Categories
Sports

Manase Fainu: NRL rising star guilty of church stabbing

NRL rising star Manase Fainu has been found guilty of stabbing a church youth leader during a violent and bloody brawl outside a Mormon church dance.

Fainu, 24, pleaded not guilty to plunging a steak knife into the back of Faamanu Levi at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints at Wattle Grove in southwestern Sydney on the evening of October 25, 2019.

But it only took the jury a few hours to find him guilty of one count of wounding a person with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and is facing a maximum of 25 years in prison.

The jury accepted the Crown prosecution’s argument that Fainu stabbed Mr Levi in ​​the back near his shoulder blade and cut him above his right eye during a brawl also involving four of his mates and another group of men.

Mr Fainu will remain on bail until at least Monday when it will be decided whether he will be taken into custody.

He is required to remain living with his parents and report to police on a daily basis over the weekend.

Defense barrister Margaret Cunneen SC said Mr Fainu was surrounded by a “God-fearing community who will all be devastated by this verdict”.

She asked for his bail to be extended with “stringent” conditions until he is sentenced, adding there was no danger to the community and noting he had no history of violence or criminal record.

“There is absolutely no danger to the community whatsoever. This is extraordinary in the context of his otherwise blameless life of him, ”she said.

One eyewitness, Tony Quach, told the court that he had seen Mr Fainu, who had his arm in a sling at the time, stab Mr Levi, puncturing his lungs and causing internal bleeding.

It was not an issue during the trial that Fainu had his arm in a sling after undergoing shoulder surgery a month earlier or that he was in the carpark.

But he denied playing any part in the stabbing or the brawl, claiming it was a case of mistaken identity.

Fainu claimed he was about 10m away and began back-pedaling because he feared for his safety when he heard someone yell “knife, knife”.

But Mr Quach told the court he saw Fainu stab his friend Mr Levi and was able to identify him by his distinctive sling.

During his evidence, Mr Quach said Fainu had not started the fight but “he ended it”.

“I saw the knife plunged into Levi’s back,” Mr Quach said.

“Who did you see plunge the knife into Levi’s back?” Crown prosecutor Emma Curran asked.

“The accused,” Mr Quach said, adding he saw Fainu with one arm in a sling and holding a knife in his other hand, with his arm bent at a 90-degree angle.

Mr Quach described Fainu as having an angry look on his face.

The court was told that earlier in the evening, two of Fainu’s friends – including Uona “Big Buck” Faingaa – were involved in an altercation on the church hall dance floor and were escorted out.

Fainu said he went to the church dance with four of his friends because Mr Faingaa was seeking to collect money owed to him by a man for a concreting job.

The Manly Sea Eagles hooker said he left the church grounds as his mates were being escorted out and apologized to a security guard for his friends’ behavior as he exited.

Ms Curran said another man, Kupi Toilalo, said he saw a man approach him and his friends during the incident with his left arm in a sling holding a knife.

“When Kupi saw this, he was at arm’s length away from the person holding the knife, nothing obstructing his view,” Ms Curran said.

CCTV played during the trial showed Fainu jumping the fence from a Coles carpark back into the church grounds shortly before the brawl.

He said he jumped the fence despite admitting that he could have walked back in via the front gate.

“Manase Fainu jumped over a fence into the grounds of the church, he was with four of his friends and the group of them approached Mr Levi and his friends,” Ms Curran said during her closing submissions.

“A brawl broke out and when things looked like they were getting out of hand, Mr Fainu pulled out a knife and plunged it into the back of Mr Levi, causing a wound that punctured his lung and caused internal bleeding.”

Fainu will be sentenced at a later date.

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Categories
US

FACT SHEET: President Biden Signs the PACT Act and Delivers on His Promise to America’s Veterans

PACT Act Marks Most Significant Expansion of VA Health Care in 30 Years

Today, President Biden is delivering on his promise to strengthen health care and benefits for America’s veterans and their survivors by signing the bipartisan Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson Honoring our Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) Act. The PACT Act is the most significant expansion of benefits and services for toxic exposed veterans in more than 30 years.

In his first State of the Union address, President Biden called on Congress to send a bill to his desk that would comprehensively address toxic exposures that have impacted veterans, as well as their families and caregivers, and provide them with the health care and benefits they have earned and deserve. Thanks to the bipartisan leaders of the House and Senate Veterans Committees, the PACT Act does just that.

President Biden believes that our nation has a sacred obligation to properly prepare and equip the troops we send into harm’s way – and to care for them and their families when they return home. Sometimes military service can result in increased health risks for our veterans, and some injuries and illnesses like asthma, cancer, and others can take years to manifest. These realities can make it difficult for veterans to establish a direct connection between their service and disabilities resulting from military environmental exposures such as burn pits – a necessary step to ensure they receive the health care they earned.

