Categories
US

Eight shot in Detroit dispute over parking: ‘It’s blood everywhere’

Sofhia Steen was surrounded by chaos, but she couldn’t move from her front porch.

“I’m still standing there as the bullets fly by me. It’s blood everywhere. It’s bullets everywhere. I couldn’t move,” Steen said. “Everyone around me was running, hiding.”

Steen was at her home on Coyle Street with family, celebrating her sister’s birthday Saturday night and into the early hours of Sunday. They had a great time, Steen said — until the gunfire started.

“This has scarred me for the rest of my life,” Steen told the Free Press outside of her west-side home Monday.

Detroit resident Sofhia Steen, 34, talks about a shooting that killed two people and injured six, including several of her family members while they were celebrating her sister's birthday at her home on Coyle Avenue near Plymouth Road in Detroit on Monday, Aug. 1, 2022. “It feels so heavy in there – my cousin is still cleaning up blood,” said Steen.  “I haven't slept since it's happened.  Every time I close my eyes I see everything.”

Two people were killed and six others injured when a gunman with a high-powered weapon opened fire, apparently over a parking dispute, according to police and witness accounts.

“I haven’t slept since it happened,” Steen. “Every time I close my eyes… I see everything.”

The shooting suspect lives right across from Steen on Coyle Street, according to police.

Gail Beamon, who lives next door to the suspect, said the two people killed were close friends of her children. The pair weren’t there for the party across the street, Beamon said. They were at her home of her visiting her children of her when the suspect got into an argument with them about where they had parked — near his driveway of her.

Categories
Business

Melbourne councils push for kerbside electric vehicle charging

“People are doing this stuff already. It would be much better if the council fixed the underlying problem and allowed them [electric car owners] to do it in a safe way.”

Councilor Jolly referred to similar trials being undertaken by local councils in the UK, where shallow trenches are dug into the footpath to embed charging cables or chargers are installed in street lights.

The kerb model would only be for residents who live in detached homes and those who had paid for a charger would not have ownership of the car spot next to the charger, as it remained on public land.

But despite these issues, Jolly said he believed the move could be a “small, worthwhile addition to the fight against climate change and encourage electric vehicle use”.

If the Yarra council agrees to a motion on Tuesday night, a report with various options would be created by council staff and presented at a later date for a decision.

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A similar motion will also be considered at a Hobsons Bay City Council meeting next Tuesday.

Independent Hobsons Bay councilor Daria Kellander, who is bringing the motion, said she had also been contacted by a resident who canceled an order for an electric car because of the lack of charging facilities in the area.

“When we look at our municipality, we only have three public electric vehicle chargers in an area with 100,000 residents and one has been down [out of order] for a number of months,” she said.

“Governments are implementing planning changes for future developments, but no one has looked at the legacy [residential] issues and that’s something that needs to be addressed.”

Melbourne company Kerb Charge is partnering with Port Phillip Council for its trial, which was greenlit in September last year. The first charger will be installed this month.

A pilot scheme in Central Bedfordshire Council in England allows electric vehicle owners to charge their cars on the street outside their homes with a charging cable embedded into the pavement.

A pilot scheme in Central Bedfordshire Council in England allows electric vehicle owners to charge their cars on the street outside their homes with a charging cable embedded into the pavement.Credit:Central Bedfordshire Council

Kerb Charge spokesman Rod Walker said the units to be placed next to residential street gutters were “about as tall as a Coke bottle and a bit wider in circumference”. The chargers can slide flat into the ground when not in use and can even be mowed over.

The most recent available data shows there were 10,311 electric vehicles registered in Victoria as of June 2021, up from 6749 the previous year.

Electric car chargers across the city have been plagued by ongoing faults and outages that providers have blamed on supply chain issues.

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Categories
Technology

Lend us your ears for Episode 513 of the top-rated Tech Guide podcast



Lend us your ears for Episode 513 of the top-rating Tech Guide podcast hosted by editor Stephen Fenech so you can stay updated and educated about the latest consumer tech news and reviews.

