Live: Duke Taking on Syracuse Without Zion

  1. Brent Axe @BrentAxeMedia

  2. Live: Duke Taking on Syracuse Without Zion

    via Bleacher Report

  3. Cuse Fans Cheer for Boeheim

    Mike Catalana @MikeCatalana

    Crowd response at Dome as Jim Boeheim walks on to court. ⁦@Cuse_MBB⁩ #Syracuse #Duke https://t.co/5xi0RBw19I

  4. Gronk in the Building

    Andrew Donovan @AndrewDonovan

    Look who traded his @Patriots uniform for a @Cuse one: @RobGronkowski walking into the Carrier Dome. #OrangeNation https://t.co/EFBvLkRWQ7

  5. Cuse Commit Getting Involved Already

    Mike Waters @MikeWatersSYR

    Syracuse commit @JG3_____ throwing t-shirts to the SU students. Syracuse v Duke at 6 pm. https://t.co/M9wy0hiA03

  6. TheDevilsDen.com @TheDevilsDen

  7. Myron Medcalf @MedcalfByESPN

  8. Stephen Wiseman @stevewisemanNC

  9. NunesMagician.com @NunesMagician

  10. Syracuse Basketball @Cuse_MBB

  11. Syracuse Basketball @Cuse_MBB

  12. Kyle Boone @Kyle__Boone

  13. Duke MBB Analysis @CC_DukeGames

  14. Duke in the NBA | Tre Jones stan @DukeNBA

  15. Jonathan Wasserman @NBADraftWass

  16. SUJuice.com @TheJuiceOnline

  17. Duke Basketball Report @dbrsbn

  18. Pete Thamel @PeteThamel

  19. Pete Moore @MooreOrange

  20. Pete Moore @MooreOrange

  21. Jeff Borzello @jeffborzello

  22. Stephen Wiseman @stevewisemanNC

  23. Rob Dauster @RobDauster

  24. Kyle Boone @Kyle__Boone

  25. Jeff Goodman @GoodmanHoops

  26. Duke MBB Analysis @CC_DukeGames

  27. Adam Zagoria @AdamZagoria

  28. Adam Rowe @AdamRoweTDD

  29. Bobby Reagan @BarstoolReags

  30. Duke Basketball @dukebasketball

  31. Stephen Wiseman @stevewisemanNC

  32. Brent Axe @BrentAxeMedia

  33. Duke MBB Analysis @CC_DukeGames

  34. TheDevilsDen.com @TheDevilsDen

  35. Chris Bunn @DukeForum

  36. Mike Waters @MikeWatersSYR

  37. Brent Axe @BrentAxeMedia

  38. SUJuice.com @TheJuiceOnline

  39. Duke MBB Analysis @CC_DukeGames

  40. Seth Davis @SethDavisHoops

  41. WAER Sports @WAERSports

  42. Adam Zagoria @AdamZagoria

  43. Brent Axe @BrentAxeMedia

  44. SUJuice.com @TheJuiceOnline

  45. Mike Waters @MikeWatersSYR

  46. Brent Axe @BrentAxeMedia

  47. Syracuse Basketball @Cuse_MBB

  48. Pete Moore @MooreOrange

  49. Duke Basketball @dukebasketball

  50. Bobby Reagan @BarstoolReags

  51. Duke MBB Analysis @CC_DukeGames

  52. Duke Basketball @dukebasketball

  53. Syracuse Basketball @Cuse_MBB

  54. Donna Ditota @DonnaDitota1

  55. Adam Rowe @AdamRoweTDD

  56. Chris Bunn @DukeForum

  57. Jonathan Wasserman @NBADraftWass

  58. Stephen Wiseman @stevewisemanNC

  59. Jeff Eisenberg @JeffEisenberg

  60. WAER Sports @WAERSports

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2GZsgjj
via IFTTT

Google Maps’ Satellite view was almost called ‘Bird Mode’

The Google Street View application is on a portable device in this photo illustration on December 6, 2017. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
The Google Street View application is on a portable device in this photo illustration on December 6, 2017. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Image: NurPhoto via Getty Images

2017%252f09%252f19%252ffa%252frakheadshot.f59fb.jpg%252f90x90By Rachel Kraus

There’s more evidence that just ignoring your eccentric boss’ bad ideas is the best way to deal with them.

