Categories
Technology

Micron 24 Gbps GDDR6X memory for GeForce RTX 40 series is now in production

Micron 24Gbps GDDR6X in production

The memory manufacturer Micron, who had developed GDDR6X technology in collaboration with NVIDIA for RTX 30, is now preparing for the next-gen GPU series by offering even faster speeds.

Company website has now been updated with new information on the new GDDR6X modules. It appears that 16Gb (2GB) modules featuring 24 Gbps speed are now in production, just 2 months ahead of the rumored launch of NVIDIA RTX 40 series.

NVIDIA is said to use both 21 and 24 Gbps speeds for its high-end series. Should rumors be correct, NVIDIA will be using 21 Gbps GDDR6X modules for three of the high-end SKUs: RTX 4090, 4080 and 4070. At the same time, rumors on supposed flagship model, either a professional workstation GPU or a true TITAN successor , might be getting 24 Gbps modules.

Micron GDDR6X memory catalog, Source: Micron

Micron probably wouldn’t be producing such chips for no reason, but just because such memory exists, it does not guarantee that full speed will be used by next-gen GPUs. For RTX 30 series, NVIDIA only used 21 Gbps speed for its RTX 3090 Ti model released in March this year, while the original 2020 launch only went as high as 19.5 Gbps.

RUMORED NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 Series Specs
VideoCardz.com TITAN ADA (?) GeForce RTX 4090 GeForce-RTX 4080 GeForce RTX 4070
Architecture Ada (TSMC N4) Ada (TSMC N4) Ada (TSMC N4) Ada (TSMC N4)
GPU AD102-450 AD102-300 AD103-300 AD104-400 (?)
Board Number PG137-SKU0 PG139-SKU330 PG136/139-SKU360 PG141-SKU331
SMS
CUDA Cores
BaseClock TBC TBC TBC
Boost Clock TBC TBC TBC
Memory
memory-bus
Memory Speed
bandwidth
TGP
3DMark TimeSpy Extreme
Launch Date TBC October 2022 TBC TBC

Source: Micron via @harukaze5719



Categories
Sports

Suzuka 8 Hours: How did Jonathan Rea fare in Japan? | World Superbikes

The six-time WorldSBK Champion – who scored his second Suzuka 8 Hours victory and first in Kawasaki colors during the last running of the event in 2019 – came into the event as favorite alongside regular KRT counterpart Alex Lowes and former team-mate Leon Haslam, the trio having amassed eight wins at the iconic event over the years.

However, it was soundly out-performed by HRC Honda, which showed an unpenetrable level of competitiveness with its CBR1000RR-R Fireblade throughout the weekend in the hands of Takumi Takahashi, rookie Tetsuta Nagashima and WorldSBK regular Iker Lecuona.

With race starter Haslam losing ten seconds to Takahashi during the opening stint, Rea took on Nagashima for the second stint, but while the ex-Moto2 rider was making his debut at both the event and on a Superbike, he couldn’t make in- roads, which coupled to a longer stop swelled the margin to 21secs.

However, KRT’s race suffered its first major blow during the third stint when Lowes was caught out by the format of using two different Safety Cars during caution periods, with Lecuona being picked up by one and the Kawasaki man bottled up behind the other. With the Safety Cars touring at different speeds so as to quickly ensure all bikes could catch up to the pack quickly, this stretched Lecuona’s advantage by almost 50secs to well over a minute.

With Kawasaki switching up the running order to put Rea on the bike next, versus Takumi Takahashi, the Ulsterman did indeed begin making in-roads into the lead.

However, his momentum would make him somewhat ragged while negotiating traffic with Rea’s awkward lunge up the inside of a backmarker at the Turn 12 flip-flop chicane resulting in a front-end fold that sent him and the bike skating down the escape road into the foam barriers.

Getting both himself and the bike up again, Rea resumed unscathed without even entering the pits but it was another 30secs lost to the front. Worse still, with Kawasaki needing a longer pit-stop next time around to check for damage, Haslam returned to the track in third and with Nagashima bearing down on him.

The Japanese subsequently overtook Haslam to put HRC a lap clear of KRT, a critical moment that neither Rea, Haslam nor Lowes could reverse.

Instead, KRT settled into a battle with the YART Yamaha team for second place, a position the two teams would swap repeatedly as they pitted out of sequence with one another. However, when YART ran into myriad issues during the final hour, the KRT protected the ZX-10RR to bring it home a strong, if distant, second

“It has been a really enjoyable week here in Suzuka with my team,” said Rea. “All the team staff, plus my team-mates Leon and Alex, meant that the atmosphere has been incredible. We have worked really well together, everyone from back room staff, strategy people, caterers, nutritionists, doctors – every single person in the team worked so hard with a busy schedule to get here.