On this week’s show: we’re in Bangkok for Huawei’s Smart Office launch event and we’ll go through their announcements, 5G is taking on the NBN and that’s how the telcos want it and what we can expect to see with the PlayStation VR2 headset .

In the Tech Guide reviews, we check out the new TCL Mini LED C835 4K smart TV, we get our hands on the BackBone One PlayStation Edition and Motorola’s new G62 smartphone that is designed to entertain you on the move.

In the Tech Guide Help Desk we talk about what to do with your SIM card now that we’re traveling again.

You can listen to the Tech Guide podcast right here using the podcast player below.

Tech Guide’s podcast is also available through Apple Podcasts here.

And we’d love to hear your feedback – you can tweet me @StephenFenech










Categories
Australia

Tasmanian rural council’s $8.2m plan for agricultural town’s main street met with tractor protest

Historic charm and farming roots have coexisted in the northern Tasmanian town of Longford for decades, but a plan for the main street to be redeveloped and beautified has angered some within the community — culminating in tractors being driven into town in protest.

The works on a 600 meter stretch of Wellington Street, would see new garden beds and street furniture installed, and safety improvements for motorists and pedestrians.

Local veterinarian Michael Morris was one of a number of concerned community members who took to the street to protest against the project, which is expected to cost $8.2 million, paid for by the local council with around $2 million coming from the federal government.

He said the development is threatening Longford’s agricultural identity.

“I find it strange that a town like this, whose heart blood is the agricultural community, that you are going to put through an application like this that is essentially going to alienate the rural heartland,” he said.

“This is a strong rural community. This road is used by a heap of farm users, a lot of machinery, a lot of trucks. This development is going to make it extraordinarily difficult for that machinery and those trucks to navigate.”

Michael Morris looks at the camera.
Michael Morris is concerned the Longford main street plan will “alienate the rural heartland.”(ABC News: Damian McIntyre)

Rob Bayles said he’d like the Northern Midlands Council to reconsider the design, and joined other farmers in a tractor conveyed down the main street.

Rob Bayles looks at the camera.
Rob Bayles drove his tractor into town as part of the protest.(ABC News: Damian McIntyre)

“There is probably no other town in Tasmania that has more agricultural produce traveling down the main street from one end to the other, and here we are wanting to make the street narrower,” he said.

“Longford is an agricultural town and it needs to be open for traffic to get through it.”

Cyclists not happy either

The council received a number of representations from the public against the project, identifying 21 issues of concern.

According to the Council’s Heritage Advisor David Denman, the proposed design would not change the character of the town.

“The proposed roadworks and streetscape works are sympathetic with the existing historic streetscape elements and will therefore make a positive contribution to the overall street and townscape aesthetic,” he said.

Concept images of the re-design of Wellington Street shows planterboxes and trees beside the road.
Local Mayor Mary Knowles said the street width would not be affected and would not impact on heavy vehicles and cyclists.(Supplied: Northern Midlands Council/Lange Design)

Mr Morris, who is also a keen cyclist, said he had concerns about what the works meant for those riding through town.

“We have got a strong cycling community here in Longford and the reality is this development is going to narrow the effective roadway for us,” he said.

“At the moment, we’ve got room to cycle along between the park cars and the main thoroughfare, but if this goes through we will be out in the main thoroughfare.”

Main street of the Tasmanian town of Longford
The council says “new protuberances” would come out no further than parked vehicles, but farmer Rob Bayles said the plan would “make it narrower in every spot”.(ABC News: Damian McIntyre)

Ebony Brooks, who works at JJ’s Bakery that’s on Wellington Street, said the street needed a revamp but wasn’t sold on the existing proposal.

“I have heard a lot of mixed reviews, both positive and negative,” she said.

“We are a rural town, every second or third vehicle is a tractor or truck, so it will affect them driving through.”