The co-creator of Google Maps and current Salesforce president Bret Taylor decided that Feb. 23, 2019 was a perfectly good time to blow all our damn minds.

SEE ALSO: Google’s augmented reality Maps are live for some users

On Saturday morning, Taylor dropped what he innocently described as a “silly Google Maps origin story” in a Twitter thread. It included the tale of how one popular feature was almost called… Bird Mode?!

Apparently, back in 2005, there was what Taylor described as a “geeky holy war” occurring on the Google Maps team. 

Google Maps was set to include the feature that we now know as “Satellite” view — the one that displays an aerial, real-world view of the map area. The problem was that the images that comprised that view weren’t actually captured by satellites. Instead, they were products of aerial photography (airplanes that fly over land capturing images).

Being the product pragmatist I am, I thought, who cares? “Aerial Photography” doesn’t fit on a button, and every person in our usability study got what “Satellite” meant. Unfortunately, to the Keyhole GIS engineers, we were basically destroying humanity with our lies. pic.twitter.com/RAQvJr8cuc

— Bret Taylor (@btaylor) February 23, 2019

At the same time, the Google execs were apparently using their executive meetings to run kooky experiments relating to management and decision making (clearly, every employee’s dream). They had come up with a method where items would be under discussion for the duration of a huge countdown clock — like a shot clock in basketball. The idea that ended the discussion before the buzzer would be the final word. 

(Side note: Google is now one of the most powerful companies in the world, and we’re paying for decisions they made in the early days today!!!!)

Now, these exec reviews were Larry and Sergey’s favorite place to experiment with crazy meeting ideas (kind of fun, actually). I had attended one review where one founder spent the entire meeting on an elliptical machine. Their new experiment was a huge countdown clock. pic.twitter.com/OvZWSZZoOX

— Bret Taylor (@btaylor) February 23, 2019

One of the decisions that became subject to the Buzzer Method™ was what to name “aerial” or “satellite” view. No one could agree, and — much to the engineers’ frustration — execs were throwing around product names willy nilly. 

Finally, Taylor believes Google co-founder Sergey Brin spoke up — proposing “Bird Mode.” 

And just like that, the buzzer buzzed. Decision, apparently, made.

Taylor and his team were flummoxed. He wrote that, whether employees were on team “Satellite” or team “Aerial photography,” everyone agreed that “Bird Mode” was a terrible name — and that the decision had been made “in the most insane way possible.” 

I think it was Sergey who spoke last. “Let’s call it Bird Mode.” Bzzzzzzzz.

I start to speak and am cut off — meeting over.

I look around, and it’s clearly evident the feature has officially been named “Bird Mode” in the most insane way possible.

— Bret Taylor (@btaylor) February 23, 2019

So what was team Google Maps to do? They went with the tried and true method of just ignoring the advice of the higher ups. And banking on the concept that bosses were probably so busy and removed from the day-to-day that they wouldn’t notice. 

So Taylor just named the feature “Satellite” anyway. And it’s thankfully been that way ever since — even if it is a lie, a damn lie, about where those map photos come from. Bless 🙌.

It turns out, when you write the code, you have a fair amount of power. 😏

We pocket vetoed the decision and launched with “Satellite.” And literally no exec noticed or remembered our review.

And we have been deceiving people with our not-really-satellite imagery ever since.

— Bret Taylor (@btaylor) February 23, 2019

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2ItnVY6
via IFTTT

Verizon launches a subscription box that’s like Stitch Fix for tech

Power banks on violet background, isometric still life. Products pictured are not included in Verizon's Tech Pack.
Power banks on violet background, isometric still life. Products pictured are not included in Verizon’s Tech Pack.

Image: Shutterstock / Yuriy Golub

2017%252f04%252f25%252f1f%252fpkheadshotsmallcopy.7f1bc.png%252f90x90By Proma Khosla

Verizon just took a pro-tip from the fashion industry with Tech Pack, a subscription box that lets users try different tech products for up to two weeks before deciding if they want to keep them. 

The new service was announced Friday, in emails sent out to select Verizon customers. It’s apparently still in the testing phase and has already filled up.

SEE ALSO: Samsung 5G Galaxy S10 is a monster phone you’ll be able to buy this year

Similar to other subscription boxes like Stitch Fix or FabFitFun, users first fill out a survey about what gadgets they like so the box can be best tailored to their interests. Three mystery products are then sent out (Verizon hasn’t decided how often) and the user can decide whether to keep or return them after two weeks.

