Categories
Business

Qantas Honolulu Lounge destined for refurbishment?

Executive Traveler Exclusive

The great Qantas Lounge Cull appears to be over, with the airline promising its Honolulu lounge – often considered the worst in the network – won’t meet the same fate as its siblings at Tokyo Narita or Hong Kong.

However, the airline declined to comment on reports that the well-worn Honolulu International Business Lounge will be refurbished or at the very least refreshed before its doors swing open once more, as well as seeing a timeframe for when the lounge will be back in action.

Honolulu remains a popular destination for Qantas, which until early 2020 flew a Boeing 747 from Sydney, and its low-cost arm Jetstar.

Until the Qantas Honolulu Lounge returns, the airline is issuing to “eligible passengers and their guests” – including business class passengers, Qantas Club members and Gold, Platinum and Platinum One frequent flyers – with vouchers to spend on food and drinks at the airport’s retail outlets.

Adults receive a US$20 voucher, with US$10 for children.

That said, savvy business class passengers and frequent flyers on QF104 can also make their way to the shared Admirals Club / Sakura Lounge of fellow Oneworld members Japan Airlines and American Airlines lounge, which rolls to the welcome mat to eligible Qantas flyers.

That lounge is located on the third level of Terminal 2 – above The Local @HNL restaurant – in the central lobby of the Overseas Terminal, across from Central Security Checkpoint #3.

Earlier this year, while the JAL/AA lounge had restricted opening hours Qantas was redirecting lounge-worthy travelers to the excellent Delta SkyClub lounge, but this temporary arrangement has since ended now that the JAL/AA lounge’s hours align with the late morning departure of the Qantas flight to Sydney.

Qantas has been steadily reopening its international lounges since November 2020, when overseas travel resumed from Sydney and Melbourne.

Both the Singapore Business and Singapore First lounges are now in full swing, along with lounges at Auckland, London and the Los Angeles Business Lounge – the Los Angeles First Lounge is now tipped to unlock its frosted doors later this month.

But the highly-regarded Hong Kong lounge was an early casualty – when Qantas eventually returns to the Asian metropolis, it will direct travelers to the lounges of Oneworld partner Cathay Pacific.

Also for the chop was the Tokyo Narita lounge, a sensible move considering that Tokyo Haneda will now be Qantas’ new hub, with excellent lounges available from JAL.

Categories
Technology

Panasonic Lumix GH6 Review: Handheld Stability

Panasonic’s high-end mirrorless cameras have been the go-to for independent and documentary filmmaking for years. In 2017, Panasonic introduced the original GH5, the flagship model that took three years to build. It was speedy, rugged, and easy to use—a massively popular, clear standout in the market.

A lot has changed since then. Other manufacturers are now building great cameras for filmmakers that can shoot 6K footage. But the new GH6 continues to hold its own for videography and photography alike, especially at this price point.

Dashboard

There’s a surprising amount of heft to the GH6 but not so much that it becomes a wrist strain. It comes with a UHS-II SD card slot as well as a CFexpress card slot, which becomes necessary for higher-end video shooting (more on that below). Its three-inch flip-out screen can be rotated so it’s visible to the subject of the camera, making it handy for online content creators who have to be their own production team.

For run-and-gun photographers and filmmakers, the body is built for functional muscle memory. Alongside typical layouts like the white balance, ISO, and exposure compensation buttons along the top, or dials to control things like aperture without taking your hand off the body, there are also multiple red buttons for recording video. There’s one button on the top plate and another on the front. You can start recording footage, no matter which photo mode you’re currently in.

The material on this camera has some of the most satisfying tactile feedback I’ve encountered on a camera. Its design isn’t that far off from many other cameras like it, but the distinction is in the subtleties. For example, the audio information button along the top is rubberized, which gives it slightly more friction than the machined metal video button right next to it. Once you’re familiar with the layout, little details like this make it easy to tell exactly which button or dial your finger is on without looking.

Photographer: Panasonic

The kit comes with a slightly better-than-standard f/2.8, 12–60mm variable focal length lens. It also includes optional Power OIS, which, combined with the in-body image stabilization, makes the whole system impressively smooth, even when freehanding shots. Inside, the GH6 packs a 25.2-MP Micro Four Thirds sensor. It’s a little on the small side, but it works well enough for this camera.

Battery life, unfortunately, is middling. A fully charged battery will last about an hour of continuous usage, whether that’s photos or 4K video. However, that could be substantially less, especially if you rely on Apple ProRes recording. Conveniently, however, you can charge the battery using the device’s USB-C port. If it can supply enough power (around 9V/3A), then you can operate the camera off USB-C power. Still, you might want a spare battery or two.

