Categories
Technology

This Keyboard With a Built-in 12-Inch Touchscreen Makes Good on Apple’s Touch Bar Promises

Like butterfly keyboards and chargers being included with iPhones, the MacBook’s Touch Bar seems doomed to extinction soon. The feature wasn’t completely useless, but its diminutive size prevented it from reaching its true potential. If you’re going to put a screen on a keyboard, you need to fully commit to the idea, like this mechanical keyboard with a 12.6-inch touchscreen does.

Amazon’s listings of consumer electronics continue to be slowly taken over by brand names that are not only completely unknown, but seemingly created by a random character generator. You can talk amongst yourselves about the right way to pronounce, “Ficihp,” but there’s little debate as to the usefulness of this creation.

As spotted by BoingBoing, although it looks like a self-contained mashup of a laptop and a tablet, the keyboard contains no actual computer components. On its own, it’s useless. But when cable connected to a computer, or a mobile device that’s compatible with external displays and hardware accessories, it serves as both a compact 71-key mechanical keyboard and a 12.6-inch color touchscreen with an ultra-wide aspect ratio and a cropped HD resolution of 1920×515.

Unlike the MacBook’s Touch Bar, which had its customization limited by how applications chose to use it, the screen on this keyboard serves as a secondary display for a laptop or desktop PC, so users can move whatever apps or toolbars onto it they so please. The ability to have touchscreen shortcuts for commonly used tools and functions in complex apps like Photoshop was one tantalizing use case the Touch Bar never fully delivered, but this could.

Some of the other suggested use cases for this accessory in the keyboard’s promotional imagery actually seem quite handy. For instance, you could use the keyboard’s screen to take notes during a video conference call, leaving the larger screen for showing the talking heads of all the participants. Or, you could just use it as a dedicated place to park your Twitter feed so it’s visible at all times. It’s your mental health, who are we to tell you how to take care of it?

Image: FicihpImage: Ficihp

The device is seemingly no slouch as a keyboard either, with adjustable brightness, swappable keycaps, and full RGB backlighting that has 15 different built-in lighting patterns. It’s also got n-key rollover, so it’s potentially even suitable for gaming too.

The hardware does have some. It’s only real connection to a device is through a USB-C port, so if you need to go the HDMI route for an older PC or laptop, you’ll need to get a hub or cable adapter to bridge the two. And while the touchscreen supports up to 10-point touch detection, that only works when this thing is connected to a Windows PC. When paired with a Mac, touch detection is limited to just a single point.

The biggest issue, however, might be the keyboard’s $US390 ($541) price tag. You can easily find a much larger hi-def external display and a passable mechanical keyboard for cheaper than this. Is the added touch functionality right at your fingertips worth the premium pricing? That’s up to you.

Categories
Sports

NRL won’t reverse result of West Tigers’ loss to North Queensland in round 19

The NRL won’t be reversing the outcome of Wests Tigers’ controversial loss to North Queensland in round 19 but will review the rule that allowed a captain’s challenge after the siren had gone.

And the Tigers also confirmed the club had decided not to pursue a course of legal action after “forcibly” making its position clear to the NRL in recent discussions having also undertaken independent advice.

In the aftermath of the Cowboys kicking a penalty kick to snatch a 27-26 victory courtesy of a captain’s challenge after the final siren, the NRL admitted bunker official Ashley Klein got the wrong call to uphold North Queensland’s challenge after winger Kyle Feldt and the Tigers ‘Asu Kepaoa collided while Feldt was chasing a kick.

Klein incorrectly ruled that Kepaoa had provided an “escort”.

The NRL world was fuming for what most considered the worst decision of the season and the Wests Tigers threatened legal action.

But after an investigation and meetings between league heavyweights and the clubs, the NRL declared on Monday there would be “no further consideration” of the match, ruling out awarding the game to the Tigers.

“Chairman and CEO of the Wests Tigers met with the chairman of the ARLC, NRL CEO and NRL head of football last week,” an NRL statement said.

