Those dastardly loot boxes containing randomized goodies might be a thing of the past come Overwatch 2‘s launch later this year, but a recent survey suggests the hero shooter’s monetization may become more aggressive elsewhere.
apparently, Overwatch 2’s in-game store might charge you up to $US45 ($AU64) for an individual skin–or at least, Blizzard appears to be testing the idea. Recently, Twitter user porter gauge uploaded screenshots from a survey their friend received from Overwatch asking them how much money they’d be willing to pay for skins and other rewards in Overwatch 2. The survey asked players whether they were “very likely,” “somewhat likely,” “neither likely or unlikely,” “somewhat unlikely,” or “very unlikely” to be inclined to purchase new rewards in the game.
Image: Blizzard
The asking prices in the survey are as follows:
Mythic Skin–$US44.99 ($AU64)
Legendary Skin Bundle (including weapon charm, player icon, victory pose, voice line, name card, and spray)–$US29.99 ($AU42)
Legendary Skin–$US24.99 ($AU35)
Emote Highlight Intro Souvenir–$US19.99 ($AU28)
Weapon Char– $US9.99 ($AU14)
3 Spray Bundle–$US4.99 ($AU7)
Oof, friend of mine got an Overwatch survey for his account, some of these prices they’re gauging for OW2 are really expensive.
I hope this is just him getting one of the higher price surveys and not an indication that they’re leaning towards this much monetization. pic.twitter.com/RWr7LbwkLB
“This survey is entirely intended to better understand player preferences for different types of Overwatch 2 cosmetics,” an Overwatch spokesperson told Kotaku via email. “Prices displayed in the survey were randomized per user and are not indicative of final pricing. We plan to share details on our Shop and Battle Pass system closer to our Oct. 4 launch.”
Since the survey emails were sent out, its asking prices haven’t gone over well with players.
“Yo, I’d literally at any price would prefer buying Overwatch 2 instead of it being free to play with money grabs everywhere,” one Twitter user said.
“I know some people [are] going to defend the prices and say ‘Don’t buy etc it is[ a free to play] game,’” a Reddit user said. “People like you who choose to defend this crap is why the gaming industry [is] going into [an] abyss.”
ReadMore:Overwatch 2 Will Replace The Original, Making It Unplayable In October
Image: Blizzard
During the Overwatch 2 “reveal event” –which detailed the game’s seasonal roadmap and featured a cinematic trailer for its newest tank character, Junker Queen–the Overwatch team clarified that Overwatch 2 won’t have any loot boxes. The event teased that a battle pass and an in-game store is coming to the game.
Back in the old Overwatch days, players unlocked skins, emotes, voice lines, and sprays by leveling up and unlocking loot boxes. If players wanted to unlock a specific skin, like say the Totally ’80s Zarya skin (her only good one), they would either have to accumulate enough in-game coin from receiving duplicate items in loot boxes to unlock the skin from her character gallery or run the gamut of purchasing a bunch of loot boxes in hopes that the skin would be among their spoils. Overwatch also has a dedicated in-game store where players can purchase loot boxes with real currency. In comparison to Overwatch 2‘s asking price for one mythic skin, buying 50 loot boxes cost players $US39.99 ($56), exactly five dollars less.
Chances are the prices of Overwatch 2 skins in the survey won’t be the final price come the game’s release later this year and that it was the Overwatch team’s way to gauge how much players are willing to spend on cosmetic items. However, it’s not a good indication when a game is asking you to cough up the same amount of money for a full-game for a single skin.
If a person can somehow be widely adored while being simultaneously underappreciated, they must be truly great. The late NBA legend Bill Russell was a truly great person.
In the time since Russell’s death was announced by his family on Sunday, tributes have poured in from around the world. Among them was an eloquent eulogy from former US president Barack Obama in which he writes, “As tall as Bill Russell stood, his legacy rises far higher –both as a player and as a person.” Obama would know: he presented Russell with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011. And yet, despite the outpouring of kind words in his memory of him, Russell may still be the most underappreciated icon in NBA history.
