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Some Solid Advice When It Comes To Buying An SSD

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There is a very special type of frustration that comes from long loading times. After spending all that time downloading and installing a new game, only to be greeted with an endless loading screen, all because your PC’s internal storage isn’t up to scratch? It sucks! That’s why grabbing yourself a reliable solid-state drive (SSD) will help you cut down on those strenuous wait times.

Picking the right SSD can be a bit tricky at times. For starters, you’ll need to make sure your PC’s motherboard can actually support them — both in terms of compatibility and physical room inside your rig. After dropping a hundred or so dollars on a new SSD, the last thing you’d want is one that doesn’t actually fit your PC case. Then comes the issue of knowing if it’s a SATA or M.2 SSD – and if it’s the latter, what generation it is.

To help you get your gaming PC up to snuff, here are a few SSDs that are worth your time, broken down by price range.

If you’re specifically looking for an internal SSD to install in your PS5, you can find Kotaku Australia’s guide for that here.

This article has been updated since its original publication.

Budget SSDs (Up to $100)

Crucial MX500 SATA 2.5-inch SSD, 250GB

Some Solid Advice When It Comes To Buying An SSD

2.5-inch SATA SSDs are somewhat on the outs, considering that these days you don’t have to spend that much more to get their M.2 equivalent. However, the Crucial MX500 SSD is a great option if you’re shopping on a budget. If you’re just after a little bit of extra storage for your gaming PC and don’t want to go too crazy with spending, you can pick up the 250GB MX500 for an absolute bargain. Even if you don’t need one that bad, it’s a very justifiable price.

It’s an SSD that is both consistent and reliable when it comes to performance. Upgrading to the 500GB, or even the 1TB capacity version of this Crucial SSD isn’t a bad idea, either. With the latter, you’ll be paying roughly around the same amount for the 500GB M.2 drives on this list.

Where to buy: Amazon Australia ($49) | Dick Smith ($65.95) | eBay ($66.90)

WD Black SN770 NVMe M.2 PCIe Gen4 SSD, 250GB

Some Solid Advice When It Comes To Buying An SSD
Image: Western Digital

If you’re upgrading or building a mid-level gaming rig, I’d suggest looking at Western Digital’s Black SN770. This WD Black SSD stands toe-to-toe with some of the more high-end M.2 drives when it comes to transferring speeds, but with the added bonus of a cheaper price. The 250GB drive is a good choice for having a dedicated OS drive.

Where to buy: Amazon Australia ($78.77) | Dick Smith ($81.87) | eBay ($97)

Mid-Range SSDs ($100-200)

Samsung 870 EVO SATA III 2.5-inch SSD, 500GB

samsung ssd
Image: Samsung

Samsung’s 870 EVO is an inexpensive SATA SSD that offers one of the strongest sequential reading and writing rates of any SATA drive. It doesn’t hurt to have more than one SSD installed on your computer so having this as an extra drive isn’t a bad idea, especially if you’ve got a large collection of games with big install sizes.

Where to buy: eBay ($89) | M-wave ($94) | Samsung ($95)

Adata XPG SX8200 Pro NVMe M.2 2280 PCIe Gen 3×4 SSD, 512GB

Some Solid Advice When It Comes To Buying An SSD

Adata’s XPG SX8200 Pro was designed to work under pressure, so it’s not a bad option if you spend your time playing system-demanding games. Where it really shines is its speed. This SSD can sequentially read up to 3,500MB/s and sequentially write up to 3,000MB/s. That’s a fantastic rate of performance, especially when you factor in the very affordable price tag.

Where to buy: Amazon Australia ($96.99) | Dick Smith ($108.83) | eBay ($99)

Samsung 970 EVO Plus PCIe Gen 3 x4 M.2 SSD, 1TB

samsung ssd
Image: Samsung

The Samsung 970 EVO Plus is a reliable SSD that can hold its own while running some of the more system-demanding games. If you also do a fair share of video editing or graphic design work, this thing will make sure you aren’t stuck with long load times.

Grabbing the 1TB version isn’t a bad idea if you’re after a good install drive or scratch drive. You should definitely consider leaning towards more storage space if you have a few Modern Warfare-sized games installed at any given time.

Where to buy: Dick Smith ($178.94) | eBay ($164) | M-wave ($179)

For The Big Spender ($200+)

Samsung 980 Pro NVMe M.2 SSD, 1TB

samsung ssd
Image: Samsung

If you’re after top-of-the-line performance, Samsung’s 980 Pro really swings for the fences.