“The meeting was agreed to discuss various aspects of the rulings made in the final minutes of the Wests Tigers and North Queensland Cowboys match on 24 July 2022, being the subject of a formal complaint lodged by Wests Tigers with the NRL.

“The NRL has acknowledged the concerns raised by the Wests Tigers and in response has put forward its interpretation of the rules which enabled the captain’s challenge to be made and the subsequent decision of the bunker match official.

“The NRL has already acknowledged that the bunker official decision of ‘escort’ was incorrect, leading to the erroneous awarding of a penalty in favor of North Queensland Cowboys which ultimately decided the match.

“On the matter of whether the captain’s challenge was permissible in terms of how the rules were drafted, the NRL and the Wests Tigers expressed differing views and interpretation.

The NRL is comfortable with the interpretation that was applied but has acknowledged, in light of the concerns raised by the Wests Tigers, that the rule needs to be reviewed at the end of the season to provide more clarity so as to ensure that there is no future misunderstanding as to the intent and application of the rule.

“Wests Tigers will be consulted as part of the review, together with other interested clubs and stakeholders.

“The NRL acknowledges the professional and respectful manner in which the representatives of the Wests Tigers have pursued their concerns on behalf of their club’s members and fans.

“There will be no further consideration in relation to the match of 24 July 2022.”

Tigers chairman Lee Hagipantelis had said in the aftermath of the game that the club was exploring its legal options but the club ruled that out on Monday after talks with the NRL

In a statement the club said that decision may be “disappointing to many” but officials were happy they would be consulted on charges to the rules.

“We have made our point to the NRL and made it forcibly,” the statement said.

“We did so on behalf of our members and fans and gave voice to their legitimate concerns that the outcome of the match was not just nor fair. We extracted a concession from the NRL that the obstruction penalty which was given was erroneous and therefore, by implication, Wests Tigers should have won that match.

“We know it, everyone knows it. Unfortunately, the history books will not record it that way.”

Read related topics:Brisbane

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Categories
Australia

Fears lengthy visa processing delays for skilled migrants will worsen the hospitality skills crisis

Long-term hospitality staff are as rare as hen’s teeth in outback Queensland.

When Sri Lankan chef Madushka ‘Max’ Dilshan Perera moved to Longreach in 2020 to work in a local pub, his skills were not taken for granted.

The chef started a weekly night ‘Sri Lankan Curry Night’ which has become a local institution.

Mr Perera wants to stay in Longreach long-term and raise his family there.

“I love this town and I love to work here,” Mr Perera said.

“My whole life is here, everything I bought, the toys for my kid, it’s all unpacked and in the house.

“Everything I worked for is here.”

But the outback chef has spent much of his time in Australia in limbo, trying to get visas for his wife and two-year-old daughter to join him in western Queensland.

A man with black hair in a white chef outfit smiles in front of a stainless steel kitchen.
Mr Perera says the first thing he’ll do when his family comes to Australia is spend some quality time around town.(ABC Western Qld: Danielle O’Neal)

Forced to wait while the borders were closed, Mr Perera’s family applied for their entry visas in March this year.

Mr Perera hadn’t heard anything from the government since April, which left him worried about his future.

“I work here, I go home, I’ve got no one. Last week I got sick and I had no-one,” Mr Perera said.

“Just doing FaceTime every night and after the phone call I start crying because I miss my daughter.

“We became a family because we need each other and right now I don’t have anyone and the same for them as well.”

Chef video calling his toddler
Max has seen his two-year-old daughter in Sri Lanka for two weeks of her life.(ABC Western Qld: Danielle O’Neal)

After the ABC spoke with Mr Perera, questions about his situation were put to the Department of Home Affairs on Monday morning.

That afternoon, after months of waiting, his family were granted their visas.

Mr Perera said he was already trying to arrange flights to Longreach so they could be reunited.

‘We don’t seem to be able to deliver what we offer them’

The news is a boost not only for the young dad, but also for his boss.