President Biden made clear that supporting those who wear the uniform is a commitment that unites all Americans – Democrats, Republicans, and Independents – and why he made supporting our veterans a core element of his Unity Agenda. And, the legislation supports President Biden’s reignited Cancer Moonshot to help end cancer as we know it.

By signing the bipartisan PACT Act, President Biden is delivering for America’s veterans and their families, and demonstrating that we can – and will – come together where we agree to get big things done for our country.

The PACT Act: Delivering Critical Health Care and Other Benefits for Veterans

Named in honor of Sergeant First Class Heath Robinson, a decorated combat medic who died from a rare form of lung cancer, this historic legislation will help deliver more timely benefits and services to more than 5 million veterans—across all generations—who may have been impacted by toxic exposures while serving our country. Danielle Robinson, the widow of Sergeant First Class Robinson, was a guest of the First Lady at President Biden’s first State of the Union address when he called on Congress to pass a law to make sure veterans devastated by toxic exposures – like her husband – finally get the health care and benefits they deserve.

The PACT Act will:

  • To ensure veterans can receive high-quality health care screenings and services related to potential toxic exposures, the PACT Act expands access to VA health care services for veterans exposed during their military service. For post-9/11 combat veterans, the bill extends the period of time they have to enroll in VA health care from five to ten years post-discharge. For those combat veterans who do not fall within that window, the bill also creates a one-year open enrollment period. These expansions mean that more veterans can enroll in VA health care without having to demonstrate a service connected disability.
  • The PACT Act codifies VA’s new process for evaluating and determining presumption of exposure and service connection for various chronic conditions when the evidence of a military environmental exposure and the associated health risks are strong in the aggregate but hard to provide on an individual basis. PACT requires VA to seek independent evaluation of this process as well as external input on the conditions it will review using this framework. The new process is evidence-based, transparent, and allows VA to make faster policy decisions on crucial exposure issues. This new process has already fundamentally changed how VA makes decisions on environmental exposures and ensures more veterans have access to the care they need.
  • The legislation removes the need for certain veterans and their survivors to provide service connection if they are diagnosed with one of 23 specific conditions. This greatly reduces the amount of paperwork and need for exams that veterans diagnosed with one of these conditions must complete before being granted access to health care and compensation disability, thereby speeding up their receipt of the benefits they have earned. This list includes 11 respiratory related conditions, along with several forms of cancer, including reproductive cancers, melanoma, pancreatic cancer, kidney cancer, and brain cancers such as glioblastoma. Survivors of veterans who died due to one of these conditions may now also be eligible for benefits.
  • To better understand the impact of toxic exposures, the PACT Act requires VA to conduct new studies of veterans who served in Southwest Asia during the Gulf War and analyzes of post-9/11 veterans’ health trends. The new law also directs the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to agree to a new interagency working group to develop a five-year strategic plan on toxic exposure research.
  • Ensuring veterans get the care they need includes ensuring that they are screened for toxic exposure and that VA personnel have the appropriate education and training. The PACT Act requires that veterans enrolled in VA health care be screened regularly for toxic exposure related concerns. This new law also VA to establish an outreach program for veterans regarding toxic exposure requires related benefits and supports, and to require additional toxic exposure related education and training for VA personnel.
  • This bill also delivers critical resources to VA to ensure it can deliver timely access to services and benefits for all eligible veterans – including those already enrolled. The PACT Act provides VA with mechanisms to enhance claims processing and to increase the workforce. The bill also invests in VA health care facilities by authorizing 31 major medical health clinics and research facilities in 19 states.

Biden-Harris Administration Record of Action on Military Toxic Exposures

This historic legislation builds on the Biden-Harris Administration’s existing efforts to address the harmful effects of environmental exposures affecting service men and women:

