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Technology

DuckDuckGo to block Microsoft trackers amid backlash

San Francisco: Following the May disclosure that the privacy-focused online browser DuckDuckGo permits Microsoft to track scripts on external sites, the platform now claims to begin banning those as well.

The platform said it was announcing more privacy and transparency around DuckDuckGo’s web tracking protections after community backlash.

“Over the next week, we will expand the third-party tracking scripts we block from loading on websites to include scripts from Microsoft in our browsing apps (iOS and Android) and our browser extensions (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge and Opera) , with beta apps to follow in the coming month,” the platform said in a blogpost.

M.S. Education Academy

DuckDuckGo said this expands its 3rd-Party Tracker Loading Protection, which blocks identified tracking scripts from Facebook, Google, and other companies from loading on third-party websites, to now include third-party Microsoft tracking scripts.

This web tracking protection is not offered by most other popular browsers by default and sits on top of many other DuckDuckGo protections.

To further deliver on its commitment to transparency, the privacy-focused online browser said it has posted a new help page that offers a comprehensive explanation of all the web tracking protections we provide across platforms.

“Users now have one place to look if they want to understand the different kinds of web privacy protections we offer on the platforms they use,” the platform said.

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US

Lake Mead: More human remains found in receding waters



CNN

More human remains have been found in the receding waters of Lake Mead, authorities announced Saturday.

This is the fourth time human remains have been found at Lake Mead National Recreation Area since May.

In the latest incident, park rangers got a call Saturday morning about skeletal remains at Swim Beach area, National Park Service officials said in a statement.

Rangers set up a perimeter at the beach to recover the remains with help from divers from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, according to the Park Service. A coroner was also called to determine the cause of death.

At least three different sets have previously been found at the lake, where water levels have plunged to unprecedented lows amid an unrelenting water crisis in the West.

The previous remains discovered, including a body that was found in a corroding barrel with a gunshot wound, were in advanced stages of decomposition and thus difficult to extract DNA from, officials said.

It’s unclear how long the latest remains found have been in the lake. The homicide division of Las Vegas Metropolitan Police is not currently handling the investigation, Lt. Jason Johansson told CNN.

The police department is, however, leading the investigation into a different body, one found in the barrel on the lake’s Hemenway Harbor on May 1. The body had an obvious gunshot wound and investigators immediately treated it as a homicide investigation, Johansson previously told CNN .

“Anytime you have a body in a barrel, clearly there was somebody else involved,” he said.

Since then, Clark County Coroner Melanie Rouse has preliminarily ruled the cause and manner of death a homicide by gunshot. The remains, dubbed Hemenway Harbor Doe by the coroner’s office, belonged to someone who died in the mid-’70s to early ’80s, according to police.

A second set of remains – found on May 7 at Calville Bay – are believed to belong to someone who was approximately between ages 23 and 37, according to Rouse.

It’s unclear how that person died. The Calville Bay remains are more skeletal than the other two sets, which both still have organ tissue available for examination, Rouse said.

A third set of remains – found at the lake’s Swim Beach on July 25 – are only partial and are still at early stages of examination, according to Rouse.

The lake straddles the border of Nevada and Arizona.

While the grim discoveries in the shrinking lake quickly generated theories of mob involvement, Johansson said those ideas are “mere speculation” at this point in the investigation.

A National Park Service spokesperson told CNN one possible explanation for the remains could be that they belong to people who previously drowned at the lake when water levels used to be high.

At its height in ’80s, Lake Mead – the largest manmade reservoir in the country – was 1,225 feet above sea level. But as the mega-drought persists, water levels have plunged this year to the lowest level since the reservoir was filled in the 1930s.

Lake Mead was filled to just 27% of capacity as of July 18, 2022, according to NASA.

Water levels have plummeted so much that, in addition to several bodies, they have exposed a sunken World War II-era vessel, the Park Service announced in early July.

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Categories
Technology

Behold, The Telstra Phone Car That Time Forgot

I visited Adelaide this week, and while wine is top of everyone’s agenda when visiting the land of many grapes, one of the highlights for me was this phone car.

