Categories
Australia

Guy caps horror fortnight with another damaging revelation

On Monday, Guy’s media team, led by director of communications Lee Anderson, wanted the opposition leader to appear on 3AW’s Drive show with Tom Elliott. They thought it was the best way to execute their strategy: respond to Elliott’s questions without giving too much away and move on to other topics. Instead, Guy became stuck. He flailed and struggled, unable to answer the basic questions of him when he found out about the plan, and whether he thought it was a bad idea.

The interview became a flashpoint for a fight between new chief of staff Nick McGowan and Anderson. McGowan effectively wanted to play a greater role in the media strategy; Anderson viewed that as a blow to his seniority, according to Liberal sources who asked to remain anonymous for employment reasons.

By Wednesday, news broke that Anderson had quit after a disagreement. Then on Thursday, it was revealed that Guy’s office manager, Simone Cencie, was also leaving. There are conflicting accounts over whether she quit or was forced to resign.

On Friday, the Victorian electoral commissioner requested documents. The commission has the power under the Electoral Act to compel documents to be handed over and require people to attend interviews with inspectors as part of an investigation into a potential breach of donations law. Failure to comply is punishable by up to $37,000 in fines.

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A spokeswoman for the commission said: “We are not in a position to allege any wrongdoing, but we would welcome anyone who wishes to come forward and provide us with information that they have regarding the matters raised to do so.”

Guy, meanwhile, continued to dig in: “I won’t take lectures from a government that hindered the police [investigating the so-called red shirts rort]who hindered the corruption commission, who took the Ombudsman to legal proceedings [to prevent her from investigating].”

Last week, he told journalists he had met Munz just “a couple of times.

“I think a lot of people [have met Munz]but I certainly haven’t had this conversation [soliciting funds for Catlin’s private business] with him.”

Some Liberals have described the past fortnight as a “shambles” and the Coalition’s electoral prospects as unsalvageable. It’s not that they expect to lose an election over the donor scandal, but they are struggling to get cut-through while being bogged down in questions over an internal crisis just three months out from the election they were hoping to fight on integrity grounds.

Opposition MPs say very few people are raising the issue with them, and the scandal, they say, pales in comparison to those survived by the Andrews government, which rorted almost $400,000 in taxpayer funds at the 2014 election, was embroiled in a branch stacking investigation that found Labor ministers misused public funds for party-political purposes and is the subject of an anti-corruption probe into a 2016 firefighters deal.

Credit:Matt Golding

Monash University politics lecturer Dr Zareh Ghazarian said the latest crisis may not be the issue that stops Victorians voting for the Liberal Party on November 26, but it starves it of oxygen and being able to lay out its agenda.

“This is not the sort of distraction an opposition and opposition leader needs going into an election campaign,” Ghazarian said. “Every time they’re greeted by the media, the top thing they must talk about is their internal business.”

Associate Professor Paul Strangio, also from Monash, said that while he agreed the donor scandal would not be the number one issue for the public, the integrity questions faced by both major parties was a gift to teal independents expected to contest the state election after their success at the federal poll.

“They’re going to now be able to use integrity as a stick to beat over the head of both major parties,” Strangio said.

Mitch Catlin, pictured in the Lexus marquee on Derby Day, 2018.

Mitch Catlin, pictured in the Lexus marquee on Derby Day, 2018.Credit:jesse marlow

Politicians and party members tend to be jittery this close to the election and some Liberals are discussing whether a leadership challenge 100 days out from polling day is a riskier strategy than placing their faith in the struggling Guy.

A leadership challenge so close to the election is complicated by a realignment of subgroups within the parliamentary party. When Guy overthrew Michael O’Brien in September, he did so with the backing of Brad Battin (who mounted an unsuccessful coup early last year) and his supporters Richard Riordan, Ryan Smith and Nick Wakeling.

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Since then, Guy has lost key backers, including Tim Smith. Battin, Ryan Smith and Riordan are likely to emerge as contenders for the leadership, making it difficult to cobble together a coalition to spill the top job before the election.

O’Brien is telling colleagues he has no interest in coming back as leader now, but it is believed he could put his hand up after the election. If John Pesutto wins the seat of Hawthorn, he would contest any leadership ballot, as would Louise Staley, according to Liberal MPs. Others have also suggested Matthew Bach could be a potential contender.

“There’s been a bit of a paradigm that’s gone on since 2010 and the leadership guard has been given more than a fair go to run the show,” one Liberal said about a changing of the guard after the election. “If the people of Victoria don’t want us again, things need to change.”

