Categories
US

Trump Asked Aide Why His Generals Couldn’t Be Like Hitler’s, Book Says

WASHINGTON — Former President Donald J. Trump told his top White House aid that he wished he had generals like the ones who had reported to Adolf Hitler, saying they were “totally loyal” to the leader of the Nazi regime, according to a forthcoming book about the 45th president.

“Why can’t you be like the German generals?” Mr. Trump told John Kelly, his chief of staff, preceding the question with an obscenity, according to an excerpt from “The Divider: Trump in the White House,” by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser, published online by The New Yorker on Monday morning. (Mr. Baker is the chief White House correspondent for The New York Times; Ms. Glasser is a staff writer for The New Yorker.)

The excerpt depicts Mr. Trump as deeply frustrated by his top military officials, whom he saw as insufficiently loyal or obedient to him. In the conversation with Mr. Kelly, which took place years before the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the authors write, the chief of staff told Mr. Trump that Germany’s generals had “tried to kill Hitler three times and almost pulled it off.”

Mr. Trump was dismissive, according to the excerpt, apparently unaware of the World War II history that Mr. Kelly, a retired four-star general, knew all too well.

“’No, no, no, they were totally loyal to him,’ the president replied,” according to the book’s authors. “In his version of his history, the generals of the Third Reich had been completely subservient to Hitler; this was the model he wanted for his military. Kelly told Trump that there were no such American generals, but the president was determined to test the proposition.”

Much of the excerpt focuses on Gen. Mark A. Milley, who served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the country’s top military official, under Mr. Trump. When the president offered him the job, General Milley told him, “I’ll do whatever you ask me to do.” But he quickly soured on the president.

General Milley’s frustration with the president peaked on June 1, 2020, when Black Lives Matter protesters filled Lafayette Square, near the White House. Mr. Trump demanded to send in the military to clear the protesters, but General Milley and other top aides refused. In response, Mr. Trump shouted, “You are all losers!” according to the excerpt. “Turning to Milley, Trump said, ‘Can’t you just shoot them? Just shoot them in the legs or something?’” the authors write.

After the square was cleared by the National Guard and police, General Milley briefly joined the president and other aides in walking through the empty park so Mr. Trump could be photographed in front of a church on the other side. The authors said General Milley later considered his decision to join the president to be a “misjudgment that would haunt him forever, a ‘road-to-Damascus moment,’ as he would later put it.”

A week after that incident, General Milley wrote — but never delivered — a scathing resignation letter, accusing the president he served of politicizing the military, “ruining the international order,” failing to value diversity, and embracing the tyranny, dictatorship and extremism that members of the military had sworn to fight against.

“It is my belief that you were doing great and irreparable harm to my country,” the general wrote in the letter, which has not been revealed before and was published in its entirety by The New Yorker. General Milley wrote that Mr. Trump did not honor those who had fought against fascism and the Nazis during World War II.

“It’s now obvious to me that you don’t understand that world order,” General Milley wrote. “You don’t understand what the war was all about. In fact, you subscribe to many of the principles that we fought against. And I cannot be a party to that.”

Yet General Milley eventually decided to remain in office so he could ensure that the military could serve as a bulwark against an increasingly out-of-control president, according to the authors of the book.

“’I’ll just fight him,’” General Milley told his staff, according to the New Yorker excerpt. “The challenge, as he saw it, was to stop Trump from doing any more damage, while also acting in a way that was consistent with his obligation to carry out the orders of his commander in chief. ‘If they want to court-martial me, or put me in prison, have at it.’”

In addition to the revelations about General Milley, the book excerpt reveals new details about Mr. Trump’s interactions with his top military and national security officials, and documents dramatic efforts by the former president’s most senior aides to prevent a domestic or international crisis in the weeks after Mr. Trump lost his re-election bid.

In the summer of 2017, the book excerpt reveals, Mr. Trump returned from viewing the Bastille Day parade in Paris and told Mr. Kelly that he wanted one of his own. But the president told Mr. Kelly: “Look, I don’t want any wounded guys in the parade. This doesn’t look good for me,” the authors write.

“Kelly could not believe what he was hearing,” the excerpt continues. “’Those are the heroes,’ I told Trump. ‘In our society, there’s only one group of people who are more heroic than they are — and they are buried over in Arlington.’” Mr. Trump answered: “I don’t want them. It doesn’t look good for me,” according to the authors.

