mangakiko – Page 35 – Michmutters
Categories
Australia

Cowboy takes home a bride and a buckle after double win at Mount Isa rodeo

When Canadian woman Kyla Dolen first met cowboy Fred Osman she admits she was instantly infatuated.

“I had moved out on a backpacking visa and had got a job helping out at his dad’s station,” she said.

“After working with him I was very twitterpated and in love with him.”

That was 12 years ago.

Now, she’s married her dream man.

A bride in a white dress with long brown hair walks alongside her groom wearing a blue shirt and cream vest holding a cowboy hat
Thousands were in attendance on the final day of the biggest rodeo in the southern hemisphere.(ABC North West Queensland: Larissa Waterson)

The couple tied the knot on Sunday, paying homage to Fred’s stockman roots as they said “I do” in front of a crowd on the red-dirt arena of the Mount Isa Rodeo — the biggest event of its kind in the southern hemisphere.

In true cowboy fashion, just an hour after his vows, Mr Osman, 36, went on to win the bareback ride, defending his 2021 champion title.

“I don’t know what I was more nervous about, getting married or winning my fourth buckle here,” he said.

A bride and groom stand at a triangle timber alter on red dirt ground with a colorfully dressed celebrant holding a microphone.
The two said their vows on the arena just before Fred won the bareback competition.(Supplied: Mount Isa Rodeo)

A long road to rodeo romance

A year ago, Mr Osman popped the question to Ms Dolen while on a hike in Canada, right before he flew back to Australia.

“It was dodgy as. I didn’t have a ring or anything at the time so I just nicked one of her other little rings and did it with that,” he said.

“But I just wanted to make sure, because we were doing a lot of flying between countries, that she knew what my intentions were.”

A bride in a white dress with long brown hair holds her grooms hand in an outback landscape.  He wears blue shirt and cream vest
The couple met 12 years ago and have been together for the past three years.(Supplied: Mount Isa Rodeo)

After COVID-19 lockdowns forced the couple into a 10-month long-distance engagement, Ms Dolen had had enough.

“My dream wedding was always to get married in Canada in the mountains,” she said.

“But after COVID and everything, I didn’t know when we were going to get back to Canada. And I’m lazy and I don’t like planning things. And I didn’t want to plan a wedding. So I was like, why don’t we just get married at Mount Isa?

“He was already going to be here riding in the rodeo and his family was coming to watch him ride so it was just so easy.

“And I wanted him to be excited about it as well and have a venue that he was excited about.”

A shot of the bouquet toss taken from the crowd.
Kyla tossed her bouquet into the crowd where one lucky single girl caught it.(ABC North West Qld: Larissa Waterson)

At the noon lunch break on Sunday, Ms Dolen walked onto the Mount Isa Rodeo arena in a sparkling white two-piece gown and cowgirl boots, her family watching via live stream from Canada.

A bride holds a bouquet and walks through metal gates onto red dirt.  She's accompanied by a man in a suit and cowboy hat.
Kyla enters the Mount Isa Rodeo arena from the chutes in true cowgirl fashion.(ABC North West Qld: Larissa Waterson)

“It’s been awesome. When you really love someone, it’s really hard to just pick the small things you love about them — it’s just the whole entity of that person that you’re drawn to,” she said.

“He’s my best friend and I just can’t imagine doing life without him anymore.”

Three riders on horses in desert setting
Kyla and Fred (center and left) first met on his family’s station.(Supplied: Kyla Dolen)

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Categories
Business

Koala cuts jobs, hits brakes on Korean expansion

Koala would not confirm how many staff members it employed before the layoffs, though the professional social network LinkedIn puts it at 288. However, that figure is unlikely to be accurate because some people do not update their employment status when they change or leave a job .

After more than four years building Koala, co-founder Dany Milham left the business in 2021 to start Milkrun.

After more than four years building Koala, co-founder Dany Milham left the business in 2021 to start Milkrun.Credit:

Industry insiders, who spoke to The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age on condition of anonymity to discuss the market candidly, said Koala had once appeared a runaway success that pioneered delivering mattresses in a box in Australia, only to find itself competing with a raft of copycats.

A similar mattress company in the US, Casper, was valued as high as $US1.1 billion in 2019 but went public for less than half that and was taken private again earlier this year after its value fell by about another 40 per cent. In 2020, Koala was reported to be raising money at a $500 million valuation.

