Categories
Science

Obligatory sensible meters are essential to fight 'actual and rising drought danger', specialists warn – Do you agree?

“compulsory in all households”

Towards the end of last year, Thames Water (TW) carried out extensive work on the streets around us, installing water meters where none previously existed. I don’t know whether these meters are “smart” or not, since they were all water meters, period.

The old system was a property-based valuation system with payment for water on the one hand and waste disposal on the other. If it hadn't worked, they would have gone bankrupt decades ago. But here's the thing, unlike gas and electricity meters, [urban] There are no water meters on the property. They are located at the inlet valve under the sidewalk “outside” the property line. Therefore, at least in cities, you can't avoid having a water meter; whatever his state of mind may be. Recognize the valve cover…

https://www.thameswater.co.uk/media-library/home/help/emergencies/how-to-turn-your-water-on-and-off/outside-stop-valve-covers.webp

Everything that concerns utility gradually becomes more and more unaffordable. Don't forget that we haven't built a single reservoir in decades; despite a rapid population increase. It's much easier to limit usage through pricing and collecting stock dividends. Of course, you can only receive the dividend while stocks last…

“Sky News reported on Wednesday that some of the company’s shareholders were expected to resign from the board after refusing to inject more than 3 billion pounds ($3.79 billion) in equity.”
https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/thames-water-investors-quit-board-after-bailout-fails-sky-news-says-2024-05-15/

“Without smart water meters, the UK is at increased risk of drought, according to the NIC.”

An obvious and blatant lie.

Categories
Entertainment

TikToker Xandra Pohl sparks romance rumors with this Chiefs NFL participant

Xandra Pohl may have chosen a new first string.

The TikTok star, best known for his viral “Get Ready with Me” videos, was spotted enjoying the rides at Worlds of Fun amusement park with the Kansas City Chiefs player Louis Rees Zamm This week in Kansas City, Missouri. And the photos have many fans wondering if love is in the air for the couple.

In one of the snaps, Xandra, 22, and Louis, 23, sat next to each other on a rollercoaster and smiled broadly as the car went down a steep track. In another picture, Louis – who played professional rugby in the UK before signing with the Chiefs in March – smiled down at the influencer after the ride ended as she covered her mouth and laughed.

“Welcome to KC,” Worlds of Fun captioned the May 14 photo carousel, which included a single shot of the NFL running back looking at a map of the park.

Following the post, fans were quick to point out Xandra's unexpected presence in the pictures, with one social media user commenting: “IS THAT @xandrapohl!!!?! IN KC???!”

Categories
Health

FDA approves Amgen therapy for small cell lung most cancers

The Amgen headquarters in Thousand Oaks, California.

Eric Thayer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The Food and Drug Administration gave approval Thursday Amgenis the therapy for patients with the deadliest form of lung cancer.

The agency approved the drug, marketed as Imdelltra, as a second or later line of treatment for people with advanced small cell lung cancer. This means patients can take the drug if their cancer progresses during or after another form of treatment, which is usually chemotherapy. Amgen's drug is also known by the generic name tarlatamab.

Amgen's drug has been shown in clinical trials to reduce tumor growth and help people with small cell lung cancer live significantly longer.

Of the more than 2.2 million patients diagnosed with lung cancer each year worldwide, small cell lung cancer accounts for 15%, or 330,000 of those cases, Amgen said. About 80 to 85 percent of people suffer from small cell lung cancer They are diagnosed with advanced stages of the disease, according to a study published in the Journal of Cancer.

There are approximately 35,000 patients with small cell lung cancer in the United States, said Dr. Jay Bradner, Amgen's chief scientific officer, told CNBC.

Small cell lung cancer usually begins in the airways of the lungs and grows rapidly, forming large tumors and spreading throughout the body. Symptoms include bloody mucus, cough, chest pain and shortness of breath.

According to the American Cancer Society, only 3% of patients with small cell lung cancer that has spread to other parts of the body survive longer than 5 years. This five-year survival rate is 7% of all patients with this disease, regardless of whether the cancer spreads. Bradner said patients with small cell lung cancer typically have four to five months to live.

An exception is Lynne Bell, a small cell lung cancer patient from Atlanta, Georgia. She says she was “horrified” and “in a dark place” after being diagnosed with an advanced stage of the disease in 2021.

But she started taking Amgen's Imdelltra in an ongoing clinical trial in September after other treatments, including chemotherapy, stopped working. Since then, Bell said her tumors have shrunk significantly and the cancer scans “look great.” She said she particularly noticed that her pain subsided after taking a second dose of Amgen's drug.

When asked how long she would continue Imdelltra, Bell said, “If this medication works and I don't have any side effects, then I'm good to go.” I’m going to win it.”

Maida Mangiameli, a small cell lung cancer advocate and patient mentor from Naperville, Illinois, is also a survivor of the devastating disease. She was diagnosed with advanced stages of the disease in 2018, but was found to be in remission this year, meaning the treatment she received has reduced the signs and symptoms of the cancer.

Mangiameli has been in remission for five years. Her treatments included chemotherapy and 28 days of radiation therapy. She told CNBC that Amgen's Imdelltra may “not be for me, but it could be in the future.”