Before recognizing his wider impact, it’s worth laying out Russell’s basketball credentials. To begin with, Russell is the winningest player in NBA history and it’s not even really close. During his 13 seasons in the league, he has led the Boston Celtics to 11 NBA championships, including eight consecutive titles from 1959 to 1966. No other team has ever won more than three consecutively.
Russell, of course, would never claim that I have won those championships – the Celtics won them. He was the consummate team player who took pride in performing the glamorous but productive duties which ultimately won games. Russell once wrote, “The most important measure of how good a game I played was how much better I’d made my teammates play.” Even opponents seemed to notice how nice it looked to play with Russell: he was named the regular-season MVP five times during the era in which the award was determined by players’ votes.
Russell’s strengths were his rebounding and (especially) his defense. He played in an era before Defensive Player of the Year awards –they didn’t even record blocks and steals when Russell played – but it’s safe to say he would’ve won several. Hall of Fame point guard Bob Cousy won six championships with Russell and said he played with “animal intensity.” Russell also understood that the mental component of basketball (and of defense, in particular) can be as important as the game’s physical aspects. “Remember that basketball is a game of habits,” I observed. “If you make the other guy deviate from his habits, you’ve got him.”
Bill Russell speaks during a DNC fundraiser attended by then-US president Barack Obama at the Boston Center for the Arts in 2011. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Russell also had a knack for playing at his best when it mattered most. During his first championship run in 1957, Russell blocked Jack Coleman in the final minute of regulation in the deciding Game 7 to keep the Celtics in the game and allow them to eventually win the title. In another Game 7 that also went to overtime, in 1962, Russell scored 30 points and grabbed 40 rebounds, leading his team in both categories. In fact, Russell seemed to keep a secret gear just for Game 7s: his teams were 10-0 in such games throughout his career, an NBA record. Russell never won an NBA finals MVP (the award was only introduced in his final season), but the fact that the NBA eventually named that trophy after him demonstrates how inextricably linked Russell’s play was with championship excellence.
However, while the on-court accolades establish Russell as one of the greatest players to ever touch hardwood, it was his activism off the court that made him a legend. Russell was the NBA’s first Black superstar at a time when legalized racial segregation still existed in much of the country. The Civil Rights Act would not be passed until Russell’s eighth year in the NBA.
Russell’s celebrity didn’t insulate him from the issues facing the rest of the country. He was subjected to racism throughout his career, even in Boston, the city he represented for 13 years: vandals once broke into his Massachusetts home and covered the walls with racist graffiti. Such bigotry and intimidation tactics, however, never prevented Russell from taking a stand against the injustices around him. In 1961, he boycotted a game in Kentucky after a white waitress refused to serve two of his Black teammates at a coffee shop. In 1967, Russell appeared alongside boxer Muhammad Ali to express his support for Ali’s refusal to serve in the Vietnam War. Russell’s record of civil rights advocacy is substantial.
And so, despite his countless athletic achievements, that is probably Russell’s most significant legacy: his commitment to using his platform as basketball star to amplify his political actions. The NBA outperforms other sports leagues when it comes to addressing social issues in a head-on way, and that is a consequence of Russell’s early example of him. Every time LeBron James fights election misinformation or Steve Kerr advocates for gun control, they’re following a trail blazed by Russell. Russell’s on-court accomplishments may never be touched, but his off-court legacy is in good hands.
He said only one person within his party had him to consider his role and that Premier Dominic Perrottet had not asked him to stand down. “He has been really supportive through this whole exercise,” Ayres said.
When 2GB host Ben Fordham asked Ayres if he acknowledged his job was on the line, the minister said: “I think yeah, you should absolutely see that.”