Balance and Focus

The Lumix GH6 feels like it expects you to use it while on the go. The level gauge overlay display has a built-in accelerometer to display lean and tilt, turning green when you’re as level as can be. This is the kind of feature that is unnecessary if you have a good tripod or gimbal, but if all you can bring with you is your camera and your feet, it’s a handy tool.

The camera uses contrast-detection autofocus. This type of autofocus is increasingly outdated, but at least the GH6 does well with it. A blue overlay will highlight the areas of the image that are in sharp focus, and repeatedly pressing the autofocus button can (sometimes) switch between different subjects in focus.

When rotating the focus lens manually, a gauge pops up indicating the focal distance and, crucially, which direction you’re moving the focus. This is the kind of extremely handy feature that’s hard to do without once you have it—no more guessing whether you’ve over- or under-shot the focus.

Options Upon Options

The GH6 came with an already impressive range of video recording options, and a firmware update in late July added even more. The star of the show is the addition of Apple ProRes 422 and 422 HQ. Depending on your storage media, you can shoot up to 5.7K video at 30 fps in ProRes 422 HQ, one of the best compressed codecs you can use without diving into studio-level cameras. This is particularly handy for filmmakers looking to edit for 4K output.

Storage media matters because, for certain video settings, the SD card you have laying around probably won’t cut it. Most typical SD cards max out at around 300MB/s read speeds, but their write speeds can often be much lower. For example, this 128-GB SD card tops out at around 120 MB/s when writing and is usually on sale for about $36. Meanwhile, a 128-GB SD card that dog record at the nearly 240 MB/s required for 5.7K ProRes footage costs around $120, at the time of writing.

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Categories
Entertainment

Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie banished by Princess Diana after fallout with Fergie | Royal | News

Princess Beatrice dons floral dress to attend Wimbledon

Princess Beatrice celebrates her 34th birthday on Monday. The royal, who remains largely out of the spotlight, is likely to spend the occasion privately, likely in the company of her husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, daughter Sienna and step-son Wolfie. Beatrice and Edoardo divide their time between St James’s Palace in Westminster and the Cotswolds.

Their London residence is just a two-mile walk from the current home of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge and Prince William, although it has been reported that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will soon be relocating to the Windsor estate.

The relationship between Beatrice and her sister Princess Eugenie and the Cambridges has been the subject of speculation in recent weeks.

Royal commentator Neil Sean claimed that the two princesses have been “struggling” with the Duke and Duchess after the removal of Prince Andrew from public life.

He told Express.co.uk: “There is a big story breaking in the Royal Family that has remained largely under the radar, and it’s to do with Prince William, the Duchess of Cambridge, and William’s father Prince Charles.

READ MORE: Poll results: Beatrice and Eugenie urged against Andrew’s royal return – You voted

Beatrice and Eugenie / Princess Diana / William and Harry

Beatrice and Eugenie were reportedly ‘banished’ by Diana. (Image: Getty Images)

Eugenie, Beatrice, William and Harry

The York sisters are supposedly ‘struggling’ to remain cordial with William and Kate. (Image: Getty Images)

Harry ‘not welcomed’ by Anne and Sophie Wessex at Philip’s funeral — unearthed accounts

“According to very good sources, Princesses Eugenie and Beatrice are seemingly struggling to remain cordial with Prince William, Catherine and Charles.

“It stems from the deal organized by William, the Queen, and Prince Charles to remove their father Prince Andrew from royal duties following his disgrace in recent years.”

Beatrice and Eugenie are believed to have once been close with their cousin, with royal biographer Tina Brown describing the pair as the “favorite cousins” of the Duke and his brother Prince Harry.

However, in her 2022 book ‘The Palace Papers’, Ms Brown recounted an earlier obstacle in the royals’ relationship, claiming that the princes’ mother Diana, Princess of Wales “banished” the York sisters from seeing her boys.

Ms Brown noted how important Diana’s sons were to her, referring to the times the princess took the two boys “to theme parks, shooting ranges, films,” and mentioning Diana breaking royal protocol as she “kicked off her shoes and ran barefoot in the mothers’ race” at Harry’s nursery.

Princess Diana with William and Harry

Diana wanted her children to have moments of normalcy. (Image: Getty Images)

But, the royal biographer also claimed that “there was a destructive side to Diana’s mothering,” adding that a “rampant insecurity” dictated that the Princess of Wales “always needed to be first in her boys’ hearts”.

Ms Brown described Diana’s “pattern of cutting out people” the two princes cared about, which “continued throughout their childhood”.

She claimed a falling out between Diana and Sarah Ferguson saw the princess “banish” the boys’ “favorite cousins” — Beatrice and Eugenie.

The late princess allegedly “fatwa’d her sister-in-law for revealing she had developed verrucae after borrowing Diana’s shoes.”