Though the signup is free, Tech Pack could become expensive for subscribers who keep most of their products, which could run up to hundreds of dollars depending on what they like. Possible products could run as low as $40 (a Belkin car charger) or up to $180 (Canary’s Flex camera) or higher. All products come with instructions, tutorials, tech support, and return labels.

Tech Pack subscriptions are currently sold out, but you can sign up via phone or email for updates.

[h/t The Verge]

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2Iz4aOO
via IFTTT

Magic Leap’s ‘Magicverse’ could be a glimpse of our 5G future

Image: ROBYN BECK/AFP/Getty Images

2017%252f09%252f19%252ffa%252frakheadshot.f59fb.jpg%252f90x90By Rachel Kraus

Tech optimism can be hard to come by these days. But the idea that tech will empower us to make the world a better place abounds at Magic Leap — it just all depends on 5G.

Magic Leap, the company best known for its augmented reality headsets, is unveiling some grand ideas about what it sees as the future of technology. Rony Abovitz, the company’s CEO, first shared his vision for the future, called the “Magicverse,” in Oct. 2018. 

Abovitz expanded on that idea in a company blog post and interview Saturday, in which he describes the Magicverse as “an Emergent System of Systems bridging the physical with the digital, in a large scale, persistent manner within a community of people.”

SEE ALSO: Porgs make Magic Leap fun. The Internet of Things could make it useful.

Uhh, what the heck does that mean? Abovitz and his team essentially see the Magicverse as a physical spaced layered with digital objects and services that people can access through connected devices of all types — including, of course, Magic Leap headsets.

“Data, information and experiences within these environments are unlocked from screens and servers to persist at scale in contextually relevant physical environments,” the blog post reads.

A diagram that Magic Leap shared in its blog post helps explain. It essentially shows how AR will enable us to embed digital services into our physical world.

The 'Magicverse' layers digital information , via AR, over the physical world.

The ‘Magicverse’ layers digital information , via AR, over the physical world.

Image: magic leap

There’s one crucial component from the Magicverse that is not quite a reality yet, however: 5G. 

According to Abovitz, because the Magicverse relies on constant connectivity, 5G — the buzzword technology concept of the moment — will be what gives the Magicverse its power. It’s the new wireless network that ISPs, chip-makers, and gadget companies are racing to make a reality. 

“One of the conditions to enable the Magicverse is the hundreds of billions of dollars of new infrastructure to create high-speed network & edge computing zones in modern cities across many countries,” the Magic Leap blog post reads. “5G (and what follows it) are major components of what feels like a new, spatial internet.”

5G promises ultra-high speed connectivity. But it will also have much higher capacity — the amount of devices a network can support at any given times. Higher speed, along with increased capacity, will supposedly be what enables a society filled with Internet Of Things (IoT) objects to actually function. Or, in the case of the Magicverse, multiple layers of digital space accessed through connected devices.

Abovitz’s vision for the Magicverse is still extremely abstract; what, by the way, is a digital layer of “energy and water”? 

Cool. How exactly does the Energy and Water layer work in Magicverse? It’s digital I understand, but I don’t exactly get it, and the health and wellness layer? Are these different categories of use cases? Do tell more.

— Ari Roisman (@AriRoisman) February 22, 2019

However, the Magicverse is significant because it actually provides a rare blueprint for what a 5G future actually could look like.

The “5G future” is a concept that ISPs have been promising, with little agreement on what that actually means. To date, it’s been explained as really fast internet, plus diagrams of things like autonomous cars communicating with each other. The promise of 5G is so far a lot of hot air and marketing.

But Abovitz’s Magicverse could show how 5G will really help change the world, even if that means everybody is walking around wearing AR headsets to interact with virtual objects and points of interest. Who woulda thought that our introduction to the future would be Pokémon Go?

“Billions of devices will become windows into the spatial digital world,” the blog post reads.

The Magicverse concept is in its early days and contains plenty of question marks. But it is one way to envision what a hyper-connected world, made possible by 5G, could actually look like.

And given all the confusing info about 5G that’s currently out there, we’ll take it.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2VfKmla
via IFTTT

New Marvel video highlights the villainous Skrulls in ‘Captain Marvel’

By Adam Rosenberg

Fans of Marvel Comics probably know a thing or two already about the Skrulls that apparently fill the role of villain in Captain Marvel. But not everyone knows about the green-skinned alien shapeshifters.