“I think there’s a lot of publicity around this issue. I’ve always acted in the best interests of the people of NSW, I think the [independent Graeme] Head review will show that,” he said.
“If the Head review shows that I’ve not done the right thing then I don’t think my position would be tenable. But I don’t believe that’s the case… I’ve done my role as a minister here and I think the Head review will show that.”
The premier has also said he was not prepared to discuss the matter until he received the independent review from former public service commissioner Graeme Head.
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A separate upper house parliamentary inquiry into Barilaro’s appointment will summarize on Wednesday with a return appearance of Investment NSW boss Amy Brown, who Ayres repeated on Tuesday was the ultimate decision-maker.
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A frame grab from a video aired in 2006 on Al-Jazeera television shows Al-Qaida second-in-command Ayman Al-Zawahiri.
AFP/AFP via Getty Images
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A frame grab from a video aired in 2006 on Al-Jazeera television shows Al-Qaida second-in-command Ayman Al-Zawahiri.
AFP/AFP via Getty Images
Top al-Qaida leader and key 9/11 plotter Ayman al-Zawahiri was killed by a drone strike carried out by the US on July 30, according to President Joe Biden.
“For decades he was the mastermind behind attacks against Americans,” Biden said on Aug. 1, also noting the 2000 USS Cole attack and the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Biden detailed al-Zawahiri’s role leading al-Qaida since Osama bin Laden was killed by US forces in 2011, including calling on followers in recent weeks to attack the US and allies in videos.
“We make it clear again tonight that, that no matter how long it takes, no matter where you hide, if you are a threat to our people, the United States will find you and take you out,” Biden said.
Biden said that no one else was hurt in the strike, including al-Zawahiri’s family, who were elsewhere in a safehouse, and there were no civilian casualties.
An administration official who briefed reporters ahead of Biden’s remarks said al-Zawahiri was an active threat to US national security and that his death is a “hugely significant blow” to al-Qaida.
“And to those around the world who continue to seek to harm the United States, hear me now: We will always remain vigilant and we will act and we will always do what is necessary to ensure the safety and security of Americans at home and around the globe,” Biden said.
The US has been aware of a network that protected al-Zawahiri for several years, the senior administration official said.
Biden was briefed on the proposed operation, and he agreed to a meeting on July 25 with key cabinet members and top officials for a final briefing on the intelligence assessment, the official said. There was unanimous support to strike the target and Biden authorized a “tailored” airstrike to minimize civilian casualties.
Osama bin Laden (left) sits with Ayman al-Zawahiri during a 2001 interview with Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir at an undisclosed location in Afghanistan.
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Osama bin Laden (left) sits with Ayman al-Zawahiri during a 2001 interview with Pakistani journalist Hamid Mir at an undisclosed location in Afghanistan.
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Zawahiri, an Egyptian eye doctor, had served as bin Laden’s deputy before taking over al-Qaida in 2011. But al-Qaida members had complained that he was comparatively uninspiring. The two men fought together in the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan.
Zawahiri helped found Islamic Jihad, the group that assassinated Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in 1981. Al-Qaida was never able to regain its status as the pre-eminent terrorist organization after bin Laden’s death, and faced newer, more brutal, rivals, such as the Islamic State.
“Without knowing the details I imagine that there are a number of components in the communication chain, so they would have to diagnose, identify the fault and test and restore,” Dr Nesci said.
“What is surprising however is that such a critical system does not appear to have a high level of redundancy – ie a backup system on hot standby. This would allow a failover to the redundant system in a few minutes while the primary system is restored.”
The outage was unrelated to long lines and a slew of canceled flights at Sydney and Melbourne airports on Monday morning.
At Sydney Airport, 23 flights were canceled across multiple airlines as a result of engineering issues and COVID-related staff shortages that have plagued airlines since Australia reopened its domestic borders.
Twenty flights were canceled at Melbourne airport on Monday, about 7 per cent of the 286 scheduled departures, including nine flights from Qantas, seven from Virgin, and four Jetstar flights.
