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Technology

Bose SB900 soundbar: listen up (review)

Supporting Dolby Atmos and packed with streaming features, the Bose SB900 soundbar aims to give your lounge room an audio overhaul.

While today’s 4K and 8K televisions deliver a stunning picture, their super-thin design means they can be found wanting when it comes to sound quality. That’s where it pays to upgrade to a sound system which helps bring movie night to life.

Of course, not everyone has the budget or the space for a true “surround” sound system with speakers spread around the room. The compromise is a soundbar which sits below the screen to deliver bigger, bolder sound.

The SB900 is Bose’s first Dolby Atmos-capable soundbar, letting you get the most from the high-end soundtracks on Ultra HD Blu-ray discs and some streaming services.

Along with the ability to throw sound around the room to create a wide soundstage, it also features upwards-firing speakers to help recreate Atmos’ sense of height and deliver more immersive sound.

Review: Bose SB900 sound bar

australian website here
Price $1399.95 RRP
Warranty 1 year
other You can read other GadgetGuy Bose news and reviews here

first impressions

The Bose SB900 soundbar sports a surprisingly slender design for one which packs in so many speakers. At only 5.81 cm tall, it can likely sit on the bench in front of your television without blocking your view of the screen. Alternatively, you can mount the soundbar on the wall, below a wall-mounted screen.

The clean design includes a glass top which features touch-sensitive buttons so as not to spoil the look from the front. The upwards-firing speakers are also subtly inset so as not to draw attention, ensuring it doesn’t look out of place in your lounge room.

There’s a thin LED light bar below the buttons which indicates the status of the soundbar with a confusing array of colors and patterns. It doesn’t act as a power light, assumingly so as not to distract you from your movie. There are times when you can find yourself wishing for some kind of front display, such as the volume level or which audio source is selected.

At the back, you’ll find indents which place the inputs on a 45-degree angle rather than pointing straight back – making it easier to mount it on a wall or push it back against a television base without the protruding cables getting in the way .

One disappointment is that there’s only a single HDMI port on the back, along with digital optical. This is fine for running audio from your television to the soundbar via eARC HDMI cables, but some people might prefer a second HDMI port as a pass-through so they can run sources like disc players into the soundbar and then run the picture out of the soundbar to television.

There’s also an Ethernet port on the back, accompanying built-in Wi-Fi, to support the soundbar’s wide range of streaming features which make it easy to fling audio around your home.

set-up

While the soundbar looks quite elegant, the remote control is rather basic and clunky. That’s in part because many of the soundbar’s advanced features can only be accessed via the Bose Music smartphone app (iOS/Android), which is required to set-up the soundbar before first use.

The app can link to a range of streaming services including Spotify, Amazon Music, Pandora, TuneIn, Deezer and iHeartRadio.

Acknowledging it’s limited access to advanced features, the physical remote sports six preset buttons which you can configure to play audio from your favorite music services without the need to reach for your phone.

The soundbar’s initial set-up includes calibrating the speaker to the room using Bose’s ADAPTiQ technology. Different vendors approach this in different ways. Some units have built-in speakers to listen to the acoustics of the room, while others come with an external speaker which connects by cable and can be placed around the room. Some Sonos units require you to do a rain dance with your phone to capture the acoustics of the room.

With the SB900, Bose supplies a headset which connects to the soundbar via a long cable. The set-up then instructs you to sit in different places around the room, wearing the headset, so it can hear what you’ll hear and adjust the audio characteristics to suit.

If you want to bump up the sound, Bose offers an optional subwoofer for $949 and optional rear surround speakers for $529. Of course, by the time you’ve spent all that, you might have been better off looking at a true surround sound system.

Within the app you can access a two-band EQ, along with control of the center channel and height channel. There’s also dialogue boost mode, which is handy at night so you don’t need to constantly ride the volume in an effort to hear the dialogue without waking the household during the noisy scenes.

Bose SB900 sound bar specs

channels 5.0.2
Audio formats Dolby Atmos, Dolby Digital, Dolby True HD, Dolby Digital Plus
inputs HDMI eARC, optical
connectivity Ethernet, WiFi, Bluetooth
Dimensions 5.81cm H × 104.5cm W × 10.7cm D
Weight 5.75kg
colors Black or White

Features

When it comes to enjoying movies and TV shows, the Bose SB900 soundbar is designed to support up to Dolby Atmos sound – thanks to nine speakers precisely arranged in the cabinet.

That’s two tweeters, four transducers, a center tweeter and those two upward-firing dipole transducers.

Bose’s PhaseGuide psychoacoustics technology helps bounce sound around the room to create a sense of surround sound, but it naturally can’t trick you into thinking there’s a speaker behind you.