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Beatrice, Eugenie, William and Harry as children

Beatrice and Eugenie were William and Harry’s ‘favorite cousins’. (Image: Getty Images)

Diana and Sarah — affectionately nicknamed Fergie — had a complicated relationship, which over the years saw them as rivals, best friends and all that comes in between.

Long before the two women married into the Royal Family, the pair had a friendship, given that they were fourth cousins ​​and their mothers went to school together.

However, they only became close in 1980 — when Diana was 19 and Fergie was 21.

Fergie was invited to the Royal Wedding of Diana and Prince Charles in 1981, and soon became a confidant for the new princess as she came to terms with all things royal.

The Palace Papers by Tina Brown

Sarah later wrote in her 1996 autobiography: “She was two years younger than I, and I strove to support and protect her as I would a younger sister — as I still do today, as a best friend.”

It was Diana who introduced Sarah to Prince Andrew, and as her friend entered the royal fold, the Princess of Wales took on a protective and guiding role.

Sarah brought out the fun and cheeky side of Diana, which often got the royal sisters-in-law in trouble with the Firm and criticized by the press.

But as sisterly relationships often go, beneath the close bond was a certain amount of rivalry.

Fergie impressed the Queen Elizabeth II with her pilot’s license, won over Prince Philip by taking up open carriage driving, one of the Duke of Edinburgh’s favorite past-times, and excelled at the kind of sports that the royals love, but Diana wasn’t good at, including skiing and horseback riding.

The Princess of Wales revealed to her biographer Andrew Morton, that Fergie “wooed everybody in this family and did it so well. She left me looking like dirt,” adding that Prince Charles told her “I wish you would be like Fergie — all jolly.”

But when both of their relationships broke down, the two women leant on each other for support.

By 1992, when they both officially separated from their husbands, Diana and Fergie were closer than ever.

However, 1996 saw Diana stop speaking to Fergie altogether, allegedly because of the way her former sister-in-law wrote about her in her autobiography, which came out in the November of that year.

When Diana tragically died in August 1997, the pair had not reconciled.

Princess Diana and Sarah Ferguson

Diana and Sarah soon became close confidants. (Image: Getty Images)

Sarah attended her old friend’s funeral and later told Harper’s Bazaar: “Because we were like siblings… we rowed. And the saddest thing, at the end, we hadn’t spoken for a year.”

She continued: “I tried, wrote letters, thinking whatever happened didn’t matter, let’s sort it out.

“And I knew she’d come back. In fact, the day before she died she rang a friend of mine and said: ‘Where’s that Red? I want to talk to her.'”

Some 25 years later, it is understood that Beatrice and Eugenie are particularly close with their cousin Harry and his wife Meghan Markle.

Eugenie is the only member of the Royal Family to visit the Duke and Duchess of Sussex in Montecito, California, and until recently resided in their former royal residence Frogmore Cottage.

‘The Palace Papers’ was written by Tina Brown and published by Century in 2022. You can find it here.

Categories
Sports

rugby leaguenews | Queensland Cup player Michael Purcell dead after car crash

The rugby league community is mourning the death of Queensland Cup flyer Michael Purcell, who died in a car crash on Sunday morning, aged 28.

Known as ‘Purcey’ or, more famously, ‘The Kangaroo Catcher’ due to stories of him beating a kangaroo in a race, Purcell was a livewire outside back who had flirted with an NRL opportunity earlier this year, when he was given a train and trial contract with the Melbourne Storm and played a trial match for them in Albury.

He scored tries for fun in the Q-Cup for both Ipswich Jets and Brisbane Tigers, quickly becoming a fan favourite.

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“It is with a heavy heart and much sadness that we have to announce that the Savige Pest Control Ipswich Jets today lost one of their own, with the passing of Jet 568, The Kangaroo Catcher, Michael Purcell,” the club said.

“We will put out a more detailed statement in the next few days, but wanted to pass on our thoughts and prayers to his family and friends at this most difficult of times. A much loved Jet who will be greatly missed.

“Once a Jet, always a Jet.”

Current NRL player James Roberts and Broncos legend Steve Renouf were among those who paid tribute to Purcell in the aftermath.

“Melbourne Storm is saddened to hear of Michael’s tragic passing at the weekend,” the Storm said in a statement.

“He was a very welcome and engaged participant in our pre-season last year, highlighted by pulling on the purple jersey in our trial game in Albury.

Stream the NRL premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now

“We will remember him as a very likeable young man, who fitted in very quickly with our group on and off the training field.

“Our thoughts go to his family and friends, and his past and current teammates.”

“We are extremely saddened to hear of the passing of former Brisbane Tigers player Michael Purcell also known as the Kangaroo Catcher,” his former Q-Cup team wrote.

“Purcey, 28-years young was Tigers player No.1344 and played nine games for the Tigers across the 2020 and 2021 seasons before being a part of Bulimba Bulldogs BRL Premier Grade squad in 2022.