Birdcage Hotel owner Gavin Ballard said it was extremely rare to find staff who want to stay long-term in remote outback towns.

“It takes a special person to come out to the outback and to work, so when you get someone who wants to stay as a business owner you certainly want to look after them and do the right thing by them,” Mr Ballard said.

A man in a black shirt sits next to a barrel table at a concrete beer garden.
Gavin Ballard says Mr Perera has been fantastic for the community, and his business.(ABC Western Qld: Danielle O’Neal)

“A lot of people like to go to the coast.

“We’ve had our trials of chefs who come this way and get job offers and they just go back to the coast, which is why we went the sponsored way.

“We’ve got a couple more guys here doing the same thing.”

Mr Ballard said if Mr Perera had left his job, the position would likely be empty for several months.

“You start all over again, the process doesn’t happen overnight,” Mr Ballard said.

A kid plays pool at an outback pub
The Birdcage Hotel in Longreach is packed during tourist season.(ABC Western Qld: Danielle O’Neal)

“If this is going on not only here, but with other businesses, we’re all going to struggle.

“We want to get skilled people out here, but we don’t seem to be able to deliver what we offer them.”

two people walk into hotel in Longreach
The Birdcage Hotel is one of Longreach’s busiest pubs.(ABC Western Qld: Danielle O’Neal)

Thousands more waiting

The extreme pressure on Max and his family has been relieved by the sudden issuing of the visas.

But the Restaurant and Catering industry Association says they are many more people still living in limbo due to issues with skilled migration programs.

“There are many stories that we’re hearing about are families that are broken up, people trying to get into the country, very long delays, but the biggest issue that we have is that there is no communication,” CEO Belinda Clarke said.

“That’s the hardest thing, for people to be able to plan and understand what’s happening. Will I get a yes or a no? But there’s no communication.”

More than 56,000 skilled workers entered Australia in the last financial year on the same temporary skill shortage visa as Mr Perera.

But federal government data shows it’s taking between six months to two years to process visas for the families of skilled regional workers.

Headshot woman smiling
The Restaurant and Catering Industry Association’s CEO Belinda Clarke says there’s “no communication” in the process of applying for a visa.(Supplied)

The Restaurant and Catering industry Association says there are more than 900,000 visas waiting to be processed by the Australian government.

In a statement, a Department of Home Affairs spokesperson said the demand for skilled workers and processing current visa applications is a priority.

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Categories
US

FBI search of Mar-a-Lago helps show how probe of Trump documents has changed

In the months before the FBI’s dramatic move to execute a search warrant at former president Donald Trump’s Florida home — and open his safe to look for items — federal authorities grew increasingly concerned that Trump or his lawyers and aides had not, in fact, returned all the documents and other material that were government property, according to people familiar with the discussions.

Officials became suspicious that when Trump gave back items to the National Archives about seven months ago, either the former president or people close to him held on to key records — despite a Justice Department investigation into the handling of 15 boxes of material sent to the former president’s private club and residence in the waning days of his administration.

Over months of discussions on the subject, some officials also came to suspect Trump’s representatives were not truthful at times, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation.

On Tuesday, a lawyer for Trump said the agents who brought the court-approved warrant to Mar-a-Lago a day earlier took about 12 more boxes after conducting their search.

Garland vowed to depoliticize Justice. Then the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago

People familiar with the investigation said that Justice Department and FBI officials traveled to Mar-a-Lago this spring, a meeting first reported by CNN. The officials spoke to Trump’s representatives, inspected the storage space where documents were held, and expressed concern that the former president or people close to him still had items that should be in government custody, these people said.

By that point, officials at the National Archives had been aggressively contacting people in Trump’s orbit to demand the return of documents they believed were covered by the Presidential Records Act, said two people familiar with those inquiries. Like the others, they spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss details of the investigation.

