Categories
Technology

Amazon brings Echo Show 15’s photo frame feature to all models

Amazon’s Echo Show 15 comes with a digital photo frame picture that enables it to display only photos or artwork, uninterrupted by random Alexa skill suggestions, recipes or your schedule. Only the 15.6-inch had that feature, though — until now. According to TheVergethe e-commerce giant has recently added its dedicated photo frame feature to all Echo Show Models in the US, the UK, Canada, Germany, France, Italy, Spain and Australia.

The Verge says you can activate the slideshow by saying the voice command: “Alexa, start Photo Frame.” Your smart display will then start a slideshow using the contents of your Amazon Photos and your Facebook account. It can also display a random selection of stock images if you’ve yet to upload your personal photos or have yet to link your accounts with the device. Don’t worry: You can choose which album the feature uses for the slideshow under device settings if there are certain images you’d rather not show everyone else in your home.

The photo frame mode hides all the other elements you usually see on an Echo Show display, including the weather. All you’ll see are the images themselves and a small note on when they were taken and which album they’re from. The said, the slideshow only lasts uninterrupted for three hours, after which you’ll have to activate it again to turn your device into a digital photo frame.

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Entertainment

Top Gear star James May involved in horror car crash on-set of Grand Tour

Former Top Gear star James May has been rushed to hospital after a death-defying stunt went horribly wrong.

The 59-year-old UK TV presenter was filming for his popular Amazon Prime Video series The Grand Tour when he crashed his car into a wall at 120km/h, suffering a broken rib, The Sun reports.

May and his co-hosts Jeremy Clarkson, 62, and Richard Hammond, 52, had been filming a dangerous drag-style race when the accident unfolded.

The challenge involved the stars individually steering speed rally cars through a tunnel towards a rock wall at a Norwegian naval base.

The tunnel’s lights only came on as the cars sped past, giving all three men just seconds to react as they ran out of time before hitting the wall.

May, who is ironically nicknamed ‘Captain Slow’ by his co-stars, hit the brakes too late and crashed into the wall.

He was helped out of his Mitsubishi Lancer Evo 8 by paramedics, before being taken to hospital for a brain scan and X-rays. He was reportedly given the all-clear a short time later.

May had to abandon filming while Clarkson and Hammond continued on their Arctic Circle trip without him.

May’s accident happened at the decommissioned Olavsvern naval base near the city of Tromso, as part of a new grand-tour special which will be released later this year.

A television source told The Sun, “It looked extremely worrying at first. Jeremy and Richard were concerned about their mate and the paramedics swooped in quickly.

“As ever on a shoot of this scale, medical staff are waiting in the wings in case — as they did here — things go horribly wrong.

“James smashed his head quite hard in the impact, and was bloodied by it. He was complaining about pain in his back and neck from him. He was only able to join them once given the all-clear a day or so later.”

The shock incident came after Hammond cheated death in a horror accident in 2006, when he was traveling at 460km/h in a jet-powered car while filming for the BBC’s hit show, topgear.

This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission

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Australia

Survivor’s arm tingles when a storm is coming

An ominous-looking storm was rolling in when Kristoffer Green and his family pulled up at an Ipswich medical center in queensland.

It was November 2015 and Green’s young daughter had a wasp bite he and his wife wanted a doctor to take a look at.

“We saw the dark clouds and we said, ‘Oh, we better watch that’,” the father-of-two, 31, told 9news.com.au.

Kristoffer Green was holding an umbrella when he was struck by lightning back in 2015.
Kristoffer Green was holding an umbrella when he was struck by lightning back in 2015. (9News)
Green thought nothing more than the storm until they were leaving the medical center in the pouring rain.

“I was helping my wife get my daughter in the backseat of the car and I was holding an umbrella,” Green said.

“The umbrella had a wooden handle, but the tip of my right index finger was resting on the metal pole in the center.”

Green said he remembers almost nothing of the moment the lightning bolt struck, hitting the metal top of his umbrella, traveling down its shaft and up his index finger into his arm.

“It was just like a blinding light and then I blacked out,” he said.

“My wife said I just simply collapsed.”