One of Dolby Atmos’ strengths is a sense of height, although it’s obviously not as impressive from an upwards-firing soundbar as it is from a true surround system with speakers in the roof. When you’re not listening to an Atmos soundtrack, Bose TrueSpace technology remixes stereo and 5.1-channel sound to recreate that sense of height. There’s no way to disable this, which could frustrate purists.

The lack of DTS support, downmixing to PCM 2.0, also might frustrate some people, depending on what’s in your video library. Many Blu-ray movies don’t offer 5.1 Dolby Digital sound. Instead, they feature a 7.1 DTS-HD soundtrack which, on a DTS-less sound system, leaves you listening to upscaled 2-channel sound.

The soundbar also has a lot to offer music lovers, with support for Chromecast, Apple AirPlay 2 and Spotify Connect streaming from devices around your home such as smartphones, tablets and computers.

There’s also two-way Bluetooth support, letting you connect your devices to play music or connect Bose Bluetooth headphones to listen to music or sound from the television.

That internet access is also put to use supporting Google Assistant and Amazon’s Alexa. You can either call on them with their wake phrase or press the button on the top of the soundbar to get their attention – which seems inconvenient considering that most home entertainment gear has a wake button on the remote control. There’s also a mute button on the soundbar when you want your smart assistant to stop listening.

Bose Voice4Video technology expands Alexa’s voice capabilities. In addition to controlling the soundbar, she can also control your television and connected devices.

Bose SB900 soundbar Quality

Out of the box the sound is a little underwhelming, but ADAPTiQ calibration helps bring it to life with more full-bodied sound. The bass still feels a little underdone on the default settings, but you can bump this up to suit your tastes.

The Bose SB900 soundbar delivers an impressively wide soundstage, but the sense of height is less pronounced than rival Atmos soundbars such as the Sonos Arc, Samsung HW-Q90R and LG SL10YG. You can also adjust the height settings to make the effect more pronounced, which only makes a slight difference.

The soundbar does a great job with Dolby Atmos soundtracks, keeping everything tight in the moving car fight scene in dead pool. When it comes to Atmos’ sense of height, the B-24 bombing raid in unbroken isn’t as impressive as I’ve heard on other high-end Atmos soundbars.

The quality gets a little uneven when you’re listening to 5.1-channel audio and relying on BoseTrue to extrapolate, such as the foyer fight scene in The Matrix. It can get a tad murky in places. BoseTrue’s attempts to add a sense of height are most noticeable when it comes to high-end sounds like breaking glass and bullet shells hitting the ground.

When it comes to music, the SB900 can hold its own but sounds a tad bright if you favor the richer sound of its rival Sonos. It performs admirably with nuanced music like acoustic guitar and jazz, but can get a Tad Murky in the middle when hard rockers take the stage.

GadgetGuy’s take

The Bose SB900 soundbar ticks a lot of boxes, especially if you’re already a Bose fan and own Bluetooth headphones which will connect to the soundbar. It looks great in your lounge room and it’s packed with streaming features for flinging music from your various devices.

The soundbar does a fine job with Atmos soundtracks, even though that sense of height isn’t the best in the business when it comes to soundbars with upward-firing speakers. Make sure you weigh it up against the Sonos Arc, especially if you’d make the most of Sonos’ more extensive multi-room ecosystem.

Would I buy it?

Maybe, but only if I was sure the Sonos Arc wasn’t right for me

Bose SB900 soundbar: listen up (review)

Adding Dolby Atmos and a range of streaming features to your lounge room, the Bose SB900 soundbar is the full package.

Positives

Dolby Atmos

Chromecast/ AirPlay 2/ Spotify Connect

Two way Bluetooth

Negatives

Sense of height not as impressive as some

Limited remote, over-reliant on smartphone app

Only works with Bose headphones

Categories
Entertainment

Breaking Bad statues shine light on actors, US city of Albuquerque

Bryan Cranston, left, and Aaron Paul, right, stand next to statues of their meth-cooker characters during the Breaking Bad unveiling in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Chancey Bush/AP

Bryan Cranston, left, and Aaron Paul, right, stand next to statues of their meth-cooker characters during the Breaking Bad unveiling in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Bronze statues of mythical methamphetamine cookers Walter White and Jesse Pinkman were installed at a convention center in Albuquerque to celebrate the Breaking Bad TV series and its entertainment legacy, winning applause in a US city that played its own gritty supporting role.

Local politicians including Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller mixed with Breaking Bad stars Bryan Cranston, Aaron Paul and director Vince Gilligan to help unveil the artwork, donated by Gilligan and Sony Pictures.

The 2008-2013 show and its ongoing prequel Better Call Saul helped fuel a renaissance in filmmaking across New Mexico, while also cutting close to Albuquerque’s real-life struggles with drug addiction and crime.

