American families with two cars $106 per month on average.”

In the same tweet thread, Jean-Pierre wrote that “real wages went up for the first time in almost a year.” She also urged the House to pass the Inflation Reduction Act “as soon as possible” in order to “lower health care, prescription drug, and energy costs.”

But Twitter users pushed back against Jean-Pierre’s claims.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre toed the administration line that the country saw "0% inflation in June."
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre toed the administration line that the country saw “0% inflation in July.”
REUTERS
Twitter users pushed back on Jean-Pierre's tweets on Wednesday.
Twitter users pushed back on Jean-Pierre’s tweets on Wednesday.

“Great. No need for the ‘Inflation Reduction Act’ anymore…” tweeted Yossi Gestetner.

Another Twitter user, Kevin Dalton, posted a link to a news article indicating that inflation was 8.5% in July, writing: “Other than the complete lie you just told, I totally believe you…”

Joel Griffith, a research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, posted a tweet showing the increased prices of key goods.

“Inflation this past year of 8.5% is near a 40-yr high,” he noted.

One Twitter user went so far as to add a “clown face” filter to a clip of Jean-Pierre touting the strength of the economy from the White House press room podium.

The rate of inflation was 8.5% in July -- hovering around record levels not seen in four decades.
The rate of inflation was 8.5% in July — hovering around record levels not seen in four decades.

Supporters of the administration, however, tried to clarify Jean-Pierre’s tweet. One noted that the press secretary meant that “inflation over the last month has been 0%” and that it “hasn’t increased in the past month.”

But another Twitter user responded: “You don’t compare inflation month to month. It is compared year to year. But you wouldn’t know that.”

Last month, Jean-Pierre was widely mocked for claiming that “we are stronger economically than we have been in history.”

Americans continue to be saddled with higher-than-usual food prices.
Americans continue to be saddled with higher-than-usual food prices.
Levine-Roberts/Sipa USA

She cited low unemployment as well as “more than 8.7 million new jobs created” — though critics noted that it was due to the end of pandemic-related lockdown measures and Americans returning en masse to the workforce after the vaccination drive.

The 8.5% rise in inflation last month was lower than the sharp, 9.1% increase in June, but still hovering at a high not seen since four decades ago.

Core inflation, which excludes food and gas prices, rose by 5.9% annually and by 0.3% compared to June.

Analysts said that a drop in demand has led to falling gas and energy prices, though that trend can easily reverse itself given volatile geopolitical conditions, including the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, as well as possible hurricanes in the US.

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Categories
Technology

Overwatch’s Paid Loot Boxes Are Finally Going Away

Overwatch’s Loot Boxes may not have been the first in video game history, but they quickly became one of the most important, even if we were sick of them as early as June 2016, which was…one month after the game’s release.

While somewhat novel at the time, they helped pave the way for even worse examples, like Battlefront II’s disastrous implementation, and as profitable as they were for publishers they were also so unpopular with fans (and with governments and regulators who accuse them of encouraging kids to gamble) that many series — including Overwatch itself — have begun to move away from them.

That’s right, Overwatch 2 won’t be using Loot Boxes, instead opting for a more direct way of purchasing stuff:

There will be no Loot Boxes in Overwatch 2. Instead, the modernized live service will give our players the power to shape their own experiences. Players can acquire the items they want directly through the Battle Pass and an all-new and consistently updated in-game shop. Our team will create and deliver seasonal content every nine weeks to ensure there’s always something fresh and exciting waiting for everyone.

And with the sequel due out soon (it’s currently slated for an October release), that means the end is near for Overwatch 1’s Loot Boxes. Blizzard announced earlier today that after August 30, players won’t be able to buy them anymore, bundling the news with a plea for users to go and buy some Loot Boxes one last time:

Earn and purchase Anniversary Loot Boxes throughout the event! Each Loot Box has a chance to contain items from past Anniversary and seasonal events; don’t wait too long to snag those skins you’ve been eyeing for the past year, though–Loot Boxes will no longer be available for sale after the end of the Anniversary Remix Vol. 3 event on August 30. However, you will still be able to earn standard loot boxes after the end of the event.

So there’ll still be some to earn, just not to buy. Interestingly, Blizzard adds that any Loot Boxes that players are sitting on “will open automatically before the launch of Overwatch 2“.

RIP, Loot Boxes. You will not be missed.