  • Established Presumption for Rare Respiratory Cancers: In April 2022, VA defined presumptive service connection for several rare respiratory cancers for certain veterans – a step that marked progress toward President Biden’s commitment to end cancer as we know it. Since this change, VA has been able to complete more claims for veterans and survivors involving a possible presumption of rare respiratory cancer. With VA taking steps to raise awareness of these benefits, we expect the number of claims to rise in the months ahead.
  • Processing Claims for New Presumptive Respiratory Conditions: In August 2021, VA began processing disability claims for asthma, rhinitis, and sinusitis based on presumed exposure to particulate matter. Veterans who served in the Southwest Asia theater of operations and other areas and who developed these conditions within ten years of military service are now eligible to apply for disability benefits and access to VA health care. Since August, VA has completed 33,276 claims, granting over 25,000 veterans and their survivors benefits for one or more conditions, leading to over $93 million in retroactive benefit payments.
  • Raising Awareness of VA Benefits Related to Military Exposures: Many veterans remain unaware of their eligibility for benefits and services related to potential military exposures. Beginning in November 2021, VA launched a proactive campaign to inform and encourage veterans to file claims related to military environmental exposures.
  • Requiring Training for VA and Non-VA Providers: Health care providers and compensation and pension examiners sometimes do not have the training to understand or treat veterans’ exposure concerns. To address this challenge, VA directed compensation and pension providers and Veterans Health Administration clinicians to complete a training module on assessing deployment related to environmental exposures. VA is also encouraging all providers who care for veterans outside of VA through the Community Care Network contract to complete training on the TRAIN Learning Network, VA’s publicly available training site. Furthermore, VA employees and community care providers have been directed to utilize the Exposure Ed App to help providers provide information to veterans on health effects associated with certain exposures during military service. More information on the app is available here.
  • Implementing a Network of Specialized Providers and Call Center: Veterans with concerns about the health outcomes of military exposures experience inconsistent care to address these specific issues, especially outside of VA. Earlier this year, VA launched VET-HOME, The Veterans Exposure Team-Health Outcomes of Military Exposures. VA plans to hire health professionals, including physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants who will specialize in conducting patient assessments regarding the health effects of military exposures. By January 2023, VA expects to have a fully operational call center and network of experts to help veterans concerned about environmental exposure and provide consultative services to veterans in primary care clinics.
Categories
Business

Santos takes ownership of Hunter Gas Pipeline to get Narrabri gas to domestic market

Energy giant Santos has acquired a company which has plans for a gas pipeline near its controversial Narrabri Gas Project.

Hunter Gas Pipeline has planning approval for a pipeline from the Wallumbilla Gas Hub in southern Queensland to Newcastle, via Narrabri.

Santos said the pipeline provided a way for the company to deliver its gas to the domestic market, provided planning authorities approved a short connection.

Santos midstream and clean fuels president Brett Woods said the company expected construction of the pipeline would begin in 2024.

“Acquiring the Hunter Gas Pipeline route is an important step for the Narrabri project,” Mr Woods said.

“Our Narrabri project … will inject new supply into southern domestic markets and put downward pressure on gas prices.”

The company claims the Narrabri project, which was approved by state and federal authorities in 2020, could supply up to half of New South Wales’s gas needs.

landholder frustration

A route for the Hunter Gas Pipeline has not been finalized, but has been narrowed down to a 200-meter wide corridor.

Quirindi landholder Peter Wills, who has campaigned against construction of the pipeline for several years, said there was limited dialogue with the prior owner, since the pipeline was first approved in 2009.

Liverpool Plains
The underground pipeline would run through the Liverpool Plains, which contain some of the most productive agricultural land in the country.(7.30)

“All the landholders are in the dark. They’ve not had any contact,” Mr Wills said.

“That’s not consultation.”

Meg Bowman, from the Hunter Gas Landholder Rights Alliance, said her group would continue to advocate for specific improvements.

“It should go down highway and expressway corridors or the rail corridor,” she said.

“That would alleviate the imposition on landholders’ private property.”

Santos has left open the possibility of changing the route to assuage landholder concerns.

“There is room to make further improvements as needed,” Mr Woods said.

Construction on the pipeline must commence by October 2024 to avoid its approval lapses.

Mr Wills said if Santos intends to build the pipeline, landholder consultation must improve urgently.

“Santos is really on the clock here with two years to go.

Sale price kept secret

Hunter Gas Pipeline Managing Director Garbis Simonian said the sale would fast track gas being piped to the domestic market.

“Santos are the ones that can bring gas to market the fastest because they have a gas field and they have experience in the construction of gas pipelines,” he said.

“It was our belief that the best outcome for New South Wales was to do this sale.”

The final cost of the project will be more than one billion dollars, with stage one previously valued at $700 million.

But he would not disclose the sale price.

“I am not at liberty to say that but all I can say is that we’re happy and we have structured a deal where we are sort of partnering with them, all of our shareholders are happy and that is the main thing,” he said.

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Categories
Technology

Samsung has launched latest foldable smart phones in Samsung Unpacked event | The Murray Valley Standard

The highly anticipated Unpacked events showcase the best in Samsung innovation. Photo: Supplied.

This is branded content for Samsung

Samsung has recently unveiled its latest, highly anticipated range of products in a launch as innovative as the next gen of Galaxy tech at Samsung Galaxy Unpacked.

The Unpacked events showcase the best in Samsung innovation, and the recent installation was no different when Samsung unveiled their latest foldable technology.

As the first company to forge a cross-generation device with an almost magic folding glass, Samsung has created a new kind of mobile device for consumers that blurs the boundary of ‘what’s possible’ for smartphone technology, while remaining relevant to the consumer’s lifestyle.