Thinking fast, Green’s wife raced into the medical center to get help from staff.

“When I woke up in the medical center my wife was crying over me and I was just completely shocked. I had no idea where I was or what had happened,” he said.

Medical center staff had hooked Green up to a monitor, which showed his heart was racing “a million miles an hour”, he said.

The young dad, who was 24 at the time, was taken by ambulance to Ipswich hospital for monitoring before being sent home the next day.

Every year, around five to ten Australians are killed by lightning strikes and 100 injuries are reported, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.

Salt in sea spray could be the reason lightning activity seems more intense over land than sea, a new study has claimed.
Bolts of lightning during a storm in Sydney. (SMH/Nick Moir)

Green is one of the lucky majority to survive a lightning strike.

But the effects, both physical and psychological, would linger for him.

For days after the strike, Green said his right arm would not stop tingling.

Green went from liking storms and taking pleasure in watching the lightning dance across the sky, to having an extreme aversion to the weather phenomenon.

“If there was a storm, I would get stressed and have heart palpitations,” he said.

Green claims he even developed a sort of internal barometer of his own, which alerted him if a storm was approaching.

“For a few years after the strike, my right arm – where the lightning went through – would tingle and start to hurt before a storm was overhead.

“I sometimes even still do it. I’ll say to my wife, ‘There’s a storm coming, hun’ and sure enough, a few hours later, there’s a storm coming in.”

Smells of ‘burning flesh and hair’

Far North Queensland man Sol Daley was out on the front verandah watching a storm on his rural property in Innisfail in 2016 when he was hit by a lightning bolt.

“My partner at the time was in the front yard moving pot plants around,” he said.

“Funnily enough, I said to her, ‘Get out of there because there’s lightning about’.

“As she stepped on the verandah, ‘bang’, the lightning hit.”

Sol Daley was hit by lightning at his property in Innisfail, northern Queensland, in 2016.
Sol Daley was hit by lightning at his property in Innisfail, northern Queensland, in 2016. (Facebook)

Daley was sitting on an aluminum chair.

“It was like a big blue finger and it came across, went through my arm and came out my foot,” he said.

“All I remember was the incredible bang, the flash of light and it was like someone was trying to kick their way out of my chest and between my legs.

“There was a smell of burning flesh and burning hair.”

Daley spent a day at Innisfail Hospital before being sent home.

But it soon became apparent that his recovery would not be straightforward.

“The next day I woke up, and I felt sort of felt okay, but when I went to speak, I couldn’t. My words were all mixed up like I had a stroke,” he said.

Daley said his speech issues continued for about a month, along with other symptoms.

“I was getting scrambled thoughts and I used to get the shakes, I called it the electric boogaloo.”

Lightning does strike twice

Julie Martineau, from Iowa in the US, is living proof that the old idiom “lightning doesn’t strike twice” has no basis in fact.

The first time Martineau was hit was back in 1999 when she was living in a mobile home.

It was the evening, a storm had blown up and she was doing the laundry.

As Martineau put her hand on the clothes dryer door, a bolt of lightning missed a large tree overhanging her mobile home and shot down the wiring connected to the dryer.

The electric current entered Martineau’s right hand, traveled across her chest and exited through her left hand.

This photo of a lightning strike survivor shows the feathered markings left on his body by the electrical charge.
This photo of a lightning strike survivor shows the feathered markings left on his body by the electrical charge. (Massachusetts Medical Society)

“I remember everything,” she said.

“I remember the bolt striking, I remember the crackle of the bolt coming down and feeling like time stopped.

“I could hear my heart beating and counting the heartbeats and thinking ‘Holy crow, there’s something really wrong’ and trying to let go of the dryer and I couldn’t let go, the current was holding me in place.”

Martineau said for months after the lightning strike she suffered a range of debilitating health effects, some of which still plague her today.

“I had a lot of pain, mainly in my arms. There was some confusion, some irritability, some personality changes, but the big one was that I couldn’t sleep.”

Just over a year later, in October 2000, Martineau had moved from her mobile home after buying a house.

It was night-time and a storm was raging outside.

“I was asleep, lying in a waterbed and somehow a bolt came in through the second-storey window,” she said.