Categories
Sports

When a player like Meg Lanning needs to ask for a break it should ring alarm bells | Australia women’s cricket team

Meg Lanning is never one to give much away. An intensely private person, she is known for predictable answers in interviews and her dislike of team meetings. She is a woman of few words and for years she has appeared something of a cricket machine.

Aside from a brief stint on the sidelines for shoulder surgery after the 2017 World Cup, Lanning has been an ever-present figure in the game since her debut in late 2010 at just 18 years of age. Throughout her time in the team, the profile of women’s cricket has risen exponentially, exposing Lanning to greater levels of media and public attention – something that has never appeared to quite sit comfortably with a player who would rather let her actions on the cricket field do the talking.

It was perhaps surprising then, that she was asked to take on more responsibility and visibility in January 2014 when, after the retirement of Jodie Fields, Lanning was thrust into the captaincy at age 21, having had never held a leadership position at any level before . The marketing contract that Lanning – with Ellyse Perry, Alyssa Healy and Holly Ferling – received to essentially be the faces of women’s cricket in Australia led to even more time in the public eye and more pressure to be one of the ‘golden girls’ of Australian sport.

This pressure only increased in the wake of the sandpaper scandal involving the Australian men’s team in 2018, when the very culture of cricket was called into question and Cricket Australia turned hurriedly to its sparkling women’s team – who had never been caught up in any scandals – in a bid to distract from the poor behavior of the men.

The cumulation of all this – the public-facing roles, the increased visibility of the sport and the pressure to maintain not only the performance of the team, but its squeaky-clean image – has perhaps led to this point. Lanning is taking an indefinite break from cricket. In a written statement, she put it as briefly and succinctly as anyone would expect.

“After a busy couple of years, I’ve made the decision to take a step back to enable me to spend time focusing on myself,” she said. “I’m grateful for the support of CA and my teammates and ask that my privacy is respected during this time.”

We may never know exactly why Lanning is taking this break. Nor should we expect to. But in contrast to many of her counterparts from a range of different sports who have taken breaks, it does not seem likely that Lanning will do a tell-all interview opening up about her struggles, or even just clarifying that she really wants to spend summer at the beach instead of on a cricket field for once in her life.

Meg Lanning jumps on Jess Jonassen and Alyssa Healy after Australia won Commonwealth Games gold.
Meg Lanning jumps on Jess Jonassen and Alyssa Healy after Australia won Commonwealth Games gold. Photograph: Dave Hunt/EPA

However, the reason for Lanning’s break is not necessarily important. What is, are the lessons that can be learned from a player at the top of her game needing to take time off. For someone so ingrained in cricket, who appears to love being out in the center of the field with her bat in hand, to need to step back and take time away for whatever reason is something worth reflecting on.

The professionalism of women’s cricket – and women’s sport more broadly – ​​has come along fairly quickly and while it hasn’t yet reached the levels of men’s sport, it is in stark contrast to what a young Lanning would have experienced in her early days in the team. With greater salaries have naturally come greater expectations – more touring, more public appearances, more time in front of the media.

For a man coming through the high performance pathways, this is understood and expected. They are prepared for the pressures of public life and know exactly what they are getting into. For the young women who entered the arena in the amateur era and have grown into professionalism, it is more akin to the proverbial frog in the pot of water. The water started off cold, but over time slowly increased to boiling without anyone being aware of what a difference that would make.

Increased professionalism for women’s sport is unequivocally a good thing. But a player of Lanning’s stature needing to ask for a break should send alarm bells around professional women’s sport. It should make organizations look at their schedules and question – are we leaving enough breaks that our players do not need to publicly stand down to get some rest?

Hopefully Lanning will return in time, refreshed and ready to once again destroy opposition bowling attacks with her cover drive. But maybe this time she – and the other hardworking women she captains – will have more rest and recovery built into their schedules to stay at the top for as long as they desire.

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US

After the fall of Roe, Republican pursuit of abortion bans appears to falter | Roe v. Wade

YoIn the leadup to the US supreme court overturning Roe v Wade and thus scrapping federal abortion protection, Republican lawmakers across the country maintained an uncompromising rallying cry against abortions, vowing to implement a sweeping wave of restrictions in their states.

However, since the highest court in the US overturned the ruling, many Republican leaders and officials have become more hesitant – or have even gone silent – ​​over the exact type of bans they promised to enact.

As Republicans move towards an election season rife with internal disagreements within their own party and mixed public opinions on exceptions in abortion bans such as instances of rape and incest, many rightwing lawmakers are finding it increasingly difficult to implement cohesive abortion policies.

