Categories
Technology

Huawei FreeBuds Pro 2 uses a BES2700 processor

After a month-long round-up, the Huawei Watch 3 Pro New ECG version was launched and the company has finally unveiled this new product at the HarmonyOS 3.0 launch event.

Unsurprisingly, the Huawei Watch 3 Pro New ECG version is launched with the latest HarmonyOS 3.0 operating system. Alongside you can also notice the independent taxis’ remote control of cars, golf course mode, and the WeChat watch edition.

Notably, it is the first smartwatch to use the HarmonyOS 3.0 operating system. On the other hand, the ECG or electrocardiogram feature let you enable to obtain accurate ECG data to support vascular health management, allowing users to actively prevent the risk of vascular disease.

Other hardware components include super battery life mode and its battery life is pretty good that can challenging and stressful task as there are a lot of options. Apart from the battery life, the Huawei Watch 3 Pro is launched with an eye-catching design, durability display quality, activity tracking features, and many more.

Huawei Watch 3 Pro’s New price starts at 2899 yuan for the fashion version and 3599 yuan for the premium version.

Huawei Watch 3 Pro ecg launched Huawei Watch 3 Pro ecg launched

Huawei Watch 3 Pro New:

Huawei Watch 3 Pro comes in two versions – Fashion and Premium. This watch has a 140-210mm wrist circumference, and 64 grams of weight excluding the strap. The watch has a 1.43-inch AMOLED color screen with full-screen touch operations, including swiping, tapping and pressing, and holding.

The Watch case is made of titanium + ceramic, while the watch strap has a leather strap and titanium strap. This HarmonyOS 3.0-powered smartwatch has various sensors including Acceleration, Gyro, Geomagnetic, Optical heart rate, Ambient light, Barometric pressure, and Temperature Sensors.

The typical scenario of smart mode can be up to 4 days: factory default configuration, 2 hours connected to LTE network per day, 22 hours of Bluetooth connection to the mobile phone, heart rate always on, scientific sleep at night, ECG measurement 5 times /day, 60 minutes/week using App, Bluetooth 30 minutes/week for calls, 30 minutes/week for Bluetooth music, 90 minutes of average weekly workouts (with GPS on), notifications enabled (50 messages per day, 6 calls, 3 alarms), 200 screen-on sessions per day.

It is compatible with an iOS phone, the typical battery life in smart mode is 2.5 days.

Smart mode for severe scenarios up to 2 days: factory default configuration, turn on the screen display function, use a high-power watch face, connect to the LTE network for 4 hours a day, connect to the mobile phone via Bluetooth for 20 hours , always open the heart rate, use scientific sleep at night, and enable stress detection, Turn on the function of heart health and sleep apnea, use the App for 45 minutes/day (including 5 minutes/day for LTE calls, 5 minutes/ day for Bluetooth calls, 10 ECG measurements/day, etc.), 30 minutes/day for Bluetooth music, 30 minutes for exercise Minutes/day (GPS on), message notifications on (50 messages per day, 6 calls, 3 alarms) , 200 screen brights per day.

Typical scenarios of ultra-long battery life mode can reach 21 days: factory default configuration, long battery life is turned on, heart rate is always on, scientific sleep is used at night, Bluetooth calls are 30 minutes/week, average weekly exercise is 90 minutes (GPS is on), message notifications are turned on (50 messages per day, 6 calls, 3 alarms), 200 screen brights per day.

Categories
Entertainment

The Bachelor’s Irena Srbinovska shares ‘horrible’ experience as healthcare worker amid COVID-19 pandemic

She’s best known for winning over Perth’s Locky Gilbert of The Bachelor but Irena Srbinovska is using her platform to bring attention to the “exhausted” healthcare workers amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The Bachelor's Irena Srbinovska shares her 'horrible' experience of healthcare worker on the front line.
Camera IconThe Bachelor’s Irena Srbinovska shares her ‘horrible’ experience of healthcare worker on the front line. Credit: Instagram

“The current situation is horrible and has been for the last two years,” she wrote.

“Speaking from experience, I can honestly say that things are not getting any better or easier on healthcare workers.

“We are all exhausted. We are not okay.”

Srbinovska, who now calls Perth home, returned to her “regular” job as a nurse after finding love on The Bachelor.

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Sports

Aussie Alex Winwood robbed in Commonwealth Games quarterfinals boxing ‘outrage’ vs Patrick Chinyemba, Harry Garside

Aussie flyweight boxer Alex Winwood has been robbed of a chance to claim a Commonwealth Games medal after the referee inexplicably waved the fight off following an early second round knockdown.

Fighting in the quarterfinals against Zambia’s Patrick Chinyemba, Winwood had won the first round on four of the five judges cards.

But 15 seconds into the second round, Chinyemba landed a huge one-two which left the Aussie on the canvas.

Winwood leapt straight back to his feet and headed for the corner. Although he didn’t stumble and seemed fine, the referee waved the fight off after counting to just three.

Channel 7 commentator Jon Harker was baffled by the quick decision.

“Oh no, hang on — she has waved it away already,” he said. “I find that impossible to believe. Absolutely impossible to believe.”