With 7,000MB/5,000MB read and write speeds, Samsung’s 980 Pro can handle any game that you want to throw at it. If you’re looking for an SSD with low latency and enhanced bandwidth, that will help you reach some high-end performances with your games, then this is the one you want.

It’s on the more expensive end of the SSD spectrum, but a solid investment nonetheless. If you can’t justify going that big, maybe drop the storage size down to the 500GB version.

Where to buy: Amazon Australia ($214.55) | Dick Smith ($228) | eBay ($255)

Sabrent Rocket Q4 NVMe PCIe 4.0 M.2 2280 SSD, 2TB

Some Solid Advice When It Comes To Buying An SSD
Image: Sabrent

If you want to go big with your SSD but still want value for your money, the Sabrent Rocket Q4 might be what you want. You’ll get some solid performance when it comes to gaming, with read and write speeds of 4,800MB/s and 3,600MB/s. It’s also not a bad option if you spend a lot of time editing videos.

The 2TB of storage should be more than enough to meet your needs, even if you feel it necessary to have a lot of big install games on your drive at any one time.

Even though you’ll be dropping a few hundred dollars to pick this up, you’ll still be spending less than you would on the equivalent SSD for most competitors.

Where to buy: Amazon Australia ($329.97)

Categories
Sports

Josh Jenkins opens up on Adelaide Crows 2018 pre-season camp after Eddie Betts book

Former Adelaide Crows forward Josh Jenkins has become the latest player to speak about the club’s infamous 2018 pre-season club, joining ex-teammate Eddie Betts.

Jenkins, who left the Crows at the end of 2019 and has since retired from the game, released a lengthy statement about his experience at the Gold Coast-based camp, just days after Betts’ revelations in his biography, The Boy from Boomerang Crescent.

While a number of the 33-year-old’s alleged experiences mirrored those of Betts’, he offered an insight into the months which led up to the camp, calling the sales pitch of the “most intensive” part of the camp a “red flag” “for him.

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“I recall us going around the circle and accepting the challenge whilst a couple of players needed to be withdrawn due to injury issues as well as one player being removed because of some personal trauma he’d recently experienced,” Jenkins’ statement to SEN read , inpart.

“Hearing he was removed because his personal trauma may be too much on top of what we were about to endure had ALARM BELLS ringing inside my head.

“This all smelt terribly and in my heart I knew we were going down a bad path.

“But off the back of a Grand Final loss, when I personally had played so poorly, I only had so much leverage.

“After around 40 minutes of resistance, I agreed to be a part of group one – in part because I knew it was a month or so away and I had time to work back channels to get removed.

“No joy. I could not get out. group one was for me.”

Like Betts did in his autobiography, Jenkins too claims that personal information on his upbringing was used during the ‘harness’ activity at the camp.

“I specifically asked for assurance pre-camp that nothing regarding my childhood would be raised or used on the camp to spur me on or ‘break me down’,” he said.

“It’s my belief this promise was broken. And I’m not certain I’ll ever forgive those involved for that.

“Nor am I sure anyone has even truly taken responsibility for what went on and why it was allowed to happen.”

Jenkins claims that the club’s welfare manager was “iced out” of discussions and planning for the camp.

“The secrecy and lack of info was astounding,” he said.

“Our welfare manager – who was receiving 90 per cent-plus approval ratings in the AFLPA surveys – was iced out of discussions and planning as well as everything afterward (sic).

Crows apologize to Betts after explosive claims

“She fought the good fight for us players and I will always be grateful for that.

“She no longer works at the Crows or in the AFL.”

Jenkins has also called for the release of a report he claims is “damning” from club doctor Marc Cesana, which was allegedly written on the back of his meetings with the players.

“No one has ever acted on that report – which I know is damning,” he said.

“The report must see the light of day. It’s the only example of a medical professional who had day-to-day dealings with the people and players who were involved.

“He was concerned about us.

Betts speaks out after explosive claims

“He expressed his disappointment to me about what happened to us, but never disclosed the details of what he’d discussed with other players.

“Hence why the report needs to see the light of day.”

Adelaide issued a response to Jenkins’ lengthy statement with one of his own on Friday evening.

“The club is not in a position to publicly share private medical information relating to its people,” the statement read.

“While under investigation, the club provided the doctor’s report to both the AFL and SafeWork SA.”

A SafeWork SA investigation in 2021 cleared the club of breaching health and safety laws, while an AFL investigation in 2018 determined the Crows had not breached any rules.

