Categories
US

SUV barrels through Native American parade; 15 injured

A New Mexico man who was driving drunk without a valid license barreled through a parade that celebrates Native American culture in the western part of the state, injuring at least 15 people, officials said Friday.

Jeff Irving, 33, was arrested late Thursday and faces charges that include aggravated driving while intoxicated, fleeing from officers and injuring parade-goers and two Gallup police officers who tried to stop the vehicle, court documents said.

In a statement, New Mexico State Police said that investigators have no reason to suspect the crime was motivated by hate. No one was killed. The people who were hurt, including the police officers, suffered mostly minor injuries, said New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham

Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez and his family were among those almost hit as the Chevrolet Tahoe drove through the parade route. The vehicle sped through downtown Gallup about 15 minutes after the nighttime parade started that served as the kick-off event for the 10-day Gallup Intertribal Ceremonial Centennial Celebration.

Irving’s blood-alcohol content was three times the legal limit for driving, according to court records. His license had been revoked or suspended for another drunken driving charge and the SUV had no registration or insurance, police said.

Court records did not list an attorney for Irving who could speak on his behalf. His two passengers were detained and taken to a detox center in Gallup, a city of about 22,000 people, state police said in the statement.

Many among the crowd of thousands lining the parade route in front of businesses that sell Native American jewelry, arts and crafts captured the chaotic scene on video.

As the SUV sped near the parade, videos on social media showed people yelling for others to get out of the way and some pushing parade-goers to safety. One video showed parade-goers yelling obscenities at the SUV’s driver and passengers while they were handcuffed on the ground.

Children performing traditional dances appear to have been among the first to have seen the SUV heading toward them, the videos showed. They ran to the side amid screams and others scrambling to get out of the way.

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The images also showed blankets, shoes, banners and umbrellas left strewn along the street and on the sidewalks as people fled.

Lujan Grisham said Friday that the state will send additional police officers and a behavioral heath crisis team to Gallup for the rest of the ceremonial event.

Nez said the vehicle was coming at him and a group of tribal officials marching in the parade. He thanked people for taking quick action to get spectators and participants out of harm’s way.

“We just ask for your prayers for all of the participants,” Nez said in a video posted on social media. “We’re all shook up. You would see this on television, you would think it would never happen here. I’m sorry to say it happened here in Gallup, New Mexico.”

Tonya Jim said she went to the parade with her parents, grandchildren and children. Her 5-year-old granddaughter of hers, KaRiah, was picked from the crowd to join a group of dancers. Shortly after, the vehicle barreled down the parade route, turned and hit a man across from them who was sitting on a folding chair, she said. KaRiah was helped off the road by someone and was not hurt.

“I’m glad whoever was holding her hand just kept holding her hand and ran with her to get her off the road,” Jim said. “I’m not sure who she was from her, but I’m thankful for her.”

Jim said the family burned cedar and prayed when they got home and did a tobacco smoke prayer Friday morning to calm down.

“I blessed my kids and thank the creator they are still with me and (to) pray for the families who are hurt,” said Jim, who is Navajo and lives in Fort Defiance.

During the mayhem, the SUV swerved onto a side street and pulled into a parking spot before trying to pull out again. It hit a parked car and backed into a police car, state police said. Officers converged on the vehicle and detained the driver and two passengers who Irving identified as his brothers, according to court documents.

Irving initially told police he was not drinking before admitting to having at least a couple of beers, according to court documents. He is from the small community of Pinedale and faces 21 charges, the documents and police said.

City, state and tribal officials met Friday, with some urging more resources to address alcohol abuse. The state has long had a driving while impaired rate above the US national average, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“I think there’s always room for improvement,” said Gallup police Capt. Erin Toadlena-Pablo. “I don’t think anyone should ever look at it and say we’re doing all we can. There’s always other means.”

The nighttime parade is a highlight of the ceremonial celebration, which was founded in 1922 as a way for traders to showcase the culture and art of Native American tribes in the region, said Gallup Intertribal Indian Ceremonial Association board President Kyle Tom.

A daytime parade will go on as planned on Aug. 13, the day before closing events, Tom said. Other events include dances, rodeos and a juried art show.

People travel to Gallup from the vast Navajo Nation that extends into Arizona, New Mexico and Utah and from other tribal reservations to attend the parades and events. Nez, tribal lawmakers and others expressed anger and disbelief over what happened.