Now on the 4th generation, Samsung’s Foldable smartphones are no longer merely emerging tech but rather a smartphone for the mainstream, which Samsung believe are here to stay. President & Head of MX Business at Samsung Electronics, TM Roh reveals globally, 10 million foldable smartphones were shipped worldwide last year, increasing by 300% compared to 2020, with no plans to stop this rapid adoption of Foldable tech.

Samsung utilized new immersive and experiential event spaces to facilitate consumers worldwide to try products first-hand. Photo: Supplied.

After a two year hiatus, this year’s Unpacked experience, was back in physical form, taking over iconic locations in New York’s Meatpacking District and London’s Picadilly Circus. These two dynamic neighborhoods are a reflection of the kind of high energy that surrounds Samsung’s anticipated announcements.

This year, big tech brands returned to the big stage but with an evolved approach, harnessing the collaboration of online and offline events. Samsung utilized new immersive and experiential event spaces to facilitate consumers worldwide to try products first-hand. The spaces allowed for interactive experiences that highlighted the tech innovation afforded by Samsung’s engineering prowess.

Including the world premiere of the latest video from everyone’s favorite K-Pop boy sensation, BTS, Samsung painted New York’s Time Square purple as it took over the iconic billboards to showcase the ‘Yet to Come’ music video which highlights the band’s partnership with Samsung’s upcoming Foldable devices.

It gave people from all walks of life – Galaxy fans, journalists, and content creators, the opportunity to experience Samsung’s latest foldable technology, and experience this new tech in unparalleled ways.

The Galaxy Unpacked experience was available to everyone, and was live streamed from all over the world at 11pm on August 10, AEST.

This is branded content for Samsung

Categories
Entertainment

Jarvis Cocker book is ‘like seeing your brain laid out in front of you’

That scene from bladerunner haunts me as I read Jarvis Cocker’s book. The one where Harrison Ford recognizes his own memories of him in photos belonging to a terminated humanoid. Disturbing. Could he be manufactured too? Not a unique being, but a mass-produced man / machine programmed with the same brain matter as every other individual of his generation of him?

Weirdly, the singer from Pulp knows exactly what I’m thinking. “I think that’s interesting, because especially at the moment, we’re living through such a cult of individuality,” he responds. “Everybody wants to feel unique… but we are more similar than we realize. That was why I wanted to explore it, really.”

Good Pop Bad Pop is Cocker’s “inventory” of things. Things the Sheffield pop star and broadcaster have been accumulating all his life in boxes and plastic carrier bags, at last pulled out, sorted, photographed and evaluated, one by one, from an overstuffed loft in London. It is, of course, the story of his life from him.

“In a way, it was like seeing your brain laid out in front of you,” he says. “Because these inconsequential things, they’re part of the fabric of the life that you are inhabiting. They’re kind of litter in your consciousness, and if you’re of [the same] age, we’re all exposed to those and they create a shared cultural atmosphere.

Remnants of Imperial Leather soap from Jarvis Cocker's book Good Pop Bad Pop.

Remnants of Imperial Leather soap from Jarvis Cocker’s book Good Pop Bad Pop.Credit:Courtesy Jarvis Cocker

“You’re blind to it when you’re a kid because you just think, Oh, life’s always been like this. You don’t realize that you’re entering the drama at one particular scene and that it will change.”

The props in Cocker’s drama are as random as a book of smutty cartoons, plastic Christmas cracker trinkets, an old fizzy drink can ring-pull, an Altai Computape cassette and a cellophane “fortune teller fish”. I mention these objects because, being of the same age and Anglo-pop heritage as Cocker, they awaken memories of my own: sensory flashbacks as vivid and deeply personal as a suddenly recalled dream.

“Yeah, I found that the objects were quite potent because they triggered memories that I wouldn’t have been able to access otherwise,” he says. “We’ve all got what we think of as our life story going through our head, and certain memories you replay and replay and they get kind of worn out, or you embellish them and they get altered.”

But something as forgettable as a stub of Cusson’s Imperial Leather soap, sticker still attached, can jolt synapses from deep slumber. After contemplating that icky artefact for a bit, Cocker remembered keeping it as a teenager because he was sad about a recent change to the label and packaging. It’s one of many telling acts of unconscious determination strewn through his inventory of him.

‘I do think it’s a dangerous thing to analyze your own creativity too much.’

Jarvis Cocker

Design captured his imagination early. Pulp was a logo and a fashion code years before it was a band, as evidenced by a school exercise book unearthed from his loft. He famously studied at Central Saint Martin’s School of Art and Design in London, as referenced in his band’s best-known song by him, Common People.