You see, dear reader, I am an excitable, hyperfixating mess when it comes to two things: cool, goofy tech and cars. So, imagine my excitement when I came across the “World’s Largest Mobile Phone”, built by none other than Telecom Australia, on a Volkswagen chassis?

This delightful automobile carries a history to it that I’d love to dig deeper into, but for now, I’ll entertain you with what I know.

This phone on wheels dates back to the 1980s (Despite saying 1992 on the side). It was built by Telecom Australia, which then became Telstra in 1995.

During the 1980s, it was used in a variety of Australian parades. The National Archives of Australia has this snap of the car from 1980 at Warana in Queensland.

Now, here’s where the history of the phone car becomes a bit of a mystery to me. As you’ll see in the images I snapped, the car as it appears in National Archives of Australia photos is slightly different. On the older version, you’ll see lights on the bottom, and on the newer version, you’ll see a hash key and an asterisk key.

You’ll also see different stickers placed across the car, though I suspect that much of this was a refresh in time for the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona (of which Telecom Australia was an Australian Olympic Team Sponsor, as written on the phone car).

But allow me to entertain you with some recounted history from the National Motor Museum in Birdwood, South Australia, where the phone car is currently on display (by the way, car lovers, you need to go see the collection, it’s incredible).

“This car is a working phone,” the Australian Motor Museum has written beside the Telecom Australia Phone Car.

“It was built by Telecom on a Volkswagen Chassis. They used it for walls and other promotions during the late 1980s. At events, the car was linked to a phone line and the public were invited to press the buttons and call anyone in Australia.”

Well, hot dang, Telecom Australia. Innovation on wheels.

Would I like to drive the phone car? Absolutely. It may not be an electric car, nor would it go particularly fast, but I’m a sucker for things like this. Perhaps the legacy of the car phone lives on in Apple CarPlay or Android Auto, which brings mobile phone connectivity to the modern vehicle.

Long live the phone car.

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Sports

The game’s problem with small truths shows why it’s ill-equipped to handle large truths

They were premieres less than a month later.

Nowadays, many in the football bubble (not all) forget clubs are accountable to fans, members, sponsors, donors and corporate backers, so their default position is to take themselves and what is really happening way, way too seriously. They adopt a different personality, depending on whether they are inside or outside the club’s multiple walls.

That does not mean confidentiality is not required in many circumstances, but club talk about teaching players to have the courage to express themselves and be true to who they are as an individual is shown as complete baloney when the ‘team is all that matters’ ethos is instantly invoked to help clubs cover up and scramble the narrative when a need for facing the truth becomes essential for a club to move forward.

Eddie Langdon spoke the truth.  Surely he can't be doing the wrong thing.

Eddie Langdon spoke the truth. Surely he can’t be doing the wrong thing. Credit:Getty

The reaction from Melbourne’s hierarchy to wingman Ed Langdon’s comments that Collingwood was “a one trick pony” and “all duck no dinner” was instructive of a club’s ethos. Simon Goodwin applied a forceful message with a light touch.

“So Ed will put his hand up and say he got that wrong, but I don’t think we should criticize players for making mistakes when they go in the media,” Goodwin said.

loading

Goodwin seemed concerned that it may be constructed as disrespectful to Collingwood, but the effect of what he was saying was be careful with the truth.

That’s not a criticism of Goodwin because he could consider the comments either unhelpful to his immediate objective of beating the Magpies or legitimately want to protect his player from the barrage of comments that might come his way.

But the underlying sentiment or message (which many within clubs at every level have) is that what players say needs to be controlled.

Langdon’s comments were his truth and let’s face it, probably not far from the truth. They created a rare atmosphere around the game and gave supporters a much-needed reminder of what footy should be about.

McVeigh’s comments showed he has learned that honesty is the best policy.

We can see the Adelaide camp debacle as again being a failure of leadership, an example of outsiders being given too much access to players, and think it’s solved by removing and discarding those responsible people and improved integrity measures.

That might help in the short term, but such outrages will occur again until the game learns to handle the truth and respond appropriately to those who put their name to words.

The Western Bulldogs or the Saints or the Blues?

Which team would you rather be with two rounds remaining?

Carlton need just one win to make finals but could face their final two rounds against top four teams without their skipper Patrick Cripps.