“It’s supposed to be a celebration, but today it was a difficult time for us,” Nez said.

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Fonseca reported from Flagstaff, Arizona. Associated Press writer Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico, contributed to this report.

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Categories
Business

Taiwan dominates the world’s supply of computer chips – no wonder the US is worried

One aspect of Nancy Pelosi’s trip to Taiwan that has been largely overlooked is her meeting with Mark Lui, chairman of the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (TSMC). Pelosi’s trip coincided with US efforts to convince TSMC – the world’s largest chip manufacturer, on which the US is heavily dependent – ​​to establish a manufacturing base in the US and to stop making advanced chips for Chinese companies.

US support for Taiwan has historically been based on Washington’s opposition to communist rule in Beijing, and Taiwan’s resistance to absorption by China. But in recent years, Taiwan’s autonomy has become a vital geopolitical interest for the US because of the island’s dominance of the semiconductor manufacturing market.

Semiconductors – also known as computer chips or just chips – are integral to all the networked devices that have become embedded into our lives. They also have advanced military applications.

Transformational, super-fast 5G internet is enabling a world of connected devices of every kind (the “Internet of Things”) and a new generation of networked weapons. With this in mind, US officials began to realize during the Trump administration that US semiconductor design companies, such as Intel, were heavily dependent on Asian-based supply chains for the manufacturing of their products.

In particular, Taiwan’s position in the world of semiconductor manufacturing is a bit like Saudi Arabia’s status in OPEC. TSMC has a 53% market share of the global foundry market (factories contracted to make chips designed in other countries). Other Taiwan-based manufacturers claim a further 10% of the market.

As a result, the Biden administration’s 100-Day Supply Chain Review Report says, “The United States is heavily dependent on a single company – TSMC – for producing its leading-edge chips.” The fact that only TSMC and Samsung (South Korea) can make the most advanced semiconductors (five nanometres in size) “puts at risk the ability to supply current and future [US] national security and critical infrastructure needs”.

This means that China’s long-term goal of reunifying with Taiwan is now more threatening to US interests. In the 1971 Shanghai Communique and the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, the US recognized that people in both mainland China and Taiwan believed that there was “One China” and that they both belonged to it. But for the US it is unthinkable that TSMC could one day be in territory controlled by Beijing.

‘techwar’

For this reason, the US has been trying to attract TSMC to the US to increase domestic chip production capacity. In 2021, with the support of the Biden administration, the company bought a site in Arizona on which to build a US foundry. This is scheduled to be completed in 2024.

The US Congress has just passed the Chips and Science Act, which provides US$52 billion (£43 billion) in subsidies to support semiconductor manufacturing in the US. But companies will only receive Chips Act funding if they agree not to manufacture advanced semiconductors for Chinese companies.

This means that TSMC and others may well have to choose between doing business in China and in the US because the cost of manufacturing in the US is deemed to be too high without government subsidies.

A person in a mask with an umbrella walks past a sign for the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp (TSMC) in Hsinchu, Taiwan.
TSMC: the world’s largest manufacturer of semiconductors.
EPA-EFE/David Chang

This is all part of a broader “tech war” between the US and China, in which the US is aiming to constrain China’s technological development and prevent it from exercising a global tech leadership role.

In 2020, the Trump administration imposed crushing sanctions on the Chinese tech giant Huawei that were designed to cut the company off from TSMC, on which it was reliant for the production of high-end semiconductors needed for its 5G infrastructure business.

Huawei was the world’s leading supplier of 5G network equipment but the US feared its Chinese origins posed a security risk (although this claim has been questioned). The sanctions are still in place because both Republicans and Democrats want to stop other countries from using Huawei’s 5G equipment.

The British government had initially decided to use Huawei equipment in certain parts of the UK’s 5G network. The Trump administration’s sanctions forced London to reverse that decision.

A key US goal appears to be ending its dependency on supply chains in China or Taiwan for “emerging and foundational technologies”, which includes advanced semiconductors needed for 5G systems, but may include other advanced tech in the future.

Pelosi’s trip to Taiwan was about more than just Taiwan’s critical place in the “tech war”. But the dominance of its most important company has given the island a new and critical geopolitical importance that is likely to heighten existing tensions between the US and China over the status of the island. It has also intensified US efforts to “reshore” its semiconductor supply chain.