In a statement, Northern Midlands Mayor Mary Knowles said Wellington Street’s width would not be affected and the works would not impact on heavy vehicles and cyclists.

“The new protuberances at the intersections come out no further than the parked vehicles in the street,” she said.

“The protuberances will improve safety for all users. Particularly drivers of vehicles leaving side streets will have improved visibility when entering the main street; and safety will be increased for pedestrians traversing the roads.”

Mr Bayles disagreed.

“The system is not broken now, why does it need to be changed? There is room to pull off, there is room for trucks to get around corners, and they are just going to make it narrower in every spot.”

Mary Knowles smiles at the camera.
Northern Midlands Major Mary Knowles, Tasmania.(ABC News: Lachlan Bennett)

Council officers recommended the works be approved, but councilors voted to defer the decision until after it was considered by the Northern Midlands Bicycle Advisory Committee.

The works have been approved by the Department of State Growth.

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Categories
US

Georgia offers guidance on how to claim an embryo deduction on state taxes

Once fetal cardiac activity is detected, the law allows expectant mothers to file for child support to cover the costs of pregnancy and delivery, and it requires state officials to count an unborn child toward Georgia’s population in census counts. It also expands the definition of “natural person” to “any human being including an unborn child” at any stage of development and grants rights to an embryo or fetus, called “personhood” provisions.

Gov. Brian Kemp signed Georgia’s abortion law in 2019, but the courts blocked it until last month. Many state agencies said in the days after the law took effect that they had not determined how to implement the “personhood” provisions.

Activists on both sides of the abortion debate began speculating in December that the US Supreme Court would overturn Roe v. Wade, the nearly 50-year-old decision that guaranteed a constitutional right to an abortion, after analyzing oral arguments made about an abortion law in Mississippi.

A draft copy of the Supreme Court opinion overturning Roe was leaked in May, setting the stage for the inevitable final decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization that was made in late June. Last month, the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals issued its order, allowing Georgia’s law to take effect.

Categories
Technology

Capture Your Next Adventure in 5K With This Sale

At Gizmodo, we independently select and write about stuff we love and think you’ll like it too. We have affiliate and advertising partnerships, which means we may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page. BTW – prices are accurate and items in stock at the time of posting.

The name GoPro has become synonymous with action cameras. Over the past decade, we’ve seen these pocket-sized cameras become a must-have accessory for people who love the great outdoors – whether they’re filming themselves free climbing, riding their favorite cycling track or carving up some waves on their surfboard .

If you’re an active, outdoorsy type and a tech lover, the GoPro HERO 9 is a great meeting point between the two hobbies, packing some fantastic camera tech into a portable and durable package. If you’ve been meaning to pick up GoPro or are keen to upgrade from the one you’ve already got, you can currently grab the GoPro HERO 9 Black for $529.95instead of its usual retail price of $669.94.

That price tag might still be a bit too rich for some, but this is a fantastic camera. In Gizmodo’s review of the GoPro HERO 9 Black, we were pretty overall impressed with it: “The video footage this camera shoots looks stunning, the stills are bigger and better, battery life is longer, and the new features are genuinely useful.”

What can the GoPro HERO 9 do?

gopro hero9 black camera
Image: GoPro

Its camera uses a 20MP sensor, which allows you to capture 5K video along with stunning 20MP photos. This model uses HyperSmooth 3.0 stabilization, which allows for much smoother video capture, with in-camera horizon leveling. If you’re into live-streaming your hikes or surf sessions, the HERO 9 Black will also support up to 1080p video.

Speaking of surfing, the camera is waterproof up to 33 feet. It’s also pretty durable, which is something we learned firsthand.

In terms of interface, the rear display is an easy-to-use touch screen. The front of the GoPro Hero 9 also includes an LCD display, so you perfectly capture any selfies without having to play the guessing game of whether or not you’re in the frame.

You can pick up the GoPro Hero 9 Black while it’s on sale here.