“It is not easy to have two goals in a single season – the WorldSBK championship and also the Suzuka 8 Hours. We had huge competition here, and did our best. I feel we just came up short but we can be proud, and really proud of my team-mates and everyone else for their hard work.It is a little bit bitter sweet coming second best but I think we can fly home knowing we gave it our best shot.

“There were a few mistakes in the race, a few issues, but that is Endurance racing and we can stand on that podium and be proud of our efforts. Thanks to Kawasaki and all of our sponsors for making this happen and no doubt we will be back again to try and go one better.”

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Categories
US

Dermatologist Yue Yu arrested for allegedly poisoning husband

A Southern California dermatologist was arrested last week for allegedly poisoning her husband, police said.

Yue Yu, who has an office in Mission Viejo, was busted Thursday after Irvine police served a search warrant at the couple’s home.

Investigators said Yu’s husband turned over “video evidence” backing up his belief that she’s the reason he’s been sick for a month, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The unidentified husband “sustained significant internal injuries,” but is expected to recover, police said.

Yu, 45, is affiliated with Providence Mission Hospital, which issued a statement noting her arrest while saying staffers were cooperating with authorities.

Yue Yu, who has an office in Mission Viejo, California, was busted Thursday after Irvine police served a search warrant at the couple's home, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Dermatologist Yue Yu was busted after Irvine police served a search warrant at the couple’s home, the LA Times reported.
Irvine Police Department

“The incident is a domestic matter which occurred in Irvine and we want to reassure our community that there has been no impact on our patients,” hospital officials said.

Yu’s biography was apparently removed from the hospital’s website as of Sunday.

Yu, whose bail was set at $30,000, was released from custody late Friday after posting bond, online records show. No additional details of the allegations were available Sunday, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Yu’s husband told police he suspected she had been poisoning him and set up surveillance video to confirm his hunch, Irvine police Lt. Bill Bingham told the Orange County Register.

Yu, who attended medical school at Washington University in St. Louis, is due to appear in court on Monday. It’s unclear if she’s hired an attorney who could comment on her behalf of her.

Yu and her husband have been married for 10 years. It’s unclear how she allegedly poisoned him, CBS Los Angeles reported.

With Post wires

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Categories
Technology

Zipp brings less weight, more speed and lower price to the revamped 808 and 858 NSW wheelsets

Zipp’s wheel range has been completely overhauled over the last couple of years, with the brand making a wholesale switch to hookless and tubeless. This now includes the 808 Firecrest and 858 NSW wheelsets.

The final piece in the puzzle was the brand’s deepest rims, and the 808 (80mm-deep) and 858 NSW (82/85mm-deep) have been revamped to reduce weight and improve performance, according to Zipp.

With the new 8-series wheels comes a wider 23mm internal rim shape that’s optimized for 28mm tires, as well as a new construction method that Zipp says makes these new hoops the brand’s ‘most rideable’ specialist speed wheels yet.

They’re claimed to be faster, too. Combining aero and efficiency gains, Zipp says the 858 wheelset is nine watts faster, while the 808 is six watts faster.

And, in what’s been a trend for Zipp wheels recently, the new wheels are also cheaper.

The 858 NSW now comes in at £1,585 / $2,000 / €1,775 for the front wheel and £1,985 / $2,400 / €2,225 for the rear, while the 808 is £1,095 / $1,125 / €1,225 for the front and £1,140 / $1,175 / €1,275 for the rear.

Both are available in XDR or Shimano/SRAM freehub options (a Campagnolo N3W driver is available separately).

Zipp 858 NSW | What you need to know

  • 243g lighter than the previous model
  • 1,530g claimed weight (existing 858 NSW, 1,773g)
  • Optimized tire bed for easy tire installation
  • Sawtooth rim and HexFin ABLC dimple pattern
  • 82/85mm-deep rim profile
  • Minimum 25mm tire width
  • Optimized for 28mm tires
  • 23mm internal width with tubeless and hookless rim profile
  • Lifetime guarantee
  • Cognition V2 hubs with Axial Clutch V2 from the 454 NSW
  • £622 / €642 / $642 cheaper than the outgoing model

Updating a winner

Zipp has redesigned the 80mm-deep 808 wheelset.
zipp

The 808 has an impressively broad set of victories in its long history, from multiple Kona Ironman wins, to World Championship and Olympic time trial victories, Tour de France stage wins – both road and TT – and Milan-San Remo.