Patrick Cripps (left) and Charlie Curnow of the Blues celebrate during a match against the Giants last month.

Patrick Cripps (left) and Charlie Curnow of the Blues celebrate during a match against the Giants last month.Credit:AFL Pictures

The Western Bulldogs needs to win both against bottom six teams but don’t seem to have a system that will push them far enough into finals to make 2022 anything else but a disappointment.

St Kilda aren’t good enough but if they beat the Brisbane Lions and Sydney Swans they will have served a finals spot and everyone will assess the Saints with their glass half full.

All that assumes Richmond make it.

Blues, Bulldogs and Saints supporters may as well enjoy the thrill their run into the finals will provide because they won’t last long in September.

The Blues still have their destiny in their own hands, so they must make that fact a confidence booster as they attack their most important fortnight in a decade. And their fans, who have hit the panic button, need to calm down because it is not helping their team, who look scared to win.

Carlton are also on the up, having taken positive steps this season and their list is good. The Bulldogs have developed talent well, and with Liam Jones and possibly Rory Lobb arriving, and Sam Darcy and Jamarra Ugle-Hagan emerging will start better with an easier draw likely in 2023. But the defensive system needs tinkering.

The Saints list remains a worry and it could be that no matter what Brett Ratten does, they will remain a middle-table team with middle-ranking players.

The De Goey option to stay

Jordan De Goey is making it hard for Collingwood to imagine him playing for another club. His performance against Melbourne was his best game for the season as he arched the back and pumped his legs to find space that was so hard for most on the ground to find.

He is connected to teammates and his coach Craig McRae has made it clear he wants him to remain at the Magpies, but the football club’s wider remit and, let’s not forget, a series of off-field incidents have thrown doubts into the minds of those outside the football department as to whether he can fulfill his end of the bargain.

Jordan De Goey played his best game for the year on Friday night

Jordan De Goey played his best game for the year on Friday nightCredit:AFL Photos/Getty Images

If De Goey was prepared to take a short-term deal to stay with the club he seems comfortable with and stay surrounded by those who know him best, he may change the opinion of doubters and reveal his commitment to being a teammate and player they not only like but trust.

It would allow him to enjoy his football with a little less pressure than what would accompany him at a new club, all but ignoring those who walk the corridors of power unless he mucks up again. By then, if not already, he’d have no-one but himself to blame.

Port Adelaide: refresh or reset?

Ken Hinkley has been adamant that he will fulfill his contract to coach Port Adelaide in 2023, his connection to the players and coaching ability high after 10 seasons in charge where he has led the team to at least 10 wins a season (until this year when they have scrounged eight victories after losing their first five) and three preliminary finals.

Power coach Ken Hinkley understands pressure

Power coach Ken Hinkley understands pressureCredit:AFL Pictures

Good coaches are hard to find and, despite a vocal band of Port supporters complaining about Hinkley due to their non-appearance in a grand finale, Port would be silly to pull the pin on the basis that he has been there long enough.

However, it is incumbent on the club to communicate their plan beyond the end of next season and make necessary changes around the coach. They need to be certain they won’t flinch next season in their commitment to Hinkley if he continues because having a lame duck coach for a season is not used to anyone. A recommitment to Hinkley with a few fresh faces in support looks a logical approach after 2022.

One guarantee is that Hinkley will be honest with himself and the club about what lies ahead, which puts the club in a good place as they plan for next season and beyond.

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US

Los Angeles voters to decide if hotels will be forced to house the homeless despite safety concerns

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Los Angeles voters will cast their ballot on a proposal that could force hotels to house the homeless, a policy that has many hotel owners concerned about how it will impact public safety.

President of the Northeast Los Angeles Hotel Owners Association Ray Patel joined “Fox & Friends Weekend,” Sunday, to discuss why the policy is not a long-term solution and his concern if the policy is adopted.

“This is not a solution, it’s just a temporary fix,” Patel told co-host Carley Shimkus. “And during Project Roomkey, a great example, they housed the unhoused in the hotels – but the government never provided an end solution. They never provided transitional services to permanent housing; and simply issuing hotel vouchers impacting our hotels and our marketability of those rooms to the pain tourist, corporate travelers and locals is not a solution now.”