Today his Shepherd’s Bush office is lined with dazzling Vivienne Westwood wallpaper. Directly behind him, trademark unkempt hair and black-rimmed glasses these days offset by a cropped gray beard, is a vaguely Klimt-ish poster sourced from M/M design agency in Paris and freshly framed by his partner, artist Kim Sion.

A young Jarvis Cocker at home in Sheffield.

A young Jarvis Cocker at home in Sheffield.Credit:Courtesy Jarvis Cocker

He lived in Paris until recently to be near his son Albert, who he shares with his former wife, stylist and fashion director Camille Bidault-Waddington. “But he’s now 19, so it would be kind of creepy if I was still just hanging around making his breakfast in the morning,” he says with a smirk.

The book was no fun to write, he says, though he’s clearly taken loads of joy in the design: a riot of found objects illustrating rambles about their provenance and significance in his personal chronology. This main narrative is cut with mini essays in various nostalgic typefaces and layouts about spectacles, television, John Peel, the Velvet Underground and other shockwaves in the cultural atmosphere.

The pleasure in writing came late in the process, he says, “and in that way it’s different to songwriting. With a song sometimes the very first moment that you hit a guitar … that’s as exciting as it gets. Then when you try and record a song, sometimes you might feel like you lose your way, or you’ve lost the spirit of it.

An old Barry White cassette, also featured in Good Pop Bad Pop.

An old Barry White cassette, also featured in Good Pop Bad Pop.Credit:Courtesy Jarvis Cocker

“Obviously writing is not like that at all. Writing you have to think about. You can’t just bang your fingers on a keyboard and expect a sentence to have appeared. So I had to kind of rewire the way that my brain works in order to do it.”

Again with the brain wiring. As per the title of his book, Cocker believes this grey-matter molding happens in good and bad ways. One loft relic he remembers buying off a WH Smith’s appointed bargain table in 1979 is a jokey cardboard facsimile of a handbag, as carried by the recently leader of the Tory opposition. “The Thatcher bag,” he writes, “heralds the beginning of bad pop.”

The “Thatcher clutch” is Cocker's sample of bad pop.

The “Thatcher clutch” is Cocker’s sample of bad pop.

It’s a notion that needs some unpacking. But it’s fundamental to his philosophy on life, art, and the looming perils of a world run by evil humanoid programmers.

“Good Pop is popular; something that comes from the population itself, a kind of generated art form, which is what music is. The roots of rock music are really abject: people in slavery, basically, trying to make something to make life tolerable. It’s something that’s come from the ground up. It’s not culture that’s passed from on high.”

bad pop is populism, he says: “this idea that you manipulate public opinion by playing on base instincts, offering shiny things to fool people. And I think the Thatcher bag, even though it was intended as some kind of satirical thing… that was a hallmark of this new type of Toryism.

‘Looking at this attic full of junk, I’m under no illusions it’s just rubbish. It should be in a landfill really.’

Jarvis Cocker

“One of the most famous things they did was to employ Saatchi & Saatchi, one of the biggest advertising agencies, to do their election campaign. They started using these tools of mass culture to manipulate public opinion, and they’ve just gone from strength to strength since then,” he says, feigning a note of triumph. “That’s over 40 years ago.

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“I’m not a political commentator,” he says, although he also reveals that Good Pop Bad Pop is a title he “recycled” from a pamphlet he wrote campaigning for a second Brexit referendum due to the “false pretences” of the first. The idea of ​​power wielded on high to thwart the collective will of individuals is clearly close to his heart.

It reminds me of the first time we met, in London back in 1998, when the UK pop charts were being systematically manipulated by record companies to engineer a new generation of pop puppets like Billie (Piper) and Aaron Carter.

“What I liked about the charts in the olden days was that they were a little bit lawless,” Cocker says now. “Record companies did try and control it. They would sign somebody and put a lot of money behind it but it didn’t always work. It always seemed like the public had the upper hand in some way. They decided what they wanted to be popular.

“For me, when it changed in the UK was around that time we were talking… It’s hard for a modern person to understand what a CD single could be, but they started this thing where a CD single came out and the first week of release , it would be 99p. And then the second week, it went up to three pounds or something.

“Immediately the narrative of the charts disappeared, because records… would go in at No.1, and then the next week, they’d just disappear. It became controlled by the commerce. Ironically, what happened was it killed the charts off. So it’s interesting that once they found a way of controlling it, they actually killed it as a commercial entity.”