Categories
Sports

Heath Davis first New Zealand cricketer to come out as gay

A New Zealand cult hero has become the country’s first male cricketer to come out as gay.

Heath Davis, 50, played five Test matches and 11 one-day internationals for the Black Caps between 1994 and 1997.

He was known for his express pace but erratic accuracy with the ball. For a period he was widely considered the most feared fast bowler in New Zealand, and his highlights feature short balls making batters duck and dive out of the way.

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His most famous YouTube video is, unfortunately, titled “worst first ball in Test cricket history” – showing his first ever Test delivery flying wide past the batter and wicketkeeper.

Davis retired from professional cricket in 2004 and later moved to Brisbane, where a workplace accident resulted in his foot being amputated.

In a documentary series by The Spinoff titled, “Scratched: Aotearoa’s Lost Sporting Legends”, Davis opens up publicly about his sexuality.

He reveals while on tour with the Black Caps he would regularly venture out on his own, “going to saunas and seedy places to get sex because you didn’t want to be seen”.

“It was lonely,” Davis said, in becoming the first professional male cricketer from New Zealand to come out publicly.

“On the other side of the world no one is going to know you. So I went out to Soho and a couple of places by myself, did what I needed to do, and left that part of my life there.

“I was repressing it. I wasn’t leading a gay life, I wasn’t out in Wellington.

“I just wanted a normal life. There was a part of me that needed to break free and I wanted a partner to love. That was really all.”

Davis’ parents are religious, and he has now found religion and is “living single” in Australia.

“I’m seeking Christ now. I’m living single, part of a men’s Christian group,” he said.

If you or anyone you know needs immediate support, contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 or via lifeline.org.au. In an emergency, call 000.

For a daily dose of the best of the breaking news and exclusive content from Wide World of Sports, subscribe to our newsletter by clicking here!

Categories
US

Family, friends remember Rolling Meadows mom, 4 children killed in head-on crash

ROLLING MEADOWS, Ill. — At the park where Lauren Dobosz spent countless hours watching her kids cheering and playing football, members of the Oriole Park Falcons gathered Monday night, along with her brother, to remember them.

“Lauren and Tom were never not busy,” said Tyler Johns, Dobosz’s younger brother. “They took care of everyone else’s kids, even there’s, before themselves.”

Luis Hernandez coached Dobosz’s youngest son Nicky.

PREVIOUS STORY: Mother, 4 children among 7 killed in McHenry County crash

“These kids always had the brightest smile on their face,” Hernandez said. “How can that be possible for them to all be here on Friday and then be gone?”

Hernandez says Nicky and his siblings, Lucas, Ella and Emma, ​​were headed north to Minnesota for a vacation with their parents, along with Emma’s 13-year-old friend.

The crash occurred around 2 am Sunday on I-90 near mile marker 33, roughly 50 miles from Chicago.

Illinois State Police said 32-year-old Thomas Dobosz and his 31-year-old wife, Lauren, both from Rolling Meadows, were driving westbound on I-90 near Hampshire in a full-size Chevrolet van carrying five children.

According to ISP, 22-year-old Jennifer Fernandez was driving in the wrong direction on the highway “for unknown reasons” and collided head-on with the van. Both vehicles became engulfed in flames.

Lauren Dobosz and the five children were killed.

Fernandez also died, police said.

Thomas Dobosz, 32, was the sole survivor and was airlifted to Loyola University Medical Center.

Sharon Swank with the Oriole Park Falcons shared an update on his condition.

“Tom, right now, is not doing so well. Please keep him in your prayers,” Swank said. “I don’t know if he’ll make it. Hopefully, I will. If he does, he’s going to need everyone’s love and support. I’m sure this is going to be the hardest thing he’s ever had to deal with.”

Dobosz works as a carpenter and his wife was a bartender at Lulu’s Gaming in Rolling Meadows.

Lauren’s boss, Kenny Felten, spoke about Lauren’s passing.