LOS ANGELES CITY COUNCIL APPROVES MEASURE TO BAN HOMELESS ENCAMPMENTS NEAR SCHOOLS

Patel touted the COVID-era program to secure housing for the homeless, but stressed his concern surrounding how the policy would impact public safety as crime continues to spiral out of control.

If passed, the voucher program would require hotels to send information on their vacant rooms for the day by 2 PM daily, but Patel stressed that many guests have not yet checked in by that time.

Born and raised on the streets of Los Angeles Skid Row, General Dogan walks past tents and clothes on the street near Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles.

Born and raised on the streets of Los Angeles Skid Row, General Dogan walks past tents and clothes on the street near Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles.
(Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images)

“That just doesn’t make sense because at 2 PM people are barely checking into the hotels, and they’re asking us to combine both populations in a hotel – the paying guests and those that have hotel vouchers that would be issued by the city ,” Patel said.

“And our great concern is the safety of our guests, our staff and also our neighbors that surround the business communities,” he continued.

The homeless crisis has been a long-time issue in Los Angeles, but has worsened in many cities nationwide since the pandemic began.

According to the LA Homeless Services Authority, over 66,000 people were homeless in 2020, which was a 12% increase from 2019.

“I think this is something that the government should have resolved long time ago,” Patel said. “It’s been politicized, and you’ll hear this from all the homeless advocate groups, too, looking for housing for the unhoused, as they seem to be taking on as a topic when politicians are running for office – but there’s no solution provided. “

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Technology

How to Use Lockdown Mode in iOS 16 to Make Your Phone More Secure

Apple prides itself on the security measures built into its software and hardware—and it continues to add new protections and safeguards over time. Lockdown Mode is a new feature heading to iPhones, iPads, and Macs later this year, and it promises to protect your devices from “highly targeted cyberattacks.”

As you might surmise from the name, Lockdown Mode is a bit like closing the shutters, double-bolting the doors, and turning off all the lights in your home. It severely restricts the kinds of activity allowed on your devices, the logic being that if something unwanted has gained access, the damage will be limited.

For example, attachments other than images get turned off in Messages, and link previews are disabled. Incoming FaceTime calls from unknown numbers are blocked, as are wired connections with other hardware and accessories. Shared albums are removed from the Photos app, and new shared album invitations are blocked.

On a more technical level, a number of web technologies are turned off, including just-in-time (JIT) JavaScript compilation (where code is run and compiled at the same time.) In addition, configuration profiles (for work or school for example) can’t be installed.

Lockdown Mode will be arriving on iPhones with iOS 16.

Courtesy of Apple

Lockdown Mode is disabled by default but can be enabled on an iPhone by going to Settingsthen Privacy and Securitythen LockdownMode. Turning it on or off requires a system reboot and the device’s PIN. While Apple is describing the feature as something for users at risk from “state-sponsored mercenary spyware”—which sounds like high-profile targets—anyone will be able to switch it on for additional protection.

“Lockdown Mode is an extreme, optional protection that should only be used if you believe you may be personally targeted by a highly sophisticated cyberattack,” is the way that Apple puts it in its support documentation. “Most people are never targeted by attacks of this nature.”

As Apple explains, the overall idea is to reduce the attack surface that malware and spyware have access to. Tools including the Pegasus spyware package developed by the NSO Group have the potential to read texts, track calls, collect passwords, monitor a user’s location, and more—and some require no interaction from the user.

With Pegasus, for example, a WhatsApp call to the target device is all it takes for the spyware to start its work, even if the call isn’t answered. It’s worth noting that this particular piece of spyware is blocked from running on devices with iOS 15 or higher installed, but there are plenty of other threats still out there, and plenty more that will be developed in the future.

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Categories
Sports

Ten Hag reveals Ronaldo and all team’s early leavers have been reprimanded | Man Utd

Erik ten Hag has upbraided Cristiano Ronaldo and other Manchester United players who left Old Trafford while Sunday’s friendly with Rayo Vallecano was ongoing and stated it was unfair to single out the Portuguese.