Virgin was forced to change its schedule over the weekend due to crew sickness, and a spokeswoman said the airline apologized to travelers impacted by delayed or canceled services.
The most recent government data from June showed just 63 per cent of all domestic flights arrived on time and 5.8 per cent of scheduled flights were canceled by local airlines.
The Bureau of Infrastructure and Transport Research Economics said Australia’s aviation sector posted the “worst on time performance figures recorded since recording commenced in November 2003″, followed by the Easter holidays in April 2022.
Bad weather, congestion and other COVID-related issues dragged down the time arrivals figure in June, which was significantly lower than the long-term average performance for all routes of 82 per cent while the rate of cancellations was more than double the long-term average of 2.1 per cent.
Dunlop have introduced the successor to the Geomax MX12, the all-new Geomax MX14 tyre, designed to excel in extreme sand and mud conditions.
Dunlop Geomax MX14
Evolving the Geomax series, Geomax 14 was an important step in developing a tire that delivers performance advantages to racers by improving the overall performance in a broader range of conditions.
The MX14 offers increased cornering grip, slide control, start performance, shock absorption, and braking grip, with enhanced handling in deep sand/mud and even in hard-based sand/mud.
With the help of top AMA Pro racers, top MXGP racers, Team Dunlop Elite amateur riders, top Australian ProMX racers and the testing team at the Dunlop Proving Grounds in Huntsville, Alabama, Dunlop were able to test the tire on the gnarliest of tracks around the world.
New Pattern
The new pattern with reduced scoop block spacing can more effectively penetrate and scoop sandy/muddy terrain thanks to the new Reinforced Scoop Technology (RST) and V-Block Technology Advanced (V-BT Advanced) designs.
The Dunlop Geomax MX14 features a new tread pattern
Flexible End Technology
The new Flexible Fin Technology (FFT) allows for improved stopping power and more progressive brake control. The optimized tread blocks has 18% taller tread blocks to ensure optimum grip and enhances the RST and V-BT technologies.
The Geomax MX14 also has ‘Flexible Fin Technology’
Improved Rubber Compound
The compound has been enhanced to improve control and penetration, increase tire strength and reduce flex, providing traction on straights and corner exits, thanks to the High-Resilience Rubber Compound (H-RRC) technology.
A High-Resilience Rubber Compound (H-RRC) is also run
New Carcass Construction
The new carcass construction is designed to improve absorption and damping by adding a ply to improve linearity when load is applied.
A new carcass construction improves damping
Head into your local Dunlop stockist for more information or to order the Dunlop Geomax 14, or see the Ficeda Accessories website for the full range.
There is reportedly a divide in the Manly dressing room between the players who played in the Pride jersey and the seven stars who boycotted their crucial loss to the Roosters.
The Daily Telegraph’s Phil Rothfield believes there is a lingering resentment between the players that played and those that chose to put their beliefs ahead of the team’s final aspirations.
“I think there is a split,” Rothfield said of the playing group on NRL 360.
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“I think the players that took the field cannot understand why the other seven didn’t.
“I think the meeting yesterday cleared it up a little bit, but you can’t repair a split of this magnitude with a bandaid in a 45 minute meeting.
“I think when something as drastic as this happens when seven men pull out of a finals crunch match over a view and an opinion and the other guys are totally on the opposite side.
“They put their views and opinions ahead of a finals berth almost.”
Paul Kent also believes there is a split between the Manly seven and the owner who incorrectly said they would backflip on their stance in time for next season.
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Daly Cherry-Evans and DesHasler.Source: News Corp Australia
“What about the owner coming out and saying the players had gone back on what they originally intended, which they have heavily refuted,” Kent said.
Braith Anasta agreed with Rothfield that as a player he would be frustrated with the seven players who put their beliefs above a goal the team has worked for since pre-season in November.