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US

Frozen in horror: Notes from inside the Parkland school massacre site

Bullet holes also mark the walls of the Parkland, Florida, school where Nikolas Cruz killed 14 students and three staff members.

A lock of dark hair remains on a floor more than four years after the body of a victim was taken away. Valentine’s Day gifts and cards are strewn about, as shards of glass crunched beneath the feet of visitors.

These are the unsettling notes from a group of reporters allowed to enter the building after jurors completed their walk-through to provide details to media outlets across the country, including CNN.

FIRST FLOOR

We entered from the east stairwell just as Cruz did. In the stairwell where Cruz entered and assembled his gun from him, a stuffed white teddy bear lay dirtied on the floor next to a bag with Valentine’s Hearts on it, probably dropped by a fleeing student.

Everywhere you walk throughout the building there are shards of broken safety glass that crunch loudly as you walk over them. They are especially loud and crunchy in the threshold of each door.

ROOM 1218

Brittany Sinitch’s English class: No one was killed or wounded here, but this is where Cruz fired first his shots. Textbooks on the desks were open to a section discussing Mercutio. A Valentine’s teddy bear was on a desk. A 2017 Stoneman Douglas football poster was on the wall — photo of the team with the motto: Faith Family Football. A pink note wishing a Happy Valentine’s Day sat on a desk next to a worksheet belonging to student Sarah Louis. A clear plastic drink cup sat half-full on a desk, its contents now a dark brown sludge. On a desk a Valentine’s Day card that reads “I don’t just like you, I really, really like you.”

ROOM 1215

Study Hall led by Spanish teacher Juletta Matlock: There is dried blood outside the door where Luke Hoyer, Martin Duque and Gina Montalto were killed. Just inside the door, some earphones with a long cord lay on the floor. The book “To Kill a Mockingbird” remains on a desk. On the wall is a poster titled “Let’s Guac About It” with basic Spanish words: Padre, Madre, Abuelo, Abuela.” On another wall is a poster of common Spanish phrases and colors.

ROOM 1213 — Ronit Reoven’s AP Psychology class:

On the far wall away from the door is a table with a large pool of blood. This is where Carmen Schentrup died from a bullet wound to her head. She and the children hid behind the teacher’s desk, which is in the southeast corner of the room. In front of the desk where Maddy Wilford lay wounded, the teacher’s desk phone lay on the floor. On the walls behind the desk are photos of what appears to be the teacher’s family and an 8 X 10 drawing of President Trump with the saying “We will win in everything we do.” On the north wall is a bulletin board with about two dozen wallet size photos of students. A lone white sneaker remains on the floor.

HALLWAY – HIXON SITE

Hixon, after he was shot dashing through the west door, took cover in an alcove in front of the elevator about 20 feet from the door. Cruz shot him a second time as he passed, but he remained alive and spent about 10 minutes trying to get up, according to video played in court. There is a large bloodstain on the floor and on the wall. A black rubber shoe, possibly, a Croc, lay on the floor there.

Room 1214 — “The Holocaust Room” – Teacher Ivy Schamis’ room

She taught Holocaust Studies. This is where Nick Dworet and Helena Ramsay died.

On the whiteboard is the hashtag #TogetherWeRemember. There are also references to eyewitness accounts. On a table are two yellowed Sun Sentinel newspapers, there are bullet strike marks on desks, laptops still open, headphones, and a water bottle still on a desk. On the floor is a tossed 2017-2018 school year planner. Blood-stained markings where Dworet and Ramsay died. Their blood coats a book called “Tell Them We Remember” by Susan Bachrach and “Listen to the Wind” by Greg Mortenson There is a Holocaust sign on a bulletin board with the words “we will never forget.” One desk had a white plug and earbuds on top. Indicating the rapid way everything unfolded

The learning objective on the board “To be aware of the world and its surroundings.”

Room 1216

No one classroom had as many of the murdered and wounded as Dara Hass’ English class. A blue folder with Alaina Petty’s name still on the desk – right behind that – between the teacher’s desk and the wall is a large bloodstain. Bullet holes in the walls.

Right next to the bloodstain on the floor where Alyssa Alhadeff and Alaina Petty died – is a handwritten paper about Malala Yousafzai – “the girl who wanted to go to school” – the paper goes on to say “a bullet went straight to her head but not her brain” ending with “In conclusion, we the people should have freedom for education.”

(Note: Malala is the Pakistani girl who was shot by the Taliban – she has fought to advocate for education access for girls and women).