The excerpt underscores how many of the president’s senior aides have been trying to burnish their reputations in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack. Like General Milley, who largely refrained from criticizing Mr. Trump publicly, they are now eager to make their disagreements with him clear by cooperating with book authors and other journalists.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who never publicly disputed Mr. Trump’s wild election claims and has rarely criticized him since, was privately dismissive of the assertions of fraud that Mr. Trump and his advisers embraced.

On the evening of Nov. 9, 2020, after the news media called the race for Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Pompeo called General Milley and asked to see him, according to the excerpt. During a conversation at General Milley’s kitchen table, Mr. Pompeo was blunt about what he thought of the people around the president.

“’The crazies have taken over,’” Mr. Pompeo told General Milley, according to the authors. Behind the scenes, they write, Mr. Pompeo had quickly accepted that the election was over and refused to promote overturning it.

“’He was totally against it,’ a senior State Department official recalled. Pompeo cynically justified this jarring contrast between what he said in public and in private. ‘It was important for him not to get fired at the end, too, to be there to the bitter end,’ the senior official said,” according to the excerpt.

The authors detail what they call an “extraordinary arrangement” in the weeks after the election between Mr. Pompeo and General Milley to hold daily morning phone calls with Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, in an effort to make sure the president did do not take dangerous actions.

“Pompeo and Milley soon took to calling them the ‘land the plane’ phone calls,” the authors write. “’Our job is to land this plane safely and to do a peaceful transfer of power the 20th of January,’ Milley told his staff. ‘This is our obligation to this nation.’ There was a problem, however. ‘Both engines are out, the landing gear is stuck. We’re in an emergency situation.’”

The Jan. 6 hearings on Capitol Hill have revealed that a number of the former president’s top aides pushed back privately against Mr. Trump’s election denials, even as some declined to do so publicly. Several, including Pat A. Cipollone, the former White House counsel, testified that they had attempted — without success — to convince the president that there was no evidence of substantial fraud.

In the excerpt, the authors say that General Milley concluded that Mr. Cipollone was “a force for ‘trying to keep guardrails around the president.’” The general also believed that Mr. Pompeo was “genuinely trying to achieve a peaceful handover of power ,” the authors write. But they write that General Milley was “was never sure what to make of Meadows. Was the chief of staff trying to land the plane or to hijack it?”

Gen. Milley is not the only top official who considered resignation, the authors write, in response to the president’s actions.

The excerpt details private conversations among the president’s national security team as they discussed what to do in the event the president attempted to take actions they felt they could not abide. The authors report that General Milley consulted with Robert Gates, a former secretary of defense and former head of the CIA

The advice from Mr. Gates was blunt, the authors write: “’Keep the chiefs on board with you and make it clear to the White House that if you go, they all go, so that the White House knows this isn’t just about firing Mark Milley. This is about the entire Joint Chiefs of Staff quitting in response.’”

The excerpt makes clear that Mr. Trump did not always get the yes-men that he wanted. During one Oval Office exchange, Mr. Trump asked Gen. Paul Selva, an Air Force officer and the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, what he thought about the president’s desire for a military parade through the nation’s capital on the Fourth of July .

General Selva’s response, which has not been reported before, was blunt, and not what the president wanted to hear, according to the book’s authors.

“’I didn’t grow up in the United States, I actually grew up in Portugal,’ General Selva said. “’Portugal was a dictatorship — and parades were about showing the people who had the guns. And in this country, we don’t do that.’ I added, ‘It’s not who we are.’”

Categories
Technology

​Oppo Watch 3 confirmed – and leaks show curved body

We know that Oppo is preparing a new version of its flagship smartwatch – and now it’s been officially teased by the company.

The new smartwatch will land with the Qualcomm Snapdragon W5 chip on board, and will be the first device to run the new wearables platform. And it could land on 10 August, on the same day as the Samsung Galaxy Watch 5.

Huawei teased the watch on Weibo, and showed off a curved body, large screen and black and silver finishes with silicone and leather straps.

But new leaks from Evan Blass have given a more candid look at the new Oppo Watch.

The original Oppo Watch bore more than a small resemblance to the Apple Watch, although this time out it seems Oppo is using a curved body.

That will hug the contours of the wrist, which could make it more comfortable to wear – especially as there seems to be a large screen on board.