The phenomenon has been starkly illustrated by Kansas’s referendum last week, where the usually reliably Republican state voted to keep abortion protections in its state constitution, providing an unexpected boost from red state America to the abortion rights movement.

With delays in passing abortion bills across the US and contentious questions on how far the bans will reach, Republicans are now, as Sarah Longwell, a moderate Republican strategist, said to Politico, “the dog that caught the car.”

According to a survey conducted between 27 June and 4 July by the Pew Research center, a majority of the American public disapproves of the supreme court’s decision to overturn Roe: 57% of adults disapprove of the court’s decision, including 43% who strongly disapprove, and 41% of American adults approve while 25% strongly approve of the court’s decision.

The survey also found that 62% of Americans say that abortion should be legal in all or most cases, and 36% of Americans say that abortion should be illegal in all or most cases. Only 38% of Republicans say that abortion should be legal in all or most cases, marking a 1% decrease from poll results obtained in 2007.

As Republican lawmakers grapple with mixed public opinions, many lawmakers have been divided over just how far they should go to ban abortions. With the recent case of the 10-year-old rape victim traveling across state lines from Ohio to Indiana to obtain an abortion continuing to dominate national headlines, many Republicans are realizing that the reality they are presented with vastly differs from their initial narratives surrounding abortion politics.

What kind of exceptions should be made in cases of rape and incest? Should a woman be granted an abortion if she is faced with a life-threatening ectopic pregnancy or an incomplete miscarriage? If an outright ban is put in place, should there be expansions of paid family leave benefits and increased funding for foster care and women’s health?

Some states have plowed ahead. Indiana has now passed a Republican-sponsored bill that would ban nearly all abortions in the state with limited exceptions, including cases of rape and incest, and to protect the health of the mother. That made it the first state in the US to put new restrictions in place, rather than just rely on a pre-existing “trigger law” passed before the supreme court’s decision.

But even in Indiana the move came after a series of thorny debates in the Indiana congress that reflect the growing divide Republicans are facing when it comes to fleshing out the specifics of abortion ban bills.

Before Roe v Wade was overturned, lawmakers did not spend “enough time on those issues, because you knew it was an issue you didn’t have to really get into the granular level in. But we’re in there and we’re recognizing that this is pretty hard work,” Republican Indiana state senator Rodric Bray told the New York Times.

Another Indiana Republican state senator, Kyle Walker, who voted against the ban last month, said: “I believe we must strike a balance for pregnant women to make their own health decisions in the first trimester of the pregnancy and also provide protections for an unborn baby as it progresses toward viability outside the womb.”

Even state senator Sue Glick, the sponsor of the bill, said that she was “not exactly” happy with the bill.

Meanwhile, the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana called the bill “cruel” and “dangerous”, while Indiana Right to Life criticized it as being “weak and troubling”, saying that it “lacks any teeth to actually reduce abortions in Indiana by holding those who perform abortions or would intentionally skirt the law accountable with criminal consequences.”

South Dakota, a predominantly Republican state, is facing a similar situation.

Shortly after the bombshell leak of the supreme court draft opinion on Roe, Republican governor Kristi Noem announced that she will “immediately call for a special session to save lives and guarantee that every unborn child has a right to life in South Dakota.”

However, since the supreme court overturned Roe, Noem has yet to publicly give any indication of when or if a special session will still take place. In response to the Associated Press asking if the special legislative session is still on the table, Noem’s office said it will happen “later this year”.

Noem has largely kept her language surrounding South Dakota’s abortion bans vague, simply reaffirming that “there is more work to do” and promising to “help mothers in crisis”. In June, Noem appeared to soften her approach on abortions by saying that doctors, not their patients, should be prosecuted for offering abortion pills.

“I don’t believe women should ever be prosecuted,” she said. “I don’t believe there should be any punishment for women, ever, that are in a crisis situation or have an unplanned pregnancy,” she said. The governor also set up a website for pregnant women that aims to “help mothers and their babies before birth and after by providing resources for pregnancy, new parents, financial assistance and adoption.”

Speaking to the Associated Press, South Dakota Right to Life’s executive director, Dale Bartscher, said that Noem’s actions reflect a turning point in the anti-abortion movement.

“An entirely new pro-life movement has just begun – we stand ready to serve women, the unborn and families,” he said. The Guardian reached out to Bartscher for additional comments.