Tokyo bronze medalist turned professional boxer Harry Garside added: “It’s heartbreaking for Alex.”

Harker continued: “She didn’t give him a chance to get up, she was waving it away before he got to his feet. And look at the way he is walking, not a problem whatsoever.”

“That fight should not have been stopped. I’m not saying he was going to go on and win, who knows? But that is not a stoppage.”

Garside responded: “Yeah, no way known is that a stoppage. You got to give him time to get up and do the eight-count and then look into his eyes from him.”

“… And look at him and see whether he walks forward, see whether he wants to continue, see whether he wants to continue, see whether his legs are clear. That’s an outrage,” Harker finished.

It was a moment that shocked everyone, including the fighters.

The look on Winwood’s face said it all, while Chinyemba had walked to a neutral corner and looked ready to continue.

Chinyemba had defeated Winwood in the first round of the Tokyo Olympics last year as well.

Despite his shock, Winwood went to congratulate Chinyemba and his corner for the win and was respectful when speaking after the fight.

“I think it was a pretty fast call,” Winwood said on Channel 7.

“There’s been a lot of quick stoppages in this tournament, but you know, I won the first round, and I felt like I won it quite clearly. And I wasn’t hurt previously. Nor was I punched quite significantly.

“I just really wanted to have a shot and prove for myself, after going down. I know what I’m made of, I wanted to show Australia and the world what Australians are made of, we have a dig and once I got up, that was the first thing on my mind. I was like ‘okay, I went down but here is for the Aussies, here is for the black fellas, we are going to show them what we are made of’.

“Obviously I didn’t get an opportunity to do that, but it is what it is.”

Winwood said he had been training with the Andrew and Jason Moloney in the lead up to the Commonwealth Games and that he “felt like I was a more complete fighter than at Tokyo”.

But at 25, he’s going to move into the professional realm rather than to focus on getting through to the Paris Olympics.

Despite holding it together throughout his interview and the in-ring debacle, the proud Noongar man’s voice broke when he spoke directly to those at home.

“Thank you, thank you Australia, you mean so much to me, from the bottom of my heart, as an Indigenous Australian I love you all — up the Aussies. Thanks mate,” Winwood said.

Garside told Seven the post-fight interview from Winwood “gave me shivers.”

“It’s always sad after a decision like that,” he said. “He wasn’t hurt. He did turn his back on him, so I do give the referee a bit of empathy there, but I think you’ve got to wait until the opponent gets up.

“Until Alex gets up and then give him eight seconds and look into his eyes and see where his legs are, if he is moving around. She waves it off way too prematurely.

“I’m a firm believer she did the wrong decision there. She could have given Alex eight seconds to recover, he looked fine. He was surprised. He was totally fine and you’ve got to look into the fighter’s eyes, that’s where you’ll see if he is dazed or rocked. It’s always in the eyes. She didn’t get a chance to do that.”

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Categories
US

Limited Staten Island Ferry service resumes amid staffing shortage

ST. GEORGE, Staten Island (WABC) — Limited, hourly service on the Staten Island Ferry resumed Thursday morning after a rough night for commuters amid a staffing shortage that previously caused canceled routes.

The first vessel departed St. George Terminal at 6 am, with hourly service expected thereafter.

NewsCopter 7 was overhead as the first boat of the morning made the trip across New York Harbor.

The ferry normally runs service every 15 minutes during the morning and evening rush.

The NYC Department of Transportation continues to “strongly recommend New Yorkers seek alternate modes of public transit, such as NYC Ferry and express buses. The SI Ferry should be used for essential travel only.”

NYC Ferry is operating hourly between St George’s Landing & the Battery Maritime Building adjacent to Whitehall Terminal.

Officials had to change the schedule late Wednesday to run every hour instead of every 15 minutes after a huge chunk of the ferry workforce failed to show up to work.

The MTA encouraged commuters to seek out alternative routes and said New York City Transit had increased bus service to Staten Island.

Increased express bus service was provided on the SIM1/SIM1C (Hylan Blvd), SIM3/SIM3C (Port Richmond) and SIM4/SIM4C (Richmond Avenue).

Customers could also take a Brooklyn-bound R train from Whitehall St-South Ferry to 86th St and 4 Ave in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. Customers could continue their journey to Staten Island by taking the S79 SBS, S53 or S93 bus where service would be augmented as necessary. Limited service was suspended on all Staten Island local routes (except for S93 and S89).

“COVID is not the issue at the ferry right now. The fact that DOT is saying it’s an issue is the larger issue. It’s actually the fact that we’re very shorthanded in all of our titles,” said MEBA Secretary-Treasurer, Roland Rexha.

The ferry is currently short-staffed by approximately 15 workers in key operational positions, such as assistant captains, engineers, and oilers.

The ferry operated on an overnight hourly schedule Tuesday into Wednesday. It ran 20-minute service through the morning rush, down from the normal service every 15 minutes.

Due to the short-staffing, it can be difficult to run full service whenever crew members are off, on vacation, or unexpected illnesses.