It’s been done before – not least by the Oppo Watch Free – which boasts a slight curve. And readers with long memories might recall the Asus Zenwatch back in 2014, which also used a curved screen to offset a large display.

In fact, we can’t help but remembering the Zenwatch with the brown leather strap. It seems we really have gone full circle.

There’s no word on the Oppo Watch 3 landing outside of China, but we assume it will eventually.

And it will be notable for being the first to use the Snapdragon W5. This enables smartwatches built on manufacturer platforms to take advantage of Qualcomm’s co-processor for improved performance and battery life.

So it will be interesting to see the kind of improvements the platform could offer as a bellweather for the next generation of smartwatches.

In an interview with Wareable, Qualcomm told us it has 25 smartwatches in the works, and didn’t rule out the platform being used for smartglasses and other wearables.

Categories
Sports

The player who Collingwood would be “crazy” to let go

Brownlow Medalist Gerard Healy says Collingwood would be “crazy” to let Jordan De Goey go on the back of strong recent form.

Coming back from injury, De Goey has averaged 24 disposals and two marks in the last fortnight and was one of his side’s best players in Friday night’s win over Melbourne.

The 26-year-old free agent has constantly been linked to the likes of Geelong and St Kilda, but Healy urged the Pies to re-sign De Goey ahead of what’s expected to busy a busy trade and free agency period across the competition.

“It would be a big call to get rid of (Jordan) De Goey,” he said on sports day.

“He looks happy and is playing fantastically well, it would be a big call for him to go even for extra money as he knows his surroundings. If you go to a new club, it’s a challenge.

“I think Collingwood would be crazy letting him go.

“His form has been pretty fair and he was excellent on the weekend, Collingwood is in premiership contention and they’ll be in it next year unless something goes wrong.”

De Goey was given eight coaches votes for his effort last Friday night and looms as a key player for the Pies as they look to lock in a top four birth in the coming weeks.

Collingwood will take on Sydney at the SCG on Sunday in one of the biggest matches left in the home and away season.





.

Categories
Australia

The Loop: Barilaro faces trade job inquiry, banks divided on interest rate expectations, two killed in Brisbane attack and ancient finds in Pompeii

Hi there. It’s Monday, August 8 and you’re reading The Loop, a quick wrap-up of today’s news.

Let’s start here: John Barilaro fronts US trade job inquiry

The former deputy premier of New South Wales faced questioning at the parliamentary inquiry into his appointment into the lucrative US trade role on Monday.

Here are the main takeaways:

  • He said he wished he never applied for the job, and said the “trauma I’ve gone through over the past six to seven weeks has been significant”
  • Mr Barilaro rejected suggestions that he fast-tracked cabinet submissions about the trade roles so that he could apply for one, saying “you’re making me out to be corrupt”
  • He told the inquiry that he first flagged his interest in the position with current NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet last November, after he resigned from cabinet, and said “no-one ever raised with me that this would be politically sensitive”
  • Mr Barilaro also told the inquiry that he didn’t know that Jenny West had been selected for the role in August 2021. Ms West had previously given evidence that she was told she was the successful candidate, only to have it revoked soon after, and that it was to be a “present” for someone
  • The former NSW Nationals leader said he withdrew his application from the US trade role on February 23 this year, before putting his hat back in the ring two days later.

You can look back at the day’s evidence as it happened with our blog.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Play Video.  Duration: 1 minute 46 seconds

John Barilaro says he regrets applying for trade position.

Economists at Australia’s major banks are split about the outlook for interest rates for the rest of the year.

In one camp, Westpac and ANZ economists are confident the cash rate target will go above 3 per cent by the year’s end, but those at NAB and Commonwealth Bank think the rate is unlikely to reach that target.

Westpac’s chief economist, Bill Evans, is predicting the rate will climb to 3.35 per cent — and argues it should if the Reserve Bank wants to combat inflation — while Gareth Aird from the Commonwealth Bank is forecasting the cash rate will reach 2.6 per cent.

So what impact could a cash rate of 2.6 per cent to 3.35 per cent have? For someone with a 30-year, $600,000 mortgage, it works out to be around $284 extra each month on their repayments.

The cash rate is currently 1.85 per cent, after it was raised by 0.5 percentage points last Tuesday by the RBA.