“I agree with and I’m just thinking now as a player the majority of the playing group you train from November all the way through,” Anasta said.
“You put your body on the line every week. You put your heart and soul into it. You make sacrifices every single day.
“These players have got a few teammates who have made a different decision than the rest of the team and it can cause a divide and it seems to be that way.
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Jake Trbojevic and Manly players process the loss to the Roosters.Source: Getty Images
“It could derail their season. We spoke about it before the game that it could happen and it is possibly happening right now.
“There are no winners and losers here. The fact is it doesn’t matter what they are arguing over or have a split of opinion over. It can cause a divide and it seems to be causing a divide.”
The Daily Telegraph’s Dean Ritchie has no doubt there is a rift between the seven players and the rest of the squad and it will take time to heal the wounds of the last week.
“There is divisions at Manly and anyone who tells you there is not telling a fib,” Ritchie said on The Big Sports Breakfast.
“The players that played were dirty on the players that didn’t play.
Sea Eagles players at training.Source: News Corp Australia
“They are trying to sort it out and understand each other’s religious beliefs and views, but there is a division there.
“You speak to one player and he will say we can move forward from this and you speak to others who say this is going to take a lot longer.”
Laurie Daley questioned how both sides of the split can come together with no common ground on the issue.
“You have got two parties that don’t agree and you talk about finding common ground, but where is the common ground in this?” Daley said.
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“There is no giving,” Ritchie replied.
“Both sides are quite staunch in their views. The players are dirty the others didn’t play and the seven players are saying, we are not backing down.
“To be fair to them they have been staunch from the beginning and have stuck tight through a lot of criticism, so they are not clearly going to apologize.
“I don’t know how one meeting is going to fix this problem at Manly.”
NSW Trade Minister Stuart Ayres has gone on radio in an attempt to defend his role in John Barilaro’s appointment to a lucrative $500,000 posting in New York.
Ayres has come under increased scrutiny in recent days after a cache of internal documents revealed he helped develop a candidate shortlist with department boss Amy Brown.
NSW Trade Minister Stuart Ayres. Credit:Dominic Lorrimer
The trade minister told 2GB only one person within his own party had asked him to stand aside after the revelations and said he had the “full support” of NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet.
“He has been really supportive through this whole exercise,” he said.
As previously reported, documents have revealed that Ayres texted Barilaro an advertisement of the trade role he was subsequently appointed to. But the trade minister has insisted he told the former NSW deputy premier that he would need to apply as a private citizen.
This morning, Ayres said if he could go back in time he would tell Barilaro it would be too politically sensitive for him to apply for the role.
“I would love to be able to go back and say to him, you probably shouldn’t do this, but it still would have been his call and he still, regardless of what you have taken place, [he] should be afforded the right to apply for a role which is available to anyone in the community,” he said.
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Meanwhile, Ayres said he is confident the ongoing parliamentary inquiry into the matter will show he acted in the “best interest of the public”.
I added that it wasn’t Barilaro’s decision to create the $500,000 trade posting in New York. Instead, he said the state government decided it wanted to form the role “a long time ago”.
“Having just been on a trade mission, I’ve seen the full benefits of this with having good quality people in these roles. But when John Barilaro decided that he was going to leave parliament, he was a private citizen.
“He was able to make an application for a job. It wasn’t going to be a decision that was going to be a political decision.”
When asked whether he believed he would survive the controversy, Ayres said he was adamant he had acted in good faith throughout the process.
“I’m confident that I’ve always acted in the best interest of the public.”
From left: Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, former President Donald Trump, and former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens
St. Louis Post Dispatch and AP photos
ST. LOUIS — Former President Donald Trump, declining to make a single endorsement in Tuesday’s US Senate primary, announced he trusted Missouri voters to “make up their own minds” between former Gov. Eric Greitens and Attorney General Eric Schmitt.