Christina Bobb, a lawyer for Trump, said his lawyers engaged in discussions with the Justice Department this spring over materials held at Mar-a-Lago. At that time, the former president’s legal team searched through two to three dozen boxes of material contained in a storage area, hunting for documents that could be considered presidential records, and turned over several items that might meet the definition, she said.

In June, Bobb said, she and Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran met with Jay Bratt, the chief of the counterintelligence and export control section at the Justice Department, along with several investigators. Trump stopped by the meeting as he began to greet the investigators but was not interviewed. The lawyers showed the federal officials the boxes, and Bratt and the others spent some time looking through the material.

Bobb said the Justice Department officials commented that they did not believe the storage unit was properly secured, so Trump officials added a lock to the facility. When FBI agents searched the property Monday, Bobb added, they broke through the lock that had been added to the door.

The FBI removed about a dozen boxes that had been stored in the basement storage area, she said. Bobb did not share the search warrant left by agents but said that it indicated agents were investigating possible violations of laws dealing with the handling of classified material and the Presidential Records Act.

What could the Mar-a-Lago search mean for Trump legally?

Trump announced Monday that the FBI had searched Mar-a-Lago and his safe, decrying the move as the latest unfair action against him by the Justice Department and FBI. Spokespeople at both agencies declined to comment.

Asked for comment Tuesday about whether the former president or his advisers had withheld documents or been untruthful, Trump spokesman Taylor Budowich called the FBI’s action “not only unprecedented, but completely unnecessary.”

“President Trump and his representatives have gone to painstaking lengths in communicating and cooperating with the appropriate agencies,” Budowich said in an emailed statement. “In the Democrats’ desperate attempt to retain power, they have unified and grown the entire conservative movement.”

One adviser who spoke to Trump after the search said the former president sounded buoyed by the development, bragging about how many Republicans were supporting him publicly, and said Trump thought the search would help him politically in the end.

“It furthers his inclination to run and galvanizes the Republican base on his behalf,” said Jason Miller, a longtime adviser and former spokesman.

Analysis: Donald Trump has been waiting for this moment for a long time

Some of the Trump’s advisers have urged him to move up his expected announcement that he will run for president in 2024 and make it soon at Mar-a-Lago, with the FBI search as a backdrop. But Trump has made no commitment to doing so, one person with direct knowledge of the conversations said.

Two people familiar with the initial recovery of the materials at Mar-a-Lago said that Archives officials believed that more records were missing and were skeptical that Trump had handed everything over. As the investigation gained steam, some Trump advisers have sought to stay away from the issue, fearing it would become a messy legal and political situation, according to people familiar with the discussions.

After Monday’s search, lawyers close to Trump sought advice or recommendations of criminal defense lawyers who could represent Trump, said a person familiar with the lawyers. According to this person, the lawyers said the warrant was related to allegations that classified information was retained by Trump.

Trump already has a number of lawyers working for him, but it is not uncommon for individuals facing investigative activity to seek local attorneys to navigate a particular court district.

Some top Republicans echo Trump’s evidence-free claims discrediting FBI search

Dozens of die-hard Trump supporters came to West Palm Beach on Tuesday to express their support. Adriane Shochet, 64, of Lake Worth, Fla., bought a $14 broomstick, which she attached to an American flag and waved as she stood on the causeway that overlooks part of Mar-a-Lago.

“I just needed to come out and show the whole free world that this is frightening, and if they can do this, what’s next?” Shochet said. “This is the polar opposite of whatever effect politically they thought they were going to get because all it’s doing is empowering the right politically.”

Passing motorists honked in support. One man stood on the bridge, which crosses the Intracoastal Waterway, holding the American flag upside down — widely recognized as a symbol of his belief that the country is in distress.

Pat Stewart, 85, found the “Trump 2020” flag that she used to fly at her house in Jupiter, Fla., which she had expected to keep tucked away until the next presidential election. For the next several hours, she stood in the sun alongside a friend who was visiting from Michigan, who is also 85, waving at passing motorists.