For the new wheels, Zipp wanted to take the 8-series platform and move it forward in terms of rideability and weight, as well as the usual aero updates.

The idea, according to Zipp, was to make the 808 and 858 more usable for any road discipline (where conditions would favor it) without compromising the rider, rather than the wheels being aimed primarily at time trials and triathlon.

Zipp 808 Firecrest | What you need to know

  • 282g lighter than the previous model
  • 1,635g claimed weight (existing 808 Firecrest, 1,917g)
  • Minimum 25mm tire width
  • Optimized for 28mm tires
  • 80mm-deep rim profile
  • Lifetime guarantee
  • 23mm internal width with tubeless and hookless rim profile
  • £565 / €714 / $713 cheaper than the outgoing model

The 858, with a rim depth that varies between 82mm and 85mm, has also been revamped.
Russell Burton / Our Media

“We’ve historically looked to improve aerodynamics as the main goal of wheel design, especially when it comes to a rim as deep as the 808/858,” says Ruan Trouw, Zipp’s advanced development engineer.

“What we learned from the 303 and 404 development, is that many other elements are in play, and they require plenty of our attention too.”

This has led to Zipp’s mantra of ‘Total System Efficiency’; a way of weighing the various priorities in the design of a wheel to find the best balance.

This shows the evolution of the Zipp 808 rim profile.
zipp

Total System Efficiency explained

Zipp’s Total System Efficiency design philosophy covers wind resistance, gravity, rolling resistance and vibration losses.
zipp

Total System Efficiency (TSE) focuses on four areas, with varying importance depending on the type of rider and riding conditions: wind resistance, gravity, rolling resistance and vibration losses. Let’s take a look at each in turn.

wind resistance

Zipp says the hookless design has a small aerodynamic advantage.
zipp

For Zipp, overcoming wind resistance is a combination of aerodynamic efficiency and crosswind stability.

The development of the original Firecrest shape, and the radical Sawtooth NSW shape (of the 858 and 454), combined Zipp’s research and testing in both areas.

With the dominance of road disc brakes, the latest generation of Zipp wheels don’t have to account for a rim-brake surface, so they’re wider and, according to Zipp, better shaped for a smooth interface between the rim and tire.

According to Zipp, the move to a hookless rim also helps provide a smoother rim and tire combination, reducing an area of ​​high turbulence and, therefore, drag.

The 808 is part of the Firecrest range.
zipp

Gravity

While the revised shape of the rim, and the introduction of hookless technology, improves aerodynamics, Zipp says there’s also a benefit in saving weight.

The weight savings here are impressive, with 282g saved on the 808 and 243g on the 858 NSW.

Where these were wheelsets used primarily in time trials, triathlons or fast road races, the new claimed wheelset weights of 1,635g (808 – 752g front, 883g rear) and 1,530g (858 NSW – 719g front, 811g rear) put these in the realm of general road racing in favorable wind conditions (they’re still super-deep rims, after all).

rolling resistance

The new design leans on the trend for wider road tyres.
zipp

This is where things can get interesting. For years, road riders thought that a narrower tyre, pumped up to a high tire pressure on a road bike, was the fastest option.

The latest research, however, has shown that it’s better to go wide – within reason – to reduce rolling resistance. It’s a trend we’ve seen everywhere from size availability on the best road bike tires, to the latest Tour de France machines.

A tire contact patch relates to its rolling resistance, and the contact patch is defined by rider weight and tire pressure. For instance, if you take two bikes with the same rider and two different tire widths but the same pressure in those tires, the contact patch would be the same because they’re both supporting the same load with the same amount of pressure.

The big difference is in the shape of the contact patch. A wider tire will produce a wider but much shorter contact patch compared to a narrow tyre. That means less ‘sag’ in the tyre, less deforming the tyre, and less energy lost when rolling.

The upscale 858 NSW gets Zipp’s Sawtooth rim and HexFin ABLC dimple pattern.
Russell Burton / Our Media

vibration losses

The final piece in the TSE puzzle, and one Zipp identified as being able to bring big efficiency gains, covers vibration losses.

For example, while the new 858 rim shape is only one watt more aerodynamically efficient, according to Zipp, the brand’s real-world testing has shown gains of eight watts for the 858 and five watts for the 808 when it comes to vibration and rolling resistance improvements.