Essays written by the students remain on their desks, never to be recovered. “We go to school every day of the week and we take it all for granted,” one student wrote. “We cry and complain without knowing how lucky we are to be able to learn.”

On cabinet doors, a previous assignment is on display. It shows headstones with epitaphs written by the students.

“RIP Here lies pretty.”

“RIP Here lies funny.”

“RIP Here lies nice.”

Next to a shoe on the ground is a pink Valentine’s Day stuffed animal and balloons.

The pooling of blood looks aged, dark, caked, flaky.

Desks are covered in a thin layer of dust, a landline phone lays upside on the ground.

At Alex Schachter’s desk – a bloodstain on the other side of a silver bar that connects the plastic seat to the desk.

WEST STAIRWELL

Near west stairs – where Hixon was shot – there is a discarded shoe.

SECOND FLOOR – HALLWAY QUOTES

Quote on hallway between rooms 1221 and 1229

“Dream as if you’ll live forever, live as if you’ll die today.” -James Dean

Further down the hallway it reads:

“Never live in the past but always learn it.” -anonymous

Room 1230

A large heart shaped box of Valentine’s Day chocolates on a desk.

On another an open pen and pencil case.

Room 1232

Calculators still on desks, spiral notebooks still open to math subject, students were working on algebra problems.

Room 1231

Clustered Desks

“Class of 2018” photos of students in casual settings (not formal pics).

THIRD FLOOR

Room 1256, Scott Beigel’s classroom:

Entering the hallway from the east side stairs, the first thing you see is a pool of caked blood that’s much smaller than others. This is where Scott Beigel’s body fell in front of classroom 1256. Unlike other rooms, the window on his door is intact. Beigel died holding the door open. His body blocked the door from closing. The children hiding in the front of his room were vulnerable, but Cruz did not choose to enter it.

Plastic world maps about the size of a placemat on most desks. There were three wall clocks lying face down by the door. On Beigel’s desk were worksheets comparing Christianity and Islam. On the whiteboard, notes on the 2018 Winter Olympics medal-winners. A deflated Valentine’s Day balloon lays on the ground.

Room 1255, Stacey Lippel’s classroom:

The door is pushed open — like others to signify that Cruz shot into it — and a “No Bully Zone” hangs on the inside. The creative writing assignment for the day is written on the whiteboard: “How to write the perfect love letter.”

The teacher’s desk is to the left and one can imagine students huddled behind it. The desks are in disarray, some pushed on top of each other from what was described in testimony as a mad rush back to get back inside. A top one desk is an enviable Valentine’s Day spread — a large gift bag with tissues stuffed inside it, a box of round, silver-wrapped candies, and a heart-shaped box.

Moving down the hallway, dry, cracked rose petals mixed with the glass shards lend a cinematic feel to the scene. There’s a large pool of blood in the middle of the third-floor hallway where Anthony Borges was injured. A sign above the water fountains has a quote from Star Wars’ Yoda: “Do or do not. There is no try.”

Beneath the water fountains, three large pools of dried blood mark the spots to where authorities dragged the bodies of Cara Loughran, Meadow Pollack, and Joaquin Oliver. A faint trail of blood traces the path of the girls’ bodies from the alcove where their bodies fell after being shot. A pool of blood is observed in the alcove outside 1249 where Pollack and Loughran died. They remained there, injured, after the rest of the group that was huddled in the alcove with Ernie Rospierski fled down the hallway. Then Cruz returned and shot them again.

ROOM 1249, Ernie Rospierski

There is an unfinished chess game. A friend of Peter Yang testified they were playing a game when the fire alarm went off.

Room 1250

Valentine’s Day balloons, flower petals, stuffed white bear.

One of the most disturbing sights is the alcove outside the bathroom where Joaquin Oliver died. There’s a large pool of blood and holes from bullets that were fired at him at close range. There are blood drops leading into the alcove from the first shots where he was wounded. But most of the blood is from when Cruz caught up to Oliver in the alcove and fired. We know from the evidence that Oliver was conscious after he was hit. He could not run when the others fled. He heard Cruz coming. Heard the shots into Pollack and Loughran. He knew he was next. We know from testimony that he held his hands up to protect himself. Two bullets in the wall show how vain that attempt was. There’s a lock of dark hair on the floor near where his body would have been. The corner of a heart-shaped paper Valentine’s Day decoration (perhaps was a card) is collapsed, presumably was drenched with blood

Moving down the hall toward the west wall, bullets scraped against the south walls, an indication that Cruz was aiming for the fleeing students and not just randomly firing ahead of him.