Former Australian cricket captain Steve Smith was an early investor in Koala. Several of its former leaders have gone onto found other high-profile start-ups, including co-founder Dany Milham, now chief executive of grocery delivery business Milkrun, and former marketing head, Tim Doyle, now boss of healthcare start-up Eucalyptus.

Koala’s spokeswoman did not give figures on the company’s revenue, profit, capital raising or savings but championed its prospects and said suggestions it had explored an IPO were “not correct”.

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“Like any private company with proven success as a market leader in our categories and markets, we are fortunate enough to receive countless inbound introductions from potential investors. They see the opportunity for Koala to continue to disrupt the global furniture market.”

She said Koala’s margins were double those of some competitors and that more than half its Australian revenue was coming from non-mattress products, representing a more diverse business.

“Word of month about our furniture offering and experiences has led to incredible growth in non mattress sales. With many more unique Koala designs being launched later this year, we’re excited to continue this strong growth into all rooms of the home.”

The company was supported by its existing investors. “We will continue to invest in our operations across Australia and Asia,” the spokeswoman said.

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Categories
Entertainment

Olivia Newton-John’s final wish to have ashes scattered in Byron Bay

Olivia Newton-John revealed exactly what she wanted to happen after her death in an interview filmed before she passed away.

In a never-before-seen interview which aired during Seven special Spotlight: Olivia – A Magical Life on Sunday night, the Australian entertainment icon explained that she wanted some of her ashes scattered in Byron Bay, some at her property in California and “in other places I love”.

The ashes of Newton-John’s late mother and sister were also scattered in the popular coastal northern NSW town, where the actress owned a property until last year.

“I don’t think I’ve really thought about it that deeply. We all should,” Newton-John said in the previously unknown footage.

“But I’d like to be with them, I’d like to be with them… that would be nice.”

Newton-John, whose starring role in grease in 1978 made her world famous, died at her ranch in California last week following a long battle with breast cancer.

She was first diagnosed with the disease in 1992, but it went into remission before it reappeared in 2013 and then again in 2017.

The Seven special also featured tributes from some of her oldest and closest friends, including Sir Cliff Richard and Bee Gees legend Barry Gibb, who described her as “a diamond”.

“And in this world there’s only a few diamonds,” he said.

“There were all these wonderful female artists and then there was Olivia Newton-John.”

Newton-John’s heartbroken family have accepted the offer of a state funeral from Victoria’s state government, with Premier Daniel Andrews confirming the news last Thursday.

“This will be much more of a concert than a funeral, I think it will be a celebration of such a rich and generous life,” he said.

“Olivia Newton-John was a very special person and to take her cancer journey and to turn that into more research, better treatment, better care and this focus on wellness, is such an amazing legacy and that’s why I think we all feel the pain of her passing.”

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Categories
Sports

transfernews; Cameron Munster future; player signings, Wayne Bennett Dolphins; Latrell Mitchell; Roosters salary cap, Angus Crichton re-signs

Cameron Munster may soon be headed north with Wayne Bennett reportedly closing in on his marquee man.

Meanwhile, the Roosters have reportedly locked in a key forward after months of speculation surrounding his future.

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DOLPHINS NEW MARQUEE TARGET

Rugby League reporter Ben Dobbin believes Cameron Munster is set to sign a four-year deal with the Dolphins which would make him the highest paid player in the NRL.

“Munster is a Dolphin, in 2024 I think Munster is a Dolphin,” Dobbin said on Triple M.

“I think it will be a four-year deal,” Dobbin said.

“So that will be roughly around $6 million?” Gorden Tallis then asked.

“Is he worth it? Yes, can he change the fortunates of a club? Yes he can,” Dobbin said.

“Can you put tools around him and will it attract other players? Yes it will.”

While strong in his belief Bennett has his man, Dobbin revealed Bennett could make an audacious bid to lure Latrell Mitchell to Redcliff if the Munster bid fails.

The NRL supercoach mentored Latrell during 2020 and 2021, coming desperately close to a premiership last season.

“If they don’t get Cameron Munster, I’m going to throw you a smokey right now. I believe they will go after Latrell Mitchell… Wayne Bennett’s relationship with Latrell Mitchell runs deep,” Dobbin said on Triple M.

Tallis, however, believed Latrell Mitchell has his roots firmly placed at the South Sydney club, explaining he is the “happiest” he has ever been.

