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It’s rare to find a pair of earbuds that deliver on both design and stellar sound quality. The Sony LinkBuds S do just that and are currently on sale for the lowest price we’ve seen since their release earlier this year. Regularly $199+, the LinkBuds S are on sale for just $148 — a discount of 26% off.
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Buy: Sony LinkBuds S at $148.00
This Amazon deal is available on both black and white colorways, so you can choose either option when you shop. They’ve got up to six hours of battery life on a single charge, with the accompanying charging case able to store an additional 20. This means you can go through multiple days without having to worry about charging your new Sony buds.
Alexa is built-in too for easy voice assistance access. Skip songs, adjust the volume or check your notifications without having to pick up your phone. Sony’s Integrated V1 processor is also designed to deliver top-notch sound quality. We’ve tested similar Sony LinkBuds before which use the same technology and found the sound on all our chosen music tracks to be incredibly balanced, with minimal distortion.
There’s also IPX4 water resistance. This means you can wear your new Sony LinkBuds S to the gym or even in light rain. The design itself is very sleek, with four ear tip sizes for a customized fit. There are touch controls too, allowing you to pause music, pick up phone calls and even activate voice assistance.
The noise-cancellation features are impressive too, designed to block off most background noise with ease. You even have an ambient sound mode just in case you want to be more in tune with your surroundings.
If you’re looking for a sleek, easy-to-use pair of earbuds with sound quality that almost rivals the Apple AirPods Pro grab this limited-time Amazon deal on the Sony LinkBuds S now — on sale for just $148.
“I never dreamed of being a pop star. I wanted to be singing on stage and playing piano. I never thought I’d be writing songs. But once things got under way all these things unfolded.”
Musician Judith Durham, who died in Melbourne on 5 August aged 79 from the chronic lung disease bronchiectasis, was always the last person to acknowledge the effect she had as a pioneering woman in Australian music.
Born Judith Mavis Cock in Essendon in 1943, she adopted her mother’s maiden name to perform as a jazz singer aged 18.
However it was a young Melbourne folk/pop band run by advertising agency workmate Athol Guy that would change her life, and the history of Australian music.
Two years after she’d joined The Seekers as a singer, Durham found herself on what was planned to be a 10-week trip to the UK by boat (they were the onboard entertainment). The trip lasted several years.
Their easy-listening sound soon charmed the Brits – drawn to Durham’s pure vocals and diction – and Dusty Springfield’s brother Tom offered to write a song for them. That track, I’ll Never Find Another You, hit No 1 in the UK in 1964. It was No 1 back home and reached No.4 in the US.
A steady stream of global hits followed – The Carnival Is Over, A World of Our Own and Georgie Girl – all written by Springfield, the latter peaking at No.2 in the US.
The Seekers at the Savoy hotel in London, 1965. Left to right: Keith Potger, Athol Guy, Judith Durham and Bruce Woodley. Photograph: Mirrorpix/Getty Images
Journalist Lillian Roxon summed up the band in 1969 saying “If there hadn’t been The Seekers some shrewd manager would have invented them. One cuddly girl-next-door type and three sober cats who looked like bank tellers.”
Their achievements were remarkable – playing with the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in London and being welcomed home with a show at Melbourne’s Sidney Myer Music Bowl in 1967 watched by a record-breaking 200,000 fans. They were the first Australian band to sell over a million records.
“When I began I don’t think it was even called a music industry,” Durham said in 2019. “It was just you sang and played a few songs.”
However four years after the Seekers’ breakthrough, Durham told her bandmates she was leaving for a solo career.
That fierce determination to do things her own way – as politely as possible – was a Judith Durham trademark.
She called The Seekers her brothers and knew how lucky she was they protected her and was proud they remained friends – working together on the anthemic 1997 hit I Am Australian.
Time had washed away any bitterness – the band had replaced Durham multiple times but the chemistry was never the same.
She would return to touring with The Seekers several times, usually to mark career milestones. In 2013, shortly after coming off stage in Melbourne on a Seekers reunion tour, Durham suffered a brain haemorrhage.