Aaron Paul greets his fans during the Breaking Bad statue unveiling.

Chancey Bush/AP

Aaron Paul greets his fans during the Breaking Bad statue unveiling.

Gilligan said he recognized that the statues of “two fictional, infamous meth dealers” won’t be universally cherished in New Mexico.

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“In all seriousness, no doubt some folks are going to say, ‘Wow, just what our city needed.’ And I get that,” Gillian said. “I see two of the finest actors America has ever produced. I see them, in character, as two larger-than-life tragic figures, cautionary tales.”

Sydney Morning Herald

The cast and crew of Breaking Bad join their fans inside the Hollywood Cemetery in Los Angeles for the screening of the show’s final episode.

Still a fixture on Netflix, Breaking Bad follows the fictional underworld trajectory of a high-school science teacher, played by Cranston, and a former student, played by Paul, as they team up to produce and distribute meth amid violent, cliffhanger plot twists.

The show and its iconic lead characters already are lionized on T-shirts and airport merchandise, while tour guides in Albuquerque shepherd fans to former film locations in a replica of the RV from the show that doubled as a meth lab.

New Mexico has long struggled against the toll of addiction, with more than 43,000 deaths linked to alcohol and drug overdoses in the last three decades. Albuquerque also currently contends with a record-setting spate of homicides.

Aaron Paul, left, and Bryan Cranston with their statues.  Tour guides in Albuquerque shepherd Breaking Bad fans to former film locations in a replica of the RV from the show that doubled as a meth lab.

Chancey Bush/AP

Aaron Paul, left, and Bryan Cranston with their statues. Tour guides in Albuquerque shepherd Breaking Bad fans to former film locations in a replica of the RV from the show that doubled as a meth lab.

Surging overdose deaths from meth and fentanyl surpassed heroin and prescription opioids as the leading causes of drug overdose deaths across the state in 2020.

Keller heralded the positive economic impact of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul on Albuquerque, acknowledging the dollars and delight it brings to a city he jokingly called “Tamale-wood”.

“While the stories might be fictional, jobs are real every single day,” Keller said. “The city is also a character. We see ourselves in so many ways, good and bad.”

Bryan Cranston, left, takes a photo with a fan, Jackson Day, who is dressed as Heisenberg.

Chancey Bush/AP

Bryan Cranston, left, takes a photo with a fan, Jackson Day, who is dressed as Heisenberg.

Republican state Representative Rod Montoya of Farmington said he admires Cranston as an actor but the statues bring the wrong kind of attention.

“I’m glad New Mexico got the business, but really?” Montoya said. “We’re going down the road of literally glorifying meth makers?”

He also questioned the logic of the tribute after Albuquerque in June 2020 removed a statue of Spanish conqueror Juan de Oñate.

Demonstrators tried to topple that bronze artwork in denunciation of Oñate’s brutal treatment of Native Americans roughly 500 years ago. A fight that broke out at the protest resulted in a gunfire that injured one man.

Walter White and Jesse Pinkman.  New Mexico offers a rebate of between 25% and 35% of in-state spending for video production that helps filmmakers large and small underwrite their work.

Chancey Bush/AP

Walter White and Jesse Pinkman. New Mexico offers a rebate of between 25% and 35% of in-state spending for video production that helps filmmakers large and small underwrite their work.

New Mexico politicians, including Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, have pinned their hopes on the film industry to increase economic opportunity in a state with the highest unemployment rate in the nation.

New Mexico’s film and TV industry recently hit a new production peak, with record-setting in-state spending of US$855 million (NZ$1,379m) for the fiscal year ending in June. Recent video projects drawn to the state include the Netflix series Stranger Things.

Breaking Bad fans are pictured during the statue unveiling in the New Mexico city.

Chancey Bush/AP

Breaking Bad fans are pictured during the statue unveiling in the New Mexico city.

New Mexico offers a rebate of between 25% and 35% of in-state spending for video production that helps filmmakers large and small underwrite their work. Incentive payments peaked at US$148 million in 2019.

Categories
Sports

Newcastle Knights awful in loss to Canterbury Bulldogs, coach Adam O’Brien on future

Newcastle coach Adam O’Brien insists he is the right man to turns the club’s fortunes around despite another dire season in the Hunter.

The Knights have won only five of 19 games this season, and on Sunday suffered their sixth loss in seven consecutive games, and fourth on the trot.

A 24-10 defeat at the hands of the Bulldogs – one of the worst teams in the NRL – was possibly flattering to Newcastle given the way the side played.

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“They looked pretty ordinary with the ball in hand,” Cooper Cronk noted, being polite.

Fellow league legend Greg Alexander said “they haven’t looked like scoring a try.”

The Knights sit 14th on the ladder but statistically they are the worst team in the competition, having leaked the most amount of points and scored the least of all 16 clubs this year.