“My bed was maybe (a few meters) from the window and the bolt came in through the window and basically flashed over the bladder for the waterbed.

“It kind of flashed over that and caught me in the process, I was collateral damage.”

Bluff Knoll in the Stirling Range in SW Western Australia was transformed into a winter wonderland.

Rare flurry of snow dusts Western Australia

Martineau has since started up a Facebook support group for lightning strike survivors.

A Native American, Martineau said she sought answers during a traditional ceremony about her two painful lightning experiences and had found peace in the belief the spirits had chosen her.

How to keep safe in a storm

Every day, there are as many as 8 million lightning strikes globally, with around 44 strikes recorded per second at any one time.

In Australia, Darwin is the thunderstorm capital, with over 80 thunderstorm days per year.

So what can you do to keep safe during a storm? Here are some of the Bureau of Meteorology’s top tips:

  • Stay inside and shelter well clear of windows, doors and skylights

  • Don’t use a landline telephone during a thunderstorm

  • Avoid touching brick or concrete, or standing barefoot on concrete or tiled floors; and

  • Keep checking the Bureau’s website or app and listen to your local radio station for storm warnings and updates.

For Davey, it all comes down to taking care and using common sense.

“Don’t think you’re too good and that it’s not going to happen because it can happen in a heartbeat,” he said.

Categories
Technology

A Single Flaw Broke Every Layer of Security in MacOS

Every time you shut down your Mac, a pop-up appears: “Are you sure you want to shut down your computer now?” Nestled under the prompt is another option most of us likely to overlook: the choice to reopen the apps and windows you have open now when your machine is turned back on. Researchers have now found a way to exploit a vulnerability in this “saved state” feature—and it can be used to break the key layers of Apple’s security protections.

The vulnerability, which is susceptible to a process injection attack to break macOS security, could allow an attacker to read every file on a Mac or take control of the webcam, says Thijs Alkemade, a security researcher at Netherlands-based cybersecurity firm Computest who found the flaw. “It’s basically one vulnerability that could be applied to three different locations,” he says.

After deploying the initial attack against the saved state feature, Alkemade was able to move through other parts of the Apple ecosystem: first escaping the macOS sandbox, which is designed to limit successful hacks to one app, and then bypassing the System Integrity Protection (SIP ), a key defense designed to stop authorized code from accessing sensitive files on a Mac.

Alkemade—who is presenting the work at the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas this week—first found the vulnerability in December 2020 and reported the issue to Apple through its bug bounty scheme. He was paid a “pretty nice” reward for the research, he says, although he refuses to detail how much. Since then Apple has issued two updates to fix the flaw, first in April 2021 and again in October 2021.

When asked about the flaw, Apple said it did not have any comment prior to Alkemade’s presentation. The company’s two public updates about the vulnerability are light on detail, but they say the issues could allow malicious apps to leak sensitive user information and escalate privileges for an attacker to move through a system.

Apple’s changes can also be seen in Xcode, the company’s development workspace for app creators, a blog post describing the attack from Alkemade says. The researcher says that while Apple fixed the issue for Macs running the Monterey operating system, which was released in October 2021, the previous versions of macOS are still vulnerable to the attack.

There are multiple steps to successfully launching the attack, but fundamentally they come back to the initial process injection vulnerability. Process injection attacks allow hackers to inject code into a device and run code in a way that’s different from what was originally intended.

The attacks are not uncommon. “It’s quite often possible to find the process injection vulnerability in a specific application,” Alkemade says. “But to have one that’s so universally applicable is a very rare find,” he says.

The vulnerability Alkemade found is in a “serialized” object in the saved state system, which saves the apps and windows you have open when you shut down a Mac. This saved state system can also run while a Mac is in use, in a process called App Nap.

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Entertainment

Melbourne socialite, fashion icon and philanthropist Lillian Frank dies aged 92

Melbourne socialite and philanthropist Lillian Frank is being remembered for her contribution to the city’s life and culture, after her death aged 92.

Ms Frank’s daughter, Jackie Frank, announced the news on social media, saying her family had lost its “heart and soul” on Friday night.