Categories
Technology

Meta Launches New Conversational AI Which Learns from Human Interactions, the Next Stage of Bot Development

While the Messenger Bot revolution never took hold like Meta might have hoped, bots are still widely used, in a range of contexts, with many brands now implementing responding bots in messaging apps to streamline their customer connection process.

And this could help further bot use. Today, Meta has released BlenderBot 3, an advanced bot responding dataset, which is able to engage with humans in a more natural way while also utilizing more prompts to guide users along a specific path of inquiry.

Meta BlenderBot

As explained by Meta:

BlenderBot 3 is capable of searching the internet to chat about virtually any topic, and it’s designed to learn how to improve its skills and safety through natural conversations and feedback from people “in the wild.” Most previous publicly available datasets are typically collected through research studies with annotators that can’t reflect the diversity of the real world.”

Which is the real purpose of this release – by giving the public access to the BlenderBot system, and enabling them to ask questions in the app, that will then give Meta more feedback on how to refine and improve the system, with a view to building a more realistic, organic simulator of conversation and engagement.

Which could have a range of purposes, and could again make it much easier for brands to maintain their connection flow, with fully automated bots that are able to respond to user queries 24/7, and direct people to the right products and services to suit their needs.

The updated BlenderBot process combines two recently developed machine learning techniques, SeeKeR and Directorto build more advanced conversational models that learn from interactions and feedback.

BlenderBot 3 delivers superior performance because it’s built from Meta AI’s publicly available OPT-175B language model — approximately 58 times the size of BlenderBot 2.

The idea is that this next-level system will be able to build on this engagement to iterate even faster, and become a more functional base AI for conversational systems moving forward.

Though there are also risks with public testing of such.

Back in 2016, Microsoft released its conversational AI system ‘Tay’ for public testing, via a dedicated Twitter account that invited Twitter users to interact with the bot, and help it learn conversational patterns. Within a day, Twitter users had the Tay account sharing an array of lewd and racist remarks, which forced Microsoft to shut it down, never to be heard from again.

Meta is well aware of this risk, and it’s built in various safeguards, which could see some of BlenderBot’s responses go off-topic. But it will avoid moving into risky territory wherever it can.

It could be a big advance for AI systems, and it may well be worth checking it out to see how well the process actually handles engagement – ​​and to consider whether it might, eventually, be valuable in your own customer service process.

Those in the US can try it out here, where you can engage in a conversation with BlenderBot and provide feedback on the quality of the experience.

Categories
Sports

Hooper to leave Wallabies tour, take break after admitting ‘mindset’ struggle”

“Michael’s one of the most professional and impressive men I’ve coached (and) I know this has been a difficult decision for him,” Rennie said in a statement.

“He’s shown true courage by acknowledging where he is at and acting on it. We will support him in any way we can and I know the team will be focused on getting the job done tomorrow.”

Hooper is not the first high-profile athlete to step away from their sport to prioritize mental wellbeing. Buddy Franklin missed the latter stages of the 2015 AFL season to focus on his mental health and Australian cricketer Glenn Maxwell took two months off in 2019, to help restore balance. Maxwell said being on tour for five years had “ruined him”.

Hooper is one of Australia’s most durable athletes but has played a lot in the last two years, after playing in Japan last year and then leading the Wallabies in difficult times during the pandemic.

Fraser McReight is on standby to play.

Fraser McReight is on standby to play.Credit:Getty

McReight is a very competent replacement, given his excellent form for Queensland and Australia A this year. Rennie favors having only a single openside in his matchday 23, and has pointed towards Samu being capable cover for Hooper.

But the value of the Australia A program will shine through again when McReight takes over as No.7. He was controversially omitted from the Wallabies’ squad for the England series in July, and instead sent to play in the Pacific Nations Cup. The 23-year-old, who debuted in 2020 but has only won two caps, played in every game and re-joined the Wallabies squad for the Argentina trip with plenty of match fitness.

Slipper, meanwhile, has stressed the importance of starting strongly against Argentina, to dampen down the passion of the Pumas players and their fans at a sold-out Estadio Malvinas Argentinas. The venue, built for the 1978 FIFA World Cup, can hold 42,000 people.

The problem for the Wallabies is their starts were poor against England, and they failed to score a point in the opening 20 minutes of all three Tests. Two tries were bombed in the opening 10 minutes in the third Test.