“It’s been a tough year for that man in the box, Adam O’Brien,” Alexander said on Fox League.

“I agree with Corey Parker – if the Dogs go on to win this big, I think there could be carnage up here in Newcastle, I really do.”

Under O’Brien’s watch, the Knights have managed to sneak into finals the last two years, despite last season winning only 50 per cent of their games.

Stream the NRL premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now

They’ve failed to make an impact in the post-season, though, being bundled out meekly both times. They won’t make the playoffs this year.

O’Brien is contracted to the club until the end of 2024, and he believes he can still turn the team into a premiership contender.

“I’ve still got confidence in my ability,” he said.

“I know that I know what wins. There’s no good moaning about it, we need to fix it.”

The coach was clearly at a loss to explain Sunday’s performance.

NRL Highlights: Knights v Bulldogs – Round 20

“It was a shock. It’s something I didn’t see coming, I didn’t see in our prep,” O’Brien said.

“I was really concerned after the first two sets of the game.

“I’m seeing the training that goes into it, and we’re training well. It’s a hard one for me… previous to getting this job here I was involved in four grand finals.

“I know how the team’s prepared, those teams. I know the systems they use defensively. You don’t un-learn that knowledge. Applying it and getting it ingrained is going to take some time, clearly.

“I’ve seen how the teams prepared for those four grand finals, I’ve seen how the club prepares, how it performs. I’ve seen all that stuff and I haven’t un-learnt that.

“We’ve got the right people in the joint, we just need to have a plan and coach the hell out of it. Hopefully we’ll look back at this season as a season that helped us grow. Had we scraped into finals this year it would have stuck a bandaid on the problem that’s still there.”

The Knights next play the Tigers in round 21.

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
Australia

NSW minister sacked after accusations of bullying

NSW Small Business and Fair Trading Minister Eleni Petinos has been sacked after reports emerged alleging “serious bullying”.

The reports on Friday claimed she used the words “retard” and “stupid” towards staff while “yelling and swearing”.

Premier Dominic Perrottet on Sunday night confirmed he had sacked the minister.

Minister for Small Business Eleni Petinos speaks during Question Time at State Parliament House.  Photo: Wolter Peeters, 16th February 2022, The Sydney Morning Herald.
Minister for Small Business and SafeWork Eleni Petinos is accused of bullying. (Wolter Peeters)

“Today I spoke with the Minister for Small Business and Fair Trading Eleni Petinos after some further matters concerning her were brought to my attention,” he said.

“In light of these matters, Ms Petinos’ service as a minister will cease with immediate effect, and I will write to the governor in this regard tomorrow.

“Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government Victor Dominello will assume Ms Petinos’ portfolio responsibilities.”

Petinos said she was proud of the work she’d done for small businesses during her time as a minister and would stay on as the Member for Miranda.

“The intense pressures and stresses of such important portfolios are significant for both staff and their Minister,” she said.

“I thank my staff for their efforts in supporting me to deliver for the people of NSW.

“I would never intentionally offend anyone or make them feel uncomfortable, and if I did I am truly sorry.”

The Department of Premier and Cabinet had earlier in the week confirmed it received an “anonymous complaint” but the staffer wanted no action taken.

NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet speaks while on tour in India. (9News)

Perrottet initially backed in his minister, saying he was “satisfied that the complaint was dealt with appropriately.”

But Opposition Leader Chris Minns had called for Petinos to be sacked if the allegations were true and Perrottet also promised to act if that evidence was found.

The allegations against Petinos capped a tough week for the government, after Trade Minister Stuart Ayres was accused of involving himself in the independent process of hiring the US trade commissioner.

Former deputy premier John Barilaro was given the role but eventually withdrew due to media attention.

Ayres insisted it had been “a selection process in accordance with the law.”

Categories
US

Federal emergency savings proposals may also increase retirement funding

Nirunya Juntoomma | istock | Getty Images

It’s no secret that households with sufficient emergency savings are more the exception than the norm.

Two proposals in the Senate aim to change that. And, experts say, tackling the problem could lend itself to workers saving more for their golden years.

“One of the best ways to protect retirement savings is to help families more effectively weather short-term emergency savings needs,” said Angela Antonelli, executive director of Georgetown University’s Center for Retirement Initiatives.

Pandemic showed the need for savings

The Covid-19 pandemic shone a light on the many workers who were unprepared for the financial struggles that ensued from suddenly being without a job and income. While generous government aid aimed to keep families afloat as the economy righted itself, Americans now find themselves battling inflation and rising interest rates that are making both buying and borrowing more expensive.

The overall share of Americans who are either very comfortable (13%) or somewhat comfortable (29%) with their emergency savings dropped to 42% in June from 54% two years ago, according to a recent Bankrate report.