“Thoughts and prayers are with Purcey’s family, friends, those he played with at the Tigers, Bulimba Bulldogs, Brothers, Ipswich Jets and the wider rugby league community.”

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US

Five takeaways on a super August Sunday for Senate Democrats

Senate Democrats after a very long series of votes have approved a massive $740 billion bill that will make significant investments in climate change while lowering the price of prescription drugs and taking steps toward a more equitable tax code.

That the Senate was able to get the bill done is somewhat of a surprise if you look back to December 2021, when Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) appeared to torpedo the efforts with an announcement on Fox News that he could not support the measure because of inflation.

It was just the first time Manchin appeared to kill the bill, only for him to save it with a last-minute deal with Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) late last month that caught most of Washington and the nation by surprise .

The package now moves to the House, where it is expected to be approved despite opposition from Republicans and some disappointment from Democrats about its size.

Here are five takeaways.

Senate Democrats stuck together

The Senate was in session Saturday, beginning a vote-a-rama at 11:30 pm Saturday that continued through Sunday in which Democrats blocked GOP amendment after GOP amendment.

Republicans had a few goals with their amendment strategy.

One was to force Democrats into tough votes ahead of the midterm elections on gas prices, taxes, immigration and other issues.

Another aim was to add a “poison pill” amendment to the package that might weaken its support in the House and force the whole enterprise to collapse.

None of these amendments were added to the package — at least for the first 14 or 15 hours of the marathon, because Democrats were able to stick together to fight them off.

That changed after 2 pm Sunday, when Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.) and six other Democrats backed a measure that raised revenue by extending for one year the cap on state and local tax (SALT) deductions that was a key feature of the 2017 Trump tax cut bill.

Democrats initially worried about the passage of that amendment could hurt the bill, but after its passage they offered another amendment that replaced the SALT cap extension with a different tax provision.

It was somewhat predictable that Democrats stuck together since it was a necessity for final passage, but it was still notable given the stark differences between centrists like Manchin and Sinema and progressive voices such as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).

During the final vote, several Democrats offered hugs to Sinema. The relief on members’ faces as they said goodbye ahead of the August recess was clear.

Sanders, Dems both showed some frustration

It wasn’t all love and roses for Democrats during the marathon night of voting.

While the larger story was Democrats battling off GOP amendments, Democrats also killed off multiple amendments from one of their own caucus members: Sanders, the two-time presidential candidate.

In one of the night’s most heated moments on the floor, Sanders offered an amendment to revive the expanded child tax credit, which lapsed late last year, as part of the Democrats’ sprawling package.

“Pathetically, the United States has the highest child poverty rate of almost any major country on Earth, and it is especially high among young people of color,” Sanders said. “This is the wealthiest nation on Earth, we should not have the highest rate of childhood poverty of almost any country.”

The Sanders measure would have restored an expanded $300 credit for four years, and would have been paid for by raising the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent.

Democrats argued that while much of the party agreed with the Sanders proposal, if added it would have sunk the entire package.

“Sen. Sanders is right, the child tax credit is one of the most important things this body did. It brought down the child poverty rate by 40 percent almost immediately,” said Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), who nonetheless urged colleagues against voting for the amendment to avoid bringing “the bill down.”

As the debate continued and Sanders pushed back at Brown, asking what harm there would be in at least forcing those Democrats opposed to the tax credit from killing it while the rest of the caucus—48 senators in all—voted for it, Brown could be heard saying “come on, Bernie.”

In the end, Democrats did stick together — with Republicans but without Sanders — voting down the amendment 1-99.

One senator has a lot of power in the 50-50 Senate

At one time the package House and Senate Democrats envisioned would have included the child tax credit and a lot more.

The package being considered last fall would have topped $3 trillion, representing one of the most ambitious legislative plans in US history.

What ended up passing is a lot smaller — mostly because of Manchin and Sinema, who both opposed various parts of the initial plan.

The result reflected the essential truth that Democrats couldn’t do much of anything without Manchin and Sinema, since no Republicans were going to join them on their legislation. That meant they needed complete unity in their ranks in the Senate to get anything done.

Out went the elimination of the “carried interest loophole,” a casualty to Sinema that was meant to raise taxes on hedge fund money managers.

In came language to bolster oil and gas drilling in a package that overall is meant to steer the US away from dependence on fossil fuels. That was a concession to Manchin, who also whittled the size of the bill down largely because he said he did not want it to increase inflation.

Democrats essentially had to buy off Manchin and then Sinema to get the bill through the Senate, and both used their leverage to get a lot of what they wanted.

It’s another lesson in the basic politics of the Senate. If your vote is needed, you can get paid in provisions for your state and interest, something both Manchin and Sinema got in spades.

