Categories
Business

Northern NSW’s guava growers consider replacing ‘declining’ crop, but exotic fruit finds home in sour beer

The last remaining commercial guava farmer in the Northern Rivers of New South Wales is preparing to rip out two-thirds of the orchard’s 3,000 trees.

It follows one of Australia’s largest growers bulldozing his orchard on the Alstonville plateau earlier this year to convert to macadamias.

Now Phillip and Janice Schmidt at nearby Newrybar are also considering the popular native nut as a replacement tree crop.

“Avocados? Macadamias? We’re yet to make our mind up, but obviously, the land should be kept productive for the sake of the country and everyone,” Mr Schmidt said.

A pile of guava trees bulldozed.
Guava trees bulldozed and pushed into piles on the Alstonville Plateau.(Rural ABC: Kim Honan)

The Schmidts sell guavas from 1,000 trees to Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne markets for a premium price.

But the fruit from the remaining 2,000 trees, previously sold for juicing, is being left to rot on the ground or gobbled up by cattle on agistment.

The former CSIRO geologist, who “accidentally” fell into guava farming when he bought the coastal property on retirement, said they were not dependent on the juicing income, but for others in the industry, it had been devastating.

“It’s been a declining part of our industry for over 10 years, and it’s finally reached the stage where I don’t think any guavas from northern NSW are used for juicing,” he said.

“We don’t really know what the cause of it is, but I suspect that imports from overseas could be a factor.”

But Queensland-based processor Tropico Fruits has confirmed it does not import any guava product for its juices.

Three black cows and a white bull in a guava orchard.
Mr Schmidt says the cattle love the guavas.(Rural ABC: Kim Honan)

The company has in previous years bought guavas from the Northern Rivers but said it never had juicing contracts with growers.

Tropico Fruits chief executive Dave Alderton said it had individual standalone seasonal arrangements based on each year’s supply and demand.

He said that despite offering such an arrangement this year for guavas, neither grower in the Northern Rivers was able to supply the fruit.

A man holds a yellow skinned guava with pink flesh inside.
Newrybar Guavas mostly grow Hawaiian pink guavas and some whites.(Rural ABC: Kim Honan)

Constant rain hurts guava harvest

In addition to the unsold juice fruit, the weeks of rain during this year’s harvest resulted in an excess of table fruit on the farm.

Mr Schmidt said that initially, it was looking like a bumper guava season.

“But then we kept on having rain, more rain, more rain until we reached the point where we were unable to actually pick the fruit because we had no means of accessing or at least getting a vehicle down to take the fruit out,” he said.

“We lost two weeks when we just simply couldn’t get down here, and those two weeks are probably our most productive actually.”

Two green skinned guavas hang in a tree.
These guavas will be sold to Melbourne, Brisbane or Sydney markets for a premium price.(Rural ABC: Kim Honan)

The result was a lot of fruit too ripe for the market that ended up being shared with friends or given to the cattle.

“The cattle love it,” he said.

“They actually follow us down to the packing shed, and they turn up at the packing shed and wait outside.”

The upside to the constant rain was much larger guavas, with the skin able to keep up with the growth of the fruit without splitting.

Guavas saved for sour beer

While the 40-year-old guava industry in the Northern Rivers has declined dramatically, the craft brewery sector in the region is booming.

The newest brewery, Common People Brewing Co at nearby Bangalow, is working with local producers on special batch brews.

A glass of light colored beer sits on a bar in a brewery with a lady pulling beers in the background.
Common People Brewing Co produced a seasonal beer using excess fruit from Newrybar Guavas.(Rural ABC: Kim Honan)

General manager Jay Kempnich said they sourced some of the Schmidts’ excess fruit to make a limited edition seasonal beer for the weekend’s self-drive Harvest Food Trail.

“We infused guava and some of our fresh lilly pillies from our own trees from out the front of the brewery here into a sour beer and made a delicious, refreshing guava beer,” he said.

The brewery, which opened in January, brews 600 liters at a time with eight beers, three of those its flagship beers.