Mangiameli added that she is pleased that there will be another treatment option for other patients with small cell lung cancer. She said the development of new treatments for the disease has been “on hold” for several years.

Amgen's Bradner also said treatment options are “pretty slim.”

“It's just one of the most terrible cancers and that's why we needed a new solution,” he said.

Lung cancer tumor and light micrograph, illustration.

Kateryna Kon | Scientific Photo Library | Getty Images

Amgen's drug is called a bispecific T-cell engager, which is designed to redirect the immune system's T cells to recognize and kill cancer cells.

The approval is based on the results of a phase 2 study in which more than 200 patients with small cell lung cancer were observed. Cancer tumors shrank in 40% of people given a 10-milligram dose of Imdelltra every two weeks.

Notably, the median time people lived after starting the 10-milligram dose of Amgen's drug was 14.3 months. According to the National Cancer Institute, current treatments last about six to 12 months.

“These patients who would normally only have four to five months are enjoying almost another full year of life,” Bradner told CNBC.

This time can make a big difference for patients.

Treatment for small cell lung cancer gave Mangiameli years to be closer to her grandchild, who was born shortly before she was diagnosed with the disease.

“I had the push, the drive to make sure I survived. … I just had my first grandchild, I have to live long enough for us to be friends,” Mangiameli said.

Meanwhile, Bell said taking Imdelltra has given her the time to travel; She took a trip to San Diego with her daughter.

“I try to go to as many places as possible,” Bell told CNBC.

Amgen continues to study Imdelltra in several studies, including some testing the drug as an earlier line of treatment for small cell lung cancer.

This includes a late-stage trial comparing Imdelltra with chemotherapy as a second-line treatment for the disease. Amgen also plans to begin another Phase 3 trial of the drug as a first-line treatment for patients with advanced small cell lung cancer.

“What gives us confidence in developing cancer drugs is that if they work in later stages of the disease, they can work even better when moved to first-line therapy,” Bradner said.

Don't miss these exclusive reports from CNBC PRO

Categories
Technology

The second Home of Quantum opens in Delft

Many remarkable things happened yesterday in the field of European technology. However, not all of them involved the King of Sweden – and Quantum.

Seeing the representative of such a traditional office coupled with the most advanced groundbreaking technology almost causes a certain amount of cognitive dissonance. Nevertheless, His Majesty King Carl XVI took. Gustaf attended the inauguration of the second House of Quantum building in Delft, Netherlands on Wednesday.

House of Quantum's mission is to create a national campus for the Dutch quantum ecosystem. It is a co-working space that also offers plug-and-play labs and other facilities that would otherwise be difficult to access for individual startups.

His second building, DT01, welcomed its first members Q*Bird (who just has launched a Quantum Key Distribution test with the Port of Rotterdam), Equal1, OPNT, Xairos and Qblox. Other existing members include Single Quantum, Orange Quantum Systems and QuantrolOx.

TNW Conference, March 20-21 June – Last chance to save BIG!

The final price increase will happen this week on May 17th! Startups, investors, corporations, governments – all in one place to explore the future of technology.

The first House of Quantum building opened just last year. “The rapid growth of the House of Quantum demonstrates once again the importance of continuing to invest in quantum technology,” said Jesse Robbers, Director of Industry and Digital Infrastructure at Quantum Delta NL.

QDNL and QSIP

House of Quantum is part of the Quantum Delta NL initiative. This is an ecosystem based on three catalyst programs: quantum computing and simulation, a national quantum network and quantum sensing applications. In addition, five innovation centers in the Netherlands are supported: QDNL Delft, QDNL Amsterdam, QDNL Leiden, QDNL Eindhoven and QDNL Twente.

It will also open campuses in the other hubs mentioned above in the future. In addition, QDNL sits on the board of QSIP – Quantum Sweden Innovation Platform, an initiative to support the growth of a Swedish, globally competitive and attractive quantum industry, which was only founded in November last year. QDNL is funded by the Dutch National Growth Fund with 615 million euros from the dedicated quantum program.

The Netherlands initially founded one National Quantum Agenda in 2019. It took until last year for the Swedish Innovation Council to release Vinnova a report to the conclusion that Sweden needs one at all. Royal attention aside, we hope it's not too late for the Nordic country as quantum technologies continue to reach one milestone after another around the world.

Categories
Sport

NCAA School Soccer cowl stars we missed for 11 years

  • David Hale, ESPN Staff WriterMay 16, 2024, 11:15 AM ET

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    • ACC reporter.
    • Joined ESPN in 2012.
    • Graduate of the University of Delaware.

After 11 lonely years, our long national nightmare is over.

EA Sports officially released a new cover of its famed NCAA football game this week, the first in the series since NCAA Football 2014 came out in 2013. Better yet, the rosters will be (mostly) complete with actual current college football players, thanks to the NCAA’s 2021 decision to allow name, image and likeness contracts.

Of course, the game’s return doesn’t make up for the time we spent without it — the legendary players we missed, the defining moments never to be captured in ones and zeroes, and the countless number of times you could’ve blown off a week of work to take UL-Monroe to a College Football Playoff National Championship.

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While we can’t create a time machine to fix those missed opportunities, we can provide at least a little revisionist history, by working back through the past 11 years to determine who would have earned the honor of gracing the cover of each version.