“She lived life to the max, without any regrets and was forever grateful,” Ms Frank said.

“She used her flamboyant personality and social standing for good, raising millions and millions for charity.

“She had a very public life and I was often asked what’s it like growing up with Lillian Frank as your mum?

“My answer, to us she was mum, to my kids’ nani and the most spectacular selfless human being in the world with the biggest heart.”

Lillian Frank smiles, resting her head on one hand as she sits in a restaurant.
Lillian Frank’s daughter says her mother lived life through “rose colored glasses” and always saw the good in people.(Instagram)

Lillian Frank was born in Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), before her family fled during the Japanese invasion of World War II.

Her daughter wrote that despite the adversity she faced, “she saw the good in everyone and everything.”

Lillian Frank settled in Melbourne in the 1950s, establishing her Toorak hairdressing salon and becoming highly active in the city’s social scene.

She was the hair stylist for Jean Shrimpton when the English model famously wore a white mini-dress to the Melbourne races in 1965.

A black-and-white photograph of Jean Shrimpton in a white minidress at the races.
Lillian Frank styled the hair of Jean Shrimpton when the model broke with fashion conventions to wear a mini-dress to the Melbourne Spring Carnival in the 1960s.(fashion)

Ms Frank continued to sit as a judge for the Melbourne racing season’s fashion events for several years.

A philanthropist, Ms Frank was made a Member of the Order of Australia and a Member of the Order of the British Empire for her charity and community work.

‘A big loss to Melbourne’

Food critic and weekend ABC broadcaster Matt Preston recalled her “real lust for life” and adventure.

“[She was] such a feature of Melbourne when I started writing about food, she was a great person to sit with and eat with,” he said.

“It’s sad news and my thoughts go out to all the family and everyone who knew her.

“She’s a big loss to Melbourne.”

Fashion designer Alex Perry was among those to pay tribute on social media, writing the late philanthropist would be “shining down” forever.

Fellow designer Toni Maticevski remembered her as a “bloody amazing woman” who brought “sparkle and smiles to everyone”.

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Categories
Australia

Mindful matchbox art helps Bundaberg’s Marlies Oakley process floods and COVID

A south-east Queensland artist has been hunting for matchboxes — but the only fire she is interested in lighting is a creative spark.

Sharks leaping into a waterspout, penguins mingling with nuns and a space shuttle gliding over the Sydney Opera House show some of the stories inside Marlies Oakley’s mind.

The German-born Bundaberg woman creates miniature stories inside matchboxes using a cut and paste collage technique, then joins the boxes together to create large voyeuristic artworks.

A woman leans against an artwork of empty matchboxes filled with collage stories.
Individual stories contained in the matchboxes symbolize disconnect and isolation.(ABC Wide Bay: Brad Marsellos)

“Every matchbox is different,” Ms Oakley said.

“They consist of a background, with a few other elements within the matchbox for a 3D format. All collage and hand cut.”

Ms Oakley began working with collage after her home and business were devastated by the 2013 Bundaberg floods.

Her early works involved cutting postage stamps to create large-scale portraits and the process helped calm her mind.

A portrait of Donald Trump created from postage stamps.
Ms Oakley’s early collage work involved portraits created from postage stamps.(Supplied: Marlies Oakley)

Working with matchboxes was triggered by a more recent stress — COVID-19 lockdowns.

“A couple of years ago, I got a big box of matches at the Tender Centre,” Ms Oakley said.

“I forgot about them, but then I opened them up during COVID lockdown and I thought, ‘Oh, what can I do with them?’ and I started to collage them.”

Each matchbox contains its own “weird” or “quirky” tiny tale and when linked they represent the common feelings of isolation and disconnection during lockdowns.

“They are all their own stories because during COVID we have all got sort of inside our own homes and cocoons and nobody went out,” she said.

Matchboxes filled with small pictures pasted inside.
Each matchbox has a background, with images pasted to form an individual story.(ABC Wide Bay: Brad Marsellos)

“We started to think inside our own box.

“I love them all, I just giggle when I see them.”