“If you’re short one person in one of those titles it’s damning, but if you’re short three or four in a title like the marine engineer that has 18 jobs, if you’re missing four people, you’re missing almost a quarter of your workforce,” Rexha said.

Filling the vacant positions has been a struggle due to a national shortage of qualified, professional mariners.

The ongoing short-staffing has also forced existing crew members to work longer shifts without proper breaks, contributing to worker fatigue that could pose potential safety issues.

“We’re navigating some of the most heavily-trafficked waters in the country. The fact that they’re not getting proper breaks is a reason for employee fatigue, and it also burns people out and makes them want to leave the job,” Rexha said.

ALSO READ | 5-year-old girl killed, 2 adults critically injured in NYC apartment fire

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Categories
Technology

Spike Chunsoft’s Switch eShop Sale Includes Danganronpa, Somnium Files, And More

danganronpa
Image: Spike Chunsoft

Spike Chunsoft has just launched a huge summer sale over on the Switch eShop in both North America and Europe, with savings of up to 85% off on a range of visual novels, adventure games, and more!

There’s up to 85% off on a range of games, with the entire Danganronpa series, Steins;Gate, Robotics;Notes, and the fantastic Shiren the Wanderer. Even Spike Chunsoft’s most recent game — AI: The Somnium Files – nirvanA Initiative — is included in the bunch.

The sale is on until 17th August, and we’ve rounded up all of the highlights for you here for both North America and Europe. You better get your wallets ready!

North American eShop

UK eShop

Game sale price RRP
AI: The Somnium Files £7.19 £25.99
AI: The Somnium Files – nirvanA Initiative £43.19 £53.99
Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair Anniversary Edition £9.44 £13.49
Danganronpa S: Ultimate Summer Camp £12.59 £17.99
Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony Anniversary Edition £18.89 £26.99
Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc Anniversary Edition £6.74 £13.49
KATANA KAMI: A Way of the Samurai Story £10.79 £26.99
Pixel Junk Monsters 2 £2.02 £13.49
Pixel Junk Monsters 2 Deluxe Edition £2.96 £19.79
PixelJunk Monsters 2 Tiki Bundle £1.07 £7.19
Re:ZERO -Starting Life in Another World- The Prophecy of the Throne £26.99 £53.99
RESEARCH and DESTROY £8.37 £16.74
ROBOTICS;NOTES DaSH £12.59 £31.49
ROBOTICS;NOTES ELITE £12.59 £31.49
Shiren the Wanderer: The Tower of Fortune and the Dice of Fate £12.59 £17.99
STEINS;GATE 0 £10.79 £26.99
STEINS;GATE ELITE £21.59 £53.99
STEINS;GATE: My Darling’s Embrace £10.79 £26.99
YU-NO: A girl who chants love at the bound of this world. £13.49 £44.99

You’ve got just under two weeks to peruse the deals and see what your fancy takes. Head on over to the eShop for your region and see just what’s on offer!

And, don’t forget, we’ve got 10% off all Switch eShop credit in our own Nintendo Life store sale, so you can save an extra few coins on your next purchase!

Please note that some external links on this page are affiliate links, which means if you click them and make a purchase we may receive a small percentage of the sale. Please read our FTC Disclosure for more information.

Let us know if you’ll be grabbing anything in Spike Chunsoft’s sale in the comments!

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Categories
Entertainment

Patton Oswalt: ‘Messed-up relationships manifest in madness’ | movies

Pslow of movies have been pinned on seemingly foolproof plans that go catastrophically awry in execution; less common is the movie that hinges on a scheme so ill-advised, so rife with potential for disaster, so guaranteed to end in failure that one wonders why a character would even try it in the first place.

The new film I Love My Dad falls into the latter category, which was precisely what star Patton Oswalt drew to it. His face-voice combo from him has that special something that makes a person a sought-after character actor and winning comedian, memorable yet unobtrusive. He’s shot hours of stand-up specials, appeared in at least one episode of all your favorite sitcoms from Parks and Recreation to Curb Your Enthusiasm (though he counts Arrested Development and Just Shoot Me! as the ones he most wishes he could’ve booked ), and amassed movie roles from beloved comedies to the voice lead of Ratatouille to an awards-tipped dramatic turn in Young Adult. “If they ask me, I do it!” I laugh. “I like doing stuff.” His against-type performance of him as a townie with more to him than his exterior of him as a disabled sad sack opposite Charlize Theron presages his latest gig of him, which pushes him to new extremes of discomfort.

Oswalt throws all of himself into a role most actors wouldn’t touch with rubber gloves: hapless Chuck, the one deadbeat dad to rule them all, a man introduced taking in a dog he finds with his young son and then furtively tearing down a “ LOST DOG” poster with the pooch’s picture as the boy asks whether it might have an owner. He’s swindled and corner-cut his way through life, rising to the top of an online chess league by copying moves from an automated program. His most egregious misdeed of him forms the basis for the film and comes from the real-life experience of writer-director James Morosini, who also appears onscreen as his own stand-in Franklin. Upon getting blocked by Franklin on Facebook, Chuck whips up a dummy profile using photos of a kindly diner waitress and engages the fruit of his loins from him in a catfish flirtation that turns sexual with skin-crawling swiftness.