First, a quick bit of context: During the game’s run (from 1993, first as “Bill Walsh College Football” through 2013), the cover image couldn’t include an active player. Typically, the new game sported a cover model who had flourished the prior season in college but had already left for the NFL — Denard Robinson, Robert Griffin III, Mark Ingram and Tim Tebow, to name a few — leaving them free to sell their images to EA. But here, we’re imagining a world where the NCAA allowed NIL starting in 2014, making all players eligible for the cover image, even if they still had eligibility remaining. This also means that players such as Joe Burrow who took his talents to the NFL after his breakout season, would not make the cut as a hypothetical cover athlete.

With that said, here are our picks for the cover of each of the 11 missing seasons of EA Sports NCAA Football.

NCAA Football 15

Expected release: Summer 2014

The contenders: Florida State QB Jameis Winston, Florida State WR Rashad Greene, Oregon QB Marcus Mariota, Wisconsin RB Melvin Gordon, Navy QB Keenan Reynolds, Clemson DE Vic Beasley

It’s a shame the game disappeared after the 2013 season, as NCAA Football 15 would’ve had its share of great options of incredibly popular first-year NFL players, from Aaron Donald to Jadeveon Clowney to Mike Evans to Kelvin Benjamin. The crop of returning players was a bit thinner, with some emerging stars like Gordon (1,609 yards, 12 TDs in 2013) and Reynolds (2,403 total yards, 39 total TDs) just ahead of their prime. Mariota would go on to win the 2014 Heisman Trophy, but he entered that season in the shadow of Winston, who would have been the obvious choice if not for a series of off-field issues, including a sexual assault allegation, that likely would have deterred EA from choosing him.

Rashad Greene is Florida State’s career leader in receptions (270) and receiving yardage (3,830). Chris Trotman/Getty Images

The cover: Greene. Let’s split the difference here. No Winston on the cover, but the honor instead can go to another member of the FSU national championship team. Greene was one of the true leaders of that 2013 squad, and he followed it up with an equally impressive 2014 in which he caught 99 passes for 1,365 yards and seven touchdowns.

NCAA Football 16

Expected release: Summer 2015

The contenders: Ohio State DE Joey Bosa, RB Ezekiel Elliott, QBs J.T. Barrett and Cardale Jones, Arizona LB Scooby Wright, Florida State DB Jalen Ramsey, Mississippi State QB Dak Prescott, Alabama RB Derrick Henry

Mariota, Amari Cooper, Todd Gurley and Landon Collins all would’ve been in the mix before the NIL era began, but the 2015 class offered one of the most diverse and deep lists of returning players worthy of cover status. Ohio State won the national championship in the first College Football Playoff in 2014, and the litany of returning stars — Bosa, Elliott, Jones, Barrett, Braxton Miller, Von Bell — was incredible. Wright’s unique skill set made him an ideal cover model, while Ramsey might’ve been the most dynamic athlete in college football at the time. Prescott warrants consideration, too, for getting Mississippi State to the top of the first CFP rankings, and had the world known what a star he’d later become in the NFL, he’d probably be the obvious pick here.

Joey Bosa was a two-time consensus All-American and Smith-Brown Big Ten defensive lineman of the year. Matthew Pearce/Icon Sportswire/Corbis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The cover: Bosa. We love the idea of Jones, Miller and Barrett sharing the cover after Ohio State won a natty with its third-string QB, but we also envision Urban Meyer putting a stop to any additional media scrutiny — even in the lighthearted form of a video game cover — of his delicate QB situation entering the 2015 season. Instead, Bosa seems like the safe solution. He was dominant in the Buckeyes’ title run in 2014, racking up 13.5 sacks and 21 tackles for loss, and it was clear entering the 2015 campaign that he was destined to be an early NFL draft pick. Plus, it’s good to give the defensive guys some love.

NCAA Football 17

Expected release: Summer 2016

The contenders: Clemson QB Deshaun Watson, Oklahoma QB Baker Mayfield, LSU RB Leonard Fournette, Stanford RB Christian McCaffrey, Florida State RB Dalvin Cook

This was a rare season in which the talent returning far exceeded the names headed to the NFL, so EA surely would’ve been pleased to have NIL open the doors to a better cover option than (no offense) Jared Goff or Eli Apple. In any case, the college options were plentiful and all deserving. Mayfield had thrown for 3,700 yards. McCaffrey was an all-purpose Superman. Cook was as electric of a runner as there was in the sport. Fournette was a high school legend who finally seemed poised to live up to the recruiting hype. Watson had come within a hair of leading Clemson past the vaunted Alabama machine for a national title.

Christian McCaffrey is the NCAA single-season all-purpose yards record holder with 3,864. Jeff Gross/Getty Images

The cover: McCaffrey. It’s a tough call between the Stanford star and the emergent Watson, who’d go on to win a national title over Alabama at the end of the 2016 season. But at the time, there was no more remarkable talent in the sport than McCaffrey, who was a unanimous All-American after amassing 2,019 rushing yards, 645 receiving yards and 1,070 return yards for a truly astonishing tally of 3,864 all-purpose yards — 613 more than the previous record held by Barry Sanders.