Matchboxes strike interest

The artworks have captured the attention of galleries, with Ms Oakley claiming several art prizes for her works including the prestigious Martin Hanson Memorial Art Award and ‘Highly Commended’ Lethbridge Gallery Small Art Award, two years in a row.

Her 2022 entry ‘Thinking Inside the Box (cubed)’ is 462 matchbox stories linked to form a cube.

The cube took Ms Oakley about a week to create, in a process she describes as a “memory game” where she surrounded herself with images she had cut.

Creating the stories is a mindful practice for Ms Oakley but it is cutting the small images from op-shop books and magazines that has been the most helpful in calming her mind.

A woman holds a large box that is an artwork featuring matchboxes with miniature collages.
Marlies Oakley with her cube telling 462 collage stories.(ABC Wide Bay: Brad Marsellos)

“For hours I’m just cutting things out,” Ms Oakley said.

“Even if I don’t glue in a day, every night, even in front of the telly, I’m cutting things out — it’s part of my life now.

“I had a holiday for three weeks and I didn’t do it and at the end I thought, ‘I need it, I miss it’. I go into my own little world and cut and glue.”

An expensive venture

Sourcing the matchboxes is one of the only downsides of Ms Oakley’s creations, with many shops no longer stocking them.

And they are not cheap.

“It’s quite expensive to find the old matchboxes,” Ms Oakley said.

“But I found a really good supply at a major hardware store — I don’t know if they use them for barbecues or whatever, but you can still find them.”

She removes the matches and places them into a large jar, which she may use in an artwork in the future.

Ms Oakley’s artwork ‘Thinking Inside the Box (cubed)’ is currently on display the Bundaberg Regional Art Gallery as part of the HERE + now 2022 exhibition, which runs until November 13.

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Categories
Technology

Xbox, PlayStation and the new normal subscription

It’s been more than a month since PlayStation Plus Premium went live, cementing the video game industry’s shift toward cloud gaming and subscriptions. PlayStation’s game-streaming scheme is competing directly with Xbox Game Pass, the service that provided the concept by earning more than 25 million subscribers over the past five years, leveraging Microsoft’s massive cloud network.

As the two main console manufacturers and the owners of huge franchises, Sony and Microsoft set the stage for the rest of the video game marketplace, and the transition to streaming subscriptions is no different. Here we’ll break down what they’re each offering and take a look at the industry from the perspective of the cloud.

PlayStation Plus has three tiers: Essential, Extra and Premium. Essential costs $10 a month or $60 a year, and it’s basically the PlayStation Plus you’re used to, offering three games to download each month, access to online multiplayer features, cloud storage and discounts. PS Plus Extra costs $15 a month or $100 a year, and has everything in the Essential tier plus a library of up to 400 downloadable PS4 and PS5 games.

PS Plus Premium costs $18 a month or $120 a year, and adds up to 340 games from past PlayStation consoles. This is also the tier that unlocks cloud gaming, supporting more than 700 titles and adding the ability to stream or download games from older eras. This tier actually replaces PlayStation Now, Sony’s often-underwhelming cloud gaming service that launched on PS4. With PS Plus Premium, cloud gaming is available on PS4, PS5 and PC, but not on mobile devices.

PSPlus

PSPlus

That’s one difference between Sony and Microsoft’s approach, as Xbox titles are playable on mobile devices as well as consoles and PC. But the bigger distinction is the type of games that are available on each network. Sony doesn’t plan on adding big exclusive games like forspoken or God of War Ragnarok to Plus on day one, meaning subscribers will have to buy these titles separately if they want to play right away. On the Xbox side of things, Game Pass Ultimate offers a streaming library of more than 300 titles, and it includes big first-party drops like halo-infinite on release day. That’s significant, considering Xbox owns influential studios including Bethesda and id Software, and it’s in the process of acquiring Activision Blizzard. Xbox offering the next Doom or Elder Scrolls on day one is a bigger draw than Sony offering strayeven if Stray is the most adorable game of the year.