Ronaldo, the only one in the matchday squad known to have departed early, was photographed outside the stadium with Diogo Dalot, who was not involved. This week the manager stated it was “unacceptable” to have exited before the final whistle. Ten Hag was asked how he had dealt with this. “You mention it, you correct them, then move on,” he said.

Ten Hag bridled when asked specifically about Ronaldo. “What do you mean? Now I have to point [out] that those who left, there were many players who left, but the spotlight is on Cristiano. That is not right, so do your research and make out [clear] many players left, that was what was said [by him].

“I don’t understand what is the relation [singling him out] – he was part of it. There were a lot of players.”

Ten Hag was pressed on why Ronaldo and the others felt it was OK to leave early. “I think we’ve said enough about it. I said it’s not correct,” he said.

Ronaldo wishes to leave United and Ten Hag was asked how content he was with the 37-year-old. “I’m really happy, I told you before,” he said. “We have a top striker, really happy he’s here with the squad and we stick to the plan.”

In pre-season Ronaldo has played only 45 minutes against Rayo and trained over the past two weeks. Ten Hag confirmed Anthony Martial would miss Brighton’s visit on Sunday with a hamstring injury but he would not be drawn on whether Ronaldo will feature.

“We will see Sunday,” he said. “I’m satisfied with the whole team, we’re working well [with a] good culture and Cristiano is working really tough and hard.”

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Ten Hag’s No 1 target is Barcelona’s Frenkie de Jong but with less than four weeks remaining of the window there continues to be a stalemate regarding his pursuit.

“We want Frenkie?” said Ten Hag. “It’s [recruitment] about the right players and I cannot give comments on a player under contract at another club. When you work with the current squad and develop players in your current squad, [I see] in this moment that we have players in that position who perform really well.”

Ten Hag stated Christian Eriksen and Lisandro Martínez were available for selection after their truncated pre-season.

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US

‘Come on, Bernie’: Democrats clash on Senate floor over Sanders proposal

Tensions simmered on the Senate floor early Sunday as members clashed during an overnight voting marathon over a proposal offered by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to restore the party’s expanded child tax credit.

Sanders offered an amendment to revive the expanded credit, which lapsed late last year, as part of Democrats’ sprawling tax, health care and climate bill, dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act. But the Vermont Independent was the only one to support the revision, as it ultimately failed in a 1-97 vote.

The vote came as the Senate hunkered down for an hours-long vote-a-rama, one of the last, key hurdles Democrats have to clear to secure passage for their mammoth bill. During the often grueling, drawn-out voting session, any senator has the chance to force a floor vote on amendment.

In floor remarks ahead of the vote on Sunday, Sanders said the amendment sought to bring back a temporary expansion to the credit that was passed in the American Rescue Plan, a sweeping coronavirus relief package Democrats passed last year.

“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 American Rescue Plan included a $300 a month child tax credit which ended up lowering the child poverty rate in America by over 40 percent,” Sanders added, noting his amendment would restore the expanded credit for four years and “be fully paid for by restoring the top corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 28 percent.”

The move by Sanders drew immediate pushback from Democrats ahead of the amendment vote, who expressed support for the child tax credit provision by itself but emphasized that they could not support the change in an effort to protect final passage on the full 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 has long advocated for a renewal of the expanded credit. But he urged colleagues against voting for the amendment to avoid bringing “the bill down.”

Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) sounded a similar note, vowing to work with his colleagues on advancing the provision but arguing that it should not be moved in the climate, taxes and health care bill.

“We have to fight to make this enhanced child tax credit permanent and that’s what I will do with people on both sides of the aisle. But this does not advance that cause because we could lose the underlying bill and therefore, we should vote against the amendment,” the Colorado Democrat said.

But Sanders appeared unsatisfied with his colleagues’ positions. He shot back at Brown, asking why passing the amendment or allowing 48 Democrats to vote for it would tank the bill.

The Ohio Democrat pointed to the tenuous nature of passing legislation through budget reconciliation in an evenly split Senate, which is requiring all Democrats to sign on to the bill for it to clear the chamber. If the amendment were added to the bill, it could put a final passage in jeopardy by dissuading a member from supporting the overall legislation.

Ahead of the weekend’s marathon debate, a number of Democrats vowed to vote against any amendments brought to the floor — even if they agree with the premise of the change — to preserve its chances of the bill passing.