“I was very angry, very angry, and very upset, that our government would do this to an ex-president,” Stewart said. Even though aides said Trump was in New York and at his golf club and residence in Bedminster, NJ, this week, she held out hope that he was at Mar-a-Lago.

“We want him to come out and announce he’s running for president,” Stewart said.

One person familiar with the investigation said agents were conducting a court-authorized search as part of a long-running examination into why documents — some of them top-secret — were taken to the former president’s private club and residence instead of shipped to the National Archives and Records Administration when Trump left office. The Presidential Records Act, which requires the preservation of memos, letters, notes, emails, faxes and other written communications related to a president’s official duties.

15 boxes: Inside the long, strange trip of Trump’s classified records

In January, the National Archives retrieved 15 boxes of documents and other items from Mar-a-Lago. David S. Ferriero, then the archivist of the United States, said in a statement in February that Trump representatives were “continuing to search” for additional records.

Trump resisted handing over some of the boxes for months, some people close to the president said, and believed that many of the items were his personally and did not belong to the government. He eventually agreed to hand over some of the documents, “giving them what he believed they were entitled to,” in the words of one adviser.

Tim Craig in West Palm Beach, Fla., contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

Waterfront homes attract premium prices, research shows

“Also, Australia is known for its balmy outdoor lifestyle, so many buyers in this super-prime space are willing to pay a premium to secure the ideal position along the waterfront.”

The average premium paid for a waterfront property across the 17 cities was 40 per cent, and prices for waterfront homes climbed an average of 10.9 per cent over the year to June.

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Beachfront homes were in the strongest demand, commanding a premium of 63 per cent. Properties in harbor locations were a close second, with a 62 per cent premium, and coastal homes secured at a 40 per cent premium.

In Sydney, it was harborside homes that typically saw the greatest premium, said Michael Pallier of Sydney Sotheby’s International Realty. Such homes were closer to the city and were more likely to offer direct water access than beach homes, which typically sat across the street.

“Point Piper would be number one, it’s the best of the best, but the non-waterfront homes there are also very expensive,” he said. “You’ll probably still spend 100 per cent more on a waterfront though.”

Buyers in Sydney’s prime waterfront markets could expect to pay at least double to get a home on the water, even when moving from one side of the street to the other, Pallier noted.

Such homes drew interest from both local and international buyers, he said, and reaching the waterfront was the goal for many cashed-up buyers.

Waterfront homes in Sydney attract an average premium of 121 per cent.

Waterfront homes in Sydney attract an average premium of 121 per cent.Credit:Peter Rae

“It’s a personal milestone for a lot of people, we have a beautiful harbor … and people want a slice of it.”

In Melbourne, Nick Johnstone, director of Nick Johnstone Real Estate in Brighton, has a list of clients waiting for a beachfront property.

“They’ll pay whatever is required to get beachfront, but homes are so tightly held and pretty much generational, where people don’t want to sell,” he said. Owners may instead pass property on to their children.

The rarity of beachfront homes made them hard to value, Johnstone said, but estimated they sold for at least 100 per cent above a mid-range property in the same exclusive suburb.

Melbourne waterfront properties drew a premium of 39 per cent.

Melbourne waterfront properties drew a premium of 39 per cent.Credit:eddie jim

“[Such homes are] rarely coming up and when they do, we are absolutely smashed with inquiries. There are just not that many beachfront properties and they’re not making any more,” he said.

Interest in waterfront homes came from local, interstate and overseas buyers — who were largely from China, or Australian expats returning home. Buyers from Melbourne’s eastern suburbs had also been increasingly moving to the Bayside region since the start of the pandemic, as buyers prioritized lifestyle locations.

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Categories
Technology

Google ‘Read Along’ app for kids is now a website

Read Along wants to help improve child literacy by using Google’s speech recognition technology to give kids reading aloud verbal and visual feedback. Originally an Android app, Google’s Read Along is now on the web to better expand availability.