“It is too far away from his farm, I think for Latrell, there is a bigger picture for him,” Tallis said.

“I have never seen a guy more settled and going back to the country and doing what he is doing, that is more important to Latrell now than money.

“I think he is the happiest (he has been).”

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Ciraldo signed to save Dogs! | 01:55

CRICHTON’S FUTURE SECURED

Roosters gun Angus Crichton has revealed his is set to re-sign with the Tricolours, ending speculation surrounding his immediate future.

Initially, the 26-year-old’s two-year contract extension was said to be a handshake deal with no formal contract being registered with the NRL.

Crichton himself acknowledged the speculation has been “tough” but never considered playing for any other club.

“I think we are really close to finalizing something, so hopefully in the next little bit I will sign on for the next two years,” Crichton told 9News.

“It has been tough to have that hanging over my head and to get it sorted will be a massive weight off my shoulders.

“I don’t want to play for any other team.”

Reports linked the Origin backrower to a move to the Tigers with the Roosters’ salary cap facing a big squeeze.

The Daily Telegraph’s Buzz Rothfield revealed the immense cap pressure the Tricolours are under, with seven of the competition’s highest paid players on their books.

“In 2022 they have got Tedesco on $1.1m, Luke Keary on $850,000, Joseph Manu ($720k), Jared Waerea-Hargreaves ($700k), Angus Crichton ($700k), Sio Siua Taukeiaho ($625k) and Victor Radley ( $510k) for a total of $5,205,000,” Rothfield said on NRL360.

With the impending arrival of Brandon Smith and an increase in salary for young gun Joseph Suaalii, Roosters bosses now have to squeeze the remaining 21 players into what is left of their salary cap.

The departure of Ronald Volkman, Freddy Lussick, Daniel Suluka-Fifita and Lachlam Lam has opened cap space.

Sam Verills and Siosiua Taukeiaho are also set to leave at the season’s end, meaning the Roosters could have even more money to re-sign players for 2023 onwards.

Matty nails Buzz impersonation | 00:51

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Categories
Australia

Kowanyama’s takeaway liquor license has good and bad sides for remote Cape York community

To legally buy alcohol from this Queensland pub you must blow in the bag – and you must blow zero.

Kowanyama, a remote town on western Cape York, was one of seven Indigenous communities in Queensland where prohibition was introduced in 2008.

In 2014, the local canteen reopened serving restricted amounts of alcohol.

This year the community has gained more freedom regarding alcohol, successfully applying for a takeaway license.

But that freedom is restricted.

Each person is limited to buying 12 mid-strength drinks per evening, and only from Wednesday to Saturday between 5pm and 11pm.

To enter the canteen patrons you must sign in, take a breathalyser test, and return a zero blood alcohol reading—even to buy takeaways.

A laminated sign hangs from a fence warning people not to bring alcohol on a premises in Kowanyama.
Some Kowanyama residents register their homes as ‘dry places’, with penalties for anyone who brings alcohol in.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby )

They can then, for example, have four drinks at the bar and take eight home.

Producing a members or visitors card at the bar allows staff to keep tabs on how many drinks people have had, while customers are kept informed of their limit by a flashing digital display on the cash register.

A similar canteen has this month opened on the opposite side of Cape York, at Lockhart River — another of the seven communities where prohibition was introduced in 2008.

Venues on Mornington Island and at Pormpuraaw, on western Cape York, are also in the process of applying for extensions of their existing liquor licences.

‘Hardly anyone here’

Many in Kowanyama gathered for the annual Rodeo Ball this month, hosted at the canteen.

Thomas Hudson, President of the Kowanyama Sport and Recreation Association which runs the canteen, said the aim of the ball was to bring the community together.

An Aboriginal man dressed in jeans and a plaid shirt stands under a string of balloons reading 'Rodeo Ball'.
Kowanyama Sport and Recreation Association president Thomas Hudson spearheads the annual Rodeo Ball.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby)

“For people to dress up and be proud of themselves because we don’t do that every day here in our community,” Mr Hudson said.

Attendance at this year’s event, the first since its inception where takeaway alcohol has been available, was down on previous years.

The steady stream of people buying from the canteen takeaway counter before its 8pm closure confirmed what ball attendee Clive ‘Smokey’ Gilbert suspected – that many were choosing to drink at home.