We see the corner in front of the stairwell where Peter Wang fell after being shot as he ran down the hallway. The wall is drawn into squares resembling search quadrants. It is stained with dark splotches of blood and yellow-greenish material that was described in testimony as brain matter. Pin-sized holes in the wall have circles drawn around them and are marked “fragment D” and “fragment F.”

There are six bullet holes in the window above where Wang died. Cruz tried to blow the windows out to shoot the fleeing students.

Jaime Guttenberg was struck outside the stairwell but fell inside. There is very little blood where she fell. The bullet never left her body.

In the teacher’s lounge, a windowpane facing the 1300 building has 4 bullet holes. Another window pane next to it has another bullet hole. These overlook the courtyard and a parking lot where students were fleeing.

A poster next to a windowpane reads like so:

“Typical or Troubled?

Notice: Notice if you are seeing trouble signs in a student.

Talk: Talk with the student

Act: Share observations with school mental health staff

Changing a life’s course.

School Social Work 754-321-1618

Family Counseling 754-321-1590

Broward Public Schools”

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Categories
Business

China’s BYD announces radical plan to sell 9000 electric cars per month in Australia next year

Although it is yet to deliver its first electric vehicle to a retail customer in Australia, China BYD’s has made an extraordinary claim that – if true – would rank it second on the sales charts behind Toyota within 12 months.


Chinese electric car specialist BYD has announced an ambitious plan to sell up to 9000 vehicles per month in Australia within the next 12 months.

Such a significant sales result within the first full year of operations has never before been achieved by a car company in Australia.

Announcing the rollout of three models next year – for a total of five electric cars over the next two years – the Australian distributor of BYD, EVDirect, claimed the start-up has the capacity and the backing from the Chinese factory to reach its extraordinary target .



BYD brand ambassador and former Socceroos player, Tim Cahill (left) with EVDirect’s Luke Todd (right).

EVDirect managing director Luke Todd told Drive at a preview event in Brisbane that BYD plans to manufacture 3000 examples of each of its three models – per month – some time next year.

“Within 12 months, we’ll have three models on the (Australian) market being delivered with production capability of 3000 vehicles per model per month – that’s 9000 vehicles per month,” said Mr Todd.

“Our production capability of 9000 vehicles per month means we are very confident that’ll be leading the charge.



“So far, the sales volume (in Australia) has exceeded what we thought.”

Mr Todd said the recently announced Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) exemption introduced by the Federal Government would likely trigger an increase in interest in electric cars.

As of July 1 2022, the 47 per cent FBT rate no longer applies to electric cars priced below the Luxury Car Tax threshold of $84,916.



Leasing an electric car could result in tax savings of up to $16,600 per year for employers and employees who use the “statutory method” of FBT calculation – which assumes a flat rate of 20 per cent personal use of a work vehicle.

“We believe we’ll see a huge upshoot in electric vehicle purchasing in general,” said Mr Todd.

If such a massive sales result after starting from zero deliveries is successful, it would be a remarkable achievement – ​​potentially making BYD the second highest-selling car marker in Australia.



However, industry analysts remain skeptical that such epic sales growth will occur so rapidly.

In 2021, Japanese car giant Toyota sold 223,642 vehicles, averaging more than 18,600 deliveries per month.

Fellow Japanese car maker Mazda was a distant second, reporting 101,119 sales in 2021 with an average of about 8420 per month.



BYD’s target of 9000 deliveries per month would also make the Chinese car maker Australia’s biggest electric vehicle seller, surpassing current leader Tesla.

From January to the end of June 2022, Tesla reported as sold 4,653 examples of its Model 3 sedan in Australia.

With supply chain issues easing and the upcoming arrival of the Model Y electric SUV, Tesla has claimed it could overtake its 2021 total of 12,094 vehicles reported as sold.

EVDirect says it has received more than 3500 orders for the BYD Atto 3, with the first deliveries due to begin later this month after supply chain setbacks pushed back its local debut originally scheduled for July.

Jordan Mulach

Jordan Mulach is Canberra/Ngunnawal born, currently residing in Brisbane/Turrbal. Joining the Drive team in 2022, Jordan has previously worked for Auto Action, MotorsportM8, The Supercars Collective and TouringCarTimes, WhichCar, Wheels, Motor and Street Machine. Jordan is a self-described iRacing addict and can be found on weekends either behind the wheel of his Octavia RS or swearing at his ZH Fairlane.