In this new “Intergalactic War” featurette from Marvel, we get a walkthrough of what the Skrulls are all about from Captain Marvel principals Brie Larsen, Gemma Chan, Jude Law, Ben Mendelsohn, producer Jonathan Schwartz, and directors Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck. There’s some new footage in here, and our clearest look yet at the movie’s take on the comic book aliens.

Captain Marvel is set to hit theaters on March 8.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2Eqyt69
via IFTTT

Kyler Murray Knew He’d Play Football ‘For a While’; Telling A’s ‘Was Tough’

MIAMI, FL - DECEMBER 29:  Kyler Murray #1 of the Oklahoma Sooners looks to pass against the Alabama Crimson Tide during the College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Capital One Orange Bowl at Hard Rock Stadium on December 29, 2018 in Miami, Florida.  (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

NFL draft prospect Kyler Murray acknowledged Saturday that informing the Oakland Athletics of his intention to play football rather than baseball weighed heavily on him.

According to ESPN.com’s Jake Trotter, Murray revealed he has long been planning to play in the NFL even though he only recently made his decision public: 

“For me, it was something I’ve known for a while. That organization, being with the A’s, was the best possible situation for me just because they were so great throughout the football season, kind of leaving me alone and letting me do my own thing, and at the same time letting me know how much I meant to them and that type of stuff. Telling them was tough.”

Murray also made it clear that he is committed to football and has no plans to go back to baseball, saying, “I mean, they can hold out all the hope they want to. I’m going to play football.”

Sam Gannon @SamGannon87

When @myron_patton asked Kyler Murray about the Oakland A’s holding out hope that he’ll return to baseball:

“I mean they can hold out all the hope they want to. I’m going to play football.” #sooners https://t.co/mEgthAZSdF

The potential NFL first-round pick addressed the media Saturday after he was honored as the reigning Heisman Trophy winner during Oklahoma’s 69-67 men’s basketball win over Texas:

Sam Gannon @SamGannon87

K1 and his Heisman trophy.
Murray honored at Saturday’s OU-Texas game. #sooners https://t.co/RXSTNfxgQv

During the press conference, Murray suggested that his initial commitment to the A’s and baseball had to do with the fact that he didn’t know if he would be on NFL radars after barely playing college football prior to the 2018 season:

Oklahoma Football @OU_Football

“A lot of good stuff happened this year.”

@TheKylerMurray #OUDNA

Full 🎥 https://t.co/HdDusfUBI9 https://t.co/gcfdU3tlPa

Murray went on to have one of the greatest seasons by a quarterback in college football history and gave Oklahoma back-to-back Heisman winners after Baker Mayfield won it the previous year. Murray also led the Sooners to a Big 12 title and a College Football Playoff berth.

He completed 69.0 percent of his passes for 4,361 yards, 42 touchdowns and seven interceptions while rushing for 1,001 yards and 12 touchdowns as a dual-threat quarterback whom opposing defenses simply couldn’t slow down.

Murray was also an excellent baseball player, as he hit .296 with 10 home runs, 47 RBI and 10 stolen bases at Oklahoma last season. That resulted in the Athletics selecting him with the No. 9 overall pick in the 2018 MLB draft and giving him a signing bonus worth nearly $5 million.

The A’s agreed to let Murray play one more season of football at Oklahoma, but that decision came back to bite them since his performance made him a top NFL prospect.

In his most recent mock draft, Bleacher Report’s Matt Miller projected that the Jacksonville Jaguars will take Murray with the No. 7 overall pick, making him the second quarterback off the board behind Ohio State’s Dwayne Haskins going to the New York Giants at No. 6.

If he chooses to work out, Murray will have a chance to bolster his draft status at the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis next week.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2VaOKle
via IFTTT

What South Korea stands to gain and lose from Trump-Kim summit

So Seung Lee was touched by the “meaningful” meeting between the US and North Korean leaders in Singapore last year.

He watched glimpses of the coverage on TV, including the famous handshake between Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un. But since that historic summit, the 78-year-old Seoul resident feels let down.

“Since Singapore, not much has happened with regards to North Korea’s denuclearisation process or a peace agreement. I guess it was just a symbolic meeting and that’s useless,” Lee told Al Jazeera. “I hope this time they come up with something that makes a real change.”