“The arrangement in this is, all 50 Democrats support this. We know every single Republican has voted against the child tax credit not once last March but twice, but we know that this is a fragile arrangement and we’ve got to pass it, as much as I’d like to do it, as would Sen. Bennet,” Brown said.

At the end of his remarks, the senator could be heard saying, “Come on, Bernie.”

The amendment was one of several ambitious proposals Sanders brought up early Sunday, all of which were overwhelmingly defeated. He brought them up hours after criticizing Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act for not going far enough on key issues like health care, child care and housing.

Sanders also offered measures aimed at ensuring Medicare pays no more for prescription drugs than the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), and expanding Medicare coverage to include dental, oral, hearing and vision benefits as potential changes to the package.

The VA-related revision failed in a vote of 1-99, with Sanders being the sole member who voted in favor. The Medicare expansion change Sanders offered failed 3-97, after Sens. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), who is facing a tough reelection campaign in November, and Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) joined the Vermont progressive in voting for it .

Sanders also introduced an amendment to establish a Civilian Climate Corps, though the amendment failed in a 1-98 vote.

The amendments from Sanders came as no surprise, as the senator has repeatedly voiced frustration with the Inflation Reduction Act, which is drastically scaled down from the Democrats’ earlier Build Back Better Act that the Vermont senator pushed hard to pass last year.

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) announced a deal with Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.) on the smaller bill in late July, months after talks around the larger plan fell apart due to opposition from the West Virginia centrist.

In remarks ahead of the vote-a-rama on Saturday, Sanders aired a list of complaints with the slimmed-down bill, which he said “does not address the reality that we have more income and wealth inequality today than at any time in the last hundred years.”

“This bill does nothing to address the systemic dysfunctionality of the American health care system,” he also said, while also criticizing the bill for not doing more to address the nation’s child poverty rates or the “major housing crisis.”

Categories
Technology

Critically Acclaimed Indie Papers, Please Releases On iPhone and Android

papers please, one of the most acclaimed indie games out there, is now available on mobile phones. For those unfamiliar with the game, papers please is a relatively unique indie game that puts the players in the shoes of an immigration officer who is trying to make sure the right people get through the border of a fictional Soviet-esque country. As the game progresses, you must identify falsified papers, potential threats, and more, all while balancing a personal budget to try and keep your family alive. It’s an incredibly interesting game and one that was hailed by critics at the time of its release and has continued to be a fan favorite over the years.

papers please was made by developer Lucas Pope who is an ex-Naughty Dog developer. after shipping Uncharted 2Pope decided he was interested in making smaller, more experimental games which led him to develop papers please. After a PC release, a PlayStation Vita release, and an iPad release, the game is now available on Android and iPhone. Those who own the game on iPad can get the game for free and enjoy it at their leisure. The game is available for $4.99 on the iOS and Google Play Store. You can read a description of the game below.

“The communist state of Arstotzka has just ended a 6-year war with neighboring Kolechia and reclaimed its rightful half of the border town, Grestin. Your job as immigration inspector is to control the flow of people entering the Arstotzkan side of Grestin from Kolechia. Among the throngs of immigrants and visitors looking for work are hidden smugglers, spies, and terrorists.Using only the documents provided by travelers and the Ministry of Admission’s primitive inspect, search, and fingerprint systems you must decide who can enter Arstotzka and who will be turned away or arrested.”

If you haven’t played papers please, it’s definitely worth the $4.99, especially given how accessible the game is now. It examines morality and empathy in a really unique way and has a simple yet fun gameplay loop. If you’re looking for something new to play, this is worth the buy.

papers please is out now on PC, mobile, and PlayStation Vita. Have you played the game? If so, what did you think of it? Let me know in the comments or hit me up on Twitter @Cade_Onder.

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Categories
Sports

Golden day for Australia’s lawn bowlers — but they’re still banned from the pub

“If the end happened that way, it was always going to come off,” Wilson said. “I just wish I had a better rig.”

Sitting high in the stands before the match, the English locals didn’t know whom to support.

“Australia or Northern Ireland?” said one. “Hardly a great choice.”

Perhaps they had a sour taste in their mouths from what had gone down that morning.