The Post-Dispatch and the League of Women Voters of Metro St. Louis present this guide to the candidates and races on the Aug. 2 ballot.
In a statement posted after 5 pm Monday on Truth Social, a blogging site similar to Twitter, Trump wrote, “I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their minds, much as I did when they gave me landslide victories in the 2016 and 2020 Elections, and I am therefore proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Total Endorsement.”
The late nod to two of the frontrunners in the Senate race represented an anti-climatic end to the sweepstakes in which Republican candidates sought to ingratiate themselves to the former president, who dominated his Democratic opponents in his two elections here.
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Nationally, political scientists, analysts and journalists are watching the Missouri race to weigh Trump’s impact on midterm elections. But Trump didn’t make a final pick, potentially saving face in what has been a tight three-way contest.
Trump said in July he definitely wouldn’t endorse US Rep. Vicky Hartzler, the third Republican frontrunner, in the race. Asked earlier Monday about expectations that Trump still may endorse a Republican in the race, Hartzler shook off her non-endorsement, acknowledging the unpredictability of the former president.
“President Trump is going to do what he wants to do,” she said. “He may even endorse me.”
Greitens had claimed Trump’s endorsement in a tweet minutes after Trump’s announcement, making no mention of Schmitt.
“Honored to have the support of President Trump! We will MAGA!” Greitens said.
Schmitt followed that with his own tweet that made no mention of Greitens: “Donald Trump endorses Eric Schmitt for Senate. Stand with Trump and vote for conservative Eric Schmitt tomorrow.”
BREAKING: Donald Trump endorses Eric Schmitt for Senate. Stand with Trump and vote for conservative Eric Schmitt tomorrow. pic.twitter.com/geOUGGhq8
— Team Schmitt for US Senate (@Schmitt4Senate) August 1, 2022
Hartzler, meanwhile, issued a statement noting there is a third, lesser-known Eric also is seeking the GOP nomination, a fact that may have escaped the former president.
“Congratulations to Eric McElroy. He’s having a big night,” Hartzler said.
McElroy is a comedian and author who lives in Tunas in Dallas County.
Ending months of speculation
Political observers had for months speculated as to which candidate Trump would back in Missouri’s 21-candidate Republican primary to replace Sen. Roy Blunt, to Republican.
In December, conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt pleaded with Trump not to back Greitens, who resigned in 2018 after being consumed with scandals connected to an extramarital affair he had and his unreported receipt of a campaign donor list from the veterans charity he founded.
“Please don’t endorse Eric Greitens. That’s a nightmare, Mr. President. We’ll lose that seat,” Hewitt told Trump in a radio interview.
Trump made no promises at the time.
“Well, that’s an interesting opinion, that’s true,” Trump said. “He’s right now leading by quite a bit.”
Indeed, the former president had been warming to Greitens, Politico reported in early March. After all, despite scandals other Republicans feared they could hand the seat to Democrats in the fall, Greitens was out front in opposing Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, with whom Trump has feuded. (Schmitt and Hartzler also distanced themselves from McConnell last week.)
But two weeks after the Politico article, headlined “Trump’s McConnell obsession leads him toward Eric Greitens,” Greitens’ ex-wife accused the ex-governor of spousal and child abuse in court documents.
After those revelations, US Rep. Billy Long said Trump contacted him and talked about the allegations against Greitens, indicating concern from the former president about Greitens’ viability.
After the phone call, Trump issued a statement signaling he’d like to back Long but wondered if voters had “been considering” the southwest Missouri congressman, indicating Trump wanted to endorse a candidate with strong public support.
Greitens has been the subject of a multimillion-dollar campaign financed by GOP donors and operatives to paint him as unfit for office.
After leading the polls in the early going, Greitens began to fade, with Schmitt appearing to take the lead in the closing week.
Schmitt, too, had tried to court the former president.
On Dec. 23, Schmitt tweeted a picture of himself sitting next to Trump.