While running a wider tire at a lower pressure helps, Zipp says there’s also a contribution from the new rim construction, called CiR (Carbon internal Reinforcement). It’s an idea borne out of Zipp’s ‘Nest’ development lab, which allows the quick development and testing of fully functioning, prototype rims.

Most carbon wheel designs (including Zipp’s previous ranges) used a rim with a uniform thickness throughout. However, Zipp’s testing and analysis has shown that forces acting on a rim are not uniform. As a result, the CiR design places material where it’s needed and removes any excess material. The finalization of this design apparently took more than two years.

The final design is best described as having an internal skeleton that’s wrapped with a fine carbon skin, much like the wings of an aircraft. The result is not only a rim that’s 10 per cent lighter than the previous model, even though it’s wider, but one that’s also significantly more flexible in its sidewall.

That means better absorption of vibrations from the road, and a less fatiguing ride as a result. Zipp also says it’s more efficient because the tire stays in contact with the road surface rather than skipping and bouncing across it. This all adds up to a faster wheel, despite losing the focus on aerodynamics.

Prices and availability

Both the 808 and 858 NSW are available from today, with pricing information below.

Zipp 858 NSW

  • Zipp 858 NSW front wheel: £1,585 / $2,000 / €1,775
  • Zipp 858 NSW rear wheel: £1,985 / £2,400 / €2,225 (XDR)
  • Zipp 858 NSW rear wheel: £1,985 / £2,400 / €2,225 (Shimano/SRAM)

Zipp 808 Firecrest

  • Zipp 808 front wheel: £1,095 / $1,125 / €1,225
  • Zipp 808 rear wheel: £1,140 / $1,175 / €1,275 (XDR)
  • Zipp 808 rear wheel: £1,140 / $1,175 / €1,275 (Shimano/SRAM)

A Campagnolo N3W driver is available separately for both wheelsets.

Categories
Sports

AFL greats debate Cripps’ MRO ban and likelihood of success at court

Whether Carlton can get Patrick Cripps’ Match Review charge reduced or thrown out could well define the club’s season.

The Blues skipper was cited by the MRO for a collision on Sunday with Brisbane’s Callum Ah Chee, who was subbed out with concussion shortly after.

Cripps is set to miss two weeks with the incident graded as careless conduct, high impact and high contact. However, Carlton is widely tipped to challenge the result at the court and has until 11am AEST on Tuesday morning to confirm whether they will do so.

But Essendon great Matthew Lloyd can’t foresee a successful challenge.

“I thought two (weeks) was right,” he told sports day shortly after the news broke.

“I thought that when you jump off the ground, I felt like he turned and didn’t really reach and make a good enough attempt at football.

“To me, Cripps has just turned, braced, and knocked a guy out.

“I thought you’re in trouble, two weeks straight away. I don’t see how they get off this one.”

The potential challenge will be of greater significance given its timing. Carlton may need to win one of their final two games to lock themselves into September, and Cripps, the club’s go-to midfielder, would likely need to be there.

But in a glimmer of hope for Blues fans, 1988 Brownlow Medalist Gerard Healy suggested he could potentially see the ban being changed.

He compared the case to that of Lachie Plowman’s last year, with the defender’s court case and subsequent appeal both unsuccessful and a two-week ban remained.

“I think it’s more line-ball for me (than the Plowman bump),” Healy said.

“That’s why we’re going to send it to the court… I think he’s in trouble, but I still think it’s not a closed case this one, whereas Plowman’s, I think that was a bit of a joke that they took that to appeal .

“(If the two-week ban remains it) really makes it difficult for them to retain their spot in the eight. I thought with Cripps in, maybe George Hewett back, they’re a chance in the last game.”

The Blues play Sydney and Collingwood in the remaining two games of the season and will go into both as underdogs.





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Categories
Australia

Jacinta Price is perhaps worth listening to

In her maiden speech, she pointed out that Indigenous Australians are not a unity ticket when it comes to supporting the Uluru Statement from the Heart.

It would be easy to dismiss Price as just a darling of right-wing commentators.

Senator Jacinta Price taking part in a traditional ceremony with her grandmother, Tess Napaljarri Ross, before delivering her first speech in the Senate.

Senator Jacinta Price taking part in a traditional ceremony with her grandmother, Tess Napaljarri Ross, before delivering her first speech in the Senate.Credit:James Brickwood

It would also be foolish.

When Price says there are more pressing issues than the Voice facing Indigenous communities, she speaks from personal experience.