“There’s hardly anyone in the canteen here,” Smokey said.

“When no takeaways were on this pub used to be crowded but you don’t see that now, they’re always going home now.”

Two Indigenous men stand side by side under fluorescent lights in a bar.
Clive ‘Smokey’ Gilbert (L) and Kowanyama Aboriginal Shire Mayor Robbie Sands (R) attended this year’s Rodeo Ball.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby)

Fellow Kowanyama resident Gwendolyn Dick said despite the below average attendance, the ball did succeed in bringing the community together during an extended period of sorry business.

“We had four deaths just recently, and another one in the last week or so,” Ms Dick said.

“It’s good to see all the families from in the community come together all in one because we often can’t during the sorry business and the funeral.”

Return of rights and responsibilities

Most in Kowanyama welcome the return of the canteen and of takeaway alcohol sales, including the community’s women’s support group.

Security providers and canteen customers said the increase in takeaway sales had resulted in a reduction in fights and anti-social behavior at the pub.

“It’s something good for the community,” Smokey said.

“It keeps them out of trouble and people enjoy their beers at home watching the football.”

Silhouetted figures bathed in fluorescent light in an outdoor bar.
Rodeo Ball attendance was down in 2022, with takeaway sales meaning more people are choosing to drink at home instead.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby)

For Michael Yam, a former mayor of the Kowanyama Aboriginal Shire Council the resumption of takeaway alcohol sales at the community’s canteen is a return of the rights and responsibilities of the townspeople.

“It’s about time they gave us something back,” he said.

“It’ll probably minimize the sly grogging because, as we know, in our community there’s always opportunists that are going to do it.”

And he said there were benefits to people choosing to drink at home, rather than at the canteen.

“Some families take their drinks home so that they can be home with their kids instead of drinking in the club all the time, away from their little ones.”

Lockhart River Aboriginal Shire Major Wayne Butcher said that community’s newly opened canteen had been “14 years in the making.”

“It’s created 10 new jobs in the community overnight so it’s great to see a lot of young people working as crowd controllers, security or people serving alcohol behind the bar and preparing food,” he said.

“That’s the other side of the coin that we don’t get to look at too much or focus on.”

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Categories
Technology

Gamblers accused of cheating in casino card game on Gold Coast win fight against Star

An experienced gambler who exploits sloppy dealers and flaws in games has won a legal battle against casino giant Star after it accused him and a friend of cheating at a Gold Coast establishment four years ago.

Mark Timothy Grant and his friend, Nathan Trent Anderson, were given exclusion notices by The Star Entertainment Queensland Ltd (Star) in March 2018, after playing the game Pontoon, also known as Spanish Blackjack.

The notices banned the pair from entering the casino giant’s Queensland venues.

In 2020, Mr Grant and Mr Anderson sought a review of the notices by the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT).

‘No grounds exist’

Earlier this month, the notices were set aside after QCAT found “no grounds exist” for the pair to be excluded from casinos on the Gold Coast or in Brisbane.

Star alleged Mr Grant engaged in “edge-sorting”—an illegal form of play under the Casino Control Act, which involves looking at cards for manufacture defects that may cause some edges to be marginally shorter than others or prints to be asymmetrical.

Playing cards fanned out, featuring a 'four-of-a-kind' King of hearts, spades, diamonds and clubs.
The two main card games played share similarities with poker and blackjack, the researchers say.(pixabay)

The defects can be present on specific card numbers in a deck.

The judgment said, during the Pontoon games that triggered the exclusion notice, Mr Grant was sitting close to the dealer but not playing, using hand gestures to indicate to Mr Anderson which cards to play.

“Star contends … the behaviors it has identified, including collusion and edge-sorting are behaviors which when viewed objectively are dishonest in nature and affect or have the potential to affect the integrity of gaming,” the judgment said.

Wide shot of the Star Casino on the Gold Coast
Star Casino on the Gold Coast, where the pair was playing in 2018.(ABC News: Steve Keen)

“[Star’s] opinion is that Mr Grant and Mr Anderson used an error or a fault in the gaming equipment to obtain a benefit.”

Advantage play not dishonest

The court heard Mr Grant had previously been investigated by Star for his gameplay.

But the judgment said the man described himself as an “advantage player” and argued playing this way was “not a threat to casinos where the staff are competent, and the games are operated correctly”.