While some companies are offering emergency savings accounts to employees, the Senate proposals come with certain parameters and are both linked to 401(k) plans.

The proposals were approved in separate committees in late June as part of that chamber’s evolving version of the so-called Secure Act 2.0. The legislation would build on the original Secure Act of 2019 by making additional changes to the US retirement system in an effort to increase the ranks of savers and the amount they’re putting away for their post-working years.

The first proposal being considered would allow companies to automatically enroll their employees in emergency savings accounts, at 3% of pay, that could be accessed at least once a month. Workers would be able to save up to $2,500 in the account, and any excess contributions would automatically go to a linked 401(k) plan account at the company.

The other Senate proposal takes a different approach: It would let workers withdraw up to $1,000 from their 401(k) or individual retirement account to cover emergency expenses without having to pay the typical 10% tax penalty for early withdrawal if they are under age 59½ .

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However, a separate account would be the preferable of the two so that people would be less likely to make withdrawals from their 401(k), Antonelli said.

“It helps prevent leakage from retirement savings,” she said.

However, for workers who have access to a 401(k) or similar workplace plan but don’t participate, having emergency funds available could spur them to enroll in their company’s retirement plan, said Leigh Phillips, president and CEO of SaverLife, a nonprofit focused on helping households build savings.

“One of the big things that prevents people participating in long-term savings is a lack of short-term liquidity for emergencies,” Phillips said.

One of the big things that prevents people participating in long-term savings is a lack of short-term liquidity for emergencies.

leigh phillips

President and CEO of SaverLife

In traditional 401(k) plans, where contributions are made pre-tax, the penalty for withdrawing from an account comes with a 10% tax penalty if the person is under age 59½ (unless they meet an exception allowed by the plan).

“Having money locked away that you can’t touch is alarming to some people,” Phillips said.

That concern is addressed in state-facilitated retirement programs, which generally auto-enroll workers — those without access to a workplace plan — into Roth IRAs (individuals can opt out of enrollment if they want).

Why Roth accounts can give peace of mind

Roth accounts come with no upfront tax break for contributions as traditional IRAs do, but you generally can reclaim your contributions at any time without an early-withdrawal penalty.

The Roth structure “offers greater flexibility and more conditions that allow someone to tap those savings if they need to,” Antonelli said.

Altogether, 46 states have either implemented or considered legislation since 2012 to create retirement savings initiatives to reach workers without a plan at work. More than $476 million is collectively invested through these plans, according to Antonelli’s organization.

Although there are some minor differences among the state-run programs, the general idea is that employees are automatically enrolled in a Roth IRA through a payroll deduction (starting around 3% or 5%) unless they opt out.

It’s uncertain if either of the Senate’s emergency-savings proposals would make it into that chamber’s final version of the Secure Act 2.0, or whether an approved provision would look exactly like what’s been proposed.

The House passed its version of the Secure Act 2.0 in March. It’s uncertain when the Senate may revisit its rendition. Assuming senators give their approval, differences between their legislation and the House bill would need to be worked out before a final version could be fully approved by Congress.

If it doesn’t happen this year, the legislative process would start over in a future Congress.

.

Categories
Technology

A Roadmap For The Future Of Quantum Simulation

A roadmap for the future direction of quantum simulation is laid out in a paper co-authored at the University of Strathclyde.

Quantum computers are extremely powerful devices with speeds and computational capabilities that are far beyond the reach of classical, or binary, computing. Instead of the binary system of zero and unit, it operates through superposition, which can be zero, one, or both at the same time.

The ever-evolving development of quantum computing has reached the point of having an advantage over classical computers for an artificial problem. This may have future applications in many areas. A promising class of problems involves the simulation of quantum systems, with potential applications such as developing materials for batteries, industrial catalysis and nitrogen fixing.

paper, published in Nature, explores near- and medium-term possibilities for quantum simulation on analog and digital platforms to help evaluate the potential of this field. It has been co-authored by researchers from Strathclyde, Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics, Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich, Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology, University of Innsbruck, Institute of Quantum Optics and Austrian Academy of Quantum Information. of Science, and Microsoft Corporation.

Andrew Daly, a professor in Strathclyde’s Department of Physics, is the paper’s lead author. He said: “In recent years there have been quite exciting advances in analog and digital quantum simulation, and quantum simulation is one of the most promising areas of quantum information processing. It is already quite mature in terms of algorithm development, and In the availability of internationally quite advanced analog quantum simulation experiments.

“In computing history, classical analog and digital computing coexisted for more than half a century, with the gradual transition towards digital computing, and we expect the same to happen with the emergence of quantum simulation.

“As the next step with the development of this technology, it is now important to discuss ‘practical quantum advantages’, at which point quantum devices will solve problems of practical interest that are not tractable to conventional supercomputers.