Read Along first launched for India in 2019 before expanding a year later. Aimed at those 5 and up, it supports nine languages ​​(including English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Hindi) in over 180 countries. Google says more than 30 million kids have read 120 million stories over the past three years.

Google’s text-to-speech and speech recognition tech works to detect “if a student is struggling or successfully reading the passage.” Kids receive “correctional and encouraging ” feedback from Diya, a “reading assistant.” In terms of privacy, the Android app can work offline (after stories are downloaded), while all voice processing occurs on-device and is not sent to Google servers.

Google is now bringing Read Along to the web in public beta and gearing it towards laptops and PCs. Speech recognition occurs in the browser with support for Chrome, Firefox and Edge today, while Safari is “coming soon.” Sign-in is optional and allows for multiple accounts.

Google is positioning readalong.google.com as a “new opportunit[y] for teachers and education leaders around the world, who can use Read Along as a reading practice tool for students in schools.” The company recommends using Google Workspace for Education accounts in schools and personal Google Accounts with Family Link at home.

In terms of content, there are already hundreds of illustrated stories categorized into different reading levels:

In addition to the website launch, we are also adding some brand-new stories. We have partnered with two well-known YouTube content creators, ChuChu TV and USP Studios, to adapt some of their popular videos into a storybook format. Our partnership with Kutuki continues as we adapt their excellent collection of English and Hindi alphabet books and phonics books for early readers; those titles which will be available later this year.

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Categories
Sports

Wollongong Roller Hawks wheelchair basketball team founders reflect on seven titles and producing Paralympians

Wollongong Roller Hawks coach Brendan Dowler may be surprised to hear his city called a powerhouse in wheelchair basketball, but the team’s results tell a clear story.

His team has been crowned national champions in 2003, 2011, 2012, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2022.

Downler is a two-time Paralympian, captain Brett Stibners is a four-time Paralympian and point guard Luke Pople has just won a gold medal at the Commonwealth Games for 3×3 wheelchair basketball.

“To hear Wollongong referred to as a powerhouse is strange in some ways, because we are a regional city, but we’re proud of the achievements we’ve been able to provide to players, the community and supporters,” Dowler said.

“We should be proud of that achievement as a smaller city in Australia.”

The club is now flush with players who have succeeded on the international stage, but it a;; began with two men who were sick of traveling to Sydney to train and play.

A smiling, bespectacled man with gray hair and a neat beard in front of a waterway, wearing a rain jacket.
Eino Okonnen is known for his boldness and persistence in recruiting players.(Supplied: Eino Okonnen)

Humble beginnings, bold recruiting

Dowler and Roller Hawks co-founder Eino Okonnen were keen wheelchair basketball players in the late 1990s.

“We were playing for Sydney teams because there were no teams down here and we were traveling up to Sydney multiple times a week,” Dowler said.

They decided to start their own team, but they needed a star player.

As well as being a talented wheelchair basketball player, Okonnen is famous for his bold approach to recruiting and headhunting players.

Two para-athletes smile as they hold up gold medals.
Luke Pople celebrates winning gold at the 2022 Commonwealth Games, alongside Hannah Dodd.(Facebook: Wollongong Roller Hawks)

His first move was to recruit Canadian Joey Johnson, who had just won a gold medal for wheelchair basketball at the 2000 Sydney Paralympics.

“I met him and asked him to play for us — he was one of the best players in the world at the time and he said OK,” Okonnen said.

“He showed up and taught us how to play.”

The Roller Hawks entered the National Wheelchair Basketball League in 2001 and won their first title two years later.

“I still recruit players, but fortunately other people do too, and the team itself encourages players to come and play with us,” Okonnen said.

He said after people saw a game they realized the sport was more physical and fast-paced than they may have thought.

“It’s not people playing in hospital chairs — they’re playing in F1 cars and you’d be amazed what people can do in a wheelchair.”

A dark-haired man with tattooed arms faces off with an opponent during a wheelchair basketball game.
Commonwealth Games 3×3 representative Luke Pople is among the next generation of Roller Hawks players to represent Australia.(Facebook: Wollongong Roller Hawks)

‘Never looked back’

Okonnen’s persuasive nature saw him recruit club captain Brett Stibners after he lost his left leg after a car accident.