NCAA Football 18

Expected release: Summer 2017

The contenders: Mayfield, Penn State RB Saquon Barkley, Louisville QB Lamar Jackson, Alabama S Minkah Fitzpatrick

Mayfield had just posted his second straight season as a Heisman finalist, throwing for 40 touchdowns. Barkley had rushed for nearly 1,500 yards and 18 TDs. Fitzpatrick was an emerging superstar on Alabama’s defense. There were good options. But there was only one obvious choice.

At 19 years, 337 days old, Lamar Jackson became the youngest player ever to win the Heisman Trophy in 2016. Andy Lyons/Getty Images

The cover: Jackson. His skill set would’ve put him among the pantheon of the greatest video game stars of all time, alongside Tecmo Bo Jackson, Jeremy Roenick in NHL 94, Bald Bull from “Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out!!” and former Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Jeff D’Amico, who we all once used to throw a perfect game against our college roommate in MLB ’99. Every play with NCAA Football Lamar Jackson would’ve been a deep ball or a scramble, and he’d finish a season with 20,000 yards because there would’ve been no answer for him.

NCAA Football 19

Expected release: Summer 2018

The contenders: Stanford RB Bryce Love, Houston DE Ed Oliver, Alabama QB Tua Tagovailoa, Wisconsin RB Jonathan Taylor, FAU RB Devin Singletary, Arizona State WR N’Keal Harry, Clemson’s defensive line of Christian Wilkins, Clelin Ferrell, Austin Bryant and Dexter Lawrence

It seems like an oversight that Mayfield spent three seasons dominating the Big 12 without ever cracking our hypothetical NCAA Football cover, but alas, he’d moved on to doing insurance commercials in a Cleveland Browns uniform by now. Fitzpatrick, Jackson, Barkley, Derwin James and Rashaad Penny were all off to the NFL, too, though all would’ve been exceptional cover options under the old system. Instead, the battle for the cover starts with a number of elite backs. Love was fresh off rushing for 2,118 yards and 19 TDs. Singletary had a little Heisman hype, including a model race car mailed out to Heisman voters to push his campaign. Taylor had turned in the first of three straight seasons with more than 1,900 yards rushing in 2017. Oliver would’ve been a great option, too. He was a dominant force with his own Heisman campaign (a bobblehead on a horse). But the honor likely comes down to two options: The ascendant QB at Alabama or the dominant defensive front at Clemson, each member returning for one last ride that eventually ended with a national title.

Tua Tagovailoa was named offensive MVP of the 2018 College Football Playoff National Championship as a freshman. Todd Kirkland/Getty Images

The cover: Tagovailoa. As much fun as it would’ve been to see the Clemson D-linemen don their famous Power Rangers costumes on the game’s cover, the buzz in the summer of 2018 was all about Tagovailoa. He’d come off the bench at halftime to rescue Alabama from the abyss in the national championship game, making him a rare combination of genuine star power and unknown commodity. The only problem with the choice is the reaction it would’ve undoubtedly engendered from Nick Saban, who wasn’t entirely eager to stoke the flames of the supposed QB battle between Tagovailoa and Jalen Hurts that summer. Of course, if NIL rules were in place in 2018, does anyone think Hurts would’ve stuck around to ride the bench anyway?

NCAA Football 20

Expected release: Summer 2019

The contenders: Clemson QB Trevor Lawrence and RB Travis Etienne, Wisconsin RB Jonathan Taylor, Purdue WR Rondale Moore, Ohio State DE Chase Young, Oklahoma State WR Tylan Wallace, Alabama QB Tagovailoa and WR Jerry Jeudy, LSU DB Greedy Williams

Lawrence and Etienne made for a worthy tandem, both fresh off a national title with two years left at Clemson. Moore was a revelation as a freshman, electric as a receiver and a return man. Young was the second coming of Bosa, a force of nature at the line of scrimmage who racked up 9.5 sacks and 14.5 TFL, presaging an even bigger season in 2019. Tagovailoa and Jeudy had just been dismissed by Clemson in the title game, but there was still ample hype surrounding Alabama.

Trevor Lawrence never lost a regular season game at Clemson and went 24-2 as a starter. Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

The cover: Lawrence. Not since Herschel Walker in 1980 had a freshman seemed so destined to win multiple championships as Lawrence at this point. He’d taken over as Clemson’s starter in Week 5 of the 2018 season, posted dominant numbers, then led the Tigers to a national title while annihilating the unstoppable force of the Alabama Crimson Tide. Alas, it was not to be, and by the end of 2019, Lawrence’s title team didn’t even seem nearly so dominant anymore after Joe Burrow & Co. set the standard in college football. Still, Lawrence was a bona fide star, and if there’s anything we’ve learned from lifestyle magazines over the years, it’s that hair as glorious as his belongs on the cover.

NCAA Football 21

Expected release: Summer 2020

The contenders: LSU CB Derek Stingley and WR JaMarr Chase, Alabama WR DeVonta Smith, Oregon OL Penei Sewell, Penn State LB Micah Parsons, Minnesota CB Antoine Winfield Jr., Ohio State QB Justin Fields

If scrubbing Lamar Jackson from the college football video game record books is the biggest loss from NCAA Football’s 11-year hiatus, the lack of a 2020 edition is a close second. It’s hard to overstate how many units would’ve sold at the height of the COVID-19 shutdown, when it looked for much of the summer as if no actual college football would be played. Instead of going for walks, starting home renovation projects or spending quality time with immediate family, we could’ve wasted away those long, tumultuous days challenging LSU’s supremacy with plucky upstart Grayson McCall and Coastal Carolina and built a dynasty. Alas, it was not meant to be.