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‘It is an important part of the game, the start, isn’t it? It doesn’t matter who you are playing, playing catch up rugby against anyone will get you away from how you want to play the game,” Slipper said.

“For us, it is just about nailing our detail and it is one thing to create opportunities and another to take them. To be honest, this week we have spoken a lot about our detail and our execution. If there is one place you want to start well it’s here, the Argentina team and the fans are very passionate and you can’t let that build.”

more to eat

Categories
Australia

Family and domestic violence is the ‘wicked social problem’ a university course is aiming to address

Grace* did not know, or perhaps did not want to admit, she was in an abusive relationship until her husband became physically violent.

When he did, it was a catalyst for her to leave, but not right away.

“I even talked police out of laying charges against him in the early stages of it,” said Grace, whose name has been changed to protect her identity.

“I’d put it down to [his] mental health in all honesty, it’s only later after much study that I have a much better understanding that, that was purely an excuse for a lot of it.”

It took a further three years before Grace accessed support services, which for her in Victoria was an organization called The Orange Door.

“I think twice I went and sat in the car outside [The Orange Door] and I went, ‘nah I can’t do it, can’t go in’,” she said, a slight tremble cracking through her otherwise steady voice.

“Just because I couldn’t … I didn’t want to tell my story.

“I didn’t want to be honest about the things that I had put up with and what I’d gone through because in my head I was going, ‘well why didn’t I leave earlier?’

“‘Who would go through that? No-one in their sane mind’ was what my narrative was.”

Shame, fear and dependency

The feeling of shame overwhelming Grace as she sat in her car that day is not uncommon among victim-survivors of family and domestic violence (FDV).

According to a number of professionals who work in the field, it is one of the common misconceptions about FDV that can have far reaching and devastating consequences for those who are already at their most vulnerable.

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Michael Flood is an associate professor at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) whose work in the school of justice includes dispelling some of the most common and persistent misconceptions about FDV.

“There are very understandable reasons why women might stay with a partner who is being abusive towards them,” he said.

“Their fear, their commitment to the relationship, their concerns about harm to the children, their lack of alternative sources of housing and income, their dependency, their social isolation, many of which are deliberately engineered by perpetrators.”

A ‘wicked’ social problem

As part of his work in the FDV field, Dr Flood is responsible for QUT’s graduate certificate in domestic violence responses.

When it began in 2016, the online course was the only one of its kind in Australia, but Dr Flood said he knows of at least five other professional qualifications in domestic and family violence now being offered at universities.

Michael Flood wears a purple jumper and a serious expression in an outdoor setting
Associate professor Michael Flood believes cultural change is necessary to prevent domestic violence.(Supplied)

“We’re dealing with a wicked social problem, a complex and pervasive social problem,” he said.

“We need skills and training for the people who will come into contact with that problem.

“Certainly, recent stories from the Queensland Police and elsewhere tell us that police, too, may not be very skilled at responding to these issues.

“I think a key learning from some of the most recent inquiries is that a whole lot more training and education, if not culture change, is necessary in our police services, and in some of the other services that respond or should respond to victim- survivors and perpetrators.”

Police responses questioned

Police responses to FDV have been under an increased — and public — level of scrutiny as of late, especially in Queensland.

The inquest into the murders of Hannah Clarke and her three children at the hands of their father and her estranged husband was followed by another into the killing of Doreen Langham by her ex-partner.

There is also an ongoing inquiry into how Queensland Police respond to FDV matters – all of it highlighting significant areas of concern and leading to calls for more thorough face-to-face, and ongoing training for police across the country.

Hannah Clarke, and her three children, Aaliyah, Laianah and Trey.
The murders of Hannah Clarke and her three children, Aaliyah, Laianah and Trey have led to calls for better police training in handling family violence.(Supplied: AAP/Department of Justice)

A recent government report identified WA as having the highest overall rate of family and domestic violence related assault in the country.

“Este [Hannah Clarke] inquest and other recent reports on family violence are being reviewed for their applicability to WA Police Force policy and practices,” a spokesman for the state’s Police Minister, Paul Papalia, wrote in a statement.

Police jurisdictions across the country are reporting that FDV call outs make up a significant proportion of their work, with many turning to improved officer training to try to better address the issue.

The QUT course, which attracts students from professions including social work, law, psychology, and law enforcement, looks at how disadvantage and privilege contribute to domestic violence and how to respond effectively to it.