Two men in black shirts standing and smiling in front of brewery tanks.
Brewery founders and co-owners Drew Tourle (left) and Jay Kempnich.(Rural ABC: Kim Honan)

“Then we’ve got the other five taps that are dedicated to doing seasonal and special batch brews, using local ingredients from the area and collaborations with local businesses where we can,” he said.

Another of those collaborations is with Barefoot Farm Byron, a pecan grower and processor in the nearby Eltham Valley.

“We put 10 kilos of their pecan nuts into one of our 600-liter batches and have done a full batch of a pecan-infused brown ale,” he said.

Four cans of beer sitting in a fridge.
The Bangalow brewery has used local pecans to make brown ale.(Rural ABC: Kim Honan)

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Categories
Technology

Google decided having two apps called Meet was a good idea

Google is moving forward with its merger of Duo and Meet, if not quite as elegantly as some might like. TechCrunch reports Google is rebranding Duo for Android and iOS as the Meet app, complete with the video calling-centric logo. The company had already migrated many of Meet’s features. However, the old Meet app isn’t going away for now — instead, it will be rebranded as “Google Meet (original).”

All Duo users should see the rebrand by September. You’ll have to use your Google account for any meeting features, but familiar elements (like effects and contacts) will remain intact. The original Meet app will continue to work, but won’t get ad hoc calling and will eventually disappear.

As a spokesperson explained in June, the merger is meant to adapt to the “evolving needs” of video calling, including meetings, by providing a unified experience. To some extent, it’s also further acknowledgment that Google’s communication app mix had grown too complex. The tech firm plans to shut down Hangouts this fall to focus on Chat, for instance, and it dropped Allo in early 2019. While the old Meet’s existence could still prove confusing, it should soon be clearer as to just which Google apps you should use for work meetings or keeping up with friends.

All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

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Australia

Renter forced to give up her cat under laws in South Australia, where landlords can refuse pets

When Jasmin Witham started renting in Adelaide, she was forced to make a heartbreaking decision.

In order to move into her new home in Clovelly Park, the 27-year-old would have to give up her kitten, Nina.

Even though more than 60 per cent of South Australian households own a dog or cat, the decision to allow pets in rental properties lies with the landlord.

Property owners can currently refuse tenants’ requests to own a pet and do not have to provide a reason for doing so.

As a result, Ms Witham, who has struggled with rental affordability over the years as a part-time student who lives with bipolar disorder and is on the Disability Support Pension, said she was faced with a difficult choice.

“We approached the landlord and asked to bring the pet with us and they said no, so I wasn’t able to bring my kitten with me to the new house,” Ms Witham said.

“It is still very upsetting, and I don’t see how having a pet or a smaller animal like a cat is detrimental in any way to a property, like if there is any damage there is a bond.”

A hand holding a smartphone with a photo of a cat shown on screen
Nina the cat went to live with Jasmin’s parents instead.(ABC News: Che Chorley)

The South Australian government is currently looking at modernizing the state’s residential tenancies laws which could see tenants allowed to rent with pets.

In 2020, new laws came into effect in Victoria which made it much easier for renters to own a pet.

Now landlords are only allowed to deny a tenant’s request for a pet if they receive approval from the Victorian Civil and Administration Tribunal.

Queensland followed in 2021 by updating its legislation and stripping landlords of the right to refuse pets in rental properties without a reason deemed valid by the state government.

In the ACT, tenants still require consent of the landlord to keep a pet on the property but tenancy agreements can no longer prohibit pets completely.

If the landlord wants to refuse a pet, they have to take it to the Civil and Administrative Tribunal.

Shelter SA executive director Alice Clark said the current legislation in place in South Australia is outdated.

“The number of pet rentals that is listed is very low in South Australia so yes I think we should catch up,” Dr Clark said.

“What we don’t want is tenants hiding their pets which we know happens frequently so it would be great to have that all done transparently and responsibly by both sides.”