Most Liberal MPs are Adamant Guy will take them to the election, and say they have a duty of responsibility to Victorians to fight Labor – not themselves. Not one spoken to by The Age has suggested they had been called by colleagues canvassing support.

But few of the party faithful are now convinced the Liberals can now offer the state a serious alternative in November. They are questioning why the opposition has not cauterized the donor issue by rolling out major policies.

“It’s because there is no strategy; there is no in-case-of-emergency-break-glass policy options,” said one Liberal source speaking on the condition of anonymity.

New state Liberal chief of staff Nick McGowan (left), seen here with Opposition Leader Matthew Guy in 2018.

New state Liberal chief of staff Nick McGowan (left), seen here with Opposition Leader Matthew Guy in 2018.Credit:AAP

“Shadow cabinet is expecting to ride a wave of discontent and anger over the government, but that’s not how it works. Matthew is so convinced in his charm and political skills of him, there’s been no real policy work, and the last fortnight has just exposed that.

“And for two weeks now, they’re talking about themselves and talking to each other, and so focused on their own seats and their own leadership ambitions, that they’re again not focused on policy.”

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The appointment of McGowan as chief of staff has prompted further internal concerns. Staff who worked with him in the Baillieu government describe him as diligent with a good understanding of the Liberal Party, but some are concerned Guy’s former best man will be a “yes man”.

The danger is, they say, that “necessary but difficult conversations don’t take place and people walk away with assumptions on agreements when there may have been none”.

“Instead of surrounding himself with people who develop him and make him better, he surrounds himself with people who say yes and tell him what he wants to hear. That combination, with his desire for people to love him, is problematic, and that’s what’s happened over the last few weeks.”

With Annika Smethurst and Rachel Eddie

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Technology

Acer Aspire 5 (2022, A515-57-56UV) – Review 2022

The Acer Aspire name has always been a bit of smart branding, since the series is positioned as a better-than-average pick among budget laptops—a notebook you can afford, but with the features and performance you aspire to. It hasn’t always hit the mark, but the company has managed to produce solid economy choices year after year. The latest Aspire 5 (starts at $369.99; $599.99 as tested) offers a 12th Generation Intel processor and reasonable RAM and storage. It delivers pretty good performance and battery life, though as you’d expect, some features are kept basic for the sake of affordability.


The Design: Just the Fundamentals

For 2022, the 15.6-inch Aspire 5 line starts at $369.99 with an 11th Gen Core i3 laptop processor and Windows 11 Home in S mode. Our $599.99 model A515-57-56UV features a Core i5-1235U chip (two Performance cores, eight Efficient cores, 12 threads) with Intel Iris Xe integrated graphics, 16GB of memory, and a 512GB solid-state drive, as well as a full HD (1,920-by-1,080-pixel) non-touch display. It’s built to offer just-good-enough levels of quality in all but a few choice areas, and that’s reflected in the design, from the materials used to the connections and components inside.

Acer Aspire 5 (A515-57) keyboard

Measuring 0.7 by 14.3 by 9.4 inches and weighing 3.9 pounds, the Acer is far from featherweight, but it’s not too bulky to throw in a laptop bag or backpack. The Asus VivoBook 15 is a little trimmer at 0.78 by 14.1 by 9.1 inches and 3.75 pounds. The Aspire’s construction combines metal and plastic, with a uniform finish that makes it hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. The lid is covered in aluminum, but the rest of the chassis is fairly sturdy plastic. The laptop is large enough for a full-size keyboard with numeric keypad, though the latter has half-width keys.

The keyboard is backlit for visibility in dim rooms, and the tiled keys are reasonably comfortable to type on. The narrower keys of the keypad aren’t as comfortable, but any number pad is better than none if you’re doing a lot of data entry in spreadsheets. The touchpad is extra-wide, giving you a spacious surface for gesture controls as well as basic clicking and scrolling.

The Aspire 5 doesn’t skimp on connectivity, with plenty of ports that’ll free you from having to bring along a hub or adapter. On the laptop’s left side are three USB 3.2 ports (one Type-C and two Type-A), along with an HDMI video output and a compact Ethernet jack.

Acer Aspire 5 (A515-57) left ports

On the right, you’ll find a third USB-A port and a 3.5mm audio jack, plus a Kensington lock slot for physically securing the machine. Wi-Fi 6 handles your networking needs (assuming you don’t use the Ethernet port), and Bluetooth is available for wirelessly connecting headsets, keyboards, and mice.

Acer Aspire 5 (A515-57) right ports


No Feast for the Eyes and Ears

The built-in webcam is a bit pedestrian, meaning it’s your typical generic cam with 720p resolution and no face recognition support for Windows Hello logins. Nor is there a fingerprint reader, so you’ll be typing passwords the old-fashioned way.