“It was great to be back at Mar-a-Lago and spend some time with President Trump during the holiday season. Merry Christmas!” I have tweeted.
On March 11, Schmitt made another appearance at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago, according to photos he posted on Twitter.
But the charm offensive apparently wasn’t enough to earn Trump’s outright backing.
Trump angered by recent poll
Trump, on his social media website on Sunday, signaled disapproval with Schmitt and Axiom Strategies, a political consulting firm working for Schmitt. Axiom’s polling arm, Remington Research Group, had released polls showing Schmitt leading the race.
On Sunday, Trump shared a link to a Breitbart article that accused Remington of underestimating Trump’s support in Missouri to boost the attorney general in polls.
“Wow, great dishonesty in politics,” Trump said in his social media post, with a photo of Schmitt below his statement. “Too bad!”
At a campaign stop in the St. Louis area, Schmitt was asked about a possible endorsement.
“I’d love to have it,” Schmitt said, adding voters had a choice between the “fighter,” Schmitt; Greitens, “who quit,” and Hartzler, “a do-nothing congresswoman who’s part of the establishment,” according to audio by St. Louis Public Radio.
Trump said in July that Hartzler called him for his endorsement, but he declined, saying she doesn’t have “what it takes to take on the Radical Left Democrats, together with their partner in the destruction of our Country, the Fake News Media and , of course, the deceptive & foolish RINOs.”
On Monday, Hartzler, R-Harrisonville, hosted a news conference in a St. Louis Lambert International Airport parking lot to criticize her two main competitors in the US Senate race.
To Greitens, she pointed out that he’s accused of abusing his family.
“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.
To Schmitt, she said he tried to use millions of dollars in tax credits to lure the Chinese to build a hub at the airport behind her.
“That’s not conservative,” Hartzler said.
And she criticized both of them for not sitting down for a debate.
“I guess they are afraid to fight a farm girl from Missouri,” said Hartzler, 61, describing herself as the “true conservative” in the race.
Hartzler left the airport, driving to other last-minute campaign stops in Rolla and southwest Missouri.
“We are getting a lot of support from every corner of the state,” she said.
Support for Democratic contenders
On the Democratic side of the race, former Marine Lucas Kunce touted endorsements Monday from US Sen. Bernie SanderI-Vt., and former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, who served under President Bill Clinton.
Democrat Trudy Busch Valentine, meanwhile, announced her election night watch party would be at the Sheet Metal Local 36 union hall in St. Louis.
On the GOP side, Greitens wound up his campaign with a statewide fly-around that included a scheduled stop at the Spirit of St. Louis Airport in Chesterfield.
updated at 6:25 pm Monday, Aug. 1
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Recent extreme weather events have underscored the need to cut the CO₂ emissions that are driving up global temperatures. This requires a rapid transition from the energy economy to renewable energy sources, the cheapest being solar photovoltaics (PV). And our newly published research points to a way we can drive down costs of the shift even further using cheaper forms of silicon for highly efficient solar panels.
Australia has been leading the way with solar PV installations, but our solar energy journey is just beginning. This year, humanity hit a milestone of 1 terawatt (TW) – 1 million × 1 million watts – of installed solar capacity. However, experts predict 70TW of solar PV may be needed by 2050 to power all sectors of the economy.
To help drive this rapid uptake of solar PV, we need solar panels that are high efficiency and low cost. Over the past ten years, some new solar cell designs have led to record high efficiencies. The problem is these designs also need higher-quality materials, which cost more.
Our recent research suggests we might be able to rethink the type of silicon needed to make these high-efficiency solar cells.
Read more: Australia is the runaway global leader in building new renewable energy
Not all silicon is equal
More than 95% of solar panels are made using silicon. The silicon used to make solar cells is similar to that used in computer chips. It’s effectively very pure sand.
To make a solar cell work, we need to form an electric field so the generated current can all flow in one direction. This is done by adding impurity atoms into silicon, a process known as “doping”.