As Trump and Kim prepare for their second meeting – scheduled to take place in Vietnam on February 27-28 – Lee is not the only one seeking a tangible and concrete plan to move things forward.

Following a thaw in the relations with North Korea in 2018, Seoul is also hoping something substantial comes out of the talks.

“The two leaders have already taken their first step for finishing their 70-year-long history of hostility. We hope they take more specific and practical actions in Vietnam,” said Kim Eui-kyeom, South Korean presidential spokesperson.

“We expect that Vietnam will become a great background for North Korea and the US to make new history.”

Three years ago, relations between Pyongyang and Seoul were close to the lowest they had been since the end of the Korean War. In the months to follow, North Korea conducted more than five nuclear tests, threatened to fire a missile towards the US Pacific territory of Guam and detonated what it said was a hydrogen bomb.

But last April, Kim crossed the border for talks with South Korean President Moon Jae-In in Panmunjom along the demilitarised zone. Prior to that, a North Korean contingent took part in the 2018 Pyongchang Winter Olympics. In attendance were high-ranking North Korean officials as well as Kim’s sister.

South Korea is also hoping for a prolonged period of peace – with hopes of ending the Korean War that ended in truce in 1953.

“For us, the era of peace and prosperity on the Peninsula has drawn closer,” South Korea’s President Moon said at a meeting with his senior officials earlier this month.

“I hope the upcoming summit will become a historic one that transforms the Korean Peninsula from a land of cold war vestiges marked by hostility and conflict to a region of peace and prosperity.”

Economic engagement

Moon enjoyed a good level of public support following his meetings with Kim. With parliamentary elections  next year, he will be eager to ensure a good outcome in Hanoi that can lead to further talks between Seoul and Pyongyang. 

In Singapore, denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula was top of the agenda. However, earlier this week, President Trump said he was in no rush to achieve that goal. Instead, he sought to stop North Korea from testing its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

President Moon, meanwhile, told Trump Seoul was willing to open economic engagement with North Korea as a “concession” if it would hasten Pyongyang’s denuclearisation.

Moon said he was ready to undertake any new project from reconnecting rail and road links between the two Koreas to other forms of inter-Korean economic cooperation.

Other South Koreans, too, are hoping for a restoration of economic ties with the North, especially resumption of operations at the jointly run Kaesong Industrial Park which have been suspended for three years. 

Korean business owners push to revive Inter-Korean projects

Located just inside North Korea across the DMZ, the complex was launched in 2004 with the idea of South Korean companies manufacturing their products using North Korean labour, helping it improve its economy.

“We are the same nation. We can communicate in the same language. Reopening the complex creates an environment where local companies producing raw or supplementary materials can benefit from,” Kim Hak-gwon, a factory owner in Kaesong, told Al Jazeera.

“It would also help create jobs in South Korea. Almost 54,000 North Koreans were working in Kaesong, but as many as 300,000 workers were involved in the South in the supply chain.”

Reopening of the complex will benefit South Korea more than any other part of economic cooperation with the North, according to Jee Hyeong Park, professor of economics at Seoul National University.

“Without ‘direct investment’ in North Korea, the economic impact from the restart of trade on South Korean economy is expected to be very slight and limited. It will help North Korea a lot economically and will make big positive impact. If economic cooperation like Gaesung Industrial Complex takes place, it can benefit South more.”

There is also a lot of hope from South Koreans on the Hanoi summit, according to a survey carried out earlier this month which revealed more than 62 percent of the respondents being optimistic of a positive outcome.

“Inter-Korean relations have been the only thing going well for the Moon government,” said Yul Shin, a politics professor at Seoul’s Myongji University. “But enthusiasm will quickly wane if we go through event after event without producing real changes on denuclearisation.”

But there is also criticism on the government of neglecting issues at home while focusing too much on North Korea.

With 1.22 million South Koreans unemployed in January – the highest number in 19 years – 23-year-old Min Jung Ahn reckons that is something the Moon administration should be focusing its time and efforts on instead of Kim.

“I don’t expect much [from the summit],” said Ahn. “It was fun and interesting to watch the first meeting. Now, I’m in between jobs and my future is uncertain. I’m a bit disappointed by the current administration of not tackling the issue of unemployment for the younger generation.