Price fell pregnant with her first child at 17, completing year 12 assessments while in hospital with early contractions.

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As a victim of domestic violence in a subsequent relationship, Price was forced to flee her partner after he attacked her with a lamp. Soaked in blood, she ran to a neighboring property, believing if she did not get away she was going to die.

Price’s aunt and nephew were both murdered, the latter the result of a family feud.

While we talk about the hardships facing Indigenous communities, she has lived them.

In a 2016 speech to the National Press Club, Price spoke of how, in many cases of brutality, she was related to both the victim and perpetrator. She said she had been encouraged to ignore the fact they had committed acts of physical and sexual violence against someone she loved.

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Price came to political prominence after having the courage to expose family violence and sexual abuse in her own community and challenging the “cultural excuses” that protect perpetrators.

On her decision to speak out, she said: “I got to a point in my life where we had that many deaths in our family. We had that many women traumatized by family violence and children traumatized by family violence. And this ‘growing up yapa [Aboriginal] way’ is always like, you don’t talk about the really tough things. You pretend like they don’t exist … You’re supposed to turn a blind eye to that. And I think I got to a point where I went, ‘I’ve had enough of this’. And I became quite vocal.”

In her maiden speech, Price said the government had failed to show how a Voice would deliver practical outcomes for Indigenous people and noted in that very week that there were two clear examples of governments’ “failure to listen” to them.

The first was the recent decision in the Northern Territory to lift alcohol bans that Price says will allow “the scourge of alcoholism and the violence that accompanies it free rein, despite warnings from elders of those communities about the coming damage”.

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The second was the removal of the cashless debit card that, according to Price, has allowed families to “feed their children rather than seeing their money claimed by kinship demand from alcoholics, substance abusers and gamblers in their family group”.

Having run an election scare campaign on the cashless debit card nationwide, the government had little choice but to make good on its promise to abolish it.

But it was difficult listening to Price as she rose in the Senate to talk about the consequences that will flow from that decision.

Price has been speaking to income management recipients since the first trials in 2001 and her voice choked with emotion as she shared stories of how it has improved the lives of Indigenous women and children.

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She called on her parliamentary colleagues to “get out to some of these remote communities, where people – who are out of sight, out of mind to you – can’t clearly articulate to you because English is not their first language”.

She says she will bring to parliament their messages “over and over again” because “we’re trying to save lives here not toe the line of ideology”.

Whether it is the Voice, the movement to change the date of Australia Day or acknowledgments of country, Price says she has had more than her fill of being symbolically recognised.

She laments that “we spend days and weeks each year recognizing Aboriginal Australia in many ways, in symbolic gestures that fail to push the needle one micro-millimetre toward improving the lives of the most marginalized in any genuine way”.

Price’s arrival in Canberra makes us question which Indigenous voices the government is prepared to listen to and how it will respond to those it finds inconvenient.

The Opinion newsletter is a weekly wrap of views that will challenge, champion and inform your own. Sign up here.

Categories
US

Trump Asked Aide Why His Generals Couldn’t Be Like Hitler’s, Book Says

WASHINGTON — Former President Donald J. Trump told his top White House aid that he wished he had generals like the ones who had reported to Adolf Hitler, saying they were “totally loyal” to the leader of the Nazi regime, according to a forthcoming book about the 45th president.

“Why can’t you be like the German generals?” Mr. Trump told John Kelly, his chief of staff, preceding the question with an obscenity, according to an excerpt from “The Divider: Trump in the White House,” by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser, published online by The New Yorker on Monday morning. (Mr. Baker is the chief White House correspondent for The New York Times; Ms. Glasser is a staff writer for The New Yorker.)

The excerpt depicts Mr. Trump as deeply frustrated by his top military officials, whom he saw as insufficiently loyal or obedient to him. In the conversation with Mr. Kelly, which took place years before the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the authors write, the chief of staff told Mr. Trump that Germany’s generals had “tried to kill Hitler three times and almost pulled it off.”

Mr. Trump was dismissive, according to the excerpt, apparently unaware of the World War II history that Mr. Kelly, a retired four-star general, knew all too well.

“’No, no, no, they were totally loyal to him,’ the president replied,” according to the book’s authors. “In his version of his history, the generals of the Third Reich had been completely subservient to Hitler; this was the model he wanted for his military. Kelly told Trump that there were no such American generals, but the president was determined to test the proposition.”