Front of the deserted Treasury Casino in George Street in Brisbane city on January 11, 2021.
The players were also banned from Treasury Casino in Brisbane city.(ABC News: Chris Gillette)

“He submits that advantage play is not cheating or dishonest,” the judgment said.

Mr Grant told the court players often collaborated in an effort to get the dealer to “bust”.

According to the judgement, he denied “edge-sorting” saying the practice was impossible in Pontoon “because players do not touch the cards”.

“Mr Grant said that he is a very competitive player, and he will take into account all legally and publicly available information and that he is allowed to make assumptions about what card is coming next,” the judgment said.

“I noticed that the cards were asymmetrical and [said] he is free to speculate on what the next card is, just like any other player at the table who has that information, but at no time did he know exactly what the next card was.”

Broadbeach sign in the foreground of the Star Casino on the Gold Coast.
Mr Grant told the court he often visited Star Casino on the Gold Coast.(ABC News: Steve Keen)

Playing card defects

The court was told cards used in the game were “Angel” playing cards.

The judgment said the cards had previously been the subject of discussion in another court case where the manufacturer argued any anomalies were “within a contractually specified tolerance of up to 0.3mm”.

In Mr Grant’s case, the judgment said Star was aware of the anomaly associated with Angel cards and 96 of the cards used during the game were irregular.

QCAT found the pair had not engaged in “edge-sorting” at Star on the Gold Coast in 2018.

The judgment said Star was aware of defects in the cards but continued to allow them to be used.

“I find that the conduct of Mr Grant or Mr Anderson did not involve any form of dishonesty, involving lying, cheating, stealing or fraud by the ordinary meaning of the word, or that they were not honest,” the judgment said.

No ‘leg-up’ from conduct

It later said Pontoon was not a game of “chance.”

“Noting an asymmetrical back on a card is of no use unless one knows what lies beneath,” the judgment said.

“A range of skills must be applied by Mr Grant to make his guess.”

QCAT noted in this case, 33 per cent of the cards in play had asymmetrical backs and 20 per cent of them had a low value, while 13 per cent had a high value.

“Gaining any sort of ‘leg-up’ in those circumstances would seem to be extraordinarily difficult,” the judgment said.

“The cards were in plain view of the dealer and subject to the casino’s inspection regime.

“Mr Grant, the dealer and the casino had the same information.”

The court ordered the exclusion notices to be revoked.

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Categories
Entertainment

Police probe threats against JK Rowling after author condemns Salman Rushdie stabbing

Scottish police are investigating online threats made against JK Rowling after the author condemned the attack on Salman Rushdie.

The Harry Potter creator tweeted that said she felt “very sick” after hearing the news and hoped the novelist would “be OK”.

A user replied “don’t worry you are next”.

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Rowling shared screenshots of the threatening tweet and said: “To all sending supportive messages: thank you police are involved (were already involved on other threats)”.

A spokeswoman for Scotland’s police said: “We have received a report of an online threat being made and officers are carrying out enquiries.”

Rushdie, 75, was stabbed at a lecture in New York on Saturday and suffered a damaged liver and severed nerves in an arm and an eye.

He remains in a critical condition, however his son Zafar Rushdie said his father’s “defiant sense of humor remains intact”.

Rushdie’s agent earlier confirmed the author was removed from a ventilator and is “on the road to recovery,” and able to talk and joke.

The attack was met with global shock and outrage, as well as praise for the Indian-born author who has weathered death threats and a US$3 million bounty on his head for three decades.

Salman Rushdie holding his left hand up to his face looking at the camera and smiling wearing glasses
Author Salman Rushdie has lived with a bounty on his head for decades. (Reuters: Andrew Winning, file)

The Indian-born author’s 1988 book The Satanic Verses was considered blasphemous by many Muslims, and the book was banned in Iran, where the country’s late leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwa, or edict, calling for Rushdie’s death

His accused attacker Hadi Matar, 24, of Fairview, New Jersey, pleaded not guilty on Saturday to attempted murder and assault charges.

Reuters

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Categories
Australia

E-scooters help Australia’s net-zero goals, but medics warn about long-term injuries

Traumatic brain injuries, severe dislocations, and broken bones are some of the injuries Graeme Maw has seen come through the Townsville University Hospital from electric scooter (e-scooter) accidents.