Even if the sexting wasn’t visually represented in the most awkward scenes of intimacy between two men this side of Wet Hot American Summer (and it is), the taboo-teasing performance would still require as much empathy as an actor can muster. Oswalt soon realized that only by meeting Chuck on his level of him, however contemptible, could he hope to access the mindset that goes through with an idea so stunningly bad as to be impervious to success.

“I think he’s one of these people who, very fatally, wants credit for wanted to do the right thing,” Oswalt tells the Guardian from a Manhattan hotel room. “So it does n’t really matter if his plan is going to be successful or just outrageous, it’s all ‘do n’t people see I eventually want to do right by my son even though I’m not following through on cualquier cosa?’ He’s taught himself that if he does an amazing apology later, it doesn’t matter what goes wrong. Unfortunately, that’s shaped his life from him.”

This is the work of an actor, honed to its essence. At the core of some stomach-turning choices, Oswalt located an impulse he could tap into, seeing Chuck’s self-destructive bonehead moves as an exaggerated form of the same ethical shortcomings we all live with. “I’m absolutely guilty of that, too, wanting to do well, and thinking that alone counts,” Oswalt readily admits. He came to see that not so much separates his own imperfections from Chuck’s, particularly in terms of parenthood, which forces us all to come to terms with our varying levels of human limitation. His daughter de ella Alice may be just out of her tween years, but their relationship enabled him to imagine a not-so-happy version of it.

“This is the first one where I really play a dad who’s trying, in his messed-up way, to repair things in a relationship that’s really gone wrong,” Oswalt says. “That’s a very new perspective, for me, that I had to learn how to embrace. I haven’t done a parent just dealing with parenthood before. Playing the father of a son who’s in his twenties, I have to at least have an idea in my mind of what it was like when he was five, eight, twelve, and the ways I messed that up. This led to a lot of emotion for me, remembering the way my daughter was at those ages. What if I’d been neglectful and shut her out of her? That’s so alien and cruel to me. How does this guy compartmentalize, even if he it’s subconscious, some real self-loathing? How do you get out of bed in the morning carrying that load? His only way of him is to take this desperate measure and rationalize it for himself as helping a kid who does n’t know any better.

Patton Oswalt and James Morosini in I Love My Dad
Patton Oswalt and James Morosini in I Love My Dad Photograph: Photo courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

The clarity and lack of hesitation with which Oswalt delved into the nuts and bolts of acting endeared him to Morosini, though they bonded first as kindred “massive film buffs.” In this askew portrait of paternal devotion, they both saw links to the hysterical mania of Frownland and the excruciating cringe of Toni Erdmann, while Morosini traced his influences from him back to the mother-daughter discord of Ingmar Bergman’s Autumn Sonata. “These messed-up relationships manifest in madness,” Oswalt explains. It’s in conversations like these that he’s most engaged and animated, a genuine love of the game explaining a staggeringly prolific career soon to enter its fourth decade. Soon, he’ll appear in an adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s fantasy saga Sandman, a graphic novel that entered Oswalt’s life sophomore year of college. “The books really shaped me so much,” he says. “They felt me ​​in a good direction.”

The Sandman job falls more squarely within Oswalt’s purview, which tends toward the side of the nerd-approved. In a memorable guest stint on Parks and Recreation, he improvised a minute-long monologue detailing his wackadoodle plans for the Star Wars franchise. He’s popped by Agents of Shield, contributed a little voice work to Eternals, and co-created the MODOK streaming series. As the authority on comics-based media (“Not the authority, maybe an authority,” he’s quick to correct, adding that “there’s an Illuminati council of us”), he’s more qualified than most to comment on the state of the MCU super-union. Marvel’s total industry domination can’t last forever, and he sees expansion as the key to remaining creatively vital. He imagines a modern-day equivalent to the circa-’50s Hollywood studio system, under which benevolent managerial neglect led to some of the American cinema’s finest works.

“Some people, like Buster Keaton, very freewheeling, got crushed by the studio system,” Oswalt explains. “But others like Vincente Minnelli and Michael Curtiz thrived, doing amazing things using that system. To go deeper, here’s my question: when will Marvel unknowingly hire their Douglas Sirk, a guy who comes in and smuggles in all kinds of hidden richness they don’t even see at the studio? That’s gonna be great … We don’t know yet, what a 20, 30, 40 million Marvel movie looks like.”

From there, he’s off, waxing rhapsodic on the thrilling potential of lessened oversight, his line of reasoning bouncing from a little-remembered Aquaman run in the ’80s to the much-maligned surrealist sitcom ‘Til Death. He’s seen everything you’ve seen and would love to discuss it, just five minutes of our conversation covering the early works of Ramin Bahrani, the ‘hugely underrated’ recent action throwback Run & Gun, and the grassroots phenomenon springing up around Tollywood masterpiece RRR . A perfect stranger starts to see what it means when an actor is described as “good in the room”.