Rental Crisis Jasmin Witham
Jasmin Witham is currently renting in Unley.(ABC News: Che Chorley)

Considering what she could afford, Ms Witham said finding a rental by herself was difficult and even finding a share house was hard.

“It’s difficult to be put onto a lease where a lot of landlords and agencies feel uncomfortable taking people getting social security benefits and will prioritize people in employment,” she said.

As Australia’s housing crisis worsens, Ms Witham hopes South Australia updates its laws to better protect both tenants and landlords.

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Categories
US

Alex Jones attorneys accidentally gave up his phone’s contents, Sandy Hook lawyers say

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The legal team representing Infowars founder Alex Jones inadvertently sent the contents of his cellphone to a lawyer representing the parents of a child killed in the Sandy Hook mass shooting, the parents’ lawyer said in court Wednesday.

The apparent blunder, revealed by attorney Mark Bankston as Jones was on the stand in the damages phase of his defamation trial, unearthed previously undisclosed texts about the massacre and financial information about Infowars. Bankston, who represents Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, parents of 6-year-old Jesse Lewis, told the far-right conspiracy theorist that his attorneys had “messed up and sent me an entire digital copy of your entire cellphone.”

“And that is how I know you lied to me when you said you didn’t have text messages about Sandy Hook,” Bankston said.

“This is your ‘Perry Mason’ moment,” Jones responded, a reference to the fictional lawyer famed for his stunning 11th-hour courtroom reveals. “I gave them my phone.”

Bankston noted Jones had testified under oath that he personally searched his cellphone for Sandy Hook text messages and was unable to find any. Bankston asked, “You know what perjury is, right? I just want to make sure you know before we go any further.”

Jones denied lying, saying, “I’m not a tech guy.”

The dramatic moment came as Bankston cross-examined Jones, shortly before closing arguments in the damages phase of the defamation trial that began last week in an Austin courtroom. Heslin and Lewis sued in 2018 over the far-right media personality’s relentless false claims that the Sandy Hook school shooting was a “giant hoax.”

Sandy Hook parents confront Alex Jones, say hoax claims created ‘living hell’

After Jones’s years-long refusal to comply with court orders and hand over documents and evidence in lawsuits, District Judge Maya Guerra Gamble of Travis County, Tex., in September found Jones responsible for all damages. She issued a default judgment against Jones, blasting him and his website’s parent company, Free Speech Systems, for having “intentionally disobeyed” the court’s requests by refusing to turn over documents related to the various lawsuits against him.

While confronting Jones about the newly discovered text messages in court Wednesday, Bankston displayed one of them, in which an editor who worked for Jones sent him a screenshot of an Infowars article claiming a hospital was using dummies in a coronavirus ward. The editor, Paul Watson, wrote that it “makes us look ridiculous” and added, “Sandy Hook all over again.” Jones texted back, “I get it.”

Bankston also asked about his emails. I have noted that Jones had testified he did not have any about Sandy Hook because he doesn’t use email. Jones said in court, “Yes. I personally do not get on the internet and sit there and use email. I’ve never sent emails myself. Because I don’t like it. I can’t stand it. There’s too many of them.”

The attorney then displayed emails he said Jones had sent to lawyers, staff and others about business operations.

He zeroed-in on messages about Infowars financial information, which he said contradicted Jones’s previous statements about the amount of money he made. Bankston pointed out that Jones had claimed he had lost millions because of deplatforming and made up to $200,000 a day. But, he said, messages on Jones’s phone suggested Infowars brought in as much as $800,000 on some days. If he kept up that pace, he said, it would add up to about $300 million a year.

Jones claimed the numbers were cherry-picked. At one point, as Bankston went over the contents of the phone, he scoffed, “This is ridiculous.”

Gamble told jurors that what the lawyers say is not evidence, adding that without evidence, it is not yet known whether the contents of the phone were given to the Sandy Hook parents’ attorney by accident.

“But what we do know,” the judge said, “is that it wasn’t properly turned over when it should have been.”