The 1080p IPS screen is a little underwhelming in an era when higher-resolution and even 4K displays are offered on many laptops, but they’re not common at this price point, and full HD at least beats some ultra-cheap notebooks’ 1,366 by 768. The 15.6-inch size is adequate for everyday tasks like schoolwork, web browsing, and streaming videos and movies, but in this segment you shouldn’t expect dazzling brightness or better-than-bland colors. Touch screens are scarce in this price range, too.

Acer Aspire 5 (A515-57) front view

The Aspire 5 is outfitted with a pair of downward-facing speakers. The clarity of the sound isn’t bad, but the speakers are surprisingly quiet. Watching YouTube videos online, I had to crank the volume to the maximum to get adequate audio.


Testing the 2022 Aspire 5: Performance in Line With Price

For this review, we compared the Aspire 5 to other budget-friendly systems, ranging from the affordable Asus VivoBook 15 to the AMD-powered Lenovo IdeaPad 3 14 and Intel-based Lenovo IdeaPad Flex 5i 14, two of the best models in this price range that we’ve seen in the last year. We also included the Dell Inspiron 15 3000 and the Gateway 15.6-inch Ultra Slim, two rock-bottom budget machines with less-capable hardware and limited specs.

Our primary productivity test is UL’s PCMark 10, which simulates routine workloads with such everyday staples as word processing, spreadsheet analysis, web browsing, and videoconferencing. We also use PCMark 10’s Full System Drive test to assess the access time and throughput of the system’s boot drive. Geekbench 5 also simulates popular apps like PDF rendering and speech recognition, with a little more emphasis on processing power.

Two other CPU tests that stress all available cores and threads are Maxon’s Cinebench, which uses that company’s Cinema 4D engine to render a complex scene, and the open-source HandBrake, which we time as it encodes a 12-minute clip of 4K video ( the Blender Foundation short film Tears of Steel) to 1080p resolution. Our final productivity test is workstation vendor Puget Systems’ PugetBench for Photoshop, which uses the Creative Cloud 22 version of Adobe’s popular image editor to measure a PC’s suitability for multimedia and digital content creation.

The Aspire 5’s up-to-date Intel Core i5 CPU is well suited to everyday applications, whether in the classroom, home, or office. Our test unit handily beat the bottom-feeding Inspiron and even topped the capable IdeaPad Flex 5i 14 in most tests.

We test PCs’ graphics capabilities with two game-like animations a piece from two benchmark suites. UL’s 3DMark provides the DirectX 12 tests Night Raid (less challenging, suited for laptops with integrated graphics) and Time Spy (more demanding, suited for gaming rigs with discrete GPUs). GFXBench is a cross-platform GPU performance test that uses both low-level routines like texturing and high-level image rendering. Its 1440p Aztec Ruins and 1080p Car Chase subtests are rendered off-screen to accommodate different display resolutions.

Because the Aspire 5 relies on integrated graphics instead of an AMD or Nvidia dedicated GPU, it’s naturally limited in graphics performance. It’s fine for office productivity, streaming media, and even light photo editing, but if you’re looking to play the latest games, you’ll have to look elsewhere. That said, its graphics are quicker than those of most economy models, often leading the pack in our tests.

Finally, we test laptops’ battery life by looping a locally stored 720p video at 50% screen brightness and 100% audio volume, with Wi-Fi and keyboard backlighting turned off, until the system quits. We also use a Datacolor SpyderX Elite monitor calibration sensor and software to measure the screen’s coverage of popular color gamuts or palettes and its brightness in nits (candelas per square meter).

With an unplugged runtime of 11 and a half hours, the Acer shows pretty good stamina for the price. Its screen, however, didn’t wow us—it’s a typical economy panel with limited color reproduction and barely adequate brightness, falling just short of the 300 nits we consider a baseline, let alone the 400 nits we prefer. To be honest, however, you won’t find much better in this class.


Verdict: A Budget Compromise, But Not a Bad One

Made to tread the line between budget and midrange laptops, the Acer Aspire 5 has a tightrope to walk, balancing an affordable price and capable features. The latest version handles that balance fairly well, though there are some rough spots that are hard to ignore, like the lackluster display and missing biometric and touch-screen features. But on the whole, it delivers what the Aspire line has always promised, a better-than-bare-bones laptop for consumers on tight budgets.