Dr Flood said it was a complex issue, and one that was not only about physical violence.

“Domestic violence is as much about a kind of daily dripping tap of abuse, of control and so on, that may not be particularly physical, it may involve only threats of violence or a perpetrator, in very subtle or sneaky ways, reminding the victim of the possibility of them using violence,” he said.

The situation is compounded when children are present.

“We know very well now that whenever there are children in a household where there’s domestic violence, they are deeply affected by that violence, affected just as much by witnessing or being around that violence as if they are being assaulted themselves,” he said.

Dr Flood said about 40 students completed the course each year, about 87 per cent of whom were women.

He would like to see more men enter the FDV response and prevention workforce.

Police officer sees hope

Patrick Hayes has been with Victoria Police for 22 years, becoming a family violence liaison officer two years ago, and is also a facilitator for QUT’s graduate certificate in domestic violence responses.

When it comes to the track record of police in dealing with FDV, Sergeant Hayes holds few punches.

A police officer in uniform standing with one hand on the bonnet of his police car.
Sergeant Patrick Hayes says improvements are being made in the way agencies work together to combat family violence.(Supplied)

“Has there been mistakes made in the past? Absolutely. There’s no denying that at all,” he said.

“What’s encouraging is that we’re recognizing this, and we’ve started to work more collaboratively. We are making headway.”

Restraining order ‘just a piece of paper’

On her third attempt, Grace finally found the courage to get out of her car and enter The Orange Door for support.

She is now working in the area of ​​FDV case management while undertaking the QUT course, which she describes as having “confronting content”.

When it comes to her own experiences and her own trauma, Grace said her journey was ongoing.

A silhouette of an anonymous woman
Grace says she feels let down by the judicial system, which fails to make her feel safe.(Unsplash: Erick Zajac)

After her ex-husband was found guilty of numerous breaches of a violence restraining order, she has now been granted a rare long-lasting order against him, which runs for 40 years.

But she feels the judicial system is letting victim-survivors down.

The consequences faced by her ex-husband for multiple breaches appear to her to be no more than verbal reprimands and ends he will never pay off.

She said the court’s actions had made her feel more unsafe.

“Just by not holding breaching accountable, there’s no deterrent. At the end of the day … it’s just a piece of paper,” Grace said.

Living invisibly

And while Grace rates her own interactions with police as positive overall, there is one aspect she still struggles to come to terms with.

She was told by police she needed to change her phone number, move house and protect her address and her place of work so she would be ‘safe’.

“I think the onus of that needs to be taken away from a victim-survivor and placed at the perpetrator’s feet,” she said.

A blurred, dark photo of a child holding her hand up behind a glass screen.
Garace says survivors should not bear responsibility for the actions of perpetrators.(abcnews)

“It’s not my responsibility to make someone else toe the line or behave responsibly, but that’s exactly what I was told.

“And I did try and live invisibly for a lot of years… it’s not an easy way to recover when you’re trying to be invisible.

“Practically, it’s sound advice — it’s just something I shouldn’t have to do.”

Dr Flood agrees.

“Whether they take place in schools or in sporting context or in the community, we need to shift the attitudes, the behaviours, inequalities that feed into domestic and family violence in the first place,” he said.

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Categories
US

Firefighter describes Nescopeck blaze that took family members

Harold Baker and other volunteer firefighters told Newswatch 16 about the blaze that took the lives of family members early Friday.

NESCOPECK, Pa. — Newswatch 16 stopped by the Nescopeck volunteer fire station, where family members gathered after the tragic fire early Friday.

Crews were called to a single-family home along the 700 block of First Street in Nescopeck around 2:30 am Friday.

Troopers said ten people died in the fire; three were able to escape.

A firefighter at the station said his children and grandchildren were in the home, and all are currently missing.

“I couldn’t get in there to save them. That is the biggest thing that has been on me. I couldn’t get in there to save them,” said Harold Baker, a firefighter with the Nescopeck Volunteer Fire Company.

Baker tells Newswatch 16 that he was one of the first people on the scene when flames broke out at this home along 1st Street in Nescopeck.

“We pulled up and the whole place was fully involved. We tried to get in to them, but there was no way to get in to them,” Baker said.

Baker also happens to have family ties to all 14 people who were staying in the home. He says he has not seen or heard from 10 of those family members.