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Sports

Aussie Calab Law wins under-20s World Championship 200m bronze

Australia — we may just have found our next sprint superstar.

Aussie 200m star Calab Law claimed bronze at the under-20 World Athletics Championship in Cali Colombia, clocking a time of 20.48 in the final and landing on the podium.

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It was a hot final as Israel’s Blessing Akawasi Afrifah claimed gold ahead of Botswana’s Lesile Tebogo, who both recorded times of 19.96 seconds, making them the third fastest under-20 200m sprinters in history. Afrifah claimed the gold by 0.006 seconds in the photo finish time but both were awarded the championship record time.

The time was only 0.03 seconds slower than 200m world record holder Usain Bolt’s fastest under-20 time of 19.93 seconds and 18-year-old World Championship silver medalist Erriyon Knighton’s time of 19.49 seconds as the fastest under-20 200m time ever.

Tebogo had claimed the under-20 100m world record earlier in the meet, running 9.91 in the final to break his own record.

Although well outside the world record time, Law claimed the bronze, bouncing back from a slow star to land on the podium.

Law had set a personal best time of 20.42 in the semi-finals, the second fastest under-20 200m time in Australian history, behind only Aiden Murphy’s 20.41 set at the South Australian State Championships in February.

The 200m has traditionally not been a strong suit for Australia

Athletics historian David Tarbotton revealing it was just the fifth international 200m medal Australia had won, and second in the World U20s after Steve McBain’s bronze in 1986.

Murphy did make the semi-finals in Cali as well, but had the 11th fastest time and missed the final, despite coming into the event as a strong medal hope.

But Law brought home the bronze in a brilliant performance to solidify his reputation as one of Australia’s great sprinting prospects.

“I was so tempted to look over my shoulder because I didn’t really feel anybody up next to me. I knew the two boys were up in front, but I was not sure at all – I had to wait to see my name up there,” Law told Athletics Australia.

“The medal for me is like another step, it’s the next level. When I get into my Open season I will be better than ever.”

At just 18-years-old, Law is bound to get faster, which could be perfect timing for the Victorian Commonwealth Games in 2026.

A proud Indigenous man from the Wakka Wakka tribe in North Queensland, Law said he was inspired by those who came before him.

“My favorite sprinter ever is Cathy Freeman. She was the best – so smooth, so relaxed, so long. I always try to replicate the way that she runs but she is too perfect,” Law said.

“My aunty was an amazing sprinter, Aunty Karla, she coached me when I was 12. They are all indigenous Wakka Wakka, my tribe is from North Queensland and they would all be really happy – they were watching me on the big screen.”

Last month, Law raced at the World Championships, making the semi-finals but finishing as the 21st fastest.

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Categories
US

Russia ‘ready to discuss’ prisoner swap but will resist pressure to free Brittney Griner | Brittney Griner

Russia is ready to discuss a prisoner swap for imprisoned Americans, said foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, but added that the Kremlin would resist public pressure to free US basketball star Brittney Griner and others being held in Russian prisons.

Lavrov’s remarks came one day after Griner received a nine-year prison sentence on drug charges that were seen as a gambit to demand an exchange for high-profile Russians in prison in the US, including the arms trafficker Viktor Bout.

“We are ready to discuss the issue. [of a swap]but this should be done via the channel approved by the presidents, Putin and Biden,” Lavrov said during a press conference in Cambodia.

He referred to a backchannel that had been set up by Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin, saying “no matter who says what in public, this channel remains relevant”.

That backchannel appeared to have been successful in arranging the release of Trevor Reed, an ex-marine who had been detained in Russia for more than two years before he was exchanged in April for Konstantin Yaroshenko, a Russian pilot who had been held for more than a decade on drug smuggling charges.

But Lavrov also warned that Russia would not respond to “megaphone diplomacy”, demanding that any negotiations be carried out discreetly.

“If this is another case of the Americans resorting to public diplomacy and loud statements on their pending steps, it’s their business or I would even say their problem, because the Americans often fail to honor the agreement on doing calm, professional work,” he said.

Griner and her legal team tried to steer clear of politics during her trial. “I know everybody keeps talking about ‘political pawn’ and ‘politics’, but I hope that is far from this courtroom,” Griner said in a closing statement on Thursday.

Lavrov said that he had not discussed the issue of a swap with the US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, who also attended the ASEAN conference in Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment on a potential swap for Bout, the arms trafficker. “These swaps will never happen if we start discussing any nuances of the exchange in the press,” he told reporters on Friday.