Acer Aspire 5 (A515-57) back view

Whether you’re looking for performance that edges out other economy laptops or a port selection that lets you leave the hubs and dongles at home, the 2022 Aspire 5 hits those marks. It’s a strong option for a solid laptop that won’t cost you a fortune.

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Categories
Sports

North Melbourne Kangaroos, Jason Horne-Francis, contract, future, South Australian, homecoming, axed, teams, Brent Harvey, selection, teams, dropped, pick one, draft

Jason Horne-Francis’ failure to complete his “proper ice bath and recovery” is what led to his shock axing from the side to face Adelaide, 7NEWS has revealed.

Horne-Francis was left out of the Kangaroos’ line up for what would have been his first homecoming to play in front of family and friends since being snapped up with North’s first number one draft pick.

7NEWS journalist Mitch Cleary said the prized draft pick was omitted for “disobeying his coach” last weekend.

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“The star teenager was called out by interim coach Leigh Adams and senior players on Sunday for failing to complete his proper ice baths and recovery in front of their very eyes,” Cleary reported.

“I have spent this morning with a dozen teammates training in Melbourne (instead of traveling with the squad).”

He’ll now play in the VFL after failing to live up to the club’s “Monday to Friday” expectations.

With Horne-Francis putting off contract extension talks earlier this year, there’s fears the 18-year-old could be preparing to depart the ‘Roos at the end of 2023 – when his initial two-year draft deal expires.

But North Melbourne great Brent Harvey says the club will not be “held to ransom” by Horne-Francis’ uncertain future.

“I think there’s always a risk (when dropping him),” Harvey said on RSN on Friday.

“He’s going to have the spotlight on him because he’s the number one draft pick… (but) he hasn’t gone out and robbed a bank, he hasn’t done anything bad; teammates love him, staff love him, the coaches love him – he hasn’t done anything bad. This is just part of the development of a young boy to get his preparation right and everybody else. Not just Jason.

“The risk is there (that he departs)… we know the risk, everybody knows the right. Not just Jason. It could be draft pick number five, not number one and they’re from Adelaide or Perth – the going home factor is always going to be there. Same as a Perth club that drafts a Melbourne boy – it’s always going to be there.

“But you can’t get held to ransom for these little things. You’ve got to make sure your culture is number one and that’s what our coach is doing right now and I absolutely love it.”

McRae reiterates hope to re-sign De Goey | 00:36

The decision to ax Horne-Francis shocked the AFL community, with Fox Footy’s Nick Riewoldt labeling the move “strange”, while David King questioned the call given the teen would have motivation to perform in front of his support network.

Brownlow Medalist Gerard Healy even told 3AW’s sports day that Horne-Francis’ non-selection for the Crows game was “a bookend to a pretty disappointing season”.

But Harvey opened up on the decision to ax Horne-Francis, who was also left in the VFL for a week after returning from suspension earlier this season.

“There’s some stuff that we call Monday to Friday, it’s preparation stuff – you need to tick the boxes,” he said.

“This is not just about Jason … (Caretaker coach) Leigh Adams has got very good standards, I’ve got to be a little bit careful … but we’ve got players not playing in our team and I’ll name one right now : Kayne Turner.

“He would run through brick walls for every single one of his teammates and every single one of his supporters – he does everything right.

“If he’s not playing, he’s playing in the reserves at the minute, you’d want to be doing everything right to make sure you’re holding up your end of the bargain. We call that Monday to Friday and if you haven’t got your Monday to Friday in order, that’s just not good enough right now.

Koch keeps Hinkley for 2023! | 02:49

“Was it good enough in Round 3, Round 4, Round 5? Maybe.

“But with Leigh Adams in charge, the standards have gone to another level and players have to play their part. Monday to Friday is just as important as performing on game day for us.

“There’s not just one incident where we’ve just said (to Horne-Francis): ‘Nah, you’re not playing because of this’. It’s not that at all, everything comes into calculations, the form side of it, what he’s doing after stoppage. There’s so much that comes into it.”

Harvey, who played 432 games for the Roos and was a premiership winner in 1999, said the club needed to instill the best culture possible in Horne-Francis and the Kangaroos squad moving forward.

“The end of the day, we’ll always come back to what’s best for the football club and what’s best for the culture,” Harvey said.

Cripps free to play, ban overturned! | 00:35

“He’s 18 years old, there are going to be little mistakes along the way.

“Any draftee that comes is not perfect, they are never perfect… he’s come over from interstate, straight into an elite environment.

“Our job is to teach them. Then they’ve got to learn themselves.

“I think he’s done fantastic in his first year away from mum and dad.

“(But) if you compromise on your culture, things go pear shaped real quickly.”