Despite conceding in testimony Wednesday that the 2012 shooting was not a hoax but “100 percent real,” Jones throughout the trial has continued to defend himself from critics of his broadcast program while seeking to protect his financial assets from potentially devastating damages that could be awarded to the plaintiffs.

Jones last week made an emergency bankruptcy filing for Free Speech Systems, just months after filing for bankruptcy protection for Infowars and two other business ventures.

Alex Jones’s media company files for bankruptcy during Sandy Hook trial

The families have said admissions and apologies from Jones are not enough; they are seeking at least $150 million in damages.

A pricey damages payout would add to the string of legal losses for Jones and Infowars since parents of Sandy Hook victims began to file defamation suits in 2018, after Jones made repeated claims on his show that the shooting was a hoax and the victims were “crisis actors.” Judges in Connecticut and Texas have issued default judgments against Jones in multiple suits.

Jones has been sued by at least nine Sandy Hook families.

Categories
Business

Orica’s $260m purchase of Axis is at the center of three global megatrends

Orica gets a double benefit: rising demand for these digital products and services but also improved profitability because these technology businesses operate with much higher margins than the group’s core explosives business.

breathing space

Increasing technology sales and improving margins partially help explain the 40 per cent rise in Orica’s share price over the past 12 months, but the big swing factor has been surging demand for explosives in a world where supply chain disruptions have been heightened by the war in Ukraine ; Russia was previously one of the world’s biggest exporters of ammonia and ammonium nitrate, the key ingredients in explosives.

Gandhi has done a good job passing through rampant inflationary pressures – including rising energy costs, raw material costs, labor costs and freight costs – by positioning Orica as a reliable supplier with prices to match.

On Wednesday, he reaffirmed guidance for the 2021-22 financial year, with margin improvement to be driven by volume growth in line with gross domestic product growth, cost reductions and higher prices.

But Gandhi’s supersized capital raising is designed to give him a bit of breathing space.

By raising an extra $282 million for working capital and balance sheet capacity, he will have more financial flexibility to navigate the inflation he is battling with higher input costs; the ongoing supply chain constraints that have necessitated finding new sources of ammonia and ammonium nitrate, sometimes under shorter payment terms; and the geopolitical threats to supply, which have required higher inventory holdings to counter supply risks.

“There’s a lot of stuff going on in the industry that we cannot control, so I am being a bit cautious here. It has nothing to do with the underlying business. The underlying business is very healthy,” Gandhi says.

Execution risk should be relatively low on the Axis deal. Gandhi plans to integrate the business into Orica but preserve Axis’ autonomy, with some of Orica’s existing orebody intelligence businesses to be run by the Axis team, which Gandhi says reflects the size and experience of the acquisition.

The deal was struck on a multiple of 11.8 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization; Orica trades on 32 times.

Categories
Australia

Gippsland farmer ‘shocked’ by Crown land campsites announced by Victorian government

A Gippsland farmer has described his shock at the location of several new campsites being established on what he considers “totally inappropriate” sections of land licensed from the Victorian government.

The government last Friday published details of the first four camps in Gippsland — two are on the Wonnangatta River, and two are on the Dargo and Macalister Rivers — on the Crown land river frontage.

Access to many of the campsites is from narrow country roads with limited parking opportunities and strict conditions.

Trevor Archer manages the farm that hosts the Macalister River campsite and said it was “totally inappropriate” because there was “nowhere to park”.

The site is 4 kilometers from Cheyne’s Bridge Recreation Area, a campsite with toilet facilities popular among trail bike riders.

“It gave me a bit of a shock, actually,” Mr Archer said.

“I knew it was proposed but they hit us pretty quick with it.

“There’s nowhere to park. The closest safe park is 4 kilometers away [at Cheyne’s Bridge] on a dangerous windy narrow road.

“It’s an accident waiting to happen if people are on foot down there.”

A barbed wire farm fence runs alongside the narrow Licola Road.
The Macalister River campsite is currently accessed by jumping a fence on Licola Road.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Access to the campsite involves scaling a barbed wire fence beside a narrow two-lane road and walking through a paddock often grazed by Mr Archer’s cattle.