“I’m not saying the North Korea issue is not important but my everyday life is way more important.” 

I’m a bit disappointed by the current administration of not tackling the issue of unemployment for the younger generation.

Min Jung Ahn, 23-year-old South Korean

There is also a worry among analysts that, following the Vietnam summit, the Washington-Seoul military alliance could be at stake, including the future of almost 28,500 US troops stationed in South Korea.

Earlier this month, South Korea signed a new deal with the United States on how much Seoul should pay for the US military presence on its soil after a previous deal lapsed amid Trump’s call for South Korea to pay more.

Trump has repeatedly said US military deployment in South Korea is too costly. There was also a surprise suspension of some US military exercises with South Korea as a concession to Kim after the Singapore talks. 

South Korea: Thaw in ties with North boosts ice fishing festival

“The Korea-US alliance is seriously ill now,” said Kim Taewoo, the former head of the government-funded Korea Institute for National Unification in South Korea.

US defence officials said they are not planning any troop reductions but some have indicated that they would not be surprised if Trump puts reductions on the table as part of his negotiations with Kim.

There is also growing skepticism among South Koreans, especially the older generation, of North Korea ever giving up on its nuclear weapons.

However, with improved Seoul-Pyongyang relations, the prospect of a unified Korea once again has made 27-year-old Kyung Hee Lee excited by the upcoming Trump-Kim talks.

“I like the fact that they are meeting again. They are doing something that hasn’t been done before,” said Lee. “Even though it is early to think of reunification, I think the summit can be the first step towards making that happen. If that is the case, my children can live in a unified Korea.”

Additional reporting by Sookyoung Lee

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2EqydEd
via IFTTT

North Korea’s Kim reported en route to Vietnam summit with Trump

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un‘s armoured train has arrived in China ahead of the second summit with US President Donald Trump in Vietnam, according to media reports.

The train arrived in the border city of Dandong after 9pm local time (13:00 GMT) on Saturday, according to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency and the specialist outlet NK News, though it was not known whether Kim was on it.

The train’s crossing into China follows days of speculation over Kim’s travel plans, which remain shrouded in secrecy, as his team gathered in Hanoi ahead of the talks expected next Wednesday and Thursday.

The Vietnamese foreign ministry announced on Saturday Kim would “pay an official visit in the coming days”, ahead of the summit though no details were released.  

Last week the Reuters news agency said Kim would arrive in Vietnam on Feb 25.

North Korea’s state media has yet to confirm either Kim’s trip to Vietnam or his summit with Trump.

Second Trump-Kim summit to be held in Vietnam on February 27-28

Security was tight before the train’s arrival in China, with police cordoning off the riverfront about 100 metres from the bridge with tape and metal barriers.

Guests at a hotel facing the rail bridge from North Korea were suddenly asked to leave on Friday and told it was closed on Saturday for impromptu renovations.

“The train is long and crossed the bridge slower than the tourist train, but its definitely him, there’s a lot of police presence,” an unidentified source told NK News.

Windows on the train were blacked out, the source said, with only headlights turned on as it crossed.

Several sources told the AFP news agency that Kim was expected to arrive in Vietnam by train, stopping at the Dong Dang train station near the China border, then driving to Hanoi.

On Saturday soldiers were deployed to Dong Dang station and along the road to the capital, according to AFP reporters at the scene.

Vietnam had already announced the unprecedented move of closing that 170-kilometre stretch of road on Tuesday between 6:00 am and 2:00 pm — suggesting Kim could travel on the road between those hours.

Another option for Kim would be to take the train to Beijing and catch a plane to the Vietnamese capital.

A 60-hour journey

If the train does trundle all the way to Hanoi carrying the North Korean leader, it will mean a nearly 4,000-km, 60-hour journey on board for Kim.

On Kim’s last rail trip in January, he travelled to Beijing with his entourage in an olive-green train emblazoned with a yellow stripe.

The engine and carriages appeared similar, possibly identical, to the train Kim used the previous year to travel to the Chinese capital for his first overseas visit.

His predecessors, father Kim Jong Il and grandfather Kim Il Sung, also preferred rail for their domestic and overseas travels.

Historic year of inter-Korea relations sees drop in tensions

China has one of the most extensive railway systems in the world, with 130,000km of tracks – enough infrastructure to circle the Earth three times.