Emergency physician Dr Maw says staff would support a ban on the two-wheeled devices, as new research shows half of the riders are making potentially life-threatening decisions on Queensland roads.

He said approximately one person per day was presenting to the hospital with injuries ranging from skin abrasions to significant head trauma.

“Lots and lots of soft tissue injury, extensive grazing and abrasions. Lots and lots of lacerations that require suturing up,” Dr Maw said.

“Often, these patients go on to suffer relatively significant long-term impacts from these sort of injuries.

“There was one young man who came off a scooter after drinking. He came in deeply unconscious and was sent to intensive care. He went from being a functioning member of society with a job to spending months and months in hospital and rehabilitation.”

A serious looking middle-aged man with slicked back hair, standing in hospital ward with equipment, wearing blue scrubs.
Dr Maw says about one person per day presents with an e-scooter injury.(Supplied)

The Townsville University Hospital has been collecting data on the frequency of e-scooter accidents since the ride-sharing devices arrived in the city in 2020.

Dr Maw said about 50 per cent of patients presenting to an emergency were not wearing a helmet, and more than 75 per cent were under the influence of alcohol when an incident occurred.

The data showed 70 per cent of patients presenting to the hospital with e-scooter injuries were male, with the majority in the 18–30 age group.

Man rides e-scooter down a tree-lined street.
The data shows 70 per cent of patients presenting to Townsville University Hospital with e-scooter injuries are male.(ABC North Queensland: Rachael Merritt)

But Dr Maw said the true extent of cases was being under-reported.

“It’s not just the people riding the scooters. We’ve had a few innocent bystanders knocked over,” he said.

“Not everybody who comes off an e-scooter ends up going to the emergency department.

“A lot of patients head to GPs, private hospitals, and some may not seek medical attention at all.”

Calls for help becoming ‘more frequent’

Queensland Ambulance Senior Operations Supervisor Wayne Paxton, from the Townsville district, said paramedics were responding to an e-scooter crash at least once or twice a week.

“It’s starting to become more and more frequent over the weeks and weekends,” Mr Paxton said.

“The types of injuries we deal with can vary from a small cut or abrasion to something like a head injury or fractured leg or shoulder injury.”

Purple e-scooters lined up in front of palm trees with helmets.
Doctors say they have seen cases of traumatic brain injury in Townsville since the scooters were introduced.(ABC North Queensland: Rachael Merritt)

Amid the rising cost of fuel, Mr Paxton said more regional Queenslanders were choosing the cost-effective mode of transport.

He said their popularity would likely continue to rise but warned riders to be aware of the risks.

“I’ve been to accidents where the helmet has been on, but they haven’t done the strap up, and it has come off during the fall,” he said.

“If we don’t have the right education and don’t wear protective equipment … it can certainly lead to serious injuries and, worst-case scenario, more deaths.”

Safety not being taken seriously

With more regional Queensland cities such as Mackay, Rockhampton and Bundaberg taking part in the e-scooter rollout, a recent survey by the state’s peak motoring body found half of the riders admitted to reckless driving behaviour.

Andrew Kirk, principal technical researcher at RACQ, said a crackdown on non-compliant e-scooter users was needed to improve safety, as well as a stronger education campaign.

“Nearly one in 10 riders have had an accident, and over half of those have been injured,” he said.

“That comes down to lack of safety equipment, going too fast and riding in the wrong areas.”

Close up of red safety sign on e-scooter saying ride safely, park responsibly, don't block path, with figures depicting action.
A statewide survey of e-scooter users by RACQ found only a third of riders were aware of the road rules.(ABC North Queensland: Lily Nothling)

Mr Kirk said RACQ had been in talks with e-scooter rental companies to incorporate new technologies, such as onboard cameras, to improve user safety and did not want to see them pulled from the streets.

“It’s getting cars off the road, so it’s reducing vehicle emissions and reducing traffic congestion,” he said.

“They do have a big role to play in Australia’s net-zero goals.

“Most bike riders have adapted to the fact you have to have a helmet on, but for e-scooters we just need to change that mentality to get people to do the right thing.”

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Categories
Technology

Zoom’s latest update on Mac includes a fix for a dangerous security flaw

Zoom has issued a patch for a bug on macOS that could allow a hacker to take control of a user’s operating system (via MacRumors). In an update on its security bulletin, Zoom acknowledges the issue (CVE-2022-28756) and says a fix is ​​included in version 5.11.5 of the app on Mac, which you can (and should) download now.