“Many of the most promising short-term applications of quantum computers fall under the umbrella of quantum simulation: modeling the quantum properties of microscopic particles that are directly relevant to understanding modern materials science, high-energy physics and quantum chemistry.

“Quantum simulation should be possible in the future on fault-tolerant digital quantum computers with greater flexibility and accuracy, but it can still be done today for specific models by means of special-purpose analog quantum simulators. aerodynamics, which can be operated either in a wind tunnel or through simulations on a digital computer. Where aerodynamics often uses small scale models to understand something larger, analog quantum simulators often use something smaller To understand it, let’s take a large scale model.

“Analog quantum simulators are now moving from providing qualitative demonstrations of physical phenomena to providing quantitative solutions to native problems. A particularly exciting way in the near term is the development of programmable quantum simulators hybridizing digital and analog techniques.” The development of a series is of great potential because it combines the best benefits of both sides by using native analog operations to produce highly entangled states.”

The University of Strathclyde and all the partners on this Perspectives article have large, active programs involving the principles of both architecture and algorithms, as well as the development of platforms for analog quantum simulation and digital quantum computing. The partners are collaborating as part of the Horizon 2020 EU Quantum Technologies flagship project PASQuanS. At Strathclyde, research in this area is strongly embedded in the UK’s National Quantum Technology programme, and has received substantial funding from UK Research and Innovation.

A quantum technology cluster is embedded in the Glasgow City Innovation District, an initiative run by Strathclyde in conjunction with Glasgow City Council, Scottish Enterprise, Entrepreneurial Scotland and the Glasgow Chamber of Commerce. It is envisioned as a global venue for quantum industrialization, attracting companies to co-locate, accelerate growth, improve productivity and access world-class research technology and talent at Strathclyde.

The University of Strathclyde is the only academic institution to have been a participant in all four EPSRC-funded Quantum Technology Hubs in both phases of funding. At the center are: sensing and timing; Quantum Enhanced Imaging; Quantum Computing and Simulation, and Quantum Communications Technologies.

Categories
Entertainment

Georgia Fowler is engaged! Victoria’s Secret model announces her surprise engagement

Georgia Fowler has announced her engagement to Fishbowl founder Nathan Dalah.

The Kiwi Victoria’s Secret model, 30, announced the happy news on Instagram on Saturday, revealing her proposed boyfriend of two years during a photoshoot for Tiffany & Co.

She was shooting a campaign called ‘Tiffany Love’ when Nathan, 27, dropped down to one knee on set.

Georgia Fowler has announced her engagement to Fishbowl CEO Nathan Dalah

Georgia Fowler has announced her engagement to Fishbowl CEO Nathan Dalah

‘Nathan was getting so into this Tiffany Love campaign that he surprised us all, including the client – dropping a knee to ask me to marry him,’ she wrote alongside the video.

‘Of course I said yes. Nathan you may be a little ad hoc at times, but you’re definitely the one for me. I can’t wait to be your wife, here’s to forever.’

In the video, Nathan – who is the CEO and co-founder of restaurant chain Fishbowl – is seen getting down on one knee in front of the former Victoria’s Secret model.

‘I would say that I had this really crazy idea,’ he says in the clip.

The pair have been together for more than two years and welcomed their first child together last year

The pair have been together for more than two years and welcomed their first child together last year

‘I know it wasn’t part of the plan or part of the shoot, but I’m gonna do it anyway. No, I’m gonna do it. I wanted to see if you would marry me, be my wife?’

Georgia replies, “Yes, I will,” before the crew cheers for the happy couple.

Congratulations were in order for the pair, who confirmed their relationship back in February 2020.

Congratulations were in order from the couple's famous friends

Congratulations were in order from the couple’s famous friends

‘Omg congratulations baby!!!!! So happyyy for you guys,’ New Zealand model Jessica Clarke commented on the post.

Model Shanina Shaik wrote, ‘Congratulations!!! so cute,’ while Bed Judd simply commented ‘Yewwwww,’ along with three love heart emojis.

Georgia welcomed her daughter with businessman boyfriend Nathan on September 17 last year, after announcing her pregnancy in April.

Georgia welcomed her daughter with her businessman boyfriend on September 17 last year

Georgia welcomed her daughter with her businessman boyfriend on September 17 last year

Auckland-born Georgia (left) announced she was expecting her first child with Fishbowl co-founder Nathan (right) back in April last year

Auckland-born Georgia (left) announced she was expecting her first child with Fishbowl co-founder Nathan (right) back in April last year

‘Dylan Aman Dalah. 17.9.21. Welcome to the world. We love you so much,’ she wrote on Instagram at the time, sharing a series of photos of the newborn.