Ryan and Krstic hauled in an 11-2 deficit to secure the win off the deft hand of Ryan.

“That’s the best player in the world,” an English woman sitting next to me said of Ryan. “Ella She’s so good for someone so young.”

It’s difficult to argue. Ryan leaves her first Commonwealth Games with two gold medals, having also won the singles title.

Wilson is only 30 and already etching his name in the history books.

Johnny Brechon, alleged gold medalist.

Johnny Brechon, alleged gold medalist.Credit:Andrew Webster

He earned the nickname “Disco” because of his penchant for the nightlife, burning the proverbial candle at both ends, swapping the green for the dancefloor then back again.

Crazy breed, those lawn bowlers.

It’s almost impossible for athletes to shake monikers, no matter how they change their lives, but the fact is Wilson has put his partying days behind him since becoming a young father.

“All the records are closed these days,” he said. “I’m a family man with a seven-month-old bubba Summer and partner [Jamie-Lee Worsnop]. I traded that life in for the family life.”

Wilson was planning to celebrate his victory back at the athletes’ village, such are the ridiculously strict COVID-19 protocols in place for the Australian team.

Australian athletes might be banned from getting out and about but you can be assured Australian reporters are not.

Channeling our inner Kate McClymontwe ventured to The Cricketers to find out what the fuss was about and it’s here that we found Tom Atwalthe 23-year-old publish.

How’s it been?

“Absolutely heaving,” he said. “It’s always good for us with the lawn bowls. Then we had the scaffolders putting up the stands. But this week has been great. Everyone’s happy, everyone’s chilling. You don’t really get much trouble here, but anywhere there’s alcohol involved you’re going to get it. But we’ve had nothing. Everyone’s been in good spirits.”

The Cricketers is found at the end of a quaint street in Leamington Spa, which is a 45-minute drive southeast of Central Birmingham.

Oddly, there’s no cricket played in these parts, even though W. G. Grace features on the billboard. The pub earned the name because former English cricket and almanac publisher John Wisden often stayed at the pub.

In the past week, the bar has been overtaken by the world’s best lawn bowlers and their supporters.

The busiest time has been between morning and afternoon sessions, and when you ask Atwal who’s been the thirstiest country it doesn’t take long for him to shoot back a response.

“The Scots,” he said. “They get a round and then they’re back in 10 minutes for another.

Josh, the young barman standing to his left, shakes his head.

“The Aussies,” he whispers.

Just not the players.

While Australian athletes have been banned from the hotel, medallists from other countries have dropped in to celebrate.

On Saturday afternoon, New Zealand’s bronze medalists sat in the beer garden drinking Guinness in the warm sun, killing the hours before they had to attend the medal ceremony.

One of the liveliest medalists has been John Brechon40, who has a makeshift gold medal dangling from his neck.

He’s actually the chef.

“Do you play lawn bowls?” I ask.

“Yes, I’m a third dan,” he says.

“That’s taekwondo,” he adds.

“Yo lo se.”

As a lawn bowler he makes a great chef. He takes great delight in telling you the meat for his burgers comes from the same butcher used by the Queen.

There’s a cardboard cut-out of Your Majesty in the upstairs window, looking down on her royal subjects.

“I’m better at cooking than I am at bowls,” Brechon says.

And you do it well, champion. Hand that man a gold medal for his beef burger and where do I collect my Walkley?

THE QUOTE
“Three parts vodka, one part Viagra.” — The spritely volunteer at the beach volleyball, who has spent the past week playing a fake inflatable saxophone, when asked what’s in his drink bottle from him.

THUMBS UP
What about that run from Australia’s Ollie Hore in the men’s 1500m at the track? He claimed gold in the last stride, beating Kenya’s Timothy Cheruyot to become only the second Australian alongside Herb Elliott to win the historic middle-distance event. (Elliott won the mile at the 1958 Games in Cardiff).

THUMBS DOWN

There’s no shooting at these Commonwealth Games because Birmingham doesn’t have the facilities. India, a shooting powerhouse, threatened to boycott as a result. In the early hours of Saturday morning, a series of gunshots rang out over the city, including those from an automatic weapon, followed by screeching car tyres.