Patrick Wardle, a security researcher and founder of the Objective-See Foundation, a nonprofit that creates open-source macOS security tools, first uncovered the flaw and presented it at the Def Con hacking conference last week. My colleague, Corin Faife, attended the event and reported on Wardle’s findings.

As Corin explains, the exploit targets the Zoom installer, which requires special user permissions to run. By leveraging this tool, Wardle found that hackers could essentially “trick” Zoom into installing a malicious program by putting Zoom’s cryptographic signature on the package. From here, attackers can then gain further access to a user’s system, letting them modify, delete, or add files on the device.

“Mahalos to Zoom for the (incredibly) quick fix!” Wardle said in response to Zoom’s update. “Reversing the patch, we see the Zoom installer now invokes lchown to update the permissions of the update .pkg, thus preventing malicious subversion.”

You can install the 5.11.5 update on Zoom by first opening the app on your Mac and hitting zoom.us (this might be different depending on what country you’re in) from the menu bar at the top of your screen. Then select Check for updates, and if one’s available, Zoom will display a window with the latest app version, along with details about what’s changing. From here, select update to begin the download.

Categories
Entertainment

Milly Alcock was washing dishes before getting cast in House of the Dragon

Australian actress Milly Alcock was working as a dishwasher and living in her mum’s attic when she got the call to star in House of the Dragon

Australian actress Milly Alcock has revealed the exact moment her life changed forever when she got the call to star in the Game of Thrones prequel, House of the Dragon.

Just two years ago, the 22-year-old was living in her mum’s attic and washing dishes in a restaurant to make money, but now she’s set to become one of TV’s biggest new stars thanks to her role in the popular fantasy franchise.

Speaking to Stellar magazine, the Sydney-born star revealed how she dropped out of school to pursue acting and how she ‘froze’ when her agent told her she’d landed the coveted role in House of Dragons.

Australian actress Milly Alcock (pictured) has revealed the exact moment her life changed forever when she got the call to star in the Game of Thrones prequel, House of the Dragon

Australian actress Milly Alcock (pictured) has revealed the exact moment her life changed forever when she got the call to star in the Game of Thrones prequel, House of the Dragon

Recalling the moment she discovered she was going to play a young princess Rhaenyra Targaryen in the new Game Of Thrones prequel, she said: ‘I never thought this would happen to me.’

‘I was washing dishes in a restaurant, living in my mum’s attic. This does not happen to people like me, so it was incredibly quick, ‘she said of the call that changed her life from her.

‘I froze, and took a deep breath and said to my friend, “Do you have wine?” Then I called my mum.’

The Sydney-born star revealed how she dropped out of school to pursue acting and how she 'froze' when her agent told her she'd landed the coveted role in House of Dragons

The Sydney-born star revealed how she dropped out of school to pursue acting and how she ‘froze’ when her agent told her she’d landed the coveted role in House of Dragons

The star also explained how she dropped out of school to pursue her Hollywood dreams.

‘I was like, I either have to sit all of my exams in rural Australia or I was just going to drop out of school.

‘So I dropped out because it was never really my thing,’ she added.

Milly dropped out of school to pursue acting, and ended up working as a dish washer to make ends meet before her big break

Milly dropped out of school to pursue acting, and ended up working as a dish washer to make ends meet before her big break

Milly is a relative unknown in Hollywood at the moment but is expected to become a huge star after the series is released.

She made her first appearance on the small screen in the Channel 10 series, Wonderland, which premiered in 2014.

She later appeared in the Australian series Janet King and the Foxtel drama, Upright.

The Australian actress posed for a stunning shoot with Stellar magazine to promote the series

The Australian actress posed for a stunning shoot with Stellar magazine to promote the series

House of Dragon is a Game of Thrones prequel series by HBO.

It is based on portions of Martin’s 2018 novel Fire and Blood and will be set 200 years before the events of Game of Thrones.

Milly will star alongside Emma D’Arcy, who will play the older Rhaenyra Targaryen in the series, and Matt Smith.

The countdown is on for Game Of Throne fans as its prequel House of the Dragon will hit screens on August 21. Pictured is Milly Alcock as Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen

The countdown is on for Game Of Throne fans as its prequel House of the Dragon will hit screens on August 21. Pictured is Milly Alcock as Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen

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