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Categories
Technology

Researcher Hacks Starlink Terminal to Warn SpaceX of Flaws

SpaceX has launched more than 3,000 of its internet satellites to low Earth orbit.

SpaceX has launched more than 3,000 of its internet satellites to low Earth orbit.
illustration: GDAPHOTO (AP)

A researcher from Belgium created a $25 hacking tool that could glitch Starlink’s internet terminals, and he is reportedly going to make this tool available for others to copy. Lennert Wouters, a security researcher at KU Leuven, demonstrated how he was able to hack into Elon Musk’s satellite dishes at the Black Hat Security Conference being held this week in Las Vegas, Wired reported.

During his presentation at the conference on Wednesday, Wouters went through the hardware vulnerabilities that allowed him to access the Starlink satellite terminal and create his own custom code. “The widespread availability of Starlink User Terminals (UT) exposes them to hardware hackers and opens the door for an attacker to freely explore the network,” Wouters wrote in the description of Wednesday’s briefing.

SpaceX has launched a total of 3,009 satellites to low Earth orbit, building out a megaconstellation designed to beam down connectivity to even the most distant parts of the world. Starlink customers get a 19-inch wide Dishy McFlatface (a clever name bestowed upon the company’s satellite dish) to install on their homes, or even carry with them on the road.

In order to hack the Starlink dish, Wouters created a modchip, or a custom circuit board that can be attached to the satellite dish, according to Wired. The modchip was put together using off-the-shelf parts that cost about $25 in total, and Wouters has reportedly made the details of the modchip available for download on Github. The small device can be used to access McFlatface’s software, launching an attack that causes a glitch and opens up previously locked parts of the Starlink system. “Our attack results in an unfixable compromise of the Starlink [user terminal] and allows us to execute arbitrary code,” Wouters wrote. “The ability to obtain root access on the Starlink [user terminal] is a prerequisite to freely explore the Starlink network.”

Wouters has previously warned SpaceX of flaws in their system. SpaceX did respond by updating the system, but Wouters argues that the only sure way to avoid this attack is to create a new version of the main chip, Wired reported.

In the process of building out its Starlink constellation, SpaceX has made some enemies along the way that make it vulnerable to potential attacks. The use of Starlink satellites to provide connectivity in Ukraine has angered the Russian government, which allegedly launched a cyberattack against American satellite company Viasat in February. A military researcher from China has also expressed a desire to destroy Starlink satellites, publishing a paper in May on “soft and hard kill methods” to counteract any threat posed by the internet constellation.

And though it may seem like it, but Wouters doesn’t actually want to bring down Starlink, instead he hopes his research can serve as a warning to better fortify the satellite dishes.

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Categories
Sports

Bazzo back amid four changes

Young defender Rhett Bazzo will return to senior action and play in his first RAC Derby against Fremantle at Optus Stadium on Saturday.

While credited with a game when deployed as the medical substitute last week he did not manage to take the field but will start in the back pocket in this finals-shaping contest.

The inclusion of Bazzo is one of four changes the Eagles match committee has made with experienced defenders Jackson Nelson and Josh Rotham and forward Hugh Dixon returning to the line-up.

The Eagles were forced to make three changes following the retirement of champion forward Josh Kennedy, the suspension of star midfielder Tim Kelly and the absence of Willie Rioli, who is on personal leave.

Kennedy retired after 271 games, content with an eight-goal haul against Adelaide, while Kelly received a one-week ban for a dangerous tackle on Crows midfielder Sam Berry.

The selectors also left out developing tall Bailey Williams as they continue to experiment with the big man mix.

The presence of Rotham and Dixon offers the coaches box a couple of options as they look to support champion big man Nic Naitanui.

The match committee was again unable to select midfield ace Elliot Yeo (calf) or half-forward Jack Petruccelle (hamstring) because of injury.

While the Eagles cannot improve from their ladder position of 17th they could make life difficult for the finals-bound Dockers who are sizing up a top-four finish.

Categories
Australia

Australia’s education ministers agree to national plan to fix teacher shortages

Australia’s education ministers have decided to create a national plan to address the growing professor shortage of plaguing schools.

Teachers from across the country joined state and territory education ministers to talk about the “struggles and glories” the sector is facing.

“It’s gotten a lot, lot harder, lots of admin, the workload has quadrupled since the 90s,” teacher Livia Bolanca said.

Minister for Education Jason Clare speaks during the Teacher Workforce roundtable, at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 12 August 2022. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen
Minister for Education Jason Clare speaks during the Teacher Workforce roundtable, at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 12 August 2022. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen (The Sydney Morning Herald)

Teachers told ministers they feel overworked and underpaid.