Westpac and CBA logos
Westpac and CBA have different expectations when it comes to interest rates.(abcnews)

News alerts you might have missed

  • Amnesty International has apologized for the “distress and anger” caused by its report that accused Ukraine of endangering civilians, but says it stands by its findings. Last week, the rights group published the report saying Ukraine stationing troops in residential areas heightened the risk to civilians.
A man with a cigarette in his mouth walks through the rubble of a bombed out building
Amnesty has stood by the report claiming Ukraine has endangered civillians. (Reuters)
  • Australia won its 1,000th gold medal at the Commonwealth Games when the Diamonds claimed victory over Jamaica in the netball final. It means Australia is the first country to reach four figures in the history of the Commonwealth Games and did it on the penultimate day of the games. It remains top of the medal tally, with 174 won so far, including 66 golds.

loading

What Australia has been searching for online

  • Stretton: Queensland police have established a crime scene in the southern Brisbane suburb after the bodies of a man and woman were found inside a home this morning in what police have described as a “frenzied attack”. A 49-year-old man has been arrested, and the victims are yet to be identified. Neighbors say they were shocked to see a crime scene established in their street.
Police in blue HAZMAT suits taking photos.
Police have recovered two “bladed weapons” that they believed were used in the attack.(ABC News: Alfred Beales)

one more thing

Archaeologists have unearthed more items from the doomed ancient Italian city of Pompeii that paint a picture of its vulnerable middle-class society.

A wooden dresser, a three-legged accent table with decorative bowls and a trunk with its lid open are among the latest discoveries inside a house that was first excavated in 2018 in Pompeii’s archaeological park.

Director Gabriel Zuchtriegel said the findings provide precious details about the ordinary citizens of the city that was destroyed in AD 79.

three bowls on a decorative table unearthed in Pompeii
The discoveries in the four new rooms include decorative bowls, an incense burner and an oil lamp.(Reuters: Archaeological Park of Pompei)

You’re up to date

We’ll be back with more tomorrow.

loading

ABC/Wires

Categories
Technology

Tower of Fantasy worldwide launch times

Open-world exploration game Tower of Fantasy is launching soon, and bringing with it a healthy dose of anime, gacha collectables, and fantastic bosses to fight through. While often compared to Genshin Impact, Tower of Fantasy eschews magical fantasy for a mixture of sci-fi and magic instead. Enemies will often be a mixture of man and machine, and future technology will be everywhere as you try to solve the riddles of your past.

Tower of Fantasy will be launching at a specific time worldwide. Below you will find the launch times for Australia:

Australia: Thursday, August 11 at 9am ACT.

On launch, all players will earn the following rewards as part of the pre-registration campaign rewards:

• 10 Black Cores

• 20 Gold Cores

• 10 Red Cores

• 500 Dark Crystal

• 14,000 Gold

• Limited title and avatar frame

• Limited Jet pack skin

•Limited Costume

•Limited Vehicle

• Several pieces of food

Players will be able to use these resources to recruit Simulacrum, which are the rare gacha units that grant players unique abilities to use in the game. In addition, players will also receive additional bonuses for log-in and new player campaigns, granting all players several chances to get a rare Simulacrum.

Tower of Fantasy follows a young character who suffers from amnesia as they try to discover who they were and what their place in the world is. Along the way, they will meet up with several survivors in the post-apocalyptic wasteland, explore an alien world full of strange flora and fauna, and fight a whole assortment of difficult, larger-than-life bosses.

Tower of Fantasy will launch on mobile devices (iOS and Android) and PC (Epic Games Store and Steam).

Written by Junior Miyai on behalf of GLHF.

.

Categories
Sports

Pies secure huge signature as gun forward signs on

Collingwood has secured a three-year contract extension for Jamie Elliott to essentially make him a Magpie for life.

The 29-year-old was due to come out of contract at the end of the season as a free agent but has recommitted to the club until the end of 2025.

He has played his 150th game in Friday night’s win over Melbourne and has kicked 21 goals in 14 games in 2022.

Collingwood head of footy Graham Wright said Elliott has become “invaluable” to the club.

“We’re pleased to extend Jamie for another three years, and to hopefully see him play out his career at the Club,” Wright said.

“Jamie is an instrumental figure in our program. Across 11 seasons he has a wealth of football smarts which is invaluable to the youth of our group.

“The likes of Ash Johnson, Jack Ginnivan, Beau McCreery and Ollie Henry are products of great improvement credit to Elliott’s influence in the forward line.