In Arkansas, the Republican governor, Asa Hutchinson, appears to have taken a softer approach on the issue after the state’s abortion trigger ban immediately went into effect when Roe was overturned. Last month, Hutchinson did not confirm that abortion will be a topic on the agenda of this month’s special session that is supposed to focus on tax cuts.

Referring to alternatives to abortion, Hutchinson said: “That’s come up in conversations … I’ve mentioned that I need. You know, what can we do more for maternity care? What can we do more for adoption services because of the increased number that’s going to be demanding that? And so that is a potential issue… so just stay tuned.”

In May, Hutchinson acknowledged that his state’s abortion trigger law would result in “heartbreaking circumstances”, adding that “whenever you see that real-life circumstances like that, the debate is going to continue and the will of the people may or may not change. ”.

The governor admitted that abortions performed in the exceptions of rape and incest are increasingly “reflecting the broad view of Americans” but acknowledged that the issue is “still a very divided [topic].”

However, whether Hutchinson will ask lawmakers to consider the exceptions during the state’s upcoming legislative special session remains to be seen.

Meanwhile, in Ohio, the Republican governor, Mike DeWine, has refused to comment on the state’s recently enacted “heartbeat bill”, which makes abortions illegal after six weeks into a pregnancy. As a result of the state’s strict abortion laws, a 10-year-old rape victim from the state had to travel to Indiana to receive an abortion.

DeWine condemned the case as a “horrible, horrible tragedy” but did not signal whether he would amend abortion restrictions in the state. Speaking to reporters last month, DeWine refused to advocate for specific abortion policies and said that he is “going to let the debate play out a little bit”, referring to the legislative debate that is expected to happen in a few months.

“We’re going to hear from medical experts, we’re going to hear from other people,” he said, adding: “then there’ll be a time when I’ll certainly weigh in.”

Since Roe got overturned, Virginia’s top Republican lawmaker has been expressing similar sentiments to DeWine’s. In June, Governor Glenn Youngkin told an anti-abortion group that he would “happily and gleefully” sign any bill that would protect life, which he believes begins at conception.

Youngkin has expressed support for a ban on abortions after 15 weeks with exceptions for rape, incest and risk to the mother’s health.

Youngkin did not specify his support for any particular policies, although he acknowledged the divisive nature of the issue and called for a legislative process to hash out nuances in abortion ban bills.

“I’m a pro-life governor and I will sign a bill that comes to my desk that protects life and I look forward to that. But as of now, what we need is the process to start and to take the next four or five or six months and to work on a bill that can be supported on a bipartisan basis,” he said.

As Republicans across the country face a widening divide over the particularities of implementing abortion bans, a leading anti-abortion group has been urging Republicans in Congress not to leave the issue to the states. Many anti-abortion activists worry that extreme measures by Republican state lawmakers may cost Republican lawmakers seats nationally, especially with midterms on the horizon.

At the same time, in the wake of the Kansas referendum result, many Democratic strategists now believe public opinion, even in many red states, will be on their side. The issue can be used to shore up under-threat Democrats and wielded as a weapon against Republican candidates who can be portrayed as out of step with most Americans.

In a memo from Susan B Anthony Pro-Life America sent out in July, Republican lawmakers were encouraged to stay away from phrases such as “nationwide ban” and were urged not to relay the issue to state lawmakers.

“It is vitally important that pro-life Members of Congress highlight the abortion extremism of Democrats, who support abortion on demand, up until the moment of birth, paid for the taxpayer,” the memo said.

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Technology

Visual Studio Code 1.70 eases title bar customization

Credit: Dreamtime

Visual Studio Code 1.70, the latest release of Microsoft’s popular code editor, promises easier title bar customization and Git merge conflict resolution, among a host of other improvements.

Introduced August 4, VS Code 1.70 can be accessed from visualstudio.com for Linux, Windows, and macOS.

Also known as the July 2022 update, VS Code 1.70 brings easier title bar customization, with developers now able to right-click to the title bar to open a context menu that toggles the menu bar. For Windows users expecting the system context menu, the menu still can be triggered by right-clicking the VS Code icon in the top left corner of the window, or by pressing. Alt+Space.

Also in VS Code 1.70, the three-way merge editor, for quickly resolving Git merge conflicts, is enabled by default. The merge editor features improved context menus, new commands to accept all changes from one side, enhanced diff colors, and a greater emphasis on conflicting versus non-conflicting changes.

Microsoft also introduced command line options to bring up the merge editor in VS Code. The company said it is beginning to explore alternative diffing algorithms to improve the precision of merge conflicts.

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