TAKE 7: THE ANSWERS ACCORDING TO JARVIS COCKER

  1. Worst habit? Prevarication.
  2. Greatest fear? Short socks.
  3. The line that has stayed with you? “When you’re going through hell, keep going.”
  4. Biggest regret? Not seeing Nina Simone at Nick Cave’s Meltdown festival [in 1999].
  5. Favorite room? The room where they present the Nobel Prize in Oslo.
  6. The artwork/song you wish was yours? The Garden of Earthly Delights [by Hieronymus Bosch]in the Prado Museum in Madrid.
  7. If you could solve one thing… Climate change. I’d really like to solve it, but I don’t think I can do it on my own.

To the uniquely creative mind, heightened awareness about what’s going into it is key. At one dramatic turning point in his journey, Cocker’s process of sorting his loft detritus and writing his book leads him to describe his entire artistic impetus of him as a slightly tongue-in-cheek formula: “Scott [Walker] + Barry [White] + Eurodisco + Gritty Northern Realism = The Future.” He’s joking, but only kind of.

“I do think it’s a dangerous thing to analyze your own creativity too much,” he says. The cautionary tale in his book is the time he interviewed Leonard Cohen in his capacity as a BBC Radio 4 broadcaster, “making the schoolboy error of trying to ask him about his creative process, and him being very polite, but very firm about not wanting to talk about it”.

“I think the reason I try and talk about it at all is that I do believe that creativity is hardwired into every human. In a way that’s what distinguishes us from other animals. We can take our experiences, think about them and then produce something that another member of our species will look at and go, ‘Oh, yeah, I know what you’re on about.’

“It’s a magical kind of thing, and everybody can do it. It doesn’t mean that everybody does it, but we’ve got that ability to do it. And for whatever reason, I’ve always wanted to encourage people to do that.”

Given what seems, at times, like a borderline hoarding disorder, he knows of what he speaks when he says, “I think life as just a consumer is very, very soul-destroying, and dull. You have to create. It’s fun to create. Creativity can be knitting, or cooking something… it doesn’t have to be some kind of masterpiece. So that’s why I go on about it.

“Looking at this attic full of junk, I’m under no illusions it’s just rubbish. It should be in a landfill really but… You mention that formula that I quote at one point in the book, but really, it’s all of it. All these things, no matter how mundane they are… when it’s all mixed together, it creates some kind of chemical reaction and something comes out.

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“To me, that’s a magical thing. Because you do it. You make it happen, as a person. It’s like we’ve all got a superpower. And we should all use it more.”

Jarvis Cocker will appear by videolink at the Melbourne Writers Festival (mwf.com.au) on September 10 and at the Sydney Opera House’s Antidote Festival (sydneyoperahouse.com) on September 11. Good Pop Bad Pop is published by Random House, $39.99.

A cultural guide to going out and loving your city. Sign up to our Culture Fix newsletter here.

Categories
US

China overtakes the US in scientific research output | China

China has overtaken the US as the world leader in both scientific research output and “high impact” studies, according to a report published by Japan’s science and technology ministry.

The report, which was published by Japan’s National Institute of Science and Technology Policy (NISTP) on Tuesday, found that China now publishes the highest number of scientific research papers yearly, followed by the US and Germany.

The figures were based on yearly averages between 2018 and 2020, and drawn from data compiled by the analytics firm Clarivate.

The Japanese NISTP report also found that Chinese research comprised 27.2% of the world’s top 1% most frequently cited papers. The number of citations a research paper receives is a commonly used metric in academia. The more times a study is cited in subsequent papers by other researchers, the greater its “citation impact”.

The US accounted for 24.9% of the top 1% most highly cited research studies, while UK research was third at 5.5%.

China published a yearly average of 407,181 scientific papers, pulling ahead of the US’s 293,434 journal articles and accounting for 23.4% of the world’s research output, the report found.

China accounted for a high proportion of research into materials science, chemistry, engineering and mathematics, while US researchers were more prolific in research into clinical medicine, basic life sciences and physics.

The report was published on the day US president Joe Biden signed the Chips and Science Act, legislation that would authorize $200bn in research funding over 10 years to make US scientific research more competitive with China.

The Chinese embassy in the US said last month that China was “firmly opposed” to the bill which it said was “entrenched in [a] cold war and zero-sum game mentality”.

The “high impact” finding is in keeping with research published earlier this year, which found that China overtook the US in 2019 in the top 1% measure, and passed the European Union in 2015.

Papers that receive more citations than 99% of research are “works that are seen as being in the class of Nobel prize winners, the very leading edge of science”, study co-author Dr Caroline Wagner said at the time. “The US has tended to rank China’s work as lower quality. This appears to have changed.”

The US still spends more on research and development in the corporate and university sectors than any other country, the report also found. “China has the largest number of researchers in the corporate and university sectors among major countries. In the corporate sector, the United States and China are on par with each other, and both are showing rapid growth.”

“China is one of the top countries in the world in terms of both the quantity and quality of scientific papers,” Shinichi Kuroki of the Japan Science and Technology Agency told Nikkei Asia. “In order to become the true global leader, it will need to continue producing internationally recognized research,” he said.