“In addition to this, Jamie is a player who stands up in the moments that matter, inspiring all members of our program.

“We respected the fact Jamie was a free agent at the end of this year, and we are glad to come to terms that see him at the Club until the end of 2025.”

Elliott kicked the game-winning goal in Round 19 against Essendon and has kicked 11 majors across his last five games.





.

Categories
Australia

Average income in Australia’s highest-earning postcode cracks $300,000

Seven other Sydney postcodes were in the top 10 for average incomes, including those of Bellevue Hill ($195,204), Dover Heights ($186,025) and Mosman ($177,645). Last year’s best-paid suburb, Double Bay, suffered a $32,500 drop in average income to $170,051.

loading

The only Melbourne suburb to reach the list in 2019-20 was Toorak at almost $185,000, down $16,000 on 2018-19.

Across the country, the average taxable income for all Australians increased by 2.1 per cent to $63,882. The median taxable income increased by a similar rate to $48,381.

The average incomes of women increased by 2.8 per cent to a record high of $52,798 while for men it lifted by 1.8 per cent to $74,559.

Australians, on average, paid $19,790 in income taxes in 2019-20, at $446 or 2.3 per cent increase over 2018-19.

The statistics also show the burden of the tax system is increasingly falling on middle-income earners.

There were 545,000 people who earned more than $190,000 through the year. Their average tax bill was $130,421 while the median tax paid was $81,554.

It was the lowest average tax paid by the nation’s highest income earners since 2012-13 and the lowest median on record.

By contrast, the 2.5 million people earning between $90,000 and $180,000 paid, on average, $33,655 in tax or a combined $83 billion.

It was the highest average tax bill for middle-income earners on record and an 8.2 per cent increase over the collective tax they paid in 2018-19.

loading

Lower-income earners also paid more tax in total and on average. The largest group of taxpayers, the 6.2 million people who earned between $37,000 and $90,000, paid a combined $67.2 billion in tax at an average of $10,818 each.

The legislated stage three tax cuts, which the federal government has committed to keeping despite their substantial cost to the budget, will deliver their largest benefits to middle and high-income earners. They begin from the middle of 2024.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Categories
US

5 things to know for August 8: Senate vote, Air travel, Immigration, Uvalde, Gaza

Here’s what you need to know to Get Up to Speed ​​and On with Your Day.

(You can get “5 Things You Need to Know Today” delivered to your inbox daily. Sign up here.)

1. Senate vote

The Senate on Sunday afternoon passed Democrats’ $750 billion health care, tax and climate bill, in a significant victory for President Joe Biden and his party. The final, party-line vote was 51-50, with Vice President Kamala Harris breaking the tie. The Democrat-controlled House, which is expected to take up the legislation on Friday, must approve the bill before Biden can sign it into law. The measure includes a handful of important but narrow provisions to lower prescription drug prices and extend enhanced Affordable Care Act subsidies for three years. The bill would also be the biggest climate investment in US history, slashing US greenhouse gas emissions by 40% by 2030, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s office said. To increase revenue, the legislation would impose a 15% minimum tax on the income large corporations report to shareholders, raising $258 billion over a decade. While the deal is far smaller than the slimmed-down $1.75 trillion version the House passed in October, Democrats and the White House say the bill could still have a massive impact on many Americans.

2.Air Travel

Another wave of airline cancellations and delays was felt across the US over the weekend. More than 7,700 flights were delayed and 950 flights were canceled across the country on Sunday, according to the flight tracking website, FlightAware. This comes as global travelers are returning to the skies in droves after a pandemic-enforced pause. However, airlines and airports across the world are grappling to meet the demand. Some flight attendants say the lack of staffing, along with unpredictable schedules, is wreaking havoc on their mental and physical well-being. Plus, with fewer pilots available, some aviation experts predict these disruptions could persist for a decade as reductions in schedules and routes cause prices to rise.

3. Immigration

At least 68 migrants arrived in New York City over the weekend on buses sent by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. According to New York Mayor Eric Adams, some of the migrants are being “forced” on buses from Texas. However, Abbott’s office says migrants are volunteering to be bused out of his state. Abbott has designated New York as a “drop-off location for the busing strategy as part of (his) response to the Biden administration’s open border policies overwhelming Texas communities,” the governor’s office said in a statement on Friday. A fierce critic of the Biden administration’s immigration policies, Abbott began sending hundreds of migrants on buses to Washington, DC, earlier this year. More than 5,100 migrants have since arrived in Washington from Texas on more than 135 buses.