“The entry point is 40 meters from where I bring my cattle up a little cutting … and later in the year there are 130–140 cows and calves coming up here and I’ve got to try to get them through [the campers],” Mr Archer said.

“If someone’s here trying to unload their gear when I’ve got cows and calves coming in… it’s just not going to work.”

The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning was contacted for comment.

The wide Macalister River flows between a rocky hill and green campsite.
The Macalister River Cheyne’s Bridge campground is 4 kilometers upstream from the new campsite.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Fulfilling an election commitment

The Labor government made a 2018 election commitment to open licensed Crown land river frontages to camping.

The land was previously accessible for day use, with the four campsites opened on areas that are frequently grazed by cattle.

The sites have to be accessed by foot, campers must keep portable toilets at least 50 meters away from waterways, or 100 meters away if burying human waste, and dogs and campfires are not permitted.

A dirt road adjacent to a shallow valley
A new campsite on the Wonnangatta River frontage must be accessed by foot.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Campers are welcome

Mr Archer said he was not opposed to having campers on the land but expected the 4km walk from Cheyne’s Bridge would deter many.

“I don’t see that anyone’s going to carry their gear 4 kilometers down the road, 4 kilometers back,” he said.

“And they can only get in that one entry and exit.”

Trevor stands on a ridge above a paddock leading down to the river.  He wears a broad hat and a dark jumper.
Trevor Archer worries how he will move cattle while campers are unloading equipment.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

It would not be the first time campers have set up on the property.

“Before the 2007 flood when the river blew out and changed course, I had 14 sites where people could choose to camp,” Mr Archer said.

“But we had them where we wanted them. They were in a bend in the river and it didn’t interfere with our stock work or anything.”

A wide grassy farm paddock with rows of trees on either side.
Walk-in campers are allowed to set up on this site alongside the Macalister River.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Calls for a ‘level playing field’

Further downstream, Paradise Valley camp and caravan park operator Neil Williams was surprised to learn about the free campsite.

“It doesn’t really seem fair that we have to go through all the compliance rigors that we do, and the state government feels like it can open up a parcel of land for anyone at any time,” Mr Williams said.

He said many Paradise Valley guests had visited the park over many years.

But Mr Williams conceded he may lose business to the free campsites upstream.

“I’d just like everyone to be on a level playing field,” he said.

“There are caravan parks all over Victoria that have had to comply with Country Fire Authority regulations.

“There’s a whole host of other council health and safety compliance issues that we deal with on a regular basis and it all adds to our overheads.”

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Categories
US

Suspect in the July 4 parade shooting pleads not guilty : NPR

Robert E. Crimo III, leaves the courtroom after a hearing Wednesday, in Waukegan, Ill. Accused of killing seven people and wounding dozens more in a shooting at an Independence Day parade in suburban Chicago, Crimo pleaded not guilty on Wednesday.

Nam Y. Huh/AP


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Nam Y. Huh/AP


Robert E. Crimo III, leaves the courtroom after a hearing Wednesday, in Waukegan, Ill. Accused of killing seven people and wounding dozens more in a shooting at an Independence Day parade in suburban Chicago, Crimo pleaded not guilty on Wednesday.

Nam Y. Huh/AP

WAUKEGAN, Ill. — The man accused of killing seven people and wounding dozens more in a shooting at an Independence Day parade in suburban Chicago pleaded not guilty on Wednesday, a week after prosecutors announced he faces 117 felony counts in the attack.

Robert E. Crimo III appeared for a brief hearing Wednesday in Lake County’s circuit court to enter a formal plea to the charges — 21 counts of first-degree murder, 48 counts of attempted murder and 48 counts of aggravated battery representing those killed and wounded during the parade in Highland Park.

Crimo wore a COVID-19 face mask throughout the 10-minute arraignment and repeatedly told Judge Victoria Rossetti that he understood the charges and potential penalties he faces, including life imprisonment. As Crimo shuffled into court, chains jangling around his ankles, several relatives and friends of at least one victim turned to look at him from across the room, some keeping their eyes fixed on him throughout hearing.