When it took her 15 minutes to write “soya milk” when requesting meals in hospital soon after the medical episode she realized she had a problem – treating it as another challenge in a life that survived a major car accident in 1990 and the death of beloved husband Ron Edgeworth in 1994.
The Seekers in 2013 after Durham returned to performing after suffering a brain haemorrhage. Photograph: Julian Smith/AAP
She had to learn to read and write again – including music – and how to play keyboards again. That trademark voice was not damaged and a year after the brain haemorrhage she was back on stage, fulfilling her commitments in Australia and the UK – her unfinished business giving her motivation in her recovery.
Durham shared a specialist – Prof John Olver – with Countdown host and Australian music industry icon Ian Molly Meldrum, who had fallen off his roof and suffered severe brain injuries in 2010.
Durham had called Meldrum after he came out of a coma; after her stint in hospital the pair became phone pals.
“She really was the loveliest person you could ever meet,” Meldrum said.
“There’s a reason why you never heard a single bad word about her. And her comeback from her after the haemorrhage was truly remarkable.
“It really takes a lot of work and discipline to recover after a brain injury, but Judith was always very determined. And always so modest about her talent and success. ”
Jimmy Barnes once tracked Durham down because she’d met one of his heroes – Keith Moon of The Who.
Olivia Newton-John saw The Seekers playing at her school in the early days and was inspired by how she and Helen Reddy cracked the international market, noting “She was one of the first Aussie girls to make it overseas”.
Paul Kelly once asked Durham to come to his house to sing the Seekers’ Morningtown Ride for his daughters in their bedroom – it was the tune they’d sing as they were going to sleep as children.
“The songs become part of people’s lives,” Durham said of the request.
She could not believe Elton John once compared her to Karen Carpenter as having the “purest voice in popular music”, saying: “It’s mind-boggling. I’m in awe of all this. I really do find it very, very hard to think that people put me up at that level.”
Durham’s solo career, alongside that of The Seekers, was impeccably curated on CD and DVD – her longtime friend and manager Graham Simpson knowing the importance of protecting the legacy.
“It’s wonderful having all this stuff captured. Otherwise it’s all gone up in smoke,” she said.
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Durham got closure after a final solo tour of New Zealand in May 2016, happy the last time she’d perform on stage was up to her high standards. She knew that further touring could risk another brain haemorrhage.
She had battled the lung condition bronchiectasis since she was a child and it eventually curtailed her flying out of Melbourne, including to Brisbane in 2019 after she was inducted into the Honor Roll at the Australian Women in Music Awards.
Over the last few years, Durham had been composing music and contemplated writing her memoirs. She’d occasionally consult a book on her life by Ella Simpson wrote in 2004 to remember moments that had become hazy.
Durham had made peace with her place in an industry and when she spoke of death in 2019 it was never morbid.
“I look at death very realistically. We all should live our lives like we don’t have much time left. For me to live long enough to see how I’ve been a thread through people’s lives is wonderful.”
Geelong veteran Zach Tuohy believes there’s a different feeling about his playing group in 2022 compared to past seasons after the Cats claimed their 11th straight win on Saturday night.
But while seven-time All-Australian Nathan Buckley believes the Cats are “primed at the right time of the year and on top of the ladder for a reason”, he holds some concerns about how “hardened” the Cats could be come September, with clashes against two bottom-10 opponents to come over the final two home and away rounds.
The Cats on Saturday cemented their spot inside the top four with a 45-point win over St Kilda at GMHBA Stadium. It means the Cats will earn a double chance in finals for a fourth straight season – and the ninth time in 12 seasons under coach Chris Scott.
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The narrative around Geelong at this time of the year in recent seasons has been whether they’re able to translate their home and away form into a finals campaign, consistently reaching the preliminary final stage since 2013 but falling short of a flag.
Speaking on Fox Footy’s Best On Ground on Saturday night, Tuohy said there was something different about the 2022 Cats.
“We’ve certainly always felt we’re in with a big shout coming to the pointy end of the year, but this year kind of does have a different smell to it,” Tuohy told Fox Footy.
“I’m not sure you can shut down one or two of our players and think it’s going to effect the result too much, which is a great problem to have.”