A man in a wheelchair on a basketball court, holding a basketball.
Brett Stibners did not want to try wheelchair basketball after he lost a leg following a car accident, but changed his mind after watching a game.(ABC Illawarra: Justin Huntsdale)

“I found out where he lived, introduced myself and on the first meeting he said, ‘Go away, I’m not interested,'” Okonnen said.

“I gave him more time and went back again and it was the same story.

“Then his mum and dad took him to see a game and once he saw a game he’s never looked back.”

Dowler said proactive recruitment had been a hallmark of the Wollongong Roller Hawks.

“I’m not as up front as Eino,” he said.

“He’ll accost people in the car park at the supermarket.”

Smaller market advantages

Wollongong has a population of about 220,000 and Dowler said being a regional hub had its advantages over larger cities.

“There’s not one reason for our success, but we have a great association and basketball is strong in Wollongong with the Hawks at the NBL level,” he said.

“We’ve had a great committee over the years, but we’ve also had support from councillors, politicians, businesses and the media, as well as a great bunch of people.

“Being in a regional city is an advantage over Sydney and Melbourne because we’re a tight-knit team and can hang out together and train more easily than the bigger cities can.”

A wheelchair basketball team arrayed on a court, all smiling and wearing medals.
The Wollongong Roller Hawks celebrate winning the 2022 league title in July.(Facebook: Wollongong Roller Hawks)

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Categories
Australia

Cairns youth crime punishment warning as city endures record spate of car thefts

Amy Grant couldn’t stop worrying about the worst-case scenario as she drove around Cairns looking for her family’s stolen 4WD.

The keys to the LandCruiser had been taken from the Grant family’s caravan while they slept inside.

It was one of about 800 vehicles reported stolen in the Cairns region so far this year, eclipsing the yearly record set in 2021 in just the first three quarters of the year.

“Let’s have a think about a 13-year-old driving down the Bruce Highway in and out of traffic, going from suburb to suburb,” Ms Grant said.

“As a mum, for those first few days, I’m thinking there’s a likelihood my car could kill a family.”

The theft left her family and their caravan effectively stranded in Cairns, the final destination of an east coast road trip the Albury residents had been enjoying.

Deadly consequences

Car thefts in Far North Queensland have already ended in tragedy this year.

A 14-year-old boy was killed in February when an allegedly stolen car he was a passenger in crashed into a tree at high speed in suburban Cairns.

a CCTV still image of a white Landcruiser from the side angle
The Grant family’s stolen car was captured on CCTV being driven in Cairns.(Supplied)

There have been near misses too.

Police said two pedestrians had to jump out of the way to avoid being hit when a 17-year-old girl drove a stolen car on to a footpath to get away from officers on Sunday evening.

Police have repeatedly pleaded with residents to make their cars more difficult to steal by ensuring their vehicles and homes were locked and keys kept in a secure place.

Alternatives needed

Criminologist Shannon Dodd, from Australian Catholic University, said taking a purely punitive stance against young offenders “could actually make it worse.”

“I understand why these issues cause a lot of community concern and certainly as a parent, I can understand wanting to feel safe,” Dr Dodd said.

“But as a criminologist and knowing the research, I couldn’t justify approaches which are aimed at taking a harsher stance toward these young people; throwing the book at them per se.

“I know that’s what a lot of people call for but unfortunately, what we might see as the likely result of that is individuals becoming entrenched in the justice system.”

Front of Cairns police station in far north Queensland in July 2017.
Police urge drivers to hide their keys and lock their homes and cars.(ABC News: Emilia Terzon )

Dr Dodd is helping lead a new six-week trial program for up to 20 young people aged 13 to 20 that aims to better understand why at-risk youth choose to go joyriding in stolen cars.