Lake County prosecutors in late July announced that a grand jury had indicted Crimo on the charges. The prosecutors had previously filed seven murder charges against the 21-year-old in the days following the shooting.

The multiple first-degree murder charges allege Crimo intended to kill, caused death or great bodily harm and took action with a strong probability of causing death or great bodily harm on the seven people who died.

A representative for the county public defenders office, which is representing Crimo, has said the office does not comment publicly on any cases. An attorney with the office entered Crimo’s not guilty plea during Wednesday’s court appearance.

Prosecutors have said Crimo admitted to the shooting once police arrested him following an hourslong search for the gunman who opened fire from the rooftop of a building along the parade route.

Authorities have said the wounded range in age from 8 to their 80s, including an 8-year-old boy who was paralyzed from the waist down when the shooting severed his spine.

In comments delivered after the hearing, Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart declined to say whether Crimo could face additional charges and said he would not comment on whether Crimo’s parents could be charged.

Some in the community have questioned why Crimo’s parents apparently supported his interest in guns only months after he reportedly threatened suicide and violence.

George Gomez, an attorney representing Crimo’s parents, said Wednesday that they are not concerned that criminal charges could be filed against them. Both attended Wednesday’s hearing where they sat quietly behind their son.

Speaking with reporters afterward, Gomez described his clients as “devastated” and “heartbroken” for Highland Park and he said they are cooperating with authorities.

Categories
Business

Streets’ Golden Gaytime has teamed up with OAK

Two iconic Australian brands have joined forces to create a frozen treat that many will be lining up to get their hands on.

Golden Gaytime has teamed up with OAK to create a chocolate twist on the iconic ice cream.

The treat has an OAK-inspired ice cream centre, dipped in a layer of chocolate, and is smothered in Golden Gaytime’s famous delicious biscuit pieces with a choccy twist.

Streets spokeswoman Annie Lucchitti said: “Golden Gaytime has been an Aussie favorite for over 50 years and we’re known for some pretty impressive flavor experiences!

“Golden Gaytime OAK brings the iconic elements of Golden Gaytime together with the unmistakeable OAK Choc Milk flavor hit. It’s creamy, crumbly, choccy – delicious.

“It’s a crowd pleaser that’s for sure. We’re ecstatic to be bringing the next level of Golden goodness to market!”

The release of the new ice cream will be staggered, hitting the shelves exclusively at IGA and Ritchies stores on Thursday, August 4.

In September, Golden Gaytime OAK will be available in Coles, petrol stations and convenience stores.

The ice creams can be purchased in a box of four for $9.50.

It’s the latest collaboration from OAK, after Allen’s beloved Milk Bottles were transformed into OAK-flavoured lollies.

The confectionary company revealed in July the beloved brands were collaborating.

The Milk Bottles come in two OAK-inspired packs and come in two flavours.

One is an Oak-inspired iced coffee – a chocolate and malt blend.

The second is strawberry, with the new Milk Bottles being sold as standalone bags of lollies.

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Categories
Technology

Nintendo Treats Its Loyal Switch Fans to Refreshing New Mario Kart and Animal Crossing Icons

Nintendo had just added a new update, and it is making fans go crazy. With its latest tweet, Nintendo just shared its August update and future plans for the Switch console. Exclusively giving away news on the new icons that players can redeem after completing some simple tasks.

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Nintendo is one of the most sold consoles on the planet. And this is no small feat knowing how much Nintendo has to sometimes suffer because of its simplistic approach toward gaming. In the recent industry trends, games are becoming more and more real to watch Nintendo is trying its best to stay loyal to its core material.

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Nintendo shares a tweet on a new update for Switch players

In the latest tweet, Nintendo shared the news on the new MarioKart 8 Deluxe icons coming to Nintendo Switch Online. Notably, these icons will feature Booster Course Pass Wave 1 & 2 and will be available till September 5, 2022, at 6 PM PT.