Sinema flexed her political muscle early in the negotiations when she ruled out proposals to increase the corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 25 percent and to raise the top marginal income tax rate on wealthy individuals.

Democratic colleagues were stunned by her hard line as they assumed corporate and top-bracket income tax breaks would be at the core of any budget reconciliation package.

Some other Democrats tried to use their leverage as well by threatening to derail the package if it included language that would be unpalatable to their constituents.

Sen. Bob Menendez (DN.J.) said he would vote against the final reconciliation bill if it included any Republican-sponsored amendments on immigration and some Western Democrats warned they might vote “no” if a drought relief provision sought by Sinema penalized their home states .

Democrats hope for some help in the midterms

The Democratic base has been down in the dumps for months — in part because of a sense that its political leaders were getting little done in Washington.

This feeling was always subjective and partly linked to expectations of members of the party set.

In his first year in office, Biden saw Democratic majorities approve a massive coronavirus relief package months into his term, and later a trillion-dollar infrastructure bill that will make major investments in roads and bridges across the country.

But because the Build Back Better agenda was blocked — and because a fair number of Democrats identified that as their real top priority — there was a sense the party had accomplished close to nothing.

That feeling contributed to Biden’s negative polling numbers that were already down because of frustration over inflation and high gas prices.

The expectation for much of 2021 was that Democrats would not get much of Build Back Better done. Instead, they are on the verge of passing a $740 billion chunk of it.

The party hopes it will make the base feel a little more strongly about going to the polls to back Democratic House and Senate candidates in November.

Schumer showed his mettle as a leader

Schumer faced a lot of questions about his ability to lead a razor-thin 50-50 Senate majority when he took over control over the upper chamber in January of last year.

Progressives pressed him from the start to consider tossing out the Senate filibuster to pass big, bold proposals such as election reform despite the slim Democratic majority.

Democratic senators said if they failed to pass legislation to tackle climate change the session would have been something of a disappointment.

Prospects for climate change and tax reform legislation looked bleak after Schumer and Manchin blew up at each other in a July 14 meeting but Manchin came back to the leader a few days later looking to rekindle a deal.

Schumer declared the resulting compromise “one of the most comprehensive and impactful bills Congress has seen in decades.”

Getting Manchin to agree to the most sweeping climate bill ever passed by Congress despite the strong opposition of the West Virginia Coal Association will go down in the books as an impressive example of leadership and deal making.

Getting Sinema to agree to give Medicare power to negotiate lower drug price is another impressive accomplishment. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) hailed it as a “seismic shift” in power between the government and the pharmaceutical industry.

And Schumer kept Sanders, chair of the Senate Budget Committee, from defecting, despite his loud grumblings that the bill fell far short of what the American public needs to better afford health care, child care and housing.

Democrats voted en masse to defeat several attempts by Sanders to change the bill after Schumer urged them to keep the legislation free of changes. The Vermont senator still stuck with his leader to pass the Inflation Reduction Act Sunday afternoon.

Mychael Schnell contributed.

Categories
Business

Qantas admits airline has not met ‘customer expectations’ as it asks senior executives to work as baggage handlers

Qantas has admitted its operational performance has not met public expectation as it confirmed its contingency plan to cope with the surge in demand over the next three months.

The Australian on Monday morning reported the national carrier had asked senior executives and other office workers to fill in as ground handlers as the business ramps up its operations.

Chief Operating Officer Colin Hughes in a note to staff called on “at least 100 managers and executives to opt into a short-term arrangement over the next three months.”

“The high levels of winter flu and a COVID spike across the community, coupled with the ongoing tight labor market, make resourcing a challenge across our industry,” it read.

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“There are a range of strategies to get our performance back to where we and our customers expect it to be. While this includes recruiting thousands of new team members into our operation and ongoing recruitment by our ground handling partners, we need to build more resilience into our operation now.

“Establishing a short-term contingency team will help do this.”

The note goes on to say Qantas is seeking expressions of interest from managers and executives to join the contingency program.

“People who respond to the EOI will be trained and rostered into the ramp environment at Sydney and Melbourne airports,” Mr Hughes said.

“These people will support our ground handling partners, who are managing the Qantas operation, over a three-month period from mid-August.”

A Qantas spokesperson on Monday admitted the airline’s recent performance had not been up to par as it confirmed Mr Hughes’ note.

“We’ve been clear that our operational performance has not been meeting our customers’ expectations or the standards that we expect of ourselves – and that we’ve been pulling out all stops to improve our performance,” the spokesperson said.

“As we have done in the past during busy periods, around 200 head office staff have helped at airports during peak travel periods since Easter.

“While we manage the impacts of a record flu season and ongoing COVID cases coupled with the tightest labor market in decades, we’re continuing that contingency planning across our airport operations for the next three months.”