Asked if the Cats were the clear No. 1 seed heading into finals, triple premiership Lion Jonathan Brown told Best On Ground: “I think so. They’re building something nicely, they just seem to be very complete.
“I just have more confidence in the game style they play. I think it’ll stack up better in September.”
Saints champion Nick Riewoldt added Roo: “That style they played that brought them unstuck – in finals in particular under the fierce pressure – that control game, they can flick to it and still go to it, but they’re less inclined to start games like it
“I think they’re just far more potent on offense than they have been in recent times and they haven’t given up much defensively.”
After a tough five-game run against finals contenders, the Cats now face Gold Coast (11th) and West Coast (17th) to finish their home and away game.
Buckley suggested it’s “not the best way to finish the home and away season”.
“You want to be hardened because you get that week off between home and away and finals, so if there’s anything that’s not working for Geelong, it might be those couple of games,” he told Best On Ground. “But they’ve taken it all before them.”
Isaac Smith of the Cats is in stellar form. Picture: Darrian TraynorSource: Getty Images
But Buckley said the changes the Cats had made personnel-wise over the past 12 months would put them in good stead for a shot at this year’s flag.
“Sam De Koning down back, Tyson Stengle up forward, Jeremy Cameron’s up and about, Zach Guthrie played a really good game tonight and Tom Atkins through the midfield – five players they’ve found this year they didn’t have last year,” he said.
“They’ve always had a deep squad and players that can come in and play the roles, but they just seem to be deeper again this year.
“The other two are Max Holmes, who’s a young player that’s getting it done, and at the other end of the spectrum is Isaac Smith – those two are running players getting up and down the ground in front of the ball. Brad Close is another … I mean Sam Menegola wasn’t even in the 22 and he comes in and he’s a legitimate AFL player.
“They’re really well placed and that depth of squad they’ve been able to put together with shrewd trading and recruiting, salary cap management – they’ve done well.”
“These shootings are disturbing,” Albuquerque Police Department Chief Harold Medina said in a Saturday news conference. “We are putting every possible resource into these investigations.”
The FBI is assisting in the investigation, the police department said in a news release.
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham also said on Twitter that she was sending additional state police officers to the city to work with local and federal authorities to bring “the killer or killers to justice — and they WILL be found.”
“The targeted killings of Muslim residents of Albuquerque is deeply angering and wholly intolerable,” the governor tweeted. “We will continue to do everything we can to support the Muslim community of Albuquerque and greater New Mexico during this difficult time. You are New Mexicans, you are welcomed here, and we stand with you.”
Albuquerque police officers responded just before midnight Friday to reports of a shooting in the area of Truman St. and Grand Ave., and found the victim dead, according to the police department’s news release. The victim, a Muslim man believed to be in his mid-20s, was from South Asia, police said. His identity of him has not been positively confirmed, the release added.
The man’s death came a day after authorities determined there was a connection between the killings of Muhammed Afzaal Hussain, 27, and Aftab Hussein, 41, both Muslim and from Pakistan, who were killed in southeast Albuquerque within the past two weeks. Detectives are working to determine whether the November killing of Mohammad Ahmadi, a Muslim man from Afghanistan, was also related. Ahmadi was killed outside of a business he ran with his brother, police said.
The victims in the first three cases were all “ambushed with no warning, fired on and killed,” Kyle Hartsock, deputy commander of the police department’s Criminal Investigations Division, previously said.
“Our top priority is keeping the community safe and we are asking the Muslim community especially, to be vigilant, to watch out for one another. If you see something, say something,” the police chief said Saturday. “Evil will not prevail.”
There is a $15,000 reward for information that helps lead to an arrest, authorities announced.
“Albuquerque is on edge right now, and I want to be clear that we, and our partners across law enforcement, are directing every possible resource to these cases,” Mayor Tim Keller said in to statement. “We will protect our community and bring the perpetrator of these crimes to justice.”
In a news release on Saturday, the Council on American-Islamic Relations announced it was raising its reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction of those responsible for $10,000.
“The lives of Albuquerque Muslims are in danger. Whoever is responsible for this horrific, hateful shooting spree must be identified and stopped — now,” CAIR National Deputy Director Edward Ahmed Mitchell said in a statement.