4. Uvalde

The school district in Uvalde, Texas, the site of a school massacre in May, is looking for an interim police chief as Pete Arredondo awaits his termination hearing, according to a report. Arredondo was placed on unpaid leave following his highly-criticized handling of the shooting at Robb Elementary School on May 24, in which 19 children and two teachers were killed. Officials have said Arredondo was the on-scene commander during the shooting, but the chief has disputed that, saying he did not believe he was in charge. Separately, the community’s school board president confirmed the district has zeroed in on a property to replace Robb Elementary. The community’s superintendent also reaffirmed students will not return to the campus because many are still traumatized by the violence.

5. Strip

A ceasefire between Israel and the Islamic Jihad militant group in Gaza is holding today after a weekend of violence left dozens of Palestinians dead. The truth, announced on Sunday evening by both sides, came about 50 hours after the escalation began, when Israel launched what it called preemptive strikes on Islamic Jihad targets in Gaza. At least 44 Palestinians, including 15 children, were killed in the violence, according to Palestinian officials. Israel maintains most of those killed in its air strikes were militants. The escalation was the most serious in nearly 15 months, when the Israeli military and Hamas fought an 11-day war in May 2021.

BREAKFAST BROWSE

Jewelry heist caught on security camera

This intense footage shows a group of masked men stealing more than $2 million in diamond jewelry. Watch the video here.

Casper is hiring professional nappers with ‘exceptional sleeping ability’

The mattress brand is hiring people to sleep for a living. And yes, the dress code is pajamas.

Seattle crowd celebrates Sue Bird’s final regular season gameand

Sunday’s Seattle Storm game was the last for WNBA superstar Sue Bird. Watch some highlights from her touching send-off here.

The only pan every cook needs

It doesn’t matter if you’re an amateur foodie or a culinary genius… this piece of cookware should always be in your kitchen.

Photographer retakes model portraits decades later

Like fine wine, these models got even better with time. Check out the stunning before and after photos taken years apart.

IN MEMORY

Actor Roger E Mosley, best known for his role as the helicopter pilot Theodore “TC” Calvin on the 1980s hit show “Magnum, PI,” died Sunday, his daughter announced. He was 83. Mosley was injured in a car crash last week that had left him paralyzed from the shoulders down and in critical condition. Mosley starred in more than 150 episodes of “Magnum, PI” alongside Tom Selleck in the crime-adventure series, which aired for eight seasons from 1980 until 1988.

TODAY’S NUMBER

9,320 thousand

That’s the length of Google Equiano, an underwater internet cable designed to deliver high-speed broadband along the west coast of Africa. Running for thousands of miles along the bottom of the sea from Portugal to South Africa, sources say the cable could increase internet speeds more than fivefold in some countries beginning in early 2023. The project, financed by Google, intends to help close the digital divide across the continent where internet access remains highly uneven.

TODAY’S QUOTE

“She’s lucky to be alive. She has severe burns and has a long recovery ahead.”

— A source close to Anne Heche, telling CNN on Saturday that the actress is recovering after the car she was driving crashed into a Los Angeles home on Friday and became engulfed in flames. A representative for Heche said her Sunday she is in stable condition. She first rose to fame for her role as Ella in the soap opera “Another World.” She was also thrust into the media spotlight for her romantic relationship with Ellen DeGeneres in the late ’90s.

TODAY’S WEATHER

Check your local forecast here>>>

AND FINALLY

Happy International Cat Day

In honor of the feline holiday, watch these cats take part in an extreme cup challenge. And remember, your day is only as pawsitive as you make it. Have a great one! (Click here to view)

.

Categories
Technology

Google Sues Sonos (Again) for Infringing on Speaker-Related Patents

Google is suing Sonos for allegedly infringing on patents covering smart speaker and voice-control technology.

The firms have been locked in a two-year legal dispute over wireless speaker patents, which started when a partnership between the two firms sourced and Sonos accused Google of stealing its IP to build Google-branded devices with Sonos tech.

This week’s suits, filed in the US District Court for the Northern District of California, claim theft of seven more features—including hotword detection, wireless charging, and how a group of speakers determines which should respond to voice input, The Verge reports.