Categories
Business

“This is crazy!” Hyundai Ioniq 5 sells out again in less than ten minutes

The Ioniq 5 electric crossover has sold out again, with the latest drop of units from Hyundai’s Australian division gone in a matter of minutes.

Hyundai announced last week that it would make an additional 135 vehicles available on Wednesday, continuing the “drip feed” release of the popular EV, which has won multiple car of the year awards around the world.

The latest tranche included, for the first time, the newly named AWD Techniq with optional sunroof, which was originally a standard feature but was then removed amid rising costs and differentiation of the pricing from the RWD Dynamiq.

Interest in the Ioniq 5 is clearly not slowing down.

In addition to being awarded the title for its superior stability when towing, the vehicle’s telematics system also allows drivers to set tow weights before driving off to get a highly accurate range estimate.

Add to that the addition of internal as well as external vehicle-to-load capabilities, and the Ioniq 5 does in deed shape up to be a vehicle that probably won’t “ruin your weekend.”

Hyundai officially 'ruins' the Long Weekend by winning Best Tow Car award.  Source: Hyundai
Hyundai officially ‘ruins’ the Long Weekend by winning Best Tow Car award. Source: Hyundai

However, it may have ruined some people’s mid-week.

This time, readers tell The Driven than the latest tranche may have sold out almost almost immediately.

“Put my postcode in for the Ioniq 5 raffle at one second past Zero hour and got a message saying the cars were sold out. This is crazy!” one reader said in a note to the Driven.

Similar messages were shared on social media: “I just missed out on an Ioniq 5. I was in there on the dot at 1pm and got kicked out multiple times. I had just entered my credit card and hit the pay button and then it told me it had sold out,” said one hopeful buyer on Facebook.

A spokesperson for Hyundai Australia tells The Driven that each tranche is divided into pre-allocations by capital city (no cars are yet available for regional areas,) and that the latest tranche sold out by 1:16pm, with the first payment being taken at 1:06 p.m.

There is one faint light at the end of the tunnel for drivers wanting to get their hands on an Ioniq 5 though: as reported by Riz Akhtar, secondhand prices are starting to come down as more new cars are made available to customers.

Mind you, the “near new” asking price for an Ioniq 5 still sits well above the price of a new one.

Categories
Technology

Two Blokes Talking Tech Episode 547 is live in New York for the Samsung launch event



Two Blokes Talking Tech Episode 547 is coming to you live from New York where Tech Guide editor Stephen Fenech and EFTM’s Trevor Long attended the Samsung Galaxy Unpacked event which revealed the company’s latest smartphones.

We talk about the new Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 and the Galaxy Z Flip 4 foldable smartphones and their new features and improvements.

Stephen and Trevor also discuss the new Samsung Watch 5 and Watch 5 Pro along with the new Galaxy Buds 2 Pro.

You can listen to the show right here on the Tech Guide site using the audio player below.

Click on the Two Blokes Talking Tech link at the top of the page and you’ll be able to find earlier episodes of Two Blokes Talking Tech to listen to.

It is also possible to subscribe to the popular weekly tech podcast on Apple Podcasts.










Categories
Entertainment

Chris Hemsworth spends the evening surfing with his kids in Byron Bay

Chris Hemsworth is raising little mini-mes.

The Thor star was seen taking his children for an afternoon surf at a Byron Bay beach on Wednesday.

The actor’s daughter, India, nine, and twin boys Sasha and Tristan, both eight, were seen running down the beach with surfboards tucked under their arms.

Daddy daycare!  Chris Hemsworth was seen taking his children for an afternoon surf at a Byron Bay beach on Wednesday.

Daddy daycare! Chris Hemsworth was seen taking his children for an afternoon surf at a Byron Bay beach on Wednesday.

The four, all dressed in black wetsuits, started their adventure running headlong into the sea.

Later, they swapped their surfboards out for kickboards for some more in-the-water fun.

At one point, Chris appeared to help a young surfer out of a rip before directing her to a safer part of the beach as she lugged her large surfboard.

A while after, India was seen clinging to her father’s back as they waded through the shallows, looking for the next swell.

Hunk: Chris showed off her muscular physique in a skintight wetsuit

Hunk: Chris showed off her muscular physique in a skintight wetsuit

Warm up: Chris ran on the sand as he warmed up for his surf

Warm up: Chris ran on the sand as he warmed up for his surf

Mini-month: The actor’s daughter, India, nine, and twin boys Sasha and Tristan, both eight, were seen running down the beach with surfboards tucked under their arms. (Pictured: India, right, and one of the twins)

Siblings: India ran into the sea with one of her younger brothers

Siblings: India ran into the sea with one of her younger brothers

Towards the end of the afternoon, the hunky actor swept his daughter up into his arms and carried her out of the sea after a wave crashed into the two of them.