“Remuneration has not matched the workload as it has intensified,” Bolanca said.

Federal education minister Jason Clare said the best outcome of today’s meeting was to create a national action plan by December.

“We want a national action plan prepared by the secretaries of our department, drawing on the expertise of the teachers, the unions, the Catholic schools and the independent schools,” Clare said.

“And to put that action plan together for us to tick off when we meet again in December.

“That’s it, in a nutshell, out of what we got today.

“Today was about listening to teachers, harvesting those good ideas, and now working on a plan we can implement to make a real difference.”

Minister for Education Jason Clare during a press conference after a Teacher Workforce roundtable, at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 12 August 2022. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen
Minister for Education Jason Clare during a press conference after a Teacher Workforce roundtable, at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 12 August 2022. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen (The Sydney Morning Herald)

Education department modeling predicts there will be 4000 fewer teaching graduates than needed by 2025.

Only half of teaching students on average are completing their degree.

Clare said some ideas ministers are considering include early practical experience, paid internships, better preparation for teaching reading and mathematics to students, and mentoring.

Most of these ideas apply to university students.

Minister for Education Jason Clare during a press conference after a Teacher Workforce roundtable, at Parliament House in Canberra on Friday 12 August 2022. fedpol Photo: Alex Ellinghausen
Clare said there is a limited budget to change teacher salaries. (The Sydney Morning Herald)

“We know the finishing pay is not high enough to attract some people or keep some people,” former education department secretary Lisa Paul said.

Clare acknowledged teachers should be paid more however there is a “limited budget” to do it.

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

Rare flurry of snow dusts Western Australia

Categories
Technology

Google Pixel Buds Pro Review: Truly Excellent Earbuds

If Apple’s AirPods Pro are the benchmark for measuring the quality of any new pair of wireless earbuds, then Google has them beat with its new Pixel Buds Pro. Not only do they sound better than Apple’s flagship earbuds, but they also cost $50 less, have better battery life , and come in cuter colors.

These earbuds work fine with iPhone devices, but their full suite of features shines through when you pair them with an Android device. For starters, they pair quickly. You can also easily connect them to multiple devices and swap between them, so if you have the buds in your ears while watching a movie on your laptop and a call comes through, you can just answer your phone without having to fiddle with anything. More importantly, these buds never fell out during my plodding runs, they feature wireless charging, and did I mention the cute egg-like case? What more could you need for podcasts and Beyoncé?

Form-Fitting Buds

The best part about the Pixel Buds Pro is how comfortably they fit in your ears. The medium-sized buds have a form-fitting peanut shape that sticks right in my medium-sized ear canals with ease, but never loses grip. I’ve tried to headbang these buggers out of my ears. I’ve taken them on 7-mile runs in the woods. I’ve showered with them in after said runs. They stay in there perfectly despite the lack of ear fins—they use the same standard silicone ear tips you’ll find on most earbuds, but the overall ergonomics just make them hug my ear holes.

The exterior of each bud comes in a few colors. My favorite is the tangerine orange (or what Google calls Coral), but my review unit was a discreet gray, which looks handsome but isn’t as fun. Frankly, part of the reason to get these instead of AirPods is the aesthetic difference between Apple’s monolithic white and Google’s playful pastels.

Google Pixel Buds Pro

Photography: Google

Using them is just as easy as using AirPods. The outside of each bud is touch-sensitive, with intuitive controls. Tap once to play or pause, twice to skip songs, and long-press to turn the active noise cancellation on or off, depending on whether you want to hear the world. I also like that swiping left or right adjusts the volume—oftentimes earbuds with touch sensors forgo volume controls for playback controls.

These buds are also plugged into Google Assistant, so you can shout “Hey Google” and demand it set timers or play a certain song. It’s useful for the few times I didn’t want to touch my phone, but it’s still a novelty in public, where you might not want to look like you’re yelling at yourself. To each their own, I guess.

Like the controls, the case the buds come in is smartly designed. It’s harder to put an earbud into the wrong slot, and I like how flat it lays on my wireless charging pad between listening sessions. It’s also just nice to hold. Like a little tick tock.

into the music

A single 11-mm dynamic driver inside each Pixel Buds Pro delivers a surprisingly robust soundstage, made possible in large part by Google’s excellent digital signal processing and noise canceling.

Music comes through with presence and personality, especially in the bass, which tends to have more punch and separation than what I’ve heard from prior Pixel Buds. While listening to my testing playlist, the midrange is the only place where the buds lose some definition. That’s to be expected when a single driver has to handle perfect bass response and shimmery highs (and does so well)—you tend to lose something, somewhere. Still, I’m glad Google’s engineers focused on the areas most people care about.