According to a Google spokesperson, the latest litigation aims to “defend our technology and challenge Sonos’ clear, continued infringement of our patents.” Sonos “started an aggressive and misleading campaign against our products, at the expense of our shared customers,” José Castañeda told The Verge. The tech giant plans to file similar lawsuits with the US International Trade Commission (ITC) in hopes of banning imports of certain Sonos items.

The litigious spat began in 2020, when Sonos sued Google over multi-room speaker technology. Google quickly countered, claiming the consumer electronics maker also plagiarized some of its own patents. Sonos reciprocated with even more legal proceedings.

In January 2022, the ITC ruled in favor of Sonos, placing an import ban on Google Home/Nest speakers, Chromecast devices, and Pixel handsets. Google altered its products, changing their setup and Speaker Group functionality.

Even with modifications, Google’s merchandise “will still infringe many dozens of Sonos patents, its wrongdoing will persist, and the damages owed Sonos will continue to accrue,” Sonos said early this year. “Alternatively, Google can—as other companies have already done—pay a fair royalty for the technologies it has misappropriated.”

.

Categories
Sports

F1 2022: Alpine boss Otmar Szafnauer shreds Oscar Piastri for lack of loyalty in brutal spray, Daniel Ricciardo

Alpine boss Otmar Szafnauer has blasted Aussie Oscar Piastri following his shock defection from the team.

Piastri sent the F1 world into a spin last week when he rejected Alpine’s seat vacated by Fernando Alonso, amid shock reports he is replacing Daniel Ricciardo at McLaren.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

It was a bold move for a man who is yet to drive in F1 and clearly didn’t sit well with Szafnauer, who slammed Piastri for bailing out on the team that had invested so much in him.

“I expected more loyalty from Oscar than he is showing,” the Alpine team principal told Spanish publication The confidential.

“I started in 1989 in Formula 1 and I’ve never seen anything like this. And it’s not about Formula 1, it’s about integrity as a human being.

“It could happen in ice hockey or soccer, it doesn’t matter. But you don’t do that. He signed a piece of paper, a document, saying he would do something different.

“For me, the way I grew up, I don’t need to sign a piece of paper and then have someone say, ‘You’re lying, because you signed this.’ For me, if you say, ‘Hey, help me, I’ll help you tomorrow,’ there’s no way I would go back on my word. No way.”

Piastri had been part of Alpine’s development program for several years and won three consecutive titles across a stellar junior career, culminating in last year’s Formula 2 triumph.

He has driven Alpine’s F1 car on numerous occasions on different circuits this year as part of the team’s testing program.

As Alpine’s reserve driver, filling the seat left by Alonso seemed like the logical move, but Piastri’s snub doesn’t sit well with Szafnauer.

“He should (drive with the) team that has taken care of him, that has taken him to the world championship and, above all, that during the last year has put him in a Formula 1 car so that he would be ready, so that he would know the circuits,” he said.

“You did everything I asked you to do (from Alpine to Piastri) and now I promise you that if you do this, I will do this. I don’t need a piece of paper where it says, ‘With a clause, I can get out of here’.

“There should be some loyalty to the fact that we have invested literally millions and millions of euros to prepare him. So I don’t understand it either, you should ask him.”

Despite reports F1’s Contract Recognition Board has already validated Piastri’s agreement with McLaren, Szafnauer said Alpine will play hardball in a bid to hold on to the 21-year-old.

“We have a contract with Piastri, which he signed in November, we have spoken to our lawyers and they have told us that this is a binding contract, so part of that contract allows us to put Oscar in one of our cars in 2023, which is the reason we issued the press release,” he said.

“There is also an option for 2024 and the possibility for us to ‘loan’ the driver to another team. We wanted Fernando with us for one more year and then a ‘loan’ of Oscar for 2023.

“I have always said in all my press conferences that Piastri would be in Formula 1 in 2023 and it is because I knew he could be in our car or in another car, on loan, if Fernando had stayed.

“But Alonso, for whatever reason – and I think I know the reasons, although you should ask him – he goes to Aston Martin. So, we started to finalize the agreement with Piastri, and instead of giving him away, we decided to put him in our car. Hence, the statement.”

As for Ricciardo, Alpine is open to the 33-year-old returning to the team, formerly known as Renault, where he spent too many seasons in 2019 and 2020.

And if that doesn’t eventuate, there are a few other teams where he could end up, while a mega $21 million payout beckons if McLaren does indeed cut Ricciardo loose.

.