“We thank local, state and federal law enforcement for their ongoing work on this crisis, and we call the Biden administration to ensure that authorities all of the resources needed to both protect the Albuquerque Muslim community and stop those responsible for these horrific crimes before they claim more innocent lives,” Mitchell added in the statement.
San Francisco, Aug 6 (IANS): Meta’s AI research labs have reportedly created a new state-of-the-art chatbot and the tech giant is letting members of the public talk to the system to collect feedback on its capabilities.
According to The Verge, the bot is called BlenderBot 3 and can be accessed on the web. Though, right now, it seems only residents in the US can do so.
“We are committed to publicly releasing all the data we collect in the demo in the hopes that we can improve conversational AI,” Kurt Shuster, a research engineer at Meta who helped create BlenderBot 3, was quoted as saying.
BlenderBot 3 is able to engage in general chitchat, said Meta, but also answer the sort of queries you might ask a digital assistant, “from talking about healthy food recipes to finding child-friendly amenities in the city,” the report said.
The bot is a prototype and built on Meta’s previous work with what are known as large language models or LLMS — powerful but flawed text-generation software of which OpenAI’s GPT-3 is the most widely known example.
Like all LLMs, BlenderBot is initially trained on vast text datasets, which it mines for statistical patterns to generate language.
Such systems have proven extremely flexible and have been put to a range of uses, from generating code for programmers to helping authors write their next bestseller.
However, these models also have serious flaws: they regurgitate biases in their training data and often invent answers to users’ questions (a big problem if they are going to be useful as digital assistants).
A Shai Bolton masterclass has taken Richmond to the top-eight after a 71-109 win over a disappointing Port Adelaide.
The win sees them two points ahead of St Kilda and comfortably clear on percentage as the season comes to a head with just two rounds remaining.
A highly entertaining first term saw both sides enjoy runs of momentum as a Shai Bolton goal helped Richmond to a nine-point lead at quarter time.
This continued into the second quarter as the Power fought hard in front of a loud home crowd to find themselves eight points down thanks to yet another buzzer-beater goal for Bolton.
The game opened up after half-time, as the Tigers kicked away impressively with seven goals to three in the third term, a 34-point lead that was ultimately too much to overcome for the Power.
Multiple Tigers had days out, headed by Bolton (four goals, 17 touches), sole captain on the night Toby Nankervis (29 disposals, 42 hit-outs), former captain Trent Cotchin (32 touches, six clearances), Tom Lynch (four goals, 16 disposals) and Dion Prestia (32 touches, 10 clearances) as the yellow and black put together a much-needed four-quarter effort emblematic of their premiership years.
Port would be buoyed by the performances of Zak Butters (28 touches, eight tackles), Ollie Wines (32 touches, six tackles), Dan Houston (24 touches, 497 meters-gained) and Miles Bergman (one goal, 21 disposals) in what was ultimately a down night for Ken Hinkley’s men.
The Tigers will be sweating on the health of Nick Vlaustin for the finals, as the 28-year-old went down with a rib injury in visible pain.
Port Adelaide faces Essendon at Marvel Stadium next week as the Tigers host Hawthorn at the MCG before Essendon in the final round and would be favorites for both encounters.
A decision to cease funding for a successful statewide community renewable energy program is leaving hundreds of projects important to Victoria’s de-carbonisation targets in limbo.
Key points:
The Victorian government funded the Community Power Hub program for 12 months
Community groups are disappointed funding has not been extended
More than 200 community renewable energy projects have been supported
The Victorian government has not re-funded the Community Power Hub program, which ran in six areas across the state for the past 12 months.
Program leaders say the abrupt end to the program will create an uncertain future for the community renewable energy projects it was designed to help progress.
Not-for-profit organization Ballarat Renewable Energy and Zero Emissions (BREAZE) led the Community Power Hub for the Grampians region, which supported 40 projects through the feasibility stage.
President Mary Debrett said many active community members would continue driving their projects to completion, but others would struggle to get off the ground without external support.