This also might be the year when EA was most convinced to go back to the old process and select a player who starred in the prior college football season but was now off to the NFL, because Burrow absolutely deserved a cover after his 2019 campaign. If we’re sticking with our precedent of returning players, however, his LSU teammates Stingley and Chase made for exceptional consolation prizes. Stingley starred as a true freshman, anchoring that LSU defense, while Chase was the most dominant receiver on a team absolutely stacked with talent at the position. Parsons would’ve been a nice alternative after offensive players dominated the covers, and Sewell could’ve been a worthy hat tip to big men everywhere. Smith wasn’t exactly heralded as a genuine superstar entering the 2020 season, but he’d racked up 1,256 receiving yards and 14 touchdowns as a junior and, by year’s end, would become the first Heisman winner who wasn’t a QB or running back since Charles Woodson.

Derek Stingley Jr. was the 10th primary defensive starter on LSU’s 2019 undefeated and national championship team to be drafted. Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The cover: Stingley. There were lots of good options here, but Stingley had the recruiting hype, on-field performance, and post-national title glow to warrant a cover, and it’s nice to get away from the QBs and skill position guys on offense. That the rest of Stingley’s LSU career didn’t quite match the freshman hype — largely due to injuries — is unimportant here. LSU was the best team to grace a college football field in decades, and he had a strong argument to be considered its biggest returning star.

NCAA Football 22

Expected release: Summer 2021

The contenders: Clemson QB DJ Uiagalelei, Alabama QB Bryce Young, LSU’s Stingley, Oregon DE Kayvon Thibodeaux, Cincinnati CB Sauce Gardner, Iowa State RB Breece Hall

And so it is that we’ve reached the year in which actual NIL deals were happening around college football, even if EA would need another three years before it could take advantage of the rule change to release a new game. Still, NIL allowed players like Uiagalelei, Young and Stingley to become household names outside of just the college football world, enjoying national endorsement deals and a new level of prestige. But Dr Pepper is one thing. The cover of NCAA Football is another. Young hadn’t taken a meaningful snap yet at Alabama, but his star turn was all but assured. Gardner, fresh off leading Cincinnati to the first playoff berth for a Group of 5 school, might’ve been an intriguing choice, too. A retrospectively amusing option might’ve been J.T. Daniels, who looked poised to take over at QB at Georgia in the summer of 2021, only to lose his job to a former walk-on — who we’ll get to in a bit — a couple months later.

D.J. Uiagalelei went 22-6 as Clemson’s starting quarterback. Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images

The cover: Uiagalelei. There’s not a clear front-runner among the contenders, but Uiagalelei was probably the biggest name at the time. He’d started two games in relief of Lawrence in 2020 and looked terrific in both. He was a former five-star recruit. He had a big personality, big arm and already had inked some very big endorsement deals. It’s almost hard to imagine now — knowing how it all turned out — but on the heels of Tajh Boyd, Watson and Lawrence excelling at Clemson, Uiagalelei seemed about as close to a surefire star as possible. But hey, maybe in 2023 at Florida State, he’ll actually become one.

NCAA Football 23

Expected release: Summer 2022

The contenders: Georgia DT Jalen Carter, TE Brock Bowers and QB Stetson Bennett, Alabama QB Young and OLB Will Anderson, Kansas State RB Deuce Vaughn, USC QB Caleb Williams and WR Jordan Addison, Ohio State QB CJ Stroud, Miami QB Tyler Van Dyke, Texas RB Bijan Robinson, past cover winners

Georgia’s run to a national title allows for plenty of options in Athens, with Bowers the clear headliner, Carter the defensive force, and Bennett the beloved underdog success story. Anderson was coming off one of the best seasons for a pass-rusher in recent memory, and Williams and Robinson had both flashed enough talent in the latter half of 2021 to be primed for even bigger things ahead. And then there’s Young. The prior two Heisman winners to return to school the following year — Winston and Jackson — were our selections to grace the cover, so ignoring Young’s win would be tough. In other words, this would’ve been among the deepest pools of cover candidates during the 11-year absence of the game, but it also would’ve marked the 20th edition of NCAA Football, and it’s entirely possible EA would want to celebrate the occasion with a retrospective, perhaps featuring some past cover models such as Tommie Frazier (from the game’s first cover), Woodson, Tebow or Reggie Bush.

Brock Bowers is a two-time national champion and holds Georgia’s record for single-season receiving touchdowns with 13. Todd Kirkland/Getty Images

The cover: Bowers, alongside the greats. This is the most elegant solution. Yes, EA should’ve celebrated its 20th installment by putting past stars on the cover, but the best way to blend the old with the new would be to add Bowers — soon to be the game’s most dynamic tight end — to the group.