“That was her number one love…her kids and her family,” he said. “It’s so sad it’s ended this way. I can’t believe it. We’re still in shock here.”

The family’s neighbor, David Moreno, spoke with WGN News Sunday upon hearing the news.

“The kids were very friendly,” Moreno said. “They were always talkative. We would always run into them at the supermarket.”

Having known the family for 10 years, Moreno says the loss is hitting the entire neighborhood.

Anyone interested in donating to the family’s GoFundMe can do so by clicking here.

“It’s going to impact it a lot,” Moreno said. “Especially the neighbors just because we all get along very well. We all talk and communicate. It will definitely be hard. The kids always played in the front yard and waved ‘hi.’”

Hernandez said the tragedy remains painful and difficult to comprehend.

“It’s hard,” he said. “How do you explain to your 7-year-old that his teammate won’t be coming back?”

Added Swank: “Please, everyone, hug your kids tighter tonight. Life is short and you never know what’s going to happen.”

Categories
Technology

Discord says Android users won’t be left hanging anymore

Discord announced new measures to bring its Android app into parity with its iOS counterpart today. The changes will improve the app’s experience for Android, which has historically lagged behind the iPhone version of Discord.

Discord says the app is now “rebuilt from the ground up” using React Native, a developer framework for making apps that work uniformly across platforms. Some of the changes have been rolling out already in recent weeks, but the overhauled version of Discord for Android should be available to all users within the next few weeks.

The chat app is about as cross-platform as they come and the company offers a version of the experience for iOS, Android, Mac, Windows and Linux. Discord also recently added a new integration for Xbox Live that lets users forward their chats to their consoles.

The company says that the new development method will allow it to expedite new feature releases and bug fixes, getting those changes to the multi-platform app uniformly and more quickly than before. Prior to the new system, Android users got the short end of the stick, often waiting for features and updates that their iOS counterparts received first.

“React Native allows us to streamline and consolidate our processes, which helps our engineers work more efficiently and push out updates more frequently, especially now that the team won’t be spending as much time maintaining different codebases for different devices,” the company wrote in a blog post.

Categories
Entertainment

BTS may be among K-pop stars to serve shorter military service under South Korean law change

South Korea is debating shortening mandatory military service for K-pop stars such as BTS from about two years to three weeks.

The issue is coming sharply into focus due to the oldest member of the band, Jin, turning 30 next year.

Under a 2019 revision of the law, globally recognized K-pop stars were allowed to put off their service until they were 30.

Military service is hugely controversial in South Korea where all able-bodied men aged between 18 and 28 must fulfill their duties as part of efforts to defend their country against nuclear-armed North Korea.

Over the years, some exemptions have become available to people such as Olympics and Asian Games medal winners, classical musicians and dancers who win top prizes at certain competitions, allowing them to either put off service or do it for a shorter time.

Parliament is now debating a bill that would shorten military service for K-pop stars.

Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup, speaking at a parliamentary session, said that by allowing BTS to continue performing, the military could serve national interests without affecting the already shrinking pool of personnel resources due to low birth rates.

BTS’s management, Big Hit, did not respond to a request for comment.

“Even if they join the military, there would be a way to give them a chance to practice and perform together if there are scheduled concerts abroad,” Mr Lee said.

“As many people highly value [artists serving] in the military, that may help increase their popularity even more.”

The seven-member band announced in June a break from group musical activities to pursue solo projects, saying they were exhausted.

In April, a Big Hit official said some members were having a “hard time” because of uncertainties over the debate in parliament, calling for a decision.

Since their 2013 debut, BTS have become a worldwide sensation with their upbeat hits and social campaigns aimed at empowering youth.

BTS became the first Asian band to win artist of the year at the American Music Awards last year, and they met US President Joe Biden at the White House in May to discuss hate crimes targeting Asians.

A South Korean think tank estimated in 2018 that BTS would bring an economic benefit totaling 56 trillion won ($61 billion) between 2014 and 2023.

Reuters

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