The program, to take place in Townsville, will combine educational sessions with hands-on activities “that get their heart racing”.

Mareeba Shire Mayor Angela Toppin said she wanted juvenile offenders sent to remote areas to take part in diversionary programs.

“These are young 10, 11, 12-year-olds, 13-year-olds maybe, [who] can be sent to gain both social and vocational skills rather than be sent to a youth detention facility,” she said.

Queensland Police and Corrective Services Minister Mark Ryan have been contacted for comment.

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Categories
US

A key Death Valley road buried in floods remains closed : NPR

Mud Canyon Road is closed due to flash flooding in Death Valley, Calif., on Friday. Authorities say the main roadway into Death Valley National Park will remain closed as crews clean up after record-breaking rains damaged the roadway and choked it with mud, rocks and debris.

National Park Service/Death Valley National Park via AP, File


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National Park Service/Death Valley National Park via AP, File


Mud Canyon Road is closed due to flash flooding in Death Valley, Calif., on Friday. Authorities say the main roadway into Death Valley National Park will remain closed as crews clean up after record-breaking rains damaged the roadway and choked it with mud, rocks and debris.

National Park Service/Death Valley National Park via AP, File

DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK, Calif. — A main roadway into Death Valley National Park will remain closed into next week as crews clean up after record-breaking rains damaged the roadway and choked it with mud, rocks and debris.

Flash flooding in the park last week trapped hundreds of hotel guests and partially buried about 60 cars and trucks in mud. No injuries were reported.

The California Department of Transportation said about 30 miles (48 kilometers) of State Route 190 were partially or fully buried with debris and about 20 miles (32 kilometers) have been cleared.

However, the route will remain closed at least through Aug. 17 from Trona Wildrose Road/Panamint Valley Road to State Route 127 in Death Valley Junction, Caltrans said in a statement.

“As our crews continue to remove debris. They have found several damaged sections of highway with complete shoulder loss, damage to asphalt, and undercutting of the roadway,” Caltrans District 9 Director Ryan Dermody said.

Some of the debris collected will be used to fill in eroded road shoulders, Caltrans said.

On Monday, flash flooding from a monsoonal moisture system also closed a 5-mile (8-kilometer) stretch of road and prompted the evacuation of the southern portion of Joshua Tree National Park, another desert park about a 4-hour drive south of Death Valley.

No injuries were reported.

Death Valley National Park, located near the California-Nevada state line, has over 1,000 miles (1,609 kilometers) of roadway across 3.4 million acres (1.3 million hectares).

The record-breaking rains last Friday dumped 1.46 inches (3.71 centimeters) of rain at the Furnace Creek area. That’s about 75% of what the area typically gets in a year, and it is more than has ever been recorded for the entire month of August.

Since 1936, the only single day with more rain was April 15, 1988, when 1.47 inches (3.73 centimeters) fell, park officials said.

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Business

Holden ZB Commodore brake booster recall

Holden has recalled almost 14,000 examples of the last car to wear the Commodore badge.

Sold to customers between 2017 and 2020, Holden’s ZB Commodore was a last roll of the dice from a brand clinging to life in Australia.

A recall notice for the European-sourced machine says the car’s brake booster may fail due to a manufacturing defect.

“If this occurs the stopping distance in the un-boosted condition would exceed the distance prescribed by the Australian Design Rule (ADR) 31/03,” the notice says.

“If the brake booster does not operate as intended, it could increase the risk of an accident causing serious injury or death to vehicle occupants and/or other road users.”

Holden finished assembly of locally-built VF Commodores in Elizabeth, South Australia in 2017. The German-built ZB Commodore took its place in showrooms until it was phased out when Holden decided to retire the Commodore name in December 2019.

Holden announced plans to end sales of all new cars in Australia weeks later in February 2020, before closing its local business at the end of that year.

The manufacturer still offers maintenance, repair and warranty work through a service network.

Models affected by the latest recall will receive a free software update that should address the issue.

More info: Holden Customer Care, 1800 46 465 336

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