Chris shares her three children with his wife Elsa Pataky whom he married in 2010.

The family resides in a $30million mansion in Broken Head, near the celebrity enclave of Byron Bay.

Thor to the rescue!  At one point, Chris appeared to help a young surfer out of a rip before directing her to a safer part of the beach as she lugged her large surfboard

Thor to the rescue! At one point, Chris appeared to help a young surfer out of a rip before directing her to a safer part of the beach as she lugged her large surfboard

Advice: India looked up to her dad as he gave her surfing advice

Advice: India looked up to her dad as he gave her surfing advice

Proud: Chris proudly watched over one of his young ones as they ran straight for the water

Proud: Chris proudly watched over one of his young ones as they ran straight for the water

Proud: Chris proudly watched over one of his young ones as they ran straight for the water

Last month, Chris said he is working on more and more films in Australia.

‘My focus ever since I had any sway was to shoot here in Australia due to, on a personal level, being at home with my family, but also because of the awareness that I had about what was possible here when it comes to the talent ,’ I told The Daily Telegraph.

Chris made his latest film, the Netflix science fiction drama Spiderhead, in Queensland.

Fun in the sea: Later they swapped their surfboards out for kickboards for some more in-the-water fun

Fun in the sea: Later they swapped their surfboards out for kickboards for some more in-the-water fun

Piggyback: India was seen clinging to her father's back as they waded through the shallows, looking for the next swell

Piggyback: India was seen clinging to her father’s back as they waded through the shallows, looking for the next swell

Cute: Chris gave his daughter a piggy-back ride

Cute: Chris gave his daughter a piggy-back ride

Cute: Chris gave his daughter a piggy-back ride

This is how it is done!  Chris looked determined as he caught a wave

This is how it is done! Chris looked determined as he caught a wave

Close watch: Chris kept an eagle eye on India as she struggled with her kickboard

Close watch: Chris kept an eagle eye on India as she struggled with her kickboard

Just like dad: She tried to catch a wave just like her father

Just like dad: She tried to catch a wave just like her father

His production company, Wild State Productions, brought Thor 3 and 4, Extraction 1 and 2, Spiderhead and Interceptor to film in Australia, the paper reported.

‘Life is sweet. It is great and I couldn’t be happier,’ Chris added.

‘If you had said or asked me 10 years ago where I would like to be, this is it.’

Cuddles: Towards the end of the afternoon outing, the hunky actor swept his daughter up into his arms and carried her out of the sea after a wave crashed into the two of them

Family: Chris shares the three Hemsworth kids with his wife Elsa Pataky whom he married in 2010

Family: Chris shares the three Hemsworth kids with his wife Elsa Pataky whom he married in 2010

Home: The family resides in a $30million mansion in Broken Head, near the celebrity enclave of Byron Bay

Home: The family resides in a $30million mansion in Broken Head, near the celebrity enclave of Byron Bay

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Categories
Sports

Every AFL player linked to a trade in 2022

We have compiled a list of every AFL player currently linked to a trade or free agency move in any capacity.

This is not to suggest any player is necessarily moving, see this as simply a list to keep track of names ahead of what will be a hectic trade period.

From Lance Franklin and Dustin Martin to depth players looking for more game time, here’s the list as it stands.

NOTE: This list will be updated regularly, and we will miss some, keep it pinned!

ADELAIDE

Matt Crouch Billy Frampton
Darcy Gardiner
Elliott Himmelberg
Lachie Sholl

BRISBANE

Dan McStay

CARLTON

Paddy Dow

COLLINGWOOD

Jordan De Goey
Brodie Grundy
Caleb Poultry

ESSENDON

Aaron Francis
Dyson Heppell

FREMANTLE

Blake Acres
Bailey Banfield
connor blakeley
Brennan Cox
Joel Hamling
Rory Lob
Griffin Logue
Lloyd Meek
Sam Sturt

GEELONG

GOLD COAST

Izak Rankin

GWS GIANTS

Tanner Bruhn
Tom Green
Bobby Hill
Jacob Hopper Tim Taranto

HAWTHORN

Jack Gunston
Liam Shiels

MELBOURNE

Toby Bedford
Luke Jackson

NORTH MELBOURNE

Todd Goldstein
Jason Horne-Francis
cam zurhaar

PORT ADELAIDE

Karl Ammon
Miles Bergman

RICHMOND

Dustin Martin

ST KILDA

SYDNEY

lance franklin

WEST COAST

jackson nelson
willie rioli

WESTERN BULLDOGS

Josh Dunkley
jason johannisen





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