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Categories
Australia

Aboriginal man dies in custody at Port Phillip Prison in Melbourne, hours after hospital visit

An Aboriginal man has died in a Melbourne prison just hours after returning from hospital.

The ABC understands the 32-year-old man was taken to St Vincent’s Hospital on Wednesday morning for treatment.

He was then brought back to the maximum-security Port Phillip prison, where he died in the medical unit on Wednesday night.

A spokesperson from the Department of Justice and Community confirmed the man died on Wednesday.

“It is with great sorrow that Corrections Victoria acknowledges the passing of a prisoner at Port Phillip Prison,” the spokesperson said.

“As with all deaths in custody, the matter has been referred to the coroner, who will formally determine the cause of death.”

Premier Daniel Andrews said both the coroner and Corrections Victoria would conduct a full review into death.

A statement was posted to the Corrections Victoria website late on Friday afternoon, saying: “We recognize that all deaths in custody have impacts on family members, friends, victims and the broader Aboriginal community, and we’re working to ensure they are provided with the support they need.”

Victoria’s corrections system was heavily criticized during a recent inquest into the death of Aboriginal woman Veronica Nelson, who died alone in her cell despite repeatedly calling out for help.

A St Vincent’s spokesperson offered the hospital’s condolences and said it would comply with the coronial inquest.

Push for uniform services across Australia

Federal Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus told ABC Radio Melbourne he wanted all states to adopt uniform custody notification services.

A close up shot of Mark Dreyfus wearing a suit and tie.
Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus says all corrections centers are run by Australia’s states and territories.(AAP: Mick Tsikas)

He said national implementation of the support services would enable Aboriginal people in custody to speak to lawyers, family members and support services.

“We’ve made a commitment in the election to assist families with coronial inquiries with the hope that if these deaths in custody are examined, we will learn more about how they can be prevented,” he said.

In 1991, Australia’s Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody warned the arrest of Aboriginal people should be a last resort and that prison staff should be trained to recognize the signs of deteriorating health.

There have been more than 500 deaths in custody since the commission.

Co-chair of the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria Marcus Stewart said the figure showed that changes were long overdue.

“[It’s] 500 too many. I have no confidence that the system is working,” he said.

“I think the system is rotted and corroded to its core and we need systematic reform, structural reform.”

Marcus Stewart, Co-Chair of the First Peoples' Assembly of Victoria
Marcus Stewart says the First Peoples’ Assembly of Victoria is calling for a truth-telling process to address deaths in custody.(Supplied)

He said mechanisms such as the Yoorrook Justice Commission, a truth-telling process, needed to be put in place so treaty could deliver reforms.

Mr Stewart said he was in favor of Mr Dreyfus’ suggestions of national custody notification services.

“It’s a bottom line responsibility that the government should be doing as a normal practice, and it’s kind of disgraceful … that in 2022 we’re talking about that being introduced,” he said.

“We see you, we hear you and we notice the inaction you’re taking on Aboriginal deaths in custody.

“Step up and take responsibility.”

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Categories
Technology

What to Do if a Big Tech Company Steals Your Code

In 2016, cybersecurity pro Patrick Wardle heard a story that deeply disturbed him: cybercriminals were using malware to surreptitiously spy on people through their MacOS webcams and microphones. In one particularly unsettling case, a hacker had used a malware called “Fruitfly” to hijack the webcams of laptops with the goal of spying on children.

Wardle had experience spotting these kinds of programs. Prior to moving into the private sector, he had worked as a malware analyst at the National Security Agency, where he analyzed code used to target Defense Department computer systems. Experienced in playing digital defense, Wardle decided to do something about the spyware threat: he created OverSight, a MacOS tool that lets you monitor your webcam and mic for signs of malware manipulation. “It was really popular, everyone loved it,” he said of the tool, which he released for free via his IT non-profit Objective-See.

However, a couple years later, Wardle was analyzing some suspicious code for a client and came across something weird within a tool that had been downloaded onto the client’s own device. The tool was created by a major company but offered similar functionality to OverSight, including the ability to monitor a MacOS webcam and mic. Sifting through the program, Wardle found familiar code. Too familiar. His entire OverSight algorithm — including bugs that he had failed to remove — was contained within the other program. A developer had reverse-engineered his tool, stolen his work from it, and repurposed it for a different but nearly identical product.