Much of the excerpt focuses on Gen. Mark A. Milley, who served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the country’s top military official, under Mr. Trump. When the president offered him the job, General Milley told him, “I’ll do whatever you ask me to do.” But he quickly soured on the president.

General Milley’s frustration with the president peaked on June 1, 2020, when Black Lives Matter protesters filled Lafayette Square, near the White House. Mr. Trump demanded to send in the military to clear the protesters, but General Milley and other top aides refused. In response, Mr. Trump shouted, “You are all losers!” according to the excerpt. “Turning to Milley, Trump said, ‘Can’t you just shoot them? Just shoot them in the legs or something?’” the authors write.

After the square was cleared by the National Guard and police, General Milley briefly joined the president and other aides in walking through the empty park so Mr. Trump could be photographed in front of a church on the other side. The authors said General Milley later considered his decision to join the president to be a “misjudgment that would haunt him forever, a ‘road-to-Damascus moment,’ as he would later put it.”

A week after that incident, General Milley wrote — but never delivered — a scathing resignation letter, accusing the president he served of politicizing the military, “ruining the international order,” failing to value diversity, and embracing the tyranny, dictatorship and extremism that members of the military had sworn to fight against.

“It is my belief that you were doing great and irreparable harm to my country,” the general wrote in the letter, which has not been revealed before and was published in its entirety by The New Yorker. General Milley wrote that Mr. Trump did not honor those who had fought against fascism and the Nazis during World War II.

“It’s now obvious to me that you don’t understand that world order,” General Milley wrote. “You don’t understand what the war was all about. In fact, you subscribe to many of the principles that we fought against. And I cannot be a party to that.”

Yet General Milley eventually decided to remain in office so he could ensure that the military could serve as a bulwark against an increasingly out-of-control president, according to the authors of the book.

“’I’ll just fight him,’” General Milley told his staff, according to the New Yorker excerpt. “The challenge, as he saw it, was to stop Trump from doing any more damage, while also acting in a way that was consistent with his obligation to carry out the orders of his commander in chief. ‘If they want to court-martial me, or put me in prison, have at it.’”

In addition to the revelations about General Milley, the book excerpt reveals new details about Mr. Trump’s interactions with his top military and national security officials, and documents dramatic efforts by the former president’s most senior aides to prevent a domestic or international crisis in the weeks after Mr. Trump lost his re-election bid.

In the summer of 2017, the book excerpt reveals, Mr. Trump returned from viewing the Bastille Day parade in Paris and told Mr. Kelly that he wanted one of his own. But the president told Mr. Kelly: “Look, I don’t want any wounded guys in the parade. This doesn’t look good for me,” the authors write.

“Kelly could not believe what he was hearing,” the excerpt continues. “’Those are the heroes,’ I told Trump. ‘In our society, there’s only one group of people who are more heroic than they are — and they are buried over in Arlington.’” Mr. Trump answered: “I don’t want them. It doesn’t look good for me,” according to the authors.

The excerpt underscores how many of the president’s senior aides have been trying to burnish their reputations in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack. Like General Milley, who largely refrained from criticizing Mr. Trump publicly, they are now eager to make their disagreements with him clear by cooperating with book authors and other journalists.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who never publicly disputed Mr. Trump’s wild election claims and has rarely criticized him since, was privately dismissive of the assertions of fraud that Mr. Trump and his advisers embraced.

On the evening of Nov. 9, 2020, after the news media called the race for Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Pompeo called General Milley and asked to see him, according to the excerpt. During a conversation at General Milley’s kitchen table, Mr. Pompeo was blunt about what he thought of the people around the president.

“’The crazies have taken over,’” Mr. Pompeo told General Milley, according to the authors. Behind the scenes, they write, Mr. Pompeo had quickly accepted that the election was over and refused to promote overturning it.

“’He was totally against it,’ a senior State Department official recalled. Pompeo cynically justified this jarring contrast between what he said in public and in private. ‘It was important for him not to get fired at the end, too, to be there to the bitter end,’ the senior official said,” according to the excerpt.

The authors detail what they call an “extraordinary arrangement” in the weeks after the election between Mr. Pompeo and General Milley to hold daily morning phone calls with Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, in an effort to make sure the president did do not take dangerous actions.

“Pompeo and Milley soon took to calling them the ‘land the plane’ phone calls,” the authors write. “’Our job is to land this plane safely and to do a peaceful transfer of power the 20th of January,’ Milley told his staff. ‘This is our obligation to this nation.’ There was a problem, however. ‘Both engines are out, the landing gear is stuck. We’re in an emergency situation.’”