Still, a journey from China’s frozen northern border to subtropical Vietnam would present a logistical headache and complex security challenges.

“The best route is the Beijing-Guangzhou line,” said Zhao Jian, who studies China’s railway system at Beijing Jiaotong University, describing a route that would see Kim travel straight down to southern China, before heading west into Guangxi province, which borders Vietnam.

Justin Hastings, associate professor in international relations at the University of Sydney, said that would be “a pretty major operation”.

“They would have to clear the tracks, they would have to provide security for basically the entire length of the Chinese eastern seaboard,” he said.

But China may view the hassle as a necessary cost to get Kim to the summit, he told AFP news agency.

“China wants North Korea to make some steps to denuclearise as much as anyone else.”

Inside Story: Is North Korea’s timeline denuclearise for real? (25:00)

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2U4LxDU
via IFTTT

Mueller suggests sentence that could amount to life in prison for Manafort


Paul Manafort

Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort faces a pair of sentencing hearings in the coming weeks in Virginia and in Washington | Keith Lane/Getty Images

Legal

The former Trump campaign chairman has faced charges for tax fraud, bank fraud, unregistered lobbying for a foreign government and witness tampering.

A federal judge should consider giving former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort a sentence that would send him to prison for at least 17 and a half years, special counsel Robert Mueller said in a court filing made public Saturday.

That could amount to a life sentence for the 69-year-old Manafort, who became one of the most prominent targets of Mueller’s probe into alleged collusion between Donald Trump‘s presidential campaign and Russia.

Story Continued Below

Manafort faces a pair of sentencing hearings in the coming weeks in Virginia and in Washington where judges will determine what punishment he should face in two separate criminal cases brought by Mueller’s office involving tax fraud, bank fraud, unregistered lobbying for a foreign government and witness tampering.

The new court submission in Washington released on Saturday makes no explicit recommendation about how much prison time Manafort should serve, but urges U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson to consider making the longtime political consultant and lobbyist serve a total sentence in the roughly 17-to-22-year range by making her sentence consecutive to one a Virginia judge is expected to impose ahead of her early next month.

Last week, Mueller’s prosecutors told U.S. District Court Judge T.S. Ellis in Alexandria that sentencing guidelines applicable to Manafort’s case there call for him to serve between 19 and a half and 24 and a half years in prison. The prosecution team also made no explicit recommendation for a sentence in that case, beyond urging that the punishment be “serious” and adequate to deter others from similar conduct.

In theory, Ellis could sentence Manafort to as long as 80 years in prison on the charges of tax fraud, bank fraud and failing to report foreign bank accounts that he was convicted of at a high-profile jury trial last August.

However, judges typically sentence defendants in the range called for by the federal sentencing guidelines, which became advisory in 2005 as a result of a Supreme Court decision.

The new filing sent to Jackson Friday under seal and made public Saturday contains dense language urging her to use whatever sentence she imposes to make sure Manafort’s total punishment winds up in the guidelines range. Whether she decides to make her sentence consecutive to or concurrent with the other judge’s sentence could be crucial to the length of time Manafort actually serves.

“Under the advisory Sentencing Guidelines, courts are to structure the sentences on multiple counts of conviction to reach the total punishment called for by the advisory guidelines,” Mueller’s team wrote in a footnote at the very end of their submission. “The government submits that mode of analysis is applicable to whether the sentence should run concurrently or consecutively, in whole or in part, to that imposed in the EDVA [Eastern District of Virginia].”

Ellis is set to sentence Manafort on March 8, with Jackson following five days later.

Manafort has been in jail since last June, after Jackson deemed him a danger to the community due to a revised grand jury indictment charging him with witness tampering in the D.C. case. He’ll be entitled to time-served credit for the nine months or so he’s already spent behind bars, but that’s unlikely to put much of a dent in his overall sentence.

Of course, Trump has the power to wipe out some or all of Manafort’s federal convictions and to commute his prison term. While Trump has often expressed sympathy for Manafort, the president has been non-committal about a pardon or commutation.

Even if Trump grants clemency to Manafort, he could still face legal jeopardy. New York prosecutors are reportedly preparing charges against him there. A federal pardon would provide no protection against such a prosecution and Manafort’s admissions as part of the plea deal he eventually struck with federal prosecutors would be admissible against him.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter https://ift.tt/2BQoUfd
via IFTTT