“I also lost my son, my daughter, grandson, two other grandkids in there, my father-in-law, my brother-in-law, and my sister-in-law. All lost.”

According to Baker, there were also 13 dogs in the home. He says not everybody was living there; several people were just visiting family.

“The kids that were there and my two kids were just visiting their aunt and uncle. Those were the ones who own the house. They were there visiting and going into the pool and all that.”

The Red Cross is providing counseling services to the family and first responders.

A GoFundMe page has been set up to help.

You can also reach out to the Nescopeck Volunteer Fire Company.


Our hearts go out to all those affected by the devastating fire in Nescopeck this morning. Come join us on Sunday at the…

Posted by Bandit’s Roadhouse on Friday, August 5, 2022

See Emily Kress’ story about the fire:

Categories
Business

Reserve Bank more pessimistic than government about when inflation will decline | australian economy

The Reserve Bank is more pessimistic than the government about when and how quickly inflation will decline, implying it may need to hoist its interest rate higher for longer to keep price increases in check.

In its quarterly statement on monetary policy, released on Friday, the central bank elaborated on its estimates for GDP growth, consumer and wage inflation, and the jobless rate. Some of the revised forecasts, including cuts in growth, were disclosed in its explanation on Tuesday on why it lifted its interest rate for a fourth month in a row.

Both the RBA and Treasury, which supplied forecasts to the treasurer, Jim Chalmers, for his state of economy speech last week, expect annual consumer price inflation to peak at about 7.75% by the end of 2022.

Both cut the GDP growth rate and expect the unemployment rate to drop – to 3.25% by year’s end, according to the RBA – but only slowly edge higher towards 4% by 2024.

The main distinctions, though, are higher forecasts by the RBA for both the so-called headline consumer price index and the underlying inflation gauge, known as the trimmed mean, than the government. Energy prices are a factor.

“Domestic retail gas and electricity prices are expected to increase by 10–15% over the second half of 2022, given the high global price of energy and recent disruptions in the domestic electricity market,” the RBA said.

“As supply constraints continue to ease, inflation is expected to decline over coming years, to be back around the top of the 2 to 3% target range by the end of 2024,” it said.

By June 2023, the RBA expects CPI to still be at 6.25%, while Treasury was tipping 5.5% for consumer price increases by then. By June 2024, Treasury had it penciled inside that range at 2.75% but the RBA still reckons it will be running at 3.5%.

Back in May, the RBA was forecasting the trimmed mean gauge would come in at 4.75% by the end of the year and slow to 3.5% by next June. Now, though, the peak will be higher in 2022 and still be at 5% by June 2023.

“Trimmed mean inflation is…expected to peak around year-end [2022] at about 6% as firms continue to pass transport and other non-labour cost pressures through to their own prices,” the RBA said in its August report.

Ahead of Friday’s release, investors were betting the RBA’s cash rate – now at 1.85% after this week’s hike – still had about another 1.5 percentage points to rise before it peaked. The major commercial banks, though, were tipping a peak cash rate between 2.6-3% before it starts to fail.

Ahead of the RBA’s quarterly statement on monetary policy, investors were predicting the cash rate had about another 1.5 percentage points to rise before a peak. pic.twitter.com/fPpCnKMS5D

— Peter Hannam (@p_hannam) August 5, 2022

The RBA repeated Tuesday’s comments that it was seeking to curb inflation “in a way that keeps the economy on an even keel”.

“The path to achieve this balance is a narrow one and subject to considerable uncertainty,” it said.

However, one uncertainty was how much of a “general inflation psychology shift” took place, making rising prices “more persistent”.

“The RBA is obviously still in inflation-fighting mode,” said Paul Bloxham, HSBC Australia’s chief economist and a former RBA staffer. “At this point, it is all about keeping inflationary expectations well-anchored in the medium term.”

Also unclear was how much wages would pick up and also how falling property prices would alter households’ sense of wealth. That made the outlook for consumption “unusually uncertain”.

Bloxham noted the RBA is forecasting real household disposable income will be falling at an annual 3.1% clip by the middle of next year. “That’s a very weak outlook,” he said.

A key reason is that even though the jobless rate is at half-century lows and expected to remain so for some time, the pick-up in wages continues to be subdued.

The RBA predicts the wage price index to pick up to “around 3.5% by mid-2023 and 3.75% by the end of 2024” – the fastest pace since 2012. In the March quarter of this year, the annual rate was 2.4%, with the ABS due to release June quarter data on 17 August.