Patton Oswalt and Charlize Theron in Young Adult
Patton Oswalt and Charlize Theron in Young Adult Photograph: Paramount/Allstar

In his easy and affable demeanor, Oswalt makes an unexpectedly apt choice for a man confident in his ability to smile and shrug his way out of any predicament. He uses his innate liking of him for unsavory purposes in the case of I Love My Dad, but offscreen, that’s the secret to his longevity of him in an industry notorious for chewing actors up and spitting out. He’s earned his stripes from him, built up his share of fame, lost love, found it again – it seems like he’s done it all, and he’s just glad to be here.

More than anything, he sincerely likes his job, that rarest privilege of all. An offhand question about his one-line bit part of him on Magnolia leads to an excited recollection of getting flown out to Reno, taught to play baccarat by Paul Thomas Anderson, and then hanging from a tree costumed in a full-body wetsuit on a brutal Californian morning in July. Oswalt still remembers the sagacity that the director shared with him on that day: “I only got to read the one page of the script I’m in, so I’m confused. I’m a croupier, and now I’m in a wet suit? He wouldn’t say why, he just said, ‘You’re the first frog who falls out of the sky.’ Eventually, I got what I meant.” And now it’s on to the finer points of foreshadowing, when it works, when it doesn’t, who’s gotten it right, etc ad infinitum. One gets the sense he has a million stories like this, and that he would gladly spend eternity sharing them.

Categories
Sports

Union St Gilloise 2-0 Rangers: Gers left with it all to do to qualify for the Champions League

Visiting the beer capital of Belgium at least provided Rangers fans with the means to soothe their sorrows.

A performance as flat as a day-old pint hasn’t completely ended hope of reaching the Champions League for the first time since 2010. But, my goodness, something much more potent will be required from Giovanni van Bronckhorst and his players if they are to turn the tie around at Ibrox next Tuesday evening.

Uncertain at the back and timid in attack, this had a completely different feel to the barnstorming displays that took Rangers all the way to last season’s Europa League final.

Seventy-six days on from Seville, a damaging false start was produced in the bid to secure a £40million group stage windfall.

Union St Gilloise's Teddu Teuma scores the opener in their 2-0 win over Rangers on Tuesday

Union St Gilloise’s Teddu Teuma scores the opener in their 2-0 win over Rangers on Tuesday

First-leg defeat leaves Gers facing an uphill battle in their bid to qualify for Champions League

First-leg defeat leaves Gers facing an uphill battle in their bid to qualify for Champions League

MATCH FACTS

UNION ST-GILLOISE: (3-5-2) You die; Sykes, Burgess, Van Der Heyden; Nieuwkoop, Lynen, Teuma (Gates 90+2), Lazare Amani, Lapoussin; Adingra (Ilyes 85), Vanzeir (Francois 90+2)

Subs not used: Imbrechts (GK), Pirard (GK); Boone, Dony, El Azzouzi, Huygevelde, Machida

goals: Teuma (27), Vanzeir (PEN 76)

Bookings: Lynen (80)

Coach: Karel Geraerts

RANGERS: (4-1-2-3) McLaughlin; Tavernier, Goldson, Sands, Barisic (Yilmaz 67); Lundstram; Kamara, Jack (Davies 67), Matondo (Wright 77), Colak, Tillman (Lawrence 77)

Subs not used: McCrorie (GK), McGregor (GK); Arfield, Davis, Devine, King, Sakala

goals: None

Bookings: Sands (40), Goldson (75), Davies (79), Lawrence (90+2)

Coach: Giovanni van Bronckhorst

Referee: Irfan Peljto (Bosnia-Herzegovina)

Venue: Joseph Marien Stadium (Belgium)

True, there was ill fortune in the ridiculously harsh handball penalty awarded against Connor Goldson following a VAR check.

But no-one could truly dispute Union Saint-Gilloise merited a two-goal first leg lead on the overall balance of play. The Belgians had numerous chances to inflict further pain.

Their opening goal, netted by Teddy Teuma midway through the first half, was dismal from a Rangers perspective. Weak defending preceded a weak attempt at a save by Jon McLaughlin.

The goalkeeper went some way too redeeming himself with a clutch of subsequent stops as Union carved their way through time after time.

This wasn’t even a proper home match for last season’s Jupiler Pro League runners-up. Union’s Stade Joseph Marien is something of a museum piece and doesn’t meet UEFA standards, hence the switch half an hour east to the UH Lueven’s Den Dreef Stadion.

Leuven is the base for numerous breweries, including a vast facility producing gallon upon gallon of Stella Artois. Reassuringly expensive was the old marketing phrase they used.

And the cost of failure here could be very high for Rangers in terms of letting slip a chance to grasp transformative revenue.

Tuesday’s play-off round draw confirmed the winners of this tie will meet either Monaco or PSV Eindhoven for a spot among the elite.

Van Bronckhorst can’t think that far, though.

Operating with a back three here simply didn’t work.

A different plan, and much more punch, will have to be summoned if Ibrox is to stage another great European night next week and not a bitter disappointment to match the loss to Malmo 12 months ago.