The revelation comes a year after the Federal Court ruled that the national carrier breached the Fair Work Act by outsourcing about 2,000 ground crew jobs to third party contractors in the middle of the pandemic – with Swissport taking on the majority of the work.

TWU National Secretary Michael Kaine hit out at Qantas for its latest attempt to fix staffing problems.

“It’s a shocking insult that nearly 2,000 experienced workers are forced to sit at home because their jobs were stolen from them while corporate ring-ins are being dragged to the baggage rooms to help ease airport chaos,” he told SkyNews.com.au.

“This isn’t the brainwave Qantas management seems to think it is.

“Introducing inexperienced office workers into specialist aviation workplaces will only increase the likelihood of serious injuries and safety incidents on site, throwing airports into further disarray.”

In the note, Qantas told staff they would be fully trained to “safely” carry out the required functions.

“During your time in the contingency program, you’ll be an embedded resource within the ground handling partners. This means you’ll receive a roster, be scheduled to operate and be supervised and managed in the live operation by our ground handling partners, ” Mr Hughes said.

The note also listed the key parts of the role which included loading and unloading the aircraft and driving a tug.

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Categories
Technology

Google sues Sonos over smart speaker and voice control tech

Google is striking back at Sonos with a pair of lawsuits alleging that the wireless speaker company is infringing on a number of its patents around smart speakers and voice control technology. It’s the latest volley in a back-and-forth battle over wireless speakers that has so far involved multiple lawsuits from Sonos, one lawsuit from Google, and one ruling in favor of Sonos that’s led to features being stripped from Google’s products.

These new lawsuits allege infringement of seven additional patents. One lawsuit focuses on hotword detection and wireless charging, and the other revolves around how a group of speakers determines which one should respond to voice input.

Google spokesperson José Castañeda said the lawsuits are being filed to “defend our technology and challenge Sonos’s clear, continued infringement of our patents.” Castañeda said that Sonos had “started an aggressive and misleading campaign against our products, at the expense of our shared customers.”

Both lawsuits are being filed this morning in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. Google plans to file similar lawsuits with the US International Trade Commission in the coming days that will seek to ban imports of any infringing Sonos products, Castañeda told TheVerge.

The legal skirmish started in 2020 when Sonos initially sued Google over multiroom speaker technology. The two companies had partnered years earlier to make Google services work on Sonos speakers, and Sonos claimed that Google went on to steal its speaker tech to build the Google Home and other devices. Google countersued months later, claiming Sonos infringed on a number of its patents, too. Then Sonos sued again. Finally, in January — two years after the first lawsuit was filed — the US International Trade Commission ruled in Sonos’ favor, finding Google in violation of Sonos’ patents.

In response, Google has had to adjust features of some of its products. That included Google removing the ability to adjust the volume of a group of speakers at once — a pretty annoying change for owners of multiple Google speakers. Today’s lawsuits seem to be an attempt by Google to gain leverage on Sonos as the two spar over features.

Categories
Entertainment

Jesinta Campbell speaks about her battle with postnatal depletion after having two kids in 12 months

Jesinta Franklin has recalled her battle with postnatal depletion following the birth of her two children in the space of one year.

The 30-year-old model welcomed her daughter Tullulah in 2020 and son Rocky, one, in 2021 with her husband Lance ‘Buddy’ Franklin.

Jesinta told Women’s Health: ‘It felt like there were so many things that compounded in those two years that weren’t just me having two children.’

Jesinta Franklin has spoken about her battle with postnatal depletion following the birth of her two children in the space of one year

Jesinta Franklin has spoken about her battle with postnatal depletion following the birth of her two children in the space of one year

‘It was lockdowns and not being able to see my family, not being able to have the support, living in AFL hubs, having a husband that was on the road constantly and having to live under all these strict guidelines in order for him to continue to play football.’

The mother-of-two went on to say she felt ‘mentally and emotionally depleted more than anything else’.

‘It’s probably taken me till about now to come right,’ she added.

The 30-year-old model welcomed her daughter Tullulah in 2020 and son Rocky in 2021 with her husband Lance 'Buddy' Franklin

The 30-year-old model welcomed her daughter Tullulah in 2020 and son Rocky in 2021 with her husband Lance ‘Buddy’ Franklin

The mother-of-two went on to say she felt 'mentally and emotionally depleted more than anything else'.  She is pictured here with her daughter de ella Tullulah

The mother-of-two went on to say she felt ‘mentally and emotionally depleted more than anything else’. She is pictured here with her daughter de ella Tullulah

In December, Jesinta revealed that welcoming two children in the last two years has ‘tested’ her marriage to Buddy.

She confessed to Stellar that both she and Buddy have struggled to spend quality time together due to their duties as parents.

What is Postnatal Depletion?