The New Zealand native recently shared her delight at becoming a mother, saying it was ‘much easier’ than she’d envisioned.

‘It has been easier than I thought. Ella she’s a real angel so it’ll be fine, ‘she told Daily Mail Australia at the Moët & Chandon Effervescence in December.

The couple confirmed their romance in February 2020

The couple confirmed their romance in February 2020

‘It’s been really nice to be able to hang out with Dylan and have a great baby.’

Nathan is the co-founder of the healthy fast food chain Fishbowl alongside Nic Pestalozzi and Casper Ettleson.

The trio opened their first restaurant in Bondi, in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, back in 2016.

The New Zealand native recently shared her delight at becoming a mother, saying it was 'much easier' than she'd envisioned

The New Zealand native recently shared her delight at becoming a mother, saying it was ‘much easier’ than she’d envisioned

Five years later, the chain – which specializes in made-to-order Japanese-style salads – has become an empire set to make $60million in revenue in 2022.

Nathan was estimated to have a net worth of more than $1million, according to reports from last year.

As for Georgia, the model was ranked in the world’s top 50 highest paid models in 2020.

According to Celebrity Net Worth, the beauty’s net worth is estimated at $1million.

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Categories
Sports

Andrew Redmayne penalty heroics as Sydney FC beat Central Coast Mariners

The ‘Grey Wiggle’ became the ‘Yellow Wiggle’ as Andrew Redmayne’s penalty shootout heroics were again on display on Sunday.

Redmayne, the Socceroos hero last month against Peru, was again called upon after Sydney FC and the Central Coast Mariners were unable to be separated after 120 minutes in their Australia Cup match.

Beni N’kololo opened the scoring for the Mariners before the home side went 3-1 up thanks to Adam Le Fondre, Anthony Caceres and Max Burgess.

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Michael Ruhs got one back for the Mariners before Jason Cummings’ header trickled into the net from a corner, deep into stoppage time.

There were no more goals to come in the extra 30 minutes of play at Leichhardt Oval, leaving the game to be settled from 12 yards.

Cummings went first, and after a bit of back-and-forth with the Sydney keeper, had his effort saved by a diving Redmayne, flinging himself to his right just as he did against Peru’s Alex Valera.

Le Fondre’s penalty was then saved by Yaren Sozer, before Jacob Farrell’s effort was blasted over the crossbar.

Rhyan Grant, Max Balard and Jaiden Kucharski all held their nerve for their respective clubs, before Storm Roux’s miss gave Connor O’Toole the chance to win the shootout for Sydney, and he duly obliged.

Sydney advances to the last 16, and will be looking to win the trophy previously known as the FFA Cup for just the second time, having beaten Adelaide in extra time in 2017.

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Categories
Australia

Chalmers, the kind of treasurer the Liberals longed for

If there is one thing Treasurer Jim Chalmers hates, it’s neoliberalism. Which is why it might come as a surprise to some that in his economic statement to parliament this week, he showed signs of developing into the type of treasurer the Australian Liberal Party has yearned to produce since Peter Costello.

Naturally, nobody pays too much attention to what politicians say while they’re in opposition. Communications from exile are, of necessity, chiefly directed at colleagues. But these notes from the political underground can reveal a lot about what is going to happen once the pale creatures of the shadow ministries unfurl as they assume power.

Labor treasurer Jim Chalmers.

Labor treasurer Jim Chalmers. Credit:alex ellinghausen

During the bitter years, Chalmers laid out the ideas that would inform his current role. Neoliberalism is broken, he told the progressive Australia Institute. But the answer to neoliberalism is not permanent big-state socialism, he argued in The Write Stuffa 2020 book of essays penned by “voices of unity on Labor’s future”.

There are few Coalition politicians who would disagree with either of those statements. Conservatism has been moving away from neoliberalism because its ultimate logic led away from community and tradition, removed the borders of the nation state, and sent the individual into the competitive world, naked and loveless. Brexit and other right-wing populist movements were the reaction of the right against the doctrinaire “ism” which came to sum up laissez-faire excesses.

But, like Chalmers, most conservatives don’t see the answer to neoliberalism in yet another “ism” – the socialism of the big state. That is not just a philosophical stance; a good chunk of the conservative/liberal drift away from the former government at the last election was a result of the perception that prime minister Scott Morrison and treasurer Josh Frydenberg had become addicted to bribing the electorate with handouts and expanding government.

While Chalmers had no choice but to go along with the handouts in the lead-up to the election, lest the Australian public vote to remain attached to the taxpayer teat, he signaled then, as he is signaling strongly now, that a weaning is imminent .