The Jan. 6 hearings on Capitol Hill have revealed that a number of the former president’s top aides pushed back privately against Mr. Trump’s election denials, even as some declined to do so publicly. Several, including Pat A. Cipollone, the former White House counsel, testified that they had attempted — without success — to convince the president that there was no evidence of substantial fraud.

In the excerpt, the authors say that General Milley concluded that Mr. Cipollone was “a force for ‘trying to keep guardrails around the president.’” The general also believed that Mr. Pompeo was “genuinely trying to achieve a peaceful handover of power ,” the authors write. But they write that General Milley was “was never sure what to make of Meadows. Was the chief of staff trying to land the plane or to hijack it?”

Gen. Milley is not the only top official who considered resignation, the authors write, in response to the president’s actions.

The excerpt details private conversations among the president’s national security team as they discussed what to do in the event the president attempted to take actions they felt they could not abide. The authors report that General Milley consulted with Robert Gates, a former secretary of defense and former head of the CIA

The advice from Mr. Gates was blunt, the authors write: “’Keep the chiefs on board with you and make it clear to the White House that if you go, they all go, so that the White House knows this isn’t just about firing Mark Milley. This is about the entire Joint Chiefs of Staff quitting in response.’”

The excerpt makes clear that Mr. Trump did not always get the yes-men that he wanted. During one Oval Office exchange, Mr. Trump asked Gen. Paul Selva, an Air Force officer and the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, what he thought about the president’s desire for a military parade through the nation’s capital on the Fourth of July .

General Selva’s response, which has not been reported before, was blunt, and not what the president wanted to hear, according to the book’s authors.

“’I didn’t grow up in the United States, I actually grew up in Portugal,’ General Selva said. “’Portugal was a dictatorship — and parades were about showing the people who had the guns. And in this country, we don’t do that.’ I added, ‘It’s not who we are.’”

Categories
Technology

​Oppo Watch 3 confirmed – and leaks show curved body

We know that Oppo is preparing a new version of its flagship smartwatch – and now it’s been officially teased by the company.

The new smartwatch will land with the Qualcomm Snapdragon W5 chip on board, and will be the first device to run the new wearables platform. And it could land on 10 August, on the same day as the Samsung Galaxy Watch 5.

Huawei teased the watch on Weibo, and showed off a curved body, large screen and black and silver finishes with silicone and leather straps.

But new leaks from Evan Blass have given a more candid look at the new Oppo Watch.

The original Oppo Watch bore more than a small resemblance to the Apple Watch, although this time out it seems Oppo is using a curved body.

That will hug the contours of the wrist, which could make it more comfortable to wear – especially as there seems to be a large screen on board.

It’s been done before – not least by the Oppo Watch Free – which boasts a slight curve. And readers with long memories might recall the Asus Zenwatch back in 2014, which also used a curved screen to offset a large display.

In fact, we can’t help but remembering the Zenwatch with the brown leather strap. It seems we really have gone full circle.

There’s no word on the Oppo Watch 3 landing outside of China, but we assume it will eventually.

And it will be notable for being the first to use the Snapdragon W5. This enables smartwatches built on manufacturer platforms to take advantage of Qualcomm’s co-processor for improved performance and battery life.

So it will be interesting to see the kind of improvements the platform could offer as a bellweather for the next generation of smartwatches.

In an interview with Wareable, Qualcomm told us it has 25 smartwatches in the works, and didn’t rule out the platform being used for smartglasses and other wearables.

Categories
Sports

The player who Collingwood would be “crazy” to let go

Brownlow Medalist Gerard Healy says Collingwood would be “crazy” to let Jordan De Goey go on the back of strong recent form.

Coming back from injury, De Goey has averaged 24 disposals and two marks in the last fortnight and was one of his side’s best players in Friday night’s win over Melbourne.

The 26-year-old free agent has constantly been linked to the likes of Geelong and St Kilda, but Healy urged the Pies to re-sign De Goey ahead of what’s expected to busy a busy trade and free agency period across the competition.

“It would be a big call to get rid of (Jordan) De Goey,” he said on sports day.

“He looks happy and is playing fantastically well, it would be a big call for him to go even for extra money as he knows his surroundings. If you go to a new club, it’s a challenge.

“I think Collingwood would be crazy letting him go.

“His form has been pretty fair and he was excellent on the weekend, Collingwood is in premiership contention and they’ll be in it next year unless something goes wrong.”