Teuma's (left) first-half strike gives Union Saint-Gilloise into the lead on Tuesday evening

Teuma’s (left) first-half strike gives Union Saint-Gilloise into the lead on Tuesday evening

Teuma's shot is too much for Rangers goalkeeper to handle, as the hosts take a first-half lead

Teuma’s shot is too much for Rangers goalkeeper to handle, as the hosts take a first-half lead

Teuma celebrates breaking the deadlock for Union in the third qualifying round clash

Teuma celebrates breaking the deadlock for Union in the third qualifying round clash

The absences of Ryan Kent and John Souttar from the traveling party meant Van Bronckhorst was certain to make changes from Saturday’s 2-1 comeback win over Livingston. In the end, there were four. And a switch of formation.

Tom Lawrence and Scott Wright also dropped out, with James Sands, Ryan Jack, Rabbi Matondo and Malik Tillman promoted.

This is the first time Union have played in a continental competition since the pre-UEFA accredited days of the Fairs Cup, yet the ground was maybe only three-quarters full by time of kick-off arrived on a stickily warm evening.

Coping with events on the pitch was, of course, far more significant for Rangers. In that regard, first impressions were disappointing. They actually settled quicker.

With John Lundstram and Sands flanking Goldson at the back, Van Bronckhorst’s men established an early grip of possession against rather edgy-looking hosts.

When Siebe Van der Heyden caught Antonio Colak just outside the area, the angle demanded Borna Barisic step up. He sent the free-kick spinning towards the near post, forcing Luxembourg goalkeeper Anthony Moris to punch clear.

Dante Vanzeir (centre) doubled the lead for Union from the penalty spot in the second half

Dante Vanzeir (centre) doubled the lead for Union from the penalty spot in the second half

Vanzeir stepped up and calmly converted the penalty in the 76th minute of the game

Vanzeir stepped up and calmly converted the penalty in the 76th minute of the game

Vanzeir coolly sent McLaughlin the wrong way from the spot to make it 2-0 on the night

Vanzeir coolly sent McLaughlin the wrong way from the spot to make it 2-0 on the night

Sands then tested Moris with a crisp, left-footed strike from distance as Union tooled to find a foothold. One was soon located, though. And from there they climbed powerfully upwards.

A first hint of danger to the visiting defense came when Loic Lapoussin’s firm hit was blocked by Lundstram. Then Lazare Amani nutmegged Barisic on a surge down the right flank before sliding over a dangerous cross that was anxiously cleared.

Firmer evasive action arrived when Sands made a brilliant challenge on Dante Vanzeir to prevent the Belgium cap netting from a Simon Adingra delivery. Lapoussin had a slid a through-ball inside Lundstram to set up the opportunity. Union were on the march.

Their breakthrough arrived in the 27th minute. Aided, it must be said, by some distinctly flimsy resistance inside the Rangers area.

Jack lost a battle of wills against rival No 8 Amani, with Barisic then unable to do enough to prevent the ball being laid into the path of Teuma. His strike from him took a nick off the heel of Goldson but he still seemed to beat McLaughlin a little too easily. Shoddy stuff all round.

Just as at Livingston, Rangers were behind to a poor concession. And, once again, there was no appreciable response prior to the interval.

Rangers' Antonio Colak buries his head into his shirt after the visitors go 2-0 down

Rangers’ Antonio Colak buries his head into his shirt after the visitors go 2-0 down

That might have been different had Colak not lost his bearings. Tillman’s cross towards him was good but the Croatian failed to make any contact with his head. A glaring opportunity was lost.

Union very nearly exact severe punishment. Not for the first time, the Belgians were able to exploit Barisic’s area and tee up a chance. Lapoussin would have made it 2-0 but for a terrific challenge by Tavernier. The Rangers captain looked accusingly to his left of him as another mini-inquest kicked off.

Staid when advancing, the Premiership runners-up were rattled in retreat. That impression was confirmed when Sands collected a booking for clattering Amani near the halfway line.

Van Bronckhorst resisted any substitutions at the interval. And the flow of the match remained firmly towards McLaughlin.

Lapoussin headed over from Bart Nieuwkoop’s cross before the Dutch full-back clipped the outside of the post from Amani’s cutback.

On 67 minutes, the Ibrox boss turned to the introduction of £9m worth of summer business. On came Ridvan Yilmaz and Ben Davies, off went Barisic and Jack. Lundstram stepped forward into midfield.

Giovanni van Bronckhorst's men face an uphill battle in qualifying for the Champions League

Giovanni van Bronckhorst’s men face an uphill battle in qualifying for the Champions League

It didn’t make enough of a difference. McLaughlin denied Lapoussin at the near post and parried a follow-up from Vanzeir. When Teuma’s drive then came off Goldson, it led to a lengthy VAR consideration by Bosnian referee Irfan Peljto.

Given that the ball had taken a little deflection before striking Goldson’s arm at point-blank range, the award of a penalty seemed nonsensical. But Peljto had made up his mind. And Vanzeir coolly felt McLaughlin the wrong way from the spot.

The Ibrox goalkeeper then saved from the same player as he broke away looking for a third. If Rangers are going to get out of this month, that might yet provide a critical moment.