Bloxham, who had predicted the RBA’s cash rate would peak at 2.6% by the end of this year, said Friday’s report had not prompted him to change his forecast.

Categories
Technology

Dual-plasmid editing system improves DNA digital storage potential

DNA-based information is a new interdisciplinary field linking information technology and biotechnology. The field hopes to meet the enormous need for long-term data storage by using DNA as an information storage medium. Despite DNA’s promise of strong stability, high storage density and low maintenance cost, however, researchers face problems accurately rewriting digital information encoded in DNA sequences.

Generally, DNA data storage technology has two modes, ie, the “in vitro hard disk mode” and the “in vivo CD mode.” The primary advantage of the in vivo mode is its low-cost, reliable replication of chromosomal DNA by cell replication. Due to this characteristic, it can be used for rapid and low-cost data copy dissemination. Since encoded DNA sequences for some information contain a large number of repeats and the appearance of homopolymers, however, such information can only be “written” and “read,” but cannot be accurately “rewritten.”

To solve the rewriting problem, Prof. LIU Kai from the Department of Chemistry, Tsinghua University, Prof. LI Jingjing from the Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry (CIAC) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Prof. CHEN Dong from Zhejiang University led a research team that recently developed a dual-plasmid editing system for accurately processing digital information in a microbial vector. Their findings were published in Science Advances.

The researchers established a dual-plasmid system in vivo using a rationally designed coding algorithm and an information editing tool. This dual-plasmid system is suitable for storing, reading and rewriting various types of information, including text, codebooks and images. It fully explores the coding capability of DNA sequences without requiring any addressing indices or backup sequences. It is also compatible with various kinds of coding algorithms, thus enabling high coding efficiency. For example, the coding efficiency of the current system reaches 4.0 bits per nucleotide.

To achieve high efficiency as well as reliability in rewriting complex information stored in exogenous DNA sequences in vivo, a variety of CRISPR-associated proteins (Cas) and recombinase were used. The tools were guided by their corresponding CRISPR RNA (crRNA) to cleave a target locus in a DNA sequence so that the specific information could be addressed and rewritten. Because of the high specificity between complementary pairs of nucleic acid molecules, the information-encoded DNA sequences were accurately reconstructed by recombinase to encode new information. Due to optimizing the crRNA sequence, the information rewriting tool became highly adaptable to complex information, thus resulting in rewriting reliability of up to 94%, which is comparable to existing gene-editing systems.

The dual-plasmid system can serve as a universal platform for DNA-based information rewriting in vivo, thus offering a new strategy for information processing and target-specific rewriting of large and complicated data on a molecular level.

“We believe this strategy can also be applied in a living host with a larger genome, such as yeast, which would further pave the way for practical applications regarding big data storage,” said Prof. LIU.

/PublicRelease. This material from the originating organization/author(s) may be of a point-in-time nature, edited for clarity, style and length. The views and opinions expressed are those of the author(s).

Categories
Sports

Caleb Clarke to wing it against the Springboks

Robust wing Caleb Clarke has been named in New Zealand’s starting line-up after returning from injury for their first Test in the Rugby Championship against South Africa in Nelspruit this weekend.

The prolific Will Jordan and versatile Jordie Barrett retain their places in the back three that can expect an aerial assault from the Springboks on Saturday.

David Havili and Rieko Ioane will continue with their partnership in midfield as they were in the final Test against Ireland.

No half-back changes

Beauden Barrett remains the starting fly-half in his half-back partnership with veteran scrum-half Aaron Smith and the pair will be key decision-makers in Saturday’s Test.

The loose trio is the same as the All Blacks’ previous Test, where Akira Ioane impressed after being thrust into the starting line-up late on that occasion. Sam Cane will lead the team from the side of the scrum, whilst Ardie Savea will be looking to continue his good form at number eight in the black jersey.

All eyes will be on second-row pairing Sam Whitelock and Scott Barrett, who will need to take charge of the lineout after a poor showing in the set-piece during their Test series against Ireland.

Meanwhile, George Bower, Samisoni Taukei’aho and Angus Ta’avao make up a new look front-row that will be up against a strong Springbok scrum.

On the bench, Dane Coles, Ethan de Groot and Tyrell Lomax are coach Ian Foster’s options as front-row substitutes, while Tupou Vaa’i and Shannon Frizell are the other forward replacements.