Grampians Community Power Hub worked on a renewable energy project with the Halls Gap Botanic Gardens.(Supplied: Mary Debrett)
She said she was disappointed the program was not re-funded.
“It will be those communities that have proactive people that will be the ones advantaged and those that don’t will be disadvantaged,” Ms Debrett said.
“For those organizations and communities where we have done feasibility studies, they are going to be needing some extra support.
“They are slow-burn projects that take a lot of work.”
Grampians Community Power Hub staff and volunteers worked with communities in Ballan and Pomonal to investigate community battery options and residents in St Arnaud on a renewable energy hub.
The Pomonal Power People group worked with the Grampians Community Power Hub on a community battery feasibility study.(Supplied: Keith Ward)
They facilitated energy audits at Grampians Health and J Ward in Ararat and the installation of solar panels at golf clubs, disability services, schools, community halls, and sporting clubs.
Slow, complex projects
Natimuk Community Energy president Edwin Irvine said their community solar farm project had been progressing for 14 years, but the Grampians Community Power Hub assisted them through crucial steps.
Natimuk residents are working to create a solar farm owned by the community.(ABC Back Roads: Dai Cookes)
He said Grampians Community Power Hub staff and volunteers helped them through a complex design and approvals process as well as governance and finance decisions, which they could not have done on their own.
“Before doing this, I didn’t know anything at all about energy regulation or the physics of a solar farm and how it connects with the grid. I needed that help,” Mr Irvine said.
“I can imagine there are a lot of other community groups that are going to need that help.
“If that help is not there, those other community groups are going to find it really, really hard.”
energy revolution
Experts say community renewable energy projects will play an important role in Victoria’s renewable energy transition.
Professor Pierluigi Mancarella is the energy systems program lead at the Melbourne Energy Institute.(Supplied: Pierluigi Mancarella)
Melbourne Energy Institute’s Professor Pierluigi Mancarella said sharing energy on a community level made sense because of cost and efficiency.
He said smaller renewable-based power plants with batteries and storage should replace “gigantic” fossil fuel-based plants and community-level batteries would be more efficient than household ones.
Professor Mancarella said supporting community renewable energy projects would be fundamental to Victoria’s decarbonisation process.
“There is so much learning… it is a competing revolution,” he said.
“It completely destroys the business models, commercial models and regulatory environment, which we have operated in so far.”
New funding scheme
Victorian Energy Minister Lily D’Ambrosio said the successful Community Power Hub program had been funded for 12 months and progressed 200 proposed projects in that time.
“We hope these local success stories inspire more renewable energy projects in the community, taking advantage of our rebates and programs for households, community groups, and businesses,” she said.
Hepburn Wind has been a community energy pioneer, establishing a community-owned wind-farm near Daylesford.(Supplied: Amy Kean)
The Victorian government has created a repayable grants program, where at least $50,000 is available for community group renewable energy projects, but loans must be repaid in five years.
The money is a low-interest-rate loan to help groups secure third-party funding.
The Victorian government has legislated a target of 50 per cent renewable energy for the state by 2030.
Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas has sent over 6,100 immigrants from the border to Washington, DC, per NPR.
In April, Abbott announced he would send buses of migrants to DC to address immigration.
Abbott announced on Friday that the first charter bus of immigrants arrived in New York City.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has sent over 6,100 immigrants from the border to Washington, DC, his office said on Friday
After the 36-hour journey to DC’s Union Station, migrants who exit the charter buses are met with volunteers from mutual aid organizations to help them get settled but not officials from the local or federal government, NPR reported.
“It was really crazy because they were just leaving them on the street,” Abel Nuñez, executive director of DC’s Central American Resource Center, told NPR while describing the first bus arrival on April 16.
“We knew it was on its way so we were there since 5 am just waiting for them along with mutual aid organizations,” Nuñez added to NPR. “It was incredible how shell-shocked these people were coming out of the buses.”
In April, Abbott announced he would send charter buses of migrants to DC to help Texas “cope with this latest escalation of the Biden border disaster.” It came after the Biden administration announced the end of Title 42, a pandemic-era public health order that blocked many migrants from entering the US.