NCAA Football 24

Expected release: Summer 2023

The contenders: USC’s Williams, Colorado WR/CB Travis Hunter, QB Shedeur Sanders and head coach Deion Sanders, Ohio State WR Marvin Harrison Jr., LSU LB Harold Perkins, UNC QB Drake Maye

Williams was the defending Heisman winner. Perkins looked like he’d be the biggest star in the sport after a show-stopping freshman campaign. Harrison was already a star with ample name recognition. The entire Colorado story was a cash cow for everyone involved.

Caleb Williams, the 2022 Heisman Trophy winner, holds several USC single-season records, including total offense (4,919 yards) and most rushing and passing touchdowns scored (52). Ali Gradischer/Getty Images

The cover: Williams. And perhaps this is the one time we’re grateful for the game’s absence because, as much as we think Williams would’ve been the deserving honoree to grace the cover, there’s also a pretty strong chance the allure of a Coach Prime sales bump would be too hard to ignore, and frankly, Sanders didn’t need any more hype. On the other hand, there’s plenty of time for Prime to win the Big 12, watch as his son wins the Heisman, recruit a top-five class without leaving his office, and nab the cover of NCAA Football 26.

Categories
Science

New images present Jupiter's tiny moon Amalthea

NASA's Juno spacecraft spies a tiny inner moon of Jupiter, Amalthea.

It's tiny, but it's there. By now, we're all used to regularly seeing amazing photos of Jupiter from NASA's Juno mission. Many of these are processed by volunteer “citizen scientists,” showing Jupiter’s swirling cloud tops in stunning detail, courtesy of the spacecraft’s JunoCam.

Recently JunoCam captured something special. Look closely at the side-by-side images of Jupiter from March 7, 2024, and you'll see a tiny speck crossing the Great Red Spot in the main left image that isn't visible in the right. This is the tiny inner moon Amalthea, just 84 kilometers across. The image was taken during the 59th perijove (close flyby) of the “King of the Planets” at a distance of 265,000 kilometers (about two-thirds of the Earth-Moon distance).

Amalthea (arrow) transits Jupiter. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS. Image editing by Gerald Eichstädt.

Amalthea: An Origin Story

The elusive moon was discovered on the night of September 9, 1892 by prolific astronomer and observer EE Barnard. Barnard used the 36-inch-diameter refractor telescope at Lick Observatory to discover the magnitude +14 moon, which never passes more than 30 inches from Jupiter (smaller than the planet's apparent diameter) in its 12-hour orbit . Amalthea is considered the last moon discovered by direct visual observation and the first moon of Jupiter discovered since Galileo first discovered the four large Galilean moons in 1610. Today Jupiter has 95 known moons, most of which are captured asteroids. These were discovered primarily photographically and during spacecraft flybys.

One of Juno's giant solar panels deployed on Earth. NASA/JPL/SWrI

Like other small moons, Amalthea is not large enough to form into a true ball. Instead, like the Martian moons Phobos and Deimos, Amalthea is a potato-shaped, captured asteroid.

Amalthea: No more red

The moon is also the reddest object in the solar system and is undoubtedly experiencing strong tidal change thanks to nearby Jupiter's enormous gravitational field. Amalthea is located 180,000 kilometers from Jupiter, just over 100,000 kilometers outside Jupiter's Roche limit radius. Any approach to Jupiter would tear Amalthea to pieces. The innermost moon Metis just exceeds this limit.

Color image of Amalthea from Voyager 1 in 1979. Photo credit: NASA/JPL

Voyager 1 and 2 gave us the first blurry views of the Moon. NASA's only other Jupiter orbiter, Galileo, gave us the best images of Amalthea to date with a flyby 374,000 kilometers away on November 26, 1999. These images show a misshapen world, not unlike the Martian moon Deimos. From the surface of Amalthea, Jupiter would be an amazing sight, spanning almost half the sky at 42 degrees in diameter.

The best view of Amalthea from the Galileo spacecraft. Image credit: NASA/JPL

Juno and the current status of the mission

Juno launched from the Cape on August 5, 2011 and reached Jupiter on July 5, 2016. The mission explores Jupiter's interior and its magnetic and radiation environment. Juno will answer important questions, including whether the planet has a solid core. Juno is the first solar-powered (as opposed to nuclear/plutonium-powered) mission to the outer planets, meaning its nominally long-range orbit was intended to avoid radiation damage to the solar panels. Engineers only allowed the spacecraft to pass by Jupiter's inner moons during the longer and final phase of the mission. Juno will operate until at least September 2025.

Two more missions are on their way to Jupiter; ESA's JUICE (Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer) was launched on April 14, 2023, and NASA's Europa Clipper is scheduled to launch in October 2024.

Jupiter seen from the surface of Amalthea. Photo credit: Stellarium

Look out for more amazing images courtesy of Juno as the mission enters its final months and days.

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Categories
Entertainment

A Georgia man burns his girlfriend's physique after she finds out he's married

A 23-year-old mother is dead after discovering her live-in boyfriend married another woman. The Georgia man police identified as Michael EdwardsHe is accused of murder Briana Winston and then burned her body. They reportedly had a child together.

Clayton County police released details about the disturbing case on Monday (May 13), according to PEOPLE. It had been about a month since her family reported her missing after losing contact with her in mid-March.