According to Bellybelly.com, postnatal depletion is a condition that involves both physical and emotional fatigue.

It often involves:

– Intense fatigue and exhaustion – and falling asleep without meaning to

– Lethargy

-Hyper vigilance

– Difficulty concentrating

-Anxiety

-Poor memory

– Loss of libido

– Worsening of pre-existing medical conditions

– Poor immune function

‘A lot of people don’t talk about how hard it is on your marriage having children,’ she said.

‘We really haven’t had much time just us two without the kids, but we’re a very tight-knit family.’

She continued: ‘It’s definitely not perfect, but we try to focus on being a team and facing the challenges together,’ she said of herself and Buddy.’

Jesinta also praised her husband for being a proactive and doting father to their children.

‘Bud is so hands-on and supportive, and I really missed that when he was gone. I’m really lucky to have a partner who is such an amazing father,’ she said, referring when he was away for the footy season.

Meanwhile, the couple are reportedly planning to sell their luxury home in Sydney’s eastern suburbs and relocating to the Gold Coast.

The rumors come amid reports Buddy is looking to either leave the Sydney Swans for a new club or retire from footy altogether, after he was asked to take a 50 per cent pay cut in 2023.

Jesinta, who hails from the Gold Coast, has also recently expressed her desire for the couple to live closer to family.

Rumors of the pair’s move to the sunshine state were published in The Daily Telegraph last week.

The publication contacted real estate Paul Biller from Biller Property agency, who listed the couple’s previous home in the affluent suburb of Rose Bay in 2020.

He sold their semi-detached property in an off-market deal for $3.8million and denied reports that the couple’s home was publicly listed.

Jesinta said she felt 'mentally and emotionally depleted more than anything else.  It's probably taken me till about now to come right,' she added

Jesinta said she felt ‘mentally and emotionally depleted more than anything else. It’s probably taken me till about now to come right,’ she added

The Franklins currently live in a luxury ground-floor apartment located nearby, which they also bought off-market.

Jesinta sparked rumors of the move after she spoke to Body+Soul in May about her husband’s football career and the family’s future plans.

‘I think there’s still a lot of good football left in him, but it’s our dream, whether that’s in five years or 10 years or whenever, to be able to live closer to one of the grandparents and have quality time.

In December, Jesinta revealed that welcoming two children in the last two years has 'tested' her marriage to Buddy.  She confessed to Stellar that both she and Buddy have struggled to spend quality time together due to their duties as parents

In December, Jesinta revealed that welcoming two children in the last two years has ‘tested’ her marriage to Buddy. She confessed to Stellar that both she and Buddy have struggled to spend quality time together due to their duties as parents

Jesinta's interview with Women's Health is out now

Jesinta’s interview with Women’s Health is out now

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Categories
Sports

South Australia’s Crows chairman and chief executive apologize to Eddie Betts, Josh Jenkins amid training camp fallout

Adelaide Crows’ chairman and chief executive have apologized to former players Eddie Betts and Josh Jenkins over their experience at the controversial 2018 pre-season training camp.

Adelaide Football Club chairman John Olsen and chief executive Tim Silvers have penned an open letter to club members and fans after Betts’ released a book last week revealing how confidential information was used to verbally abuse him during the camp.

Former Crows Josh Jenkins and Bryce Gibbs also expressed their disappointment at the camp and how players were sworn to secrecy about what had occurred.

“We apologize to Eddie, Josh and any other player, coach or staff member, who had a negative experience during this time,” Olsen and Silvers wrote.

“It has been confronting to hear Eddie Betts and Josh Jenkins describe their experiences during the 2018 pre-season training camp on the Gold Coast, as well as the subsequent hurt they have carried.

“Equally we are sorry to hear Bryce Gibbs express his disappointment at the way in which the camp and events surrounding it were handled and its impact on the playing group, and we acknowledge there are others who may feel the same way.

“The most important thing we can do now is listen and offer our support.”

A man wearing a suit speaks to microphones in front of a blue and red banner
Adelaide Crows chief executive Tim Silvers apologized to Eddie Betts last week.(ABC News: Camron Slessor)

Olsen and Silvers said “moving on” as a club would be “difficult”.

“Everyone will do it in their own time and in their own way, and we sincerely hope that, with the passage of time, the healing process can take place,” they wrote.

“We are committed to emerging from this painful and challenging period and getting better.

“While we cannot rewrite history, we remain determined to learn from the past.”

The pair stressed that the club culture had shifted in the past few years, with changes to several leadership positions.

Don Pyke sitting next to Rob Chapman with microphones in front of them
Coach Don Pyke (left) and Crows chairman Rob Chapman (right) have since left the club.(abcnews)

Then-coach Don Pyke, head of football Brett Burton, chairman Rob Chapman and chief executive Andrew Fagan have since left their roles.