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Categories
US

Russian prosecutor asks court for nearly 10-year sentence : NPR

Brittney Griner holds a picture of her Russian basketball team as she stands inside a defendants’ cage before a court hearing in Khimki, outside Moscow, on Thursday.

Evgenia Novozhenina/AFP via Getty Images


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Evgenia Novozhenina/AFP via Getty Images


Brittney Griner holds a picture of her Russian basketball team as she stands inside a defendants’ cage before a court hearing in Khimki, outside Moscow, on Thursday.

Evgenia Novozhenina/AFP via Getty Images

MOSCOW — A Russian prosecutor asked a judge to find Brittney Griner guilty on drug charges and to sentence her to serve 9 years and 6 months in a prison colony, as the two sides delivered closing remarks in Griner’s month-long trial.

Griner’s defense attorney called for her to be acquitted, or for the court to show leniency in any punishment she’s given. The basketball star also spoke on her own behalf of her.

Thursday’s court session then took a brief recess before the verdict is announced — likely around 10:45 am ET.

Griner, 31, has now been detained for 24 weeks, after authorities at Sheremetyevo International Airport outside Moscow found cannabis vape cartridges in her luggage. She could face up to 10 years in prison if she’s convicted of drug charges.

The Olympian and NBA champion says she must have put the cannabis in her bag by mistake. Her defense team notes that Griner has a medical marijuana card in Arizona to help her cope with injuries sustained over years of competition. But personal cannabis possession is illegal under any circumstances in Russia, similar to US federal law.

In her final statement to the judge, Griner reiterated that she never intended to break any laws or hurt anyone.

She apologized to her Russian teammates for any damage she may have caused, adding that “this is my second home and all I wanted to do was win champsionships and make them proud.”

“I made an honest mistake and I hope that in your ruling that it doesn’t end my life here,” Griner said.

The court’s judgment is only one factor deciding Griner’s fate. She’s also at the center of a potential prisoner swap that could see the US release notorious Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout. But Russian officials have said any such deal would have to wait until after Griner’s trial is over.

Some legal experts have described Griner’s guilty plea as a strategy for a shorter trial, and more lenient verdict — especially since Russian criminal courts reportedly have a conviction rate of 99%.

Griner was arrested in February, one week before Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine. Her detention of her quickly led to speculation that Putin’s government wants to use her as leverage against the US Griner alluded to that in her closing remarks of her to the judge on Thursday.

“I know everybody keeps talking about political pawn and politics, but I hope that is far from this courtroom,” she said.

Here’s a quick recap of Griner’s ordeal:

  • Feb. 17: Griner is detained at the airport near Moscow
  • May 3: The US State Department declares Griner wrongfully detained
  • May 28: US Ambassador to Russia John J. Sullivan calls Griner a “bargaining chip” amid talk of a possible prisoner exchange
  • July 1: Prosecutors unseal their case in court as the trial begins
  • July 7: Griner pleads guilty to drug charges as talk of a prisoner swap grows
  • July 27: Griner testifies, saying she inadvertently brought the cannabis to Russia
  • July 27: The US says it offered Russia a deal to free Griner and another jailed American, Paul Whelan
  • Aug. 4: Closing arguments begin

Griner is a star center for the Phoenix Mercury. But like many WNBA players, she plays in overseas leagues during the US league’s offseason, earning far more than her WNBA salary from her. In recent years, she has played for UMMC Ekaterinburg, a Russian team owned by oligarch Iskander Makhmudov. The team has had longstanding ties to Griner’s US club.

Griner was returning to her Russian team from the US when she was detained.

The effort to free Griner has grown from her fans and fellow basketball players to include a much broader circle. This summer, dozens of rights groups, including the Human Rights Campaign, the National Organization for Women and National LGBTQ Task Force wrote a letter to President Biden urging him to treat her case with urgency.

Maynes reported from Russia. Chappell and Treisman reported from Washington, D.C.

Categories
Technology

ColorOS 13 beta now available for public testing on Oppo Find N and Find X, OnePlus 10 Pro

Oppo has been testing the beta version of the new ColorOS 13 internally, with only a few fans being allowed to join in. Now the company – along with OnePlus – are opening up the beta test to a wider audience.

The foldable Oppo Find N, the Oppo Find X5 and Find X5 Pro are invited to join in. Note that this is a limited test with slots for only 1,000 users. There will be several rounds, so if you don’t get in the first time, try again later.

The good news is that this is not restricted to China. Find X5 and X5 Pro owners in Australia, France, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, UAE and Vietnam can apply. Users in other regions who are interested in joining should keep an eye on the Oppo forums for further announcements.

ColorOS 13 beta now available for public testing on Oppo Find N and Find X, OnePlus 10 Pro

The update process is pretty simple. First, back up your data. Second, you need to update your phone – to version A.20/A.22 for the Find N, A.20/A.21 for the X5 Pro and A.18 for the X5. Third, go to Settings > About device > Trial versions and fill in your data to apply for a slot in the public beta test. If accepted, ColorOS 13 beta will become available for download and installation.

But now here is why you may not want to install this update. It is a beta, meaning there is the possibility of bugs. In fact, Oppo already lists several known issues waiting to be fixed, eg the NFC on the Find N crashes occasionally, requiring a restart, the Find X5 series has issues where icons and some menus go blurry. Also, some apps don’t work with Android 13 yet, especially banking apps.