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Chalmers’ challenge since the election has been to prepare Australia for the fiscal restraint he knows is necessary in a way that won’t leave Labor voters with buyer’s remorse. Upholding tradition, he has discovered a “fiscal black hole”. New governments always find these and they are always used to explain why election commitments will have to be modified or delayed. But in Chalmers’ case there really is one.

It is moot that the “Liberal’s trillion dollars of debt” was run up with the support of Labor during the pandemic – the truth is it exists and Chalmers is the kind of guy who believes it’s a problem. So he has committed to addressing “waste and waste” (hint: these are endemic to governments and unlikely to yield the dividends he will ultimately claim they have) and, more importantly, he is “being upfront with the Australian people”.

Categories
US

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis CEO says inflation is ‘very concerning’ and ‘spreading out’ across economy

The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis CEO and President Neel Kashkari said Sunday that the current state of inflation is “very concerning” and “spreading out more broadly across the economy.”

“It’s very concerning. We keep getting inflation readings, new data that comes in as recently as this past week, and we keep getting surprised. It’s higher than we expect,” Kashkari said during an appearance on CBS’ “Face The Nation.” “And it’s not just a few categories. It’s spreading out more broadly across the economy and that’s why the Federal Reserve is acting with such urgency to get it under control and bring it back down.”

Kashkari stressed that although wages are increasing for many Americans, so are the costs of goods and services, which means workers experience a “real wage cut” because inflation is growing so quickly. He said wage-driven inflation is not happening, and the cost of goods is partially due to disruptions in the supply chain, namely caused by the pandemic and now the war in Ukraine.

“For most Americans, their wages are going up, but they’re not going up as fast as inflation, so most Americans’ real wages, real incomes are going down,” he said. “They’re getting a real wage cut because inflation is growing so quickly. I mean typically, we think about wage-driven inflation where wages grow quickly and that leads to higher prices in a self-fulfilling spiral – that is not yet happening. High prices and wages are now trying to catch up to those high prices.Those high prices are now being driven by supply chains and the war in Ukraine among other factors.And so we need to get the economy back into balance before this really does become from a very wage drive inflation story.”

POWELL PLEDGES THE FED IS ‘ACUTELY FOCUSED’ ON TACKLING INFLATION

Neel Kashkari, Federal Reserve president for Minneapolis

Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari visits “Maria Bartiromo’s Wall Street” at Fox Business Network Studios on March 29, 2019, in New York. (John Lamparski/Getty Images/Getty Images)

Noting the recent results of the economic cost index, he stressed that it’s a good thing Americans are earning more, but the Federal Reserve cannot wait for the supply chain to adjust to get prices down.

“Just at its basic level, inflation is when demand is outstripping supply. We know supply is low because of supply chains, because of the war in Ukraine, because of COVID. We hoped that supply would come online more quickly. That hasn’t happened,” Kashkari said. “So, we have to get demand down in the balance. Now, I hope we get some help on the supply side, but that doesn’t change the fact that the Federal Reserve has its job to do, and we are committed to doing Item.”

“We cannot wait until supply fully heals. We have to do our part with monetary policy,” he added.

Kashkari argued that the new bill introduced by Sens. Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., and Joe Manchin, DW. Va., dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act is “not going to have much of an impact on inflation” over the next several years, and it will be the Federal Reserve’s job to adjust monetary policies to get it down.

Neel Kashkari at Yahoo Finance Summit

Moderator Brian Cheung and banker Neel Kashkari attend the Yahoo Finance All Markets Summit at Union West Events on October 10, 2019, in New York City. (Jim Spellman/Getty Images/Getty Images)

“Over the short term, the demand side effects totally swamped the supply side effects. And so, when I look at a bill that’s being considered that your two senators talked about, my guess is over the next couple of years, it’s not going to have much of an impact on inflation,” he said. “It’s not going to affect how I analyze inflation over the next few years. I think long term it may have some effect, but over the near term we have an acute mismatch between demand and supply, and it’s really up to the Federal Reserve to be able to bring that demand down.”

The White House has repeatedly held back from admitting the US economy is in a recession and has been debating the definition of the term. On Sunday, Kashkari argued that inflation is so bad that it doesn’t matter if we use the term recession or not, and seriously work needs to be done to address it.

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“Fundamentally, the labor market appears to be very strong while GDP, that the amount the economy is producing appears to be shrinking. So, we’re getting mixed signals out of the economy. From my perspective, in terms of getting inflation in check , whether we are technically in a recession or doesn’t change my analysis,” he said. “I’m focused on the inflation data. I’m focused on the wage data. And so far, inflation continues to surprise us to the upside. Wages continue to grow. So far, the labor market is very, very strong. And that means whether we are technically in a recession or not doesn’t change the fact that the Federal Reserve has its own work to do.”

“We are a long way away from achieving an economy that is back at 2% inflation. And that’s where we need to get to,” Kashkari added.