The camp was held after Adelaide’s defeat to Richmond in the 2017 Grand Final.

Silvers and AFL boss Gillon McLachlan have apologized to Betts for the hurt caused by the camp amid a potential class action.

Betts’ biography further detailed misappropriate use of Aboriginal rituals while Jenkins claimed details about his upbringing were used against him during the camp, despite him explicitly requested it not be shared.

The AFL and SafeWork SA completed separated investigations and found no breaches to work safety laws.

However, the AFL Players’ Association is contacting all players from the 2018 camp to gain better understanding of the issues that were raised.

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Categories
US

Senate delivers major boost to Biden’s agenda : NPR

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., speaks during a news conference after passage of the Inflation Reduction Act at the US Capitol on Sunday.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images


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Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., speaks during a news conference after passage of the Inflation Reduction Act at the US Capitol on Sunday.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Congress is on the verge of passing President Biden’s signature legislative achievement after Senate Democrats approved a better climate, health care and tax bill on Sunday.

“It’s been a long tough and winding road but at last, at last, we have arrived,” Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said before Sunday’s vote, which came after more than 24 hours of debate and votes on amendments to the Inflation Reduction Act. measure passed after Vice President Kamala Harris cast a tie-breaking vote.

The vote is a boost for the president, who ended his isolation at the White House Sunday after testing negative a second time for COVID. Although his approval ratings of him are still underwater, Biden has witnessed an unusual stretch of good news: from blockbuster job numbers to bipartisan legislation passing Congress, and the killing of a terrorist leader. Democrats, meanwhile, have something to campaign on with less than three months left for the midterms, where they are expected to lose ground.

In a statement issued after the Senate vote on the roughly $700 billion package, Biden said “doing the important thing almost always” requires compromises. Indeed, Democrats were initially looking at a $3.5 trillion package.

“I ran for President promising to make government work for working families again, and that is what this bill does – period,” Biden said. He also urged the House to pass the bill as possible so he can sign it into law.

That could happen as early as Friday when the House is scheduled to return from its recess.

“The House will return and move swiftly to send this bill to the President’s desk — proudly building a healthier, cleaner, fairer future for all Americans,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement.

With less than three months from the midterms, Democrats are eager to move beyond their internal splits and tout the accomplishments they have been able to get through Congress in the past few months: bipartisan gun reform, a veterans health care bill and a legislation boosting semiconductor chip production in the US

Rep. Josh Gottheimer, DN.J., who had appeared skeptical of the measure, said in a statement Sunday he’ll be voting for it.

“This bill passes my key test that I’ve pushed for since day one: it does not raise taxes on individuals, families, or small businesses in my District,” he said.

What’s in the bill

The measure includes several significant policy changes. It includes roughly $370 billion for climate change policies, including tax credits for electric vehicles and money for renewable energy programs. Democrats say these investments will cut greenhouse emissions by 40% from 2005 levels by the end of the decade.

“Very few pieces of legislation will ever make the kind of impact that this climate bill will have, not just for the United States, but for the entire world,” Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., said after the measure passed on the Senate floor.

Additionally, the bill allows Medicare to negotiate the prices of certain prescription drugs, and caps the cost of out-of-pocket costs people on Medicare pay to $2,000 per year, starting in 2025. The powerful pharmaceutical industry lobby has opposed this for years.

The bill also extends the subsidies for the Affordable Care Act that were part of a pandemic relief bill for three more years.

Tax changes include a 15% minimum corporate minimum tax and an excise tax on stock buybacks that will bring in roughly $300 billion in new revenue to pay down the deficit.

republican response

Senate Republicans were united in their opposition to the package.

Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, in a statement, excoriated the bill, saying it would make the deficit worse.

“Democrats have proven over and over they simply do not care about middle-class families’ priorities,” he said in a statement. “They have spent 18 months providing that. They just spent hundreds of billions of dollars to provide it again.”

Democrats, however, argue that the bill will not exacerbate inflation and will actually lower it, pointing to other studies.

A boost for Biden

News of the bill’s passage caps a string of good news for the president. The week began with Biden announcing the killing of al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri. The Senate then passed a bipartisan measure to provide health care and benefits for millions of veterans injured by exposure to toxins, from Agent Orange in Vietnam to burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan. Both came a week after the Senate passed a major industrial bill aimed at investing billions in American-made technology like semiconductors.

As recently ads last month, the Democrats spending package appeared dead after more than a year of internal squabbles between moderates and progressives about the size and scope of the proposal.

Schumer and West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin secretly renewed talks about 10 days ago and put together the framework. Most Democrats were skeptical after Manchin pulled back from talks citing inflation concerns just days before this deal was announced. Democrats also needed the vote of Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, who forced leaders to remove a provision targeting how hedge funds and private equity funds are taxed.