There is also the possibility that something goes wrong, which is why step 1 is backing up your data. With all of this in mind, you probably don’t want to run this on your daily driver. But if you do decide to go ahead and test drive the beta, this thread in the Oppo forums has detailed instructions.

OnePlus 10 Pro owners in China can also try ColorOS 13. The process is similar – you sign up through the About device screen (noting that there are limited spots available to beta testers). The same warnings about apps and features not working and the possible data loss apply.

Again, this is only for 10 Pro owners in China since the global version of the phone runs OxygenOS instead. OnePlus has already shown off the water-inspired look of OxygenOS 13.

Source 1 | Source 2 | Source 3 (in Chinese) | Source 4 | Via

Categories
Entertainment

Jessica Biel shines in one hell of a true horror story

Biel and Lynskey are both utterly compelling, and the faithful period detail of the production and wardrobe design give things a slightly elevated and unsettling feel. It comes as little surprise to learn that director Michael Upendahl, who sets the tone in the first and last episodes, has done some American Horror Story and Fargo (as well as Mad Men).

With Raul Esparza as an outsized attorney, and Justin Timberlake as one of the sheriff’s deputies on the case, it all adds up to some riveting real-life horror.

Defending the Guilty ★★★★
stand*

There’s nothing like a dark, memoir-based British comedy for exposing the sandy foundations of our professions and institutions. Whether it be Daniel Radcliffe doing Russian medicine circa 1917 in A Young Doctor’s Notebook (Stan) or Ben Whishaw doing the modern NHS in This Is Going to Hurt (Foxtel, Binge), it’s a proper laugh and a bit of a worry.

So too this sharp and salty series based on British lawyer Alex McBride’s memoir of his sometimes excruciating experience as a trainee or “pupil” barrister. The central figure is put-upon dork Will (Will Sharpe), the pupil of cynical older barrister Caroline (the marvelous Katherine Parkinson), who torments him by calling him “Baby Boy” and herself “Mummy”. As Caroline defends and occasionally prosecutes colorful characters charged with various crimes, Will learns painful lessons about human nature, both in court and in his cutthroat competition with the three other pupils vying for the one job. The casting is perfect across the board as McBride and cuckoo creator Kieron Quirke quickly establish a captivating little world of horsehair wigs and acerbic repartee.

Thirteen Lives
Prime Video, from Friday, August 5

Joel Edgerton (centre) plays Australian doctor Richard Harris in Thirteen Lives, a movie about the Thai cave rescue.

Joel Edgerton (centre) plays Australian doctor Richard Harris in Thirteen Lives, a movie about the Thai cave rescue.Credit:Vince Valitutti

Ron Howard’s Gold Coast-shot movie about the extraordinary rescue of a teenage soccer team from a flooded cave system in Thailand in 2018 might initially seem redundant to viewers who’ve seen the gripping documentary series The Rescue (Disney+). But it doesn’t take long for the audacious, desperate brilliance of the operation to captivate all over again. Colin Farrell and Viggo Mortensen dial themselves down superbly as British divers John Volanthen and Rick Stanton, as does Joel Edgerton as Australian diver and anaesthetist Richard Harris.

Reservation Dogs (new season)
binge

Reservation Dogs, the Native American comedy created by Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi, returns for a second season.

Reservation Dogs, the Native American comedy created by Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi, returns for a second season.Credit:Shane Brown/FX

The poignant and fiercely funny Native American comedy created by Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi has returned at its unpredictable and ebullient best. Perhaps nowhere has the crowded coexistence of ancient and modern cultures been better illustrated than by old-timer Uncle Brownie (Gary Farmer) trying to improvise an authentic old-time ceremony but veering off into Tom Petty’s Free fallin’. The kids are on their own journeys, with Elora and Jackie (Devery Jacobs and Elva Guerra) on the road and the others staying on the reservation.

I Love That for You
Paramount+

Molly Shannon plays a home-shopping star in I Love That for You.

Molly Shannon plays a home-shopping star in I Love That for You.Credit:Tony Rivetti Jr/Showtime

In real life Vanessa Bayer survived childhood leukemia. In her wickedly funny comedy series she plays an aspiring TV shopping channel host who lies that her childhood cancer has returned so she can keep her job. She’s an absolute treat too as her character de ella suffers a little less conflict than even she might have hoped in embracing her own awful lie de ella. Saturday night Live veteran Bayer more than holds her own opposite the particularly wonderful Molly Shannon and Jenifer Lewis. A dark treat.

William S. Burroughs: A Man in Full
docplay

Author William S. Burroughs.

Author William S. Burroughs.

William S. Burroughs remained in many ways a closed and enigmatic figure long after his stunningly original writing expanded the scope of literature and cultural conversation by placing gritty realities of homosexuality and drug addiction in the spotlight for the first time. This poignant biography has friends, lovers and biographers piece together a portrait of a man who was famously a mentor and inspiration to Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and countless others down the decades, but was far more vulnerable and wounded than many will have suspected.

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