Authorities arrested Edwards after a man provided details about Briana's disappearance earlier this month. Michale Edwards is charged with aggravated assault, first degree murder, aggravated murder and tampering with evidence.

What did the man from Georgia do to Briana Winston?

Meanwhile, the unnamed man requested immunity in the case in return for the gruesome information. He revealed that he helped Edwards dispose of Briana's body after he killed her on March 17. That day, she reportedly confronted her boyfriend about cheating.

Amid the argument, Lt. Ashanti Marbury said Edwards “suffocated” Briana Winston and then stuffed her lifeless body into a suitcase. The man then drove from Georgia to Gates, Tennessee – over 400 miles from Clayton County. Together, the men placed Winston's body in a fire barrel and set it on fire with an accelerant. Police claim they left the body to burn for hours until only “skeletal remains” remained of the 23-year-old.

“Then they smashed Briana's bones with a shovel to speed up the combustion process,” Lt. Marbury at Monday's press conference.

Both men then distributed their remains in different locations. The Georgia man (her ex-boyfriend) was distributing them along Interstate 40 in Tennessee. Meanwhile, his accomplice dumped some of her remains in a cemetery behind a church.

Who else was involved in the case?

From the beginning, Edwards was a person interested in the missing persons case. According to a police statement, during Briana's disappearance her family discovered that Michale had completely cleaned out their shared apartment.

Police first interviewed him on April 4 after arresting him on aggravated stalking charges, in violation of a protective order against Winston.

The next day, his wife, Brienna Phillips EdwardsHe was also detained for allegedly making false statements to police.

It is unclear what the statements were, but Lt. Marbury says Edwards turned the crime into a “family affair” by getting his parents involved. His wife allegedly helped by providing Edwards with the car to transport Briana's body.

“We found out about that in this interview on April 5th [Brienna] “I had secretly married Michale on January 25, 2024 and no one knew they were married,” said Lt. Marbury.

Check out her photos below.

The Georgia man's mother, Ebony Anderson, and brother, Keilan Wright, are also behind bars for conspiracy to tamper with evidence. In a recorded jailhouse call, Edwards instructed them to burn a pair of shoes and gloves he allegedly wore during the crime.

This is a developing story.

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Health

Danaher exhibits how hanging on to an excellent firm's distressed inventory can repay

Every weekday, CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer publishes Homestretch – an actionable afternoon update just in time for the final hour of trading on Wall Street. (We are no longer recording the audio so we can make this new written feature available to members as quickly as possible.)

Categories
Science

The inexperienced vitality wall can't come quick sufficient – isn't that an issue?

From the MANHATTAN CONTRARIAN

Francis Menton

We are quickly approaching what I call the “Green Energy Wall.” The “wall” is a combination of real obstacles, part cost, part physical, that will inevitably end the pursuit of “net-zero” emissions-free electricity generation long before the zero emissions goal is achieved. I first identified the approaching wall in this post in December 2021 and pointed out in this follow-up post in November 2023 that it was “gradually coming into focus.” Anyone who is paying attention and can do basic arithmetic knows that we are some jurisdictions approaching that wall much faster than others. (New York has voluntarily put itself at the forefront.)

What we don't know is what impact the fall of the Berlin Wall will have: Widespread and frequent power outages? Regular, forced load shedding brownouts? Triple or quadruple electricity prices? A political uprising when people realize they have been deceived by scammers who claim an energy transition is easy and inexpensive? Or maybe it's all of the above.

Now the years are slowly passing by. The impossibility of the situation we are dealing with is becoming increasingly obvious, but so far there is no obvious crisis. Will it arrive in a year or two? Or maybe five?

Think of New York. Numerous laws and regulations require us to meet energy transition requirements that are simply not being met. The fantasies include two major laws passed in 2019, one for New York State (Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act) and the other for the city (Local Law 97); and vehicle emissions standards adopted by the New York City Department of Environmental Protection in 2022.

Start with vehicle emissions standards. In 2022, the New York DEC adopted the standards and requirements of the California Air Resources Board's Advanced Clean Cars II regulation. California regulations require a minimum percentage of vehicles sold to be “zero-emissions” starting with the 2026 model year, then rapidly increasing to 100% “zero-emissions” by the 2035 model year. Here's a table from CARB showing the percentages of vehicles sold by model year that claim to be “zero emissions”:

Electric vehicles aren't the only things that qualify as “zero emissions” (e.g. hydrogen vehicles), but electric vehicles are the only things that qualify and also exist in significant numbers. The 2026 model year begins around September 2025 – around 16 months from now. What is the current percentage of vehicles sold in New York that are “zero emissions”? A March 6, 2024 New York Times article puts the share of electric vehicles sold in the New York “metropolitan area” at less than 10% in 2023. The article does not give a figure for New York State as a whole, but there is no doubt that the figure for the state – including rural upstate areas – is significantly lower than the percentage in the city and suburbs. Meanwhile, many sources report that electric vehicle sales suddenly fell sharply in the first quarter of 2024. (I can't find any state-by-state statistics on this.) But even if electric vehicle sales in New York State continue to grow in the first few months of this year, will they really somehow reach 35% of all sales in just over a year? And then to 43% after just one more year, then to 51% after another year, and so on to 100% by 2035? This is completely ridiculous.