Additionally, the icons will be refreshed each week on Sundays, ie, on the 7th, 14th, 21st, and 28th of August. These updates will also feature the new Splatoon 3 icons, to be released on September 9 this year.

Notably, Animal Crossing New Horizon will allow customizable icons to players whose birth month is August. Although, these icons will be only available until 9:59 AM in Japan, and fans have to exchange Platinum Points in the store to get these.

Additionally, the Platinum Points are required to exchange for the icons in any country. Thus, fans need to complete some very simple missions to earn these as rewards.

For example, playing online or trying out the library of classic games.

How do fans react to the news?

The fans were pretty excited about the update, as many thought it was great to see ‘Dry Bowser’ as an icon.

Notably, many icons that were teased by Nintendo are fan favorites. Moreover, gamers just loved seeing the fresh change of pace for the company.

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Many fans, albeit, pointed out that exchanging Premium Points for these icons is a great strategy. Mostly because many players don’t use them in any way and thus were seeing a downward trajectory in the feature.

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What do you think about the latest update by Nintendo? Let us know your valuable opinions in the comments below.

WATCH THIS STORY: Ranking The Highest Selling Nintendo Games of All Time

Categories
Australia

Destructive cold front sweeps east bringing rain, damaging winds to NSW, Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania, ACT and WA

Another destructive cold front is sweeping east, exacerbating the risk of flooding across multiple states in southern Australia.

A large area of ​​South Australia, and some elevated areas in Victoria and New South Wales, and north-western parts of Tasmania, are on high alert today with warnings of heavy rain and damaging winds.

It comes as yet another destructive cold front sweeps east.

“Rainfall totals of 10 to 30 mm are likely over a broad area of ​​southeastern Australia on Thursday,” Weatherzone said.

“The heaviest rain will be in central and southern inland NSW and the ACT, where 24-hour totals could exceed 150 mm on and west of the ranges, with six-hourly rainfall rates possibly reaching 50 to 60 mm.”

Severe weather warnings have been issued and multiple flood watches are in place across parts of NSWnorth eastern Victory and northern Tasmanian.

Thredbo Ski Resort in NSW has been forced to close lifts due to safety reasons, as the wild weather lashes the alpine region.

The wild winter weather has forced the closure of Thredbo's ski and chair lifts.
The wild winter weather has forced the closure of Thredbo’s ski and chair lifts. (9News)

In South Australia, damaging winds up to 90 km/h will be felt across Adelaide and the Hills.

Forecast wind like speed and direction at 1pm AEST on Thursday, according to the ECMWF-HRES model.
Forecast wind like speed and direction at 1pm AEST on Thursday, according to the ECMWF-HRES model. (Weather zone)

“We are in for a very wet afternoon, particularly in our northern region, around 50-60mm expected up in the Hills,” 9News presenter Jesse Burns said.

“A wet weather warning has also been issued, with a month’s worth of rain expected this week alone, particularly in our northern region with around 50 to 60mm expected around The Hills.

“That’s cause for alarm with potentially localized flash flooding in those areas.”

Senior Meteorologist at the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) Dean Narramore explained the next cold front is “tapping into tropical moisture”, which will cause moderate to heavy rainfall across parts of Victoria and NSW.

“That could lead to another possible flood event for inland parts of NSW,” Narramore said.

“Looking at the rainfall totals we will see light to moderate falls right across WA and SA, but the focus of the heaviest rainfall will be north-east Victoria and south-eastern NSW.”

While rain is easing in WA, large swathes of coastline are being pounded by dangerous surf.
Large swathes of WA’s coastline is being pounded by dangerous surf. (9News)

Residents in WA’s central west to south east corner are being told to stay away from the surf as large swell pounds the coast.

Significant wave heights exceeding 7 meters have occurred in exposed locations, and erosion has been observed along the coast.

a travel warning has been issued as thick fog covers Brisbane this morning.

‘River City’ wakes to white-out as fog swallows city