Blues livewire scrum-half Finlay Christie and playmaker Richie Mo’unga are half-back options on the bench, with center Quinn Tupaea the final substitute.

Foster was excited to start the Rugby Championship against their rivals and is looking forward to getting started.

“What a great way to start this year’s Rugby Championship. It’s always an exciting tournament to be part of,” he said. “This year’s draw means we have a massive challenge of two games here in South Africa.

Expects intense encounter

“We have settled in well in Mbombela and are preparing for what is always an intense game against our old foe.

“Many of our squad are here in South Africa for the first time. This gives us another opportunity to add new experiences and grow our game.”

New Zealand: 15 Jordie Barrett, 14 Will Jordan, 13 Rieko Ioane, 12 David Havili, 11 Caleb Clarke, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Ardie Savea, 7 Sam Cane (c), 6 Akira Ioane, 5 Scott Barrett, 4 Sam Whitelock , 3 Angus Ta’avao, 2 Samisoni Taukei’aho, 1 George Bower
Replacements: 16 Dane Coles, 17 Ethan de Groot, 18 Tyrel Lomax, 19 Tupou Vaa’i, 20 Shannon Frizell, 21 Finlay Christie, 22 Richie Mo’unga, 23 Quinn Tupaea

Date: Saturday, August 6
Venue: Mbombela Stadium, Nelspruit
Kick-off: 17:05 local (16:05 BST, 15:05 GMT)
Referee: Angus Gardner (Australia)
Assistant Referees: Luke Pearce (England), Christophe Ridley (England)
OMT: Brett Cronan (Australia)

READMORE: Springboks: Malcolm Marx starts on 50th Test in Rugby Championship opener against the All Blacks

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Australia

NSW flood response to include buybacks, land swaps for Northern Rivers homes

The Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation, the agency tasked with reviving the flood-ravaged communities in northern NSW, gave advice to the inquiry that the government faces a recovery bill of $3 billion, on top of what it has already spent.

In June, Minister for Emergency Services Steph Cooke said the NSW and federal governments had committed more than $3.5 billion for the clean-up and recovery effort.

The plan recommends offering people a voluntary buy-back of their properties to the government.

The plan recommends offering people a voluntary buy-back of their properties to the government. Credit:elise derwin

The government is set to unveil its full response to the floods disaster – and the cost – while engaged in an ugly dispute over funding for sports stadiums with the NRL and its powerful chief Peter V’landys.

The $3 billion recovery cost in NSW will dwarf a Queensland scheme introduced after Grantham was hit with devastating flash flooding in 2011. The Grantham scheme was a joint approach by the federal and state governments and saw residents offered properties on a piece of high land in exchange for their low-lying, flood-ruined homes.

Mayors in flood-affected parts of northern NSW have been calling on the government to push ahead with voluntary land buybacks without waiting for the inquiry’s recommendations.

In response, Perrottet said in June that he would adopt recommendations from the independent inquiry, including any proposals relating to the possible relocation of homes in flood-prone areas.

“We absolutely have to,” Perrottet said at the time. “If we have another flood like that in two or three years, and we’ve just gone back and done the same thing again, I would feel personally responsible.”

Queensland announced a $350 million home buyback scheme in March, a month after floods hit the south-east part of the state. The scheme is expected to help 500 people sell back their houses to the government.

The report has also recommended that Resilience NSW boss Shane Fitzsimmons be dumped and the disaster agency dramatically scaled down after the agency was widely criticized during the floods.

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It will also call for the agency to be cut to a small office and its responsibilities reallocated to other government departments.

Former premier Gladys Berejiklian created the disaster management agency in response to the Black Summer bushfires, installing Fitzsimmons as its boss.

It has since faced scrutiny over its role, budget and employee-related expenses amounting to $38.5 million for 245 staff.

Former Bega MP Andrew Constance, who almost lost his south coast home in the Black Summer bushfires, was critical of the treatment of Fitzsimmons, given his work during the fires.

“For goodness’ sake, this is a bloke who saved lives, who was there for my community and our state during Black Summer,” Constance said in a video posted to Instagram on Thursday night. “I think he deserves a bit better than this.”

The flood inquiry report is a 700-page document that includes three volumes that address the preparation, response and recovery from natural disasters.

It is still under review by the government and a response to recommendations is expected in the coming weeks.

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