Xbox has been the loudest proponent of cloud gaming in the console space, and with the support of a robust network from Microsoft and years of public testing, Game Pass has set the standard when it comes to subscription services. Game Pass has PC-only and console-only tiers providing access to a library of more than 300 downloadable games for $10 a month, while Game Pass Ultimate unlocks cloud play on PC, mobile and Xbox consoles for $15 a month. Assuming you pay for PS Plus Premium up-front, this puts the annual price of Game Pass Ultimate ahead of Premium by $60 – which is roughly what it’ll cost PlayStation subscribers to buy one of those first-party Sony games, so it all shakes out in the end.

Microsoft Xbox Series S

Microsoft Xbox Series S

Xbox has been steadily building the foundation for an industry that isn’t limited by hardware, relying on cloud gaming rather than console generations, while Sony still seems married to the idea of ​​hardware cycles and more traditional game sales. Despite being there first with PlayStation Now, when it comes to streaming, Sony is playing catch-up to Microsoft, but it still has plenty to offer in the form of classic games and new exclusives. Cloud play is here to stay and it’s possible that other services like Steam and the Epic Games Store will follow Xbox and PlayStation’s lead in the coming years. Nintendo is bringing up the rear in terms of online, cloud, and anything resembling 21st century technology, but it has an unrivaled back catalog and Switch Online unlocks a number of NES, SNES and N64 games.

This isn’t about any one service being better than the others. This is about adjusting to the new normal for video games, where your money won’t be spent on a $60 disc or a discrete download code, but will instead be spread among streaming services with individual purchases on the side. We’re used to this idea when it comes to TV and movies, and streaming technology is almost reliable enough to make it the standard in gaming.

These are the new calculations we’ll be running each month: Do I value Game Pass Ultimate over Netflix? Or PS Plus Premium over Spotify? New subscription services pop up almost weekly; something’s gotta give.

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Technology

$AU98,252 Pokémon Card Thief Hid Them At Mum’s House

A warehouse worker for one of the UK’s biggest collectable card-selling companies was found guilty last week of stealing over $US70,000 ($97,174) of Pokemon cards, and then hide them in…his mum’s house.

Over the last few years, Pokémon cards have become a hot commodity, with specific cards fetching extraordinary prices at auction. Even recently out-of-print card packs can fetch large numbers, and this has led to an increasing number of stories about theft of the valuable cardboard. The Pokémon Company has attempted to address this by printing billions more cards, but it seems they remain a strong temptation to thieves.

Kyriacos Christou worked in the warehouse for Magic Madhouse Ltd, an online store for CCG and tabletop gaming, based in Enfield, North London. Over a series of months, he stole an increasing number of Pokemon cards, becoming ever more brazen in his thefts, Magic Madhouse’s owner Michael Duke told Kotaku.

“He would take cards out of boxes, and put them in his pocket, Duke explained. “We didn’t have any CCTV in the premises at the time, so if he was isolated he was using it as an opportunity to grab things.” This included individual cards, booster packs, and booster boxes, the latter worth anything from $US100 ($139) to $US1,000 ($1,388). “I have aimed at the higher rarity stuff, a lot of promotional stuff. We were in the process of re-cataloguing our cards, and we were halfway through Pokemon, so we hadn’t quite finished cataloging the whole range. Initially, he was aiming at cards we hadn’t finished cataloguing.”

ReadMore: The Top 12 Most Valuable Pokémon Cards In History

But as time went on, Christou became less careful, and starting stealing cards for which they had specific records. “The stuff that was going missing was stuff that was out of print,” Duke detailed to Kotaku. “Evolutions was going missing, they’re almost four-digits a box.”

Once the thefts were getting noticed, Duke says he was able to pinpoint specific things that were going missing, and started looking on eBay for the missing items. “I stumbled across this eBay store,” he told us, “and looking what the person had up for sale, and looking for things [missing from] our inventory, and I found discrepancy after discrepancy.” Duke went on to work out which areas of the warehouse were seeing the highest amount of theft, and set up secret cameras. “Less than twelve hours later, I caught the person stealing.”

Photo: KotakuPhoto: Kotaku

The court case, originally reported by The Daily Star, revealed that Christou’s eBay store had sold one booster box for £520 ($US630 ($875)), as well as a collection of 22 rare holos for £450 ($US545 ($757)). A single first-edition Lugia went for $US1,200 ($1,666).