Categories
Business

EXCLUSIVE | Shipbuilder Navantia to build 500MW hydrogen electrolyser plant with ‘world-renowned technologist’

Spanish shipbuilder Navantia is planning to begin production at a new 500MW electrolyser assembly line in northwest Spain by the “end of 2022 or beginning of 2023”, Recharge you have learned.

“The capacity for assembly of electrolysers in the short term is about 500MW/year and could be rapidly increased,” a Navantia spokeswoman tells Recharge.

The new facility — being built at its turbine factory in the northwestern Spanish city of Ferrol — will use stacks supplied by a third-party “electrolyser technologist” in the first phase, at least, she explains.

“We will establish collaboration with [this] world-renowned technologist, there are advanced conversations and the collaboration agreement is expected to be closed before [the] end of 2022. The type [of] model of collaboration — license agreement, joint venture or other alternative — will be defined by then.”

A trend seems to be emerging for electrolyser makers to form joint ventures or partnerships with third-party companies in order to build large new factories.

For instance, US company Plug Power is building a 2GW electrolyser factory in Queensland, Australia, in a 50-50 joint venture with green hydrogen pure-play company Fortescue Future Industrieswhich is owned by that country’s richest man, Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest.

Article continues below the warning

US-based Cummins has formed a joint venture with Chinese state-owned oil giant Sinopec to build a 1GW PEM electrolyser factory in southern China.

And Belgium’s John Cockerill is constructing a 2GW electrolyser plant in India in conjunction with local renewables developer Greenko.

As Plug Power CEO Andy Marsh recently told Recharge: “I think [a joint-venture approach] spreads risk, spreads reward, but it also opens up opportunities that I don’t think Plug would be able to capture on its own.”

The Navantia spokeswoman added that the company’s ambition was to produce both alkaline and PEM electrolysers.

“We will start production of electrolysers already tested and in commercial production by the technologist,” she said. “The ambition in the future is to participate in new developments and acquire the capacity to manufacture the whole electrolysers, including the stacks.”

Navantia’s intention to build an electrolyser production line was revealed with zero details last month, as part of a press release announcing an agreement between the shipbuilder and Spanish oil company Repsol to jointly explore “renewable hydrogen generation opportunities”.

“The ambition of Navantia [is] to become a relevant actor in the manufacturing of electrolysers… [in] answer to the demand of: a) the Spanish governments [sic] to develop the industry and local employment in the value chain of hydrogen production; and b) the main promoters, like Repsol, of hydrogen production plants, to ensure the… supply [of] electrolysers for their projects,” the spokeswoman explained.

Navantia also builds offshore wind turbine foundations and earlier this year it set up a new brand called Navantia Seanergies to push its non-shipbuilding activities.

According to shipbroker Clarksons, Navantia has not built a ship since 2019 and does not have any on order.

Categories
Sports

Collingwood beat Melbourne by seven points in yet another thriller to make it 11 straight wins

Jamie Elliott has kicked four goals in his 150th game to help Collingwood upset Melbourne by seven points and stamp themselves as a genuine AFL premiership threat.

The lead swung on the last five goals of a pulsating contest at the MCG on Friday night before the Magpies prevailed 15.6 (96) to 13.11 (89) in front of 70,956 fans.

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It was Collingwood’s 10th win by a margin of less than two goals in a rolling first season under Craig McRae, lifting them into a second spot on the ladder.

But the fallout could hurt, with Will Hoskin-Elliott (hip flexor) substituted out, Nick Daicos (ribs) hurt and Mason Cox set to come under scrutiny for driving his knee up into Max Gawn’s stomach at a ruck contest.

Ash Johnson matched Elliott’s tally with four goals, Daicos (31 disposals) was brilliant at half-back, Jordan De Goey (24 touches, nine clearances) had an impact in the middle and hard-working forward Brody Mihocek (two goals) played a key role opposed to Steven May.

Clayton Oliver (42 disposals, 14 clearances) was best afield for Melbourne and Gawn (31, 10) was superb, while Ben Brown and Bayley Fritsch kicked two goals each.

But they couldn’t stop an irresistible second-half surge from Collingwood, who trailed by 23 points during the second quarter and kicked seven goals to three after the main break to overpower the reigning premiers.

The fuse was lit for a red-hot contest when Ed Langdon branded Collingwood “a bit of a one-trick pony” in a radio interview on Thursday.