In commercial panel manufacturing, the most commonly used type of silicon is “p-type” silicon. This material is doped with atoms that have one less electron than silicon, such as boron or more recently gallium.
We can then introduce a very thin layer on the surface full of atoms with one extra electron relative to silicon, which is called “n-type” silicon. Placing these two types of silicon together forms what is called a “pn junction”. The massive difference in the number of electrons between the p-type region and n-type region forces electrons to move rapidly, creating an electric field that drives the current in our solar cell.
Conventional solar panels on Australian roofs today are overwhelmingly made using p-type silicon, as it is about 10% cheaper than the alternative “n-type” silicon, doped with phosphorus.
Read more: The sunlight that powers solar panels also damages them. ‘Gallium doping’ is providing a solution
Higher efficiency comes at a cost
Researchers are continually pushing to drive up the efficiency of solar panels so they can generate more power for consumers. In 2017, a record efficiency of 26.7% was achieved for a silicon solar cell. Last month, LONGi Solar announced an efficiency of 26.5% – very close to the world record – for the same type of solar cell made in a manufacturing environment, rather than in a laboratory.
This type of solar cell is called a “silicon heterojunction”. The special element of silicon heterojunction solar cells is that the surface is capped with a very thin layer – about 1,000 times thinner than a human hair – of amorphous silicon. This thin layer smooths the surface and reduces a lot of the energy losses.
Sanyo developed this cell design in the 1990s. At the time, high-quality n-type silicon wafers were used to make silicon heterojunction cells, even though these wafers are more expensive.
The main reason for this is that sunlight degrades cheaper p-type wafers. However, our understanding of this phenomenon and how to treat it has come a long way since the 1990s.
Our light-bulb moment
For the past 30 years, all silicon heterojunction solar cells, including the record-breaking cells, have been made using n-type silicon wafers. In our research project, we wanted to test whether cheaper, p-type wafers could also be used.
Through comprehensive testing, we found heterojunction solar cells made with p-type silicon did not perform as well. We were puzzled by this. But one day we had a literal light-bulb moment.
We realized that accidental exposure to room lighting for as little as ten seconds before testing reduced the voltage of p-type cells by as much as 30mV, which can cut their efficiency by a percentage point (ie from 22% to 21%). This was causing our cells to perform much worse than expected. Much like someone who has severe allergies is more sensitive to pollen in the spring, we realized these high-efficiency silicon heterojunction solar cells made with p-type wafers are much more sensitive to light-induced degradation.
Australians have led the way in installing solar panels but reducing the cost of high-efficiency panels could increase the urgent transition to renewables. Shutterstock
Problem identified, we now have the solution
We believe this observation is the reason high-efficiency cells have only previously been explored using expensive silicon. Past researchers were unaware of the sensitivity of p-type wafers to degrade and did not have the knowledge to overcome it.
Fortunately, we now know the bonding of boron and unwanted oxygen in the silicon wafer causes this degradation. Treatments with a high-intensity laser have been shown to stabilize cells in a matter of seconds.
The laser illumination can make hydrogen, which is already floating around in the silicon, more mobile to move around and “passivate” the unwanted boron-oxygen defects. Exactly how hydrogen does this is still an active area of research, but we know it solves the problem. Our research confirms a short laser treatment can stabilize the performance of p-type silicon heterojunction solar cells.
Armed with this new knowledge, we can further develop high-efficiency technologies with cheaper raw materials. This will reduce the cost of every watt of solar electricity produced. In March this year, solar panel manufacturer LONGi Solar announced an efficiency of 25.47% for a silicon heterojunction solar cell made using p-type wafers.
To see manufacturers making high-efficiency solar cells that are potentially cheaper means our findings have a tangible impact on industry. Reducing solar cell costs will provide cheaper electricity to millions of consumers while addressing climate change.