All the cards were being kept in Christou’s mother’s house, which was also shared by Christou’s brother, a Pokemon YouTuber. According to the Starthere were over half a million Pokemon cards in the house. Duke said the police told him, “There were cards everywhere, all over the house. In the living room, kitchen, everywhere.” This complicated things, because it made it hard for the police to know which cards were stolen, and which belonged to his brother. So the police focused on Christou’s bedroom and the cards found there.

After pleading guilty, 28-year-old Christou was given a 16-month suspended sentence, meaning he’s spared jail time on the condition that he re-pays £6,000 ($US7,270 ($10,092)) within 28 days of the sentencing, as well as completing 175 hours of unpaid work, and doesn’t reoffend for the next two years. He also went to some effort to return cards he hadn’t yet sold, including the rarest stolen item, one of 32 cards given to winners during a World Championship Pokemon game. This, apparently, swayed the judge away from giving him immediate jail time. This is something Duke says he’s happy with. “It was a massive weight off my shoulders,” he told us. “I’ve been rewarded some compensation for losses. I’ve managed to secure a bunch of cards back. And while not being anywhere near perfect, it’s probably the best I could have hoped for.”

This doesn’t mean Duke came out even. When I asked how much he thinks he lost, he replied, “25, maybe £30,000.” ($36,353 ($50,465)). But it seems to be the emotional toll that has worse affected the business owner. “I’m doing better now,” he told Kotaku. “For several weeks after, it affected me quite badly. I wasn’t able to focus, I wasn’t able to sleep properly, I had bad trust issues. Then I thought I got better, but I realized I was suffering from other things as well. I’ve been using the Apple Health app on my phone a lot more recently, and I can start to see all the trends. ‘Ah, that’s when this started happening. And that’s when Este started happening.’ It’s honestly been a real struggle.”

With the court case over, and now the warehouse has security cameras and other measures in place to prevent something similar from happening again, Michael Duke says he hopes to find some closure.

Given Magic Madhouse is an officially recommended reseller by PokemonI figured it would be a good idea to also ask Duke if he thought the recent crazy prices for Pokemon cards would continue. “I think it’s settled down now,” he explains. “The recent craze died off at the start of this year. Now there’s a remarkable disparity, some people selling a card for £150, others selling it for £500. It’s harder to price cards, but I think you find the same in a lot of collectable markets.”

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Technology

Out Of Range Secrets And Wii Play

Video: Out of Range Secrets and Wii Play

Wii Play Presents many mysteries beyond its limits. Among other things, the game reveals that the Earth is indeed flat and therefore has a bill! Okay, maybe a 3D object isn’t needed at the time, so we’ll let that slide.

Wii Play There is a collection of minigames for the Nintendo Wii. in Europe, Australia and Japan Wii Play Released on the same day as the console. However, it was only released in the United States in February 2007. At the time, it was sold with the Wii remote control and was intended to help learn how to use the remote control. Wii Play Supports My function, which allows you to play with your own My avatar. hear Wii PlayMotion Was released in 2011 – also for Nintendo Wii.

In the following YouTube video you can see which secrets are in the shadows Wii Play Current Boundary Break episodes seen in:

Wii Play It consists of nine mini-games (also called levels in the game) that can be played alone or in pairs. When you first start the game, only one of these mini-games is available. After playing one, the other will be unlocked (regardless of success) until all nine are unlocked. In single player mode you can get a prize (Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum prizes) for each mini game, which will be saved under the respective Mi. When you do, you’ll receive a message on the Wii menu stating the specific rank for the minigame. For example, Panzerkiste has the rank of private first class. There are the following mini-games:

  • shooting festival
    • It’s about knocking down objects in a corn field. There are five rounds.
  • my mob
    • Mii avatars run around and you have to do z. B. Find twins or mismatched Miis within the time limit.
  • table tennis
    • A table tennis simulation where you compete against a computer opponent.
  • my posenspiel
    • The Mi Avatar can have three different poses that you have to select quickly and then move the Mi to the right place. The place where the MI should be placed is a bubble; Bubbles fly through the screen and must not land in the water.
  • ice hockey
    • An air hockey simulation like table tennis, where you play against a computer opponent.
  • billiards
    • This is billiards simulation.
  • fishing
    • Here you have to catch fish that fetch different points. There is a bonus fish that gives a double score.
  • wild kuhu
    • This is a racing game. A cow is taken to a field and has to avoid the scarecrow to get points.
  • armor box
    • Here you have to shoot at other tanks as a battle tank and you can lay landmines. Alternatively, the game can also be played with nunchucks. The game initially expands to more than 20 missions. Once you complete it, you can play until the 100th mission. There are different types of enemy tanks. You start the game with three lives and after every five missions you get an extra effort.

do you have it Wii Play Then played on Nintendo Wii? Were there any exciting discoveries in the video that you would like to share in the comments section below?

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Hamish and Andy admit they’re scared they’ll be canceled over old podcasts

Hamish Blake and Andy Lee share fears that they may be CANCELED over their problematic old podcast episodes: ‘It could finish our careers’

They’re one of Australia’s favorite comedy duos with nearly 20 years in the business.

But Hamish Blake and Andy Lee have admitted they’re scared their careers may end over politically incorrect things that they said on old podcast episodes.

Speaking to Nova’s Ben and Liam, Andy, 41, said he would be canceled for the jokes he made in the early noughties if he said them today.

Hamish Blake and Andy Lee have admitted they're scared their careers may end over politically incorrect things that they said on old podcast episodes

Hamish Blake and Andy Lee have admitted they’re scared their careers may end over politically incorrect things that they said on old podcast episodes

‘There are so many things that would cancel Hamish and I,’ he admitted.

‘I promise you – because Hamish and I do another podcast called The Remembering Project where we listen back – there are things we listen back to and go “nah, we’re not going to say that in this day and age.”

‘Someone can trawl through and if they really want to, they can get their knives out and finish our careers.’

Speaking to Nova's Ben and Liam , Andy, 41, said he would be canceled for the jokes he made in the early noughties if he said them today

Speaking to Nova’s Ben and Liam , Andy, 41, said he would be canceled for the jokes he made in the early noughties if he said them today

Nova host Liam said he listened to an old episode from 2006 on the way to the studio ahead of the interview with Andy.

‘Hamish has been turkey slapped on the Hamish and Andy show!’ Andy can be heard laughing in the clip.

‘What are we doing!’ laughed Lee. ‘I can’t even remember doing it, I’ve blocked it out of my mind!’

‘The context here – that I think is important – is that you used a slice of turkey to slap him in the face,’ Liam said.

Hamish and Andy are one of Australia's favorite comedy duos with nearly 20 years in the business

Hamish and Andy are one of Australia’s favorite comedy duos with nearly 20 years in the business

It comes as Andy Lee’s hit game show The Hundred returned for a third season this week.

Popular guests will include comedians Tom Gleeson, Tommy Little, Nazeem Hussain and Luke McGregor, Love Island host Sophie Monk, Hamish Blake, Nath Valvo, Susie Youseff, Lizzy Hoo and more.

They will all join Andy, 41, panelist Mike Goldstein and 100 everyday Aussies who Zoom in every week to share their thoughts.

It comes as Andy Lee's hit game show The Hundred returned for a third season this week

It comes as Andy Lee’s hit game show The Hundred returned for a third season this week

‘I asked The Hundred whether they wanted another season of the show and it was a resounding “yes”. You have to trust the data,’ Andy said in a statement to TV Blackbox.

‘I also asked them whether they wanted Gold Logie winner Hamish Blake to replace me as host and I’ve decided to keep their answer confidential.

‘Some data you can’t trust. I’ll be back for season three.’

The show’s format centers around Lee posing questions to three guest panellists, who battle it out to determine who knows Australia best.

'I asked The Hundred whether they wanted another season of the show and it was a resounding "And it is".  You have to trust the data,' Andy said in a statement to TV Blackbox

‘I asked The Hundred whether they wanted another season of the show and it was a resounding “yes”. You have to trust the data,’ Andy said in a statement to TV Blackbox

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