Equally ridiculous is the CLCPA’s requirement that 70% of electricity generation come from “renewable energy” by 2030. The people responsible for implementing this requirement are completely incompetent and have no idea what they are doing. After the law was passed in 2019, the first major step in 2020 and 2021 was to close the two zero-emission nuclear reactors at Indian Point, which provided about 25% of New York City's electricity, and replace them with two brand new natural reactors Gas plants, which significantly increases emissions. So far, progress towards the so-called 70 x 30 goal has been negative.

The main initiative to achieve the 70 x 30 goal is a plan for 9,000 MW of offshore wind energy off the coast of Long Island. In this March 5 post, I did the simple math to calculate that if all of the capacity is actually built, it would, at best, cover about 16% of New York's current electricity consumption – before the addition of new loads from electrification City vehicle fleet and home heating. Granted, we have the large hydroelectric plant at Niagara Falls that is considered “renewable,” as well as some other water resources that, along with Niagara Falls, could account for 20% of consumption. With these and offshore wind we can achieve perhaps 35% of consumption. (Meanwhile, offshore wind projects keep being canceled and delayed as developers try to command higher prices.)

How do we achieve 70% renewable energy use in less than six years? They literally have no idea. Pursuant to the CLCPA, a so-called “scoping plan” has been prepared. It envisions a need for something they call the Dispatchable Emissions Free Resource. This is something that does not currently exist and is unlikely to exist in any relevant time period.

But the lack of a viable replacement hasn't stopped New York from promising to close its well-performing natural gas power plants. Several of them were scheduled to close this year. But then in November someone noticed that there was no replacement for the plants, and so the forced shutdown of four of these plants was postponed for two years. Newsflash: In two years we still won't have anything to replace these systems. The same will be the case in four, six, eight and ten years. Will they simply continue to delay the ordered closure? Maybe this way we can avoid hitting the green energy wall.

And then we have Local Law 97, which supposedly requires all large (25,000 square feet and above) residential buildings to convert to electric heat, mostly by 2030. This will mean an increase in grid demand of about 30%. . At the same time, the closure of natural gas power plants is mandated, which will only be partially replaced by highly intermittent offshore wind turbines that cannot fully replace gas generation, let alone begin to meet increased demand.

There must be something here, and there will be. It is of great advantage if this happens quickly and does not drag on for years.

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Categories
Sport

Tom Brady Regrets Roast, Says He 'Wouldn't Do It Once more'

  • Mike Reiss, ESPN staff writerMay 14, 2024, 8:24 p.m. ET

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      Mike Reiss is an NFL reporter for ESPN covering the New England Patriots. Reiss has covered the Patriots since 1997 and joined ESPN in 2009. In 2019, he was named Massachusetts Sportswriter of the Year by the National Sports Media Association. You can follow Reiss on Twitter at @MikeReiss.

What was billed as “the greatest roast of all time” was anything but for Tom Brady, who expressed regret over the impact on his three children.

“I loved when the jokes were about me,” Brady said Tuesday on “The Pivot” podcast with Ryan Clark, Fred Taylor and Channing Crowder. “I thought she was so funny. I didn’t like how they influenced my children.”

“So it’s the hardest part; the bittersweet aspect of doing something that you thought was a possibility and suddenly you realize I wouldn't do that again because it actually affected the people I care about.” about most in the world.

Brady's comments came at the end of the 56-minute podcast, when he was asked by Taylor – his teammate with the New England Patriots in 2009 and 2010 – if he learned anything about himself from the roast.

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Taylor's question was asked more in the context of his connection to his teammates and how it seemed to reflect their bonds formed over years in the locker room, but Brady instead focused on his children Jack, Benjamin and Vivian.

“It makes you a better parent in some ways when you go through that,” he said. “Sometimes you’re naive. You don't know, or you're a little like, 'Oh, shit.'

“I love it when people make fun of me. As a parent, it will make me a better parent in the future.

Brady added: “At the same time, I’m glad everyone who was there had a great time. And I think for me, beyond that, it's always good: 'If we don't laugh at things, then we can' I cry.' I think we should have more fun in the locker room. Let’s do more of this and celebrate other people’s success.

Part of the podcast focused on May being Mental Health Awareness Month, with Brady acknowledging how he is doing in this area.

“I just do my best to check in with myself as often as I can — my physical health, my mental health, my emotional health,” he said. “I'm working on that. Every year I think I’ll start something different.”

“I think last year I wanted to kind of rebuild my body because I lost a lot of weight in my last season. It was a challenge. There is a lot of work this year. I think next year I will really calm down towards a better, more sustainable rhythm of life between all our tasks. When is it not enough? I'll leave when we retire.

Brady revealed another aspect of retirement that has challenged him.

“Sometimes I feel like I'm just sitting in the washing machine for a bit, not quite sure where you're going, what the schedule is. The structure, the habits have a positive effect on us at different times; when you put on. “If you don't have that, you're bouncing around – you're also like a ping-pong ball,” he said, admitting that he's “not really in my center at the moment.”

“As a quarterback, I obviously felt like I was in control. I loved flying the plane and acting as an operator. I think what you realize in life is that you don't have that much control. What more do I need to do in my life? I have to perform better with less control. I can't be so worried when things don't go exactly the way I want them to.