“Because of President Biden’s continued refusal to acknowledge the crisis caused by his open border policies, the State of Texas has had to take unprecedented action to keep our communities safe,” Abbott said in a statement.
On Friday, Abbott announced the first arrival of a charter bus of immigrants in New York City, which will “now be a drop-off location for the busing strategy as part of the Governor’s response to the Biden Administration’s open border policies,” the statement said.
“In addition to Washington, DC, New York City is the ideal destination for these migrants, who can receive the abundance of city services and housing that Mayor Eric Adams has boasted about within the sanctuary city,” Abbott said in the statement. “I hope he follows through on his promise of welcoming all migrants with open arms so that our overrun and overwhelmed border towns can find relief.”
While criticizing Abbott, New York officials said the immigrants, over 40 of which arrived Friday, will be welcomed to the city.
“Governor Greg Abbott is continuing to play with the lives of human beings. We think this is cruel, it’s disgusting and it’s pure cowardice,” said Manuel Castro, commissioner of the Office of Immigrant Affairs, per CBS News.
Activision Blizzard has published a financial report that shows that more than half of the total revenue came from mobile games in the last quarter, more than PC and console games combined.
The report covers the three months up to and including June 30, during which time Activision Blizzard earned £273.4million ($332million) from PC games, and £309.6million ($376million) from console sales. Staggeringly, from “mobile and ancillary” sales the company brought in £684.3million ($831million) therefore accounting for more than 50 per cent of total income.
If Activision Blizzard were to include income from their “Other” category, which includes income from the Overwatch and Call of Duty leagues as well as its distribution business, which is at an impressive £86.5million ($105million), it still would be less than 50 per cent of its total revenue.
At the same point last year console and mobile revenues were much more competitive with one another. Consoles accounted for approximately 32 per cent of the total income, whilst mobile saw around 35 per cent. PC brought in 27 per cent.
Credit: Activision Blizzard
This shows an unmistakable growth year on year for mobile. PC and consoles declined sharply, whilst mobile grew 5 per cent. The majority of Activision Blizzard’s income came from King, the mobile game publisher Activision acquired in 2016, which was responsible for more than 82 per cent of the total mobile revenue. King are the company behind candy crushthe US’ most successful mobile game for five consecutive years.
Devil Immortal is another mobile game that comes from Activision Blizzard, and has faced extreme criticism regarding its monetisation, yet has achieved a massive 30 million players just two months since launching. On the other hand, it is the company’s worst rated game.
In other news, after a string of rumors and leaks, Tactics Ogre: Reborn has finally been announced and has received backlash over the price and graphics.
A former Saint has been rushed to hospital, reportedly with a fractured skull, after a shocking incident that saw a local footy game called off on Saturday.
Eli Templeton was sent crashing over a fence while representing Balwyn Football Club and landed head-first onto the surrounding concrete.
He suffered concussion in the shocking incident that’s been described in a News Corp report as “not malicious”.
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It was former Docker Zac Clarke who made the contact that sent Templeton over the fence in the clash between Balwyn and Doncaster East.
Templeton was reportedly unconscious for at least two minutes after the accident.
There’s reports the 26-year-old suffered a fractured skull in the sickening collision which left teammates and those at the ground visibly shaken.
But in good news for Templeton, he is set to make a full recovery.
Balwyn president Richard Wilson told local media the youngster was “cognitive and speaking and passing all the tests” on Saturday night.
It’s believed if Templeton had gone over the fence a few meters away from where he landed, it would have been onto grass.
Templeton had been granted permission to play for Balwyn after his VFL side Port Melbourne had the bye this weekend.
In a statement, Port Melbourne confirmed Templeton was injured in the collision.
“The club is aware that one of our VFL players Eli Templeton was injured in a local game today playing for Balwyn,” the statement read.
“We ask that everyone respects his privacy and we will update in due course.”
The 26-year-old played 14 games for the Saints across three seasons before being delisted at the end of 2016.
The Burnie product was the number three pick in the 2013 Rookie Draft but his AFL career was over by the age of just 21.
The Balwyn clash was called off early in the third term after Templeton’s sickening injury with the club leading by 23 points at the time.