The response was one of intent, with the Melbourne wingman crunched by Brayden Maynard in the opening exchanges and immediately set upon by three other Magpies.

Elliott marked his milestone with two first-quarter goals but it was the Demons who led by eight points after a fast-paced opening term.

Every Langdon touch was booed by the Magpie Army and Melbourne fans also found a villain to jeer when Cox thrust his knee into Gawn at a ball-up.

Melbourne dominated overall play in the second term thanks to their brilliant midfield – Christian Petracca (36 disposals) and Andrew Brayshaw (32) were prominent — and could easily have led by more than 17 points at half-time.

But Collingwood kept themselves in it with superior efficiency, crafting eight goals from just 18 forward entries to the Demons’ 10 from 41.

The Magpies evened up the midfield battle and attacked the contest with ferocity in the third quarter and cut the margin to seven points by the final change.

Daicos was crunched in a Fritsch tackle when he was called to play on after a mark but returned in pain after having his ribs checked.

The lead changed hands five times in an epic final quarter before Collingwood hit the front for the last time through Johnson, who converted a free kick after being pushed in the back by Harrison Petty.

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AAP

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Categories
Australia

Only ‘ideology or fear’ would push a government to attack ABC, Anthony Albanese says | Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Only a government ruled by ideology or fear would attack the ABC, Anthony Albanese has said at the 90th birthday celebration of the public broadcaster in Sydney.

In a thinly veiled attack on the former Coalition government’s fraught relationship with the ABC, the prime minister on Friday evening said a strong independent broadcaster was vital to democracy and brought Australia together as a nation.

“The health of our democracy is underpinned by truth and by the strength of our cultural identity – how we see ourselves as a people and what unifies us in all the splendor of our diversity,” Albanese said.

“A government that chooses to attack a public broadcaster does so motivated by either ideology or fear – or a toxic cocktail of the two.

“No government should fear the ABC – unless it fears the truth. A government of integrity and transparency should welcome the accountability that a strong, properly resourced public broadcaster brings.”

An avowed fan of Triple J, Albanese praised many aspects of the ABC, from the credibility of its news and current programming affairs to its crucial role during the pandemic and the bushfires.

“There are people still alive right now because of the ABC,” he said.

He confirmed Labor would provide five-year funding terms, restore the $83.7m cut by the former government and review options for delivering greater financial sustainability to safeguard against political interference.

Albanese told guests in studio 22 at the ABC’s Ultimo headquarters that locally made children’s television such as Bluey was important for the development of cultural identity in young people who would otherwise face “a tide of imported programming”.

“Just as in drama, we need other voices and all the perspectives they bring, but not at the expense of our own,” he said.

Albanese, who was joined by the communications minister, Michelle Rowland, said the ABC helped to share Australia’s voice in the region.

“That was undervalued by the previous government, even trivialized,” he said, reiterating an election promise to increase funding for Australian content in the Indo-Pacific region.

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The ABC’s managing director, David Anderson, said the corporation could not be complacent about the future.

“We need to continue to evolve the ABC to respond to rapid technological change and the changing audience preferences and behaviors that come with it,” he said.

“The competition for audience attention is intense and the competitors are large, global and well-funded.”

Categories
US

1 dead, 2 injured following shooting at Mirage on Las Vegas Strip

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department is investigating a deadly shooting inside a room at the Mirage Hotel and Casino on the Las Vegas Strip late Thursday night.

Captain Dori Koren with the Homicide and Sex Crimes Bureau said one person has been pronounced dead inside the hotel room and two others are at a local hospital in critical condition as a result of the shooting.

“We can tell you at least preliminarily, that there was an altercation that happened in the room between four individuals we believe all known to each other. And during that altercation, the one individual shot the three other individuals,” Captain Koren said at an overnight briefing.

Multiple posts on Twitter indicated a heavy police presence inside the hotel. At one point people were saying police locked down the hotel completely.

As for the suspect, police say a manhunt is underway.

Koren said police are looking for a man who took off from the scene.

LVMPD posted to its Twitter just after 10 pm alerting the public of the shooting.

“These types of incidents these types of extreme violence that happen in our city we take very seriously, you’ve seen it with all the investigations we conduct, we’re fortunate to have the best homicide investigative unit in the country with the highest clearance rates for a reason so we’re confident we will solve this case,” Koren added.

On Friday morning, Koren tweeted that the suspect involved was “identified, located and arrested” within six hours of the shooting. Details on the suspect’s identity weren’t disclosed immediately.

FOX5 will provide additional information when it is made available.