De Goey was given eight coaches votes for his effort last Friday night and looms as a key player for the Pies as they look to lock in a top four birth in the coming weeks.

Collingwood will take on Sydney at the SCG on Sunday in one of the biggest matches left in the home and away season.





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Categories
Australia

The Loop: Barilaro faces trade job inquiry, banks divided on interest rate expectations, two killed in Brisbane attack and ancient finds in Pompeii

Hi there. It’s Monday, August 8 and you’re reading The Loop, a quick wrap-up of today’s news.

Let’s start here: John Barilaro fronts US trade job inquiry

The former deputy premier of New South Wales faced questioning at the parliamentary inquiry into his appointment into the lucrative US trade role on Monday.

Here are the main takeaways:

  • He said he wished he never applied for the job, and said the “trauma I’ve gone through over the past six to seven weeks has been significant”
  • Mr Barilaro rejected suggestions that he fast-tracked cabinet submissions about the trade roles so that he could apply for one, saying “you’re making me out to be corrupt”
  • He told the inquiry that he first flagged his interest in the position with current NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet last November, after he resigned from cabinet, and said “no-one ever raised with me that this would be politically sensitive”
  • Mr Barilaro also told the inquiry that he didn’t know that Jenny West had been selected for the role in August 2021. Ms West had previously given evidence that she was told she was the successful candidate, only to have it revoked soon after, and that it was to be a “present” for someone
  • The former NSW Nationals leader said he withdrew his application from the US trade role on February 23 this year, before putting his hat back in the ring two days later.

You can look back at the day’s evidence as it happened with our blog.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Play Video.  Duration: 1 minute 46 seconds

John Barilaro says he regrets applying for trade position.

Economists at Australia’s major banks are split about the outlook for interest rates for the rest of the year.

In one camp, Westpac and ANZ economists are confident the cash rate target will go above 3 per cent by the year’s end, but those at NAB and Commonwealth Bank think the rate is unlikely to reach that target.

Westpac’s chief economist, Bill Evans, is predicting the rate will climb to 3.35 per cent — and argues it should if the Reserve Bank wants to combat inflation — while Gareth Aird from the Commonwealth Bank is forecasting the cash rate will reach 2.6 per cent.

So what impact could a cash rate of 2.6 per cent to 3.35 per cent have? For someone with a 30-year, $600,000 mortgage, it works out to be around $284 extra each month on their repayments.

The cash rate is currently 1.85 per cent, after it was raised by 0.5 percentage points last Tuesday by the RBA.

Westpac and CBA logos
Westpac and CBA have different expectations when it comes to interest rates.(abcnews)

News alerts you might have missed

  • Amnesty International has apologized for the “distress and anger” caused by its report that accused Ukraine of endangering civilians, but says it stands by its findings. Last week, the rights group published the report saying Ukraine stationing troops in residential areas heightened the risk to civilians.
A man with a cigarette in his mouth walks through the rubble of a bombed out building
Amnesty has stood by the report claiming Ukraine has endangered civillians. (Reuters)
  • Australia won its 1,000th gold medal at the Commonwealth Games when the Diamonds claimed victory over Jamaica in the netball final. It means Australia is the first country to reach four figures in the history of the Commonwealth Games and did it on the penultimate day of the games. It remains top of the medal tally, with 174 won so far, including 66 golds.

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What Australia has been searching for online

  • Stretton: Queensland police have established a crime scene in the southern Brisbane suburb after the bodies of a man and woman were found inside a home this morning in what police have described as a “frenzied attack”. A 49-year-old man has been arrested, and the victims are yet to be identified. Neighbors say they were shocked to see a crime scene established in their street.
Police in blue HAZMAT suits taking photos.
Police have recovered two “bladed weapons” that they believed were used in the attack.(ABC News: Alfred Beales)

one more thing

Archaeologists have unearthed more items from the doomed ancient Italian city of Pompeii that paint a picture of its vulnerable middle-class society.

A wooden dresser, a three-legged accent table with decorative bowls and a trunk with its lid open are among the latest discoveries inside a house that was first excavated in 2018 in Pompeii’s archaeological park.

Director Gabriel Zuchtriegel said the findings provide precious details about the ordinary citizens of the city that was destroyed in AD 79.

three bowls on a decorative table unearthed in Pompeii
The discoveries in the four new rooms include decorative bowls, an incense burner and an oil lamp.(Reuters: Archaeological Park of Pompei)

You’re up to date

We’ll be back with more tomorrow.

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