“The analogy I like to use is plagiarism: someone has copied what you have written and they copied your spelling and grammar mistakes,” said Wardle. “I always say there are many ways to skin the proverbial cat but this was like blatant copyright [infringement].”

The developer was taken back. I have contacted the company immediately and attempted to alert them to the fact that a developer had hijacked his code from him. Unfortunately, Wardle said, it was not the last time he would find that a company had co-opted his work from him. Over the course of the next couple years, he would find evidence that two other major companies had employed his algorithm for their own products.

This week, Wardle gave a presentation on his experiences at Blackhat, the annual cybersecurity conference in Las Vegas. Alongside John Hopkins University professor Tom McGuire, Wardle demonstrated how reverse engineering — the process by which a program is taken apart and reconstructed — can reveal evidence of such theft.

The developer has declined to identify the companies that stole his code. This isn’t about revenge, he says. It’s about identifying a “systemic issue” affecting “the cybersecurity community,” he said. To do that, Wardle used this week’s talk to outline some lessons he had learned while attempting to notify companies about the theft issue.

“You reach out to these companies and say, ‘Hey, you guys, you basically stole from me. You reverse engineered my tool and reimplemented the algorithm — that’s legally very… uh, grey.’ In the EU, there is a directive that if you…[do that] that’s illegal. But also just the optics are bad. I run a non-profit. You’re essentially stealing from a non-profit and putting this in your commercial code and then profiting from it. Bad look,” he says, chuckling.

The Wardle responses got were often mixed. “It depends on the company,” he said. “Some are great: I get an email from the CEO admitting it and asking, ‘What can we fix?’ Awesome…[With] others, it’s a three-week internal investigation, and then they come back and tell you to take a hike because they don’t see any internal consistencies.” In those cases, Wardle has had to provide more evidence of what happened.

Why does this sort of thing even happen in the first place? Wardle says his views of him have shifted over time. “I went in thinking these were evil corporations out to squash the independent developer. But in every case, it was essentially a misguided or naive developer who had been tasked with [finding a way to] monitor the mic and the webcam…and then he or she would reverse engineer my tool and steal the algorithm…and then nobody in the corporation would ask, ‘Hey, where did you get this from?’”

In all three cases, after Wardle stated his case to a company, executives eventually admitted wrongdoing and offered to rectify the situation. To effectively make his case for him, however, Wardle often had to show them the evidence. He said he had to take their own, closed-source software and employ reverse-engineering to understand how their code worked and demonstrate its similarity to his own. To bolster his case, Wardle also teamed up with the non-profit Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which offers pro-bono legal services to independent security researchers. “Having them on my side gave me a lot of credibility,” he said, suggesting that other developers also employ a similar strategy.

“I’m in a good position because I collaborated with EFF, I have a large audience in the community because I’ve been doing this for a long time,” said Wardle. “But, if this is happening to me, this is happening to other developers who might not have quite [the same standing]…and in those cases the companies might just tell them to take a hike. So what I’m really trying to do is talk about this and show that, ‘Hey this is not ok.’”

As to how widespread the practice of algorithm theft is, Wardle believes it’s quite prevalent. “I believe it’s a systemic issue because as soon as I started looking I didn’t just find one, I found several. Y ellos [the companies] were all completely unrelated.”

“One of the takeaways I’m trying to push is, if you’re a corporation, you really need to educate your employees or developers [not to steal]. If you do this, it puts your entire organization at legal risk. And, again, the optics look really bad,” he said.

Categories
Australia

Investigation underway after man dies in Ashmont home, another man in hospital

Police are investigating after a man died in his home at Ashmont near Wagga Wagga in southern New South Wales and another man was found injured nearby.

Neighbors said the two men were residents of a home on Adams Street.

They said there had been an altercation at the home around 10am yesterday then the house was silent.

One neighbor said one of the occupants had turned up on their doorstep confirming an altercation had taken place.

Concerned, the neighbor called police who arrived and confirmed the matter was now a crime scene.

Riverina police said emergency services were called to a home around 5pm yesterday, where they found a man with serious injuries.

He died at the scene.

A police car parked on a road outside a house with boarded up windows.
Police are investigating the incident.(ABC Riverina: Danielle Pope)

While the man is yet to be formally identified, he is believed to be aged in his 50s.

Locals who knew the man were shocked to hear the news, and said he was originally a Lake Cargelligo man.

They said his family was due to arrive in town today.

Police said a second man, who is believed to be aged in his late 40s, was located a short distance away with head injuries.

He was taken to Wagga Wagga Base Hospital where he remains in a stable condition.

Police have confirmed the two men were known to each other.

No charges have been laid at this stage and the investigation is ongoing.

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